Worthy is the Lamb Who Was Slain

A blog that I frequent a lot had a link to a video that, to be quite honest, shook me up a little bit.  It is one thing to make statements like the title of this post (“Worthy is the Lamb Who Was Slain.).  It is another thing entirely to make that real.

Imagine yourself in Israel 2500 years ago.  You are a farmer, or a wife or son/daughter of a farmer.  You live a nice little life(for 500 BC standards).  You grow enough food for you and your family, you enjoy your children, you enjoy going to the tabernacle.  But every year, this thing called Passover comes around, and it just tears you up – as it should.

Passover IS the Gospel.  That God would accept the death of an innocent lamb as “payment in full” is the best news ever.  Now imagine your family preparing for Passover.  You don’t just take any lamb in your flock.  You have to take a young lamb, a lamb without any outward spot or inward disease.  Perhaps it’s your favorite, because it is the one that gives the best milk or the one that you think follows your lead the best.  Nonetheless, the Torah is clear – only the best.

So you prepare for Passover.  You make sure all of the food is ready.  You make sure the choice wine is ready.  You have the children all ready, maybe even teaching your older children what you’re doing.

And then it’s time.  Now you take that unblemished lamb, the best of your flock, the one with the most potential, and you take it to the High Priest.  He prepares the lamb.  He shaves its neck to make sure that bare skin is available.  He has his assistants hold the lambs legs.  Imagine being the lamb.  “What are they doing?  Why are they holding me down, and why is everyone chanting and singing.  Now why is it so quiet.  What is this guy doing?”  And the Priest says, “Blessed are you, LORD our God, King of the world, who has sanctified us with his statutes and commanded us concerning the [ritual] slaughtering.” And the priest takes a knife, and with bowl underneath, slits the throat of the lamb.

Now imagine that lamb is a man.

Could you imagine having to kill your own lamb?  How about your own son?

Maybe this helps… (and an explanation of why this is important)

Now imagine that lamb is a man.  Imagine that lamb is your son, your only son.  This is hard to stomach.  It’s not easy.  But this IS the Gospel.  That God would send His Son here, for you, and that His Son, named Jesus, would die in YOUR place.  The name for this is Substitutionary Atonement.  Substitutionary because it is your sin and his death, not his sin and his death or your sin and your death. Atonement because by His death, your sin is atoned for – forgiven, cleaned, taken off the ledger sheet. And not only is your sin taken off the ledger sheet, but you are given the righteousness (perfectness, in God’s eyes) of the Man that just died for you  Both Christ dying for Christ’s sins and you dying for your sins don’t solve the problem.  If you die for your sin, then you can’t live with God.  If Christ dies for Christ’s sin (Christ didn’t have sin, but for argument’s sake), it would be the same thing – it doesn’t take care of us (or him, for that matter).  The only way salvation works is if someone innocent (without sin) does for someone who is sinful.  And that’s what happened two thousand years ago.

Jesus was real.  He died for you, in your place, taking your punishment on Himself, that you would be able to live with Him and God forever. Yes, we can celebrate Easter on Sunday, and yes without the empty tomb, Christ’s death would be pointless.  But the Cross – the alter of the Lamb of God – IS the Gospel.  “Worthy are you to take the scroll and to open its seals, for you were slain, and by your blood you ransomed people for God from every tribe and language and people and nation, and you have made them a kingdom and priests to our God, and they shall reign on the earth.” Revelation 5:9-10.

~ by michaelldouglas on April 9, 2009.

8 Responses to “Worthy is the Lamb Who Was Slain”

  1. Thanks for this reminder. I often avoid images of lambs, and the images that OT sacrifices are hard to stomach, but I need to be reminded that they are necessary and central to the gospel. Thanks for that reminder! Just an aside-I once heard someone who studied the OT say that the Passover lamb was often chosen months ahead and brought in to the family like a pet and loved by the family. Just a deeper illustration of the sacrifice that was made for us…it is astounding isn’t it?

    • amazing indeed… and I have heard that too. Why would it be personal for us if it wasn’t a valuable sacrifice? IF just anything would do, it doesn’t mean as much…

  2. OH, my brother…we need to be REMINDED of this more often than Easter. Every month, every week, every day, every HOUR on the HOUR. It needs to never be “routine”, but so ingrained in our every thought and word and deed that it pains us when we CAN’T talk about it.

    I LOVE YOU and your precious heart for the Lord- remind me to tell you about Secret Church last night, where the topic WAS the Cross of Christ.

  3. [...] http://michaelldouglas.wordpress.com/2009/04/09/worthy-is-the-lamb-who-was-slain/ [...]

  4. Awesome post. Thanks for blessing me with it!

  5. RE. “He died for you, in your place.
    The rule of God in Gen.9:5 NIV does not allow a direct benefit for any person by any human male’s life taken by bloodshed. It is true that the crucifixion of Jesus is the base fact for perfecting the Way any man might be saved from the penalty of eternal death. But since Jesus’ life was lost by bloodshed it this fact that nullifies the assumption that “he died in your place”. Your proposal is an error.

    • Theodore-

      Thank you for visiting the site. I’m not sure what you mean by v 5 in Genesis 9. The entire Old and New Testaments point to a sacrifice in place of in order to save. The sacrifices in the Old Testament is the subject of God’s wrath. The Lamb, Jesus Christ, is the subject upon which God punishes my wrath. It is true that Jesus’ life was lost, but only his physical life. Jesus was fully man, and thus, could die in body for our sins but also be raised in body (the tomb was empty) and spirit to sit at God’s right hand and intercede for us. This fulfilled the Scriptures. I hope you see the issue here – it is incredibly important. Hope you come back soon!

  6. It should be apparent that God’s posititon in Gen. 9:5 NIV will not allow the sacrifice of any human male’s life to be taken by bloodshed and there not be the prexisting requirement to give an account to God. The major error with the theory of substitutionary atonement is the assumption that the sacrifice in and of itself is also the resolution. However God’s position is the Way by which you account to him relative to Jesus’ crucifixion having caused Jesus to loose his life by bloodshed. Therefore the Way to be forgiven of all sins occurs after Jesus.

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