12 January 2020
Text: Matt 3:13-17 (Isa 42:1-7, 1 Cor 1:26-31)
In the name of +
Jesus. Amen.
“For
thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.”
Our
Lord does many things that He doesn’t have to do. He was born of the flesh, circumcised,
baptized, and put to death on a cross.
All of these things involve the Law – the Law that we have not
kept. But Jesus takes on our
burdens. He suffers the very obligations
that we have, but which He is above. Why
does He do this, dear friends? Because
He loves us. The lover is willing to
suffer for the sake of the beloved. This
is the true meaning of the word “passion” – a word that we have reduced to
describing what people think about pizza and hobbies. True passion, in the original sense of the
word, means suffering. Even the baptism
of our Lord was a kind of passion, a humiliation. For by submitting to a washing is to give the
impression of being filthy. Jesus is
not, but we are.
Jesus
fulfills the Law, or as He says, fulfills “all righteousness” – so that we can
be righteous. For of ourselves, we can’t
do it. We are damaged goods. We are rotten to the core. We are headed to the scrap heap. But Jesus looks upon us with pity, knowing
that it is sin that has made us filthy and ugly. It is sin that has crippled us and turned us
into monsters. It is sin that has
brought death into the world.
And
only He, the Righteous One who is both God (who is perfect) and Man (who exists
in the flesh in our world) can keep the Law on our behalf, and then transmit
His righteousness to us as a free gift.
But
this gift is actually an exchange, a trade.
He gives us His righteousness, and we give Him our sins; we get
everlasting life, and He gets the cross and death. We are exalted; He is humiliated.
“For
thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.”
This
idea of a once-for-all blood sacrifice is radical. But it is the only solution for us poor,
miserable sinners. God loves us
infinitely, and He is willing to go to any length to redeem us, to drag us out
of the pit, to bind up our wounds, to dress us in the finest clothing, and sit
us at the table with Him.
St.
John the Baptist recognizes the radical nature of the Messiah coming to him for
baptism. In fact, “John would have
prevented Him.” John realizes that this
is contrary to how the world works. For
in the world, the guilty are punished and the innocent are rewarded. In the world, love takes a back seat to
selfish desire. In the world, the judge
punishes the offender; He does not serve the offender’s sentence. John is aghast at just how extraordinary this
is: “I need to be baptized by You, and do You come to me?”
And
here is where Jesus explains the mystery of the Gospel: “Let it be so now, for
thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.”
We
cannot fulfill all righteousness, but Jesus does. He keeps the Law where we fail. And like Abraham, by faith, the righteousness
of God Himself is counted to us, credited to us, given to us by proxy. We wear the royal ring and we bear the royal
scepter – because our Lord has given them to us as a passport, as a key to
admission to the Kingdom of God. It is
He who takes the beating reserved for the impostor and the intruder – even as
we are clothed in unearned royal garb and seated undeserved at the head table
of the banquet.
And
where is this faith given to us, dear friends?
In baptism! For just before He
ascended into heaven, He gave the apostles, the ministers of the church, both
the authority and the order to “make disciples of all nations, baptizing them
in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” John’s baptism of repentance is completed in
our Lord’s baptism of salvation. And
this is what the Church does, dear friends.
We follow in the footsteps of our Lord: bringing sinners to where they
find life: to Jesus, to Holy Baptism, to the Word of God, to the Gospel.
And
all righteousness is fulfilled in the faith given as a gift by means of Holy
Baptism, by the “Word of God in and with the water” and the “faith which trusts
this Word.” The Holy Baptism that the baptized,
crucified, and risen Lord Jesus Christ gives us is “a life-giving water, rich
in grace, and a washing of the new birth in the Holy Spirit.”
And
even as Jesus emerged from the water with “the heavens… opened to Him,” and
just as the Holy Spirit descended and came “to rest on Him,” and even as the
Father claims Him as His “beloved Son with whom [He] is well pleased,” so too
does all of this happen to us in Christ.
The
Father is pleased with us, His baptized.
The Son exchanges His righteousness for our sin, and the Holy Spirit comes
to rest upon us. Our baptism links us to
the cross, to the passion of Jesus, whose love impels Him to take our
punishment while we receive His justification as a free gift of faith. This is why we make the sign of the cross in
remembrance of Holy Baptism, for the cross is where all righteousness was truly
fulfilled. And that fulfillment of the
Law and satisfaction for our sins is made at the cross, and it is given to us
“to fulfill all righteousness” at our own Holy Baptism.
Most
of us were baptized as little children, even as young as our Lord was when He
was brought into the covenant through circumcision. We are weak, and God uses “what is weak in
the world to shame the strong,” as St. Paul proclaims. As children, as newcomers to the faith, we
are “low and despised in the world,” so that we cannot boast of ourselves, but
so that “in Christ Jesus,” God Himself “is the source of your life.” Christ is our “wisdom and our righteousness
and sanctification and redemption.”
For
even as children, even as sinners, even as those who are despised by the world,
God Himself sends His beloved Son to us to redeem us, “as a covenant for the
people, a light for the nations, to open the eyes that are blind, to bring out
prisoners from the dungeon, from the prison those who sit in darkness.”
“For
thus it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.” Amen.
In the name of the Father
and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
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