Spirit of Prophecy Day Sermon
THE BEAUTY OF THE LAMB OF GOD
              Anna  Galeniece
              Director,  Ellen G. White Estate Branch Office and
              Associate  Professor of Applied Theology
              Adventist  University of Africa, Nairobi, Kenya
(PDF Version)
“Worthy is the Lamb who was slain to receive power and  riches and wisdom, and strength and honor and glory and blessing!” (Rev 5:12,  NKJV)
INTRODUCTION
As the family of Seventh-day Adventists, we set aside  this month and especially this particular Sabbath as the Heritage Sabbath and  Spirit of Prophecy day to remember God’s leading in the past so that we may be  sure that He will lead us in the future. That is why we are going to look  through the pages of the Bible to meet the main Person—Jesus Christ as the Lamb  of God. We will fix our eyes on His beauty so that through this prism we may  learn to see each other, ourselves and the road we are on, in a more attractive  way.
Ellen G. White died 100 years ago, on July 16, 1915.  Her prophetic contribution focused on Jesus—His  life, His death for our salvation, His high-priestly ministry, and His soon  return, and exploring the implications that such themes have in the church and  in our personal lives.  Her  most-treasured books expound these themes, books such as Steps to Christ, The Desire of Ages, and The Great Controversy.  She  would want us to focus on Jesus, too, which we will do today.  We are going to look at the Lamb of God in  light of these themes: how He is introduced in symbol, then revealed in person,  now ministers for us, and is coming again.   And we will let Ellen White enrich our understanding of these things, by  quoting from her in key places.
In spite of varied cultural and worldview differences,  each person on this earth desires something beautiful and eye-catching. Even  harsh criminals and all pleasure-denouncing ascetics still have this desire  somewhere deep inside of their being. This should not surprise anyone, because  God created human beings and the surrounding environment in just such a way. On  the sixth day He “saw everything that He had made, and indeed it was very good”  (Gen 1:31); and because it was good, it was perfect and beautiful from the inside  out.
THE LAMB OF GOD IS INTRODUCED
Unfortunately, this beauty was soon marred with sin, and  the loving Creator had to intervene in order to wash away the sin of Adam and  Eve. The Lord had to slay an innocent animal and clothe the sinful and naked  couple (Gen 3:21). Further, God in His foreknowledge and wisdom announced the  first promise to Adam and Eve: “And I will put enmity between you [Satan] and  the woman, and between your seed and her Seed; He shall bruise your head, and  you shall bruise His heel” (v. 15). Ellen White wrote, “This sentence, spoken  in the hearing of our first parents, was to them a promise. Before they heard  of the thorn and the thistle, of the toil and sorrow that must be their  portion, or of the dust to which they must return, they listened to words that  could not fail of giving them hope. All that had been lost by yielding to Satan  could be regained through Christ” (Education, p. 27).
The promise that was given to the first couple was the  promise about “the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world” (John  1:29). In your personal life there may have been a time when you first realized  that you are a sinner and you need to be cleansed from something that  disconnects you from the Heavenly Father. You may have felt like you were standing  naked in the presence of the Almighty. Then, after you confessed your sin  before Him, the heavy burden was lifted up and you knew for sure that you were  forgiven, clothed in Christ’s perfect righteousness. How awesome to experience this  forgiveness, not just once in a lifetime, but every day in our earthly journey! 
Throughout the Old Testament era, God’s people sacrificed  innocent animals to obtain forgiveness of their sins. To the young nation of  Israel about to escape from Egypt, the Lord introduced something special—the  Passover feast that, as Ellen White wrote, “was to be both commemorative and  typical, not only pointing back to the deliverance from Egypt, but forward to  the greater deliverance which Christ was to accomplish in freeing His people  from the bondage of sin” (Patriarchs and Prophets,  p. 277). The sacrificial lamb that every family had to offer to God represented  the real Lamb of God, in whom is the only hope of salvation. The Passover had  to be celebrated every year to remind people of their bondage and their regained  freedom. The blood of the slain lamb that protected every family of God’s  people during the last plague in Egypt symbolized the end of their slavery. God  Himself miraculously brought them out to start a new, free life.
Likewise, the Lord is in the business of saving your life  and mine from slavery to sin by granting us the freedom that every redeemed  person experiences in Jesus Christ. We do not need to live in sin anymore; it  brings only misery, slavery, and death. Jesus has purchased our freedom with  His blood. It is our privilege to accept it and enjoy a new life, free from  whatever had disconnected us from the Lord. 
In addition to the Passover sacrifice in Israelite homes,  a year-old lamb was sacrificed on the altar in the sanctuary every morning and  evening. It symbolized the daily consecration of the people to God and their  dependence upon the future coming Messiah whose blood was to complete the  process of atonement. 
