Todos, todos…
So, Russell Brand announced this morning that he’s getting baptized this weekend.
(Add that to the oddness of say, Naomi Wolf interviewing folks from the Lepanto Institute and Bill Maher going off on genderwoo, and you’ve got …something in the air.)
I’m not interesting in critiquing another person’s faith, faith journey or gatekeeping or even “celebrating” in the way that some like to when a celebrity converts (to anything), but when a public person makes public statements in this way, it offers an opportunity to think about the issue at hand – in this case, baptism.
It doesn’t seem to me that Brand is getting baptized in a Catholic context – he speaks of it maybe happening in the River Thames (?) and also – and this will be my focus – speaks of it rather generically and individualistically – as a chance, essentially, to start over.
Which is a good thing!
(Although weird, maybe for Hallow, which decided recently to have him be a face for their app? Shrug. )
But not a complete understanding of Christian baptism, either. So it’s worth thinking about, not to hold up Brand’s decision or rationalization as flawed, but simply to have an opportunity to rethink, for ourselves, what baptism – and therefore, faith – is.
How do I think of my own faith and my own faith journey?
Of course my faith starts with me, the subject here, created by God, made for life with him, broken by sin, who can only be redeemed and restored by Christ.
But I’m not the only one here. My recognition of my need for Christ joins me to, yes, Christ, who in turn does not exist only for my benefit. Dying and rising with him in baptism has not just benefitted me personally, and set me on a fresh new path, but has joined me to Him, the Lord, the redeemer, joined me to all others who are in communion with him, who are a part of his Body, and calls me to keep journeying, to continue being transformed, hour by hour, day by day, into his likeness. (2 Corinthians 3:18)
So it seems to me that a public conversion is an opportunity to step back and reflect – not so much on the faith journey of another person, whose heart we cannot know – but on that of the only one we can even begin to know – our own.
Does a public convert seem to hold political or social views that conflict with mine, that don’t seem consistent with my understanding of the Faith? Well, what about me? Where are my own gaps, struggles and inconsistencies? Does a public convert articulate an understanding of faith that seems to fall short of what historical Christianity, even in its diversity, has proclaimed? Well, how deeply have I apprehended and am living out a deeper, more grounded understanding myself?
In other words: splinter, beam, etc.
From someone a lot smarter than I am:
Therefore, being baptized means being united with God. In a single new existence we belong to God, we are immersed in God himself.
Thinking of this, we can immediately see a few consequences.
The first is that God is no longer very distant from us, he is not a reality to be discussed – whether he exists or not – but we are in God and God is in us. The priority, the centrality of God in our lives is a primary consequence of Baptism. To the question: “Does God exist?” the answer is: “He exists and he is with us; this closeness to God matters in our lives, this being in God himself, who is not a distant star, but is the environment of my life.” This would be the first consequence, and therefore would tell us that we ourselves must take into account this presence of God, really live in his presence.
A second consequence of what I have said is that we do not make ourselves Christians. Becoming Christian is not something that follows from a decision of mine: “Now I am making myself Christian.” Of course, my decision is also necessary, but above all it is an action of God with me: it is not I who make myself Christian, I am taken up by God, taken in hand by God and in this way, saying “yes” to this action of God, I become Christian.
Becoming Christian is, in a certain sense, “passive”: I do not make myself Christian, but God makes me a man of his, God takes me in hand and realizes my life in a new dimension. Just as I do not make myself live, but life is given to me; I was born not because I made myself man, but I was born because being human was given to me. So also being Christian is given to me, it is a “passive” for me that becomes an “active” in our, in my life. And this fact of the “passive,” of not making oneself Christian but of being made Christian by God, already somewhat implies the mystery of the cross: it is only by dying to my egoism, departing from myself, that I can be Christian.
A third element that is immediately opened in this perspective is that, naturally, being immersed in God I am united with all others, I am united with my brothers and sisters, because all the others are in God and if I am drawn out of my isolation, if I am immersed in God, I am immersed in communion with others.
Being baptized is never a solitary act of “me,” but is always necessarily a being united with all the others, a being in unity and solidarity with the whole body of Christ, with the whole community of his brothers and sisters. This fact that Baptism inserts me into community breaks my isolation. We must remain aware of this in our being Christian.