Baptism: God's Gift of Forgiveness - Acts 2:37-42
For the last two weeks, we have been examining the waters of
Baptism. We are in the midst of a
journey examining the fact that these waters, water that has been around since
the time of Creation…the waters placed on our heads or under which we were
immersed having existed since God’s Spirit hovered over them as time
began. The first Sunday we simply looked
at the fact that Baptism is a simply a gift.
It is a gift in the fact that it is a reminder of God’s grace…God’s
prevenient grace working in our lives before we are ever truly aware of it.
Last week we considered how Baptism is also an acknowledgement of
God’s gift of family. That through the
waters of our Baptism, we are made part of God’s family. In these waters we are adopted into the
family of God, we are made brothers and sisters with Jesus and with all who
have received the waters in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We become part of the largest family the
world has ever seen, a family not united by the DNA of our blood, but actually
through the blood of Jesus Christ.
Today we move forward to consider yet another gift that we find in
these waters of Baptism. In these
waters, we find God’s gift of forgiveness.
Imagine a culture in which water is tied to forgiveness—a culture
in which those in need of forgiveness are immersed in water, in need of someone
to save them. There is a description of such
a ceremony in The Interpreter. The idea of such a culture in which water
is tied to forgiveness sounds kind of shocking, but it should not be. The idea of tying the two together can be
seen from the beginning of the New Testament…each of the Gospel authors offers an account of Jesus’ cousin,
John the Baptizer, taking those who came to him at the Jordan River and
baptizing them for the forgiveness of theirs sins, calling them to repent—to
turn their lives back over to God.
Through the Gospel of Matthew we read of Jesus calling folks to repent
and return to God, and concludes the Gospel by telling the disciples to go into
all the world to make disciples through baptizing them in the Name of the
Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, and teaching them everything that Jesus
had commanded, which included the command to repent. Then here in Acts, as we read this morning,
As Peter began proclaiming the gospel of the good news of Christ’s redemptive
death and resurrection, when the folks wanted to know what they should do,
Peter said, “ ‘Repent, and be baptized….in the name of Jesus Christ so that
your sins may be forgiven….’” The ritual
of water for the forgiveness of sins is as much a part of our culture as it is
for the Ku tribe as described in the movie
There are some similarities and differences between how our waters
are tied to forgiveness and that of the Ku tribe.
How are they the same?
With both, the person in need of forgiveness is placed under the
waters. In Ku, the murderer is bound and
tossed into the river. For us, the
sinner, bound by sin itself, is placed under the waters of Baptism.
With both, the person who needs forgiveness cannot save
themselves. With the Ku, the murderer,
because he is bound, cannot swim to safety.
He must rely on someone outside of himself to come to his rescue. For us, bound by our sin, we are lost, not
drowning in water, but drowning in our sins, are unable to save ourselves. Nothing we can do can bring forgiveness and
set us free.
With both, the persons in need of forgiveness deserve death. With the fictional Ku tribe, the wages of
murder are life for life…the person deserves to die, and when he dies, justice
is served. With us, our sin warrants our
death…from the sin of Adam comes the promise that with sin, is death…Paul
reminds us that “…the wages of sin is death….”[i]
With both, it is not the water that saves, but it is the mercy
found under the water that saves…
With both, it is a family member of the one who was sinned
against, that must save us…with the Ku, it is any member of the family of the
one who was murdered. For us, for us, it
is the Son of God, the child of the one we have sinned against, who is the only
one who can save us…who can bring us forgiveness of our sins…but He did not
just risk His life to save us, he gave His life, He sacrificed Himself, to
bathe us in the mercy of God and bring us forgiveness of our sins. Like the Ku, He had a choice…in the
wilderness Satan tempted Jesus to think of and look out for Himself, but He
choose to follow God…in the Garden of Gethsemane, Jesus was tempted to choose
some other path that what God set before Him, but rather than save himself and
doom us to the justice that called for our death, Jesus went to the cross that
we might have life by being joined to Him.
We talked out first week how our baptism is our response to what
John Wesley called God’s prevenient grace.
We considered how the Holy Spirit brings God’s grace into our lives
before we are even aware that God is working upon us. With our baptism, John Wesley says that the
Holy Spirit is at work again bringing God’s grace to us in yet another
way. Wesley called it justifying grace.
With justifying grace, we come to acknowledge that we are sinners,
that we are in need of saving, that we deserve death, and can do nothing to
save ourselves. With that confession and
through the waters of baptism, we are joined to Christ…baptized himself by John
in the Jordan River…remember again what we said about the water having been
here since creation began…the waters that rolled off of Jesus’ head in his
Baptism are connected to the same waters that rolled off our head in our
baptism. Through our baptism we are
joined to Christ, to his life, to his death, and to his resurrection…and Jesus
died the death that we all deserve. The
death of Christ atoned for our sins, and through these waters we are joined to
that death, and rather than receive the death that we deserve when a Holy God
looks upon our unholy lives, we receive grace and mercy for God looks not at
our sin, but at Christ’s sacrifice…not at our ugliness, but at the beauty of
the Son…when we enter the waters, we find that Christ has dived in to keep us
from drowning in our sin.
My friends, here in these waters we find a life giving gift. We no longer have to struggle under the
weight of our sin, under fear of the penalty of death, with guilt that would
seek to drown us. Christ has saved us,
freed us, and allowed us to become forgiven and enjoy the mercy of God. Jesus calls us to come to Him…to confess our
sins…and receive this precious gift.
In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Spirit. Amen.
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