+ Baptism of Our Lord – January 11th, 2026 +
Series A: Isaiah 42:1-9; Romans 6:1-11; Matthew 3:13-17
Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church
Milton, WA

In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Fishermen and mariners will tell you that whenever you’re near rivers, lakes, or ocean to keep and eye on the water.
Deep currents run swift. Those peaceful ocean waves also have violent rip currents. The tranquil, moving river hides a raging undertow. That pristine, peaceful lake suddenly drop off into the depths.
Keep your eyes on the water.
Holy Scripture does something similar. God tells us to keep an eye on the water. For wherever you find water in God’s Holy Word, you’ll soon find God working for your salvation.
When it comes to the streams and seas of Scripture, keep your eyes and ears on the water. Why? Jesus is in the water doing what he does best with water: rescuing. Delivering. Saving.
The promise of Jesus’ rescue on the cross runs its course through all the waters of Holy Scripture. The rising tide of God’s grace and forgiveness swell the waterways of his word. Beneath the seemingly calm and placid surface of God’s Word runs a deep current that flows downstream from the rivers that watered Eden to Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan all the way to your baptism.
This is why Paul says “faith comes by hearing.” It’s easy to look at the Jordan River and see merely a slow-moving meandering river. But when you look with your ears you discover something far deeper in the waters of Jesus’ Baptism. The water trickles and winds its way through the land, but underneath the water there’s a battle raging.
When Jesus dips his toes and dives into the Jordan River the doors of the deep and the vaults of the heavens open up in a deluge of God’s divine grace. All the waters of Scripture come rushing in as John baptizes Jesus. There’s the waters of creation with the Spirit hovering once again. There’s the flood and the ark and the dove resting on the Son of God and the Son of Rest and the greater Noah. There’s the Red Sea waters parted once again in a greater exodus. There’s the Jordan River splitting in two as the heavens are opened and the Father says “This is my beloved Son”. The path to paradise is paved with water. The liquid highway to the cross runs through the Jordan River.
When Jesus steps into those ordinary waters of the Jordan River he’s doing something marvelous and wondrous. For wherever there’s water, there’s God working for your salvation, deliverance, and rescue.
Keep your eyes and especially your ears on the water.
Below the calm surface the Son of God is stirring the waters of salvation.
God incarnate churns the wells of salvation.
God’s beloved Son is the Captain of our deliverance, battling the leviathan of sin. Drowning the dragon beneath the waves. Flooding the grave with his grace.
Beneath the verdant banks of the Jordan a violent victory over death has begun. The one who treads into the Jordan will tread the serpent and all our trespasses under his water-soaked feet. The one who drips dry the waters of the Jordan is the one who drips and drains his own blood on the cross for you.
John is right. Jesus needs no baptism. He has no sin to call his own. He’s the God-man. The Righteous Redeemer incarnate. And yet, this is what Jesus has come to do. To do what you and I cannot and will not do on our own. To fulfill righteousness. To forgive sin. To raise from the dead. To tear the grave open from the inside. To rend the heavens wide open, flood you with forgiveness, and wash you clean.
Jesus’ baptism is like those infant mommy and me swim classes. Babies can’t swim on their own. They need a substitute. Someone to hold them in the water and save them from drowning. So Jesus goes in first. Not only tests the waters, but turns and churns the waters for us, mixing the font with his mercy. Splashing us with his grace and goodness. Flooding us with forgiveness. All while we’re held safe and saved in his pierced and glorified hands.
Where our love for God ebbs and flows, Christ’s mercy for you in the Jordan River and on Jerusalem’s cross overflows with life and salvation. A steady stream of grace and steadfast love flows from Jesus’ wounded side into the cup. Onto your lips. Into your body. Over your head and over body and soul. Washing. Cleansing. Hallowed waters. A divine flood that works faith and forgiveness. A saving bath of blessing. A deluge of God’s goodness and mercy.
It is for you as it was for Jesus in the Jordan River that day. Where there’s water, there’s God working his great and gracious salvation. Soaking you with his saving gifts. Pouring out his promises upon you and into you.
So it is with your baptism. The water appears to be ordinary tap water. And it is. And yet it’s more.
Beneath the surface of those calm waters rests the cross. Underneath the smooth surface of the font runs a swift current of salvation.
Below the calm surface the God – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit - is stirring the waters with his word and promise for you.
God incarnate churns the wells of salvation into a whirlpool of faith, hope, and love.
God’s beloved Son is the Captain of our salvation, battling the leviathan of sin. Drowning the dragon beneath the waves. Flooding the grave with his grace.
From our eyes baptism looks ordinary. Plain. Maybe even a little boring. But beneath the surface a battle is raging. Those waters are a violent flood for our old sinful flesh. A naval victory over the ancient serpent. Jesus drowns our sin and shame. Jesus cleanses us from all unrighteousness. Jesus washes us clean with holy water. Holy words. His holy presence. Those waters are death and life all in one drop.
Do you not know that all of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might walk in newness of life.
For if we have been united with him in a death like his, we shall certainly be united with him in a resurrection like his.
Keep your eyes and ears on the water and the word. For there in the water. There in his word. There in his body and blood. There’s Jesus with you and for you.
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
