Sermon - The Rev. Leah D. Schade
Reformation Lutheran Church, Media, PA
Jan. 11, 2009 - Baptism of Jesus
Text: Mark 1:4-11
When you think of the Jordan River, what kinds of images come to your
mind? You probably picture a wide, deep, swiftly flowing stream of water
gushing through the desert. You can probably picture John the Baptist out
there in the water, his camel’s hair cloak and sandals tossed on the
shore, and his body immersed up to his waist, his long beard just touching the
surface of the water. This river is sacred to all the descendents of
Abraham - to Jews, Christians and Muslims alike. Jordan is the river
Joshua crossed over after God parted the waters and allowed them to cross into
the Promised Land. “Crossing over Jordan” is a term we use for liberation
and entering into eternal life. The old spiritual, Deep River, will be
(was) sung by our Chancel Choir today. . .
Deep river, my home is over Jordan,
Deep river, Lord, I want to cross over into camp ground.
Yes, the image of Jordan River is a powerful symbol for us - deep, wide,
flowing, clean water that cleanses the body and soul. But do you know
what you would find if you went to the Jordan River today? It’s not what
you would expect. You would see a “thin rivulet of brown slime largely
obscured by reeds. Most of what now flows in between the Jordan’s banks
is human sewage. The river where John the Baptist proclaimed Jesus to be
the Messiah, a river so sacred it doesn’t need a priest’s blessing to be
considered holy water, is today, [hardly more than a latrine].” (Butters,
6).
I was dismayed to learn that “almost all the water that used to flow into the
river is now diverted for human use (mostly agriculture), and in past decades,
both the Israeli and Jordanian governments have blocked off the Jordan’s
sources. . . The decline of the river has had profound social and
environmental consequences for the Jordan Valley. It has reduced habitats
for the 500 million migrating birds . . . And it is decimating Palestinian towns
in the occupied West Bank - home to some fo the world’s oldest continuously
inhabited cities - which are slowly dying of thirst without access to the river
. . .” It’s so shocking that tourists and pilgrims coming to visit the
river, hoping to experience the history, spirituality and religious
significance of the sacred waters take one look at it and exclaim, “This is
it?”
It seems to me that the plight of the Jordan River is a poignant symbol for the fallen state of our world, and even the poisoned state of our souls. This once beautiful, healthy flowing river of water was created by God to be a source of life for the land and inhabitants on either side, human and non-human alike. But because of human greed, territorial fighting, and simple lack of foresight and ignorance of long-term consequences, the River has fallen into a state of poisonous ruin. The same can be said of so many gifts that God has given us. Of course we can name countless natural resources that have been destroyed or polluted almost the point of no return. But this also applies to human institutions themselves - ones that are supposed to provide sustenance, health and well-being to our society.
Think of the flow of money and credit. Ideally, this life-giving stream,
if you will, is supposed to support growth, generosity, the common good and the
pursuit of happiness. But human greed, lack of foresight, and
refusal to be concerned with the most vulnerable have reduced the stream to a
stagnant trickle in most areas of the world. The flow has been diverted
into great pools of wealth for a few, while the rest of the population
downstream is dying of poverty. The great rivers of economy in the world
have been reduced to shallow, stinky rivulets.
And this kind of fallenness doesn’t just happen on the world stage.
Sometimes it happens on a smaller scale, in one’s own family. Think of
the flow of caring, communication and love that is supposed to be like a
nourishing stream around each member of the family, supporting growth, healthy
development and mature relationships. But sometimes that flow is diverted
by selfishness, infidelity, addictions, battling egos, or abusive
violence. The life-giiving streams of the family can quickly dry up into
stagnant trickles of polluted water.
It is into these sorry waters of human sin that John came a-wadin’ two millenium ago. Baptism existed long before John ever dipped his toe in the Jordan. The Jewish ritual of immersion, or mikvah, was an ancient practice of purification. But John made a significant development in his use of immersion. The key word here is repentence, or in Greek metanoia. Metanoia comes from a root word that means, to turn around. Metanoia means, literally, to change one’s mind.
John wanted people to turn their lives around, to change their minds about how
they treated people, what their motivation was in life, and how they should
orient their decisions. Even as John was immersed in the then-clean
waters of the Jordan out in the desert, he knew that the crowds flocking to him
were coming from oppressive political, religious and cultural systems that were
drying up the meager streams of their lives. They were parched with a
thirst for moral and ethical behavior, justice, righteousness, and freedom from
the economic, religious and military giants that sucked them dry and turned
their lives into nothing more than little trickles of putrid, muddy water.
John knew that only metanoia, repentence, a turning around to face a new
direction would enable individuals and whole groups to change their lives and
change the world around them. His message and mission was one of telling
it like it is, confronting the people of power with their evil, and calling
even the powerless to take a good, hard look at their lives and see where they
needed to make changes, get right with their neighbor and God, and take those
important first steps that would lead them into a new, sanctified life.
He believed that the kingdom of God was imminent, and that the person who would
usher in this new kingdom was right around the corner.
What surprised him was that the man of whom he spoke was standing right there
on the shore listening to him that day. And that this man waded into that
water asking for baptism. John knew that this was a man who did not need
to be cleansed. And yet he came to those waters. Why? Jesus
didn’t need the act of baptism. But I think he realized that the act of
baptism needed him.
This ritual of cleansing and repentance was a cornerstone of Jesus’
ministry. Jesus knew that the changing of one’s heart and mind was a
prerequisite for the in-breaking of God’s reign of justice and mercy in one’s
life, and in the society at large. There’s something about turning around
and seeing things from a different perspective that allows God to surprise you,
open you up to what God is working on, and engage you in this new vision for
life.
Let’s try this for a minute. I want you to stand up, turn around and face
the back of the church. Let’s just experiment. If you are able -
could you please stand up. Now turn 180 degrees and face the back of the
church. For those of you in the balcony, I apologize for disappearing
from view for a minute. You’ll just have to go by the sound of my voice.
(Walking to the back of the church) Now - things look different from
this perspective, don’t they? You can see that we placed the baptismal
font right here at the entrance of the church this morning. Maybe you
even noticed it as you came in. You see, as we sit in these pews, we
usually face the altar, we gaze upon the cross. Our attention is meant to
be focused on God. But one of the things that the baptism of repentance
is meant to show us is that you cannot focus on God without also focusing on
the world and our relationships with those outside these walls. If you
want to get right with God, you gotta get right with your spouse and your
children, and your in-laws. If you get right with your employees and your
shareholders and your customers, you will be one step closer to being right
with God. Metanoia - turn your life around, turn your heart and your mind
around. Look at things from a different perspective in order to see
things the way God sees them. Get right with those most vulnerable, and
you’ll get right with God. When you get right with the water itself,
respecting it, treating it as a resource to be shared and protected instead of
hoarded and used without regard for others . . . when you get right with the
water, you get right with God.
And, I am happy to report, the metanoia is already happening. People are
taking a long hard look at their lives, and their decisions, and their spending
habits, and their actions, and they are changing their minds. I would
venture to say that a mass metanoia is taking place in this country. We may
not all agree on what changes to make, but I think we can all agree that change
is needed. There is a movement, en masse, of economic, political, and
ethical turning around, and it’s happening the world over.
In fact, would you believe it’s even happening along the Jordan River?
“The plight of the Jordan Valley is galvanizing a new generation of
environmental activists in the region . . . For all the communities that live
along the Jordan, they realize that sharing its blessings is an opportunity to
nurture the region’s fragile peace.” With the latest testing of that
peace in Gaza, we may be tempted to despair that it will ever take root and
grow. But yesterday, January 10, marked the two-year anniversary of the
joint signing of the “Memorandum of Understanding” to create the Gesher Peace
Park along the Jordan River. Mayors in Israel, Jordan and Palestine each
signed the memorandum, recognizing the potential for developing their
communities as religious and eco-tourists spots. Key leaders in that
region are experiencing a metanoia, a changing of hearts and minds, and are
determined to reverse the state of pollution and ecosystem destruction in the
river. They are working together to create a Peace Park on an island in
the middle of the river, where Jordanians and Israelis may one day meet without
passports or visas. Says a director of the joint environmental group
Friends of the Earth Middle East: “War will not generate water. But
peace can.”(Butters, 6.)
That is metanioa. Oh, what God can do with people who are willing to see
things from a different perpsective, who are willing to turn around and look at
things from a different point of view. That’s what Jesus knew about
God. That’s why Jesus wanted to be baptized - to draw people into this
mind-changing, heart-changing, life-changing metanoia. God is still using
the waters of baptism to effect that change in people. Not just
individuals but whole groups of people who are willing to turn and see things
differently. When you leave today - pass by that font, touch those
waters, trace the cross on your forehead with the droplets. And turn your
heart to God. Amen.
Source: Butters, Andrew Lee, “Postcard: Jordan Valley”, Time Magazine, September 8, 2008.