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CHAPTER 1:
THE LAMB MUST BE PERFECT AND YOUNG
Throughout the whole of Christendom, you
would be hard-pressed to find anyone who denies
that our Messiah, Yahshua, was the perfect, sinless,
sacrificial Lamb — without spot, wrinkle, or blem-
ish. And rightly so. This belief is foundational to the
redemptive message of the Gospel. In order to be re-
ceived by Yahweh as an acceptable atoning sacrifice
— and now to serve in the heavens as our eternal
High Priest — Yahshua had to be sinless, blameless,
undefiled. He had to be the fulfillment of every type
and shadow that the Torah demanded.
The Apostle Peter affirms this truth plainly:
1 Peter 1:19 – “But with the precious blood of
Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without
spot.”
The body of Messiah was unpolluted. His motives
were pure. His obedience was perfect. In every way
that mattered, Yahshua fulfilled the moral perfec-
tion required of the sacrificial lamb.
However — and this is where the mystery begins
to unfold — perfection alone was not enough.
The Torah doesn’t just require a lamb without
blemish. It requires a lamb of a specific age. A
lamb in its first year.
Exodus 12:5 – “Your lamb shall be without blemish,
a male of the first year: ye shall take it out from the
sheep, or from the goats.”
This detail is often overlooked in Christian theolo-
gy. Many teachers will affirm Yahshua’s sinlessness,
but how many consider the timing of His presen-
tation and death?
The lamb had to be a male of the first year — not
an adult lamb, not a seasoned ram. It had to be
young, recently born, newly alive. The timing was
prophetic. The timing was exact.
This requirement means that in addition to being
without blemish, the lamb had to be offered before
it reached one full year of age. After that, it was
disqualified.
So then, we must ask: Did Yahshua meet this re-
quirement too? Was He not only spotless, but also
slain as a “yearling lamb”?
This is where the revelation deepens — and where
the timeline of His ministry comes into focus. For if
He was publicly declared “the Lamb of Yahweh” by
John the Baptist, and if the Torah demands that a
lamb be sacrificed within its first year of life, then
from the moment of His baptism, a countdown be-
gan. One year. No blemish. No guile. No failure.
The lamb had to be perfect. And the lamb had to be
young.
CHAPTER 2:
THE YEARLING REQUIREMENT
In order to qualify as the Passover lamb, the Torah
requires more than the absence of blemish. Accord-
ing to Exodus 12:5, the lamb must not only be male
and unblemished, but it must be a yearling — “a
male of the first year.”
Exodus 12:5 – “Your lamb shall be without blemish,
a male of the first year: ye shall take it out from the
sheep, or from the goats.”
This phrase “of the first year” means the lamb had
to be either less than one year old at the time of its
sacrifice or in the first year. Once that threshold was
crossed, it no longer qualified as a legitimate Pass-
over offering.
The perfection required was not just moral — it
was also temporal. The lamb had to be young, fresh-
ly born, newly offered. It was not the seasoned, the
matured, or the experienced that was chosen. It was
the firstborn, early in life, innocent in time as well as
in nature.
And so the question emerges for the believer who
takes the Scriptures seriously: Did Yahshua, our
Passover, fulfill this temporal requirement as well?
Not just spiritually unblemished, but offered within
the right window — within His first “year” as the
Lamb of Yahweh.
This is not a minor detail. The same Torah that
demands the lamb be spotless also demands it be
young. If Yahshua is to be our fulfillment of Exodus
12, then He must be both. We have long affirmed
that He is without sin — but now we must examine:
was He sacrificed within the year of His presenta-
tion?
Only when we see that the Lamb was introduced
at His baptism, and from that moment onward
lived under the shadow of the altar, do we begin
to realize the staggering accuracy of prophecy. For
one full year, He walked under divine scrutiny. One
year — and not a blemish could be found.
Let the reader understand: It is not enough to be
perfect — the Lamb must also be timely.
In order to qualify as the Passover lamb; something
more than “no blemish” is required...
CHAPTER 3:
WHEN THE LAMB WAS PRESENTED
When was Yahshua declared to be “The Lamb of
God”? Not during His birth. Not during His ear-
ly life in Nazareth. Not even when He was twelve
years old teaching in the Temple. The official,
divine presentation of Yahshua as the sacrificial
Lamb of Yahweh came at His baptism, at about 30
years of age.
John 1:29 – “The next day John seeth Jesus com-
ing unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God,
which taketh away the sin of the world.”
This is no poetic metaphor. This is a prophetic
proclamation. John the Baptist — himself born into
the priestly line — was standing in the waters of
consecration, calling Israel to repentance, when the
heavens opened and Yahweh revealed His Lamb.
This declaration was not merely theological. It was
legal. In Torah, the lamb had to be chosen and then
observed. And from this moment forward, Yahsh-
ua is not simply the Son of Man — He is the Lamb
under scrutiny.
