SOLEMNITY OF
THE LORD’S BAPTISM
Luke
3:15-16.21-22
During the Epiphany last Sunday, we
reflected on the manifestation of the Lord to the nations represented by the
magi and the shepherds. On this Sunday
of the Lord’s baptism, we see the “Trinitarian theophany” or the manifestation
of the three persons of the Trinity in one single event: Jesus who was being
baptized, the Father uttering His voice and the Holy Spirit descending in the
form of a dove. The Lord’s baptism
happened before He embarked on His public ministry. The same “Trinitarian theophany” would occur again towards the end of the public ministry of Jesus in
the Transfiguration. Between these two
theophanies was Jesus’ proclamation of God’s Kingdom through His words and
works.
After we have opened all our Christmas
gifts, the Church reminds us that the greatest gift next to our life is our
faith which is given to us in baptism.
In the liturgical calendar, after the Lord’s Baptism the Church enters
the Ordinary Time. After all the
festivities of Christmas and New Year, we embrace once again the ordinariness
of life in witnessing our faith. During
His baptism before His public ministry, Jesus was reminded by His Father of His
identity: “You are my beloved Son, with
you I am well pleased.” As we enter
into the simplicity of this season, we are also reminded of that profound
reality namely our true identity given to
us when we were baptized as if the Father was saying to us personally “You are my beloved child, with you I am well
pleased.”
It
was important to Jesus to accept His identity which would be the reservoir of
His strength during His public ministry.
During His intimate moments with His Father in prayer, Jesus would go
back again and again to that special moment when He heard His Father’s
voice. In fact He needed to hear the
same voice again during the Transfiguration before He could carry on the most
painful days of His earthly life.
During
this ordinary season, like Jesus we carry in our hearts the Father’s voice so
that whatever happens to us this year, we believe that the Father will always
be there for us the way He was with Jesus all the time. It means that we are ready to accept the
different theophanies of God in our life.
We welcome Him as He manifests Himself to us in life or in death, in
pain or in joy, in the sunshine or in the rain, in light or in darkness, in
good times and in bad. These are the
many facets of life which reveal to us the many faces of God. We just have to be ready to accept His creative surprises in our life.
Our
baptism is both a gift and a responsibility.
As a gift, we became children of God, we call Him our Father and we are
heirs of the Kingdom; as a responsibility, we live a Christian life, a life which
is patterned after His Son.
I am God's beloved, that's who I am. I live it, that's what I become!
What an inspirational message that I shall return to throughout our Year of Faith. The word made manifest! It was nice to see that the picture you have used is the same one as I have to use as our introductory slide for St Cecilia's. Thank you, Father :)
ReplyDeleteMargaret Meek.
Thanks Margaret, the Word continuously inspiring us... we can only be grateful!
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