THE LAMB OF GOD
In
life, we have often forgotten that the things that are most
important are often the most trouble, require the greatest work, and
demand the most sacrifice. This is true with children. It is also
true of marriage, career, and most of all it is true of
spirituality.
We
isolate ourselves from the disarray of life. We like everything to
be clean and sanitary. We want the joys of life, without the pain.
We want the pleasures of life, without the work. We want to enjoy
the accomplishments, without learning from the failures.
If I had to point to the one great flaw of our great American
nation, it is that we have forgotten somehow the precious value of
sacrifice.
When I talk to some of our youth group members, most often they talk
of their dreams to make something of themselves. A noble desire.
A
few years ago, I had a young teenager shared with me an essay in
which he wrote in barely legible handwriting and with grammar that
was poorly constructed, "Someday, I hope to be somebody. I want to
be an NBA star and play basketball and make commercials. But, I know
this will be hard and I might not make it. So if I can’t get into
the NBA, I might just be a doctor instead."
Now, we can laugh or smile at those naive statements, but the
sadness of that essay is that this young man did not see the need to
learn how to sacrifice. He would play basketball, but only for the
joy of it. There is nothing wrong with that, of course, but if you
want to play on a team, you have to offer something for sacrifice.
You have to devote hours to practice; you have to submit to the
directions of the coach; you have to exercise your body. He did none
of that. And, as for the idea for just being a doctor, the grades
were not there - not because he did not have the ability, but
rather, because he did not make the appropriate sacrifice and devote
himself to study.
Many people would like to win the lottery. Come to think of it, who
wouldn’t want to win the lottery? But, the problem with that desire
is that it is symptomatic of how we no longer want to make the
sacrifice. The lottery enables us to dream of becoming wealthy
without making any sacrifice, or taking any risks.
Life, and the things that matter in life, come at a cost. It is not
always clean. It is not always easy. Sometimes things get messy. In
the things of life that matter, we have forgotten the value of
sacrifice.
However, sacrifice is central to the Christian experience. Jesus, in
fact, is the great sacrifice made for our behalf. In the Gospel of
St. John, we read: "This is how we know what love is: Jesus Christ
laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for
our brothers and sisters."
In
today’s Gospel lesson, it is John the Baptist who is the first to
introduce Jesus to the world as being the Messiah. John could have
called Jesus many things, including Messiah, Christ, Son of God,
Savior. But what John calls him, is "Lamb of God."
The first time the Baptist sees Jesus in the Gospel of John he tells
his disciples, "Look. The Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the
world." John baptized Jesus and the next day he sees Jesus again and
repeats to his disciples, "Look, the Lamb of God."
To call Jesus "the Lamb of God," is to call Him something that is
not so clean and tidy as "Son of God," or "Savior." Because it
realizes that things in life that matter most come with a cost. In
the things of life that matter, we have forgotten the value of
sacrifice.
John the Baptist was probably remembering the stories from the Old
Testament when he looked at Jesus and said, "Behold, the Lamb of
God."
Most of all, he may have been remembering what the prophet Isaiah
had said about the coming Messiah, "He was oppressed and afflicted,
yet he did not open his mouth; he was led like a lamb to the
slaughter." (Isaiah 53:7)
Perhaps the reason many marriages fail today is that we have lost
the willingness to sacrifice for others, even our spouses. It is the
same in friendship, our career, and even our church.
In
the wedding service, men and women take vows "to love each other for
better and for worse, in sickness and in health, in plenty and
want." That is what they say, but that is not what they mean. So
often, the vows in their heart are not those that are on their lips.
Their wedding vows are simply to love each other, for better, and
that only in health, and in wealth.
Life without sacrifice is without meaning. And, love without a cost
is worthless. Nevertheless, sacrifice is central to the meaning of
the Gospel. As the first letter of John says, "This is how we know
what love is: Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought
to lay down our lives for our brothers."
Love demands sacrifice. Jesus Christ is the Lamb of God. He has paid
the ultimate sacrifice in his love for us. Cannot we therefore learn
to make some sacrifices for him and for his children around us? Amen