The baptism of Gijs in 2015 - washed clean! |
I
remember the births of my two sons very well – as should be.
Although both of them were born in a hospital, they were both unique
in their ways. Stephan was born on Halloween. If you haven’t heard
my story yet, you probably will if you talk to me long enough. Sean
was born in Genk, Belgium, which was different in it’s own right.
Just
as we remember the births of our children well, we also remember the
births into Christ that we have experienced. The ‘usual’ way
might be in a baptismal pool, but there are all sorts of variations.
Our Stephan was baptized in the (very) cold creek at Bible camp in
the Fall. Sean was baptized in the outside pool of friends in a night
in January (we removed the ice from the pool covering).
For
some, there was quite a crowd (a whole congregation). For others it
was something more intimate. But for all of us, we can remember (I
hope) that choice that we made, the thrill of knowing that we were
washed clean, the wondering about what our life would look like now.
On
Monday afternoon, Tulay emailed that the baptism we had talked about
recently (she called us and said she had recently come to faith in
Jesus, and did we know anything about baptism) would not leave her
thoughts. She went to bed with the thought and awoke with the desire
to be washed. We had just seen each other the day before and
worshipped Jesus as Lord and King.
In
Maastricht we meet in an upper room, but do not have a baptismal
pool. Sometimes we are able to go to congregations close by and use
theirs (in Liége or Genk). But this time, it was going to take too
long. So we made other plans. A few years back, we had bought an
inflatable pool – the kind you put in your back yard for the kids
to play in (bigger than a little splashing pool). We have used it
once for a baptism and it did well. Now was the time to use it again.
I
took a bicycle pump, a tarpaulin, our garden hose and towels along.
We stopped at a DIY store and bought the kind of pump and hose you
use to empty your cellar of flood water. We didn’t have an electric
pump, but I figured the bicylce pump would work just fine to blow up the pool. It didn’t.
So I started blowing. The room needed to warm up anyway, so we had
gone early to get things ready. How long could it take to blow this
thing up?
Thankfully,
Ruud came with a pump that pumps when you pull and when you push. Now
(15 minutes before people would arrive) we could start filling the
pool with water. The hose was hooked up to only cold water, so we
filled buckets with hot water and dumped them in. This was going to
take longer than expected.
In
the meantime, Tulay arrived. Have you read what Cornelius’ house
looked like when Peter arrived? (see Acts 10:24-27)This is what I was reminded of. There
were 5 of us from the church who could be there – including sister
Nel who does not go out in the evening (it was 8pm) and sister Kitty
who had gotten permission from her non-believing husband. But Tulay
brought her 7-year-old daughter, her mother and father, her best
friend (who was now also a Christian) and her friend’s daughter,
and the woman who had first introduced her to Jesus. Tulay understood
how important this was and she had invited the people nearest her to
hear what God had to say.
We
sang, we looked at examples of this same birth in the book of Acts,
and we saw a woman rise from the dead to new life in Christ. Now, as
with all of our births, life would begin. Now would begin the
learning, the struggles, the glorious little victories made possible
only in Christ. Now we had a new sister. And we shared our hearts in
prayer to the God of all who alone makes this possible.
Tulay
went on her way that evening tired, but excited for her new life. Do
you remember your birth? Where were you born?
Then
Philip began with that very passage of Scripture and told him the
good news about Jesus.
As
they traveled along the road, they came to some water and the eunuch
said, “Look, here is water. What can stand in the way of my being
baptized? And he gave orders to stop the chariot. Then both Philip
and the eunuch went down into the water and Philip baptized him. When
they came up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord suddenly took
Philip away, and the eunuch did not see him again, but went on his
way rejoicing.
Acts
8:35-39
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