The Spirit of the Triune God is in you and giving you the gifts to be and do your mission as God’s Christ in your world.
Pr. Joseph G. Crippen
The Baptism of Our Lord, First Sunday after Epiphany, Lect. 1 C
Texts: Luke 3:15-22; Acts 8:14-17; Isaiah 43:1-7 (and referencing Isaiah 11 as well)
Beloved in Christ, grace to you, and peace in the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
Pentecost changed everything for the Church. That’s obvious.
The Church came to birth that day. But what isn’t as obvious is how deeply those first believers expected Pentecost to be repeated for any who came to trust Christ for life.
So, when those who heard on that first day asked what they could do, Peter invited them to repent and be baptized, receiving forgiveness, but also promised they’d receive the Holy Spirit. As the book of Acts unfolds, the early Church watches for the coming of the Spirit, names where they see the Spirit moving, and lives with confident expectation that the Spirit would continue to bless the Church, and individual believers. What we heard in Acts 8 today became the pattern: baptize, then lay on hands and pray for the Holy Spirit.
From the beginning this was always the promise of our baptism.
John the Baptist was clear: His baptism was an act of repentance, a symbolic washing. But Christ would bring a baptism not only with water, but into the very Spirit of the Triune God.
So when the early Church read Isaiah 11, which promised how the Spirit of God would come upon the Christ, they said, “That’s what happened at the Jordan with Jesus. And that’s what happened to us at Pentecost. And that’s what we see happening with all who come to follow the way of Christ.”
So they prayed Isaiah 11 as a prayer, and so do we, at baptisms, at confirmation, and today when we affirm our own baptism once more: “Stir up in your people the gift of your Holy Spirit:” we pray. “The Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and might, the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of God, the Spirit of joy in your presence.”
What if this Spirit was and is your gift, your truth? What if you joined the early believers and expected, trusted that Pentecost was also your reality?
Somehow as the Church we lost our way with Baptism over the centuries.
Baptism became sometimes a talisman, sometimes a way to control whom God loved and chose, sometimes a way to guarantee a seat at the heavenly table after death. It caused fear if someone died without it, as if God was somehow bound by our inability to get the rite accomplished. It was often something to be done and then for the most part forgotten.
That meant the Spirit life expected by John and Jesus and the early believers as part of baptism, the mission that comes from baptism in water and the Spirit, was kind of dropped by the wayside. Many of us weren’t taught that our baptism was the beginning of our mission as God’s Anointed, just as with Jesus.
So what if we take the early Church seriously? They saw God’s Spirit active in Jesus, empowering and gracing. Everything he did, taught, shared, lived, came from the Spirit of God that was evident in in him.
Pentecost showed them that as with Jesus, so it would be with them, and even with those who were drawn to the community of Christ but weren’t at Pentecost. And the world was being changed.
The Spirit is frightening to contemplate, though.
It’s easier to believe in a God you can control. Get all your teaching straight, get the simple answers you want, and you’ve got God in hand. Once you introduce God’s Spirit blowing, moving, filling, fiery and changing, all bets are off.
You can’t control who thinks the right thoughts about God and what those right thoughts are when the way the Triune God lives and moves in the world is through the Holy Spirit, who can’t be controlled, or predicted, or stopped. The Spirit blows wherever she wills, Jesus promises in John 3. We can only see where the Spirit has been, we have no control. So to pray this prayer is to relinquish illusion of control. To trust that God will do what God will do and be open and willing to receive that movement from God. Willing to let go of our need to define God or the boundaries of God’s action in the world.
It’s scary. But it’s also the good news: if the Triune God is who Scripture says, who we claim God to be, God’s already doing everything without our say so. There’s nothing at stake in relinquishing except our stubborn clinging to an illusion that isn’t real anyway.
So what could your life be like if you expected these gifts of the Spirit?
Trusted the Holy Spirit is in you? Watched for signs of the Spirit’s moving in your life? What if you expected you’d be given wisdom and understanding, counsel and might, knowledge and fear of God, and joy in God’s presence? What would such gifts do in your life, your relationships, your service?
If you don’t think you’ve seen such gifts in you, ask someone who knows you well. We see things in others we often can’t see in ourselves. It may be that others might have seen gifts in you already.
But here’s your mission: expect the Spirit’s gifts and be ready to move.
Washed in God’s waters and given forgiveness and life, God has called you by name, and you are God’s beloved child; God is well pleased with you. And now God’s Spirit lives, and moves, and breathes, and loves in you. Name that. Watch for it, and expect to see great wonders.
Because Pentecost changes everything. And Pentecost is already your truth.
In the name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen