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INJ
St Matthew 3:13-17
'The Baptism of Our Lord'
Morning Service
The Baptism of Our Lord (Epiphany Octave) | January 13, 2008
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Dear Saints,
Jesus was thirty when He went down to the Jordan to be baptized by His cousin, the prophet John the Baptist. John was baptizing for the forgiveness of sins. But Jesus is perfect, He needs no forgiveness. Why is He baptized?
Imagine a huge flock of sheep all gathered on the bank of the Jordan, pressing toward the water. One by one they go down to John, standing there in the river. Now these sheep are filthy, disgusting, covered in filth and black smudge. They have burrs and thorns caught in their wool, and they are ragged, nasty looking sheep.
That's you. That's me.
And as these sheep step into the water and John pours water over then and says, “I baptize you for the forgiveness of all of your sins,” then all of the muck and filth washes off of these sheep, these lambs, and they walk out of the other side of the river pure, white, gleaming. Sheep after sheep comes into the water, and all of the dirt and blood is washed off. Sheep after sheep is washed clean, while the water is covered, like a swamp or an oil spill.
Now imagine that in the middle of all of these dirty disgusting sheep there is one sheep who is white, gleaming, stunning to look at. This Lamb is without spot or blemish, perfect in every way. And now this perfect white woolly Lamb comes to the edge of the water, and John sees Him, and tries to prevent Him coming into the filth, saying, “I need to be baptized by you, and do You come to me?”
But this perfect Lamb answers, saying, “Let it be so now, for thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.” So this perfect Lamb steps into the water, and as He does all the filth and muck and stain and thorn and dirt and blood that is swirling around on the water is absorbed onto Him; His wool is saturated with your uncleanness and my unrighteousness. All of it. And this Lamb walks out of the river bearing all the filth of all the sheep of all the world. And now the water is clear and pure, and this Lamb is near unrecognizable.
And there is John, in the river, and He points to this Sheep and says, “Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.” This is Jesus, who knew no sin, the One whom God made to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him. “Surely He has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows.” [Isaiah 53:4]
Dear Saints, in this image we have the baptism and the death of Jesus and our baptism all wrapped up together, how they should be. For the baptism of Jesus is the first step on the road that ends at the cross, and at Jesus' cross He fills up the promise of the forgiveness of all sins, the gift that baptism gives to us.
We've been talking a lot lately about how Jesus bears our sins; how He takes on Himself our sinfulness. This is key to understanding the work of the Holy Trinity in our salvation. Dr Luther called this teaching the “Great Exchange.”
There is a story told about Luther, I've never seen it in the histories, so it might the apocryphal, but it at least sounds like Luther. You all know that Luther had the Bible's teaching down that we can do nothing to save ourselves, that salvation is a work of God alone. So someone asked him, “Have you contributed anything to your salvation?” His answer was... “Yes... I've given Jesus my sin, my death, my hell, my punishment...”
This is how our salvation is, we give sin and death and wretched bondage to the devil, and the Lord gives us in exchange forgiveness and life and salvation. This is a great exchange indeed.
What would a decent exchange be? You see a beautiful home, and you go to buy it, and the owner says “You give me $200,000 and I'll give you this house.” That's a decent exchange, a good one depending on the house. Here's a better exchange: the owner of the home says, “You give me your car, and I'll give you this house.” Now we're getting somewhere, but let's go even further, the man says, “You give me that half-eaten bag of corn-nuts, and I'll give you this house.” This is getting to be a really good deal, at least it is if you have a bag of corn nuts. This is a good exchange. But this is not yet what is going on with Jesus. We have to go further. The man says, “You give me that bag of garbage, the one with the diapers and banana peals, you give me that, and I will give you this home.” Now that is a great exchange.
But Jesus goes even farther, He takes our sin, our death, our wretchedness, the wrath and hell that our iniquities have earned, all of this for all of us, and He gives us His kingdom, His name, His holiness, His perfection, His Holy Spirit, His life (eternal life), His hope, His resurrection. He takes what is ours, what is bad, and He gives us what is His, what is good. The great exchange. “For our sake He made Him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God.” [2 Corinthians 5:21]
Such an exchange is unheard of! There is nothing, dear saints, that can compare to the riches of God's mercy for us, to His compassion and boundless love.
If you want to see what we have given Jesus, then we simply look to the cross. That's where He really gets it. And there we see the shame and forsaken-ness and suffering that we deserve, that is ours, handed over and gladly received by Jesus.
And all of this is brought to us in the gift of our baptism. That is where the exchange is completed. Where Jesus gives us what is His, His name and life and joy and forgiveness. The font is where we are reborn as children of the heavenly Father, where we adopted as God's children, where we are made heirs of the eternal kingdom, and where we are rescued from the devil and death and sin.
Remember the words that the heavenly Father spoke of Jesus at His baptism? We heard them in the text, “Behold, a voice from heaven said, 'This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.'” Even this, dear saints, the good pleasure of His Father, our Jesus shares with you. In you baptism you are declared a child of God, and by faith you too have these words spoken from heaven to you, “You are my beloved children, with whom I am well pleased.”
My this voice of your baptismal promise give you comfort and peace. Amen.
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Pastor Bryan Wolfmueller
Hope Lutheran Church | Aurora, CO