This Sunday, thanks to a permissive rubric in the Book of Common Prayer (p. 15), we will keep the feast of All Saints’ Day. I cannot begin to describe my excitement for this day!
All Saints’ is one of the four days especially appropriate for Baptism, well five if you include Bishop’s visitation (BCP p. 312). This means that at both of our liturgies this weekend we will have the opportunity to remember our baptisms in different ways. At the 8am liturgy we will renew our Baptismal Vows. This is a chance to recommit ourselves to the promises that we have made. It is a good and holy thing to regularly stop throughout the year and remind ourselves of the promises we have made to God, our neighbors, and ourselves. It is good to stop and remember how we have pledged to live out our lives of faith.
At the 10am liturgy we will have the great joy of receiving two new people into the household of God. At this liturgy we will baptize Jesse and Sophia. While this will be a great occasion for them and their families it is also a great moment for the whole community. After they are baptized we will welcome them saying, “We receive you into the household of God. Confess the faith of Christ crucified, proclaim his resurrection, and share with us in his eternal priesthood” (BCP p. 308). We will warmly greet Jesse and Sophia as they join with us in the good work God has called us to do. We will pledge to support them as they grow in faith, beginning a new relationship together.
Baptizing people is one of the great privileges of my vocation as a priest - it is truly holy and awesome (in every sense of the word). Every time I go to stand at our Baptismal font and add names to our Baptismal register I am reminded in a particular way of the great line of faithful people we are part of. Our font has been in use here since Easter 1853 (two years after the parish was founded). For 171 years people have been brought to this place, committing their lives to the work of God, pledging to share with us in the eternal priesthood of all believers. According to our records Jesse and Sophia will be the 1419 and 1420 persons baptized in this place. There is good history and deep roots here, and there is great promise for the hope of the future: not only for the 1419 and 1420 persons baptized, but for the 1520 and 1620 persons as well.
I hope you will join us for worship this weekend as we rejoice with the saints of God, are reminded of our call to be saints too, renew the promises of our Baptismal life, and welcome Jesse and Sophia to join us on this wonderful and wild adventure.