God did everything for us. This is one side of the coin,  but there is another. The story of the Israelites and their sacrifices reminds us  of our obligations to God. As Christians we receive so many benefits from Him:  our energy, abilities, families, health, and more—even life itself. However,  the real questions are: What are we giving back to Him? What are we  sacrificing? 
The Israelites had to sacrifice the very best—a lamb that  was so dear to them and so innocent. We might also bring to Him the most expensive  objects or large sums of money and relax in the thought that we have done our  part. But would this be enough? Can we purchase salvation or our life? The  answer is obvious: No! Paul reminds us that God desires something better from  us. He says, “I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that  you present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is  your reasonable service” (Rom 12:1). Ellen White put it this way: “Those who  love Him with all the heart, will desire to give Him the best service of the  life, and they will be constantly seeking to bring every power of their being  into harmony with the laws that will promote their ability to do His will” (Patriarchs and Prophets, 353). 
The pioneers of our church did so. They served the Lord sacrificially  and spread the Gospel wherever and whenever they could. Our faithful spiritual  ancestors did the same. Today it is our turn to follow them. But we will be  able to do so only if we love God. Therefore answer the following questions. Do  you love God? How have you shown your love for the beautiful, slain Lamb of  God? Give Him your heart! Your all! Remember that the Lamb of God desires the  best sacrifice—your life!
THE LAMB OF GOD IS REVEALED
After the world had waited four thousand years for His  arrival, the Messiah was born in Judea, in fulfillment of the Bible’s promises  (Dan 9:26, 27; Micah 5:2). His perfect life and untiring ministry to the sick  and the needy clearly demonstrated His character and purpose. But that was just  one aspect of His earthly life. There have been many good people in this world  who loved others and were ready to do anything to help them. However, Christ’s  mission was much wider and deeper than just being a good citizen. He took upon  Himself the sins of the world, including yours and mine. He was crucified on  the cross, not for doing something bad Himself, but to bear upon Himself all  the evil of this world. He became the real sacrificial Lamb of God, the One to  whom all other sacrifices pointed. In Him the promise became reality.
Jesus submissively obeyed all the requirements of the Law.  His death on Calvary, which provided forgiveness to human beings, also showed  the unchangeable nature of the Law. God could not and did not change His law, as  it was ingrained in the very foundations of His rule, “but,” as Ellen White put  it, “He sacrificed Himself, in Christ, for man’s redemption” (The Desire of Ages, p. 762). Because God  and Christ are one, Jesus willingly gave Himself as an innocent sacrificial  lamb in order to bear the penalty for our sins and to reveal to everyone that  God is love, as a universally favorite Bible verse says, “For God so loved the  world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should  not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16). 
Over the years, this simple but powerful verse has brought  hope and strength to millions of men and women around the world who put their  trust in God. Faith makes a difference in the life. It is not passive but  active. This faith in the loving God through Jesus Christ moved William Miller  to preach the soon return of the Savior. The same faith has accomplished things  that were humanly impossible through the life and prophetic ministry of Ellen  White, a weak human being without a primary education. She was able to become  not only a powerful preacher, strong advocate for church organization, valued counselor,  and a leading advocate for health, education, and publishing, but also the most  translated woman writer in the history of literature, who wrote more than 5,000  periodical articles and 40 books. 
If God could use her, why not you? If He opened the mouth  of Ellen White—who could not speak a clear word in public because of her shyness—to  preach to thousands, He can enable you to speak for Him, too. If God could use  her weak and poorly-educated hand to write more than 50,000 pages of His  messages to the church, He can use you to bless others, too. The love that she  had for her personal Savior, who first loved her, and the full commitment she  made to Him and His work transformed her life and ministry. She knew the  sacrificed Lamb of God personally, and you can know Him personally, too. 
Have you put your faith wholly in the Lord Jesus Christ? Have  you loved Him with your whole heart, mind, and soul? Have you reflected this  love to others around you? God in Jesus Christ showed us what such love looks  like! Many Adventist pioneers reflected this love, also. You can do this, too,  by looking to the Lamb of God who revealed God’s loving character to us. 
