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Sunday, January 09, 2005

The Solemnity of Our Lord's Baptism

In the gospel, we find Jesus baptized by John. John at first did not want to baptize Him, as John knew that he would be baptizing the Messiah, and that this Messiah should rightly be baptizing John. Jesus however knew that it was proper for Him to do what the Father wills. So John had to accede and baptized Jesus. After the baptism, the sky opened up from above Jesus and the Holy Spirit descended like a dove upon Him. Then a voice from heaven said, "This is My Beloved Son, listen to Him."



In this gospel scene, we witness the presence of the Holy Trinity. God presents Himself to us as Father, Son and Spirit. It is a scene which invites all to see God as three Persons and also how they are related to One another in a relationship of love. When we recall our own baptism, we are reminded that we are baptized in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. In our baptism, we are therefore, also called to a relationship of love and service in the Church - where the presence of the Holy Trinity indwells and guides us. Baptism in the name of God as Holy Trinity reminds us to a life of commitment to serve our brothers and sisters in the manner of Jesus.



Our Lord's baptism signifies His solidarity with our humanity. In the Incarnation, He took upon Himself all of our humanity (with the exception of sin), and through the baptism of John, He took upon Himself the way that all of us should go through - a life of repentance from our sins and turning back to God (a lifetime of conversion and growing more and more into the Spirit of Christ). In this Solemnity of the Lord's baptism, we are called to "enter more readily into the Lord's service" and to "commit ourselves everyday into a life of generous service to the Church." This was the example that Christ wanted to convey to us by His Baptism. Though He had no sin, He generously entered into our human condition and showed us the way to God - through a life of genuine service and charity.

Sunday, January 02, 2005

2nd Sunday after Christmas - Epiphany




This Sunday we celebrate the manifestation of the Christ-Child to the world. We are told that wise men from the East came to offer this Child with gifts of frankincense, gold and myrrh. They have heard that a King was to be born in Bethlehem and so they seek to find Him. When they were given the sign of a star, they traveled to Bethlehem.





These wise men from the East accepted the Christ-Child and gave homage to the One who would be both King and Martyr. The gospel says: "To His own He came, and yet His own did not accept Him". By the mere instance of great difficulty by which Joseph and Mary looked for a place to stay so that Mary can give birth to Jesus, is a point of fact to the future rejection of the King-Messiah. God-made-man needed a place to be born and yet even at the Inn where Joseph and Mary knocked, they were not given hospitality. But when finally one owner of an inn gave his stable as a place for them to stay, it was a very humble setting - for it is a place where animals stay and feed. Such is His lowly estate that the Word made flesh will reveal Himself to humanity.





Though Christ lived humility to perfection, He had power to save all humanity. In the Gospel, we read: "Any who did accept Him He empowered to become children of God." The power all Christians received from Christ is a life-giving strength. No power on earth can destroy the Spirit of life in Jesus and in all who follow Him. Christ is the Source of our life and our strength. Though death tried to overcome Him, the Father sent the Holy Spirit to vindicate Him from the power of sin and death. In this feast of the Epiphany, we already foresee through our knowledge of the faith, how God would empower Christ to defeat sin and death, and also share the victory with us if only we continue to have faith in Him.