The
Baptism of the Lord
Year B
God
Revealed
Readings: Genesis 1:1-5; Acts 19:1-7; Mark 1:4-11
We have entered a new season of the
Church year, the season of Epiphany.
During the Sundays of Epiphany we focus on how God is revealed to
us. An epiphany is an
appearance, a visible manifestation of God.
The Epiphany immediately brings into mind the magi bringing gifts
to the baby Jesus. The Wise men in their visit to Jesus were not the
Epiphany. They were the
beneficiaries of one. God
was revealed to them through the child Jesus whom they visited.
We
too need to expect Epiphanies in our lives, times when God is revealed
in a personal way to each of us. Such
times help us to come to know God better.
They are times when God seems to reach through time and space.
Each Sunday in Epiphany focuses on the ways in which God is
revealed to people.
Today
we read of how God is revealed to us through the working of the Holy
Spirit in our lives. In the
Old Testament reading, the spirit is revealed as "a wind from God
which swept over the face of the waters."
The creating spirit of God hovered over the waters, the source of
life. In the reading from
the Acts of the Apostles, Paul points out to the people of Ephesus that
the Holy Spirit should have been the great gift of their baptism.
He is surprised to find their lack of understanding at how God is
revealed. He wants them to
experience the Holy Spirit in their lives as a gift of grace.
Finally in the Gospel, God is made manifest through the baptism
of Jesus in the Jordan River.
The
Jews were constantly looking for God's revelation. But they came to a time in their spiritual life as we all do
when God seemed not to be present with them.
As God became more and more absent in their lives, they looked
back with yearning to the days of the prophets when God had been very
much a part of their experience. They
felt as if the Holy Spirit had been absent since those days.
The voice of God which had spoken to the prophets was heard now
only as an echo. They
looked for the time when the sky would be opened and God would once more
speak directly to the people.
And
then it happened. Jesus
came to John to be baptised. The
heavens opened. The dove
hovered over him. God
called out words of affirmation. "You
are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased."
Clearly in Mark's Gospel the voice is Jesus' personal experience.
The onlookers are unaware of what is happening.
But we who read the Gospel are to understand it as a revelation,
a manifestation to us, the people of God.
Through it we are to understand Jesus' unique relationship to
God, and his call to ministry.
But
we are called to understand far more.
For this incident in our Lord's life is within the experience of
each of us. We are intended
to experience that same descent of the dove in our own lives.
We are to experience God's presence in our lives.
How is God revealed to us? Where
for us is the deep sense of peace, the sense that our wills and that of
God are in harmony? Where is the sense of a presence from whom we receive
affirmation of our call to ministry?
How
do we experience God's presence? How
do we hear God? How do we
experience God at work in our lives?
How does God speak to us? A
young woman asked me that question one day.
In fact she had many questions.
She had not been brought up in the church and had little
experience with the faith. She
did have a real hunger for spirituality.
And so we had the first of many conversations about how we
recognize God.
She
said that if anything could convince her of the existence of God it
would be going through something like she saw in the movie,
"Twister". Her
picture of God was of a judgemental God who punishes, a harsh God, a God
of anger. She expected that
God would be revealed through some manifestation of power.
Many
people have that kind of understanding about God. After all, it would be so much easier to hear the kind of God
that spoke angrily and loudly. That
kind of God one could really understand.
It would leave no doubt in our mind.
We want theatrics! Thunder! Lightning! The works! We want
something that will make us really take note and know that God is
speaking to us.
Yet
it seems that most of the time God's voice comes in much gentler,
subtler ways. Sometimes the
way in which God speaks to us is more difficult to discern.
Not that hearing God's still small voice is necessarily any more
consoling than it would be to hear thunder! To hear God speak in the
silence is not always to hear what we want to hear.
God may tell us in that still small voice that what we have
chosen is not what God would have us do.
God may well order us out of our complacency, out of the safety
of our lives and into the real world.
God may lead us in directions for which we can see very little
value.
The
other misperception about how God speaks to us comes from intellectuals.
They know all the theological jargon.
They understand the difference between transubstantiation and
consubstantiation. They can
speak with authority about the Trinity or about the grace of God.
Strange as it may seem, God does not talk 'God-talk'.
You don't have to have a theological degree to come into
relationship with God. God
speaks through the ordinary. God
uses words like flower or rainbow.
God spoke and life began. We
speak in concepts. God
speaks in reality. That is
the great truth of the process of creation.
I
suspect that when we are really listening to what God is saying it comes
to us, not in some dramatic way, but in the still small voice.
How have you encountered God within the last few days?
Was it in some earth shattering revelation?
Or was it in a letter from a friend or when you were tucking a
little one into bed? Was it
during a phone call from a friend, a smile from a stranger, an
unexpected apology, a touch, an affirmation, a kind word?
I would even bet that it didn't happen in church.
God speaks more outside of church than inside.
Thank God for that! That is the glory of God! And if it all seems
too ordinary for you, too quiet to be God, then I suspect that you need
to listen even harder, for you are probably receiving a revelation from
God.
At
baptism we were promised God's gift of grace working in our lives.
However, like the Ephesians we may not even be aware that there is a
Holy Spirit at work in our lives. Baptism
isn't about knowing everything there is to know about God; it is about
knowing God. Let us recover
that sense of the presence and power of the Holy Spirit as the source of
our gifts. We need to experience the Holy Spirit at work in us with the
understanding that such encounters with God are God's gift to every
Christian. We need to
expect that God will meet us in our everyday lives.
God is constantly revealed to us and in us to others. Each new discovery takes us deeper into relationship with
God. What a great thing
that is to experience in our lives!
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