Superman: always a popular costume choice |
At the end of October, children across the country venture
out into neighborhoods donning Superhero attire, Angel outfits, and all other
sorts of costumes. As a child I always
looked forward to Halloween, the day I would march around in my homemade
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles costume (as Donatello, of course) and walk from
door to door trick-or-treating. A funny
thing would happen when I wore this costume -- I changed. While in costume, everyone expected me to
take on the persona and the behavior of Donatello and I happily obliged with
“Cowabungas”, “Dudes”, and attempts at athletic jump kicks. I had put on Donatello and the outside
changed my very thoughts, words and actions.
I was a “little Donatello” for a night, realizing a lifelong dream of
being a “hero in a half-shell.”
In baptism, we hope for a similar transformation.
Paul writes, “for all of you who were
baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.” (Gal 3:27). Symbolized with a white garment, the newly
baptized are clothed with Christ. Unlike
the Donatello outfit, when we “put on” Christ, it is once for all. He does not come off. We never dry off from our baptism. Instead, we are continually challenged and
strengthened by the Sacrament to take on the very persona and behavior of Jesus
Christ. Like the Donatello costume, what
happens on the outside is meant to change our very thoughts, words and
actions. The goal, then, of putting on
Christ is for the inside to match the outside, so that our very identity
becomes who we outwardly claim to be in baptism. For those of us who were baptized as babies,
we spend our entire Christian lives trying to grow into the infant-sized
baptismal garment. We strain to join our
voices with Paul’s in proclaiming that “it is no longer I, but Christ who lives
in me” (Gal 2:20).
We return to the image of the “little Donatello.” After the shell came off the effects quickly withered
away. Once the costume was boxed up for
the year, once there was no big event to look forward to, I forgot about the
whole thing. With no continual
reinforcement, I returned back to my usually quiet six-year-old self.
This too is a danger for us all -- forgetting our new
identity in baptism. “Every Christian is
to become a little Christ,” C.S. Lewis writes.
“The whole purpose of becoming a Christian is simply nothing else.” We are continually challenged to appropriate
our identity as “little Christs”, to grow in faith, hope, and love. This becomes especially difficult when there
is no big “faith event” on the horizon to look forward to. In a world that pulls us in a million
different directions at once, we need constant reminders and help to be “little
Christs”; we need the St. Mark community and our family to ensure we notice and
live into our baptismal clothes. We both
support and challenge each other to be who we claim to be in baptism.
This Halloween, as we see the “little superheroes”, “little
angels”, and “little monsters” parading from house to house, may they serve as
a reminder to baptism. May the automatic
taking on of personalities by the trick-or-treaters inspire us to take on the
personality of Christ. And may we
support each other in our journey, no matter where we are in our faith.
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