Monday, August 2, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 85

 


Psalm 85:1-13

Key Verse: 6-7

“Won’t you bring us back to life again so that your people can rejoice in you? Show us your faithful love, Lord! Give us your salvation!” CEB

My daughter is good with plants. She will find a plant, someone has given up on and set out on the curb thinking that it is done for. She will bring it in, take care of it and with love, care, the right amount of Sun and water, she can bring it back to life. In this Psalm we are that plant and we are asking God to bring us back to life. We desire for God to show us the loving kindness, which can only be found in and through God. We cry out for God’s faithfulness, and provision. We need God to gives us what we need so we can live again, so we can be restored to fullness, life and growth.

If we choose to turn to God, God will turn to us. In fact, when we turn to God, we will find God is already turning toward us, reaching out to us, abandoned, lost, left to along the roadside by grief, hardship, pain or even just the overwhelming struggle of day to day life. God will bring us home, put us in the window.  God will provide us with exactly what we need to flourish and grow.  When we choose to turn to God in the midst of it all we will always find that God is there already, giving us what we need to bring light in to the dark places of our lives, redeeming the pain and sorrow we have experienced, restoring us so we can flourish and grow again.

A Prayer for Today

Lord God, I am so tired.  Sometimes I feel life has drained the life out of me. I am withered, sun scorched and dry. I am come to you today, in all my hurt, in all my pain, with all my struggles, with the monotony and dullness of this day, desiring the restoration on you can bring. As I turn to you let me see you at work with your faithfulness, your love, your care and your provision. Let me know your redemption and your salvation. Let me grow again. Let me flourish in your light and your love. - Amen

 

Monday, June 7, 2021

Mann for Today: Psalm 84

Psalm 84:1-12

Key Verse: 8

“Lord God of heavenly forces, hear my prayer; listen closely, Jacob’s God!” CEB

So much of this Psalm has made it into hymn and song. Something in this particular Psalm resonated with us on so many levels. How often have we prayed only to feel as if we speak words that dissipate like smoke. We cry out in our hearts and the words hit the ceiling and go no further. Even when we know God hears, there is still something inside which cries out. God, listen closely! God is the God of all things. God is mighty and powerful. God spoke all creation into existence. All that is, is because of God. And that is the God to whom pray. That is the God to whom we sing our praises, lift our petitions and to whom we cry out. Knowing the God of unseen and heavenly forces is listening is daunting, awe-inspiring  and humbling. So we ask for God to lean in, to listen closely, to hear our prayer. Because what a powerful thing it is to know God is listening; to know God hears; to know God understands. Whatever your prayer today, pray it knowing God is listening. God hears you today.  

A Prayer for Today

Lord God, you are magnificent. You are wonderful and good. You give me hope when the chaos is too much, when the pain and heartache threatens to over whelm. Your love fills me. I know your forgiveness, your grace and your mercy. I am thankful for all the ways your redemption is at work in my life and in this world. There is so much I wish to bring to you. I lay out my heartache, my pain, my hurt, my concerns for myself and those around me. I give it all to you. As I pray, I cry out, hear me! Listen to me. Let me see, let me know that you are at work in all of this. Let me know that you hear me, so that I might give praise to you for all the ways you work your redemption in my life, in the lives of those I love and in the world around me. -Amen

