If you are looking at a particular sermon and it is removed it is because it has been updated.

For example Year C 2010 is being replaced week by week with Year C 2013, and so on.

Friday, 10 January 2025

Baptism of Our Lord Year C, 2025

 

(Isaiah 42:1-4, 6-7; Acts of the Apostles 10:34-38; Luke 3:15-16, 21-22) 

Jesus’ decision to leave Mary and His Nazareth home and go to be baptized by John the Baptist in the Jordan, occasioned the most sublimely intimate event of Jesus’ life thus far, an event involving the most  Holy Trinity Itself:  the HOLY SPIRIT descended upon Jesus like a dove, and a VOICE came OUT OF HEAVEN saying:

YOU are MY BELOVED SON.

Jesus was then about 30 years of age and had been living under the tutelage of Mary first of all -- as her child, to be guided by her into His Jewish faith and spirituality, and also shown how to live an appropriate social life with its personal relationships.  Only later was He to be taught by Joseph for guidance on how to learn a life-sustaining, trade skill, with himself as a joiner.  Mary and Joseph were thus the chosen guides for Jesus’ growing-up into a perfect Man before His being manifested later as perfect God.

Jesus had always realized spiritually that Joseph was not His father: His ever-growing love for, His intimacy in prayer with, the God of Israel culminated during their twelfth family pilgrimage to Jerusalem.  At the end of that pilgrimage -- during which Jesus had officially accepted a full-grown man’s obligations for His observance of the Law -- their caravan set-off back to Nazareth.  Mary and Joseph, however, could not find Jesus in the caravan with them nor with their friends.  It was only after returning to Jerusalem and searching for three days that Mary and Joseph did eventually find Him in the Temple, where He simply answered Mary’s chastising words by saying, ‘Did you not know that I must be in My Father’s house?’

However,  even then in the Temple Jesus had only been talking with the learned doctors about God.  But now, after humbly taking up the last position in the queue for John’s baptism, God spoke to Him, as He rose from the waters, with sublime intimacy:

            You are My beloved Son with Whom I am well-pleased!

Now indeed, after 30 years of astounding humility and most patient trust in His ‘distant’ Father, Jesus had become  His Father’s perfect instrument, His Chosen One, to be sent (as the Son ‘proudly’ referred to His mission) as

PERFECT GOD AND PERFECT MAN for mankind’s redemption.

It is, however,  the very moment, the very instant, of Jesus’ baptism, the most joyful, crowning and consecrating, moment of His whole life thus far, which is also the whole point of our celebration in this Mass today.   Jesus was transformed by those divine words still echoing in His mind, and causing His heart to pulsate so serenely and sublimely, yet with such promise of more than human strength.

            You are My beloved Son with Whom I am well-pleased! 

Dear People of God, surely we -- who try to celebrate this Mass in spirit and in truth – must, as disciples of Jesus our friend, our brother, and our Saviour, long to hear such words ourselves on our appearance before the Lord, Maker and Master of all things, Who originally called us to faith in Jesus that He might – by the grace of  His own most Holy Spirit -- make of us guests fit to sit at the table bearing all the blessings for the Father’s heavenly feast, blessings prepared to form us, ultimately, for the eternal praise and glory of the Lord and Father of us all.

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ, we should most whole-heartedly REJOICE with Jesus on this unique day of His supreme delight as Son of Man, here on earth, yet so lovingly  embraced by His heavenly Father and most faithful-abiding Spirit.