Note: You may choose Romans 6:3-11 as the Epistle text.

Intro
You’re standing in the wilderness across the Jordan River.  A voice calls out 
from a distance, “Prepare the way of the Lord!”  A figure approaches, a 
wild-haired, bearded man.  His skin is bronzed by the sun, his eyes ablaze with 
prophetic fire.  

Main Body
He comes adorned like a prophet from the pages of Scripture.  Coarse camel’s 
hair is his clothing, and a leather belt straps itself around his waist.  You 
think this crazy figure of a man is Elijah, back from the haunts of death.  You 
now realize you are standing where tradition tells you God chose to whisk 
Elijah off to heaven centuries before.

The strange figure draws near.  “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near.”  
He glares at you with a stubborn stare, pointing a finger in your direction.  
Yes, he means you, church-going religious one.  Yes, you, sincere Israelite, 
Pharisee, Sadducee, and Scribe.  He also includes you tax collector and 
prostitute, the dregs of society. 

No matter who you are, repent.  So, you help your neighbor.  Repent, for what 
you do is not enough to bring you into God’s graces.  So, you are a wayward 
son.  Repent, you are worse off than you think.  You also need the Messiah and 
what He brings.

What a strange man he is.  He follows a paleo diet, eating grasshopper protein 
and wild honey.  From where does he hail and who sent him?  His name is John.  
He is the son of Zechariah and Elizabeth, old parents when he enters the world, 
too old.

John grew up as an orphan in the wilderness.  He wants little to do with the 
Temple.  Oh, he comes from a family line of priests, but he is not a priest.  
His business is at the Jordan River.  He comes to baptize, not Gentiles, but 
Israelites.

People underwent baptism in John’s day.  Now, God did not command the practice, 
but baptism became a way for Gentiles to show their Gentiles ways are washed 
away, no more a part of their lives.  Gentiles received a baptism when they 
became Jews. 

So, John’s baptism is nothing new, but something is different.  For the people 
whom John urges to receive baptism are not Gentiles but Jews.  Some are also 
religious leaders: Pharisees and Sadducees.  Why do they need to renounce 
Gentiles ways?

No wonder John’s baptism causes such controversy.  He is calling Israel to 
repent.  Their understanding of what God set up for them is so far off track 
they might as well be Gentiles.  The Israelites misunderstand God’s Law.  His 
Law shows us we need a Savior.  God did not give us His Law for us to try to 
climb our way to heaven.

So, John singles out the religious leaders for the harshest treatment.  “You 
brood of vipers!  Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?  Produce fruit 
in keeping with repentance.  Turn from your fallen ways, for the kingdom of 
heaven is near.”  John appears in the wilderness, showing the Old Covenant is 
now ending.  

Prophet Malachi wrote of Elijah, who will come before the Day of the Lord to 
prepare the people for the Messiah.  John speaks in the spirit of Elijah, 
becoming the last Old-Covenant prophet.  The Messiah is here, and Israel is in 
desperate need of a bath.

John calls Israel to be washed and ready for the Coming One.  He calls Israel 
away from Jerusalem and its religious institutions.  For with the Messiah, 
everything is going to change.  You Israelites might as well be Gentiles!

To repent is a change of mind, to change your thinking.  Repentance is not 
about behaving; no, behaving is a byproduct of repentance.  To repent is a 
total flip of the mind and will.  The time is here, stop wasting time, for the 
kingdom of heaven is near.

So, Jesus listens to John’s call and comes for baptism.  Do you not find what 
Jesus does as strange?  John does.  God’s sinless Son comes to receive a 
baptism of repentance for forgiveness.  He doesn’t need to repent.  He doesn’t 
need forgiveness.  What Jesus does perplexes John.

What sins does Jesus need to confess?  None, but He still stands before God, 
standing with sinners to be baptized, to be washed of His sins.  

John objects; this isn’t what he planned.  He pictures the Messiah as robust 
and mighty.  The Messiah will come with a fiery baptism, with an ax in one hand 
and a pitchfork in the other.  Jesus is the Messiah who will clean up the 
threshing floor, gather the proper wheat into His barn, and burn the chaff with 
voracious fire.

John gazes into Jesus’ eyes.  “I should be baptized by You.  I’m the sinner; 
You’re the sinless one.  I’m baptizing people to prepare them for You—yet You 
come to me.  I’m confused.”