The Lamb must now be watched. The Lamb must
be weighed. From this moment, every step He takes
is under the eyes of the Law, the prophets, the an-
gels, the adversary, and Yahweh Himself.
No blemish can be found. Not in word. Not in
thought. Not in motive.
This is the divine moment when the clock begins
ticking. Just as the lamb in Egypt was chosen on
the 10th day and kept until the 14th for inspection,
so now the Lamb of Heaven is introduced to Israel.
And the Torah demands a yearling — so this conse-
crated Lamb has exactly one year to fulfill the law in
totality.
This is why Yahshua said later:
John 12:27 – “For this cause came I unto this hour.”
From the moment John cried out “Behold the
Lamb,” Yahshua entered the final season of His life.
Not a season of anonymity, but a season of exam-
ination. Not a season of growth, but a season of
offering. He had already experienced His season of
growth in favor with Yahweh and man throughout
His life. He learned obdeince throughout His life,
now is not the time for learning but for full demon-
stration of what He has learned.
He is now the Yearling Lamb. And every day from
baptism to crucifixion — every temptation, every
healing, every teaching, every silence, every step —
is now part of the sacrificial journey to the altar.
Let the weight of that moment settle: the Lamb had
been chosen. When was Yahshua declared to be
“The Lamb of God”? Clearly, at His baptism at the
age of thirty...
There is another prophetic marker that confirms
this year-long ministry timeline: the words of Yahs-
hua Himself, quoting from the scroll of Isaiah at the
beginning of His public ministry.
Luke 4:18–19
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath
anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor... To
preach the acceptable year of the Lord.”
In quoting Isaiah 61, Yahshua does not say
“acceptable years” — He says “the acceptable
year.” The Spirit-led proclamation was not poetic
exaggeration. It was a divine timestamp. He closed
the scroll. He handed it back to the attendant. And
then He said:
Luke 4:21 – “Today this Scripture is fulfilled in your
hearing.”
This was not a metaphor. It was a declaration. The
acceptable year had begun — and the Lamb had
been revealed. From this moment forward, Yahshua
was living in the prophetic “year” of divine favor
— the same year required by Torah for the lamb to
remain spotless.
This declaration places His ministry in direct
alignment with the requirements of the sacrificial
system — a one-year offering, consecrated, ob-
served, and ultimately slain.
CHAPTER 4:
LEARNING OBEDIENCE
THROUGH SUFFERING
The author of Hebrews opens a window into the
internal struggle of Yahshua, revealing that His
journey was not robotic or automatic. His obedience
was not mechanical — it was learned. His perfection
was not imposed — it was formed through trial,
pain, and surrender.
Hebrews 5:7–9
“Who in the days of His flesh, when He had offered
up prayers and supplications with strong crying
and tears unto Him that was able to save Him from
death, and was heard in that He feared; Though He
were a Son, yet learned He obedience by the things
which He suffered; And being made perfect, He be-
came the author of eternal salvation unto all them
that obey Him.”
This passage is sacred ground. It unveils a Messi-
ah who groaned. Who cried. Who feared. Not be-
cause of weakness, but because of submission. Yahs-
hua, lived as fully human. And in that humanity,
He learned to obey through suffering.
He was not born obeying. He was born capable of
obedience, and as He matured, He was trained in it
— just as we are.
This learning was not abstract. It was real. He
learned to obey by not retaliating when insulted. He
learned by refusing temptation. He learned by be-
ing misunderstood, betrayed, and abandoned — yet
still walking the path of righteousness.
Yahshua’s final year — His yearling ministry —
was not the beginning of His obedience, but the
consummation of it. He had been perfected before
the presentation. And now, as the Lamb, He must
be maintained in that perfection until the moment
of offering.
The Lamb who learned obedience is the Lamb
who could be trusted with the altar. Hebrews Chap-
ter Five tells us plainly that Yahshua had been “per-
fected” for this ministry as the Lamb of God...
CHAPTER 5:
ISAIAH’S PROPHECY OF
A MORALLY TRAINED MESSIAH
The prophet Isaiah, centuries before the baptism
of Yahshua, spoke with startling clarity about the
moral development of the Messiah. He didn’t de-
scribe Him merely as preprogrammed perfection,
but as one who would be trained — morally, spiri-
tually, and righteously — from a young age.
Isaiah 7:15–16“Butter and honey shall he eat, that
he may know to refuse the evil, and choose the
good. For before the child shall know to refuse the
evil, and choose the good, the land that thou abhor-
rest shall be forsaken of both her kings.”
This is not a throwaway prophecy. This is a de-
scription of the internal struggle of Messiah’s hu-
man development. He was not born with automatic
resistance to evil. He was born with the potential for
obedience, and Yahweh oversaw His training until
that potential was fully realized.
