The Baptism of Our Lord
January 12th, Year of Our + Lord 2025
Our Redeemer and Our
Savior’s Lutheran Churches
Custer and Hill City, SD
God Does Great Things
Through Baptism
Luke 3:16 – 22, Romans 6:1-11, Psalm 29
Audio of Sermon available HERE.
The voice of the Lord is over the
waters;
the God of
glory thunders, the Lord, over many waters.
How can plain water do such great things? Luther in his Small Catechism asks the obvious question concerning Baptism. When a person is baptized, it appears sweet, but unimpressive. And yet the Scriptures make such great promises concerning Baptism. Or “do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life. For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his.”
From Jesus we hear "Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.” And in Galatians we learn that “as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is not male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. And if you are Christ's, then you are Abraham's offspring, heirs according to promise.”
In Hebrews we are encouraged to approach the Holy Places of God, “to draw near with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water.” It is as Peter says, “Baptism now saves you.”
But how can plain water do such great things? It is not plain water that saves us, it is the Word of God, in and with the water, which saves. And faith, the heart which believes and trusts the promises of the Word joined to the Water. Faith receives God’s promises in Baptism, and so God’s kingdom comes.
Today we celebrate the Word entering the Water, that is we celebrate the Baptism of Jesus. For Jesus is the Word of God, made flesh, so that He could enter into the water, for us.
Almost 2,000 years ago, the voice of the Lord thundered over the Jordan, the Spirit descended asa dove, and Jesus revealed the glory of Baptism. For us and for our salvation, the pure and spotless Lamb of God entered into the water, and so He prepared all water, making it fit for Baptism. Jesus three years later commissioned the Eleven to make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Whenever the servants of the Church join these words to water in Holy Baptism, there again God speaks over the water, thundering His glory, by adopting another child, by forgiving sins, by saving a sinner.
How can water do such great things? Because God has chosen to work through water, and has tied it to the Cross. Jesus Christ began His work of taking on the sins of the world in the River Jordan, and He finished His great work of paying for all of those sins in His Baptism by fire on the Cross. As Paul teaches us, the Power of Baptism is the Work of the Cross.
The Word of God
declares that, for the sake of Jesus’ death, Baptism now saves you. Baptism saves you by giving to you the entire
work of Christ, the great exchange of your sin-doomed life for His sinless,
eternal life, the new and glorious life revealed on Resurrection morning. Jesus shares His life with you, in your Baptism.
The Lord sits enthroned over the flood. These gloriously wet words of our Psalm, along with the promises to Noah after the flood, and the promises to Moses at the Red Sea, all these promises of God and more are fulfilled in Jesus’ Baptism, and delivered to you, in yours.
Baptism now saves you, and it also changes you. If you haven’t figured this out yet, you should be warned. Jesus was driven directly from His Baptism into the desert, to be tempted. In a similar way, the Baptized become targets for Satan’s hatred. The alternative, being cut off from God and enslaved to sin and Satan, well, that is no alternative at all. But the Evil One tends to pay less attention to those who lack any connection to Christ. He focuses his malice on those whom God has called, those on whom God has lavished His promises, those who have put on Christ.
So you, the Baptized should remember that you are in the middle of the struggle, the struggle between good and evil, between God and Satan. But that’s right where you want to be, because Christ has won this battle. His victory is complete, and He promises to bring you through to victory, with Himself.
In Christ, you are safe from Satan’s attacks, but that doesn’t mean it’s going to be pleasant. Still, it is truly a comfort to be persecuted for your faith in Christ. Despite how you might feel in the midst of it, to have the battle brought to you is evidence that you truly are a soldier in the Lord’s army. Good News indeed!
Another reason it won’t be easy is because the battle lines are drawn right through you. No one likes to be persecuted, and no one should seek to have evil done to them. But the battle is also within you. You know who you are, baptized into Christ, and you also know how you should live. And you try. But you don’t succeed all the time. Neither do I. This is often the hardest part of the battle. For we who have been washed clean and set free from sin cannot live in it any longer. And yet within ourselves we find urges to do just that. The temptation of sin beguiles and calls to us. Too often, we are entangled. It is depressing. How can Baptism help us when we still sin?
One of my favorite illustrations for Baptism is new fallen snow. To look out the window in the morning and see the world, covered in pure white snow, is a wondrous thing. It is also a good picture of Baptism, where God clothes you in Christ. His righteousness, His pure white garment of goodness, is placed over your sins. And so, you are beautiful to God, in Christ.
We cannot, however, stand at the window and stare at the snow all day. Life must be lived. The dogs need to go out in the backyard, and it won’t be long before cars and trucks litter the snow-covered street with dirty tracks. Gazing at beauty won’t earn a paycheck, so you wield your shovel and clear a path. Sand, gravel and salt are cast around, to give us some traction, darkening the pure white snow, melting it into a dirty grey slush. It can’t be helped.
Likewise, even though it is not acceptable, even though our sin is a tragedy, and an affront to God, the truth is that in this life, the Baptized can’t keep their garments pure and white. We live, and we sin; we stain our garments. It is much worse than the loss of beauty when we break the new fallen snow. Our sin is an insult to God, a denial of who He has called us to be. It is depressing, and ugly. How can Baptism help us when we still sin?
