Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Satan, Baptism, Death, Oh my: June 25, 2023

 Year A, Pentecost 4                             Romans 6:1-11                                                                                

            Normally we are not fortunate enough to have a reading coincide with baptismal themes.  For instance, if you were listening when I read the Gospel, you probably found that language about setting a man against his father and a daughter against her mother less than appealing for a baptism. I read that and thought, well that’s a horrible text for a baptism.  I mean, I could probably find some connections if I tried really hard, but it would have been a stretch. I was relieved when I saw that Romans actually talked about baptism because that meant I had a legitimate reason to choose Romans rather than the Gospel.  Then I read Romans carefully and I was sad again…because it’s a complicated reading.  It was a real roller coaster of emotions for me.   Our readings rotate on a three year cycle and coincide with whatever is going on in the church year. It’s called the lectionary.  It’s inconvenient at times to have such limited flexibility in terms of what we hear on Sunday.  At the same time, it means that our Bible reading is uncensored in some respects.  The preacher can’t just choose the safe readings.           

            I always like to go through the baptismal liturgy line by line when I meet with the parents and godparents of the child about to be baptized.  We have a saying in the Episcopal Church—that praying shapes believing.  In others words, what and how we pray shapes and in some ways shows what we believe.   If you read our whole baptismal liturgy, you will get a really wonderful overview of what we believe in the Episcopal Church. That said, there are a few places when it’s obvious to me that Iose the parents and godparents.  The first is when we talk about renouncing Satan. Obviously, no one is interested in approving of Satan, but people are confused as to why we are talking about Satan during a baptism when we don’t talk about it in any other worship service.  I will come back to that.

            The 2nd place in the liturgy where I see people squirm a little is in the section called “Thanksgiving over the water,” specifically when we talk about what the water symbolizes and the role water has played in critical moments in the Judeo-Christian story.  We say, “In it we are buried with Christ in his death.”  Now you see why I was so excited that we had this reading from Romans today.  #1—this is proof that the Book of Common Prayer is based on the Bible.  #2. We get to see that some of what we believe about baptism comes directly from the Apostle Paul.  In our reading from today, he wrote, “Therefore we have been buried with him by baptism into death…” I know what you are thinking, well now it all makes perfect sense. Obviously, this is why we talk about death when we are baptizing an adorable baby. No?  Not yet clear?  Well that’s ok, because that’s what I want to talk about. I am going to tell you why death in this context…is good news.

            For Paul, the death he was talking about was a figurative death.  It was and is dying to sin.  It’s the idea that sin no longer has control over us because Jesus made the ultimate sacrifice when he died for us.  When he died for us, he was wiping the slate clean for all God’s people.  This is a major tenant of our faith but one that I think a lot of modern Christians struggle with.  Why did Jesus have to die in order that we might live? I am not sure.  Tomes of theology books are written on the topic, but I am not yet convinced as to why it had to be that way.  What I know is that Jesus died because it was the only way for him to be the person God called him to be. His goodness, his divinity, offended the people in power. He wasn’t willing to back down.  He wasn’t willing to be someone else.  So they killed him.

            That sacrifice, that determination to be his authentic self, allowed Jesus to show his love to people who were hell bent on rejecting him.  It’s what separated him from the false messiahs, of which there were many.  It was a demonstration of such immense love, that it broke the chains that enslaved God’s people.  It allowed God’s people to be free from sin.  It’s what I talked about last week---it’s grace. It’s the free gift that we didn’t deserve or know we needed. 

            Does that mean that now we are all sin free?  Clearly not. We all know that we sin.  However, what makes us free is not that we never sin, but that sin doesn’t define us.  It’s part of who we are, but it’s not all of who we are.  One of the last things we do in the baptismal service is anoint the individual with oil and proclaim, “You are sealed by the Holy Spirit in Baptism and marked as Christ’s own forever.”  Baptism is about a new identity, it’s an identity where you can truly be yourself because you are created to be good and loving. You are created to love others and to love God and you can do that because you have gone through this figurative death.

            Now, Edie is young.  While she certainly has character and her own unique identity, no one would label her as a sinner in need of redemption.  At the same time, sin is inevitable and this baptism gives her freedom to always be defined not by her faults or sins, but by the grace that God has given her.  It’s the job of the parents, godparents, family and all the people in the church to remind her that her identity as a baptized child of God is steeped in goodness, and that is a goodness that can never be taken away.

Photo by Jon Tyson 
            So back to the devil thing.  Why do we renounce the devil in baptism? I think it’s to remind us that while we have been freed from sin, sin is still a relentless foe.  Evil is around us.  We can’t ignore it.  But we also can’t internalize it.  We can’t let it fester in our souls.  We must remember that evil is the enemy and it has to be renounced because our identity as children of God is goodness and light. Again, that doesn’t mean we are perfect. It means that we not defined by our imperfections.  We are defined—no---we are loved---by a God who refused to let the evil of this world change his identity. No matter what God’s people did, God’s reaction was to forgive and to love.  That was true when Jesus died and rose again.  It’s still true today.  God is a God of love and forgiveness and we who worship that God, we are people of love and forgiveness as well.    

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