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Today’s Reflection
Giving testimony is not about analyzing or studying something in detail. Testimony is a sincere cry that comes from our own life and experience. In today’s Gospel, the “Lamb” is a symbol of that cry.
For the Jewish people, the “Lamb” meant someone who sacrifices himself to save others. Their history was full of suffering under many empires, and they felt too weak to rise again on their own. Because of this, their despair turned into a hope that God would save them, and the “Lamb” became a symbol of future salvation and hope.
In the Gospel of John, John the Baptist calls Jesus the “Lamb of God.” At that time, people believed the world was full of sin. Still, calling Jesus the “Lamb” meant that God Himself was entering the world to bring hope. Jesus is the one who takes away the sins of the world. Sin breaks relationships, divides people, and causes pain. But Jesus came as the One who loves this world to the very end, and the world He desires is a world where people live in love and unity.
To give testimony is to speak about the world we live in and to reflect on how we understand God who has come into this world. Through the symbol of the “Lamb,” the Gospel of John reminds us that what the world truly needs is harmony, trust, and love. These were the deep hopes of the early Christian community at the time the Gospel was written.
Today, we must also ask ourselves: What does our society desperately need now? And how are we called to respond? (박병규 요한 보스코 신부)