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 83

Psalm 83:1-18

Key Verse: 1

“God, don’t be silent! Don’t be quiet or sit still, God,” CEB

Come on God do something! Do not be quiet. Do not sit still. Move! Be active. This is our cry in our frustration, in our anguish. When are hurting. When things are not going our way, we believe God is not working. We do not see how God could be at work right now. When things are not right; when there is so much injustice in the world around, when so many are sick and dying, when we look at the world and it does not see righteousness at work in the world’s events or in the events of our nation, then we want God to work, to do something. Why can we not hear God’s voice right now? Why do we not see God’s love and justice at work in the world, in our nation, in our own lives and the lives of those around us? God must not be moving. God must be silent. So we cry out to God to move, to act, to speak. Yet, God is at work, there is nothing on this earth which is outside the reach of God. Even in the darkness, God is at work. Even when it seems there is nothing but injustice and chaos, God is seeking to set things right and bring order. God is at work. God is working.  Yet sometimes, it is only when we call out to God to not be silent, to break the quietude, to move and act, that is when we are best able to see the hand of God at work in the small ways God is moving. When we call out for God to work, then we are often most able to see how God can work in and through us. Even as God is always at work, it is never wrong to ask God to work, so that we can see God’s work with new eyes.

 

A Prayer for Today

Oh Lord, I cannot see you today. I cannot hear you. Where are you? Are you taking the day off? Are you on mute? Speak loudly to me today, so I can hear you. Help me to see you at work in the world around me. Allow me to see your grace, your love, your righteousness where ever it is in the world around me. Show me who you are today. Help me to see how I can enter into your work. Show me how I can be your voice, and your action, allowing others to see and hear you today. -Amen

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Manna for Today; Psalm 79

 


Psalm 79:1-13

Key Verse: 13

“We are, after all, your people and the sheep of your very own pasture. We will give you thanks forever; we will proclaim your praises from one generation to the next.” CEB

There are times when we our lives seemed filled with struggle. Sometimes it even seems as if all that is evil in this world is working to bring chaos, hardship and pain into our lives. All that is holy and good in our lives, in the world even, is over run by the forces of evil. We wonder if there is any place left for the goodness of God. Where is God’s hand of grace? Even when the darkness does not overwhelm, and is limited to certain places in our lives, sometimes it is hard to see how the goodness of God can ever come to bear on that particular situation, or in one area of our lives. Even when we can not see God at work, even when we are unsure if God’s grace and goodness have any bearing on a particular thing, we are still God’s people. Even in the chaos, even in the darkness, even when God’s hand does not seem to be at woek we can give praise to God, we can proclaim God’s goodness, even when we do not see it at work. God is always good, God is always at work. We are God’s and God’s righteousness, goodness, grace and justice are always at work in the darkness bringing light, in the chaos creating order, amidst the evil bringing justice, for this we can give praise to God.

 

A Prayer for Today

Lord you are bring light to the darkness. You mend what is broken, you make right was is corrupted by sin and evil. There is chaos, there is sin, there is evil, there is death an and there is destruction. None of those things will have the final word. These things are but temporary and all that you are is eternally and you are eternally at work to make all things right.  In all things, at all times you are good. Your righteousness is at work and your justice is coming. I give glory to you for all the ways I see and do not see you at work in my life and in this world. Amen

 

Wednesday, May 5, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 78

 


Psalm 78:1-77

Key Verse: 1-2

“Listen, my people, to my teaching; tilt your ears toward the words of my mouth. I will open my mouth with a proverb.” CEB

We have before us today Psalm which recounts the history of God with the people of Israel up until the reign of David. It begins with an invitation to listen. In Romans Paul reminds us that someone is unable to have faith unless they have heard. Faith cannot to those who have not experienced Jesus for themselves, unless we share what God has done. Those of us who have seen, who have heard, who have experienced the love and grace of God ourselves must be willing to join the Psalmist in recounting what we know for all those who will hear. We too must proclaim the goodness, the greatness, the grace, the mercy and the forgiveness of God and live out its truth in our lives. Let us be a voice like John the Baptist proclaiming the goodness of gospel. And when we hear the truth proclaimed by others, such as the Psalmist let us rejoice together in knowing we serve a good God who works with people and draws people into true relationship. God desires to know us as we learn to know God.

