Reed Breaking and Wick Quenching
Homily: Yr A Baptism of the Lord. Jan 15 2017, St. Albans
Homily: Yr A Baptism of the Lord. Jan 15 2017, St. Albans
Readings: Isaiah 42.1-9; Ps
29; Acts 10.34-48; Matthew 3.13-17
Image by Trudy Bloem, Creative Commons
When I used to play high
school football, one of our coaches would go and scout the other teams to
determine their strengths and weaknesses. I remember the day before we were scheduled to
play Merivale high school, the coach gathered the defence together and he
showed us how Merivale’s favourite play worked.
The quarterback would fake a lateral to one side, holding the ball high
in the air like this, and then he would hand off to the running back on other
side. And so during the game the next
day, whenever we saw the fake lateral with the ball held high we would swarm
the running back on the other side, and we tackled him for a loss almost every
time. We had found a weakness, and so we
exploited it.
There’s a big difference
between the high school football team and the high school debating team. But
the coaching philosophy wasn’t all that different. Debaters were trained to look for weaknesses
in their opponents’ arguments, and when they found one, they pounced.
Power exploits weakness. People who want to win will find a weakness
and use it to their advantage. They will
break the bruised reed, they will quench the dimly burning wick. And that’s not just in contrived situations
like football games and debates. Think
of what happens among children in schoolyards.
Think of what happens among adults at your workplace. Think about what happens between spouses in a
marriage. Reed breaking and wick
quenching happen all the time. The
easiest way to assert that you’re right is to tell somebody else they’re wrong.
Too often we lift ourselves up by
putting others down. I know. I have broken bruised reeds and quenched dimly
burning wicks. I suspect you have too.
But when God looks upon Jesus,
hear what he says:
“Here is my servant, my chosen
in whom my soul delights;
I have put my spirit upon him,
he will bring forth justice to the nations.
A bruised reed he will not
break,
And a dimly burning wick he
will not quench.”
We call this compassion. The biblical language for this is the Hebrew
word “hesed”, usually translated as steadfast love and mercy.
The God revealed to us in
Jesus is a God of compassion, abounding in steadfast love and mercy.
Some people would have been
surprised by that. In our psalm today,
the psalmist focuses on the power and the strength of God, the one who created
the heavens and stretched them out. And
so when the psalmist imagines the voice of God, he imagines it as a voice which
breaks cedars, a voice which flashes forth flames of fire, a voice which shakes
the wilderness and strips the forest bare.
But in our gospel reading we
hear a different voice. When Jesus had
been baptized, just as he came out of the waters, the heavens were opened to
him and a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am
well pleased.” The wilderness does not
shake, and there are no reports of cedars breaking. What is heard is the voice of love, the voice
of compassion, a voice which sees Jesus’ baptism and says, in a very loose
paraphrase that I heard this week, “This is just so awesome!”
Today’s account of Jesus’
baptism begins with grace. When John
sees Jesus coming, he recognizes him as one who is more powerful. John even says that he’s not worthy to carry
Jesus’ sandals. And so, John refuses to
baptize Jesus at first, probably he has every expectation that the one who is
more powerful will now take over the ministry of baptism. But Jesus doesn’t take over John’s ministry,
instead he affirms it and he submits to it.
Would that you and I were so gracious about affirming each other’s
ministries!
Jesus submits to the baptism
of John, because he understands that our part in baptism is to present
ourselves to God and to commit to God and to God’s ways. But the most important part of baptism is
what God does. God sends his Spirit upon
us. God gives us a name, child of
God. God tells us that he loves us and
delights in us. And God calls us to go
and to be his agents in the world.
This is what happened at Jesus’
baptism. This is what will happen here
in twelve weeks at our Easter Vigil, when eight of us will be baptized here at St. Albans.
At Jesus’ baptism, God called
him to a special ministry and mission, and that was to reveal to us who God is,
what God is like. And Jesus, through his
life and teaching, even his death, did just that, revealing God to be a God of
compassion, full of steadfast love and mercy.
We see it in Jesus’ ministry of healing, we see it in his ministry of
reconciliation. We see it when he
reaches out to those who are marginalized.
We hear it in Jesus’ message of love, of forgiveness, of praying for
enemies, we hear it as he proclaims the good news to all in need, people of all
genders, races and nations.
Jesus surprised people. Jesus disappointed some people. Many thought that the Messiah, the one chosen
and sent by God should act in a more powerful way. That he should put down enemies. That he should pick winners and losers, determine
who’s in and who’s out. Because isn’t
that how power usually works?
But Jesus is the one who will
not break a bruised reed and will not quench a dimly burning wick. When he encounters people he will not condemn
them for their bruises nor will he dismiss the dimness of their light. No, he will see our bruises and our dimly
burning light and he will be moved with compassion towards us, loving us as we
are, bringing healing and grace into our lives.
Jesus reveals God to be a compassionate God, abounding in steadfast love
and mercy.
In baptism we commit ourselves
to God, and God names us as his beloved children, puts his Spirit upon us and
calls us to go and be compassionate, agents of God’s steadfast love and mercy
in the world.
Is that a big task? It’s huge!
Compassion is hard, it’s something we have to learn and practice, every
day. So much of the time we see and do
the opposite, power-seekers who exploit weakness, those who would break the
bruised reed in order to gain advantage, and snuff out the smouldering wick to
make themselves appear strong or to prove that they’re right. We live in a world where often compassion is
not the norm. But you in your baptism
were called to lift people up, not to put them down. You are to support the one who is bruised, to
tend and heal the broken reed. You are
called to affirm even the dimmest light, to celebrate that light even as it
smoulders, to show compassion and to help it burn brightly again. For every person you will encounter is a
brother or sister made in God’s image who has the light of God within them.
Let me remind you of some of
your baptismal vows. At your baptism,
you, or someone on your behalf, promised,
To proclaim by word and
example the good news of God in Christ.
To seek and serve Christ in all
persons, loving your neighbour as yourself.
To strive for justice and
peace among all people and respect the dignity of every human being.
Those are big promises,
difficult promises to fulfill, which is why in our baptismal liturgy the
response is always,
“I will, with God’s help”
The God revealed to us in
Jesus is a compassionate God, abounding in steadfast love and mercy. In your baptism you promised to follow in
this way, following the example of Jesus. May it be said of this church that we are a compassionate
community that builds people up, not that brings them down.
May it be said of each one of
us:
Here is my servant, in whom my
soul delights.
A bruised reed she will not
break, and a dimly burning wick she will not quench.
Amen.
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