Romans 12: 6f * Mark 1:1f
Years ago, when Diane and I
lived in Arizona , we saw the Grand
Canyon . It has been said that no matter how well the Grand Canyon has been described, and no matter how many
photographs one has seen, “no one expects it.” The canyon itself is grander
than the pictures, and is beyond expectations, a surprise to everyone who sees
it for the first time. No description and no photograph does it justice.
And,
no matter how well the truth about God is taught, He will be a surprise when we
see Him face to face on the Last Day. “Eye hath not
seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the
things which God hath prepared for them that love him. But God hath revealed
them unto us by his Spirit: for the Spirit searcheth all things, yea, the deep
things of God,” writes Saint Paul to the Corinthian Church . We know God by revelation, just
as we know the Grand Canyon by descriptions
and pictures. We could spend weeks exploring the canyon before we truly know
it. We will spend eternity learning evermore the knowledge of God, never
exhausting all that we can learn, for He is without end, without limit.
The
pictures of the Grand Canyon are true; they
are a genuine revelation of what really is there. What we see in them is no
deception, but the truth. It is less than the reality itself, that we see once
we arrive at the place and our eyes take it in; but, the pictures have been
true and accurate. When Christ returns in glory and we rise from the slumber of
our graves, whether to terror or joy- depending upon how well we prepare to
meet Him in this life- and we see Him on the throne of His Father’s glory, we
will see that God is more than we have been taught, but not different. The full
majesty of Divine Glory will surprise us, because we cannot raise our minds to
a level of expectation high enough in this time of mortal frailty. But, what
has been revealed is true and no lie. God is greater than we understand; but He
has made Himself known truly and faithfully, never deceiving us in the process
of guiding the Apostolic
Church into all truth by
the Holy Spirit.
This
is the meaning of this Sunday in Epiphany. God has made Himself known in our
world. Unfortunately, many preachers this Sunday are telling their people that
it was here, in the waters of Jordan ,
when the Father spoke, that Christ became aware of His true identity. This
interpretation has been popular for about forty-five years. But, it is dead
wrong. Clearly, to anyone who knows the Gospels, and who knows the doctrine of
Christian Faith, Christ was mysteriously aware in early childhood of His Divine
Nature, and of being one with the Father. This is clear from the words He spoke
to Mary and Joseph in the temple when He was but twelve years of age. No. On
that day at the River Jordan, in the presence of John the Baptist and of the
crowd gathered, the voice did not come for Christ’s sake, but for ours. It did
not meet any need He had, but rather it meets our need. To try to analyze Christ
in psychological terms is always a mistake. But, suffice to say, that because
He remains fully God, even while being fully human, He has no need of assurance
or confidence. Neither did He need to be told His identity. He had need of none
of these things, for “while He walked the earth as a man, He filled the heavens
as God (On the Incarnation, Saint Athanasius).”
On
that day, when our Lord was baptized, the most amazing revelation of God took
place to human eyes and ears. Within the realm of our senses, God revealed
Himself as Trinity, the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. What did each
manifestation of the Divine Persons signify, as we consider them respectively?
Let us consider these manifestations of the Persons of the Trinity (who
together are One God, world without end), and learn from them. Yes, what we
learn will be less than the reality in its fullness, but it will be true.
Here
is the scene: Jesus Christ is standing in the water having been baptized. The
Holy Spirit appears in the form of a dove descending upon Him, and the voice of
the Father is heard. First of all let us consider the Son. We see the Word made
flesh; the One Who was in the beginning, Who was with God, Who was God, and Who
was in the beginning with God (and that is not redundant), is present as a man,
sharing our world of matter and space and time, where He was seen and heard,
and where He was touched by the hands of men. His presence in our form, His
coming in our nature, is the greatest revelation of God, and the seal and proof
of His love for us. Whatever it means that we are made in God’s image, clearly
it means that our nature was such that the Word could assume it, that He could
take it into His eternal uncreated Person without compromising His Divinity or
His holiness. And, as He stood in the waters, being Himself without sin, He
identified Himself with our weakness, and began to be the offering for our sin.
This foreshadows the cross where He would die in our place the death of sin
that we deserved. For John baptized sinners unto repentance, and here he
baptizes the Holy One, who has no sins to repent of. Thus, Christ begins His
ministry of redemption by letting the weight of our sin fall upon Him. Remember
that it was from this experience that John the Baptist saw that Jesus is the
Lamb of God Who takes away the sins of the world.
The
Holy Spirit appears as a dove. Now, this is a different kind of manifestation
than the physical presence of Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh. The Holy
Spirit is appearing in a vision granted to everyone there; His appearing is in
a symbolic way, that is to say, it is a Divine writing of iconography in the
very heavens. The appearance of a dove is a symbol, and the message is that
God’s wrath is over and done. This is the Christmas message of the angel who
appeared and spoke to the shepherds of “peace on earth, goodwill towards men.”
Not “among” men, but towards men. We are reminded of the story of Noah,
who sent out the dove, which returned with an olive branch in its mouth to
reveal that the waters of God’s wrath had abated from off the earth. Noah later
offered a sacrifice after he left the ark, and God promised not to destroy man,
and hung up His bow, His rainbow, as a pledge. The meaning is this: By
appearing as a dove that descended upon Jesus, the Holy Spirit signified to us
that Christ is the peace offering that reconciles us to God. This too, just
like the very baptism itself, points to our redemption by Christ’s full and
complete offering of Himself on the cross.
And,
to the ear came the audible voice of the Father, telling us of His pleasure in
the Son. This is more than simply His approval of Christ’s holy life. It is the
eternal love within the Trinity, wherein God delights in being God, where each
of the Persons delights in the perfection and worthiness of the other two
Persons. Again, like those pictures of the Grand Canyon ,
we know this is true, but our speaking of it cannot do justice to the reality
as we shall begin to know it when the risen Christ returns in glory. For now, we
see the significance in the Father’s words, telling us not only of His Son’s
worthiness and holiness, but telling us this in contrast to the pleasure He
cannot take in the fallen state of every other human being who was there. Here
too we understand why this voice was heard at the Lord’s baptism. As Jesus
Christ identified Himself with sinful mankind, the other Persons of the Godhead
told us Who He is, and why He is Himself without sin, but standing in for us to
save us. The Father speaks of His Son Who always pleases Him, telling us not
only that He remains holy and without spot or stain of sin, but even more, that
He is the Son Who throughout eternity and before all worlds gives delight to
the Father in that Divine love that is beyond our comprehension.
We
see the Trinity in this report of the Lord’s baptism that day. The vision of
the Holy Spirit was for our sake; the voice of the Father was for our sake.
Here we see and hear the Trinity with eyes and ears, and we see also that only
in Jesus Christ and His offering of Himself do we have salvation from sin and
death. And, we can say, from all this, that the revelation of the Trinity tells
us that, in the words of Saint John the Apostle, “God is love.”
No comments:
Post a Comment