A Lamb That Was Slain
9 comments | PermalinkRecently I noted an article about a planned animal sacrifice in Jerusalem. This event was controversial because 1) there is no temple or altar in Jerusalem today; 2) killing an animal makes some people mad.You can watch the video here.Friends in Jerusalem went to the Old City that day and saw a guy they suspected of carrying a ritual knife in his briefcase and followed the guy through a wild maze of streets in pursuit. It turned out they followed the right guy. They filmed the service.
We talked about the appropriateness of putting this online. The 5-minute video is as graphic as it gets. More and more people today don't realize that meat doesn't originate at a grocery store. They have little concept of an animal being raised and then slaughtered. Furthermore, almost no one in the Western world has ever sacrificed an animal for religious purposes.
I think, however, that is precisely why this *graphic* video should be shown. We read about sacrifice in the Bible but we don't really understand what that means. We read passages that talk about the "life being in the blood," but those are just words that we don't really consider. We "know" that the wages of sin are high, but we don't get the life lesson that the ancient Israelites received every year.
The point of sacrifice was simply this: you deserve to die because of your sin. This animal is dying in your place. Watching the priest slice his throat and watching the blood drain out drove the point home much better than reading a chapter of Leviticus.
Today New Testament believers know that the blood of bulls and goats is not enough to take away sin. But I think that we can often just take for granted Jesus' death in our place. We don't think about his innocent blood draining away because we can't conceptualize it. We don't always appropriate the idea of substitute because we've never seen a living object die in our place. But our loss can be this: sin is easy because forgiveness (we think) is cheap.
The video was made by SourceFlix Productions. Instead of dubbing over the scene with English commentary, they chose to include some explanatory text below. Don't watch this video while eating, and if you're thinking about showing your children, watch it yourself first.



9 Comments:
Justin,
Thanks for linking to this. I am currently reading through Leviticus (in my ESV Reformation Study Bible.) I think it is hard for us to imagine the work involved in performing these sacrifices. I wonder how different it looked at the temple.
Just reading about this... I probably won't watch the video.
I watched Mel Gibson's Passion of Christ once and I got the message very powerfully branded and singed into graphic memory.
I would also recommend not watching it on your laptop at Chipotle, unless you want people at the next table to threaten to vomit on you. Not that that just happened or anything, of course.
"But our loss can be this: sin is easy because forgiveness (we think) is cheap."
I do take my forgiveness way too lightly at times.
But a video is worth a 1,000 words, sometimes.
Thanks for sharing this. Heavy on the heart, but also good for the heart to watch this sacifice. Made me think of Issac being bound by his Dad, Abraham.
We have no idea over here in America.
A good friend of mine has been a missionary in Nepal for 11 years, and he has seen a lot of sacrifices of goats and other animals, and streets were literelly running with blood on the Hindu more sacred days. Of course these are pagan sacrifices, and demonic.
But even the blood sacricfice on this video is done in vain, and is an abomination to God.
I thank the Father for His Son being the Lamb of God, who took away my sins, not in part, but the whole, as far as the East is from the West, and not only mine, but Jesus saved all His people from their sins (Matt 1:21).
Hi,
I don't want to watch the video at this point in time or ever, but this post makes me think about the seriousness of sacrifice.
Thank you.
We who grew up on a farm, know well what it is like to see an animal slaughtered. But, then we also knew as well what the purpose was for the death of that animal.
"Christ, our Passover lamb, has been slain." (1 Cor 5:7)
The video was eye-opening.
I wonder if anyone has a good write up in response to Rene Girard's views on scapegoating in different cultures of the world?
Before our Good Friday service I called around a few local slaughterhouses to see if I could view a lamb being killed, they all thought it sounded a bit nutty so I didn't get to see and smell the event before I preached that night, but it would have been a graphic and visual imprint in my own mind.
This video is great to see. Not fun, but worth watching.
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