Becoming All Flame – A Sermon On Luke 3:15-17, 21-22

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Today is the Feast of the Baptism of Jesus. But I’m more interested in your baptism. If you don’t remember it, that’s okay. You can still tell a story about your baptism. And if you haven’t yet been baptized in the Church, that’s okay too. You can still tell a story about your baptism.

I’m not asking about that day a priest poured water over your head in the name of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. I’m not asking about when a minister immersed you in the water of new life. I’m not asking about that first baptism that you may or may not remember. Besides, that original baptism with water was just the first of many. 

So tell me about your most recent baptism. What happened? Who was there? How did it change you? What difference is it making in your life today?

I want to know about that something that got ahold of you and wouldn’t let go. What fire was ignited in you? In what ways did it fan the flames of your life? How did it add fuel to your fire? 

Let me give you a few examples of baptisms in my life. Maybe they’ll help you see what I’m talking about.

  • I will never forget the day I went to my priest and said, “My life is a mess and I don’t know what to do.” I sat in his office and he baptized me into the truth of my pain and my brokenness. He held my feet to the fire and it ignited in me a fire of new life and a different way of being. 
  • Years ago I was baptized in the Frio River on a canoe trip with my two sons. We came to a waterfall. The water created a curtain but behind that curtain there was a large hollow in the rock. The three of us sat in the hollow with our arms around each other laughing and splashing. My younger son Randy said, “We’ve never smiled this big before.” The water, the laughter, the togetherness fanned the flames of our love.
  • I remember standing here in this church the day I married our older son Brandon and his fiancé Erin, and I remember sitting out there the day we buried him. The fire of love and loss changed me in ways I could never have imagined.  
  • This past Friday Cyndy and I attended the opening of an art exhibit entitled “77 Minutes in their Shoes.” It’s about the Robb School shooting. The exhibit contains photographs of the shoes the children were wearing at the time of the shooting. It was a powerful and moving experience. It added fuel to the fire that burns in me for justice, peace, and nonviolence. 

When have you experienced things like that? What is igniting a fire within you today? What is fanning your flames, enlarging and expanding your life? What is adding fuel to the fire of your life? That’s the baptism I’m asking about. 

We don’t often associate baptism with fire but that’s how it is described in today’s gospel (Luke 3:15-17, 21-22). John the Baptist says,

“One who is more powerful than I is coming…. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.”

I think we often misunderstand baptism, make it too small, and water down its power and presence in our lives. For most of us, I suspect, baptism is about the water in the font and the assurance of individual salvation. I don’t disagree. I just think it’s more than that. It connects us to something than larger than and beyond ourselves. 

In the church we’re baptized just once but in life we are baptized over and over and over again. That’s why we regularly renew our baptismal vows. The renewal of our baptismal vows declares that baptism is never a one and done kind of thing and it’s about so much more than what happens at the font in the church. 

In a few minutes we will renew our baptismal vow and recommit ourselves to

  • continuing in the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, the breaking of bread, and the prayers;
  • resisting evil, repenting and returning to the Lord;
  • proclaiming with our words and actions the Good News of God in Christ;
  • seeking and serving Christ in all persons, loving our neighbors as ourselves; and
  • striving for justice and peace among all people, and respecting the dignity of every human being.

Do you see how far reaching our baptism is? Can you feel how it connects you to others? Do you hear the transformation being called for? 

Every time we come to circumstances, people, and relationships that open to us and invite us to be more fully ourselves, we are being baptized. Every time we experience something that cleanses our eyes so that we see more clearly or face a difficult truth, we are being baptized.

Every time something happens in our heart and we love more deeply, we are being baptized. Every time we feel the pain of the world and respond with compassion and offer healing, we are being baptized. Every time we begin to live from a new place of wisdom or gratitude, we are being baptized.  

That one baptism that happens in the church was never intended to be exclusive. It’s archetypical. It is the pointer to all the other baptisms in our life and world. The fire of baptism is everywhere. 

It’s in our marriage, friendships, and parenting. Our work and vocation are baptismal fire. Our passions, dreams, and creativity are the fire of baptism. Our concerns and work for justice, peace, and human dignity are baptismal fire. Even our pain, brokenness, sorrows, and losses are baptismal fire. 

