Saturday, June 1, 2019

Baptism: Waters of Grace, Power, and Call


“Live your life with love, following the example of Christ, who loves us and gave himself for us.”
—Ephesians 5:2

This weekend I have the immense privilege of spending time with young people and adult volunteers from across our conference as part of Youth Annual Gathering (YAG). Traditionally taking place the weekend leading up to Annual Conference, YAG’s theme mirrors the theme of Memphis Annual Conference. So this weekend, we are celebrating our connection as United Methodists and remembering who we are in Jesus Christ through Word, Water, and Witness.

Last night, we opened YAG with worship at three different stations where we engaged Word, Water, and Witness. At the Water station where I served as facilitator, participants were invited to sit around a white shower curtain flat on the ground. After silence and deep breathing, worshippers considered the promises made and vows taken at our baptisms. For some of us, our parents made those promises before we affirmed and took responsibility for our own journey of faith at confirmation. For others of us, as older children or youth or adults, we answered these solemn vows as a recognition of the faith we were claiming as God claimed us in baptism. Still others who are still anticipating their baptisms engaged these vows they will make one day by God’s grace.

Do you renounce the spiritual forces of wickedness,
reject the evil powers of this world,
and repent or your sin?*

Using markers, we wrote or drew on the shower curtain places and spaces where we encounter wickedness, evil powers, and sin in our world and in our lives.

Do you accept the freedom and power God gives you
 to resist evil, injustice, and oppression
in whatever forms they present themselves?*

We wrote or drew the evil, injustice, and oppression we have witnessed or experienced in our world and in our communities.

Do you confess Jesus Christ as your Savior,
put your whole trust in his grace,
and promise to serve him as your Lord in union with the Church
which Christ has opened to people of all ages, nations, and races?*

Together, we turned the shower curtain 90° counterclockwise to represent the change that happens in our hearts and lives when God names us and claims us as beloved through the waters of baptism. We noticed and reflected upon what others had written or drawn in response to the earlier questions.
And then we remembered that we (or our parents) are not the only ones who take a vow at our baptism. When we are baptized, the congregation that surrounds us promises to care for us and nurture us in the Christian faith and life so that we may come to know God more fully and follow Jesus more faithfully. As the body of Christ gathered around the white shower curtain, we looked one another in the eye as we heard the words our communities of faith had promised to God, to us, to one another at the moment of our baptism:

With God’s help we will proclaim the good news 
and live according to the example of Christ.
We will surround this person with a community of love and forgiveness,
 that they may grow in their trust of God,
and be found faithful in their service to others.
We will pray for them, that they may be true disciples who walk in the way that leads to life.

Then a bowl was placed in the center of the shower curtain. Water was poured, and as we heard it gushing and splashing we remembered….These are waters of grace. These are waters of power. These are waters of change and calling. Offering these words with our hands extended out and palms turned upward to heaven, we asked for God’s blessing over the water.

Today we come to the waters
to renew our commitments in each other’s presence
to the Christ who has raised us from death,
to the Spirit who has given us new birth,
and to the Creator who is making all things new.
Let these waters be to us drops of your mercy.
Let these waters remind us of your righteousness and justice.
Let these waters renew in us the resurrection power of Jesus.
Let these waters make us long and desire to join you in building your kingdom
here on earth as it is in heaven.**


But baptism isn’t only meant to change us. God seeks to change the world through baptized people. God claims us and names us through baptism and, then, through the gift of the Holy Spirit empowers us to join in the work of transforming the world. And so, we took sponges and dipped them into the sacred and holy waters of baptism to wash away the sin—communal and personal—that we had named and drawn on the shower curtain. We found that some of what was written and drawn wiped away easily, leaving no trace. Yet, other parts left a stain behind—sometimes faint, sometimes still bold—reminding us that until Christ comes again in final victory and God’s reign is realized fully, this world will always be in need of transformation. And we will always be called to this work by the Holy Spirit through baptism.

Finally standing again ready to leave the station worship space of remembering who we are as disciples of Jesus through water, we heard these words of prayer and calling proclaimed over our lives…
The Holy Spirit work within you,
that being born through water and the Spirit,
you may be a faithful disciple of Jesus Christ.
Amen.

This morning at Youth Annual Gathering we lived our baptismal vows and answered the call of baptized Christians by serving through mission.

We repented of the sin of complacency and inaction towards homelessness in our nation (and in downtown Memphis today), choosing to not look away but to go and search for our siblings who slept on the street last night and offer them a breakfast burrito and conversation through the Urban Bicycle Food Ministry.


We accepted the freedom and power God gives us to resist evil, injustice, and oppression by partnering with a Dorothy Day House in Frayser that gifts housing to families experiencing homelessness, offering our hands to gardening and landscaping work for the current resident family (which allowed the mother of infant twins a Saturday to sleep in and rest).


We served Jesus’s church that is open to people of all ages, nations, and races by assisting in the nursery renovation of a local United Methodist congregation.


Church, our youth are not just your future. Our youth are THE CHURCH NOW! They are boldly living into God’s call as faithful disciples of Jesus Christ RIGHT NOW! May we all be inspired to greater fruitfulness and faithfulness by the ways our young people live their lives with the love of Christ.

Grace and Peace,
Amanda HW


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