"Behold, the Lamb of God"
John 1: 29-34
TheWord: https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/011826.cfm
Almighty ever-living God,
who govern all things,
both in heaven and on earth,
mercifully hear the pkleading of your people
and besotow your peace on our times.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
God, for ever and ever.
(Collect of Mass)
It seems we may often read the Gospels in a way that puts us outside the conversation and events, so we act far more as spectators rather than participants. We stand at a distance and watch the events unfold. We sit quietly and listen to the words of Jesus or other figures in the Gospels, at Mass for example. It’s as if we walk upon the event, stand in the crowd, observe what happens, then go on our way. While we may hear a fine homily that connects the lesson of the scriptures to our lives, it strikes me that I sometimes wonder if we really get it.
However, the Gospel
this weekend provides more than passive participation. Imagine that John the Baptist stands before
you on stage in a darkened theatre. The
light shines on John for a moment yet in the back you see a shadowy figure who
stands quietly. Suddenly, the Baptist turns to the audience in front of and
below him. As he steps forward, he
begins to speak directly to the audience of which you are a part so that he
might engage our full attention. He raises his right arm and points to that
figure behind him as the light then shifts and you see it is Jesus.
Then facing the
audience John declares: “You see him?
This is your Lord and Savior; the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of
the world. He is the one of whom I said,
a man is coming after me who ranks ahead of me . . . the one who will baptize
with the Holy Spirit . . . he is the Son
of God. Now, follow him.”
Instead, our Lord
comes in peace. He comes to forgive and
extend mercy; to include rather than to exclude and to heal the broken hearted.
To so identify with us that he embraces our human experience and eventually
even dies for us, only to be raised three days later – for us. The fiery preaching of John the Baptist was
done to prepare us and to wake us up that we might be ready to see this figure
not in shadows and darkness but in clear and shining light with no doubt as to
his mission and identity.
So, this Sunday is a
kind of transition from the clarion call of Advent to “make ready the way
for the Lord” to see God’s prophetic promises fulfilled in the birth of
Jesus among the lowly and peaceful figures of the Christmas season to now see
the adult Jesus ready for mission and anointed with the Spirit, the Son of God
come among us.
To see Jesus, in the
words of the Baptist, as “the Lamb of God” whose self-sacrifice on the cross, atones
for the sins of all humanity. Who became the sacrificial lamb, the all perfect
and holy one, whose death, like the lambs sacrificed in the Temple, make it
possible to pay the price for our sins and to bring us the promise of an open
door to eternal life.
The first reading
from Isaiah speaks of a figure who is called to be “a light to the nations,
that my salvation may reach to the ends of the earth.” In our Christian
perspective we see Jesus as that light and his mission which reaches out to Jew
and Gentile alike; a mission that is inclusive and invites. Ultimately, it is a call from God through his
Son which demands a response. We cannot ignore the great figures who heard the
call of God, embraced it in faith, and walked with confidence in his guidance:
Isaiah, Mary, Joseph, and John the Baptist rank as shining lights from our
Advent and Christmas time.
Now, as John points
to Jesus he speaks to us collectively.
In other worlds, the mission of Christ has become our mission as well as
his followers. We should be reminded
this week that we follow Christ, the Lamb of God as John calls him, as a people
of faith; as a diverse collection of humanity whose call to see Christ as that
light sent from God might have come to us in all sorts of ways such as family,
culture, personally, the witness of others.
That we who believe in Christ are called to be a continual light to the
nations and to carry on the mission Jesus began and continues in and through
his Church.
It seems primarily
then that God intends us to carry out his mission through human leaders and
human events. There are many other moral
leaders and founders of various world religions such as Confucius, Buddha, Moses,
Mohammed, of the variety of Christian leaders who began other Protestant
traditions or even the notorious King Henry VIII in his less than stellar
efforts to shift authority from the Pope to himself.
The mission we carry
calls us first to be a holy people. To be a people who not only show up but
more to be a people who embrace conversion in Christ Jesus. It is that act of God’s grace that will make
us holy as in right relationship with God who strive to live lives of virtue,
not sinfulness. Then our light can truly
shine because it is the light of Christ not ourselves that others can see. In other words, let’s be a community which
attracts rather than excludes or repels.
So, as John stands
center stage and looks down to you with arm extended to the one he calls the
“Lamb of God” who will “baptize with the Holy Spirit” and who therefore is the
“Son of God” do I get it? Can I let go and
embrace the mission Christ has offered to me?
Can I strive to be holy and walk in the way of his light?
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