Happy Birthday, the second time,
too.
I really
like September. I like going to school. As a student and as a
teacher I’ve been going to school in September for over 60 years. I
like crisp fall days in the middle of the USA. Several years ago I
had the privilege to be in Australia in September. There I enjoyed
the balmy days of spring in the southern hemisphere. I also like
September because my birthday is September 11. For the first 50
years of my life, having 9/11 as a birthday was a good thing since
people could remember “nine one “as a helpful number in the USA.
However, in 2001 life changed on “nine eleven”. I was with student
nurses at the hospital in the birth center that day, and several
families who were in labor did not want to have their babies born
on such a tragic day. I told the laboring mothers that September
11th always had been a good day, and that having a baby born on
September11th was a good thing.
We know
that Jesus talked with the Jewish people about a new birth and
being born again. Nicodemus, a rabbi, even asked if a man could
enter his mother’s womb a second time. Jesus spoke about this
second birth as recorded in John 3:2-6. “I tell you, unless
a man is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the Kingdom
of God. What is born of the flesh is flesh and what is born of the
Spirit is Spirit.“ This second birth is baptism. Through
this process and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, we are assured of
eternal salvation in the Kingdom of God. In the Lutheran church
infants are baptized. Some other churches do not baptize until the
teenage years; others baptize even later.
Jesus
himself was baptized as an adult by John. When he came out of the
water in the Jordan river, heaven opened and the Spirit of God came
down from above in the form of a dove as the Father spoke,
“This is my beloved son, in whom I am well
pleased” (Matthew 3:17). Since I was baptized as an infant
at six weeks I experienced the “second birth” in October. When our
son attended a Lutheran grade school, once a month during chapel
services, children were recognized during their baptismal birthday
month. It would be spiritually healthy for all of us to commemorate
our second birthday as well as our traditional first
birthday.
Dear
Heavenly Father, we thank you for life on earth and for our second
birth and the price paid for us by sending your only Son Jesus to
assure us of our life with you forever in heaven. In Christ’s name.
Amen.
Jamie
Spikes, PhD, RN
Parish
Nurse Educator
St.
Luke
Lutheran
Church
Manhattan, KS, USA