EPIPHANY
2
January
14-16, 2023
Pastor
Timothy J. Spaude
Text:
John 1:29-41 (EHV)
“LOOK! THE LAMB OF
GOD!”
1.
He
is exactly what we need.
2.
He
is exactly what everyone else needs.
John 1:29-41 (EHV) “The next day,
John saw Jesus coming toward him and said, “Look! The Lamb of God, who takes
away the sin of the world! 30This is the one I was talking about
when I said, ‘The one coming after me outranks me because he existed before
me.’ 31I myself did not know who he was, but I came baptizing with
water so that he would be revealed to Israel.” 32John also
testified, “I saw the Spirit descend like a dove from heaven and remain on him.
33I myself did not recognize him, but the one who sent me to baptize
with water said to me, ‘The one on whom you see the Spirit descend and remain,
he is the one who will baptize with the Holy Spirit.’ 34I saw this
myself and have testified that this is the Son of God.” 35The next
day, John was standing there again with two of his disciples. 36When
John saw Jesus passing by, he said, “Look! The Lamb of God!” 37The
two disciples heard him say this, and they followed Jesus. 38When
Jesus turned around and saw them following him, he asked, “What are you looking
for?” They said to him, “Rabbi” (which means “Teacher”), “where are you
staying?” 39He told them, “Come, and you will see.” So they came and
saw where he was staying. They stayed with him that day. It was about the tenth
hour. 40Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother, was one of the two who heard
John and followed Jesus. 41The first thing Andrew did was to find
his own brother Simon and say to him, “We have found the Messiah!” (which is
translated “the Christ”).
If you had been there and had been
raised in a Jewish home you would have understood exactly what John the Baptist
was saying when he exclaimed, ““Look! The Lamb of God, who takes away the
sin of the world!” But we weren’t there. And to the best of my knowledge
none of us were raised in Jewish homes so at first hearing we might miss
everything John wanted us to hear so today let’s take a closer look at Jesus as
the Lamb of God.
Christmas might still be on some of
our minds. Did any of you say or hear, “Thank you! That is exactly what I
needed!” as a present was opened and mean it? We live in affluent times. Probably
that did not happen. We all have what we need and more. Sometimes I see a movie
or read a story of a Christmas past when people didn’t have much and that new
shirt or pair of pants was really appreciated because people had need. Do we
recognize our need?
The Lamb of God shows us. If we had
all grown up in Jewish homes back at the time of Jesus and John the Baptist
pointed to someone as the Lamb of God the first thing we would have thought of
was the Passover lamb. We would have been used to every year watching Father
select a perfect lamb. Maybe he took us with him as he went to the priest who
slit the lamb’s throat and drained its blood into a bowl. We would have sat
around the table as once again we were told the story of the Passover. How God
rescued our ancestors from slavery in Egypt. We would hear again of the
powerful plagues God sent so the Pharaoh would let them go. Special attention
was paid to the 10th plague, that of the firstborn, where the
firstborn son of every family living in the land of Egypt died that night
unless the home had the blood of a perfect lamb painted on its doorframe. And
while our little hearts felt so bad for the lamb that was slain we also felt
great relief that no one in our home had died. That was the Lamb’s purpose, to
be a substitute. Someone was going to die. A person or the Lamb.
And if we were blessed enough to grow
up in a believing family, Father would have told us that the Lamb was a picture
of Messiah. He would have reminded us that our real slavery was to the sin we
can’t stop doing and the Devil who had the right to accuse us and to death that
would take us to the Devil’s prison called Hell. He would have told us that
Messiah was coming and when He came He would be the Lamb for us all. He would
be punished for our sins. His blood would be shed just like the Passover Lamb
but since He was the Lamb of God His once and for all sacrifice would set us
free. You see, sin was so bad someone had to be punished either the Lamb or…That
was the purpose of the Christ. To be our substitute, to be sacrificed. And so
when John the Baptist saw Jesus he did not exclaim, “Look the Dr who will heal
all your diseases!” for even though Jesus could have done that it was not His
purpose. Nor did He exclaim, “Look the Financial Adviser” for although Jesus
can make all people physically rich that is not His purpose. Nor did John
exclaim, “Look the Life Coach” or “Look, the Teacher” for even though Jesus can
and has taught us exactly how to live and we are blessed when we do so that’s
not what we needed. We needed someone who could be punished so we are not and
so John exclaimed, ““Look! The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the
world!” He’s exactly what we need.
May the Holy Spirit help us to
appreciate and value what we have in Jesus and not be disappointed. “Thank you
for the shirt, Grandma, (what I really wanted was an Xbox.) We may want our
diseases or a loved one’s disease healed but it may be that having that problem
is what’s best. We may want more money but maybe learning to live within our
means is what’s best. We may want to be more popular or less lonely but maybe
having those struggles is what’s best. We may want some pet sin or hurt or
guilt to be gone but maybe a continued reminder of our need for a Savior is
better for us. What we need is forgiveness, our sins taken a way so we can live
in the glory of heaven. Only Jesus does that. Look the Lamb of God. He is
exactly what we need.
And exactly what everyone else needs.
This word of God shows how those in the know tried to help others know too.
First there was John the Baptist. He attracted a crowd. Dressed funny. Camel’s
hair cloak. Ate funny. Locusts and wild honey. No fermented drink. Probably had
never cut his hair. Spoke way too bluntly. Called people snakes to their face!
But when Jesus came by he made sure the people gathered around knew Jesus was
the one they needed, not John. “The next day, John saw Jesus coming toward
him and said, “Look! The Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world! 30This
is the one I was talking about when I said, ‘The one coming after me outranks
me because he existed before me.’ 31I myself did not know who he
was, but I came baptizing with water so that he would be revealed to Israel.” John
also had friends, disciples, people who were attracted to him, not offended by
him. He made sure they knew who they really needed. 35The next
day, John was standing there again with two of his disciples. 36When
John saw Jesus passing by, he said, “Look! The Lamb of God!” Andrew, the
brother of Simon Peter, was one of those disciples John the Baptist pointed to
Jesus. And what does he do? 41The first thing Andrew did was to
find his own brother Simon and say to him, “We have found the Messiah!” (which
is translated “the Christ”).
And here brothers and sisters we see
one of the important reasons God still has you on this planet, to point others
to Jesus the Lamb of God that everyone needs. Those regular jobs you do to make
other people’s earthly lives are important too. God wants homes built well and
maintained, children cared for, cars running and finances in order. He wants
people fed and clothed. But ultimately what He really wants is people with Him
in heaven. He sent His Son Jesus to be the Lamb of God who took away the sin of
the world. None of us can do that. So He lets us do what we can, point people
to Jesus.
Some of you, like John the Baptist
attract people to you, not because you dress and eat funny. Because you are
nice, caring, helpful, dependable. There is a reason God gave you those gifts.
You will build relationships with people. They will like you and trust you.
When they time is right, when that right opportunity comes, just like it did
for John the Baptist, seize it. Point them to the one they need. Not you.
Jesus, the Lamb of God. Pray that the Lord help you recognize those right
times. Some of you attract no crowd of people. But you have family. You have
friends. They are going to have troubles and problems in life. They may come to
you for help. You may have to tell them. “I can’t fix that. Maybe nobody can.
But can I tell why I can continue to go on with my problems? I have Jesus.”
I heard of a real story recently. A woman
was in hospice care. Her death was coming. Her pastor visited her. She had her
faith. She knew heaven was coming. Her husband was an atheist. One day he
called the pastor. He said, “My wife is fine. I am not. Tell me why.” You know
what happened next. Look the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the word.
Exactly what everyone needs. Amen.
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