 

A Prayer for Today

God of grace and power, of mercy and love, help me to see you today. Help me to know you in my life. Help me to see you at work I my life. Help me to hear the truth of who you are as it is proclaimed by those who love you and have experienced you at work. Let me join with them in their proclamation. Let me share the truth of your character with my actions as well as my words. Amen

Wednesday, March 31, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 77

 



Psalm 77:1-20

Key Verse: 1-2

“I cry out loud to God—out loud to God so that he can hear me! During the day when I’m in trouble I look for my Lord. At night my hands are still outstretched and don’t grow numb; my whole being refuses to be comforted.” CEB

When I am hurting, when I am struggling, when the injustice, the pain, the chaos of the world around me is more than I can bear, I turn to God. I cry, I weep, I wail, I rage, I scream. And yet the injustice continues, the pain, still hurts, the struggle remains real and in the midst of the storm I cannot find peace. There is no comfort.

It all goes on, and on and on. We cry out with the Psalmist, “Will my Lord reject me forever? Will he never be pleased again? Has his faithful love come to a complete end? Is his promise over for future generations? Has God forgotten how to be gracious? Has he angrily stopped up his compassion?” (vs 7-9). We want to cry out with Jesus (quoting another Psalm), “My God, my God why have you forsaken me?” Where is God? Where is God’s graciousness, and compassion? Why is there no relief for me, and for all those who suffer?

It is hard to remember the goodness of God, when we are surrounded by the pain and suffering which so often fills our lives. It is hard to see the hand of God at work when the world seems to be flooded with injustice. Yet God is at work. God is always at work, bringing redemption to the darkest places and bringing order to the chaos created by sin and evil in this world.

Even in amidst the flood we can trust that God is at work. Even when we feel unheard, we can know God hears. Do not give up, do not ever believe God has abandoned the work of salvation at work in this world.

 

Things to Think on

Do you feel as if God hears you when you cry out?

Have you ever grown weary calling out to God?

Is it hard to trust God when you see the death, the pain, the suffering, the injustice, the chaos in the world around you?

Can you recount the times when God’s faithfulness, goodness, and compassion have been see in your life or in the lives of those around you?

Even in your pain, can you give praise to God for the things God has done, and trust that, even now, God is at work to bring redemption to the pain and suffering that is currently going on?

A Prayer for Today

Lord, you are God, forever and for always. I see the suffering. I see evil at work. I hurt. I am frightened. I know the chaos sin brings into this world. Every day, I call out to you. I lay all the burdens me at your feet. I give you the pain, the suffering, the hurt, the injustice. But it all goes on and on. Help me to trust you even when I do not see you at work. I have seen you at work in the past. Help me to look to your great deeds, so I can give you praise even now when I feel unheard and I do not see my prayers being answered. Amen

Monday, March 29, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 75

 

Psalm 75:1-10

Key Verse: 1

“We thank you, O God! We give thanks because you are near. People everywhere tell of your wonderful deeds.” NLT

This is the week in which we take time to truly think and ponder on all that the Lord has done. We are truly thankful for all the ways Jesus was obedient to God in all things. In Jesus the life, death and resurrection of of Christ, God draws near to all humanity.  As we ponder the last week of Christ’s life we are not only remembering but proclaiming the wonderful deeds of Christ in our world.

Remembering all that Christ did through the course of his final week here on earth, is a way of taking the event of Jesus’ life seriously. Jesus moved toward the cross obediently, trusting God in all things. When we remember the great and mighty things the Lord God has done, allows us to better recognize the ways God moves in and through our lives, so that we too can respond, as Christ did, in trusting obedience. Let us as we move with Christ toward his cross, seek out ways we too can speak of the wonderful deed of God, not only in the life of Christ but in our lives. Let us use Christ’s example and be ready to follow God to all the places God might lead. Let us trust, let us obey and let us see the great and mighty ways God’s redemption is always at work even when the events of our lives seem to be the bleakest or most terrible. God is able to bring redemption to all things, just as God brought redemption through the life and death of Christ.  

 

Things to Think on

Take time today to pay attention to the things God has done and is doing in your life.

How does remembering the ways God has worked move you toward obedience?

