Conversatio Divina

Part 18 of 20

Remember Your Baptism: Living Out the Christian Rite of Transformation

David deSilva

The rite of baptism is a snapshot of the transformation that God seeks to work in us throughout the rest of our Christian lives. In the Christian churches, the rite of baptism is both a rite of entry and an instrument of transformation. But because we are taught that baptism is a one-time act, we may not know how to use this rite fully as the formational help it is intended to be.

I’d like to suggest some ways we can experience our baptism again, intentionally, on a daily basis. As Martin Luther observed, our baptism—however long ago the event—offers “a garment which the disciple is to put on every day, each day putting the old person to death a little more and nurturing the new person toward maturity.” Martin Luther, The Large Catechism, tr. Robert H. Fischer. Philadelphia: Fortress, 1959, 90, adapted. By holding our own baptism regularly before our eyes, by returning again and again to its implications for  our  lives, we become more fully each day the new person who came to birth by water and the Spirit.

In the words of Michael Green, “the whole of the Christian life in time and in eternity is, in a sense, encapsulated in baptism. The Christian life is a baptismal life, and it is all about dying and rising with Christ, in this world and hereafter.” Michael Green, Baptism. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1987, 50. The rite of baptism initiates us into this baptismal life. It sets out the contours of a transformational process that we are intentionally to engage each day.

In my own spiritual journey, both Scripture and the liturgy of the Book of Common Prayer have been equally formative for my understanding of the baptismal life. Scripture provides the primary images and expresses the essential significance of baptism; the liturgy (itself infused with Scripture and sound spiritual counsel) offers a means by which people can grab hold of that significance, begin to live it out, and return to in order to find help for the ongoing journey.

01.  Putting Off the Old Self

Paul had a firm grasp of baptism as a rite of transformation: “Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? Therefore we have been buried with him by baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we too might walk in newness of life” (Rom. 6:3-4, NRSV). Something dies or begins to die, and something is born and begins a new life in baptism. What dies, according to Paul, is our “old self” (Rom. 6:6; see also Col. 2:11–13). It drowns in the pool, as it were, and we emerge a “new person,” born from a different parent into a new family.

Our old self is the part of us that was born into sin and misshaped by broken people and sick systems. To some extent, families of origin, schools, classmates, associates at work, the omnipresent media, and the dominant ideologies of our societies have all shaped us—or, better, misshaped us—into the image of human brokenness rather than the image of divine fullness. See further, David deSilva, “1 Peter: Strategies for Counseling Individuals on the Way to a New Heritage,” Ashland Theological Journal 32 (2000) 33–52. The old self is not a pretty sight. It seeks its own gratification at the cost of others’ dignity, fulfillment, and growth. It thinks highly of itself and meanly of others. It acts viciously to protect its own interests. It turns people to painkillers like compulsive eating, needless spending, or sexual addictions rather than helping them deal with the underlying issues. It poisons relationships. It is a gravity well that threatens to suck down our own souls into itself.

Baptism breaks the power of this “old self,” but experience also tells us that the old self continues to live—we even nurture it—long after our baptism. And so baptism initiates us into a lifelong process of putting off this old self, the self we are apart from God, like a garment that is ill fitting, uncomfortable, and too restrictive for the person that the Holy Spirit is bringing to life within us. The baptismal life is a life of dying to our life of self-will, self-seeking, and self-serving, learning to imitate the Christ who sought the good of others and God’s good purposes for them before all else.

02.  Baptism as Renunciation

Baptismal liturgies since the third century have facilitated this dying to the old self by means of formal acts of renouncing all those things that feed the old self—all those forces that are not from God. In the form found in the Book of Common Prayer, the renunciations are as follows:

Do you renounce Satan and all the spiritual forces of wickedness that rebel against God?

Do you renounce the evil powers of this world which corrupt and destroy the creatures of God?

Do you renounce all sinful desires that draw you from the love of God? Book of Common Prayer, 302.

These questions, affirmed once in the rite itself, remain valuable as tools for self-examination, confession, and “course correction.” They continue to challenge us to grow in our awareness of the forces around and within us seeking to hinder the work of the Holy Spirit in us and through us. They invite us to sharpen our ability to discern our own impulses as well as the spiritual dynamics of the systems surrounding us, freeing us to move more consistently in alignment with the movements of God’s Spirit rather than the contrary movements of other powers.

