Today is the beginning of the Jewish holiday of Passover. Millions of Jews and Messianic
Christians worldwide will prepare their homes and will gather for this
eight-day celebration. The Passover is a celebration of remembrance for the
events of the first chapters of Exodus.
The people of Israel, the sons of Jacob and their families,
had settled in Egypt to escape the famine that had nearly killed them. Joseph
had ensured that they had land to graze their sheep on, and that they were
cared for and largely left alone. Years had passed. Joseph had died, and a new
Pharaoh had come to power, a Pharaoh who didn’t know anything about Joseph. He
looked at his people and he looked at the Israelites, and he became afraid. God
had blessed the Israelites, and they were now a great nation in and of
themselves, to some estimates of over two million people. Pharaoh began a
governmental program to ensure his power over Israel. He made them slaves. The
oppression of Israel was so intense that she began to call out to God.
God raised up Moses as their reluctant deliverer. Moses was
raised in the palace of Pharaoh himself but also probably knew his heritage, as
his nurse was his own Israeli mother. He had the best of everything, including
education and healthcare, and then spent forty years in the desert learning
humility and hard work. God gave him a clear calling through the burning bush,
and empowered him for the work he called him to. Moses went before Pharaoh and
demanded that Pharaoh let God’s people go.
Pharaoh was not so inclined. His “NO!” was firm. Moses and
Pharaoh engage in a tug-of-war that left the Egyptians smarting. God sent a
series of plagues that assaulted and defeated a number of the Egyptian gods.
Flies covered the land. All the water turned to blood. Frogs filled their
kitchens and beds. They were covered with boils. The land was covered with a
darkness that could be felt. Some of the plagues affected both the Israelites
and Egyptians alike, but the most oppressive were for Egypt alone. The last of
the plagues was the death of every first born, both animal and human. It would
be a clear sign to Pharaoh that God was sovereign. It spoke a few things to the
Israelites as well.
God told his people to take a perfect, defect-free lamb, one
per household. They were to slaughter the lambs together at twilight and take
some of the blood and put it on the sides and tops of the doorframes of the
houses. They were then to roast the lamb and eat it, along with bitter herbs
and unleavened bread. They were to eat the whole thing, and any that was left
was to be burned in the fire. They were to eat it in their traveling clothes,
sandals on and staff in hand, ready to depart. On that night God would pass
through Egypt and strike down every first born as an act of judgment. The blood
would be a sign, and where the blood was, God would pass over
that house. No harm would touch them.
And that’s exactly what happened. The people ate in
obedience, with the blood on their door. God traveled through the land of
Egypt, taking every first born as his own. There was loud wailing in Egypt, and
Pharaoh let the people of God go.
The feast of Passover has
been celebrated ever since as a remembrance of God’s deliverance of his people
from slavery and oppression.
Passover
has great symbolic
significance for the Christian. We were in slavery to sin. We were oppressed
and unable to free ourselves. The Lamb was slain, the blood shed to cover us,
the wrath of God now passes over us, and we are free, delivered!
Get rid of the old yeast that you may be
a new batch without yeast, as you really are. For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed. Therefore let us keep the
Festival, not with the old yeast, the yeast of malice and wickedness, but with
bread without yeast, the bread of sincerity and truth. I Cor. 5:7-8
Just as
the Israelites were to eat the lamb in their traveling clothes, so we are to be
prepared to leave. Jesus will return and take us home. Just as the Israelites
ate the unleavened bread, so we are to be rid our lives of the leaven of sin.
Just as only God could deliver the Israelites, so only God can deliver us. We
must place our faith in him and live for him.
This is
the beginning of Holy Week, the week between Palm Sunday and Easter. My prayer
is that I will remember this week, and always, of the sacrifice of our Lamb.
Worthy is the Lamb, who was slain, to
receive power and wealth ad wisdom and strength and honor and glory and praise!
Then I heard every creature in heaven and on earth and under
the earth and on the sea, and all that is in them, singing:
To him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb be praise and honor
and glory and power for ever and ever!
Revelation
5:12-13
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