Sunday, April 22, 2012

Profiles of Courage: Bill the Baptist


(Part I)

There is a momentary silence as the stage lights shine brightly upon the water.  This is a night of redemption, symbolized in so many fitting ways.  A young woman is lifted up by a strong hand, beads of water stream from her hair.  And the applause, the confirmation of a sister echoes throughout the sanctuary.  The two in the baptismal share a hug, while the forty-two preceding, draped in white cotton towels clap and cheer.  Bill the Baptist has returned.

The story of Bill the Baptist is not a clear one, a good story never is.  And it’s not a clean one as the great stories never are.  The trajectory of his story plays with a fatalistic irony that begs for interpretation and thoughtful studies concerning the human condition and the nature of redemption.  Themes upon themes, and yet for Bill the Baptist, this is a story told only between himself and God. 

Unbeknownst of any prophetic implications Mary and James Theodore christened their newborn son William James Theodore.  Under the pastoral tutelage of prolific baptizer Arthur Snelling, the young William was nurtured towards the bright lights and warm waters of the baptismal.  Snelling himself was a mold breaker, known for his unorthodox delivery, many flocked to him out of mere curiosity.  For example, Snelling was one of the first to adapt the wrist-upon-wrist-lock into baptisms.  Countless awkward interactions preceded the revolutionary technique, as many pastors found the traditional hand-to-chest baptism difficult to implement for the females of their congregation. 

A young, impressionistic William became Snelling’s protégé after his parents witnessed the boy baptizing the family dog in the bathtub.  The next day, Bill recalls, the dog was hit by a car and died.  God’s timing seemed obvious and reinforced the truth that all dogs do indeed go to heaven, but only if baptized.  William thrived under Snelling’s supervision, and soon the adolescent became second-string baptizer for the congregation of the First Family of Christ.

Bill finds an old VHS and puts it into the player.  The tape loops for a moment and then reveals a teenaged Bill – pencil and paper in hand – with an elderly Snelling placing a careful hand on the young man’s back.  The two stare intently upon a television, Snelling points a crooked finger to the screen, and Bill scratches a few notes in response.  Bill looks on wistfully, “Art was the first one to tape baptisms as a point for training.  We spent hours in that film room.”  

William’s moniker changed literally over night.  Caught up in the rousing spirit of a tent revival, William – at age sixteen – performed an impromptu baptism, officially breaking himself away from his predecssor.  There were children, grandparents, man, woman alike in that crowd, and none left with a dry brow.  The next morning the local paper headlined, “Bill the Baptist Dunks 118!”  Nothing would be the same. 

Few could have projected such a far-reaching ceiling in a career that began with incredible expectations anyways.  “None of the church directors could have predicted what we saw with Bill,” reminisced an anonymous pastor.  “Every baptism is a ‘miracle,’ yes.  But Bill literally performed miracles when he baptized people.  Our church had sent a couple scouts to see if all the hype was real.  They were with Bill for two days, and they came back reporting that Bill had done 22 full immersion baptisms in pothole at a Wal-Mart parking lot.”

As Bill’s skill and following grew so did his legend.  One lingering story that continues to bring chills is of Bill baptizing people with water that had turned into wine.  Such a story sounds quite miraculous and even heretical for some, but for Bill it was an average night.  When asked about it Bill just shrugs, “The miracle wasn’t water into wine, but the fact that the wine actually turned into grape juice when we baptized our underage participants.” 

The numbers are staggering.  Bill shows us a room of bookcases that are filled with binders, each one documenting person after person that was baptized into the kingdom with Bill’s own hands.  Each binder represents one day or event, with a number that titles the spine.  176. 223. 184. 305. 111.  These are not statistics to Bill, they’re people.  Each with their own life and their own story.

Bill’s own story would unravel quickly.  With so many solidifying their lives of redemption through Bill’s baptismal waters, few could have seen the ironic fall.  “The rise of William James Theodore is unprecedented. But the fall of Bill the Baptist has never been seen and never will,” commented one rival pastor.  His tone betrays an unforgiving grudge, “A man with three first names is no man at all.  He was doomed to fail.” 

(Check in tomorrow for Part 2) 

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