What are the events of the last week of Jesus’ life?  In what ways was Jesus faithful to God in his final days?

In what ways do the final actions of Jesus help move you to obedience?

In what ways can you tell of God’s wonderful deeds through Christ today and throughout the rest of this week.

A Prayer for Today

Lord, as I remember who Christ is and what he has done for me, let me sense your nearness in my life this week. Draw close to me, as I draw close to you. Help me to not only remember, but throughout this week, proclaim the goodness and redemption of Christ in all I do, and in all I say. Help me to move in obedience and trust as Christ did. Amen

Tuesday, February 16, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 74

 

Psalm 74:1-23

Key Verses: 21-22a

"Don't disappoint those in need or make them turn from you, but help the poor and homeless to shout your praises. Do something, God! Defend yourself." CEV

It is easy to blame God with others turn away from God. Why does God not do anything? Why did God allow them to become disheartened? Why did God allow them to lose faith!

But what are we doing to be the hands and the feet of God when this happens? What fault are the people God when those among us do not experience the love of God in and among the people of God. We are God’s witnesses. We are the way most of those around us experience the love, the goodness, and the kindness of God. When we do not live out the character in our lives, others will not experience the character of God in us. Even worse, we prove to be false witnesses, and when they see us as the people of God and experience that which is not of God in us and at our hands, they are experiencing God falsely in us.

When the Church as the Body of Christ acts in ways which are contradictory to the nature of Christ, we are not only failing to be the body, but we are sharing lies about who Christ is to all those who only know him and experience him in us and through us.

Why are people disappointed in what God is doing?  Why is God not defending God’s self? Because those who are called to live out the character of God in this world are failing to live in such a way, which speaks the truth, of who God is.

Things to Think on

In what ways are you disappointed with God? Are you disappointed with God or are you really disappointed with the people of God?

In what ways could you better “defend” God in the things you do and say today?

How would the Church need to be different, for the poor and the homeless to praise God because of what the Church is doing?

How can you help that happen in your life? In what you do and what you say?

 

A Prayer for Today

Lord, there are so many people disenchanted with you. And I know that they are really disappointed in with your Church, and the things people who are speaking and acting in your name are doing and saying. It is also easy to push the burden of this false witness off on others; on those people over there. But reveal to me in what ways I am a part of this problem. Show me how I can be better a truer witness of who you are. Purify me, my words, my actions so that I can be a true witness of who you are to those around me who are disenchanted with you and your Church. Help me to live in such a way that all I do speaks truth about who you are. Let do better and be better today. – Amen

 

Friday, January 22, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 73


 

Psalm 73:1-28

Key Verses: 21-23

“Once I was bitter and brokenhearted. I was stupid and ignorant, and I treated you as a wild animal would. But I never really left you, and you hold my right hand.” CEV

It is so hard to look around at the world and see that evil people prosper. So many people who do cruel unjust things, not only get away with doing them, but they prosper while doing so. It seems their lives are better, and easier than mine. It is easy to see the injustice and hatred all around and become broken hearted. And in our anger, in our bitterness, in our frustration, take it out on God. When we see the evil and corruption all around it would be easy to say, “God does not see.” “God does not care.” “God does not move.” But in our anger, in our frustration, in our pain, let us not turn away from God. Even as we yell at God, even as we hurl our insults at God for God’s inability to do the things God should be doing, let us continue to hold on to God’s hand, because God will not let go of ours. Even as we come to God with our anger, our frustration, our hurt and our pain, and hurl all that at God, accusing God of being blind, incapable of moving, or asleep at the wheel, God will not let go of our hand. When we are frustrated with the evil all around hold on to God’s hand, as God continue to hold ours; giving us the strength, peace, and assurance which can only come from God.

 

Things to Think on

The Psalmist speaks of almost stumbling and almost falling, in what ways have you almost stumble and fallen recently?

When you look around, how are your frustrated, angered, or dismayed by the things you see?

What does it mean to you to know God is holding your hand through it all?

