
The Mingling and the Emergence
Matthew 3:13-17
Fr. Jijo Kandamkulathy CMF
Claretian Missionaries
Every time, while preparing the wine for the Mass, the words form on my lips like a breath from the depths of mystery: “May the mingling of this water and wine bring us to share in the divinity of Christ who humbled himself to share our humanity.” A drop, a simple drop of water, loses itself in the wine. It is no longer seen, yet it transforms the whole, making it fitting for sacrifice. On this feast, this prayer becomes a window, and through it, I see the banks of the Jordan. There, the Uncreated Light, the Eternal Word, steps into the tasteless, mundane water of our human condition. This is the Great Mingling. God, in Christ, immerses Himself not in a sacred spring, but in the river of our collective story—a current often muddied by frailty, fear, and forgetfulness.
Why this immersion? What in our bland humanity could possibly woo the Divine? It is love itself, the very logic of the Creator for the created. This is not a fall, but a conscious, gracious descent. The old Adam, in his sin, became entrenched, trapped in the mire of his own making, unable to rise. But this New Adam enters the water to purify it from within. He takes our flawed nature into Himself, and by the alchemy of divine love, He makes it a vessel of grace. When He emerges, dripping with the waters of our world, He is the icon of redeemed humanity. He is the assurance that no one, no matter how deep they feel they have sunk, is irredeemably lost. Emergence is always possible. The Father’s voice tears the heavens open not for angels, but for us: “You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased.” In Jesus, humanity is reinstated, beloved, and capable of bearing the Spirit.
Yet, the mingling at Jordan was only the beginning of the formula. The water was but a sign pointing to a more profound, terrifying immersion. Later, when the sons of Zebedee, James and John, approached Him with ambition burning in their hearts—”Grant that in your glory we may sit one at your right and the other at your left”—Jesus responded with a question that plunges to the heart of His mission: “Can you drink the cup that I drink, or be baptized with the baptism with which I am baptized?” (Mark 10:38-39).
Here, He names the other baptism. The first was with Jordan’s water; the second would be with His own blood. The first was a mingling with our humanity; the second would be an immersion into the abyss of our sin, our alienation, our death. Psychologically, we must pause here. The disciples saw only glory, a linear path from Jordan’s affirmation to a throne. But Jesus saw the true architecture of redemption: the path to life winds through the valley of death. His conscious immersion was to be total.
He calls it a baptism. At the Jordan, the waters closed over Him momentarily. On the Cross, the flood of the world’s hatred, violence, and sin would engulf Him. He would descend into the very depths of human God-forsakenness, crying out the Psalm we cling to in our despair. This is the baptism that would truly, finally, and irrevocably mingle the divine life with the darkest consequences of the human condition. The water at the offertory mingles with wine, which will become His blood. That simple liturgical gesture contains the whole arc: from the Jordan’s water to the Calvary cup.
What does this mean for us? The disciples’ request exposes a universal human temptation: we desire the glory, the confirmation, the beloved status, but we wish to bypass the immersion that makes it authentic. We want resurrection without crucifixion, transparency without vulnerability, belovedness without the obedient descent. Jesus’ response is a gentle, firm correction. True greatness, true sharing in His divinity, comes only through sharing in the full shape of His humanity—which includes its suffering, its limits, and its ultimate surrender.
When He felt most alone, crying out “Why have you forsaken me?” He was, in the deepest mystery, enacting the most profound communion. He was drinking the cup of our isolation so we might never be alone. The Father’s question to the old Adam in the garden, “Where are you?” was a question born of a broken relationship. To the New Adam on the Cross, there is no such question. He is precisely there—in the place of the lost. The Spirit, who descended at the Jordan, sustains Him even in the offering.
Therefore, the Feast of the Baptism is an invitation to hope-filled emergence, yes, but it is also a sobering call to consent to the full baptism of Christ. We are baptized into His death so as to rise with Him. Our daily immersions—into our own frailty, into the needs of others, into the inevitable sufferings of a love that is real—are participations in that one great baptism. We need not be afraid of the depths, for He has sanctified them.
The old Adam, clothed in shame, hid from transparency. Sin makes us opaque, even to ourselves. We build walls, we manage images, we live in the nightmare of being found out. But the New Adam, baptized and crucified, walks in the “sunshine of divine transparency.” His life is an open book to the Father. When sin is washed away, first by water and finally by blood, we have nothing to hide. Our fragility, held in His love, becomes a place of grace, not shame.
This is the journey from the Jordan to Jerusalem. It is the path from being declared beloved, to living out that belovedness through a self-emptying love that is stronger than death. As we witness Jesus in the water today, let us ask for the courage to accept both baptisms: the one that tells us we are loved, and the one that calls us to love to the end. Let us wriggle out of the opaque shells of fear and step into the luminous, demanding, and joyous transparency of the children of God.
© Claretian Publications, Macau
Cum Approbatione Ecclesiastica
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