He was fed on butter and honey — the food of dis-
cernment, the nourishment of righteousness. And
by that diet — both physical and spiritual — He
was raised to maturity in wisdom.
Isaiah’s words here were first meant to reassure
King Ahaz during a time of national crisis. Two
enemy kings threatened Judah — Rezin of Syria and
Pekah of Israel. The prophet declared that before
a certain child (likely Isaiah’s son or a prophetic
child-sign) was old enough to “refuse the evil and
choose the good,” both of those kings would be re-
moved. And indeed, within a short time, both were
gone — the prophecy was immediately fulfilled.
But like many prophetic passages in Scripture, this
one carries a dual fulfillment — an immediate
historical sign, and a later, messianic application.
How do we know? Because the New Testament con-
firms it. Just a few verses earlier in Isaiah 7:14, we
read:
“Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son,
and shall call his name Immanuel.”
And in Matthew 1:22–23, the Gospel writer explic-
itly tells us that this prophecy — and therefore the
surrounding verses — pointed ultimately to Yahsh-
ua:
“Now all this was done, that it might be fulfilled
which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet, say-
ing, Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall
bring forth a son, and they shall call his name Em-
manuel...”
Because Isaiah 7:14 and Isaiah 7:15–16 are a flow-
ing prophetic message, and Matthew connects verse
14 directly to the Messiah, it stands to reason that
verse 15 — the child being morally trained — also
finds its greater fulfillment in Yahshua.
He would be nourished on the butter and hon-
ey of obedience. He would grow in wisdom and
in stature. He would learn righteousness from the
Father. He would be morally prepared to “refuse the
evil and choose the good.”
This makes Yahshua’s baptism all the more pro-
found. It was not the beginning of His obedience,
but the culmination of a life trained to choose good
over evil. At that moment, He is not just a clean ves-
sel — He is a vessel that has been tested and prov-
en.
This was the Messiah Isaiah foresaw. A child,
growing in discernment, learning to navigate be-
tween obedience and temptation, being molded by
Yahweh into the only Lamb suitable to take away
the sins of the world.
The Torah required a yearling lamb, yes — but
that yearling had to be without blemish, and that
blemishlessness was not just external, but moral and
spiritual. Isaiah’s prophecy confirms that the Father
brought the Son to this condition before baptism,
so that when He entered the waters, He entered as
a tested and approved vessel — ready to begin the
final, flawless walk to the altar.
CHAPTER 6:
THE NEW MAN RISES FROM THE WATERS
Yahshua had learned obedience through the trials
and sorrows of His life — but something changed
at the Jordan. The act of baptism was more than a
ritual; it was a burial. Not symbolic only, but spir-
itual and prophetic. For Yahshua, the waters of the
Jordan marked a line in history. The old man — the
man trained in obedience, shaped by Yahweh, test-
ed in silence — was now put to rest.
It never ceases to intrigue me how little faith we,
even as believers, truly have in the waters of bap-
tism. From our pulpits, we declare with boldness,
“The old man is dead!” — yet when it comes to Yahs-
hua, the Messiah of Israel, we hesitate to apply our
own doctrine.
There’s a strange religiously induced mental block
that prevents us from believing that what happens
to us in baptism also happened to Him. We preach
it for sinners, but struggle to receive it for the Sin-
less One.
But if baptism truly fulfills all righteousness —
and if we believe that “the old man is buried” in those
sacred waters — then we must also believe this: the
man Yahshua who entered the Jordan died to His
former identity.
And when He rose, He rose in the power and purity
of His divine calling — the Yearling Lamb.
To declare the “old man is dead” and then exclude
Yahshua from that very death is to rob the waters of
their full authority. If He was immersed to fulfill the
law, then something truly died that day. And some-
thing new — and perfect — arose. A consecrated
vessel. A prepared Lamb. A man anointed without
measure.
2 Corinthians 5:17 – “Therefore if any man be in
Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed
away; behold, all things are become new.”
This Scripture is not only for the disciples who
followed Him. It is first true of the One who led
the way. When He emerged from the waters, He
emerged as the Lamb of Yahweh — the yearling —
ready to begin the final countdown.
It is no coincidence that immediately after His
baptism, He is led by the Spirit into the wilderness.
Why? Because now the testing begins anew. Not
to produce obedience, but to demonstrate it. Now
Yahshua walks in full awareness of His purpose: to
live without blemish for the remainder of His brief,
divinely appointed time.
The Spirit descended. The Father spoke. The Son
rose. And the Lamb was on the altar.
CHAPTER 7:
THE MOUNT OF TEMPTATION AND
THE SECOND ADAM
As soon as Yahshua rises from the waters of bap-
tism, the Ruach (The Holy Spirit) drives Him into the
wilderness — into the place of testing, the arena of
confrontation. It is there that He climbs the Mount
of Temptation, and on that summit, He will face His
most decisive trial yet. But this is no random en-
counter — this is Eden revisited.