 

A Prayer for Today

God, it is not fair. It is not right. So much of what goes on in the world around me is not as it should be. People are sick, people are dying. People are hurting, are angry. Unjust people, just keep on being unjust. Evil people seem to be prevailing. Their hatred infects the world around me. I don’t know what to do. I cry out to you until my voice is hoarse but it all keeps on going on. There is so much darkness, I am unsure if I will ever see the light again. Yet I hold on to your hand. I cling on to your hand. Thank you for not letting me go. Even when I rail at you, even when I am frustrated with you, help me to trust you through it all. Never let me go – Amen

 

Thursday, January 21, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 72


 

Psalm 72:1-20

Key Verses: 1-4

“Please help the king to be honest and fair just like you, our God. Let him be honest and fair with all your people, especially the poor. Let peace and justice rule every mountain and hill. Let the king defend the poor, rescue the homeless, and crush everyone who hurts them.” CEV

Here in the US, as of yesterday at noon, we have a new President. No matter what we think of our new president, we can join with the Psalmist praying our president would be the kind of ruler described here in this passage. The psalmist asked god to let the new king be God, honest and fair, especially to the poor. Let there be peace and justice, let him be a ruler who looks to the needs of the poor, the homeless and let all those who hurt them be crushed. The psalmist does not ask for a king who looks out for personal needs and desires, who adheres to the psalmist’s politics, but instead asks for peace and justice, honesty and fairness, someone who looks out for the homeless and the poor. And this the psalmist sees as a ruler who is like God. I am not sure when we think of having a “Godly” ruler we usually think of honesty, fairness, justice, peace, especially in regards to the poor, the needy and the homeless. Yet this is how a Godly ruler is described here. The psalmist asks God that their new king be like God in these ways. Later on in the Psalm it says, “Only you can work miracles.” A ruler who leads and governs as God is a miracle indeed, but yet this is what we pray for, this is what we ask God for, knowing that only God can work such miracles. And this is a miracle we all need, every person, every country, to have a leader who governs with God’s honesty, fairness, who seek God’s justice and peace, and who defends the poor, and rescues the homeless. This is who our God and this is the miracle we desire for God to work in our nation.

Things to Think on

What would it mean to truly have a leader who governs as God would govern?

Read the Psalm again, what attribute of a godly ruler surprise you?

Pray for our president (or the leader of your nation) this morning. Pray as the Psalmist would pray

 

A Prayer for Today

Oh, God, I know you are not a part of partisan politics. Everyone around me, including myself have our own ideas of what a good leader for our nation would look like. I have ideas of what policies that person would enact. I have opinions as to whether our leader is good or fair or is the right person for the job. Let me turn away from my ideologies, the policies of the political party I support. Let me instead turn to you. Let me look to your character and instead of desiring the person I want to rule the way I would wish for them to rule. Let me desire a leader who is like you, in all ways. Better yet, instead of attempting to put my trust in a leader, a political party or a political system, let me put my trust in you. Let me look to you to perform miracles in me, in my life, and let me trust you to perform miracles in the political system and in the hearts and lives of those who govern. Let me not put my trust in them, but in you, knowing you can work in and through them.   – Amen

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 71

 


Psalm 71:1-24

Key Verses: 14-15

“I will never give up hope or stop praising you. All day long I will tell the wonderful things you do to save your people. But you have done much more than I could possibly know.” CEV

Even when the darkness is great, I will never give up hope! Even when the chaos seems to rule, I will not give up hope!  Even when I am lost in the confusion, I will not give up hope! Even when it seems, the people of God have also turned away, put their hope, and trust in the powers of this world, even still, I will not give up hope!

You are still the creator of all life. The earth is yours and all that is it. You made the sun to rise. You put all the billions of stars in their places and set all the solar systems to spinning. It is all yours. You created it and created the laws by which they all move. You spoke and creation came into being. You breathed your breath and humanity came to be. We are yours. You are God in and through it all. My hope is in you! And I give you the praise for all you have done. For it is more than I can possibly know. God is at work, in creation, in the world, working to accomplish the hard work of redemption. Even when it we cannot see it, we can know God is at work and say, “I will never give up hope or stop praising.”

