
There are many things in a church that quietly teach theology without ever once consulting a textbook. Stained glass does it with colour. Pews do it with posture. The thermostat does it with conflict.
And then there is the baptismal font.
The baptismal font, for reasons known only to God and the building committee of 1897, is almost always in the way. It stands just inside the door in many churches, minding its own business, quietly daring you to trip over it while carrying a casserole, a bulletin, or a small child dressed in alarming amounts of white.
On the Feast of the Baptism of our Lord, this is not an accident. It is a lesson.
Because the font exists to interrupt us.
You cannot get very far into the church without passing it. You cannot enter worship without brushing past the water. You cannot pretend that faith is merely something you think about privately while sipping coffee later. The font insists — politely but firmly — that identity comes before activity.
Before you sing, before you serve, before you sit, before you sort out where your committee meets, you are reminded who you are.
“You are baptized,” the font says, without ever raising its voice.
“You belong,” it adds, with a splash of holy restraint.
Boundaries, we are often told, are about keeping things out. But baptism teaches us that holy boundaries are first about knowing what we are already in. We are in Christ. In grace. In mercy. In a love that has already claimed us long before we got our act together or found our name tag.
Jesus himself submits to this interruption at the Jordan. He steps into the water not because he needs to be corrected, but because identity is declared there. “You are my beloved,” says the voice from heaven — before a sermon is preached, before a miracle is performed, before the cross is even imagined.
Beloved first. Everything else follows.
The font teaches us boundaries by reminding us that not everything is demanded of us all at once. We do not earn our place. We do not negotiate our belonging. We are named before we are tasked. Marked before we are managed.
And yes, occasionally we stub our toe on it. That too is instructive.
Because faith that never interrupts us is probably too well tucked away to be of much use. The font stands where it does to say: Slow down. Remember. This is not just a building you’re entering — it’s a life you’re living.
On this feast day, may we allow the water to do its quiet work again. May it interrupt our rushing, redraw our priorities, and gently remind us that the most important boundary we ever cross is the one into grace.
And it’s already been crossed — for us.
A Companion Prayer
Gracious God,
who met your Son in the waters of the Jordan
and named him Beloved,
meet us again at the edge of your grace.
When we forget who we are,
interrupt us with holy water and holy memory.
When we rush past what matters,
slow us down with love that will not be ignored.
Teach us the boundaries that give life —
where identity comes before effort,
belonging before busyness,
and grace before everything else.
We ask this in the name of Jesus,
who stepped into the water for us all.
Amen.








