A recording of today's gospel and blog can be accessed here.
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Today’s gospel (John 1: 29-34) is brief but, like all
Scripture, revelatory. John the Baptist first declares Jesus the Lamb of God, a
title that will be recorded again in the Book of Revelation and be enshrined in
our daily liturgies. Then, John dwells on the fact that he did not know Jesus
until he saw the dove descending upon Him at His baptism, affirming finally
that I have seen and have borne witness that this is the Son of God.
Like John himself, this passage is simple and bare,
unadorned, and stark in how it delivers its message. And yet, like many
passages from the gospels, it tells us both about the Lord and about ourselves,
at least ourselves insofar as John stands for us all.
It tells us about Jesus for it seems to foreshadow the
vision John the Evangelist will share with us again in the Book of Revelation. Here,
the Lamb appears in various guises: as shepherd, as conqueror, and as temple of
the Lord. When the Lamb is first seen, John had expected to see the power of
the Lion of Judah. The feast of heaven for eternity is also called the supper
of the Lamb, and yet this Lamb is said to be slain as it were from the
foundation of the world. In other words, this apparently simple image is
multilayered in its significance: the person of the Lamb is the redeemer and
conqueror of sin who bestrides all time.
If we look forward into time and eternity, we should
likewise look back, starting firstly with the moment in which Jesus dies on the
cross which St John again associates with the hour of the slaughter of lambs in
the Temple. We can go back to the birth of Jesus, born in the very village
where lambs were bred for the Temple slaughter. Into the Old Testament, the
Lamb is there in Isaiah’s vision of the suffering servant, led to the slaughter
like a lamb, and in the rituals of the Torah where the people of Israel are
passed over because of the blood of the lamb smeared on their lintels, a moment
echoed in every slaughter of a lamb that takes place in the Jewish liturgy thereafter.
This Lamb of God is everywhere, then. And this is surely the point for John the
Baptist who calls Jesus the Lamb in the hearing of his followers and those
gathered for His baptism. John here connects this central figure and symbol of God’s
revelation and the Jewish imagination with the figure of the coming Messiah who
takes away the sins of the people.
This then is Jesus: not the cuddly social worker of the
liberal imagination, come to make us feel better about ourselves, but the blood-stained
warrior, as meek as He is mighty, who comes to claim back His own from the grip
of the devil. Now there is an answer to the question of Isaac to his father Abraham:
where is the Lamb for the burnt offering? We also know the real
significance of Abraham’s answer: God will provide. God Himself will
come and save us, for Jesus is Emmanuel, God with us.
The enormity of this revelation is truly beyond us: our
limited minds cannot begin to encompass what its implications truly are. And
here is where this gospel passage tells us also something about ourselves
through the figure of John. For in John, as in us, God reveals Himself little by
little. All the Fathers of the Church puzzle over John’s remarks in this passage:
having refused at first to baptise Jesus, saying that he ought to be baptized
by Him, how could John thereafter say that he did not know who He was until he
saw the dove descend? We may wonder also what he means, for surely, even if he
has not seen Jesus since their childhood – we know for a fact the Holy Family
was mobile and travelled several times between Nazareth and Judea – how could
he not have known the stories around his own birth and the significance of his
cousin? The answer to these questions, we may hope to ask for in heaven, but
that is not really the point.
Rather, the point is that John himself comes slowly not
simply to know Jesus – He knows He is the Messiah – but to know what that
means, to know something more of the depths of that mystery of who He actually
is; to be initiated further into that knowledge that Jesus says is the essence
of the eternal life, i.e. to know Him and to know the One who sent Him. This is
the blessing of John’s encounter with the Lord. It is not merely to have the
privilege of making His paths straight; it is also to have an increasing knowledge
and conviction, a revelation and vision, of who He actually is. John’s journey
in this regard begins in humility – I am not fit to loosen His sandal - it continues with insight and understanding
in his perception of Jesus as the lamb of God, and of course it is accomplished
in his own sacrificial death where, in the name of justice and in the name of
the true meaning of the spousal relationship, the great figure of God’s offer
to fallen humanity, he sheds his own blood in anticipation of the shedding of
the blood of the Lamb.
We too are called to these transformations before the Lamb
of God: an increasing awareness of the fact we are not fit for His blessing, a
deepening understanding of who He is and what He means to us, and lastly the
final act of offering where union with Him configures us to the Lamb, sacrificed
as it were since the foundation of the world.
And beyond this, the Lamb’s supper for the little lambs of
His flock, lambed into eternity by the labour of the Lamb.
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