Community Church of Durham
Isaiah 43 (The 1st Sunday of Deep Advent)
1.
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| Baptism 2025 |
And you were here just last Sunday for the 20th Anniversary of our Open & Affirming Covenant. You wept a little as we sang songs of unity and healing.
For gay and for straight, a place at the table.And you smiled broadly as we baptized Margo and Tabitha right out there. I’ve got the pictures to prove it. Water, water and rainbows everywhere! And you felt that surge of courage—as I sure did—as we repurposed that original statement for a new day of service and witness. “We honor human relationships—all of them—that are based on love, responsibility, mutual respect, trust and fidelity.” Again, wow! God is good.
Transgender and queer, a rainbow of light,
Many the ways of loving and living:
For gay and for straight, a future that’s bright!
And it’s not simply the case that you’ve been part of the action—you have (in so many ways) dreamed it into being, and you have (in so many ways) invested in it, and you have (in just about every way) made it happen. Through your prayers. By your faithfulness. Because of your energies. And so it is that we have seen the Holy Spirit at work, we have seen the Holy Spirit at play, we have seen the Holy Spirit breathing life and courage into and through a community we love. It has been a very special and memorable month indeed!
2.
So when we read in the ancient scroll that God is doing a “new thing,” we have only to remember what our own eyes have seen, what our own ears have heard, what our own hearts have experienced. In this very place. In just these last weeks. Among these people.
And just as the prophet has imagined, what we’ve seen here is a diverse community of curious seekers and devoted leaders gathering from the east and west, from the north and south, around good news and gladness. Not despair and division. But God’s good news and God’s gladness. “Don’t you recognize it?” That’s the prophet speaking. “Don’t you recognize it?” “I’m making a way in the desert, paths in the wilderness.” “I have put water in the desert, and streams in the wilderness.” And these stunning promises, these tender reassurances: framed as they most often are in scripture with, “Don’t fear, for I am with you.” Don’t fear, for I have called you by name. Don’t fear, for you are mine.
So—there is a way in the desert, a path in the wilderness. And we have walked a fair piece already. Baptized and fearless. Claimed for God's purpose. Named indeed by God.
And if you’re wondering, by the way, why we’re so lavish with the water (or maybe I should say 'extravagant' with the water) when we baptize Margo and Tabitha as we did last week, it’s because we believe that our symbols have to match our gladness, our liturgies have to correlate with God’s commitments. In the text, our God doesn’t say: “I’m putting a drop of water out there in the desert…so you can grovel and suffer and beg for mercy.” Our God doesn’t say: “I’m setting out a thimble of sustenance in the wilderness…so you can wipe a little on your forehead and be on your way.” No, no, no.
Our God says: “I’m making a way in the desert, so you can get home.” “I’m setting before you holy paths, so you can travel together.” “I’m putting running streams in the wilderness, so you can touch my power and immerse yourselves in my grace and go joyfully into a future of hope and justice and care for one another.” I’m doing a new thing! So, yes, my friends. Your baptism in Christ—and that’s what it means to belong here, to be connected as we are here—your baptism in Christ is a baptism of running streams and hustling rivers, a baptism of plenty and power, a baptism that washes away any hint of shame or inadequacy. Your baptism joins us as one people, to travel these holy paths, to go gladly together, to follow Jesus together, to revel in the love of the One who calls us by name and invites us all home. For singing and praising. For feasting and serving. For making peace and giving thanks. Your baptism, my baptism, Margo’s baptism, Tabitha’s: a way in the desert, running streams and hustling rivers!
3.
It's important to note that this particular text—the extraordinary poetry we find in the 43rd chapter of Isaiah—it’s important to note that it’s conceived in a people’s exile: in a people’s experience of extreme vulnerability and spiritual longing. And this particular people have been forced into exile, driven from their homes and families. They have not gone willingly.
So this 43rd chapter is, in a luminous way, God’s promise to an immigrant community, God’s declaration of solidarity with a community traumatized by the violence of nations, the politics of greed, and their own fears for families left behind. This is a people on the run. This is a people far from home. This is a people without the proper papers, piecing things together, always aware that the next knock on the door could be the last one.






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