 

Things to Think on

What does it mean for you to find hope in God right now?

Have you ever been tempted to give up hope? Why?

What does it mean to praise God, even when hope is hard to find?

In what ways is it difficult praise God when things are hard?

 

A Prayer for Today

I find hope in you. You are my hope and my salvation. I will hope in you today, tomorrow, and in all the days to come. Even when all else fails, I will still hope in you. Lord I continue to give you praise for all you are doing, all you have done and all you will do. Help me to continue to find hope in you at all times and to find ways to give you praise, each and every day.  – Amen

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

Manna for Today: Psalm 70



Psalm 70:1-8

Key Verse: 1

“Save me, Lord God! Hurry and help.” CEV

Does it sometimes seem to you as if God is not enough in a hurry when it comes to helping when you are in need or hearing when you call out? God never seems to move as quickly as we would like. Often times God does not even do the things we wish for God to do. God does what is best, what is right. Even so, is God listening to what we are saying; to what it is we tell God we need? And why is God so slow? But, God does move. God does hear. God is at work doing what is best, what is right, seeking to bring salvation and redemption.

Even in our distress, even as we are lacking, even as we are in need, we can say, Our God is wonderful. God is at work, even when we cannot see God at work. God is good, most especially when our lives seem to be awash in evil. Our God is love even when we are about to drown in the hatred. God is the light in the darkness. God is the raft in the sea of pain, which holds us and carries us to the shore. God is wonderful and good in all things at all times. We can trust and rely on God. Always.

Things to Think on

In what ways does God seem to be working too slow in your life?

Are there things you know God is doing, or will do which you wish God would hurry up in doing?

Tell God exactly in what ways you would like God to “hurry up”.  (The psalmist does, we all should feel free to do so as well)

In what ways do you see and know the wonder of God? In what ways can you say, “God is wonderful” today?

 

A Prayer for Today

God when you say you are slow to anger, sometimes I think it is that you are just slow. You are not fast enough for me. But, then I run ahead. I go on past you. I am in a hurry, but I do not always know where we are going, or the way to get there. When I am ahead of you, I run the risk of going the wrong way, becoming lost. When I am ahead of you, I am not following you. I am not waking in your way, going along your path. I know I want you to hurry up. I but even as I am impatient help me to slow down. Help me to see you at work, to see your wonder and say, “you are wonderful.” And know it. Help me to be patient, to wait on you, to follow and lay down my desire to lead, to set the pace. Help me to follow, to wait. To be a disciple.  – Amen

Monday, January 11, 2021

Jesus Man of Mystery: The Reveal - Mark 1:4-11

 

Last week we heard about the nature of who Jesus is from John who was the latest of the gospel writers; his recounting of the events of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, was the final one written. This week, we are looking at a passage, which is found at the beginning of Mark; Mark’s gospel being the last one to have been written.

The Mark’s gospel begins like this, “The beginning of the Good News of Jesus Christ.” Mark in his book is attempting present to all who will listen, who Jesus is, as well as the purpose of his life, his teachings, his death and his resurrection. As the first gospel writer, he would have been the first person to record accurately the events of Jesus’ life. John is pulling back the curtain and revealing the man of mystery behind it, whom he, as well as so many others, had come to know as the Messiah, the one and only true Son of God, who was himself God. In many ways, Mark is saying, “So here is Jesus. Perhaps we have all heard a little about him; rumors, snippet of his sayings and teachings perhaps, the thing a friend of a friend of a friend might tell you, but draw close, and I will tell you who he really is. I will let you know the truth of the man behind the legend.”

