DYNAMIS!
A publication of St. George Orthodox Christian Cathedral
Wichita, KS
Sun., January
14, 2007 Tone 6 Nina, Equal-to-the-Apostles and
Enlightener of Georgia
6th Vigil of Theophany: 4 Kings 5:9-14 LXX (2 Kngs MT)
Epistle: 1 Timothy 1:15-17
Gospel: St. Luke 13:10-17
Types of Baptism ~
Cleansing: 4
Kings 5:9-14 LXX (MT = 2 Kings), especially vs. 14: “So he went down and
dipped himself seven times in the Jordan, according to the word of the man of
God; and his flesh was restored like the flesh of a little child, and he was
clean.” St. Irenaeus connects the
Baptismal Mystery with the cleansing of Naaman the leper as follows: “It was
not for nothing that Naaman of old, when suffering from leprosy, was purified
upon his being baptized, but it served as an indication to us. For as we are lepers in sin, we are
made clean by means of the sacred water and the invocation of the Lord from our
old transgressions....”
The cleansing of Naaman
directs us to the mystical nature of Holy Baptism but also warns us against
excessive, rational defenses or explanations of that which takes place in the
Church’s initiatory rites. Certain
well-meaning analysts, observe that there are numerous instances in which
persons who are baptized as infants apostatize as adults from the Christian
Faith, and so they condemn the practice of infant Baptism. These critics assert that initiation
into Christ should be reserved for those who fully understand the commitments
they are making. Thus, they say,
candidates for the rite should have reached “the age of discretion.”
There certainly is
justification for deploring the numbers of children who grow up to become
apostate adults, and for seeking, in the Church’s present practice, whatever
happens that leads some to such an unfortunate choice. Father Alexander Schmemann himself
deplores the depth of “our liturgical decadence” and the “begging for shorter
services.”
The problem lies not in
Baptizing infants but in the loss of connection with what Father Schmemann
calls “the dimensions of the baptismal mystery, its truly cosmical content and
depth.” Truly, Beloved of the
Lord, the initiatory rites of the Church are best served when they are
reverentially celebrated as Holy Mysteries, as the Divine means by which one
becomes “a member of the Body of Christ, a consecrated vessel of the Holy
Spirit, a fellow citizen with the Saints.” Baptism is not a
magical act nor a tradition of cultural, social, or ethnic heritage.
Look at what arrests our
attention in the account of Naaman’s cleansing: his comical rage when the
Prophet Elisha asks him to carry out a simple ritual which his logic tells him
could just as well have been accomplished by bathing in the “Abana and Pharpar,
the rivers of Damascus” (vs.12).
His demand for reason and practicality are exposed as foolish, a fact
which even his servants are able to see.
Human rationality ultimately will never penetrate the workings of
God. No well-catechized and devout
adult comes to Baptism and fully understands what God is accomplishing in his life - yes, neither in this age
nor in the age to come. Baptism is
a Mystery!
The cleansing of Naaman
does emphasize the importance of being willing to comply humbly and in the fear
of God with the requirements of the Church when we approach Her Holy
Mysteries. This is true at any
point in the life in Christ - whether we are children or adults. The great Syrian General of the Armies
does finally go to the Jordan and baptize himself a full seven times - not five
or six, but seven (vs. 14). Then,
and only then, his leprosy was healed.
Why did the Prophet not
direct Naaman to bathe in the waters of Damascus when he returned home? It was to teach us that Baptism is an
act of the Church, in which the Church celebrates her passage through death to
life, her holy Pascha in the Lord.
Normal practice is Baptism within the gathering of the Church, in her
precincts, with her waters. Even
when lay persons Baptize in extremity, the act still is the Mystery of
incorporation into the Church.
O Christ our God, may all
Thy Baptized servants be worthy partakers of Thy death and resurrection and
preserve their Baptismal garment undefiled unto the dread day of Thy coming.
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