The Feast of the Baptism of the Lord
Dear brothers and sisters,
As we commemorate the Baptism of the Lord in the waters of the Jordan River, we are reminded that it is in the waters of Baptism that we are born into the family of God and are made members of his Church. Moreover, it is in that holy bath that we pledge our loyalty, our love, and our service to Christ. Baptism is the gift of God by which he gives us his very own life and makes us his sons and daughters by reason of which our lives are changed forever.
Detail, Scenes from the life of Christ and life of Blessed Gerard of Villamagna, MS M 643, fol. 5v
Baptism, of course, is not something that we do for ourselves. Rather, it is something we receive from God’s own initiative. Baptism “is a gift; the gift of life. But a gift must be accepted, it must be lived.”[1] No one gives a gift except in token of friendship and a gift of friendship implies a "yes" to the friend and a "no" to all that is incompatible with this friendship. When we receive the gift of Baptism, it implies a “no” to all that is incompatible with the life of God's family, to all that is incompatible with true life in Christ.
Consequently, in the second dialogue of the Rite of Baptism, three “noes” and three “yeses” are spoken. We say "no" as we renounce temptation, sin, and the devil. We know these things well – that we will be tempted by the world, by the flesh, and by the devil, and that we will sin – but, perhaps precisely because we have heard these renunciations so often, the words may not mean too much to us. If this is the case, we must think a little more deeply about the content of these “noes.” To what are we saying "no"? This is the only way to understand what we want to say "yes" to
In the ancient Church, these "noes" were summed up in a phrase that was easy to understand for the people of that time: they renounced, as they said, the "pompa diabuli" (the pomp of the devil), that is, the promise of life in abundance, of that apparent life that seemed to come from the pagan world, from its permissiveness, from its way of living as one pleased. It was therefore a "no" to a culture of what seemed to be an abundance of life, to what was in fact an "anticulture" of death. It was a "no" to those spectacles in which death, cruelty, and violence had become an entertainment. This "pompa diabuli", this "anticulture" of death, was actually a corruption of joy, it was the love of deceit and fraud, and the abuse of the body as a commodity and a trade. If we think about it now, we can say that also in our time we need to say "no" to the widely prevalent culture of death, to the pompa diabuli which still seems to run rampant. As Fulton Sheen reminds us, “Never forget that there are only two philosophies to rule your life: the one of the cross, which starts with the fast and ends with the feast. The other of Satan, which starts with the feast and ends with the headache."
The pomp of the devil is still manifested, for example, in drugs, in the flight from reality to what is illusory; to a false happiness expressed in deceit, fraud, injustice, and contempt for others; it is expressed in a sexuality that becomes sheer irresponsible enjoyment, that makes the human person into a "thing," so to speak, no longer considered a person who deserves personal love which requires fidelity, but who becomes a commodity, a mere object; it is expressed by the embrace of freedom simply for the sake of individual autonomy; it is expressed in the desire for wealth that cannot be spent; it is expressed in the desire for comfort that allows me to be lazy and allows me to ignore the struggles of the poor; it is expressed in the willingness to throw away what makes me uncomfortable or gets in my way; it is expressed in the willingness to reject lifelong monogamous marriage in the desire to define myself solely accordingly to my sexual urges; it is expressed in the desire to remain forever youthful, which leads me to ignore the fact that one day I will die.
Brothers and sisters, let us say "no" to this pompa, to this promise of apparent happiness, to anticulture of what may seem to be life but is in fact merely an instrument of death, and to this anticulture. If we say “no” to all of this, if we say “no” to so much of what our culture embraces, promotes, and imposes, it allows to say something much greater. Saying “no” to the pomp of the devil and his empty promises enables us to say “yes” to the true culture of life. For this reason, the Christian "yes," from ancient times to our own day, is a great "yes" to life. It is our "yes" to Christ, our "yes" to the Conqueror of death, our "yes" to life in time and in eternity.
Just as in this baptismal dialogue the "no" is expressed in three renunciations, so too is the "yes" expressed in three expressions of loyalty: "yes" to the living God, that is, a God Creator and a creating reason who gives meaning to the cosmos and to our lives; "yes" to Christ, that is, to a God who did not stay hidden but who has a name, words, a body, and blood, to a concrete God who gives us life and shows us the path of life; "yes" to the communion of the Church, in which Christ is the living God who enters our time, enters our profession, enters our daily life.
We might also say that the Face of God, the content of this culture of life, the content of our great "yes," is expressed in the Ten Commandments, which are not a pack of prohibitions, of "noes," but actually present to us a great vision of life. They are a "yes" to the God who gives meaning to life (the first three Commandments); a "yes" to the family (the Fourth Commandment); a "yes" to life (the Fifth Commandment); a "yes" to responsible love (the Sixth Commandment); a "yes" to solidarity, to social responsibility, to justice (the Seventh Commandment); a "yes" to the truth (the Eighth Commandment); a "yes" to respect for others and for their belongings (the Ninth and 10th Commandments). This is the Christian philosophy of life, the culture of life that becomes concrete and practical and beautiful in communion with Christ, the living God, who walks with us in the companionship of his friends, in the great family of the Church.
Baptism is a gift of life! It is a "yes" to the challenge of really living life, of saying "no" to the attack of death that presents itself under the guise of life; and it is a "yes" to the great gift of true life that became present on the Face of the Child of Bethlehem, who gives himself to us in Baptism and in the Eucharist. Therefore, whenever we present ourselves to receive the Holy Eucharist, the Body and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Christ, we renew our “no” to the anti-culture of death even as we renew our “yes” to life, to the Church, and to Christ.
Today, as we celebrate the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord and conclude the season of Christmas, let us renew our commitment to make our lives firmly rooted in the faith of Jesus Christ, in all that we received when we were washed clean in the saving waters of Baptism. Let each of us say a firm “no” to the pomp of this world and a resounding “yes” to Christ and so build a society founding on the reality of life and love. Amen.
[1] Pope Benedict XVI, Homily, 8 January 2008. The remainder of his homily follows in an adapted form.
No comments:
Post a Comment