John stands knee-deep in the river, day after day. He feels this inner fervency to draw people to repent. So much so that he lives off the land and sleeps under the stars. Relentlessly, he cries out, taking no notice of how he is received. Maybe, just maybe a few will respond.
Then, one day, the Son of God, for whom he has been preparing others to receive, arrives and wants to be baptized as well. John says, “Uh, no. You are the one who should be doing this to me. I am not worthy to untie your sandals.”
But Jesus tells him this is what must be done, and there is purpose in it. I can picture him as he looked into John’s eyes. I almost hear him say, “Trust me on this. You have to do this. You’ll see why in a minute.”
As he is baptized, the Holy Spirit comes to bolster Jesus through the next three years of grueling ministry. God anoints Him for the task. He confirms that Jesus is His Son.
Jesus’ baptism has another purpose as well. It’s is also a foreshadowing of Jesus passing that same Holy Spirit on to each believer who is baptized in His name and receives Him into their lives. While John baptized for repentance of sins, Jesus takes that and turns it into so much more. John’s baptisms was temporary and temporal. Jesus’s obedience turned it into a divine and eternal action of our loving and willing-to-forgive Father in Heaven.
Have you ever felt inadequate for a ministry God has called you to do? Then you can relate to John. But just as Jesus told John that what he was asking him to do was purposeful and necessary, so He tells you. Just do it, trust and then watch what happens. Christ can take your simple acts of obedient talent and manifest Himself into them so they become significantly more than you ever imagined.. He did it with water jugs at a wedding, with a boy’s meal of fish and bread, and with two pieces of wood tied to make a cross bar in which to punish thieves and murderers.
So, do what Christ is calling you to do, no matter how insignificant it makes you feel. Obey His command. Perhaps the skies won’t open up and an illuminated dove descend. But God will nod and say, “This is my child, with whom I am well pleased.”
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