Rev. Charles Lehmann + Baptism of Our Lord + Matthew 3:13-17

     In the Name of + Jesus. Amen.
     When Jesus, the Savior of the world is baptized, the heavens are rended 
wide. A voice comes down from heaven. The Holy Spirit descends as a dove. And 
the words... the words are great! “This is my beloved Son; with him I am well 
pleased.”
     Now, that's something. But hey... It's Jesus. I've never seen anything 
like that happen in a normal baptism. Just think of last week.  The heavens 
didn't rip open.  There were no doves.  Kaden's baptism was beautiful, but not 
that exciting.  It was normal.  It was like a hundred other baptisms you have 
seen before.
     A man in a funny white dress holds a baby over a bowl of water and 
splashes it on the kid's forehead three times. He mumbles some words. Half the 
time you can't even hear them.
     Then the baby cries while he's being handed back to his parents.  A lot of 
the time he was sound asleep until the cold water got on his forehead and in 
his eyes.
     Baptism is a very human thing. It's not accompanied by the sky being torn 
in twain and the Holy Spirit swooping down, feathers and all. That's Bible 
stuff. You live in the real world.
     We often look at a baptism and you think: Nice ceremony. Good symbol of 
the child entering the church. A nice time to take pictures with the family and 
have a barbeque on a Sunday afternoon. But it's really hard to believe that 
anything special or miraculous is happening there.
     The baby does not reverently go back to the pew with hands folded. He does 
not silently speak the Lord's Prayer after the baptismal water is wiped from 
his forehead. He does not confess with a clear and loud voice the words of the 
Nicene Creed. He can't talk. He can't even mimic his parents' actions that well 
yet.
     He doesn't behave any differently either. He still gets mom and dad up in 
the middle of the night. He still demands enormous amounts of attention. He 
still dirties his diaper. And, he gets worse. He becomes actively willful and 
disobedient. He screams. He yells. He says, “You're not the boss of me.” He 
sins. There's really very little reason to think the brat has faith at all.
     Our text today is different from all we know from the baptisms we've seen 
here at Peace With Christ. With Jesus it's not hard to know that something 
important is happening. You've got all the cool stuff with Jesus, but when you, 
your kids, your brother, your sister... when they were baptized, it was boring. 
Your eyes couldn't see what was really going on.
     But the eyes of the skeptic are the eyes of unbelief. One reason we are 
tempted to deny the reality of the baptism because we can't immediately see 
what it is. Faith is not seen, but heard. Consider the creed that you confess 
each Sunday.
     You confess one baptism for the remission of sins. You confess this in the 
article about the Holy Spirit. But how is the Spirit involved in your baptism? 
The answer is that the one baptism of the creed is the one baptism of today's 
text. You are baptized into Christ. It is His baptism that you receive. It is 
because the Spirit descended on Him in His baptism that Peter later preaches 
that in baptism you receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.
     You receive the Lord's baptism. Not only has Jesus sanctified all waters 
by His baptism, but He has done it for you. Consider what John the Baptizer 
says of Jesus just before baptizing Him. “Behold the lamb of God who takes away 
the sins of the world.”
     In your baptism, your sins are washed away. In Christ's, He takes them up. 
He bears them, carries them to the cross and dies there because of them. Yet, 
even so, Christ hears the Father's words, “This is my beloved Son; with him I 
am well pleased.”
     God's beloved Son bears the sin of the world and receives the wrath it 
deserves. God's anger is turned aside from you and focused on the Son. You are 
forgiven. The sin that Christ has borne in His baptism is gone forever. So now 
consider your baptism. When you entered the baptismal waters you received the 
baptism that Christ Himself received.
     The Father now speaks the words to you that He originally spoke to Jesus. 
“You are my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased.” You. You are baptized into 
Christ, and as many of you as are baptized into Christ have put on Christ.
     The Father does not see you, the doubter of baptism, you, the despiser of 
His gifts. No. You are baptized. He sees you, His beloved Son in whom He is 
well pleased. He sees Christ. All His deeds are seen in you. All His 
righteousness is yours by your baptism into His death. All His life is yours by 
your baptism into His resurrection.
     It is still nonsense to your eyes, and in this life it always will be. 
Your eyes see a baby getting wet. The water doesn't seem any different than 
what a cow drinks or from what you use when you take a bath. But your ears know 
differently. Your ears, not your eyes, are the organ of faith.
     It is a true baptism. It is water filled with God's Word. The Lord's Word 
is Spirit and life, and washed in this Spirit water, you are begotten of the 
Father. That is why He speaks to you.
     Your ears hear the Father's words and believe them, and that is why what 
your Sunday school teacher may have taught you to say is good. “I am a child of 
God by my baptism.”
     You are the Father's child, His beloved son. And He will keep every 
promise He has made to you in Christ through your baptism.
     Satan does not want you to believe it, but you may loudly sing a hymn 
against him.
     “Satan hear this proclamation. I am baptized into Christ. Drop your ugly 
accusation. I am not so soon enticed. Now that to the font I've traveled, all 
your might has come unraveled. I am baptized into Christ. I'm a child of 
Paradise.”
     Luther says in His Large Catechism that the Lord gives so many and so 
great gifts in baptism that we could spend our entire lives praising God for 
them and never run out of things to say.
     In the Lord's baptism, He has taken up your sin, and He carries it in His 
own body.  He will carry it into the wilderness and be tempted by the devil.  
Satan will try to persuade the Lord to cast your sin aside, to give it back to 
you.  Satan will try to turn Jesus away from the way of the cross.
     Satan wants your sins to drag you down to hell.  He doesn't want God to 
deal with them.  He doesn't want Jesus to forgive them.  But Jesus has said 
that it is fitting for Him to fulfill all righteousness, and so he has 
fulfilled it.  He has placed Himself under the Law and has redeemed those who 
are under the Law.  Not only has He suffered, died, and felt the full brunt of 
God's wrath in your place, but He has fulfilled every precept of God's Law.
     In your baptism, you are clothed with Christ.  His every keeping of the 
Lord's commands is credited to you.  Every leper he cleansed, every blind man 
whose sight is restored.  Every grieving mother or sister that He comforted.  
He did this all for you.
     In the Lord's Baptism, He sets aside what is by nature His.  He ignores 
what is due Him by the fact that He is the eternal Son of God.  He makes 
Himself nothing, taking on the very form of a slave.  He takes your sin.  He 
takes your death.  He destroys them on a cross on a mountain called Golgotha.
     Your are baptized into His death.  All of the benefits that He won for you 
on the cross are yours in your baptism.  You are baptized into the Lord's 
resurrection. The life he lives is yours, now and forevermore.  Your eternal 
salvation doesn't depend on you now and it never will.  It's a done deal.
     You are the Father's beloved Son.  In you he is well pleased.
     In the Name of the + Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
 
Rev. Charles R. Lehmann
Assistant Pastor, Youth and Education
Peace with Christ Lutheran Church
Fort Collins, CO 
http://wickedbutforgiven.blogspot.com/
http://believeloveprayfight.blogspot.com/



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