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Homilies by Rev. Andrew Collis unless indicated otherwise.
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‘Wilderness and otherness’
"Worship God in the beauty of holiness," the psalmist sings. "The voice of God is upon the waters ... the voice of God shakes the wilderness ... God will give strength and bless us with peace." It's a fitting psalm for our celebration of the Baptism of Christ today. And it invites consideration of the fact that following his baptism by John in the Jordan, Jesus is led by the Spirit into the wilderness. Jesus is led into a wilderness we might call a storied country. God be with you ...
Jesus is baptised by John (the wild one) and then led into the wilderness. While there is much on which we might focus today -
One commentator writes: "If there is any comparison between Jesus' baptism and ours, any at all, it's that baptism assumes wilderness. Not to test our loyalty. Not to tempt God's commitment. Not to get us to [activate] the Spirit. No. Because none of that is biblical. A quick review of Numbers should remind us that being in the wilderness is part of what it means to be the people of God" (Karoline Lewis).
Not only is wilderness (as desert) a place in which water is especially precious, and not only do we encounter wild animals alongside the angels (as Mark reminds us), but being in the wilderness (in all senses of the word) is part of what it means to be the people of God. In other words, our wilderness wanderings are not so much personal as communal affairs. In the wilderness (the wild, untamed, unfamiliar places; landscapes and seascapes; mythical country, country vulnerable to human greed and exploitation) there are stories and there are voices -
It's not so much that Jesus is there to negotiate a trial or endure a burden. It's not so much that Jesus is there to make his way through hardship as though survival were synonymous with salvation. A display of sheer will and perseverance can only accomplish so much. And it doesn't sound like something our God, who is all about relationship, calls for.
So, if we take Jesus' baptism seriously, what does it mean to be led into the wilderness -
It means that being baptised and then immediately led into the wilderness, a storied country, is about faith lived in community.
Jesus' baptism suggests that being in the wilderness is not simply about the self but about the other. About God's other. Jesus' time in the wilderness (including temptations to personal power and comfort -
The scene calls to mind my friend Adam Hill's spiritual and artistic practice of regular travels throughout "regional" and "remote" NSW and beyond -
The artwork we have before us is one such story. With characteristic wit, it subverts the notion of land as realty in the name of Aboriginal elders and in the Spirit of land as a reality -
I am reminded that with baptism comes wilderness and that storied country is not just an individual affair. The Israelites were not alone in the wilderness. They had each other. They had a story of liberation and a covenant with a God of justice and compassion. Jesus was not alone in the wilderness. He had the Spirit and the promise of God's declaration of love (along with those wild animals and heavenly guides).
We are never alone in the wilderness. Baptism propels us into community (into storied country -
We have missed the bigger promise that baptism brings -
The nature of epiphanies is communal, Matthew suggests. "This is my Beloved." Everybody got to hear that, not just Jesus, and so when he is led into the wilderness, he already knows this is not a private affair, a personal test, a lone examination. The wilderness is its own epiphany (as Adam and countless others would attest), but an epiphany for all to witness.
"Worship God in the beauty of holiness [or otherness]," the psalmist sings. "The voice of God is upon the waters ... the voice of God shakes the wilderness ... God will give strength and bless us with peace." That little word, "us", is key.
“[T]he vocation that is mine is always a vocation for others and among others” (Jean-
Does the story of Jesus baptised and led into the wilderness recall a time spent in a wilderness -
Based on a sermon by Karoline Lewis.