Shalom chaverim, shalom my friends…
The first thing that came to mind upon seeing the first ariel photos of the devastation brought on by the Pacific Palisades fire was that this is what Jerusalem and all of Judea must have looked like after the Roman siege of the city in the year 70 CE – nothing but rubble, smoke, hot spots still burning. It is what the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki looked like as fires burned for at least three days after “we the people” dropped the first, and thank God only, nuclear weapons used in warfare up until now.
Fire. One of the signs of the Holy Spirit. Along with breath, and wind – like those annual Santa Anna winds fueling the five fires that erupted around Los Angeles, the City of Angels, throughout the past week. We often write and pray for the “power of the Holy Spirit.” How often do we associate this “power” with what we have witnessed in Pacific Palisades? Luke, writing amidst this kind of smoldering devastation that once was the home base for the Holy of Holies, the Ark of the Covenant, need not imagine the awful power of fire and wind. It’s all around him.
Leading up to Jesus’s baptism, Luke presents instances of the power of the Holy Spirit, often in poetry or song. Zechariah, priest and aged father of John the Baptizer, possessed by the Spirit’s power proclaims that his child “shall be called the prophet of the Highest…to give knowledge of salvation unto his people for the remission of their sins…to give light to them that sit in darkness and in the shadow of death.” [i] And the song of Mary, though terrified by the announcement that she shall bear a child, proclaims that thru the power of the Spirit God “has scattered the proud in their conceit…cast down the mighty from their thrones and has lifted up the lowly…filled the hungry with good things and the rich he has sent away empty.” Through the life, death, and resurrection of the child she bears “he has remembered his promise of mercy, the promise he made to Abraham and his children for ever!” [ii] As we sing these songs we embody their vision.
Then John, of whom Zechariah sings, announces the arrival of Jesus to the River Jordan, and warns the people, “He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand, to clear his threshing floor and to gather the wheat into his granary; but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire." [iii] Unquenchable fire has become all too familiar this week. Note: this is not to suggest Jerusalem, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, nor the Palisades are being winnowed out – but their smoldering landscapes give us some idea of context from which Luke writes.
Then comes Luke’s utterly spare account of Jesus’s baptism: “Now when all the people were baptized, and when Jesus also had been baptized and was praying, the heaven was opened, and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in bodily form like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, ‘You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.’" This one scene features God the Father, Jesus the Son, and the Holy Spirit all in one scene at the same time.
Our desire to move on and away from the winnowing fork and unquenchable fire threatens to deceive us into casting this as some sort of precious moment, when in fact, given the total attention to the movements of the Holy Spirit in Luke, we are meant to be forewarned: “The coming of Jesus Christ does not baptize the status quo; rather, it overthrows every power and undermines all that seems certain in the world’s eyes.” [iv]
As among the ashes of the Jerusalem holocaust, (a word that literally means, the whole, all, is burned and consumed by fire), as among the ashes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and now the Palisades, this baptism of the Christ we gather to remember is to be a reminder that the power of God’s Holy Spirit is forever an agent of change – change that means to redeem all the accumulated sins of human history and return us to a vision of God’s Shalom, or what Jesus repeatedly calls the kingdom of God. What our retired Presiding Bishop Michael Curry and Martin Luther King, Jr. repeatedly have called us to return, re-turn, which is the root understanding of repentance, to re-turn to thr vision of being A Community of Love: love of God and love of neighbor – all neighbors, all creatures, and this fragile island home we call planet Earth. A community of shalom.
In a book of reflections on the Bible’s call to be a community of love and shalom, Walter Brueggemann writes, “The central vision of world history in the Bible is that all of creation is one, every creature in community with every other, living in harmony and security toward the joy and well-being of every other creature…the most staggering expression of the vision is that all persons are children of a single family, members of a single tribe, heirs of a single hope, and bearers of a single destiny, namely, the care and management of all of God’s creation…a cluster of words is required to express [this vision’s] many dimensions and subtle nuances: love, loyalty, truth, grace, salvation, justice, blessing, righteousness. But the term…used to summarize that controlling vision is shalom…it bears tremendous freight – the freight of a dream of God that resists all our tendencies to division, hostility, fear, drivenness, and misery.” [v]
Our collective tendencies to division, hostility, fear, drivenness, and misery forever result in the kind of scorched earth we have seen in the siege of ancient Jerusalem, in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and more recently in Gaza, Ukraine, and the destruction of wind and fire surrounding Los Angeles, the City of Angels, to name but a few among many such historical tragedies. To live into the Bible’s vision of Shalom requires us to repeatedly repent, re-turn, to live lives of reconciliation instead of perpetuating division, hostility and fear. We are those people committed “to continue Christ’s work of reconciliation in the world.” [vi]
This is why we who dare to be Christ’s Church, Christ’s Body in this world, periodically need to review and renew our Baptismal Vows which are meant to remind us that the coming of Christ, for which we pray and for which we await, does not baptize the status quo – which, when we are honest with ourselves, woefully falls short of the Bible’s controlling vision that “all of creation is one, every creature in community with ever other, living in harmony and security toward the joy and well-being of every other creature.” [vii] Speaking of harmony, Luke knows that singing helps us to embody the Bible’s vision of well-being for every creature: so we sing, “Shalom, chaverim, shalom chaverim, shalom, shalom/Shalom my friends, shalom my friends, shalom, shalom.” [viii]
[i]
Luke 1:68-79
[ii] Luke
1:46-55
[iii]
Luke3:15-17, 21-22
[iv]
Gaventa, Beverly R., et al, Texts for Preaching Year C (Westminster John Knox
Press: 1994) p.101
[v]
Brueggeman, Walter, Living Toward a Vision, (United Church Press, New
York:1982) p 15-16
[vi]
The Book of Common Prayer, 1979, p.855
[vii]
Ibid, Brueggeman
[viii] Hymn 714, The Hymnal 1982, Church Publishing