Today is the Sunday before the Feast of Theophany (or
Epiphany), when we celebrate Christ’s baptism in the river Jordan and the
revelation that He is truly the Son of God. His divinity is made manifest
and openly displayed at His baptism when the voice of the Father declares, “You
are my beloved Son” and the Holy Spirit descends upon Him in the form of a
dove. Theophany shows us that Jesus Christ, who was born in the flesh for
our salvation at Christmas, is not merely a great religious teacher or moral
example. He is truly God—a member of the Holy Trinity– and His salvation
permeates His entire creation, including the water of the river Jordan.
Through Christ’s and our baptism, we become participants in the holy mystery of
our salvation, for He restores to us the robe of light which our first parents
lost when they chose pride and self-centeredness over obedience and communion. He enters the Jordan to restore Adam and Eve,
and all their children, to the dignity of those who bear the image and likeness
of God.
At the time of His earthly ministry, however, people were
looking for a very different kind of Savior.
The word “messiah” means “anointed one,” and the Jews wanted a leader
who would deliver their nation from Roman oppression, not unlike how any people
living under military occupation by the armies of another nation typically want
their liberation and independence. Christ’s own disciples thought of Him
in those terms until after His resurrection, for even those closest to the Lord
had great difficulty accepting that He was not the earthly king they had
expected. They were so focused on how
Jesus Christ might fulfill their dreams for power in this world that they were
blind to His true identity as the Son of God, the incarnate second Person of
the Holy Trinity, the divine Word Who spoke the universe into existence. His
Kingdom is not of this world and stands in prophetic judgment over those who
idolatrously use religion to bring themselves glory and dominion in this world.
In order to prepare the way of a Messiah Who did not fit
popular preconceived notions, God sent a very bold prophet who surely made most
other people uncomfortable. St. John the
Baptist and Forerunner was a strict ascetic, living in the desert, eating only locusts
and honey, and wearing camel skin. Like all the true Hebrew prophets
before him, John did not serve anyone’s worldly agenda. In addition to his stark appearance and
lifestyle, his message was severe to the point of being insulting. He
proclaimed God’s truth and did not care who might be offended, perhaps because harsh
words were necessary to open people’s eyes to where they stood before God. John mocked the Pharisees and Sadducees,
calling them a brood of vipers—a bunch of slimy snakes. He told the rich
to share with the poor, soldiers to stop abusing their authority, and tax
collectors to stop stealing from the people. He let no one off the hook, fearlessly
proclaiming God’s word even to those who had the power to destroy him. Ultimately,
he lost his head for criticizing the immorality of the royal family.
God shook up Israel with John the Baptist, the Forerunner
of our Lord, who began to open their eyes to a Messiah Whom they did not
expect. They needed a call to repentance from a wild and holy man who
served none of the petty kingdoms or factions of this world, but who instead called
everyone to repent by changing the direction of their lives in relation to God
and neighbor. They were to make straight whatever crookedness was in them. They were to abandon hypocritical and
self-serving distortions of God’s Law. No
one was to say, “But I am a child of Abraham or a religious leader or a
well-respected person, so repentance is not for me.” No one was to point
to the offenses of others as a distraction from reorienting their lives toward
God. The Forerunner called everyone straightforwardly
to greater holiness in preparation for the coming of the Messiah, Who is truly
the God-Man.
As we prepare for the Feast of Theophany, we must
recognize that John’s message applies to each of us today in ways that should
make us all uncomfortable. If we
have put on Christ in baptism, we must conform our character to His because we
have already received the robe of light.
Having celebrated His birth as Orthodox Christians, we have already
proclaimed that the Savior is not merely one of many insightful teachers or
inspiring examples, but truly the Son of God. In Him, we are “partakers
of the divine nature” by grace as members of His Body, the Church. The more that we share in His life, the more
clearly we will see how infinitely much more room we have for growth in embracing
the healing of our souls because none of us has become a perfect epiphany of
what Christ’s salvation means for those who bear the divine image and likeness.
It would be different if the Epiphany of Jesus Christ as
the Son of God were merely an idea to be grasped as an abstract truth. It would
be different if Theophany were a calling to thwart those we deem our enemies or
to achieve some conventional personal or political goal. This feast is nothing like that, however, for
it calls us to enter into the great mystery of our salvation by becoming
radiant with the divine glory that the Savior has shared with us. We must no longer live as those driven by obsessive
insecurities and fears rooted in the fear of death, but as those clothed with a
robe of light and enabled to shine like an iron left in the fire of holiness.
In order to share more fully in the eternal life of the
God-Man, we must follow the path of ongoing repentance proclaimed by John,
always seeing ourselves as those who must prepare the way of the Lord in our
lives. That means that we must persist
in cooperating with Christ’s healing mercy, actively making straight whatever remains
crooked. Like those who first heard the Forerunner, we have become
too comfortable with life on our own terms, perhaps thinking that we are
somehow God’s favorites and that repentance is for someone else, likely for
particular people or members of groups upon whom we like to look down. John would have none of it and would correct
us to our faces in no uncertain terms for our hypocrisy. As he did to the Jews of the first century, he
would tell us to stop trying to turn God into an idol who serves our agendas
for gaining whatever we happen to want in this world. He would call us, instead, to become true
icons of our Lord, sharing as fully as we can in the divine healing and
transformation made possible for us in Jesus Christ.
Those who have put on Christ in baptism and who have received
the Communion of His Body and Blood must become epiphanies of His fulfillment
of the human person in God’s image and likeness. As we prepare to celebrate
Theophany, let us gain the spiritual clarity to behold the glory of Christ’s
baptism by straightening the crooked areas of our lives. Instead of
finding ways to ignore the preaching of the Forerunner, let us take his
sobering message to heart as we confess and repent of our sins and reorient
ourselves to our Lord and His Kingdom. The Messiah is born and is on His
way to the Jordan where His divinity will shine forth. Will we have the eyes to behold His
glory? Will we be ready for Him? There is only one way to prepare: namely, to repent as we turn away from all
that hinders us from shining brightly with the divine glory manifest in the
God-Man. Nothing can keep us from doing so other than our own stubborn refusal
to prepare the way of the Lord by making His paths straight in our own
lives. There is no other way to enter
into the great joy of the Feast of Theophany.