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Lay ministers serve RLC

Resurrection Lutheran Church welcomes    Rev. John Hazzard as its next pastor. Pastor John has been a member of Resurrection his whole life. On Nov. 2 he was ordained by the North America Lutheran Church Bishop Dan Selbo and installed by Pastor Tim Loehrke. After retiring from Port Clinton Schools,  Pastor John followed finalized his dream to become a pastor. 

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Sermons

2nd Sunday After Epiphany                                                                                          January 18, 2026   Sermon Text: John 1:29

Pastor John Hazzard  

“Lamb of God”

The grace and peace be to you from our Risen Lord and Savior Jesus the Christ.

     In England a person’s title is seen as important because it shows the person with the title to be a prominent member of society.  No matter the title, from King, to Queen Mom, to Prince and Princess, to Duke and Duchess, to Earl and Lad, people covet the titles that are bestowed on them.   Just a little side note.  I am not sure if many of you are aware of this, but when I was in high school, I was given the illustrious title of Duke.  Not “the Duke of Earl,” nor was I called “the Duke of Port Clinton” or anything like that, my title was just Duke.  As many of you may have already guessed, it was because The Dukes of Hazzard was a popular TV show at the time.                                 

     This title was a nickname given to me by the older wrestlers on my high school team.   Having this nickname/title seemed to entitle me to several privileges which included sitting at the Junior/Senior lunch table, which my freshman classmates did not have the privilege to enjoy, not getting locked in the wrestling mat storage box,  as well as having the privilege of  riding “shotgun” in the front seat  when I rode  to football and wrestling practice with Fudge Gutowski or John Gluth.  The nicknames we had for one another were very important, every bit as important as the titles given to the British Royalty.  As a matter of fact, if you didn’t have a nickname, you felt left out.  I felt like a big shot because of this exclusive title of Duke, even if it was the result of a corny early 80s tv show like The Dukes of Hazzard. 

      Like most titles and good things, they do not always last.  Once my upper-class teammates graduated from high school, my title and privileges graduated with them.  I found myself sitting alone at the lunch table and driving myself to practice for a while, which was quite a humbling lesson.  I was no longer the bigshot I felt my title suggested.  

      With all that being said, the most titled person of all time is Jesus of Nazareth.  RC Sproul tells a story about a speaker who was scheduled to speak about “Who Is Jesus.”  This speaker did nothing but list all the known titles of Jesus and it took that speaker about a half hour to list them all.  He began, the Christ, the Son God, the Son of Man, Lord, the Consolation of Israel, the Lion of Juda, the Alpha and the Omega, and the list went on and on, but out of all of those names, the title which should be by far the most important to us is the title John the Baptist gives Jesus, “The Lamb of God” who takes away the sin of the world!  This is a title that is much more than some simple nickname; it is the most important of all the titles Jesus had.    

       In our Gospel text we are told, “The next day he saw Jesus coming toward him and declared, “Here is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!”  This title is only found in two books of the Bible.  Here in John’s Gospel he reveals several of the titles attributed to Jesus.  In John chapter 1 Jesus is called the Word of God.  John the Apostle declares, in the beginning was the Word, and the word was with God, and the Word was God. Later in verse 34 Jesus is called the Son of God, in verse 36 he is called the Lamb of God, in verse 38 he was called Rabbi by two of John the Baptist disciples who then decided to follow Jesus, in verse 41 Andrew called Jesus the Messiah as he described him to his Brother Simon Peter, in verse 49 Nathanael tells Jesus that he is the Son of God; the King of Israel, and finally in verse 51 he calls himself the Son of Man.  In this very short literary span, we hear Jesus called by all these titles, but the most important of the titles used is “The Lamb of God”.

          The title Lamb of God is a rarely used in the Holy, as a matter of fact this title is only used in two places in all of Scripture and both of those books are written by the Apostle John.  We hear this title used here in Chapter 1 of his Gospel and then in the 6th Chapter of last book of the Bible, the Book of Revelations.  So, we may be wondering how John came up with this title?  

       We know in the Old Testament—as part of the Law—that bulls and goats were used as sin offerings.  The scapegoat then had all of the sins placed upon it after which it was driven out into the wilderness.  But lambs were not mentioned.  So where does this idea come from that Jesus is “The Lamb of God” that takes away sin.     

           The obvious answer is that like Moses, Isaiah, Elijah, Daniel and the others, John the Baptist was a prophet and was more than cable of giving revelation from the Mind of God. The other part of the answer is that Jesus, as the Lamb of God, has been present in the Old Testament all along.  And just like one of those “seek and find puzzles,” in which the longer you stare at the page the more you see the little pictures hidden in plain sight, Jesus comes into view.    

