Luke 3:21-38 · The Baptism and Genealogy of Jesus
Your Ordination
Luke 3:15-17, 21-22
Sermon
by Will Willimon
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My colleague, John Westerhoff, used to say, ''If you are a pastor who is spending more than fifteen hours a week working in projects outside the congregation, you are probably wasting your time. We need you in the congregation equipping the saints for their demanding ministry in the world.''

On the other hand Westerhoff said to the laity, ''If you are a layperson who is spending more than fifteen hours a week working in projects within the church, you are probably wasting your time. Your ministry consists not of running errands for the pastor but in sharing in Christ's ministry in the world.''

I remember the night I got ordained. One of the great moments of my life. Broad Street United Methodist Church. 1973. We had a great service that night. Gathered congregation. Gathered family and friends. The bishop laid hands on my head. Made me a minister. I'll never forget the time I was ordained.

Do you remember the time you got ordained? You are, you know, ordained. You, a minister of the gospel. In the early rites of baptism, the church made this clear. The newly baptized Christian was given a new white robe, symbolic of the new life that was now being lived. Hands were laid on the head, sign of the gift of the Holy Spirit, the empowerment to be in ministry with Christ in the world. Later, a Bible was given, sign that this new Christian is to be in the world preaching and teaching.

Alas, most of us now associate laying-on-of-hands with ordination of clergy. Through the course of time, baptism lost its significance as the making of ''priests'' in the world and became only a rite of initiation into the church. This all led many to the unfortunate conclusion that pastors, those who are ordained, are the real ministers of the church and the laity are there just to undergird and support the work of the clergy.

And this is wrong.

Today's gospel is the baptism of Jesus. When Jesus was baptized, says Luke, a dove descends and there is a voice proclaiming Jesus as the beloved Son of God. Right after this event, Jesus begins his ministry of preaching, teaching, and healing, sign that kingdom of God is breaking out all over. Jesus' baptism is the day of his ''ordination," the beginning point of his work, his ministry.

What does this have to do with you?

Just a few weeks ago we read the story of the angel's annunciation to Mary. Remember what the angel told Mary? ''The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be born will be holy; he will be called Son of God'' (Luke 1:35).

For Mary, everything is set in motion by the Holy Spirit. On that day, the Holy Spirit came upon Mary and her ministry began. That day was the beginning of her work for God. That day, Mary became the first in the story of Jesus to hear the call of God and to say, Yes. That day she got commandeered for God.

From these stories I draw a couple of conclusions:

1. Ministry is a gift of God. It is not our idea. It is God's idea.

2. Ministry is a gift of God through the descent of the Holy Spirit. We are given the Spirit in baptism, not for some sort of personal comfort (though we well may receive comfort from the Holy Spirit) but rather so that we might be empowered to participate fully in the ministry of Christ in the world.

3. Ministry is a gift of God to all the baptized. The church which had on its bulletin board out front ''Pastor: Jane E. Smith; Ministers: The Whole Congregation'' got it right. All of you are ordained by God to be ministers. Pastors are only here to help you ministers do your ministry, not to do your ministry for you.

I have seen you in ministry. I have seen evidence that you are ordained, gifted with the Holy Spirit for ministry. I have seen you at ministry in the choir room, or a Sunday School room, or the sick room, or the board room, or the classroom.

So in a way, I said it wrong. The day I got ordained was not that night back in 1973 when the bishop laid hands on my head and made me a pastor. The night I got ordained as a minister was that day all the way back in 1946 when the pastor dipped his hand in the baptismal bowl and poured water on my head and signified that I had been given the Holy Spirit and made me a minister.

One reason why you are here in the Chapel on Sunday is to become more adept at ministry, to gain the skills, insights, and vision needed to be a good minister of the gospel wherever God has planted you. As your pastor and preacher I preach and I teach in order that you might ''preach'' and teach wherever you go in the coming week.

So go on and be a minister! Use the gifts God has given you as a sign of the outbreak of the Kingdom of God. Take on new challenges in your ministry, make the challenges so great, so demanding, that you will either have to rely on the Holy Spirit to uphold you or else fail miserably. Go on, be the minister that God has called you, ordained you to be.

But before you go, let us say our prayers:

Lord, help us to be the sort of witnesses you deserve,
Enable us to speak up for you,
Give us the grace to show forth your power in all that we do,
Empower us with your Holy Spirit so that we are given strength and courage, not of our own devising, for the tasks which await us. Amen.


Notes: Fred Craddock warns ''Jesus' baptism is so familiar to the church from the accounts in the other Gospels that the preacher and the teacher will have to call deliberate attention to Luke's text in order for him to be heard'' (Luke:Interpretation, Louisville: John Knox, 1990, p. 50).

Luke does not explicitly mention the place of baptism (though he mentions the Jordan at verse 3), nor even the person doing the baptism (John is in prison by this time in Luke – verse 3:20). Clearly, it is not so much the baptism which interests Luke as its effects when ''The heavens were opened'' as the beginning of all that Jesus ''began to do and teach'' (Acts 1:1).

When the heavens open, the Holy Spirit descends upon Jesus. Luke gives a central role to the Holy Spirit throughout his gospel and Acts. In fact, some have noted that Acts ought to be called, not ''The Acts of the Apostles'' but rather ''The Acts of the Holy Spirit," so prominent is the Holy Spirit there.

Thus Jesus' baptism becomes a prelude to the other key Holy Spirit events like Luke 4:1-18 and Luke 24:49.

Although the voice proclaiming Jesus as the Son is important, we ought not to read into this a moment in which Jesus becomes the Son of God through the imposition of the Spirit. In Luke, we have known Jesus as the Son since the annunciation.   This Holy Spirit comes, as it frequently comes in Luke-Acts, for prophetic empowerment. Led by the Spirit into the desert (4:1), Jesus will soon reappear ''in the power of the Spirit'' (4:14) to begin his ministry.

Luke Timothy Johnson makes an evocative suggestion in his commentary, linking the descent of the dove in Jesus' baptism with the annunciation to:

''The reader may...[observe]the structural similarity between this scene and that of the annunciation (1:35) and the angelic song 92:14) in the infancy account. In the annunciation, the Spirit comes down and the child will be called son of God furthermore, the power will 'overshadow' Mary -- the word, we saw, recalled the 'hovering' in passages such as Ps 90:4 (LXX). In the angelic song, we find the heavens open, and the declaration of peace to people 'of God's favor' -- the same word used here of Jesus. In the baptism, perhaps, the dove is the 'hovering' symbol that enables the reader's imagination to pull these elements into a single focus'' (The Gospel of Luke, Collegeville, Minnesota: The Liturgical Press, 1991, p. 71).

And what is that single focus? We shall interpret Jesus' baptism as that time when the Holy Spirit is made prominent in his ministry, that inauguration day for his ministry, just as the Annunciation was Mary's inauguration of her ministry. By implication, our baptism is also our day when our ministry is inaugurated. None of us ministers on our own. We are each empowered by the Holy Spirit to be in ministry.

Duke University, Duke Chapel Sermons, by Will Willimon