DYNAMIS!
A publication of St. George Orthodox Christian Cathedral
Wichita, KS
St. Matthew 3:13-17
(1/6)
The Theophany of our
Lord Jesus Christ
Christ's
Baptism: St. Matthew 3:13-17, especially vss. 14, 15: “John tried to prevent Him,
saying, 'I need to be baptized by You and are You
coming to me?' But Jesus answered
and said to him, ‘Permit it to be so now, for thus it is fitting for us
to fulfill all righteousness.’” While John the Forerunner lived silently
in the desert from childhood, the Lord Jesus remained quietly unrecognized in
Since the baptismal rite that the Forerunner offered
was for “repentance” (Lk. 3:3), one might
ask if there were not some contradiction in Jesus accepting a ritual signifying
personal repentance.
After all, the Apostle Paul asserts that He “was in all points
tempted as we are, yet without sin” (Heb. 4:15)! Our expectation is
inverted: the all-holy God-man is baptized by John, the teacher of baptism for
repentance. Why does Christ
ritually unite His sinless humanity with our corrupt humanity? Why does He subject His Light to our
darkness and sin?
The Holy Fathers note that when the Lord was baptized, “the whole
universe [was] watered by mystical streams.” Hence, the whole created order, by the
entry of the All-pure Person of God the Word, was “lighted from on
high....the land and the sea have divided between them the joy of the world,
and the world hath been filled with rejoicing. The waters saw Thee, O God, the waters
saw Thee; they were afraid.
Thereby, the Lord’s purpose in being baptized was grand in scale,
yes, even cosmic in scope. Not only
are men restored to God as He unites Himself to our race again in
By the mystery of Christ’s Baptism, the waters of earth that
suffused His Body were spiritually transformed to be a means by which the Holy
Spirit may be conveyed to men, to us.
In Holy Baptism, the Spirit acts through water and we are united with
Christ. Part of Christ’s
purpose in Baptism was to prepare all of earth’s waters for our new birth
in the Spirit (Jn. 3:5).
Note carefully: the capstone that completes God’s “arch of
intention” in the Lord Jesus’ Baptism was the descent of the Holy
Spirit and the spoken affirmation by God the Father: “This is My beloved Son, in Whom I Am well pleased” (Mt.
3:17). In the Lord Jesus’
Baptism, the mystery of the Holy Trinity is disclosed for the first time in a
complete revelation of the Divine nature of three Persons: the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Spirit. Christ’s
Baptism is an eternity-filled moment, the first instance in time revealing the
glory, nature, and purpose of the Godhead.
Great art Thou, O Lord, and wondrous art Thy works, and there is no word
that sufficeth to hymn Thy wonders! This change hath been wrought by the
right hand of the Most High.
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