Sermon | ||
---|---|---|
Download Sermon |
Service | ||
---|---|---|
To download this video, press here to go to the download page. You may need to scroll down to see the download button. |
Download Bulletin |
Sermon for the Baptism of Our Lord
1 Corinthians 1:26-31 + Matthew 3:13-17
On Sunday we heard about how twelve-year-old Jesus amazed everyone at the temple in the Jerusalem. It’s now about 18 years later. Jesus has spent all that time in Nazareth, growing in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men. We know that He learned some carpentry from His earthly father, Joseph, who was a carpenter, by trade, because Jesus Himself is once referred to as “the carpenter.” It appears that, sometime during those 18 years, Joseph died, because he is conspicuously absent from the rest of the story of Jesus’ life. The next thing we hear about Jesus happens when He’s about 30 years old, as Matthew, Mark, and Luke all record how Jesus came down from Galilee to the Jordan river, to be baptized by John, who had started preaching and baptizing several months before this. Why was Jesus baptized? For what purpose? What was the significance of it? What does it matter for us and for our salvation? We’re going to walk through these five verses from Matthew chapter 3 and then answer those questions.
As Jesus approached John to be baptized, John recognized Him immediately. How, we don’t know. We’re not told of any interaction between the two before this. Maybe John knew in the same way that Simeon and Anna recognized Jesus as a baby, by the direct inspiration of the Holy Spirit.
In any case, John knew that Jesus was not at all like other men. He tried to prevent Jesus from being baptized, saying, “I am the one who needs to be baptized by you, and you come to me?” John, as a prophet sent by God, knew a lot about Jesus. He knew that he (John), like everyone else who was coming to be baptized, was sinful and in need of repentance and the forgiveness of sins, and that Jesus had no need of those things, because He was sinless to begin with. John knew that he was just a humble messenger, while Jesus was the divine Messenger to whom John was pointing. He knew that Jesus was far greater than he, far superior to him, as he confessed openly soon after baptizing Jesus. He knew that he needed to be saved by Jesus, and that Jesus certainly didn’t need to be saved by him. And he was right about all those things.
But John didn’t know everything about God’s plan of salvation. Jesus fills him in a little bit. Allow it for now. For thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness. John knew he was supposed to be pointing people to Jesus, but he didn’t know, until now, that Jesus’ ministry had to begin with a very special baptism. John knew that Jesus was the Righteous One. But he was just now learning, from Jesus, that baptizing Jesus was part of “fulfilling all righteousness.” We’ll talk about that more in a minute.
Now, to be washed by someone is a humbling experience, even more so when it’s a washing that’s normally connected with spiritual dirt, where everyone else who comes to be baptized is being baptized specifically because he recognizes that he’s a sinner who deserves nothing from God but His wrath and punishment. And so Jesus was humbled by John, and John must have felt awkward doing it. But at Jesus’ word, John consented and baptized the Lord Jesus.
We’re told that, right after Jesus was baptized, three remarkable events occurred. He saw the heavens opened to Him, the Holy Spirit descended like a dove and came upon Jesus, and the Father spoke those incredible works that He would later repeat at Jesus’ transfiguration: This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. This is the second reference in the New Testament to the three Persons of the Holy Trinity. The first was in Gabriel’s announcement to Mary about Jesus being the Son, of God, who would be conceived by the overshadowing of the Holy Spirit. But here at Jesus’ Baptism, the three Persons are clearly seen. What does it all mean? What was it all for?
First, do you remember, when Jesus was crucified between the two thieves and the Evangelists record that it was to fulfill a prophecy about the Christ? He was numbered with the transgressors. Jesus’ death among sinners was the culmination of that prophecy. But it was really a prophecy that was fulfilled throughout Jesus’ life, and in a very special way at His Baptism. Jesus was numbered with the transgressors. He went to Baptism together with a multitude of people, all of whom were transgressors, sinners. And He allowed Himself to be counted among them, even though He had no sin, just as, one day, He would allow Himself to be crucified among sinners, as if He were a sinner. This is all part of what Paul says about Jesus in 2 Cor. 5: God made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. It was part of “fulfilling all righteousness” for Jesus, the Righteous One, to be numbered among the transgressors, so that all who believe in Him might be numbered among the righteous.
Another purpose of Jesus Baptism was that it served as what we might call His “anointing,” His inauguration and ordination into the office of the Christ. Now, Jesus was the Christ from the moment He was conceived and born. As the angel told the shepherds, “Unto you is born a Savior, who is Christ, the Lord.” He was always the Christ with regard to His identity. But it was at His Baptism that Jesus fully entered into the office of the Christ, the ministry of the Christ as Prophet, Priest, and King. And even though He was the Son of God, as the Son of Man He didn’t take that office or that ministry upon Himself. He waited for the Father to open the heavens to Him, and to send down the Holy Spirit upon Him, and to speak the words of approval upon His Son, designating this man Jesus as His chosen Servant for this one-of-a-kind mission to save the fallen human race. The Baptism of Jesus, where the Father spoke and the Spirit came upon Jesus, is the fulfillment of the prophecy of Isaiah that Jesus later applied to Himself: The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon Me, because the LORD has anointed Me.
Finally, what does Jesus’ Baptism mean for you and me? It means that Jesus is the Savior you should trust in, the only Savior chosen and sent by God the Father, the only one who has the Father’s full approval, in everything, because Jesus never once failed or faltered. He is the Righteous One who was willing to be numbered with the transgressors in order to bring us transgressors to God. He is the Righteous One with whom we believers are now clothed through Holy Baptism, as Paul says, for as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. And having put on Christ through Baptism, you have now become a beloved child of God who is well-pleasing to the Father, because in this strange and wonderful Sacrament of Holy Baptism, God has made a way for you to be connected to His beloved, well-pleasing Son, who was baptized, just as you were—not in the same place, or by the same person, or at the same age, but in the same divinely instituted washing. His was a washing of solidarity with sinners, an anointing of ordination, a reception of the Holy Spirit. Yours was a washing of solidarity with Christ, an anointing of adoption, and, likewise, a reception of the Holy Spirit.
The Baptism of Jesus is the event in which God the Father held forth His beloved Son to the world as wisdom from God, including both righteousness, and holiness, and redemption. Forget the wisdom of the world. Here is My wisdom, the Father says. Forget the righteousness of the world. Here is your righteousness! Forget the holiness of the world. Here is your holiness! Forget the redemption that the world offers. Here is the redemption that God offers! Here, in this Man Jesus, the Christ, the beloved Son of God, who makes you beloved sons of God through faith in Him, and through Baptism. Rejoice in this Sacrament that connects you with Christ! Amen.