Christ, our paschal lamb, has been
sacrificed; let us then feast with joy in the Lord.
Christ, the Lamb
of God, has indeed been sacrificed. He has died for our sins, going
to the cross out of unimaginable love for us. He willingly suffered
and laid down His life for us, sinners that we are, that we might
receive sanctifying grace, the indwelling presence of God in our
souls, and eternal life in Heaven with Him.
Like the blood of
original Paschal lamb, Christ's blood has been poured out for us that
we might live. Only we do not just escape physical death like the
Israelites of old. We escape spiritual death, eternal death,
separation from God. The Paschal lamb is a type, a foreshadowing, of
Christ, but Christ is the fulfillment beyond our wildest dreams,
God-made-Man Who dies for us.
Unlike the little
white, fluffy animals the Israelites sacrificed, though, Jesus
Christ, God-made-Man rises from the dead, conquering death. Death
cannot hold Him, and this is what we celebrate at Easter, the
Resurrection of Jesus, our Lamb Who lives again to intercede for us
eternally.
The Passover of
the Israelites was not complete unless the people ate the lamb. This
was symbolic of receiving life and entering into communion. We, too,
must eat our Lamb, Jesus Christ, and we do so in the Eucharist.
Jesus gives Himself to us Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. We eat
our Lamb, coming into communion with Him and through Him with each
other and receiving an outpouring of divine life, not symbolically
but really and truly.
So let us feast
with joy in the Lord, for our Paschal Lamb has been sacrificed for us
and has risen again to bring us to new life with Him.