Today,
when seeing Jesus, we have heard John saying «There is the Lamb
of God, who takes away the sin of the world» (Jn 1:29).
What may all those people have thought? And, what do we think,
ourselves? In the celebration of the Eucharist we all pray «Lamb
of God who remove the sins of the world / have mercy on us».
And the priest invites the congregation to the Communion, by saying:
«There is the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the
world...».
When John said, «this
is the Lamb of God» we should have no doubts they all
understood what he meant, as the lamb is a metaphor of messianic
character that prophets like Isaiah had already used, and it was very
well known to the good Israelites.
On the other hand, the
lamb is the animal Israelites sacrifice to celebrate their Passover,
marking freedom for the Israelites from the Egyptian slavery. The
Pasch dinner consists of eating a lamb.
And
even the Apostles and the Fathers of the Church state hat the lamb is
a sign of purity, simplicity, goodness, mansuetude, innocence... And
Christ is Purity, Simplicity, Goodness, Mansuetude and Innocence.
Saint Peter will say: «For you know that it was not with
perishable things (…) but with the precious blood of Christ, a
lamb without blemish or defect» (1Pet 1:18.19). And St.
John, in the Revelation uses thirty times the word “lamb”
to describe Christ. Jesus Christ is the lamb who takes away the sins
of the world, which has been immolated to give us Grace. Let us fight
to always live by Grace, to fight against sin, to hate it. The beauty
Grace gives to the soul is so great that no treasure can compare with
it. It makes us agreeable to God and worthy of being loved. This is
why, the “Gloria” of the Mass mentions the peace of those
men the Lord loves, of those who live by Grace.
John Paul II tells us,
while urging us to live by the Grace the lamb has given us: «Pledge
to live by the Grace. Jesus was born at Bethlehem precisely for that
reason (...). To live by Grace is the supreme dignity, the ineffable
joy, the guarantee of peace, the marvelous ideal».