THE LAMB OF GOD IS MINISTERING 
After Christ’s resurrection and ascension to heaven, His  followers throughout the centuries have been eagerly waiting for His return,  because He promised to come again (John 14:1-3). This sure promise sustained  the faith of millions of martyrs—the first-century Christians, the Waldenses,  John Huss, Reformers like John Wycliffe and Martin Luther, and many others.  This promise initiated the great Christian awakening at the beginning of the 19th  century and moved William Miller and his followers to preach the blessed hope  of Christ’s soon coming. After devoting his life to Bible study, Miller concluded  that Christ was to return about the year 1843. Others later narrowed the time  down to a specific date, to correspond with the time of the Jewish Day of  Atonement, since the prophecy of 2300 years in Daniel 8:14 had to do with the  cleansing of the sanctuary. Thus Miller and a great number of the message’s supporters,  including Joseph Bates, James White and Ellen Harmon (White after marriage),  were truly waiting for Christ’s return, especially on October 22, 1844—the day  that the Millerites established from their study of the Bible prophecies. However,  Christ did not come on that date! The believers had to go through a bitter-sweet  experience, as Revelation 10:8-10 had predicted. The sweetness was their precious  Bible study, and the waiting, rejoicing, and preaching of the good news; while  the bitterness was their tasting of the great disappointment when the Christ they  had so eagerly awaited did not come. 
Today we may ask questions like, “What does all this have  to do with us, or even just with me?” and “How can we connect the Millerites’  disappointment with the beautiful message about the Lamb of God?” These are  valid questions. The answers relate strongly to our Christian standing and  faith today. Let us briefly unfold the answers in two parts.
First of all, we need to remember that after His  ascension Jesus entered the heavens and became the “High Priest” (Heb 4:14-16)  who intercedes for His people and ministers for His church through the Holy  Spirit from God’s heavenly sanctuary. The Apostle Paul describes Jesus as the “Mediator  between God and men” (1 Tim 2:5). In other words, He is the one who has  presented the people’s praises, prayers, and confessions to the Father. Most Christians  agree with this. 
However, we also need not to forget that the earthly  sanctuary had two apartments: the Holy Place and the Most Holy Place. With  Christ’s ascension, He entered the first apartment or the Holy Place. But He  entered the Most Holy Place only in 1844. The Lamb of God became not only our daily  Mediator but also the High Priest.
The ultimate conclusion of Miller and other believers was  based on Daniel 8:14, “For two thousand three hundred days; then the sanctuary  shall be cleansed.” They had been correct in their calculations concerning the  time that this prophecy would end, for they were faithful students of the Bible  and history. Millerites were waiting for Christ’s literal return at the end of  this prophetic period, but instead of returning, Christ started the judging or  the cleansing process in the second apartment, which was represented in ancient  Israel by the ministry of the high priest on the Day of Atonement. The  Millerite Adventists were right concerning the timing, but they were mistaken  about the event to take place. The sanctuary that Daniel spoke of was not the  earth itself, the earthly sanctuary, or the Temple of the Israelites, but rather  the sanctuary in heaven. The book of Hebrews makes this very clear. It says,  “For Christ has not entered the holy places made with hands, which are copies  of the true, but into heaven itself, now to appear in the presence of God for  us” (Heb 9:24).
After the darkest part of the night comes the brightness of  the morning. This is true in both the physical and the spiritual realms. On the  next day after the great disappointment, God helped Hiram Edson, who was one of  those who were waiting, come to an understanding that dried the tears from the  eyes and cheeks of a group of Millerites and made their faith even stronger. While  Edson was passing through a large field on his way to encourage others, he suddenly  stopped. As he would later tell it, heaven seemed to open to his view, and he  saw distinctly and clearly that instead of Christ coming out of the Most Holy Place  of the heavenly sanctuary to come to this earth at the end of the prophetic  period of 2300 days (representing years) on October 22, 1844, He for the first  time entered on that day the second apartment of the sanctuary. Christ had a  work to perform in the Most Holy Place before coming to this earth. 
This unusual experience encouraged the small group of Adventists  who went back to their Bible study and prayers and thus were encouraged in  their spiritual journey. With the correct view of the ministry of the Lamb of  God, they could see the reason for their disappointment, even as they held onto  their previous beliefs on other prophecies and doctrines. They realized that their disappointment had come not from any  failure of God to keep His promise, but because they misunderstood the  operation of the antitypical service in the heavenly sanctuary. The biblical truth  about the sanctuary, including the High Priestly ministry of Jesus in the Most  Holy Place of the heavenly sanctuary, not only shed light on the path for our  pioneers, but also became one of the major pillars of faith for Seventh-day  Adventists, one that distinguishes us from other denominations. It is a truth  that Ellen White wrote about at length in several chapters of her book, The Great Controversy.
Satan has been attacking this pillar furiously. He has  every reason to do so today, because the main point of it is the beauty of the  slain Lamb of God who is alive today. Through His ministry in the heavenly  sanctuary, this Lamb takes away our sins and clothes us with the robes of His  righteousness. His service there applies His death, resurrection, and perfect  life to every penitent soul.
