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The Lamb of God
~Dr. Kelly Anderson S.S.L., Ph.D
Associate Professor of Biblical Studies for the Major Seminary,
Saint Charles Borromeo Seminary + Ambler, Pa.
John’s testimony about Jesus takes place after the baptism and temptation, just as Jesus is beginning his public mission. I’ll only concentrate on John’s marvelous acclamation: “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.”
A uniquely Johannine description of Jesus is that he is the “Lamb of God.” This startling depiction has deep roots in the Old Testament, recalling various lambs: first is the sacrificed Passover lamb whose blood saves the Israelites from death; second is the suffering servant of Isaiah 53:6–7 who vicariously bears the sins of the people and dies in their place; and third, is the daily temple sacrifices which are offered for atonement. Jesus is therefore the summation of the all the lambs in the Old Testament and brings them to fruition. He is God’s own victim who bears the sins of the people, atones for them, and suffers death for them.
The verb “takes away” (αἴρων) is in the present tense, meaning that Jesus’ removal of sins is ongoing and continuous. The Lamb, sacrificed once, continually bears the sins of the world in his wounded, marked body, and this wounded, sacrificed, cleansed body is given to us in the sacraments where it never ceases to purify us. And the faithful are privileged to proclaim this ongoing reality at every Mass: “Lamb of God, you take away…”
This Lamb takes away the “sin of the world” (the Agnus Dei follows 1 John 3:5 in saying “qui tollis peccata [sins] mundi”). The world (κόσμος) refers to the totality of all that is, and so the freedom from sins that the Lamb brings is more pervasive and profound than just freeing the human heart. The Lamb’s sacrifice affects all of creation, reaching to the angelic realm where the rebellion against God began, and even piercing Sheol, the land of the dead, where the crucified Lamb enters in triumph and frees those enslaved in death and despair.
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