One of my favorite films of all time is It’s a Wonderful Life. We never used to call it by the title, though. In our home when the kids were young, it was just “George Bailey.” We watched it so many times, we knew it so well, you could just stick the VHS tape in the player and let it play from wherever it was stopped the last time we played it. Kira, as a little girl, liked to do just that. A little George Bailey to unwind at the end of a tough day at kindergarten was just the thing. It didn’t take much to do the trick.
George Bailey is a man who has lived a very ordinary life. He’s never been anywhere, never done anything really special. And then one evening he is feeling like whatever luck he had has run out. His life, he decides, is worth nothing. He never made a difference in the world. It didn’t matter that he was born, and it wouldn’t matter that he died.
But he was wrong, wasn’t he? That night George was given the amazing gift of being able to see just exactly what difference he did make, and to whom he made a difference. George was never an important person in the ways the world defines that – nonetheless, his life truly made a difference. This is true for each one of us, ordinary as we may be. You matter. What you do, or do not do, matters.
From the moment of your birth, you made a difference. Out of the primordial waters of your mother’s womb, you swam into the world. The doctor or midwife who caught you lifted you up and said, “It’s a boy! Or it’s a girl! Or yes, it’s just what you already knew because everyone knows now well before the baby is born.
And all eyes in the room were on you; you were at that moment the most important thing in the world.
And then there was that moment when you locked eyes with the ones who had been waiting for you. You stared at each other, meeting each other for the first time – in curiosity and wonder.
In earlier times, it was customary to salt the baby, as you would a chicken breast or a roast. The salt, people believed, kept away the evil spirits, protecting the newborn from harm. Every effort would have been made to keep this new life from any potential danger, for you were loved from the moment you took your first breath.
Even if your mother, your father, didn’t know how in the world they were going to raise you, provide for you – bringing a new life into the world is the greatest leap of faith – that was okay. Somehow, and by the grace of God, there is love. You matter.
Then, maybe one day, they carried you into the church to be baptized. A few drops on the forehead, or full immersion in the waters; they called your name and said, “You are baptized in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”
Once again, there might have been salt. Many years ago, it was customary for the pastor to take a pinch of salt and place it on the baby’s tongue. You probably liked the taste of it, like most people do. “A covenant of salt,” the pastor might have been thinking in that moment. Salt is a good preservative. It makes things last a long while – maybe even forever.
On that day when you were baptized, the church gathered together and, once again, all eyes were on you. Each one watching remembered their own baptisms, somewhere deep inside, because every baptism is a moment for us all to remember that we have been baptized. In this baptism we were, each one of us, called into a new life, anointed as Christ’s own. With every baptism, we enlarge this big, beautiful family. All of us brothers and sisters of Jesus – there can never be too many.
And this means that we are brothers and sisters to one another. And so with every baptism we say, welcome to the family! We’re a little bit quirky, kind of dysfunctional, but we love each other and that’s what counts.
Welcome to the family, little one. We have some rules, which you will learn, probably by osmosis because, to be honest, we don’t really talk about these things enough. You just learn by hanging out with us.
Rules like, saying “I love you” is optional, but showing your love is mandatory.
Rules like, if one of us is in trouble, all of us are there to help carry the burden, because you really are your brother’s keeper, your sister’s keeper.
And here is an interesting one: It’s not only the people in our family that matter. All the people in the neighborhood matter, and any one of them could, potentially, become a member of our family – anytime. We are a family with very porous boundaries. So this means our love and our care extend beyond the walls of our house.
It’s a big task, we know, and that is the reason we gather together, because none of us could ever do it alone. We do it together because that is exactly what Jesus has called us to do. This is exactly who Jesus has called us to be.
Way back in the first days of his ministry on earth, Jesus stood up on a high place so everyone around could hear him, and he said, “You are the salt of the earth. You are the light of the world.” He was talking to all of us, together. Salt and light – this is the life we have been called into. This is our new identity. And that’s kind of a big deal.
Maybe none of us will ever be a big deal in worldly terms. Maybe we will never be newsworthy for anything we have done. Maybe our lives will be just as insignificant as George Bailey’s was. But here’s the thing: We are salt of the earth – always flavoring things, protecting and preserving things, making an actual difference in our world. And we are the light of the world, which should never be hidden away. The world needs our light. The world needs our saltiness.
When I was a graduate student at the University of Texas, our campus minister, PJ, would offer us communion every Sunday. and the first thing he would do, before giving us the bread and the cup, was to put a little pinch of salt on our tongues, saying, “Remember your baptism.”
I have borne witness to this today – that when you are baptized, you are enough. You have the Spirit within you and the whole community of faith around you. You are well equipped to carry the gospel out into this world. You are well equipped to fight back against the powers of evil around us. You are well equipped to stand up against injustice wherever you see it and speak up for your neighbors wherever they need it. You have what you need, church.
It is a gift to be able to bear witness to this good news. Now the gift, dear ones, is yours. Every day you take the gospel out into the world with courage and love, just boldly being who you are – salt and light – you are surely blessed.







