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Kathleen Norris Isaiah 42:1-9; Ps 29; Acts 10:34-43; Matt 3:13-17 Baptism is not easy to explain to those of other faiths, and even many Christians, when asked what their own baptism means to them, would be hard pressed for an answer. Baptism was so serious to early Christians, however, that the baptism of Jesus was a much bigger deal than Christmas, It was celebrated as one of three feasts of light: Epiphany, in which the sages of the East acknowledge the remarkable nature of the Christ child; Jesus baptism, and the wedding at Cana, at which Jesus performs his first miracle, turning water into wine. These feasts illuminate Gods nature; for Christians, they demonstrate what God is like, as made incarnate in the person of Jesus; and they tell us what kind of persons God would have us be. These days, the baptism of Jesus, coming in the shadow of Christmas, has lost much ground. But it deserves our attention. Baptism has been much on my mind, as I recently helped teach a confirmation class of fourteen teenagers at St. Clements, Honolulu, with a curriculum based on the baptismal covenant. The promises Christians make at baptism are good stuff: about resisting evil, both spiritual evil and the evil powers of this world; about proclaiming Gods love in our words and actions; about serving Christ in our everyday encounters. Confirmation and baptism are rites of passage, in which we adopt a new identity, and new responsibility, within a faith community. Today we are asked to hear the words God speaks about JesusThis is my belovedand take them to heart. We are also beloved of God, as distracted and fault-ridden and weak as we are; like Jesus, we also find in baptism a new identity. But its hard to talk about Christian identity when so many Muslims fear that Christians in the West are waging a new Crusade against them, and when many Christians have taken to chest-thumping in return: My God can beat your God! And youd better get out of the way of me, and my Jesus! What does this have to do with baptism? About enjoying the incomparable blessing we receive as beings created and loved by God? Well, baptism is about responsibility as well as identity. The baptism of Jesus initiated his public ministry, which led him to the cross. For individual Christians, baptism is our first call to the community of the church, where we are to witness to joy and peace in a cruel and violent world; to bring a message of hope in the face of despair. Whatever the worldly power may bea Roman Emperor, a military dictator, a corrupt lobbyist, or overpaid executive, or war profiteerChristians are called to witness to another, greater power. Our baptisms mark us for this purpose. Baptism is important, then, and as current as Internet chat. Following the tsunami disaster in Southeast Asia, I did something I rarely do; I entered chat rooms. I hoped that the horrendous scope of this tragedy would elevate the level of discourse, but I was wrong. Among the voices of compassion, there was a strident hatred: 55,000 dead Asians, so what; 90,000 dead Asians, so what; 135,000 dead Asiansand I quotegive them to the sharks. The word Asian was not employed, but I will not repeat the racist terms. Americans, at least those on the Internet, revealed themselves as a people of bad science and bad theology. Some blamed the earthquake on global warming; others, demonstrating a pitiful ignorance of a tsunamis destructive force, blamed the victims for not swimming to safety. Predictably, God was blamed as well: God punishing the human race for moral laxity, God punishing all those Muslims, Hindus, and Buddhists, who refuse to recognize Jesus as the only way to salvation. This can satisfy a desire to justify ourselves at the expense of others, but it is exactly the kind of sinful prejudice and easy judgment Jesus came to destroy. And gave his life in doing so. The topic of baptism surfaced on the Net. As most of the dead had not been baptized, people asserted that they were going to hell. But baptism is a blessing, not a bludgeon. Its a sacrament, not a Weapon of Mass Destruction. Baptism is much larger than even Christians acknowledge. You often hear people say, I was baptized a Catholic, or an Episcopalian, or a Methodist. Not so. A Christian is baptized into the Christian faith. Baptism is larger than any denomination. And I believe that todays readings allow us an insight into something larger still: a God who is not limited by our understanding of baptism, or salvation, but who has created all people in the divine image; a God whose love is so great, it is beyond our understanding, and certainly our comfort zones. Today, we hear the prophet Isaiah say that the one who is of God brings justice, and shows mercy a bruised reed he will not break. In the account of the first Christian apostles, we are told that God shows no partiality, but