An interesting scripture to consider is John 3:30Which kind of makes sense when you look at how John portrays himself as the herald declaring Jesus' coming. I almost wonder if John would expect his followers to move to Jesus. We shall see tomorrow.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
An interesting scripture to consider is John 3:30Which kind of makes sense when you look at how John portrays himself as the herald declaring Jesus' coming. I almost wonder if John would expect his followers to move to Jesus. We shall see tomorrow.
Can a lamb be sacrificed for other reasons other than to save us from sins!So we see it says the Next day John saw Jesus coming -----so this tells us that the baptism has already taken place --Matthew 3 -----so John is relaying now the Reason for the Baptism when Jesus shows up the next day -----
Notice John portrays Jesus as the Lamb of God who takes away the Sin of the World --he doesn't say that he is the great teacher ---or he came to show us a moral way to live ----he uses the word lamb which the Jewish people would have been very familiar with as a sacrifice to God to temporarily pardon their sins -----
So then John gives his testimony witnessing the Holy Spirit coming down upon Jesus ----
So Here is something to ponder ----
How did Jesus take the SIN of the World away ?-----
Jesus was pure --holy and sinless ---He was divine -----and he remained same-----there has been debates over this issue by theologians ---some say he actually took all sin upon Himself --Some say He couldn't have as that would make him a Sinner ----Some say He took our Sin Nature upon Himself ----others Disagree and say you can't be God and Have a Sin Nature -----
AS I recall there are a variety of types of sacrifice in Torah. And the PAssover LAmb (which John wants to portray Jesus as) is not a sin offering, though it really is not a sacrifice either, it is a lamb slaughtered to be roasted and eaten.Can a lamb be sacrificed for other reasons other than to save us from sins!
They taste good grilled with a little mint sauceCan a lamb be sacrificed for other reasons other than to save us from sins!
I would imagine but you would have to really ask the Shepherds to get your question answered correctly----either way they would still be shedding Blood when they are slaughtered which is what covers Sin --- all life is in the Blood -------Can a lamb be sacrificed for other reasons other than to save us from sins!
I was thinking of the blood of the Passover lamb as protection and liberation.AS I recall there are a variety of types of sacrifice in Torah. And the PAssover LAmb (which John wants to portray Jesus as) is not a sin offering, though it really is not a sacrifice either, it is a lamb slaughtered to be roasted and eaten.
John doesn't mention the Baptism directly but he does allude to it by this in verse 32Or could it simply be that the story was already so well known that John saw no need to repeat it?
OR John does not know that part of the tradition. OR John does not think it is a valid part of the tradition to have the pre-existent Word being tempted (this is my interpretation). There is ample reason to read John 1 and not think Jesus was baptised by John at all, or to believe he was -- the text is simply not explicit either way.@unsafe
Since John's Gospel doesn't give us the temptation in the wilderness story, you are pretty much piecing together a timeline here. I agree with you that John is talking in the past tense about the baptism of Jesus.
Why would John have omitted the story about Jesus being tempted in the wilderness? Did he feel it reflected poorly on Jesus? Does he have another literary goal in mind?
Or could it simply be that the story was already so well known that John saw no need to repeat it?
Bible study is so much fun when there are several plausible answers to a question.OR John does not know that part of the tradition. OR John does not think it is a valid part of the tradition to have the pre-existent Word being tempted (this is my interpretation). There is ample reason to read John 1 and not think Jesus was baptised by John at all, or to believe he was -- the text is simply not explicit either way.