The sermon centres on the profound truth of Jesus as the Lamb of God, whose sacrificial death atones for the universal sin that defines humanity's moral and spiritual destitution. Drawing from John 1:29 and the hymn 'Jesus, the Name High Over All,' it unfolds a threefold message: the gravity of sin as a universal condition of rebellion against God, the divine provision of Christ's atoning sacrifice that bears and removes sin through His blood, and the urgent call to behold and trust in Him as the only means of salvation. Rooted in Old Testament imagery like the Passover and daily sacrifices, the sermon emphasises that Christ's once-for-all offering on Calvary fulfills all types and shadows, making His righteousness available to all who look to Him in faith. With pastoral urgency, it warns against relying on human efforts or prayers, insisting that salvation comes solely through personal faith in the Lamb of God, who alone can break spiritual bondage, defeat Satan, and transform hell into heaven for the repentant sinner.