The imagery is stunning: the serpent is there, just
as in the garden. The two trees are present, though
unseen — the Tree of Life and the Tree of the
Knowledge of Good and Evil. The same question
hovers in the air: Will the Son obey Yahweh’s voice,
or will He yield to fleshly desires? I have often
taught throughout the decades of my ministry that
Yahshua did not win the battle on Mt. Calvary but
rather on the mountain of temptation.
This mountain becomes the testing ground of the
Second Adam. Where the first Adam failed in a lush
garden, the second must succeed in a barren wilder-
ness.
The stakes are the same — the inheritance of a
kingdom, the dominion of the earth, the faithfulness
of man to his Creator.
But the tempter’s approach is refined:
“If You be the Son of God...”
“Command these stones...”
“Throw Yourself down...”
“Bow and I’ll give You the kingdoms...”
Each temptation is a shortcut. A counterfeit
crown. A kingdom without obedience. And yet,
Yahshua refuses each one with the sacred reply, “It
is written.”
He wields the Word like a sword and overcomes
the adversary not with divine power, but with hu-
man submission to the Spirit.
In that moment, the Lamb remains spotless. The
Lamb, now fully consecrated, continues forward
toward the altar. He has faced what Adam faced —
and triumphed. He has refused what Israel failed to
refuse in their wilderness — and prevailed.
This mountain was not a detour — it was the
proving ground. And the Yearling Lamb came off
that mountain victorious, unswerving, and still
without blemish.
As He climbs the mountain after baptism; the
Mount of Temptation, He will face His greatest
challenge...
CHAPTER 8:
ZECHARIAH’S VISION OF
THE HIGH PRIEST
Centuries before Yahshua stepped into the Jordan
River, the prophet Zechariah saw a vision of anoth-
er man named Yahshua (Joshua), standing before
the angel of Yahweh in filthy garments. This vision
was no coincidence. It was prophetic in every sense
— a mirror of what would happen at the baptism of
our Messiah.
Zechariah 3:3–4
“Now Yahshua was clothed with filthy garments,
and stood before the angel. And he answered and
spake unto those that stood before him, saying,
Take away the filthy garments from him. And unto
him he said, Behold, I have caused thine iniquity to
pass from thee, and I will clothe thee with change
of raiment.”
This was no ordinary cleansing. This was the
moment of consecration. A change of status. A strip-
ping of the old and a dressing in the new. And the
garments given? Not just clean robes — priestly
robes.
The vision continues with a conditional promise:
Zechariah 3:7
“Thus saith Yahweh of hosts; If thou wilt walk in
My ways, and if thou wilt keep My charge, then
thou shalt also judge My house, and shalt also
keep My courts, and I will give thee places to walk
among these that stand by.”
This was the moment Yahshua (in the vision) is of-
fered priestly authority and future kingship — but
only if He walks in obedience.
Sound familiar?
This vision is echoed in Yahshua’s real baptism,
where the heavens open and the Father speaks,
“This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased.” The Lamb is approved. The garments are
changed. The High Priesthood is promised — but
not yet received.
Yahshua must walk this one-year journey — as the
Yearling Lamb — in perfect obedience, to be worthy
of the priesthood shown in Zechariah’s vision.
And just as Zechariah saw the “stone with seven
eyes” — the fullness of the Spirit — so too, Yahshua
arose from the waters filled with the sevenfold Spir-
it of Yahweh (see Revelation 5:6), ready to walk out
the final steps toward glory.
Some may argue that Zechariah 3 is speaking
about a different man — a literal High Priest named
Joshua (Yahshua in Hebrew), serving after the Bab-
ylonian exile. While it is true that this vision has an
immediate historical reference, the Scriptures of-
ten use real historical figures to serve as types and
shadows of greater realities yet to come.
Zechariah’s vision is not limited to the natural
man Joshua — it is messianic at its core.
Here’s why:
The Name Itself – The High Priest in Zechariah 3
is named Yahshua — the exact same Hebrew name
as Yahshua, our Messiah. This is no coincidence.
It’s a prophetic setup.
Priest and King – The man in the vision is prom-
ised not just priestly authority but rulership:
“I will give thee places to walk among these that
stand by.”
This merging of priesthood and kingship is found
nowhere in Old Testament priestly law — but it is
fulfilled perfectly in Messiah Yahshua, who is both
King and High Priest after the order of Melchize-
dek.
The Conditional Obedience and Cleansing –
Zechariah 3 shows a man in filthy garments being
cleansed and re-robed in righteousness. This imag-
ery goes far beyond any single historical figure. It
points to the Messiah’s baptism and consecration
— a moment when the heavens declared Him the
beloved Son, and the Spirit clothed Him with the
fullness of divine anointing.
