The Baptism of Our Lord
January 11, 2026
Isaiah 42.1-9; Matthew 3.13-17
+Well, this past week was one of those
weeks in which many of us thought: everything we feared is coming true.
It was an ugly week.
It was a violent week.
Renee Nichole Good’s death has hit all
of us hard.
Well, all of us who care.
She is one of us.
We see ourselves in her.
This poet, mother, spouse.
This person who, like we try to do,
stood up against a posse of deputized gang members.
And she paid the price for it.
Remember all those times I said I hope
none of us become martyrs?
Well, that reality hit close to home
for all of us with her murder.
It is important to remember what martyr
actually means.
It means witness.
A witness to the truth.
A witness to what is right.
A witness against the forces of
darkness that seem to prevail in our nation right now.
And the fact that so much of this is
being perpetrated by so-called Christians is a double gut-punch for us who are
striving to follow Jesus and do what we feel is our baptismal call in this
world.
All of this is important to remember on
this Sunday in which we commemorate the baptism of Jesus in the river Jordan.
It is important for us to remember that
when, in a few moments, we remember and renew our baptismal vows.
It is important to remember that when
we are sprinkled with holy water in remembrance of the water of our own
baptisms.
On Facebook yesterday, a Facebook
friend of mine posted this:
JESUS DID NOT ENTER THE RIVER JORDAN SO
YOU COULD USE HIS NAME TO COMMIT ATROCITIES.
Let’s repeat that again:
JESUS DID NOT ENTER THE RIVER JORDAN SO
YOU COULD USE HIS NAME TO COMMIT ATROCITIES.
Our job as baptized followers of Jesus
is not to commit—or condone—atrocities.
Our job is what:
To strive for justice and peace and to
respect the worth and dignity of every person.
Well, let me tell you:
I am struggling to respect the worth
and dignity of some people this morning.
But that’s our challenge.
And that’s what we must do.
Because if we don’t, we become THEM.
And that is not an option for us.
Our baptism is not, as you have heard me say a million times, some sweet
little christening event for us as Christians.
It is not a quaint little service of
dedication we do.
For us Episcopalians, it a radical
event in our lives as Christians.
Just as the Eucharist is a truly
radical event in our lives, over and over again.
Baptism and the Eucharist are the events
from which everything we do and believe flows.
They are the ground of being for our radical
beliefs, for our activism and our standing up and speaking out.
In baptism, we are marked as Christ’s
own.
For ever.
It is a bond that can never be broken.
We can try to break it as we please.
We can struggle under that bond.
We can squirm and resist it.
We can try to escape it.
But the simple fact is this: we can’t.
For ever is for ever.
And knowing that is not cause for us to
simply sit back and bask in the glow of that knowledge.
To know that—to acknowledge that—is to then
go out in the world and live out that commitment.
In the waters of our baptism, God spoke
to us the words God spoke to Jesus in today’s Gospel reading.
In those waters, the words we heard in
our reading from Isaiah were affirmed in us as well.
Here is my servant, whom I uphold,
my chosen, in whom my soul
delights;
Those words are our words.
Those words were spoken to us by our God
in those waters.
In those waters, we were all made equal
to each other.
In those waters, the same water washed
all of us—no matter who are.
In those waters, there are no class
distinctions, no hatred, or discrimination or homophobia or sexism or war or
violence.
In those waters, we are all equal to
one another and we are all equally loved.
In a few moments, we will stand and
renew the vows we made at baptism.
When we are done, I will sprinkle you
with water.
The sprinkling of water, like all our
signs and actions that we do in this church, is not some strange practice a few
of us High Church-minded people do.
That water that comes to us this
morning is a stark reminder of those waters in which we were washed at
Baptism—those waters that made us who we are, those waters in which we all
stand on equal ground, with no distinctions between us.
Here at St. Stephen’s, all of our
ministry—every time we seek to serve Christ and further the Kingdom of God in
our midst—is a continuation of the celebration of baptism.
Sometimes we lose sight of that.
Sometimes we forget what it is that
motivates us and charges us to do that wonderful work.
Sometimes we forget that our ministry
as baptized people is a ministry to stand up and speak out against injustice.
Our ministry is to echo those words
from Isaiah God spoke to us at the beginning of our ministries:
I have put my spirit upon [you];
[you] will bring forth justice
to the nations.
[You] will faithfully bring
forth justice.
[You] will not grow faint or be crushed
until [you have] established
justice in the earth;
Those words speak to us anew this
morning.
I know how frustrating it is right now.
I know we ae feeling faint.
I know we are feeling crushed.
But now is not the time.
It is time for us to bring forth
justice, certainly to our nation.
It is time for us to establish justice
in our world in which justice needs to be established.
Today, let us be renewed in our call to
justice.
Today, on this first Sunday in
Epiphany, it is time to stand up and speak our and to rail against the forces
of darkness in our world.
When we do, it is then that we live out
our baptism.
It is then that we truly live our
baptismal life.
Let us be emboldened by our baptism.
Let us truly live our faith in a God of
justice by speaking out and pushing back.
Let us boldly live out our baptismal covenant
in all that we do as Christians in seeking out, speaking out and doing all we
can in love and compassion and justice.
JESUS DID NOT ENTER THE RIVER JORDAN SO
YOU COULD USE HIS NAME TO COMMIT ATROCITIES.
Jesus entered those waters to show us
the way forward.
Forward into a world in which justice
will prevail,
That is what we are called to do.
Now.
And always.
Just as I was leaving for church this
morning, Annette Morrow sent me this:
This
is from Matt Moberg, Chaplain for the Minnesota Timberwolves:
If
you’re a church posting
prayers
for peace and unity today
while
my city bleeds in the street,
miss
me with that softness you only wear when it costs you nothing.
Don’t
dress avoidance up as holiness.
Don’t
call silence “peacemaking.”
Don’t
light a candle and think it substitutes for showing up.
Tonight
an ICE agent took a photo of me next to my car, looked me in the eye and told
me, “We’ll be seeing you soon.”
Not
metaphor.
Not
hyperbole.
A
threat dressed up in a badge and a paycheck.
Peace
isn’t what you ask for
when
the boot is already on someone’s neck.
Peace
is what the powerful ask for
when
they don’t want to be interrupted.
Unity
isn’t neutral.
Unity
that refuses to name violence
is
just loyalty to the ones holding the weapons.
Stop
using scripture like chloroform.
Stop
calling your fear “wisdom.”
Stop
pretending Jesus was crucified
because
he preached good vibes and personal growth.
You
don’t get to quote scripture like a lullaby
while
injustice stays wide awake.
You
don’t get to ask God to “heal the land”
if
you won’t even look at the wound.
There
is a kind of peace that only exists
because
it refuses to tell the truth.
That
peace is a lie.
And
lies don’t grow anything worth saving.
The
scriptures you love weren’t written to keep things calm. They were written to
set things right.
And
sometimes the most faithful thing you can do
is
stop praying around the pain and start standing inside it.
If
that makes you uncomfortable—good.
Growth
always is.
Amen.