Jesus insists: “Let it be, John.”  Jesus speaks the same word for forgiveness 
when He tells John to “let it be.”  “Let go of how you think I’m going to work. 
 I come to forgive, to fulfill all righteousness.”  In those words, we realize 
how God will save the world.  The sinless Son of God will take all sin into 
Himself and become the world’s sin.

Jesus becomes the world’s sin.  He comes to embody all humanity in Himself.  In 
His sinlessness, He takes the world’s sin into Himself.  Jesus is the Lamb of 
God, who takes away the sin of the world, taking all our sin into His dark 
death.  He stands in John’s baptismal water, contaminated by our sin.  

Jesus now takes water to do His bidding, to purify those who will later come to 
His baptismal waters.  So, we learn the baptism of John and Jesus are 
different.  John baptizes to prepare for our Lord’s first coming.  Jesus 
commanded His Church to baptize to prepare people for His second coming, on the 
Last Day.  

Your baptism came from Jesus, not John.  Your baptism came with the flaming 
wind of His Spirit.  Jesus fulfills John’s baptism when He stands in the water 
to be baptized by him.  How can we be sure?  The heavens open.  The Spirit 
descends, the Father speaks, and the Son is wet with water.  The Holy Trinity 
affirms as much, with the Father giving voice: “This is my Son, whom I love; 
with Him, I am well pleased.”  

John’s baptism prepares the way for Jesus’ coming to die and rise.  Your 
baptism prepares the way for Jesus’ coming in glory when He will call forth the 
dead and fulfill His salvation.  Our Epistle Reading told us as much.  Baptism 
joins you to Jesus in His death and resurrection.  Why?  So you will die with 
Christ to rise and live with Him forever.  Jesus will fulfill your baptism on 
the Last Day when you rise to new life.

John points to Jesus as the promised Messiah—and what a Jesus he preaches!  
John’s Jesus holds a winnowing fork in His hand, a fork to separate the grain 
from the chaff.  John’s Jesus comes with burning judgment, ready to scorch the 
chaff with ravenous fire as He gathers His wheat into the barn.  John’s Jesus 
holds an ax chopping at the root of every fruitless tree.  

John prepares, and Jesus appears.  Which Jesus do we find?  He comes humble and 
meek, bringing Himself to receive John’s baptism of repentance when He doesn’t 
need to repent.  We don’t find an ax and a pitchfork, but cross and death.  We 
don’t find God coming in judgment, but coming to be judged.  We find a 
different Jesus.

Oh, Jesus can be the God of burning wrath, but He prefers not to be.  Think 
back to God giving His Law to His people.  At Sinai, God revealed His judgment 
is to the third and fourth, but His faithful love is to the thousands.  
Understand the ratio?  Three to four versus thousands.  God will judge, but He 
prefers mercy and grace instead.

So, Jesus comes as the Gospel to John’s Law.  Who thinks God will use His ax 
against the promised “shoot from the stump of Jesse,” Jesus?  Who will think 
the fire of God’s judgment will turn against the Son in His passion to save us? 
 Who will think the way of heaven is for the King to die for His subjects and 
rise from the dead?  So we learn, once again: God’s ways are not our ways.

Seven-hundred years before John, God’s prophet, Isaiah, foresaw the coming 
Kingdom.  A little shoot sprouts from the stump of King David’s family tree.  
The small shoot is Jesus, the sprout who will become a branch bearing 
life-giving fruit.  The Spirit of the Lord will rest on Him. 

Jesus will judge the world in His righteousness.  He comes to restore wholeness 
and harmony to all creation.  The wolf will live with the lamb (Isaiah 11:6).  
The broken will become whole and complete.  Creation will groan no more.

The baptism Jesus put in place is a letter from the Triune God, addressed to 
you.  Christ saved you in His death on the cross—but baptism makes salvation 
personal.  In Christ, YOU are born from above.  Baptism now marks YOU as a 
child of God, becoming His testimony to you: You belong, you’re mine, part of 
my family.

At Jesus’ baptism, the heavens opened, the Spirit of God descended, and the 
voice of the Father spoke: “This is my Son, whom I love; with Him, I am well 
pleased.”  So also with you at your baptism.  Heaven opens, the Spirit 
descends, and the Father smiles with approval: “This is my son, my daughter, 
whom I love.”  

Conclusion
In God’s Son, Jesus, whom He loves, you are loved.  You are born from above, 
renewed, resurrected, for you are baptized.  All thanks to Jesus and what He 
does for you in baptism.  Amen.
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