The Stone with Seven Eyes – Zechariah 3:9 refer-
ences a stone with seven eyes — clearly symbolic of
the seven Spirits of Yahweh (Revelation 5:6), which
rest upon Messiah alone.
Thus, the vision of Zechariah 3, while rooted in
historical reality, is a prophetic blueprint of the con-
secration of Messiah Yahshua — the true and final
High Priest who would stand spotless before Yah-
weh, clothed in obedience, and prepared to inter-
cede for the nation.
CHAPTER 9:
PROMISED TO BE KING—BY OBEDIENCE
The vision of Zechariah did more than cleanse
Yahshua’s garments — it prophesied His exaltation.
But that exaltation came with a condition: obedi-
ence.
The Father’s voice in the heavens said, “This is
My beloved Son in whom I am well pleased,” but
the full dominion over creation was not handed
over at that moment. Instead, the promise of king-
ship was given if He would remain without blemish
— if He would walk in obedience to the end.
Zechariah 3:7 – “Thus saith Yahweh of hosts; If thou
wilt walk in My ways, and if thou wilt keep My
charge, then thou shalt also judge My house, and
shalt also keep My courts, and I will give thee plac-
es to walk among these that stand by.”
This covenantal “if–then” promise mirrors the wil-
derness temptation. Satan offered Yahshua the king-
doms of this world — but without the obedience.
Without the suffering. Without the cross.
It was a real temptation. The kingdoms were real.
The offer was genuine. And yet, Yahshua refused
the shortcut. He would reign — but only by the
path Yahweh ordained.
He would keep the commandments. He would
drink the bitter cup. He would walk the narrow
way. And then — and only then — would He re-
ceive the scepter.
This chapter in the Lamb’s journey shows us
something powerful: even Yahshua had to quali-
fy for kingship. His Sonship did not entitle Him to
rule. His obedience did.
The Lamb was promised dominion — but only if
He remained pure. The priestly robes were His, but
they would be bloodied before they were glorified.
And so He walked on, day by day, trial by trial,
fulfilling the requirement. One year of perfect obe-
dience. One year of overcoming. And then — He
would be crowned.
The power of Water baptism is portrayed here...
CHAPTER 10: THE ONLY YEAR REQUIRED
Sound the glorious news — HE OVERCAME!
This yearling Lamb walked in perfect obedience, if
not all of His life, then most certainly from the mo-
ment of His baptism. For this is the ONLY YEAR He
was required to be perfect.
What the Torah demanded, He supplied. What
Exodus typified, Yahshua fulfilled. Not over de-
cades. Not over a long, uneventful stretch. But with-
in a concise, appointed, and consecrated span of
time — one prophetic year.
This year was not just any year. It was the year of
presentation, the year of scrutiny, the year of pres-
sure, testing, exposure, and obedience. It was the
acceptable year in which Yahshua could have dis-
qualified Himself — and didn’t.
He was declared “the Lamb of Yahweh” at His bap-
tism. From that moment, He was no longer just the
Rabbi, or the Prophet, or the Nazarene. From that
moment, He was the Lamb — and the Lamb could
not falter.
He went up the mountain and faced Satan with
nothing but the Word and the Spirit. He taught the
multitudes, healed the sick, raised the dead, and
rebuked the hypocrites — all while carrying the
weight of the Law’s demand: be spotless.
This was the year that mattered. Not His silent
years. Not His preparation. This year — the year of
declaration and destiny.
He was prepared for it by His Father. He was led
into it by the Spirit. He was watched during it by
the angels, the adversary, the priests, and the peo-
ple.
And at the end of this year, He walked willing-
ly up the hill of Calvary — not as a victim, but as
a Lamb — flawless, sinless, whole. He had been
presented, examined, and now... He was ready for
sacrifice.
Let all of Heaven record: the Lamb passed inspec-
tion. Sound the glorious news - HE OVERCAME!!!...
CHAPTER 11:
OUR GREAT HIGH PRIEST
The Lamb who was slain did not remain on the
altar. After fulfilling the requirements of Torah —
perfect obedience, sinless offering, timely sacrifice
— Yahshua was raised in glory and exalted as our
High Priest.
Hebrews 4:14–15“Seeing then that we have a great
high priest, that is passed into the heavens, Jesus
the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession. For
we have not an high priest which cannot be touched
with the feeling of our infirmities; but was in all
points tempted like as we are, yet without sin.”
The priesthood of Yahshua is rooted in His year of
perfection. Had He faltered even once during that
final year, His sacrifice would have been invalid —
and His priesthood disqualified.
But He did not fail. He passed the test. And be-
cause of that, He has ascended into the heavenly
sanctuary — not as a mere intercessor, but as the
One who understands your weakness.
He was tempted. Just like you. He battled flesh.
Just like you. He walked this earth, felt its pain,
endured its loneliness, carried its griefs. And yet,
through it all, He remained without sin.
