The Texts: Isaiah 42:1-9, Acts 10:34-43, Matthew 3:13-17
John the Baptist is known as a preacher of repentance. Proclaiming the Law
of God he accused the people and convicted them of being sinners. Then, John’s cousin Jesus entered the waters of the Jordan and asked John to baptise him. In the presence of perfection, John felt the accusation of the Law. He needed cleansing from his sins and tells Jesus, “I need to be baptised by You, and do you come to me?”
John not only knew Jesus was holy and righteous, but that He come to remove sins. Early, John saw Christ on the banks of the river and confessed, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world” (Jn 1:29). John is the sinner needing forgiveness, and yet Christ asks a sinner to baptise Him, the Holy One of God.
What a surprise this was for John. What a surprise this is for us! What is going on here? Why did Jesus seek John’s baptism? Our Lord answers John’s protests, saying, “Let it be so now, for thus it is fitting for us to fulfil all righteousness.” Only the God/man Jesus could fulfil God’s requirements to be our Saviour. That is why He was sent. Christ alone is holy and sinless and only He can keep God’s Law to perfection. Not you or me or anyone else.
We miserably fail God’s test for righteousness. First of all, we are born a sinner. Before we have had the chance to act in sinful ways we are marked as a transgressor of the Law. The older we get the more we sin. Despite our best efforts to improve we cannot save ourselves. Our words and actions do not recommend us; they condemn us. Eternal death is what we all deserve from birth.
Not Jesus. He is righteous from eternity. He is the Word made flesh (Jn 1:14). The only Son of God (Jn 3:16). Everything Jesus did and everything He went through was done for our salvation. At His circumcision He first bled to fulfil the Law for us. In the temple as a boy Jesus worshipped the heavenly Father, showing us what true devotion to God’s preached Word looks like, a Word He would one day fulfil in His cross and rising again.
According to the requirements of the Law Jesus was without sin. He had no need of a baptism of repentance. Yet He chose to identify Himself with the sinners He came to save. He didn’t put Himself above us, although He could have. He entered the Jordan in the place of you and me. Christ repented on behalf of us all, that we might turn to the Father, seek His mercy and be saved.
Standing with us in the Jordan, Christ placed Himself under the Father’s judgment. He is baptised by John and the Father’s verdict is clear, “This is My beloved Son, with who I am well pleased.”
The Holy Spirit descended on Him in the form of a dove. Not that Christ was ever without the Spirit. He is eternally one with the Spirit and the Father. But the Spirit’s descent reveals to the world Jesus is anointed by God to be the Messiah, because He is from God. Christ is an Epiphany. He is God among us to save us.
At Jesus’ baptism, the Father’s approving words and the Spirit’s descent upon Him marked the beginning of His earthly ministry. He preached and taught about the kingdom of God, called all people to repentance, and performed many miracles, showing Himself again to be the Saviour He was born and anointed to be.
Jesus was not transformed by His baptism; it only revealed Him to be the long-promised Messiah. By His baptism He transformed the waters of Baptism, so that everyone baptised in His name is washed clean of their sins and born again a child of God with the hope of heaven. Jesus didn’t need His sins washed away. He made the waters of Baptism a washing of regeneration and renewal of the Holy Spirit (Ti 3:5).
Baptism transforms us. It makes us a new creation, the old has passed away, behold the new has come (2 Cor 5:17). Baptism takes away the old Adam, drowning him and all sins that lead us away from God and into death. Then by the grace of God we are made alive, re-born a new creature, a child of God. We are born again as saints, with the Spirit of God living in us to lead us to keep the Law, to do good works and finally to bring us to life everlasting.
Baptism is the Gospel. It is a physical acting out of the Good News. It is a means of grace so that we would not rely on our faith or our decision to know that we are saved. Rather, we are to trust in God’s Word spoken and poured over us to know that we are the beloved children of God.
As Jesus stood in the waters of the River Jordan in the place of all people, so He is present in the waters of Baptism to transform us from objects of wrath to the holy ones of God. He is there by the power of His Word that commands Baptism and grants the gifts of forgiveness, adoption and life.
At Jesus’ baptism the three persons of the Holy Trinity are present: Father, Son and Spirit. God is present in all His holiness at your Baptism too. He is not there as a bystander to watch the proceedings, but to work through water and Word to give you new birth. Christ pours the benefits of His death and resurrection over you, the Spirit opens your ears to hear the Word of the Gospel, and the Father declares for heaven and earth to hear “You are now My beloved child; with you I am well pleased.”
The water of Baptism has power to do all this because God Himself enters that water by His Word, making it a life-giving water, rich in grace, and a washing of the new birth in the Holy Spirit (Small Catechism, Baptism, Third Part). This is why Baptism takes away sin, destroys death and every evil and opens the gates of heaven for us.
Jesus gives us His identity in Baptism so that we are re-made like Him: blessed, righteous and innocent. Baptism sanctifies us; it makes us holy and pleasing to the Father as if we had always been His first born. The opening of heaven at Jesus’ baptism means that it will forever be open to all those who enter the healing waters and trust in the power of God’s Word to cleanse and save, to make us holy and give us a future with Him.
Later in His life Jesus would face a baptism of a different kind. He said to His disciples, “I have a baptism to be baptised with, and how great is my distress until it is accomplished” (Lk 12:50). The baptism He refers to is the baptism of suffering and death on the cross of Golgotha.
Like His circumcision and baptism, Christ didn’t die for His own sins. He died for ours. By the wood of the cross Jesus bought our salvation. His Holy blood transformed a symbol of torture for the Roman Empire, into the symbol of grace and peace in the kingdom of God. The nails of crucifixion become the keys by which the gates of heaven are opened. His wounds the price of forgiveness; His cries to the Father were His intercessions for us; His dying the death we deserve; His resurrection our assurance for life after death.
The forgiveness, the life, the peace and the grace Christ earned on the cross and by His resurrection are given to you in Baptism. God transforms you in Baptism through the power of His Word and Spirit. Jesus’ words spoken in Baptism transform ordinary water that could be used in the garden or kitchen, into a cleansing water that takes away sins and gives life and salvation. God’s grace is given in full to all who are touched by those healing waters, but it is only of benefit to those trust God’s Word.
Jesus’ baptism announced the beginning of His earthly ministry. Your Baptism has begun your journey of faith in Christ from the font of salvation to your heavenly home. Your Baptism transformed you from nobody to a child of God. Never despise it, but look on it as the new beginning, as the most wonderful day in your life. The day you were saved. The day you were born again to eternal life. The day when you were made part of God’s holy family.
Go and live out your Baptism and the grace you were given that day. Let the words of God spoken over you that day never leave your heart. Never forget who God has transformed you to be and give Him thanks and praise Him for the gift of forgiveness and salvation made yours in Baptism. Praise Him by doing good works in His name that the world may know God’s saving grace: earned by Christ on the cross and granted to sinners in the waters of Baptism. Amen.
Let’s pray. Heavenly Father, as You revealed Jesus to be Your Son at His baptism, so You have made us Your children in our Baptism. Keep us trusting in Your Word that we may daily turn to our Baptism, see the grace You have poured into our lives and praise You for saving us. Amen.
The peace of God that passes all understanding, keep our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Amen.