Tags
baptism, beauty, belonging, beloved, challenge, child of God, Christ, church, God, image of God, love

One of the challenges of a church with multiple service times is the inevitable formation of multiple smaller communities within a larger community. Between different attendees and different worship styles, each service begins to take on its own personality. I have had families with young children show up at our early service, and had to be sure to let them know that the later service might be much more familiar and comfortable than the meditative feel of the early service. Or I have had folks who grew up in an Anglo-Catholic tradition show up at our later service, and had to be sure to let them know they might find the more formal liturgy of the early service more heart-warming. The trick is figuring out how to create a sense of “home” in each worship service while also providing opportunities for cross-pollination across services.
I think that is why I am so excited for a baptism at my church this weekend at the early service. We almost never have children at that service (I know very few parents of littles who can get their families at church by 8:00 am), and we do not have music (for those littles to join in the joyful noise making), and the pews in the historic chapel are way less accommodating than the movable chairs in our newer chapel. But the mother of the baptized grew up in that space and wants her child to experience the centuries of prayer found there. And although there may not be other children there, she will tell her son of the days when she used to sit in the window wells or babies crawled under the pews. And when she sees parishioners the age of her son’s grandparents in worship, she will be able to tell her son about the fellowship of saints, and maybe even let parishioners take a turn rocking her son if he becomes fussy.
That is the true beauty of the kind of community church creates. No matter which service you choose, there is a child whose grandparent may live far away, a grandparent who hasn’t seen his children in months or a year, and a parent who just needs a place who gets how hard parenting is. And those three groups come together as a fluid organism, with all their everyday human stuff, laying their troubles before God, praising God for their blessings – even when it is sometimes hard to see them, and breaking bread together, recognizing the beauty of a diverse room of people reflecting the image of God.
That is what this Sunday’s baptism is all about: bringing another human being into to the strange, mysterious, beauty of Church; helping him know that he is a child of God and is marked as Christ’s own forever; teaching him that he will now belong to a community that will both love him unconditionally and challenge him to live into his vocation and calling – whatever it may be. We baptize that little one to tell him all that. But we also baptize that little one to remind ourselves of that reality: to remember how we too are beloved children of God with a commission to love and serve the Lord in the world. No matter what service you choose, we all need that message.

