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The
Baptism of Christ Mark
1:9-15 Within
these few verses is revealed the very nature of Christ. (Mark 1:9-15 NIV) At that time Jesus came from Nazareth in Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. {10} As Jesus was coming up out of the water, he saw heaven being torn open and the Spirit descending on him like a dove. {11} And a voice came from heaven: "You are my Son, whom I love; with you I am well pleased." {12} At once the Spirit sent him out into the desert, {13} and he was in the desert forty days, being tempted by Satan. He was with the wild animals, and angels attended him. {14} After John was put in prison, Jesus went into Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God. {15} "The time has come," he said. "The kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news!" The Outward SignsSometimes,
God just has to put up a sign post for us.
When important things are happening – and the advent of Christ is the
important thing in human history – God must explain it to his beloved
children. The baptismIt
often puzzles Christians: John is
preaching a gospel of repentance. Jesus
comes to him to be baptized; but
Jesus is sinless – why the need? Even
John sees it that way, in the other Gospels.
The anointing of the SpiritThe
original language here makes it clear that the Spirit is not a bird.
Rather, the Spirit, unseen, descends like a dove.
Why is this done?
God’s voiceThe
unity of God requires that all three persons be present, and so the voice of God
is heard. We see in this three
things:
The Nature of the TrinityPermit
me to re-use a model that might make more sense than some others.
As human beings we have a great deal of difficulty in the saying that God
is three, yet one. It’s because we think that such a thing cannot be.
But we have examples even in our own lives of this;
I borrowed this one from Dorothy Sayers. Consider
that you are a mystery writer (which she was).
First there is the idea for the book – locked up in your head where no
one can see it. You might say,
“I’ve a great idea for a new book!” You
write it down; it gets published
(well, some writers do get published) and out comes the incarnation:
the published work. If the
work is great enough, it may actually have an effect on peoples’ lives.
That would parallel the Spirit working in us. So
saying, let us consider the three persons in the Trinity. God the FatherAquinas
put it well: the essence of God is
his existence. Surely he must exist,
and exist forever – for nothing ever caused its own existence.
Therefore all that has existence must have been created by the one who is
existence. What
do we know about this existence? When
we say, “God is” – it’s the way he introduced himself to Moses[1]
- what do we find?
All
of these are his attributes; so we
say that God is his attributes. He
is perfectly love, for example – the source, the author, the exemplar of love.
But his attributes come in two varieties:
So
what, then, can God do with mankind? The
righteous, holy God can have nothing to do with us.
The loving God yearns to take us in his arms.
His “oneness” says he cannot do both.
But God is one – in three. Jesus ChristThe
solution to the problem is found in Jesus, at the Cross.
He is the mediator – perhaps we might say the bridge – between man
and God. He is the solution to this
dilemma about God.
How
is this done? Through the
atonement. Our sins are as a debt
to be paid – and we are the paupers who cannot pay them. But God sends his son to be the payment for those sins, and
thus our relationship to God can be restored on the basis of the righteousness
and sacrifice of Christ. God’s
holiness is satisfied; his love is
fulfilled. But
then what? Surely it is not
sufficient to see salvation and live unchanged;
if we are crossing over the bridge from sin to holiness we must change.
For that, there is the Holy Spirit. The Holy SpiritThe
primary purpose of the Spirit is simple: He
is here to convict the world of sin and judgment to come. [6]
But
there are other purposes as well:
This
– as we said – must produce change in our lives. If we cross over from darkness to light, it should show
clearly. How? Is this not the fruit of the Spirit?[9] The First YearIn
this very brief account Mark skips over the first year of Jesus’ ministry.
We know this from the parallel accounts;
it is likely that Mark, being a friend of Peter, starts his detail from
when Peter joined Jesus. But before
this year can happen, we have a strange event – the temptation in the
wilderness. Fully humanIf
there is anything which defines “human”, it’s temptation.
Christ is fully human, like us, and therefore is tempted, like us.
The level of the temptation is matching to his stature as a man – none
of us is ever tempted beyond what we can bear – and therefore is much greater
than anything we could bear. But it
is very human: we see the
temptations of the flesh, the world and the spirit. But
notice something that is absent here. The
Father and the Spirit are present at the baptism, but they appear to be absent
in the wilderness. God often does
that to us. It is like letting a
little child take a few steps on his own; in
no other way will he learn to walk. Jesus
does this for forty days. He
understands our temptations. Fully DivineThe
Spirit sent him into the wilderness. The
one who is fully divine always listens to the commands of God, even when the
change of location looks really bleak. It is the mark of the divine nature of Christ that he went
willingly where the Spirit sent him. The
temptation – Mark doesn’t mention the details here – is over, and we see
another aspect of the divine nature of Christ.
If you are one of God’s children, after the temptation comes the
comfort. In this instance, in the
form of angels. And who knows?
Maybe some of us have entertained angels unaware – as they were
comforting us. The resultThe
time has come. Jesus begins his
preaching ministry. There is no
sense of waiting, holding back or delay. It’s
just “get on with it.” What
then does our Lord preach?
Do
we see it as good news? Do we see
it with the authority of God in it? Are
we really the children of the kingdom of God? |