Thursday, January 11, 2024

God's Masterpieces: January 7, 2023

Year B, Epiphany 1                                         Mark 1:4-11                                                                            

            About ten years ago, I became enthralled with Vincent van Gogh.  It started with a general appreciation of his art and then evolved into an interest in his life.  I ended up reading a book of his letters, which told a great deal more about Van Gogh than any biography really could.  They talked about his family, his romantic attachments, his friends, his faith, and of course, his art.  A common theme in these letters was his inability to fully appreciate how gifted he was. 

There was one letter in particular that fascinated me. It was to an art critic who had reviewed one of his paintings, quite generously.  Van Gogh started by thanking the critic for what he said, but then went on to describe in detail the faults in the painting, going to great pains to tell the critic why it wasn’t really as good as he thought it was.  At one point he said that his painting was only worth more than a blank canvas. That was the best he could say about his art.  Unfortunately, that was how he saw himself as well.  He looked at himself, and all he saw were flaws.  Where other people saw a great master, he saw an incompetent fool.

           Our Gospel reading starts with, “John the Baptizer appeared in the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.”  Christians did not invent baptism. John the Baptist did not invent it. The Hebrew people had been doing something very similar for centuries. They too were immersed in water in a ritual cleansing.  Their cleansing was primarily focused on repentance.  This cleansing ritual had been part of the Jewish faith for many years.

Yet John changed things a little.  For one thing, the Jewish ritual had always been one of self-immersion.   The person essentially baptized themselves.  It was an effective sign of repentance.  But John baptized other people, which no doubt felt a little awkward to the Jewish people, as it was an act of submission.  John was also very clear that what he was doing was a poor substitution to the baptism that was to come, a baptism of the Holy Spirit, by one who was more powerful than he.

            Considering that baptism was about repentance and submission, one might ask why Jesus needed to be baptized.  He was perfect in every way.  He had no sin, and therefore no need of repentance. The meaning of repentance is to turn away from your sins.  He had no sins to turn from.  So why did he need to be baptized by John? John even said that he was not worthy to untie his sandals, yet here he was baptizing the one who was infinitely more powerful. 

In the Gospel of Matthew, we see another version of this same story.  But in that gospel, the baptism is a moment of recognition.  The heavens tear open and God announces in a booming voice, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”[1] The crowd hears it.  John the Baptist hears it.  Everyone who is present hears that Jesus is the Son of God. It was an important moment when the true identity of Jesus was revealed.

But in the story we heard today from the Gospel of Mark, it seems that only Jesus heard the voice.  Only he witnessed the heavens tear open. “And just as he was coming out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him.  And a voice came from heaven, ‘You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.”  While I am sure it was comforting for Jesus to hear the affirming words of his Father, my guess is it would have been a little more helpful, had everyone heard those words.  I have this image of Jesus coming out of the water, looking around, asking the crowd, “Did anyone else see or hear that?  I swear the heavens just tore open and God announced that I am the Son of God.”

            So back to my original question, why did Jesus need to be baptized?  He didn’t need to be baptized, but he chose to be baptized.  He chose to be associated with humankind.  He wanted to experience all that humans experienced.  Even though he did not sin, he committed an act of repentance in front of everyone.  People often wonder, how could Jesus truly be human if he did not sin.  Humans are sinful creatures.  We can’t help it.  Haven’t you ever heard someone make a mistake and then dismiss it with this excuse, “I’m only human”---as if that is what it is to be human. 

When we describe Jesus in the church, we describe him as fully human, and fully divine.  Jesus wasn’t just human, he was fully human, perhaps more so than any of us. What if sin is not the thing that makes us human, but what if sin is actually the rejection of our full humanity? [2]After all, God created us in the image of God, the untarnished image of God.  Jesus came into the world not to show us how perfect he was and how sinful we were, but who we could be. 

Now you might be thinking, that’s too much pressure.  We can’t be perfect, everyone sins.  That’s true.  However, we should not define ourselves by sin. Jesus was baptized for the same reason he was born, for the same reason he died, and for the same reason he was resurrected. He did all that so we could be saved. Do you know another translation of the Greek word that is translated to saved, is also--to be made whole?  Jesus was baptized, died and resurrected so that the burden of our own sins could no longer weigh us down—no longer keep us from being fully human.

For some reason, we have a tendency to look at ourselves and see our faults (our incompleteness), instead of our gifts.  Van Gogh looked at his paintings as worthless. He only saw defect. Now his paintings sell for tens of millions of dollars.  I wonder what he would think if he knew that his paintings would one day be virtually priceless. While he did not think much of himself, Van Gogh described Jesus as the greatest artist of all, because he worked with living flesh.[3] One has to wonder, with that perspective, why Van Gogh could not see the art in himself, the beauty of himself—one of God’s beloved. If Jesus is the greatest artist, then we are all masterpieces.  If we could see ourselves as masterpieces of a great artist, then perhaps we would be less likely to see sin and flaws and more likely to see beauty.  To be fully human is to hear those words that came from a torn apart heaven that were heard by Jesus as not merely words spoken long ago to a divine creature, but as words meant for us….God’s children: “You are my child, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.”

 



[1] Matthew 3:17

[2] John Kavanaugh, p. 16

[3] The Letters of Vincent van Gogh, p. 369