Year AMatthew 3:13-17

The Baptism of the Lord

READINGS

  1. Matthew 3:13-17
  2. Mt 3:11-12
  3. Mt 11:11-14
  4. Psalm 2:7
  5. Gen 8:6-12
  6. Gen 1:2

HOMILY

This is a feast with which, as each year goes by, I become more and more aware of how important it is and how little I had understood earlier about why this is remembered so often.

One of the reasons is because so much depends on understanding the relationship between John the Baptist and Jesus.

There was an old way of talking about all these passages as though, when Jesus came along, John the Baptist's disciples were probably in some sort of rivalry with Jesus' disciples, so the Gospel writers had to come up with some sort of complicated way to settle the rivalry in the text.

That seems to me to be a complete misreading of what's going on, for it presupposes that the Gospel writers themselves were consumed with jealousies rather than understanding something entirely different that is going on.

So Jesus comes from Galilee to John at the Jordan to be baptized by it.

Jesus is coming deliberately.

Remember that in a previous Gospel, we had John preaching about the one who was to come.

John said the 'one who is more powerful than I is coming after me I'm not worthy to carry his sandals; he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and Fire; his winnowing focus in his hand etc etc'.

John used the word the "powerful" one, which is referring to God, but he saw it in a comparative way.

John saw someone who was going to be tougher than he, more powerful than he who was going to bring vengeance in some way upon the people.

He saw the fulfillment of the prophets in that way.

Later in the Gospel, which we also had in Advent this year, following Saint Matthew's text, we have the time when Jesus is with John the Baptist's disciples: go to see Jesus and say if are you the one who is to come or we should wait for another.

Jesus answers and then talks about John the Baptist saying he's the greatest of all the prophets and yet the very least in the Kingdom of Heaven.

Then Jesus gives the very famous line about violence from John's days until now all the Kingdom of Heaven is taken by violence.

Now I think that, here in the passage of the baptism, we see something about a very key point that's being brought out.

How Jesus both is the stronger one and yet he's not really in comparison with John the Baptist.

So here we have Jesus coming to the Jordan to be baptized by him having to take advantage of the whole prophetic setup, which John put together.

Remember that John represents all the prophets: Elijah, Moses, Joshua, every single one of these prophetic memories described by his clothing and the place (Jordan) to be baptized by him.

So Jesus is coming to fulfill all that.

Now, John would have prevented him saying 'I need to be baptized by you and you come to me'.

In other words, John recognizes a superiority to Jesus, but misses the point: it's not a question of superiority, it's something entirely different.

Jesus is not a continuation of greater and greater figures. Jesus is something else and it's very important.

And Jesus answered him 'let it be so now.'

Jesus is not expecting John to understand the distinction. He's just saying the time will come when you will understand this (or at least your disciples will).

for it is proper for us in this way to fulfill all righteousness it behooves us 

'It is befitting for us' is one of the key terms in theology, in which so many people talk about the necessity of this or that, always being a word with a tightness about it that doesn't understand Grace, but the proper, the befitting meaning this is how the Creator does things.

in this way to fulfill all righteousness 

All righteousness means the whole of the prophets and the law.

Remember that, in Matthew, it's the prophets and the law rather than the law and the prophets.

Matthew understands that the law itself is prophetic.

It's pointing towards a prophetic fulfillment, which is why Jesus is the prophetic fulfillment and so here are all righteousness: that of the law and that of the prophet.

And the fulfilling all righteousness is going to include Jesus occupying the space, the place of death.

Why? Because only thus can the Holy Spirit be given.

In the Torah, the whole point of the Holy place in the Temple is that it is kept from death.

Nothing to do with death can ever be in it, as if God were allergic to death.

Quite rightly, God is the ever-living one, the almighty one.

The notion of God's deathlessness is seen as something that it needs protecting against by us.

It's in rivalry with our lives, but Jesus has come here so as to occupy the place of death as the opposite of the Hebrews understands very clearly, which is what's going to enable the Holy Spirit, the spirit of life, to be given to us, so that we can begin to live as if death were not.

And that is how, thanks to Jesus fulfilling the law by going through even what the law prescribes, the death that he is going to be able to fulfill all righteousness.

John presumably not entirely understanding what Jesus is talking about, but understanding that there is a way in which what he's been doing prophesying what is to come and what Jesus is going to do, which is to actually perform the definitive final sacrifice, whereby God as son comes in and offers himself a sacrifice to us occupying the space of death, so that we may be set free from it forever.

It's very unlikely that John understood at the time; it's only after a long long time that we begin to understand it, but John consents.

So at this stage, John baptizes Jesus. And when Jesus had been baptized, just as he came up from the water.

The word 'coming up' is the standard word referring to ordination of priests at the time.

The understanding is that, once you had been baptized or washed as a priest, you had been through death; so now you were able to stand in the Holy place.

The Holy place was understood to be the place of Abundant Life, God's effervescent life, so you would be able to share in the Holy space with the Angels and Saints.

The ordination of of priests was different from Washings for forgiveness of sins or Washings for various forms of cleanliness; but here, they're coming up; and is the coming up of the great High Priest.

suddenly the heavens were opened to him 

Meaning exactly that, as he was ordained, he was all automatically in the Holy place: the Holy place was opened to him.

In other words, it had started to come about on Earth that which had been before.

The foundation of the world was now being made available on Earth and Jesus saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and a lighting on him.

In the New Testament, we move gradually backwards to the beginning of creation.

Not only all the prophetic uses of water, but now back to Noah, who when the whole world was being destroyed by God's Wrath in Genesis, sent out the bird.

The first time it came back, the second time it didn't come back, because it had settled.

So here the Spirit of God settling on Jesus like a bird, but even more than that, the Spirit of God (he doesn't say the Holy Spirit, but the Spirit of God like a dove) was the Spirit that hovered over the waters the beginning of Genesis.

Remember that this is the the fluttering of a bird.

This is the bird, the Spirit that hovered over the waters before creation, which is a lighting on him.

In other words, at last the creator has come amongst us as human and is going to fulfill creation in going to his death, as great high priest, so as to open up for us the possibility of entering into the fullness of creation.

All of that is foreseen here.

and the voice from Heaven says this is my son the Beloved 

This is a quote from a Psalm, which is a reference the same Psalm about Melchizedek.

It's the song about the great High Priest coming in.

Note that here it says this is 'my son'.

In other words, this was done for other people to hear.

Jesus is doing something deliberately for us to make clear the sense of what he's going to do.

This is 'my son, the Beloved' and probably the word 'the Beloved', which include beautiful translations like on 'who my favorite rests', 'in whom I am complacent', which are also a reference to Abraham's way of referring to Isaac or God's way of referring to Isaac as Abraham's beloved son, because the same word, which is translated as only begotten in Hebrew is often translated in Hebrew as beloved.

Here is God's promise that God will fulfill, God will provide the sacrifice, God is not going to sacrifice that that's something we do, but God's going to provide, so as to undo our sacrificial world from within, by undoing death with whom I am well pleased.

This is part of my being not only looking at things and seeing that it's good, but being well pleased.

This is the fullness of humanity coming into being to open up creation and the kingdom of heaven for us.

So we get this wonderful rich scene in Matthew's Gospel of the Creator coming in as human to occupy death and open up creation, something that John the Baptist had understood was more powerful than he, but not in a comparative sense.

Something way beyond what he could have imagined and something entirely without vengeance or violence, which is going to be for so many people the great stumbling block.