That is why He can stand in the heavens on your
behalf. Not as a distant deity, but as a tested man —
a brother, a forerunner, a High Priest.
Let us therefore come boldly — not because we
are perfect, but because He is. Because the Yearling
Lamb became the Perfect Priest. Because the One
who was examined, and pierced, and laid in a tomb
— now lives to make intercession for us all.
Hebrews 4:14-15...
CHAPTER 12:
THE LEGAL GROUNDS FOR HIS DEATH
There is a profound and overlooked law in the
justice system of Yahweh — a law that governs even
Yahweh Himself: “Thou shalt not shed innocent
blood.” (Jeremiah 22:3)
Yahweh is perfectly just, and as such, He cannot
break His own law. Therefore, for Yahshua to be
legally executed as the Lamb of Yahweh, something
had to happen: He had to become the legal bearer of
sin, even though He Himself was sinless.
Luke 22:37 – “And he was reckoned among the
transgressors: for the things concerning me have an
end.”
This prophetic declaration reveals the spiritual
legal mechanism at work. Yahshua had to be num-
bered among the transgressors — not because He
committed sin, but because He had to fulfill the role
of proxy.
Death could not legally claim a sinless man. The
wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23), and Yahshua
had earned no such wage. Therefore, in order for
Him to be legally slain, He had to carry the identity
of the guilty.
This is what happened at His arrest and crucifix-
ion. Though innocent, He was accused of blasphe-
my and sedition — and remained silent.
He bore false charges, but He carried them willing-
ly, fulfilling Isaiah 53: “He was numbered with the
transgressors.”
He was not simply treated as a sinner — He was
judicially reckoned as one. The divine court, for the
purpose of redemption, transferred the guilt of the
world onto His shoulders.
And this was the only way the Lamb could be
slain — not as an innocent man, but as a guilty
proxy.
The altar of Yahweh demands death, but it must
be lawful. Therefore, the Lamb had to be declared
guilty by identification, not by action.
This was the legal groundwork for Calvary. This
is what made the sacrifice of Yahshua both just and
justifying.
The Yearling Lamb died not as a sinner, but for
sinners — and He died under law, so that we might
live under grace.
CHAPTER 13:
THE MYSTERY OF SIN AND
RIGHTEOUSNESS
The Scriptures tell us Yahshua “knew no sin,” and
yet He was “made to be sin for us.” This mystery
cuts to the very heart of the gospel — that the sin-
less became the sin-bearer, that the righteous one
was reckoned guilty, and that the innocent stood
condemned for the sake of the guilty.
2 Corinthians 5:21 – “For he hath made him to be
sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made
the righteousness of God in him.”
How do we reconcile this? Was Yahshua somehow
infused with sin? Was He corrupted in His being?
Absolutely not. The answer lies in understanding
the word “knew.”
The Greek word used here is ginōskō (γινώσκω)
— which means “to know by experience,” “to be-
come intimately acquainted with.”
Yahshua never entered into a relationship with
sin. He never became familiar with it. He never
gave Himself over to it.
He knew temptation. He faced it. He overcame it.
But He never learned sin. Instead, He learned obe-
dience.
This is the divine exchange: the One who never
knew sin became sin, so that those who did nothing
but sin might be made righteous. He became what
He hated — not in nature, but in standing. Not in
character, but in covenant.
And we — the sinful — are offered what we never
earned: righteousness, holiness, and sonship.
This is not just substitution — it’s transformation.
The Yearling Lamb takes our guilt, and we receive
His perfection. And all of it, down to the finest pro-
phetic detail, was carried out within one appointed
year.
He didn’t just fulfill the requirement —
He embodied it.
II Corinthians 5:21...
CHAPTER 14:
NO GUILE FOUND—PETER AND ISAIAH
We often hear it quoted: “He did no sin, neither
was guile found in His mouth.” But what moment
was Peter actually describing? What scene was he
referring to?
1 Peter 2:22–23 – “Who did no sin, neither was guile
found in His mouth: Who, when he was reviled,
reviled not again; when he suffered, he threatened
not; but committed himself to Him that judgeth
righteously.”
This passage is frequently misunderstood as de-
scribing the totality of Yahshua’s life — but in con-
text, Peter is pointing us to the moment of His ar-
rest, trial, and execution. That’s the moment where
His silence and purity under persecution fulfilled
prophecy to the letter.
Isaiah 53:9 – “And He made His grave with the
wicked, and with the rich in His death; because He
had done no violence, neither was any deceit in His
mouth.”
Isaiah foresaw the silent Lamb. He foresaw the
trial where Yahshua stood before rulers, falsely
accused, and said nothing in His own defense. No
guile. No manipulation. No self-preserving protest.
Just quiet resolve, like a Lamb led to the slaughter.
