“I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?” John the Baptist is incredulous at Jesus’ request. Baptism is for penitent sinners. Why would the sinless Son of God need to be baptized?
Part of the answer comes from this week’s readings in Ezekiel, where the LORD condemns the wicked shepherds in Israel whose unfaithfulness is so brazen that even unbelievers mock their lack of zeal. He will indeed scatter those shepherds, but he will also do something much greater. He himself will shepherd his people. Jesus approaches John for baptism not because he needs it, but because he, the Messiah, will fulfill all righteousness before his Father. Holy and blameless, the Good Shepherd will lay down his life for the sheep.
And we, the sheep, certainly need him. As our flesh militates against the Holy Spirit working within us, we are torn between the two. We echo St. Paul’s frustrated cry: “Wretched man that I am, who will resuce me from this body of death?”
But we know the answer: it is the shepherd, who was not baptized for his own good, but for ours. With him the Father is pleased, and in our baptism, the one who fulfilled all righteousness makes us righteous. The one who suffered suffers with us. His resurrection becomes our resurrection, and after the struggle is over, we will share in his glory.
So, there is no need for us to pause at Jesus’ baptism, either. To do so would be to question the unmatched grace and love he has for us. Instead, secure in our own baptism, we can confess our sins, receive true forgiveness, and, confident in the glory to come, remain in his fold.