Wherever life is being transformed baptism is happening. Those baptismal experiences transform us in the same way fire consumes and transforms wood into something new. So it is with us. But here’s the thing. At some point in that process the wood becomes the fire. 

There is a beautiful story about that in our tradition. It comes to us from the monks who lived in the Egyptian desert around the fourth or fifth century. 

“Abba Lot went to Abba Joseph and said to him, ‘Abba, as far as I can I say my little office, I fast a little, I pray and meditate, I live in peace and as far as I can, I purify my thoughts. What else can I do?’ Then the old man stood up and stretched his hands towards heaven. His fingers became like ten lamps of fire and he said to him, ‘If you will, you can become all flame.’

(Translated by Benedicta Ward, The Sayings of the Desert Fathers, 103)

That’s how I want to live, don’t you? I want to become all flame. What would it be like and mean in your life today to “become all flame”?

____________________
Image Credit: Photo by Paul Bulai on Unsplash.

© Michael K. Marsh and Interrupting the Silence, 2009-2025, all rights reserved.

10 responses to “Becoming All Flame – A Sermon On Luke 3:15-17, 21-22”

  1. Sharyn Reynolds Avatar
    Sharyn Reynolds

    I have recently been baptized into the struggle to provide safe, well-run public education in Texas.

    I am a Retired PCUSA pastor, former public school teacher, presently living in a retirement community and along with some of my neighbors, we are seeking to develop a non-partisan, non-profit network of citizens to Advocate for Public Education in our state.

    If you, or someone on your Mission team or even someone not in your church but who you know in your community might be interested in talking with us, we are eager for form coalitions and spread the conversation.

    I look forward to your message each week and pray for the ministry in your community.

    Sharyn

    Sharyn Reynolds reynoldsharyn45@gmail.com 737/279-0278 4300 Bull Creek Rd. C-403 Austin, Texas 78731

    >

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    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Sharyn, thank you for letting me know of your recent baptism and work. I know there are some here working for the same goals as you. Also, thank you for reading my blog.

      God’s peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

  2. bakerboy4711 Avatar
    bakerboy4711

    Thank you for your inspired message today, my heart once again when you talk of “Robb” school and the loss of your Son, my prayers are for you and your Sons wife’s life, it can’t be easy,

    May the Lord continue to bless your Ministry, And God’s blessings on the youths if Your church.

    My love in Jesus to you from the UK.

    Peter.

    Like

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Peter, thank you for your prayers and remembrance of us. I am grateful for that connection.

      God’s peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

  3. Summer Green Avatar
    Summer Green

    Fr. Mike, I appreciated your widening of baptism. I too have had moments when I’ve been baptized by events that have fanned flames of love and justice in me. I pray that I will be consumed and “become all flame.”

    Also, I am a seminarian at Seminary of the Southwest in Austin. I was hoping to visit your congregation this weekend (January 19) and wondered if you were available for lunch or a coffee afterward. I have been reading your sermons for years and would love to introduce myself in person. You can reach me at livingbetwixtandbetween@gmail.com. Thank you for your consideration.

    Peace+

    Summer

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Thank you Summer. I sent you an email in response to your comment.

      Peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

  4. Bob Avatar

    I went back and reread your Epiphany sermon for about the 5th time and how these two sermons tie together. Our Epiphanies are our baptisms. They are the fire that makes us who we are and set our values. Thank you

    Like

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      Good insight Bob. In the Orthodox tradition, as you may already know, the Epiphany is the baptism of Jesus, not the coming of the magi.

      God’s peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

  5. thoughtssacredandshallow Avatar

    Thank you Michael for this wonderful reframing and broadening of what a baptism can represent – I loved your personal examples that showcase both the joys and sorrows of life – it has been good to reflect on my own experiences that have been pivotal in my life and formation. God bless you.

    Like

    1. Michael K. Marsh Avatar

      I’m so glad the sermon invited you to reflect on your own baptismal experiences. I hope that has been meaningful.

      God’s peace be with you,
      Mike

      Like

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