When we lived in northeastern Montana, shoveling snow was often a losing battle, because the wind always seemed to blow. I would bundle up and go clear the walks and the driveway. But too often newly exposed sidewalks would be quickly covered again. To keep the white blanket from coming back would have required staying out in the cold, shoveling till the wind died down, or spring came. I couldn’t do it.
I distinctly remember one January, in the week running up to the celebration of the Baptism of Our + Lord. I was out fighting the snow and wind, and as I watched the grey sidewalk turn white again, at first I was mad. Why do we choose to live in such places, where 10 inches of snow, 20 below zero temps and 30 mile per hour winds mean that it is a Tuesday in January?
I was angry. But suddenly, thanks be to God, I laughed. I laughed, because the Holy Spirit reminded me that the devil has a much more frustrating problem, when he tries to torment wise Christians. The devil wields his shovel of guilt, trying to dig out your old sins, which once stained your white garment of righteousness. You should forget them, for they have been forgiven. But, the evil one knows how hard that is for you. Then he scatters the sand, gravel and salt of shame into the open sores of the stains you have added with your sins today. It hurts. It is ugly. It makes you doubt that you are saved.
But the Wind of God blows. That is, the Spirit of God is always at work, applying and re-applying the covering of Christ. The word ‘spirit’ is closely related to the both the words ‘breath’ and ‘wind.’ The lifelong value of Baptism is the fact that the Spirit of God, blowing His Word of forgiveness, is constantly renewing the Baptized, returning us to the state of perfect righteousness that we first received in Baptism. Wise Christians seek out this Wind of God, which the Spirit blows for them, through His Word.
Satan can’t keep up. Cross-shaped drifts of forgiveness blow in from God. Satan can’t outwork the Spirit of Christ. It must be depressing for the devil. Good. Depressing for Satan, and pure joy for the Baptized, the promise that, even though we don’t deserve it, all who believe and are baptized can be daily renewed in purity and righteousness, through the Word of Christ.
This is the form of Christian living in this world. We who have died and risen with Christ through our Baptism are then called to hear Him, daily, repeatedly, morning by morning, evening by evening, Sunday by Sunday. To hear of Christ and His work, to thank and glorify God for His grace. To feel the wind of the Spirit blowing through His Word, driving drifts of forgiveness over your sin. Restoring you, and sending you back out into the world, to work, and serve your neighbor, and confess the good news of Baptism.
We see this pattern of Christian living in the Words of Institution for Baptism. After telling the Eleven to make disciples through Baptism, Jesus then tells them to teach the Baptized to obey all that He commanded. Jesus isn’t saying we can or we must work in order to earn or keep our salvation. We are saved by grace through faith, not by our works.
Jesus does
mean that He wants us to be doing the things He has told His Church to do. Like hearing the Word, and gathering for
worship, receiving the Supper, and loving and serving your neighbor, in Jesus’
Name. Jesus commands these things, for
it is through these things that God preserves the faithful, in spite of
themselves. And it is also through these
things that God reaches out to the unbelieving world, and to His wandering
sheep, who have stopped living out their Baptisms.
This is your life, the life of the baptized believer. This is the life that flows from forgiveness. The life that leads to love, love for your fellow believer because of what you share in Christ. Love for the unbeliever because you know that Christ has died and risen for all people. Love that seeks to serve needs, because we have been served perfectly by Christ.
The love received by the Baptized prompts us to dare to speak the truth about sin, our own sin, and sometimes, when the Spirit calls you to the task, also the sins of others. Repenting and confessing his own sins, the baptized believer is also called to help other sinners see and understand sin, and then point them to the perfect covering of Christ and His forgiveness. The love of Christ moves Christians to humbly and gently speak the truth about sin, always for the sake of declaring the joy of forgiveness, the washing of regeneration and renewal, that is available for all, in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Fathers and mothers do this for their children. And sometimes, when they have been raised well, children do this for their fathers and mothers. Friends dare to speak such words to friends. Living in daily repentance, Christian hearts bathe their conversations in prayer, that we may be ready to give the reason for the hope that we have to any who ask us.
How can Baptism do such great things? Because of the One who was Baptized for us, Jesus Christ, true God and True Man, our Brother, and our Savior. The Lord Jesus Christ entered into the water, and He has applied His life-giving water to us. So we can remember and rejoice, every time we see water. When you wash your face, remember your Baptism. When the rains cleanse the earth, or the snow covers the world in beautiful spotless white, remember your Baptism. When you quench your thirst with cool water, rejoice that God has quenched your soul, with Himself, by your Baptism into Him. When you see a lake or the ocean, remember that God has placed you into the safety of the Ark of His Church, which no wave can sink.Doing all this would keep you thinking about your Baptism all the time, wouldn’t it? I mean water is all around us, you would be remembering your Baptism all day.
Good, for this will shape your mind like God the Father’s. For He is also thinking about your Baptism into His Son, all the time. God remembers your Baptism, and so you can rejoice, in the Name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, Amen.