When we remember the baptism of Jesus, it points to how Jesus leaded in ways that respected and honored the leadership of others.
Many times when two powerful leaders get together, it becomes a battle over who has the most authority or skills or money or followers. It can become a fight over who is the best. Like two big horned sheep fighting over a ewe, they lock horns and butt heads and crash together. Two bulls in a pasture, two stallions in a wild herd of horses. You just know that fireworks are going to ensue. Leaders often lock horns. Jesus and John didn’t lock horns, they didn’t do anything that suggested that a power struggle was going on. Luke’s version omits John’s question to Jesus, “Why are you coming to me to be baptized?” which is in Matthew and Mark.
Jesus didn’t come as someone wanting to take over from John and steal all his followers. Jesus didn’t come to push John out of the river and start his own baptism show. Jesus came with respect, honoring the leadership and ministry John had, and recognizing John’s God-given authority to baptize. And John was clear with his followers, a better spiritual authority was just around the corner. John didn’t claim to be a messiah, and he didn’t let anyone call him such. He knew that Jesus was the one people had been waiting for, who would fulfill the promise that no one need live in fear. Who would share the message that God claims us all and sees us all as precious. God created us for glory and not for locking horns in power struggles.
Baptism is meant to be a sign that reminds us of this love. It’s meant to remind us that God is with us, we are not alone. All too often, baptism has been corrupted and turned into a ‘get out of hell free’ card. Although that idea was started in medieval times, it has had a long history of being used abusively. The ticket out of hell idea was originally supposed to assure people, and lower their anxiety. Instead it increased people’s shame and fear. It was abused to show who was an insider and who was not.
United Church Stewardship leaders say that “Baptism is about the affirmation that there is something sacred about life and that a piece of that sacred goodness is found deep within us. Baptism affirms the inherent worth of each of us and is a physical sign of a spiritual reality—that we belong to a loving God and that the goodness that comes from God is deep within us and serves as a communal symbol of God’s unconditional love.”
It’s easy to brush off this idea or pretend it doesn’t mean much in this world of discrimination, political turmoil, horrendous forest fires, and divisive conspiracy theories. But the reality is that we need to be reminded of the love God has for us just as we are. Baptism is not what we do for God, anyone looking at a newborn baby knows that they don’t need to be cleansed of any thoughts or deeds, they are too busy learning what the world looks like and what language sounds like and what food smells like. They are truly innocent. And we need regular cleansing of our need to be competitive, of our need to put ourselves down before others do, or our need to hide our flaws, or our need to be right. And this is something we wrestle with, in community as a collection of flawed but beloved human beings. Like God’s love, baptism isn’t something earned, or something bought or something won, it is a gift bestowed on us and recognized by a loving community as precious in God’s sight. It helps us remember that we too are gifts of God to the world. We are enough as we are.
So how do we respond to this astonishing claim that we are gifts of God to the world? I think that Jesus and John also model a response to that knowledge. Instead of locking horns, they looked each other in the eye, and treated each other’s gifts with deep respect. John acknowledged Jesus and his ministry with profound awe. “One is coming who will baptize you with fire”, he said, anticipating not just Pentecost, but the burning passion his disciples developed for sharing the healing and compassion that Jesus gave them. The fire of compassion for one another that would send them around the world with their message of hope and healing and love. And Jesus acknowledged John by coming and asking for baptism. Jesus didn’t put on any airs, he didn’t say, “Thanks, John, it’s time to tie up my sandals now and be my personal butler,” he said, “baptize me like you have baptized all these other people.”
What humbleness, what servant leadership that showed! Instead of us locking horns with those around us, what if we too looked our neighbor in the eye and saw them as also a beloved child of God, one to cherish and support. Just as if Biden came, looked Trudeau in the eye and said, “I want to become a Canadian citizen”, we can remind ourselves and each other that we are to see each other as a beloved child of God. Let us honor and respect the leadership of each other the way Jesus and John honored each other, as God loves us, and as we are called to love one another.