Luke 24:13-35
Acts 2:14a, 36-41
April 23, 2023
Rev. Fa Lane
“Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ so that your sins may be forgiven.”
I love that hymn, God of the Sparrow God of the Whale. I like imagining the animal sounds that are an expression of excited joy, revelry, of praising God! Like the song of the bowhead whale as the creature says “Awe! (audio clip)
I am amused thinking of the chatter of high flying monkeys or morning birds vocalizing a morning praise! If I anthropomorphize just a bit, I like to think that their hearts are excited at life created by God; like the men in Emmaus, who said to one another of Jesus, “Were not our hearts burning within us when he was talking to us? How magnificent is it to think that we and a redwing blackbird and a grey squirrel and a black bear are created by the same God and can all be influenced by God’s presence to exclaim an amen in our own language.
The two men with whom Jesus walked on the road to Emmaus were part of a new band of men and women who’d just been on an emotional rollercoaster celebrating with the Passover meal, crying on Crucifixion Friday and stunned breathless on Resurrection Sunday. I suspect these two men were confused, fearful, maybe a little angry and wistful, if not hopeful for restoration after all as they talked together commiserating about what had happened in Jerusalem.
Those same men may have been present during the Acts story when Peter coalesces those who would follow Jesus to become a body, a church, that professes Christ as Lord. Peter incites an ancient Jewish practice of being immersed in water to be ritually purified. If someone had touched a dead body or been ill and unclean in some way, they needed to be restored. It is what he knows to do to reinstate one into the worshipping congregation. This immersion represented a change in status in regard to their qualification for full religious participation in the life of the community. So, when Peter insisted that everyone be baptized in Jesus’ name, it was an act of saying, I will participate in the community of Jesus. It was (and is) an acknowledgment of Christ’s exalted nature and promise to practice how Jesus had taught them to live. In Luke’s perception, this uniting act makes clear that a person is not a solitary disciple but one of an identified group, the “people of God” who live in a manner consistent with God’s Will.
Luke is the writer of both this Gospel account and the book of the Acts of the Apostles – that’s it’s full tile. In the Acts of the Apostles Luke develops the theme of “hope” for redemption and restoration. It is Israel’s hopes for liberation and restoration. It is in the acts done, such as being baptized, that we are gathered into a people of hope So, when we remember our baptism, we are restoring ourselves to a right relationship, drawing near to God.
Through baptism we join the universal church, the body of Christ. Whether the waters be in a basin, a country creek or the ocean, the words and act, the very water speaks to Christ’s burial – as when we are submerged in water – and then resurrected with Christ coming out of the water. Have any of you been submerged at baptism and came up out of the water? It is through water and the Holy Spirit that we are brought into union with Christ, with each other and with the universal church of every time and place.
Something miraculous happens when we submit to God’s will in baptism. Throughout Luke’s gospel he reminds us that miracles happen. The men in Emmaus encourage us to look for God in our every day encounters. We pray for the Holy Spirit be present in the water and upon the candidate asking God to initiate the sacrament. In this way, baptism is both God’s gift and our human response to that gift. We let our hearts be shifted as we walk in the woods, and come upon a spring God is all around us in nature.
Water is God’s gift in the natural world. It’s properties are able to purify and rejuvenate us. Remember, the Lord restores our souls and leads us beside still waters. Who doesn’t enjoy a swim or a bathtub at the end of a hard day? Even just soaking your feet takes stress away.
It is important that we not waste or spoil this precious resource but bless it. The Green Team, youth of this church and friends were been busy cleaning up the creek behind the church. That water is respite, a home and a food source for many birds and small animals. It’s also a treasure for those of us who walk by it.
Ensuring clean water for citizens of every town and village is a good and noble act. Many villages or small rural community do not have adequate safe water systems. I know that Reuben, in Nairobi, frequently tells me there have been no rains, the land is parched; there are no crops to eat. Less than 10 years ago Flint MI had a water crisis. Native American tribes have to litigate for their water rights where water levels have declined dramatically and growing demand for water plus climate change have reduced river sources. Organizations like the Water Project helps communities gain access to clean, safe water. You can help them.
Peter encourages us to repent to yield to God’s will, and accept baptized in Christ’s name. In yielding, we repent of our past sins and errors.
Let us repent of closing our minds and hearts to the ones in need; those whom we don’t see; the migrant workers on farms living in bad conditions and away from their families; the soil that is damaged from over farming, mining, or floods and chemical spills; the “essential workers” who during the pandemic put their lives and their family’s health at risk; the gay and transgender people who simply want to love whom their heart desires, have secure jobs and homes; the single parents trying to raise children on not enough sleep and not enough support; farmers, especially African American farmers who jump through bureaucratic hoops to produce crops that feed us all. Lord Have Mercy.
Let us repent of uncharitable thoughts, or doubting someone’s integrity, of harboring fear because of skin color, of anger and withholding love for LGBTQ individuals. Let us not curse them but bless them as the water of baptism reintegrate us into Christ’s Church, thankful for Christ’s body and work in the world on behalf of all of us. Let us bless the waters that clears our souls and remind us we are all siblings in God’s world. God’s beautiful and bountiful world.
As you leave worship, or later when you’re washing your hands or taking a glass of cool water. Thank God for the blessing of water.
Amen.
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