The Unbaptized Arm
Have you ever heard the strange legend about a group of 15th Century soldiers and their unusual baptism? They served a man named Ivan the Great who was the Grand Prince of Moscow and All Russia. Ivan was pledged to marry a Greek princess, but her father insisted that he and his 500 soldiers become members of the Orthodox Church first. This involved a full immersion baptism. However, the Orthodox Church forbade professional soldiers from being baptized due to their violent way of life, which is not in line with the teachings of Christ. But the clever fellows found a work-around. As they entered the waters, they held up their right arms above the surface. This prevented their “fighting arms” from being baptized. They were willing to give their bodies and souls to God but reserved their sword arms for the state. This story serves as a classic example of when your “yes” really means “no.”
In our Scripture today, Paul had been accused of being unreliable and untrustworthy by the church in Corinth because he had said he could come to them on a certain day and then was unable to make the trip. He sent a letter in his place and was met with their questioning of his motives and his word. You can hear the hurt and offense that this caused Paul in verse 17: “So I wasn’t unreliable when I planned to do this, was I?” Having his integrity questioned was painful.
2 Corinthians 1 (Common English Bible)
17 So I wasn’t unreliable when I planned to do this, was I? Or do I make decisions with a substandard human process so that I say “Yes, yes” and “No, no” at the same time? 18 But as God is faithful, our message to you isn’t both yes and no. 19 God’s Son, Jesus Christ, is the one who was preached among you by us—through me, Silvanus, and Timothy—he wasn’t yes and no. In him it is always yes. 20 All of God’s promises have their yes in him. That is why we say Amen through him to the glory of God.
Paul leans on their understanding of the reliability of God to make his point. As God is faithful, Paul was faithful to his churches, even when they needed to be reprimanded. He preached a Savior who was completely reliable and worthy of their trust. Jesus was not a “yes and no” man, and Paul was not untouched by that fact. His yes was always a yes.
Yet out of this unpleasantness came one of Scripture’s most beautiful verses: “All of God’s promises have their yes in him” (verse 20). Yes, Lord! What a wonderful statement of the reliability of Christ. Every good thing that God gave to humanity came through him.
Think for a moment about the commitments and promises you have made. Consider what you are doing with your time, your talents, and your treasure. Are you one-hundred percent in or are you holding something back? Does your yes mean maybe? Are you willing to serve God with all of your heart, mind, soul, and strength, or are you keeping something in reserve for yourself?
God’s yeses are always yes, for all of eternity. May we respond like Paul and give everything we have to the building of God’s kingdom, holding nothing back.
Just like Jesus.

Blessing of the Fleet








