The
baptism of a Christian brings life where there was only death
before. Baptism is resurrection. Baptism is
Easter. Baptism is our entrance into the very kingdom of
heaven.
There are
many wonderful days in our lives. But there is no greater day
than the day of our Baptism, and it will never be excelled.
Our very best days, even if they could all be combined
into one could not together touch the excellence of our
baptism day which surpasses what nothing else can begin to
touch.
Holy
Baptism unites us with Christ in His death and resurrection.
To be baptized with water in the Name of the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit is to be unshackled from the slavery to
sin and witness the drowning of our own death.
God
through His Son makes people His new, mint-condition
creation. In baptism God breathes His Spirit into us.
He washes our soiled nature clean and creates life in
us as miraculous as the handiwork of Eden where God formed
Adam into a living being.
Because
of water baptism, consider yourself permanently delivered from
the clawing reach of the evil one. Sin's quick sand has no
hold on you. You are free to live without
fretting or phobia. Baptismal water irrigates lives made new
in Christ so that we flourish.
The flood
tide of baptism has carried away the flotsam wreckage of our
sin. The ocean of baptism has drowned Pharaoh's army.
The breakers of baptism have carried us to the promised
land.
St. Paul
makes the point that baptism is a point of no return. It is
unthinkable that being delivered from sin and death a
Christian should contemplate returning to it.
By no means! Paul says.
How
absurd for a prisoner set free from his cell and pardoned from
the scaffold's hangman would wish to return to it. Do you not
know what your Savior has done for you?
Christ
died- and He took YOU with Him.
He rose
from death, and YOU were given his victory in baptism.
Death
which has no dominion over Him cannot therefore conquer you.
In baptism you have passed from death to life, from slavery
to freedom, from doubt to certainty, from loss to gain, from
bereavement to joy, from hell to heaven, and from sin to
righteousness. All this was given you in a
baptism that can never be taken away because your baptism is
into Christ.
For you,
Jesus Christ "crossed the Rubicon," the baptism of his
suffering and death (Mark 10:38) There was no turning back.
Crossing the Rubicon is an expression that comes from
the history of ancient Rome. Julius Caesar committed an
irrevocable act, led his army across the Rubicon River, and
became guilty of breaking the law. It was his point of no
return.
Caesar
was a mortal man whose greatness and worldly victories could
not defeat sin or death even with an army at his back.
The
conquest of sin and death required a different man, a perfect
man, the man who is God who would pass a point of no return
carrying a cross, a man righteous in Himself, who would be
charged with guilt for doing so- a man without an army,
without worldly greatness, and without cover. This man was
Jesus. He assumed our flesh, took the
responsibility for our fallen sin, and invaded the territory
of our corruption. He crossed his Rubicon from life to death,
from righteousness to iniquity, from freedom to slavery, from
decency to degradation, from blessedness to anguish.
And never looked back.
In
infancy Jesus was taken to Egypt, to the land of plagues and
slavery, of bondage and death. In his maturity he went to
Golgatha and the tree of the cross, the place of disgrace and
death.
But it
could not hold him. Not Egypt. Not Herod. Not
perils or betrayals. Not Pilate. Not Calvary.
Not even the tomb.
And now
in the resurrection of His body there is again no turning
back.
The
death he died he died to sin, once for all. It's done!
Neither He nor we will ever die again.
The
valley of the shadow of death has been traversed, and in Him
we have come to the green pastures and still waters where
goodness and mercy follow us all the days of our lives. There
is no going back. We walk in the newness of
life.
In
baptism we have crossed the Rubicon, crossed the Red Sea and
traversed the Jordan. Death has forever lost its dominion.
We have been given pure and unending life. We who have
died to sin can no longer live in it. We are the
baptized; the people of the resurrection, dead to sin and
alive to God in Christ Jesus.
The day
of our baptism is the greatest because it is the new day that
will never end.
Pastor Reed
© 2009