Donate!

English

The Baptism of the Lord  - “You are my beloved Son"

          Saturday morning at the “That Man is You” men’s group, we heard the powerful witness of a man named Jeff who shared his own experience as a prodigal son.  He had a traumatic experience as a pre-teen that wounded his heart and filled him with shame and self-hatred.  Soon after that, as a teenager, he began drinking and smoking marijuana to numb the pain, and by high-school and college he had progressed to harder drugs including cocaine.  He was angry with his lot in life and self-centered to the point of self-sabotaging the opportunities he was given.  He didn’t think his life was worth living.   One evening, in his early twenties, after a heavy night of partying, as he sat on his parents’ couch at 2:00 in the morning, he realized that he was having a cocaine-induced heart attack.  He thought he was going to die.  He called his brother to tell him he was sorry.  The brother said that he would call 911, but he told him not to bother.  “If I live, I live.  If I die, I die.”  He then made a prayer to God:  “If you exist, God, come into my life now.”  He felt a warmth run through his body and heard interiorly the words of Jesus from the cross, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”  He had a profound experience of God’s merciful presence and lived.  He felt like the prodigal son who returned and was embraced by the Father.  He decided to go back to Mass.  He met a girl at church, fell in love, got married, and started a new life.  He had a child.  He started to pursue a successful career.  But instead of alcohol and drugs, he turned to work to fill the void in his heart.  He said, “I was climbing the ladder of success but realized the ladder was up against the wrong wall.”  He said the pursuit of worldly success was like drinking sea water.  The more you drink, the thirstier you get.  What you think will satisfy your need, only leaves you more empty.  He professed to be Christian, but his real god was money, power, influence, and addiction.  Those were the things that ruled his life.  He said, as a prodigal, my Trinity was “me, myself, and I.”  He realized he was still stuck in the past.  He was still defining himself by his woundedness and past sins.  But God sees more than our sins.  God has a plan for our future that is good.  God is thinking about what we could be not just about who we were or what we did.  He wondered what happened to the prodigal son after he returned to the father’s house.  The parable does not give us the rest of the story.  So he asked God, “What is it you want me to do with my life?”  The Lord revealed to him that he wanted him to start a business  - a construction business.  This was in the midst of the financial crisis in 2008 after the housing collapse.  No one was building new houses.  He thought that this was crazy.  And the Lord said to him, “I’m not asking you to understand, I’m asking for your ‘yes’.  Will you respond to my grace or not?”  It was an invitation to put God first.  To trust in God.  To believe God.  What he realized was that his calling was to serve the Lord, not himself.  And that would take the form of using his business and the growth that the Lord made happen to care for those in need.  “What you do for the least of my brothers, you do for me.”  He shared how his company has been able to support works of mercy around the world and that his success comes from putting God first. 

          Jeff wanted every man who is struggling with any type of addiction or wound from a past sin to know that our God is a God of mercy who wants to heal us.  What holds us back from conversion - what keeps us stuck in the past - is how we look at ourselves and who we believe.  He said this:  “The Enemy knows us by our name but calls us by our sins”.  (“You are an addict.  You are a cheater.  You are a liar.  You are a loser.  Your are worthless.  You are not lovable.  You have no future.”)  But the God of mercy knows our sins and calls us by name.”  Don’t be afraid of your weakness.  It is in and through our weakness that God saves us - in and through the mess that we have made of our lives.  His advice: seek the mercy of God, put your life into his hands, and be open to what the Lord asks you to do.  Jeff prayed at the beginning of his witness “that my woundedness may be a source of healing for others.” 

          I share this story on the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord because Jeff’s story speaks to the mission of Christ that was revealed in his baptism in the Jordan by John.  Jesus humbled himself to submit to the baptism of John.  John’s baptism was a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.  Jesus is without sin, but he submits to this baptism, to the surprise of John, not because he needed it, but as a gesture of solidarity with sinners.  God does not distance himself from sinners.  Rather, he identifies himself with sinners.  “I am with you.  I have not abandoned you.”  He is side by side with sinners - in line with sinners - taking the place of sinners.  He enters completely into our sinful condition to redeem it - make whatever it is a means of our salvation.  The baptism of Jesus is the prefigurement of his dying and rising from the dead.  Jesus humbles himself in this gesture to foreshadow what he will do on the cross.  “He humbled himself, becoming obedient to death, death on a cross” (Phil 2:8).  Jesus made a similar gesture at the Last Supper when he stooped to wash the feet of the disciples.  Peter, not understanding what Jesus was doing, had a similar reaction to the reaction of John at the baptism, trying to prevent Jesus from doing it.  And Jesus’ response to Peter was, “Unless I wash you, you will have no inheritance with me” (Jn 13:9).   Jesus said to John when John protested, “Allow it now, for thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness” (Mt 3:15).  It is Jesus’ death on the cross for the forgiveness of our sins and his resurrection from the dead that will bring “the victory of justice” - setting things right between us and God.  Jesus restores the relationship with God that was wounded by our sin.  He reconciles us to the Father, allowing us to receive the inheritance lost or squandered, like that of the prodigal, by our sin.  When Jesus rises from the water after being baptized, the heavens were opened for him, and the Spirit of God descended upon him.  His resurrection opens heaven for us.  In the sacrament of baptism, we receive the saving grace of the cross - the forgiveness of our sins and the restoration of our relationship with God.  By going down in the waters of baptism, we enter into the mystery of Christ’s death and resurrection, we die with Christ and rise with him, becoming adopted sons and daughters of God the Father.  Our baptism prefigures our resurrection from the dead and future share in the glory of the heavenly life.  Baptism also gives us a share in Christ’s mission.  Through Jesus’ identification with us and his redeeming action, we become identified with the Son, so that God the Father looks at us the same way that he looks at Jesus: “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.”  The baptism of Jesus takes place before Jesus’ public ministry begins.  The Father is “well pleased” with Jesus before Jesus performs one miracle, preaches one sermon, or calls one disciple.  The Father’s love for the Son is not based on the Son’s “performance” or achievement.  Neither is God’s love for us based on our goodness or achievement or “merit”.  God loves us the same way he loves Jesus.  “You are my beloved son”.  “You are my beloved daughter”.  Is this the voice we choose to listen to when we have fallen into sin?  Or do we listen to the Evil one who throws our sins in our face and tempts us to doubt the worth and value of our lives?  In baptism, we belong to God and there is always a way back to him for those who seek his mercy - for those who ask.  God opens a way through a path that we do not understand.  Through Christ’s wounds, we have been healed.  And when we give our lives over to Christ, our woundedness can become a source of healing and hope for others.  May each of us be renewed in the grace of our baptism today, not allowing ourselves to be defined by our sin but by the love that God has for us.  It is the Spirit of God that has descended upon us at our baptism - the love of God that dwells within us and is nourished by the reception of the sacraments - that allows us to fulfill the unique and awesome mission God has given to each of us.  May we not look back but look to the good future the Lord has planned for us.