John the Baptist had been preaching with fire and
passion in anticipation of the emergence of the
Messiah. When the Christ appeared in public to
begin His ministry and John saw Him walking toward
him, the prophet announced, “Behold
the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the
world!” (John 1:29)
It
would have been accurate for John to say, “Behold the
Lion of Judah who has
come to lead the people of
God to victory.” He could have shouted,
“Behold the Son of David, the King of Israel who has come to
rule the nations.” Yet, he didn’t. Instead
John proclaimed the plan for Christ to come and offer
His earthly body as a sacrifice for the sins of the
world. What would be His greatest deed, the
greatest manifestation of His identity? His greatest
hour was His shameful death as a condemned criminal on
the cross.
All the Old Testament
sacrifices make sense now. They were shadows of
the one great event when the Son
of God would walk to Calvary as a lamb led to
the slaughter and humbly submit to death so that men
might live.
“Behold the Lamb
of God”—Fall down before this unselfish King and give
Him your praise, your love, and your life (Revelation
5:6-9.
– Source unknown; via THE SOWER, a weekly publication of the Arthur church of Christ, Arthur, IL. Ron Bartanen, who serves as minister and editor, may be contacted through the congregation's website: http://www.arthurchurchofchrist.com
No comments:
Post a Comment