However  we  might visualize Satan, the existence of evil forces and their impact on human psyches and actions are difficult to deny, as those who counsel people recovering from occult involvement often attest. Coming alive to God requires that we discard every counterfeit, persisting in our renunciation of all competing spiritualities, recognizing behind them the subtle activity of deceptive and malevolent powers—whether psychics or astrologers, manipulative magic, necromancy, or fascination with the “other Gospel” and “other Jesus” of Gnosticism. As Paul would put it, we cannot share in the Lord’s table and in the table of demons (1 Cor. 10:21).

The second renunciation calls us to examine our collusion with another kind of spiritual power—the power exercised by the domination systems that have permeated, shaped, driven, and constrained human society and human lives. A helpful primer on this subject is C. Dale White, Making a Just Peace: Human Rights and Domination Systems. Nashville: Abingdon, 1998). See also Walter Wink, Naming the Powers (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress, 1983); unmasking the Powers (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress, 1986); Engaging the Powers (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress, 1992). Domination systems are social structures that have taken on a life of their own. They imprint on each new generation the mind-set that allows those structures to continue to shape and constrain human relations, assuring their own perseverance. They often work against God’s vision for human community, a vision of peace, justice, and relational wholeness where all enjoy the gifts of God’s good creation. Militarism is an enduring one, imprinting deeply on humanity its fundamental premise that inflicting death and hardships is an acceptable and necessary means of assuring “peace.” Materialism is another one, with its creed that “more is better,” its practices of ensuring the enjoyment of this “more” by a privileged few, its disregard for our calling to stewardship (rather than ownership) of earth’s resources. Patriarchy, which ascribes relative value to human beings and limits their roles and spheres on the basis of gender, is perhaps the most ancient.

The ideologies perpetrated by these systems distort our view of other people, deform our relationships, and conscript us for the agenda of their own perpetuation—rather than for the agenda of seeking how to live out God’s vision for human community, the “kingdom of God.” These ideologies have become instinctual; their practices are taken for granted; they are the “default settings” into which we are born and bred. Dying to our old self includes dying to the influence of these systems, withdrawing our participation from them insofar as they conflict with the life of the new person and the community of the New Creation, and ceasing passively to enjoy their benefits, knowing this also enmeshes us in their sins (see Rev. 18:4–5). See further D. A. deSilva, “The Revelation of John and the Practice of Christian Counsel- ing,” Asbury Theological Journal 60 (2005) 67–87, especially 74–75, 83–85.

The third renunciation requires the least explanation, but perhaps the most discipline! We are often all too aware of those “sinful desires that draw [us] from the love of God,” both in the sense of loving God as we ought through doing what pleases God, and the sense of replacing the experience of God’s love for us with the indulgence of lesser loves and desires. The culture of consumerism (no longer limited to Western culture!) is no help to us, fostering these lesser desires and attacking the logic of saying no to self-gratification at every turn. But once again, authentic fulfillment of our core longings requires the renunciation of inauthentic attempts to appease our deep hunger with shallow compensators.

By renouncing all these forces that distort the image of God within us—that feed, in other words, the “old self”—we make room for God’s Spirit to help us grow into the likeness of Christ, who is the image of God and template for the “new person.”

03.  Putting on the New Self

The central Christian mystery is not just about dying: it is also about rebirth and life beyond death. Dying to the “old self” carries with it the promise of “beginning to live to God” as the “new person” born by water and the Spirit, emerging from the water and set on the path of growth into maturity in Christ. Thomas à Kempis, The Imitation of Christ 2.12.

Putting on this facet of baptism daily reorients our attention to our new upbringing in God. We leave behind those facets of our first upbringing that reflect human brokenness rather than God’s wholeness. We move toward the transformation into Christlikeness that is our destiny as God’s children. The “new person” with whom we clothe ourselves in baptism exhibits the beauty of “compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience,” while our relationships exhibit the beauty of forgiveness, love, and harmony. The new person is none other than Christ coming to life in us, and we ourselves living for Christ: “You were taught to put away your former way of life, your old self, corrupt and deluded by its lusts, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to clothe yourselves with the new self, created according to the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness” (Eph. 4:22–24, NRSV).

04.  Baptism as Allegiance and Redirection

The transformation of the baptismal life always involves “turning from” and “turning to.” Just as the suppression of the “old self” is matched by the nurturing of the new person, the baptismal liturgies join the threefold renunciation with a threefold declaration of commitment:

Do you turn to Jesus Christ and accept him as your Savior?

Do you put your whole trust in his grace and love?

Do you promise to follow and obey him as your Lord?Book of Common Prayer, 302–303.

