Lyrics by Lamb of God

We have compiled all the lyrics of Lamb of God's songs we could find so that those who, like you, are looking for songs by Lamb of God, find them all in one place.

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by Lamb of God.

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  1. Memento Mori
  2. Laid To Rest
  3. Lamb of God
  4. Walk With Me In Hell
  5. Ruin
  6. 512
  7. Blacken the Cursed Sun
  8. Descending
  9. Ghost Walking
  10. Omerta
  11. Straight For The Sun
  12. 11th Hour
  13. Black Label
  14. Condemn The Hive
  15. Grace
  16. Nevermore
  17. Omens
  18. The Subtle Arts Of Murder & Persuasion
  19. A Devil In God's Country
  20. A Warning
  21. Again We Rise
  22. Another Nail For Your Coffin
  23. Anthropoid
  24. As The Palaces Burn
  25. Ashes of The Wake
  26. Barbarosa
  27. Beating On Death's Door
  28. Blood Junkie
  29. Blood Of The Scribe
  30. Bloodshot Eyes
  31. Bootscraper
  32. Break You
  33. Broken Hands
  34. Buckeye
  35. Bury Me Under The Sun
  36. Cheated
  37. Checkmate
  38. Choke Sermon
  39. Chronic Auditory Hallucination
  40. Confessional
  41. Contractor
  42. Culling
  43. Darkness
  44. Dead Seeds
  45. Delusion Pandemic
  46. Denial Mechanism
  47. Departure Hymn
  48. Desceding
  49. Desolation
  50. Digital Sands
  51. Dimera
  52. Ditch
  53. Duane
  54. Embers
  55. Engage the Fear Machine
  56. Erase This
  57. Everything To Nothing
  58. Evidence
  59. Fake Messiah
  60. Foot To The Throat
  61. Footprints
  62. For Your Malice
  63. Forgotten (Lost Angels)
  64. Gears
  65. Ghost Shaped People
  66. Goatfish
  67. Gomorrah
  68. Grayscale
  69. Guilty
  70. Hearts And Flowers
  71. Hit The Wall
  72. Hourglass
  73. Hyperthermic/Accelerate
  74. Ill Designs
  75. In Defense Of Our Good Name
  76. In The Absence Of Sacred
  77. In Your Words
  78. Insurrection
  79. Invictus
  80. King Me
  81. Lame
  82. Letter To The Unborn
  83. Lies Of Autumn
  84. More Time To Kill
  85. Never More
  86. New Colossal Hate
  87. Nightmare Seeker (The Little Red House)
  88. Nippon
  89. Now You've Got Something To Die For
  90. O.D.H.G.A.B.F.E.
  91. On The Hook
  92. One Gun
  93. Overlord
  94. Pariah
  95. Pathetic
  96. Poison Dream (feat. Jamey Jasta)
  97. Poverty-Stricken
  98. Preaching To The Converted
  99. Purified
  100. Reality Bath
  101. Reclamation
  102. Redneck
  103. Remorse Is For The Dead
  104. Requiem
  105. Ressurection Man
  106. Resurrection #9
  107. Routes (feat. Chuck Billy)
  108. Ruiner
  109. Salivation
  110. September Song
  111. Set To Fail
  112. Shoulder Of Your God
  113. State Of Unrest (feat. Kreator)
  114. Still Echoes
  115. Suffering Bastard
  116. Terminally Unique
  117. Terror & Hubris In The House Of Frank Pollard
  118. The Black Dahlia
  119. The Duke
  120. The Faded Line
  121. The Number Six
  122. The Passing
  123. The Undertow
  124. Til The Clouds Clear
  125. To The End
  126. To The Grave
  127. Torches
  128. Vanishing
  129. Vigil
  130. Visitation
  131. We Die Alone
  132. What I've Become
  133. Wine & Piss
  134. Zero
  135. Laid to Rest (HEALTH Remix)

Lamb of God (Greek: Ἀμνὸς τοῦ Θεοῦ, romanized: Amnòs toû Theoû; Latin: Agnus Dei, Ecclesiastical Latin: [ˈaɲ.ɲus ˈde.i]) is a title for Jesus that appears in the Gospel of John. It appears at John 1:29, where John the Baptist sees Jesus and exclaims, "Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world." It appears again in John 1:36. Christian doctrine holds that a divine Jesus chose to suffer crucifixion at Calvary to save the world from its sins. He was given up by divine Father, as an "agent and servant of God" in carrying away the sins of the world. In Christian theology the Lamb of God is viewed as both foundational and integral to the message of Christianity. A lion-like lamb that rises to deliver victory after being slain appears several times in the Book of Revelation. It is also referred to in Pauline writings; 1 Corinthians 5:7 suggests that Saint Paul intends to refer to the death of Jesus, who is the Paschal Lamb, using the theme found in Johannine writings. In Genesis 22, the binding of Isaac foretells the Gospel of Jesus Christ, when Isaac asked his father Abraham "where is the lamb for the burnt offering" to which Abraham responded "God himself will provide the lamb for the burnt offering, my son." (Genesis 22:7-8). However, it was a Ram (not a Lamb) that was ultimately sacrificed in Isaac's place, and the Ram was caught in a thicket (i.e. thornbush). (Genesis 22:13). The lamb metaphor is also in line with Psalm 23, which depicts God as a shepherd leading his flock (mankind). The Lamb of God title is widely used in Christian prayers. The Latin version, Agnus Dei, and translations are a standard part of the Catholic Mass, as well as the classical Western Liturgies of the Anglican and Lutheran churches. It is also used in liturgy and as a form of contemplative prayer. The Agnus Dei also forms a part of the musical setting for the Mass. As a visual motif the lamb has been most often represented since the Middle Ages as a standing haloed lamb with a foreleg cocked "holding" a pennant with a red cross on a white ground, though many other ways of representing it have been used.

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