Feast of the Baptism of the Lord
Today we come to the end of the Season of Christmas. It’s the shortest season of the year, usually only lasting 20 or so days. This year it was only 17 days. And yet, what we celebrate at Christmas changes everything. It is more monumental to human history than the discovery of fire; than Aeneas traveling to Italy from Troy or Julius Caesar crossing the Rubicon; than the Battles of Lepanto and Vienna stopping the Muslim invasion into Europe; than the storming of Normandy on 6 June; than the assassination of John F. Kennedy or the resignation of Richard Nixon; than the terrorist attacks on 9/11.
The Incarnation was bigger than all those world-changing events. God Himself was able to be seen in His Son, Jesus. When you looked at Jesus, you saw God. When you heard Jesus, you heard God. When you touched Jesus, as so many people did for healing, as Mary did in holding her baby, you touched God. This was a radical change from what had come before. And it changed radically what would come after.
Because of the Incarnation, God communicated Himself through physical reality. This includes the Sacraments. Through the Sacraments, we experience God. And this is an effect of the Incarnation. Water remains H20, but by the power of the Holy Spirit and the ministry of the priest, it also gives God's grace and makes a person a child of God and a member of the Church for all eternity. Olive oil remains what it is, but becomes a vehicle of God’s grace to strengthen, console, and anoint a person for a mission in the Church. A promise between one man and one woman remains a valid agreement between two free people, but is strengthened by God’s grace to allow the married couple to share God’s grace with others just by living their married life with God. The Sacraments are possible because of the Incarnation. In the Sacraments we encounter God and share in the events of the life of Jesus Christ. As Pope St. Leo the Great said, “Our Redeemers’s visible presence has passed into the sacraments.” Every time we celebrate a Sacrament, we are coming into contact with the Risen Lord.
God uses material things to make Himself known. That is the great news of the Incarnation. He made us to come to know reality by our senses. There is nothing that we know that we did not learn, at least at its heart, by our senses. Numbers, which are immaterial, are learned through physical things: if we add one orange to one orange, we get two oranges. We learn about history through hearing. We learn to do so much by experiencing it. God knows that we learn through our senses because He created us this way. And so He continues to come to us through our senses.
In the Sacraments, we are meant to have an encounter with Christ, no less than when John the Baptist and the people at the Jordan River saw Jesus rising from the waters, saw the Spirit descending like a dove, and heard the voice from the heavens. In the Sacraments, especially the Sacrament of the Eucharist, we are meant to experience Jesus who helps us to know if we are called to be a priest, a consecrated man or woman, or married. In the Sacraments, Christ wants to strengthen our priesthood, our consecration, and our marriages. But we have to be open. God wants to reveal Himself to you in the Sacraments. Today, as we prepare to receive the Eucharist, ask God to reveal Himself to you. If you are open to His presence in the Sacraments, you will know of His presence.