       The image of Jesus as the Lamb of God begins to appear when we read in Isaiah 53 how it will please the Lord to offer up his suffering servant.  It is written;

We all, like sheep, have gone astray,
   each of us has turned to our own way;
and the Lord has laid on him
   the iniquity of us all.

7 He was oppressed and afflicted,
   yet he did not open his mouth;
he was led like a lamb to the slaughter,
   and as a sheep before its shearers is silent,
   so he did not open his mouth.
8 By oppression[a] and judgment he was taken away.
   Yet who of his generation protested?
For he was cut off from the land of the living;
   for the transgression of my people he was punished.[b]
So here in Isaiah 53 we have the suffering servant that God sends being compared to a Lamb that willingly suffers for all of our iniquities.  

         Additionally, another hidden image can be seen when we look closely at what Moses commanded the Israelites to do on the day of Passover. He told his people to sacrifice a spotless lamb without blemish and then they were to place the blood of the lamb on their doorposts so that the Angel of Death would “pass over” their homes sparing their firstborn from death. 

         Finally, we see Jesus pictured in Genesis 22 when God commands Abraham to go to Mount Mariah and sacrifice his only son Isaac.  Just as Abraham is about to faithfully plunge his knife into the heart of Isaac, he is stopped as a ram, a male sheep suddenly becomes trapped in a thicket and becomes the substitutional sacrifice taking the place of Isaac.  So, we see that throughout History the strand that runs through all of Scripture is that God provides the perfect sacrifice that would take the wrath that we all deserve.  Jesus is and always has been “The Lamb of God that Takes Away the Sin of the World.”  

         This has all been prefigured in Isaiah’s prophecy, in the “pass over” narrative, and in the grace, God exhibited when He offered the lamb to take Isaac’s place as the sacrifice.  These are all figures of Christ as the “Lamb of God” as they suddenly emerge from the mouths of the prophets and the pages of Scripture when we take the time to read the Holy Bible.

          We hear all the titles given in the first chapter of John’s gospel, but out of all those titles, as I stated early, Jesus as “The Lamb of God” who takes away the sins of the world, is arguably the most important.   As the “Lamb of God” Jesus lived the perfect life so that as He shed His spotless blood, died, was buried, and rose again from the dead he conquered death once and for all.  Jesus as the Lamb of God was anointed during his baptism by the pouring out from heaven the Holy Spirit.  He is the one who brought about Pentecost, the one who baptizes with the Holy Spirit.  God’s title is proclaimed by John the Baptist.  Even though he didn’t immediately understand its significance, Jesus is the spotless Lamb of God who came to take away the sin of the world. 

          So, what does all of this mean for you and for me? It means that our standing before God is not based on a title we carry, a reputation we’ve earned, or a place we think we deserve at the table.  Unlike the titles of this world, whether royal, social, or even the nicknames that once made us feel important, this title of Jesus does not inflate our pride. It humbles us. Because the title Lamb of God tells us something honest and uncomfortable about ourselves: we needed a sacrifice. We needed a substitute. We could not fix our sin, outrun it, or outgrow it.

            But it also tells us something astonishing about God. God did not demand that we bring the lamb. He provided it. Just as He provided the ram for Abraham, just as He commanded the blood of the Passover lamb to protect His people, God Himself provided the Lamb who would finally and fully take away sin—not just cover it for a time but remove it forever.

          When John the Baptist points to Jesus and says, “Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world,” he is declaring that forgiveness is no longer a ritual, no longer temporary, and no longer reserved for a few.   It is finished in Christ.   Your guilt, your shame, your failures, and your rebellion were laid on Him.  And like the lamb led to the slaughter, Jesus did not resist, He did not protest, and He did not turn away—because His love for us held Him there.

          For you and me, this means freedom.  It means we no longer live trying to earn God’s approval, because the Lamb has already made us acceptable.  It means we no longer define ourselves by past sins or fading titles, because Jesus has given us a new name: forgiven, redeemed, child of God.  It means when we stand before God, we do not stand alone—we stand covered by the blood of the Lamb.

            And finally, it means hope. Because the Lamb who was slain is also the Lamb who reigns.  The same Jesus who took away the sin of the world now lives, reigns, and intercedes for His people.  One day, as John tells us in Revelation, every knee will bow before the Lamb, and those who belong to Him will worship, not in fear, but in joy. So, behold the Lamb of God.  Trust Him.  Rest in Him.  Follow Him, because this is the only title that saves, and it is enough for you and for me.

The peace of God which surpasses all human understanding keep your hearts and minds in our Risen Lord and Savior, Jesus the Christ; The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.   Amen.

 

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