The Millerites were disappointed when Jesus did not  return when they expected, but God made the truth of the matter clear in a  little while.  No matter what disappoints  you in your spiritual journey, whether personal disbelief, unjustified criticism  from your family and friends, sickness, loss of finances or a job, or whatever it  may be, remember that the safest way is to continue to trust God and wait for  His revelation. Keep on reading the Bible and praying! Jesus Christ has not made  mistakes, and He will vindicate your trust in Him, for “he who endures to the  end will be saved” (Matt 10:22). Do you believe this? How does Jesus make the  difference in your life? Remember that the Lamb of God is still in His heavenly  sanctuary to make your life meaningful and beautiful, and to see you through to  His kingdom!
THE LAMB OF GOD IS COMING BACK
The plan of salvation that God had worked out before the creation  of this world would not be complete if it merely told us about the Lamb of God who  died for us and who is interceding for us. Both of these truths are wonderful,  but by themselves they do not tell us of an end to the terrible problem of sin.  So we can be thankful that the Bible is not silent about the rest of the story.  It tells us that the Lamb of God is coming back, but this time not as a humble  sacrificial Lamb to be offered for sins of the world. He is coming as the One who  has “the keys of Hades and Death” (Rev 1:18). In other words, He is coming to  put the final end to the destruction sin has inflicted on this earth—to do away  with sickness and death. “For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and  this mortal must put on immortality” (1 Cor 15:53).
There are too many cases of heart attacks, cancer, AIDS,  Ebola, and numerous other diseases in this world; too many people die every day  because of war, terrorism, disasters, accidents, and numerous other causes. Even  one such instance is too many! Yet people suffer everywhere; maybe you are one  of them. But Jesus said: “Now when these things begin to happen, look up and  lift up your heads, because your redemption draws near” (Luke 21:28). Do not be  discouraged. Let your faith in God become stronger with every passing day,  because Christ is coming back!
Faith in the Lamb of God, who is coming to take His  people to be where He is, has sustained the faithful throughout the ages and  given them power to stand to the very end. The Adventist pioneers and their  forerunners died in faith so that the Gospel truth would reach us. For example,  Charles Fitch was one of the most beloved and successful Millerite preachers.  He designed the well-known 1843 prophetic chart, which was so widely used by  other preachers who were proclaiming Christ’s soon return. As a committed and enthusiastic  evangelist, Fitch was not afraid even to step into icy-cold water and baptize  people at the beginning of October, when northern cold and chill get to the  very bones. Several groups came to him, one after another, to be baptized, and  he wanted each person to enter the kingdom of God. For him, Christ was coming  in a matter of days. There was no time for a delay. Not surprisingly, this  faithful Adventist preacher got sick with pneumonia after that experience, and he  died less than two weeks before the expected return of Christ in all His glory.  He fell asleep in faith, confident that his Savior would resurrect him very  soon. This is living faith. While we do not need to invite sickness and trouble  upon ourselves, we should be strong in believing the biblical truth and  proclaiming it to others—that the One who paid the price for our sin is  ministering for us in the Most Holy Place and is coming back for His redeemed  ones. This is the kind of faith that God looks for in you and me. 
Ellen G. White described the glorious return of Jesus: “When  Christ shall come to the earth again . . . every eye shall see Him, and they  also that pierced Him. In the place of a crown of thorns, He will wear a crown  of glory—a crown within a crown. In place of that old purple kingly robe, He  will be clothed in raiment of whitest white, ‘so as no fuller on earth can  white them’ (Mark 9:3). And on His vesture and on His thigh a name will be  written, ‘King of kings, and Lord of lords’ (Revelation 19:16)” (The Desire of Ages, 739).
Is this message a part of your being? Have you lived your  life in full anticipation of Christ’s soon return? While the whole universe,  knowingly or unknowingly, is waiting for the King of kings and Lord of Lord to  come, get ready—and do it now.
CONCLUSION
We have looked at the journey of the Lamb of God and His ministry  to the godly people throughout centuries. Especially, we have noticed His Day  of Atonement ministry in the heavenly sanctuary as High Priest that started on  October 22, 1844. This message presents Christ in all His beauty and gives us  hope and encouragement in our daily journey. The Lord guides us to the sure future  and allows us to see others and ourselves through the lens of God’s unending love  because:
- The Lamb of God desires the best sacrifice—our life!
              - The Lamb of God revealed the loving character of God!
              - The Lamb of God is still in His heavenly sanctuary to  make our life beautiful!
              - The Lamb of God is coming back as the King of kings and  Lord of lords!
Let His name be glorified in the church and in your  personal life today, so that all of us may join the choir of the heavenly  beings by singing: “Worthy is the Lamb who was slain to receive power and  riches and wisdom, and strength and honor and glory and blessing!” (Rev 5:12).