I was part of a plot recently to arm the kids in my neighborhood with squirt guns enough to soak a small army. Please know, when I say “squirt guns,” those of you who haven’t witnessed the technological advances in water warfare in recent decades, may misunderstand me. These guns don’t merely “squirt,” like the transparent, brittle, plastic pistols of my youth, shooting a thin stream of water that might irritate a small kitten. These are “Super Soakers” that throw and twist and shower water onto their targets with as much velocity and volume as a garden hose.
Anyway, my three-year-old, Max, being the youngest kid in our little circle of soldiers on Redbird Trail that day was struggling. Once the older neighborhood kids realized his arms weren’t long enough or strong enough to force the pump that released the water from his weapon, he was done for. Armed with a re-purposed Windex bottle of warm water from the kitchen sink then, Max was doing little damage to his enemies who deluged him with icy water from the spigot.
Still, Max was having a blast. His teeth chattered, his lips were blue, and he was cold to the touch. While his enemies winced, screamed and scurried away at the slightest stream of water from his puny little makeshift weapon, Max laughed and leaped, smiled and shivered from head to toe, charging head first into the face of all the water that came his way.
Of course, all of this made me think about God’s blessings to us in the waters of Holy Baptism. And watching Max made me wonder about how we’re called to relish those blessings of new life and forgiveness of sins and abundant grace, even in the face of so much in this world that threatens to send us wincing and screaming and scurrying in the opposite direction.
The point of a water fight after all, is to get wet, in the end. The point of life as a baptized child of God is to get wet, too. As children of God we are soaked with forgiveness, drenched with love, washed away by grace, drowned, revived and renewed, over and over again, and in the face of what looks like loss and struggle and defeat to so much of the world around us.
I’m grateful for the batch of baptisms we’ve celebrated in the last month or so at Cross of Grace. I look forward to those that are still to come. And I’m grateful for Max, just the same. Quite simply, they remind me of God’s victory for the sake of us all and they inspire me to live more graciously and joyfully because of it.
See you in worship,
+Mark
