Last week, we began collecting biblical data for substitution-replacement: one person, animal, object, payment, or group taking the place of another.
This week, we look at the complicated cases. Moses offers himself for Israel. Judah offers himself instead of Benjamin. David wishes he had died instead of Absalom. Then Caiaphas and Barabbas bring substitutionary logic into the story of Jesus through political calculation and judicial injustice.
These passages display substitution in the Bible, and they also complicate it. They show a difference between substitutionary willingness and substitutionary requirement or calculation. The Bible honors self-giving love, mediation, grief, and transformed brotherhood without automatically making replacement the mechanism of redemption.
So when we come to Jesus, the question is not simply whether he is “greater” than Moses, Judah, or David. The question is how he fulfills the pattern: by becoming a replacement victim, or by giving himself for others and calling his people into that same cruciform life.
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Music credit: "Marble Machine" by Wintergatan
Link to Wintergatan’s website: https://wintergatan.net/
Link to the original Marble Machine video by Wintergatan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IvUU8joBb1Q&ab_channel=Wintergatan