As he begins his story, Mark almost immediately moves into this passage here. The good news, the gospel, begins with Jesus being baptized. And Jesus’ baptism begins with, John the Baptizer, out in the desert, looking and acting like Elijah, crying out for the people of Israel to prepare the way for the Lord, and proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. The implication being, by being baptized in this way a person is making preparations for the coming of the Lord, which John is declaring as imminent.

The baptism he is offering is a water baptism, to be done for the forgiveness of sins. This baptism marks the preparation the person wishes to make in their lives, through the repentance of sin. John’s baptism is the outward sign of the person’s repentance, and confession of sin and the marking of the inward work of God, in a person’s life through forgiveness. John preaches, saying all those accepting and participating in this baptism are preparing for the coming of the one who will come after him, who is not merely another prophet to follow him, but who is one whom John is not even worthy to untie the thong on his sandal. This One for whom they are preparing, whom John is proclaiming, will come after him and will not baptize with water, as John is baptizing, but will instead baptize with the power of the Holy Spirit. With his words and his call, John is proclaiming the coming of the Lord's messiah, and is calling for the people to make ready their hearts and lives for him.

Then, suddenly Jesus is there. Jesus appears on the scene, and is baptized by John. “In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan.” Mark has had an eight-verse lead up and then, bam, one short sentence; Jesus is introduced, and comes to John and is baptized. Out of all the Gospel writers, Mark is the one who gives the briefest account of almost everything (if Marks spends more words on something than Matthew or Luke you should slow down, and really pay attention to what it is Mark is saying). Mark is not much on the details, or elaborating. Mark will not give you two words when only one will do. So, in concise Markan fashion, he presents the facts in their rawest and most concise form. Jesus arrives on the scene, is baptized and then the Heavens are ripped open, from which the voice comes declaring that this is the Son God. 

But, since Mark’s telling of these events are so concise I need to be careful not to just bowl on ahead and skip over what is perhaps the most frequently asked question of any of the gospel accounts of Jesus’ baptism, the question, “Why?” “Why does Jesus come to John to be baptized?” “Why would Jesus participate in this baptism for the forgiveness of sins?” “Why is Jesus being baptized when John is baptizing people to help prepare them for the coming messiah, who is Jesus?” “Why does one who has no sins to confess; who does not need to be forgiven; who all these others are being baptized in preparation for, come and get baptized?” “Why does Jesus participate in something which does all these things, he does not need to do?”

Let us begin to unravel this question by talking about baptism. Baptism is an outward action serving as a sign of that which God has and is doing inwardly in a person’s life. John baptized people who had repented and had confessed their sins, and whom God forgave. Baptism was an outward sign of the forgiveness God was giving the person inwardly, it was an outward sign of the relationship God has with the person who is baptized.

So what does it mean for Jesus to be baptized? First, it is important to note, Jesus does not come to John to repent and confess his sins. Mark says nothing of him doing this or needing to do this.  Nor does he tell us God needed to forgive him of anything. Jesus does not seem to be coming as a response to the message John is giving. So, if baptism is an outward sign of something God is doing inwardly. What then would God being doing inwardly in the life of Jesus here? Baptism is a sign of the inward relationship a person has with God and the work God is doing in their lives because of this relationship. In order for God to begin to be at work, most people would first need to repent, confess, and then be forgiven of their sins in order to be in right relationship with God, but we have already noted Jesus has nothing for which he would need to repent, confess, and be forgiven. He has lived a sinless life. He was already living in right relationship with the Father.  We have already established, it is not the baptism itself, which does anything, but it is simply a sign of the grace of God at work inwardly in a person. The baptism of Jesus is therefore an outward sign of the inward grace of God, for Jesus, just as it is for any of us. The main difference being, Jesus is already experiencing, close and personal relationship with God, the Father. His baptism is a sign of his relationship with God.

