Sometimes the Old Testament may...
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Sometimes the Old Testament may seem like a waste of good paper. After all, Jesus didn't come until the New Testament. Besides, have you seen how much thicker the Old Testament is than the New Testament? It's full of laws that we don't follow and already fulfilled prophecies. Today's New Testament reading, however, takes us back to the beginning. When we think of baptism, we usually only go back to John the Baptist. We don't flip back a few hundred pages and remember Noah's ark. And why should we? There was no crazy man proclaiming God's news, no dove descending from the sky, no voice of God. Oh, wait. Noah was that crazy guy. The dove flew back with a branch. God was a major player in the whole story. As 1 Peter says, "Eight persons were saved through water" in Noah's ark. Through baptism, we are marked to share in Noah's heritage and God's promise never to destroy us. The Old Testament gives baptism a new depth; it becomes a reminder of God's power instead of some random bath in the middle of Israel. I guess that Old Testament isn't such a waste of paper after all.