in every nation accepts those who do what is good in Gods sight. And in the gospel God says, this is my beloved, with whom I am well pleased. He is speaking of Jesus, of course, but also of us. We cant earn Gods love, but we can simply accept it and without denying Gods love for others, even those who differ greatly from ourselves. Those of us who are Christian hear in this gospel a call to a new identity. But identity is a thorny issue: there are those who make me proud to be a Christian, and others who give the faith a bad name. Identity is also a thorny issue for the citizens of Hawaii. I once read that Hawaiians lead the nation in awareness of their ancestry. Our Miss Hawaii contestants proudly list their heritage, and often its a mix such as this: Chinese, Hawaiian, Portuguese, Russian, English. Prejudice and discrimination exist in Hawaii, but the ease we have with race is epitomized for me in our Christmas pageants: imagine a Mary of Japanese and Portuguese descent; a Joseph who is Samoan, African-American, and Chinese; and a baby Jesus of East-Indian and Caucasian ancestry. Today, in Hawaii, we glimpse the future of the human race. It was a privilege to grow up in a place where the Methodist Youth met with the Young Buddhist League, making it impossible to understand America as a Christian country. It was a privilege for me, as a Caucasian, to be in the minority, because I grew up in the world as it is mostly Asian, and non-Christian. While some in this country still use the term American as a synonym for white, Hawaii has long demonstrated that it isnt so. When America was at war with Japan, and many Japanese-Americans were wrongfully interred in camps, young men from Hawaii such as Daniel Inouye volunteered for the European front. Their units were among the most decorated of World War II. But pride in our identity is a mixed blessing. What it means to be local is hotly contested. Some say it requires indigenous Hawaiian blood; others take it to mean anything but white. Some say youre local if youre born and raised in Hawaii, whatever your race. Hawaii is the only state that was once a kingdom, and that, too, is a mixed blessing. Among our state holidays are Prince Kuhio Day, and King Kamehameha Day. But much bitterness remains from the overthrow of the monarchy in 1893, and native Hawaiians still suffer disproportionately from the ravages of poverty. As we enter the 21st century, Hawaiis indigenous people are still working out their identity as related to the rest of America. Hawaii enjoys a special relationship with the Episcopal Church through King Kamehameha IV, and his wife, Queen Emma, who invited the first Anglican missionaries to the Islands. The King translated the Book of Common Prayer into Hawaiian, and Queen Emma journeyed to England, Scotland, and Wales to obtain funds to build St. Andrews Cathedral in downtown Honolulu. Its cornerstone was laid in 1867, the year that Queen Emma founded St Andrews priory, a school that still educates young women. Queen Emma also helped establish a hospital for the native people, who had no immunity to diseases brought by foreigners. Queens Hospital is today the largest public hospital in the state. The world knows Hawaii as a tourist paradise. But our identity is deeper than that: richer, happier, and sometimes, more tragic. Our islands, the most isolated island chain on the planet, harbor one-fourth of the endangered plants and animals in the U.S. A recent New York Times editorial, Aloha Poouli, lamented the loss, just last month, of a bird native to the upper slopes of Mauis Haleakala volcano. Hawaii is indeed a pleasant place, but we suffer from the usual problems of American life: traffic jams and potholes, pollution and waste management, and organized crime that profits from drugs, gambling, and protecting the many hostess bars that front for prostitution. A pervasive, bi-partisan corruption of campaign finance has long marred our political landscape and eroded trust in public institutions. We lead the nation in the percentage of families sending their children to private schools. We have a serious lack of affordable housing that contributes to homelessness. But we also have the spirit of Aloha, which is not a cliché, but something we try to live, even if it shows up in odd ways. We have lots of auto theft, for example, but comparatively little crime against persons. Its not uncommon to see morning commuters give city bus drivers fresh gardenias or papayas from the trees in their yards. In a drugstore in Honolulus financial district, one clerk often hands out hibiscus flowers from her garden. She looks you in the eye, until shes sure youre paying attention, and she says to each customer, God bless you; enjoy your day. You leave her checkout stand changed, re-named, baptized. You know you are loved, perhaps even beloved of God. So Aloha. God Bless. And Amen. |