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Baptism of Our Lord A
Topic: #8 of 1088 for Sermons on Lordship of Christ
Scripture:
Matthew 3:13-3:17
Denomination: Lutheran
Date Added: January 2002
Audience: General Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Baptism of Our Lord Matthew 3:13-17 3 January 2002
Rev. Roger Haugen
“O How I love Jesus
O how I love Jesus,
O how I love Jesus,
Because he first loved me.”
Because he first loved me. Before I could do anything, before I could even think of needing to do something, Jesus loved me. Our stewardship program this year is called “Dessert first”. Now this is Dessert first! Imagine getting the good stuff first, before eating the spinach or meat and potatoes. Imagine being loved before we even breathed our first breath! We read in Jeremiah, “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you.”
We are conditioned to think that we must earn something like dessert. You know, eat your vegetables and then get the ice cream. Not so with God. We hear the good news that we are “my sons and daughters, the beloved, with whom I am well pleased.” All this before we do anything. It is simply a fact.
Jesus even gets the dessert first. Here he is being baptized and only after does he begin his ministry. Before he has done anything he hears the words from God, spoken for everyone around to hear, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.” All of this before he goes into the wilderness, to prepare for his ministry, to be tested. Then he returns to heal the sick, comfort the lost and give sight to the blind. He has done nothing, yet he is declared “beloved, well pleasing to God.”
Jesus returns from the wilderness to do as God wishes. Jesus returns to give life and hope to all people, sharing the love of God to all without price or consideration of worth or deserving. Jesus loves all people simply because we are lovable, we have been declared loveable by God.
This is the love Jesus shows to each of us -- a love without deserving, without having to do anything. This is the love that God showers upon Carissa and Tamara who are baptized today. A love that requires that they do nothing to deserve, that, in fact, they can do nothing to deserve it.
Of course, we love Jesus, “because he first loved me.” There is nothing we can do that will make God love us, God in Jesus Christ loves us already.
With our identity and worth established, we are free to live as God would have us live. To live by God’s measure, and not by anyone else’s. In baptism we commit ourselves to a life lived in response to this great love. How could we not share God’s love with others once we have experienced it ourselves. Our journey in faith is to learn how to live a life of response to this love. We commit ourselves to teach our children to live in response to this love in spite of all the messages they may receive to the contrary.
Along with Jesus, our ministry begins with our baptism. As Jesus went into the wilderness to be tested, we too, are tested. Life as a baptized child of God is not one that is without pain and suffering. In fact, as we baptize our children, we are committing ourselves to make their lives more difficult because we seek to teach them to live open to the needs and hurts of others. We are to live with Matthew 25 in mind, looking for those who are hungry, naked and thirsty, because it is in people such as these that we find Jesus. All of this in response to the love that was first given us.
Sometimes we take baptism lightly. Sometimes we see it as something to be done and that’s about it. We do not really
Rev. Roger Haugen
“O How I love Jesus
O how I love Jesus,
O how I love Jesus,
Because he first loved me.”
Because he first loved me. Before I could do anything, before I could even think of needing to do something, Jesus loved me. Our stewardship program this year is called “Dessert first”. Now this is Dessert first! Imagine getting the good stuff first, before eating the spinach or meat and potatoes. Imagine being loved before we even breathed our first breath! We read in Jeremiah, “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you.”
We are conditioned to think that we must earn something like dessert. You know, eat your vegetables and then get the ice cream. Not so with God. We hear the good news that we are “my sons and daughters, the beloved, with whom I am well pleased.” All this before we do anything. It is simply a fact.
Jesus even gets the dessert first. Here he is being baptized and only after does he begin his ministry. Before he has done anything he hears the words from God, spoken for everyone around to hear, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.” All of this before he goes into the wilderness, to prepare for his ministry, to be tested. Then he returns to heal the sick, comfort the lost and give sight to the blind. He has done nothing, yet he is declared “beloved, well pleasing to God.”
Jesus returns from the wilderness to do as God wishes. Jesus returns to give life and hope to all people, sharing the love of God to all without price or consideration of worth or deserving. Jesus loves all people simply because we are lovable, we have been declared loveable by God.
This is the love Jesus shows to each of us -- a love without deserving, without having to do anything. This is the love that God showers upon Carissa and Tamara who are baptized today. A love that requires that they do nothing to deserve, that, in fact, they can do nothing to deserve it.
Of course, we love Jesus, “because he first loved me.” There is nothing we can do that will make God love us, God in Jesus Christ loves us already.
With our identity and worth established, we are free to live as God would have us live. To live by God’s measure, and not by anyone else’s. In baptism we commit ourselves to a life lived in response to this great love. How could we not share God’s love with others once we have experienced it ourselves. Our journey in faith is to learn how to live a life of response to this love. We commit ourselves to teach our children to live in response to this love in spite of all the messages they may receive to the contrary.
Along with Jesus, our ministry begins with our baptism. As Jesus went into the wilderness to be tested, we too, are tested. Life as a baptized child of God is not one that is without pain and suffering. In fact, as we baptize our children, we are committing ourselves to make their lives more difficult because we seek to teach them to live open to the needs and hurts of others. We are to live with Matthew 25 in mind, looking for those who are hungry, naked and thirsty, because it is in people such as these that we find Jesus. All of this in response to the love that was first given us.
Sometimes we take baptism lightly. Sometimes we see it as something to be done and that’s about it. We do not really
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