After coming to this understanding, it is interesting then to note what happens after Jesus is baptized. The Heavens are torn open and the Spirit descends on him as a dove. Now, in modern Christianity, the dove has come to be associated with the Spirit, because of this event right here, but to John and any other who might have also witnessed this event, they did not immediately think of the Spirit when they saw a dove. The dove, for them would have been a symbol for the community of Israel. In effect, the dove descending upon Jesus, told all those who observed Jesus was the epitome of what it meant to be a member of the people of God, living in right relationship with God. The dove would have been a symbolic way of indicating Jesus is living the way, God desires for people to live. The dove is revealing Jesus as the prototypical child of God, living in total obedience to God.

Not only do we have the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove descending upon Jesus, but there is also the voice of God, heard speaking, revealing who Jesus is. The voice of God coming from the Heavens saying, Jesus is not only the prime example of what it means to be living as a member of God's people, but he is also God's beloved Son, AND in him God is well pleased. What an amazing statement indeed! Even if we just take it at face value, this is significant, but there is more going on here than we might be able to see on the surface.

In the ancient Middle East, they knew very little about reproduction, that all that entailed, but they did know it was possible for a person to be born of a woman, yet not belonging to the husband, so every child had to be claimed as a legitimate child by their father. Therefore, on the eighth day after a child was born the father would claim the child and name the child. The father would stand before the members of the community and say, "This is my beloved child," and then the father would name the child.

So Jesus is baptized, and as he comes up out of the water, the heavens split open and the voice of God is heard claiming Jesus as son. This moment is pregnant with so much meaning and so much symbolism. It is a moment, in which we have this outward sign of Jesus’ inward relationship with God. It is also a moment, which serves to proclaim Jesus as the prime example of what it means for a person to live in right relationship with God, setting Jesus, life and teachings up as the pattern for all to follow from this time forward. Finally, it is a moment in which God claims Jesus as beloved son, with whom God is pleased.

Jesus is standing in the river, the water running down off his face and his bear, he is dripping having just come up out of the water.  The Spirit then comes descending upon him in the form of a dove. Through his baptism, he is outwardly proclaiming his inward and intimate relationship with God, the same relationship God desires to have with each of us, and then God declares Jesus to be beloved Son. Mark, through his brilliant conciseness, is saying so much, while saying so very little.

Mark begins his gospel declaring, this is the beginning of the good news. For Mark the beginning of the “good news, is Jesus’ baptism. In the baptism, without Jesus saying a single word, the good news begins to be proclaimed. With the baptism of Jesus, we have standing in the water the very One who brings all of humanity into right relationship with God. Jesus is the only human who has lived fully in right relationship with God. As such, he is the proto-type of what it looks like truly to live a Christian life. All others who desire to be a part of the people of God, are to pattern their lives after him, using his actions, interactions, the way he communicates with those around him and his teachings as the pattern on which to pattern our own.

Before Jesus begins to live out that example, without preaching a sermon or saying a word, through sign and act of God, his true nature and purpose is revealed. Mark, who never minces words, or uses flowery words, has recorded this, in straight and simple language, for us all to hear and to understand, so the good news of the truth of the gospel can be revealed to us, so our eyes can be opened and we can see who Jesus really is. We need only to look at the sopping wet Jesus to see him revealed as the one who has come to bring salvation to us all, so that we might all have the relationship with the Father that he has.

The baptism of Jesus, an event which on the surface seems so strange and unneeded, is an event which reveals to us, at the beginning of Jesus ministry, the beginning of the proclamation of the good news, exactly what Jesus is all about. His life, his death, his ministry here on earth is all about standing in the gap, so we might live in total obedience to God, so we too might know what it means to live, to really and truly live as the people of God, full of the spirit of God and free of all sin.

Let us rejoice today! The Jesus who is and was, has always been God, one with the Father (as we heard from the beginning of John’s gospel last week), came to this earth, was baptized, ministered and died, so we might all know God and live in perfect relationship with God, just as Jesus did. Let all of us who have been baptized walk daily with God remembering God is at work inwardly in all of our lives filling us with his grace, allowing us to walk in right relationship with him.