This is not merely a demonstration of personal
discipline — it is a requirement of the Lamb. Had
He lashed out, cursed His accusers, or even spoken
deceitfully to escape the cross, He would have dis-
qualified Himself. But He didn’t. He fulfilled both
Isaiah’s prophecy and Torah’s requirement: the
Lamb must be blameless — and guileless.
So Peter urges us to follow in His steps — not just
in morality, but in how we respond to mistreat-
ment. If Yahshua could remain pure when facing
death, then we — filled with His Spirit — can re-
main pure when facing trials.
No guile in His mouth. No sin in His hands. No
deception in His heart. This was the Lamb that was
slain.
1 Peter 2:22, Isaiah 53:9...
CHAPTER 15:
THE FINAL LAMB IS REVEALED
This is the story of the Yearling Lamb — not just a
theological title, but a divinely timed mission. Yahs-
hua was not only sinless; He was ready. He was not
only pure; He was prepared. From the moment John
cried, “Behold the Lamb of Yahweh,” the final Lamb
was no longer hidden. He was revealed — not just
in form, but in purpose.
He had come through thirty years of training. He
had walked in submission. He had been raised on
butter and honey. He had learned to refuse the evil
and choose the good. And now, in His final year,
He walked as the Lamb under observation — ready
to pass every trial, ready to meet every shadow of
Torah.
This Lamb would not be spared.
“He was led as a lamb to the slaughter...” (Isaiah
53:7)
But He did not die by accident. He was offered.
He was chosen. He was examined. And He was per-
fect. The final Lamb had arrived.
His obedience opened the door for your deliver-
ance. His silence opened the scroll of your destiny.
His blood didn’t just satisfy justice — it announced
the arrival of a new covenant. And all of it was
proven in one short, intense, holy year.
He is the Lamb. He is the Priest. He is the Example.
And He is the King.
CHAPTER 16:
FROM EXAMPLE TO EXHORTATION
Whether or not Yahshua committed any infrac-
tions in the years before His baptism, they were
buried in the waters of immersion. What mattered
was not speculation about His youth — but the per-
fection of His yearling walk.
From baptism onward, the Lamb walked the final
appointed year — the only year in which the To-
rah demanded He be spotless. And in that year, He
overcame.
But this is not just theology. It is a call.
Yahshua did not live this way to show us how di-
vine He was. He lived this way to show us how hu-
man we could be. He didn’t overcome as Yahweh in
disguise — He overcame as the Son of Adam, filled
with the Holy Spirit, walking in covenant obedi-
ence.
1 John 2:6 – “He who says he abides in Him ought
himself also to walk just as He walked.”
This is the message to every believer who emerges
from the waters of baptism: you too are now a year-
ling lamb. You too must walk in newness of life. The
old is gone. The new has begun.
The Yearling Lamb was not our excuse — He is our
example. And if He could walk blameless for a year
under the full weight of the Law, the scrutiny of the
adversary, and the frailty of flesh, then so can you
— by the same Spirit.
This is not about earning salvation. It is about
honoring the Lamb. It is about following in His
steps. It is about becoming what He was — a living
sacrifice, holy, acceptable to Yahweh.
Because the Lamb didn’t just die for you. He lived
for you. And now, He calls you to live for Him.
CHAPTER 17:
THE WATERS THAT MAKE NEW LAMBS
Baptism is not a token ritual. It is not merely sym-
bolic. It is the mystery of death and rebirth — a
burial of the old man and a resurrection of the new.
And it is in these waters that Yahshua stepped for-
ward into His final calling — not as a carpenter or
teacher, but as the Lamb of Yahweh.
Something happens in baptism that heaven re-
cords. Not only was Yahshua identifying with sin-
ners — He was stepping into the identity of the
Yearling Lamb. He had been morally prepared, spir-
itually trained, prophetically groomed — but now,
in that sacred immersion, He became consecrated
for offering.
Romans 6:4 – “Therefore we are buried with him by
baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised
up from the dead... even so we also should walk in
newness of life.”
The Lamb entered the water one way — and came
out marked. From this moment forward, He was
not living for preparation. He was living for sacri-
fice.
And so it is with you.
You, too, enter the water with a past. You descend
into the grave of baptism with your faults, your
failures, your unfinished obedience. But if you rise
in the name of Yahshua, you rise a yearling lamb. A
new creation. A vessel consecrated.
The waters don’t merely wash. They anoint. They
transition. They appoint.
And now, as you walk forward from those waters,
you are called to the same charge: walk unspotted.
Walk as a lamb. Walk in obedience. You are no lon-
ger your own — you are a living offering. You also
have entered into your divine year of proving who
you were prepared all of your life to be. Walk wor-
thy of your calling, your baptism, your vocation.
Because what Yahshua did was not just for you —
it was shown to you, so that you might walk in His
steps.