Remembering and revisiting this act of adherence becomes a fresh opportunity to open ourselves to God’s love and power and redirect our attention and energy to reach out for all that is from God. Answering these questions affirmatively each new day focuses our attention, indeed our intentions, on Jesus, directing our energies for the day’s activity toward the progress in transformation toward Christlikeness that we can discover in it. The more Jesus fills our vision for the day, the less quarter we will give to those powers we have renounced.

Keeping Jesus before us as “Savior” reminds us that the power of sin, the sick and death-dealing systems of the world, and Satan is broken. That deliverance allows us to look past their lies about the “way things are,” their deceptive promises, and their threats. Keeping Jesus’ favor and love before us—indeed, letting  these surround and uplift us—assures us of Jesus’ personal investment in us and in seeing our transformation all the way through. Enjoying the love and security he offers, fulfilling our two most basic needs, frees us from the coping mechanisms and compensators that keep us bound to the old life and the evil powers that rule over it. Keeping Jesus’ lordship before us fixes us on the path toward transformation as we make his example, his words, and his living voice the foundation of today’s agenda, direction, and pace.

 

05.  Baptismal Life in “Real Life”

Following the acts of renunciation and commitment, the baptismal liturgy of the Book of Common Prayer invites the whole congregation to reaffirm its commitment to the story of redemption (in the form of the Apostles’ Creed) and to the life and mission of the new person in the form of five vows.

Will you continue in the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in the prayers?

Will you persevere in resisting evil and, whenever you fall into sin, repent and return to the Lord?

Will you proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ?

Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself?

Will you strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being? Book of Common Prayer, 304-305.

The first vow calls us ever back to the regular practice of those spiritual disciplines, individual and communal, that enable us to discover how to live lives consistent with our beliefs and that empower us to do so. The second again reminds us of the “turning away” from the life of the old person that we have examined already. The final three have something else to speak to us.

These vows express a vision for the transformed life, inviting us to direct our efforts toward that vision. In this vision, our primary agenda for the day ahead is not to accomplish the tasks we set for ourselves or that our job or situation imposes on us, but rather, in the midst of all these—and above all these—to connect people with the love of God by loving them in the power of the Spirit and inviting them to encounter God in the midst of their situation. Our lives become “sacraments” offered for others: as in baptism the word of God’s promise is joined to physical water that can be seen and latched onto by the senses, we join the word of God’s promise spoken in witness to the embodied sign of our attitudes and deeds that align with that witness. Our driving concern is to reflect God’s valuing of each person, to divest ourselves from every mind-set and practice that violates another’s dignity, and to invest ourselves fully in nurturing justice and wholeness as God broadens our vision and directs our concern.

 

06.  The Book of Common Prayer prescribes a sevenfold prayer to be offered by the congregation for those who are coming for baptism.

With a simple change of pronouns, we can continue to offer these prayers on our own behalf, seeking God’s guidance and empowerment for moving forward in baptismal transformation:

Deliver me, Lord, from the way of sin and death. open my heart to your grace and truth.

Fill me with your Holy and Life-Giving Spirit.

Keep me in the faith and communion of your holy Church.

Teach me to love others in the power of the spirit. send me into the world in witness to your love.

Bring me to the fullness of your peace and glory.
(Book of common prayer, 305–306, adapted)

This prayer provides a succinct summary of the movement of the baptismal life as a whole: leaving behind the life of the “old self,” seeking what nurtures the new person, seeking God’s empowerment for the mission of the new life, and fixing our hearts on the final promise that draws us on in the transforming process—the fullness of God’s peace and glory now and in the life beyond death.

Use these petitions as part of your daily prayer time, pausing after each one. in that pause, let God direct your thoughts toward further contemplation and prayer on each point as God brings specific impressions, words, people, or situations to mind. seek God’s direction in regard to these impressions and follow his promptings; record these in a journal if that is helpful. when you are ready, move on to the next petition.

Return to the prayer in brief retreats throughout the day, attending to the impressions and leading that the spirit gives. let these actions of God become the rhythm of your life, the cadence with which you fall increasingly in step each new day.

Footnotes

David A. deSilva serves as Trustees’ Distinguished Professor of New Testament and Greek at Ashland Theological Seminary in Ohio. he is the author of numerous books, including Sacramental Life (InterVarsity, 2008), An Introduction to the New Testament (InterVarsity, 2004), and Introducing the Apocrypha (Baker Academic, 2002). He is ordained in the Florida Conference of the United Methodist Church.