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Baptism is a Gift
Baptism is a precious gift given by God through the Church, a
gift that as parents you have the privilege of offering your
children. It is a gift meant to last a lifetime and beyond.
Baptism is the gift of new life, the gift of the Risen Christ.
But baptism is first of all a sacrament and encounter with
Christ himself. It is a moment when Christ comes to us and acts
within us and among us. A sacrament has great power and
potential to transform us; this is true for adults who
understand the meaning of the sacrament and choose it for
themselves, and it is also true for the youngest children indeed
for babes in arms, at their baptism.
Infant baptism is part of the most ancient tradition of the
Church. It is a powerful and visible reminder to us that God’s
love and salvation are not earned but are offered to us as a
gift. Infant baptism is a sign of God’s desire to give us more
than all we can imagine. (Ephesians 3:20) Obviously, the tiny
baby cannot ask for or even imagine the richness of new life in
God. It is a gift, one so precious that, by its very nature, it
calls for response. In the case of infant baptism, the immediate
response of joy, gratitude and commitment is offered by the
parents, the Godparents and the entire Christian community. The
child’s personal response will come at a later time. God is more
than willing to wait for this response; the joy and praise of
little children whom Christ called the greatest in the kingdom
of God, must surely be the sweetest sound of all to God’s ears.
The scriptures remind us of the mystery of God’s intimate
relationship with us, even before we were born: Before I formed
you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I
consecrated you. (Jeremiah 1:5) It was you who formed my inward
parts; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. (Psalm 139:13)
The Church honors this relationship by offering baptism to the
youngest children.
Jesus’ words to Nicodemus, No one can enter the kingdom of God
without being born of water and Spirit (John 3:5), have always
been understood by the Church to mean that even the youngest
children should not be denied the sacrament of baptism. The
child’s right to baptism becomes even clearer when we recall
Jesus’ words to his disciples regarding little children: It is
to such as these that the kingdom of heaven belongs. (Matthew
19:14)
Of the many ways Jesus has revealed himself to us, the image
of the Good Shepherd is particularly rich in relation to the
sacrament of baptism. At our baptism, Christ, the Good Shepherd,
comes to meet us and claim us as his own; he calls his own sheep
by name. (John 10:3) We are marked with his sign, the cross, to
show that we belong to him. Through water and the word, we
receive his light and life. We who are called and known so
personally then enter his sheepfold, the Church. When he has
brought out all his own, he goes ahead of them, and the sheep
follow him because they know his voice. (John 10:4)
Our baptism is the beginning of a journey. Throughout this
journey, we are meant to enjoy the Good Shepherd’s presence in
our lives, to experience the benefits of his care and protection
and to grow in our love of him and in our knowledge of his
endless love for us. As our journey continues, we become more
capable of hearing his voice, of following where he leads and of
growing and changing to become more like him.
Our children need our help on this journey and the help of the
entire Christian community to become aware of the immense gift
they have received in baptism. Our help begins before birth and
is most critical in early childhood when the child has the
greatest religious needs, as well as the greatest religious
capacities. In our efforts to help them, we would do well first
to remember Jesus’ own teaching about little children,
particularly the moment when he placed a child in the midst of
his disciples and said, Unless you change and become like
children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. (Matthew
18:3).
Children have something to teach. As we seek to know them and
their real needs, as we try with joy and fear and humility to
respond to those needs, something wonderful and perhaps
unexpected happens we realize that we need them on our journey
toward God as much or more than they need us. We discover that
the fullness of joy in their relationship with God can become
our own!
The poet William Wordsworth once said, our birth is but a
sleep and a forgetting. As Christians, we can say that our
baptism is our second birth. But it is not a birth of sleep and
forgetting; rather, it is a birth of awakening and remembering.
Our baptism is the beginning of a lifelong journey of awakening
to the fullness of life that Jesus came to give us and a journey
toward remembering who we really are beloved sheep of the Good
Shepherd, precious members of his sheepfold, the Church. |
Baptism
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