THE GOSPEL’S WITNESS:
ONE PASSOVER, ONE YEAR
Despite centuries of tradition asserting a 3.5-year
ministry, the Gospels themselves present a simpler,
more striking testimony: Yahshua’s ministry fits
within a single appointed year — not a day more.
The most convincing evidence? The Passover count.
SYNOPTIC GOSPELS (Matthew, Mark, Luke)
Each of these three Gospels mentions only one
Passover — the one at which Yahshua is crucified.
No earlier Passovers are recorded.
The entire public ministry, from baptism to the
cross, unfolds between His presentation as the
Lamb and His death as the Lamb — in a time frame
consistent with the Torah’s demand for a “male of
the first year.”
THE GOSPEL OF JOHN: THREE PASSOVERS?
John is often cited as evidence for a longer ministry
due to three Passover references:
John 2:13 – Temple cleansing
John 6:4 – Feeding of the 5,000
John 11:55 – Final Passover and crucifixion
But John’s Gospel is structured thematically, not
strictly chronologically.
The temple cleansing in John 2 appears to match
the final-week cleansing recorded in the Synoptics
— likely the same event, not a separate earlier one.
John 6:4 may be a scribal insertion — many ear-
ly manuscripts omit it, and no supporting context
exists in the Synoptics to confirm a second Passover
during that time.
John 7:2 immediately follows with mention of
Tabernacles, not another Passover — suggesting a
condensed timeline.
TORAH ALIGNMENT
The Torah required that the lamb be selected and
kept for a brief window before sacrifice — specifi-
cally in its first year of life. If Yahshua was declared
“Behold the Lamb” at His baptism, and if only one
Passover occurs after that moment in the Gospel
record, then the Torah has been precisely fulfilled
— not just in meaning, but in timing.
CONCLUSION:
Yahshua’s ministry was not drawn out over years.
It was appointed, deliberate, and prophetic. He
was chosen, observed, and offered within a single
acceptable year — the year Isaiah foretold, the year
Luke confirmed, and the year the Gospels quietly
record.
CHAPTER 18:
THE 144,000—THE COMPANY OF
YEARLING LAMBS
The Lamb is not just the sacrifice — He is the
model. And those who follow Him are called to the
same standard. In the closing chapters of Revela-
tion, a peculiar group appears — a company whose
testimony matches that of the Yearling Lamb.
Revelation 14:4–5
“These are they which follow the Lamb whither-
soever he goeth. These were redeemed from among
men, being the firstfruits unto God and to the Lamb.
And in their mouth was found no guile: for they are
without fault before the throne of God.”
This is not just some cute metaphor. This is iden-
tification. The 144,000 are not only sealed — they
are spotless. They are without blemish, just like the
Lamb they follow. And most telling of all: there is
no guile in their mouths.
These are the yearling lambs of the final age —
those who, like Yahshua, walk out their consecra-
tion. They are not superhuman. They are surren-
dered. They are not perfect by nature. They are
purified by fire and made holy by obedience.
They have been through tribulation. They have
stood in truth. They have not defiled themselves
with Babylon’s seductions. They are as lambs
among wolves — and they shine.
You are called to this company. You, too, have
been washed. You, too, have been consecrated. You,
too, are walking out your appointed year.
Let the Lamb receive the reward of His suffering
— not just in your praise, but in your life. Live as
the Lamb lived. Speak as the Lamb spoke. Walk as
the Lamb walked.
And when your appointed hour comes, may it be
said of you what was said of Him:
“Without blemish... without guile... worthy of the
altar.”
...you can bear the same testimony of the 144,000 of
whom are without sin and no guile found in their
mouths.
Your Shepherd in service to Christ,
John Shane Vaughn
First Harvest Ministries, Intl.
Founder & Apostolic Overseer
ABOUT FIRST HARVEST MINISTRIES INTERNATIONAL
(FHMI)
First Harvest Ministries International is a non-denominational,
non-501(c)(3), worldwide ministry founded on the original ap-
ostolic doctrine. We are a Spirit-filled congregation committed to
preaching both Spirit and Truth — the two end-time witnesses
raised up to confront this Laodicean generation.
FHMI was called into being by Yahweh to fulfill a prophetic man-
date: to help reunite the two divided houses of Israel — Ephraim
and Judah — into one renewed man, known in Scripture as Rem-
nant Israel. We believe the restoration of all things includes cov-
enant truth, Sabbath keeping, holy living, and the Gospel of the
Kingdom as preached by our Messiah Yahshua.
Founded in 2014 by Pastor John Shane Vaughn, this ministry
continues to grow by the Spirit of Yahweh, laboring to awaken the
Bride, gather the scattered seed of Israel, and prepare the Body for
the return of the King.
Reach out to us:
Email: brothervaughn@gmail.com
Website: www.HisComingKingdom.com
YouTube: @FirstHarvestMinistries
Facebook: @shanevaughn38