The Passover
The date was
approximately 1,480 B.C. and the place was Egypt. For several hundred years now, all of the
Jewish people had become the slaves of the Egyptians. They had been forced into cruel slavery since
Pharaoh needed cheap laborers to build his empire. Sadistic Egyptian work
bosses carried whips and heavy sticks, whipping, yelling and beating their
Jewish slaves as they struggled to perform back breaking labor in the hot Egyptian
sun. Prayers, moans and cries for mercy came up before God from the oppressed
Jewish slaves!
To make
matters worse, Pharaoh was worried that the Jewish people were having too many
babies. Someday the Jewish people might
out-number the Egyptians and try to break free from their hard labor! Pharaoh
reasoned that if he killed all the Jewish baby boys then the Jewish people
wouldn’t someday outnumber the Egyptians.
Pharaoh ordered
that all new born Jewish male babies born throughout Egypt be thrown into the
Nile River to drown. This decree was the law of the land. Jewish mothers and fathers could only watch
helplessly in horror as their new-born baby boys were drowned in the Nile River! Prayers, screams and cries for help came up
before God from terrified and broken hearted Jewish parents of new-born baby boys! (Exodus 1:1-22)
God heard
the cries of the Jewish people and He appeared to Moses in a flame of fire in
the middle of a burning bush. At that
time Moses was a shepherd in the land of Midian and when he walked over to
check out the bush, God spoke to him out of the flames. First God told Moses to take off his shoes
because he was on holy ground.
God told Moses that He had heard the cries of
the Jewish people and then God called Moses to go free his people from Pharaoh.
God was sending Moses to Pharaoh to
bring the Israelites out of Egypt. (Exodus 3;6-8) When Moses argued with God
that he wouldn’t be able to persuade Pharaoh to let the Jewish slaves go, God
promised Moses that He would be with him.
The Pharaoh of
Egypt just laughed at Moses the first time he came before his throne! Of course, Pharaoh would not let the Jewish
people leave Egypt! What would Pharaoh do without his Jewish slave
laborers? But then God began sending
plagues to Egypt. Surely the Pharaoh
would change his mind when he understood that God was sending the plagues
because he was not letting the Jewish people go!
First God caused
the water in the Nile River to turn to blood. Then God sent frogs, millions of them, in
people’s houses, hopping on their dinner tables, jumping in their beds,
everywhere. Then there was an outbreak
of lice and then flies. Then cattle all
across Egypt got sick and then Egyptians everywhere caught an infection of
boils making many people miserable. Next
came fire and hail from heaven and then locusts were everywhere eating all of
the crops. And then darkness fell across
Egypt and the sun didn’t shine. During
each of these plagues Pharaoh would promise to let the Jewish people go and
then he would change his mind when the plague was gone.
Finally, God
told Moses that the last plague would cause Pharaoh to let the Jewish people
go! God’s judgment would be poured out upon Egypt, and God would finally deliver
Israel from slavery and death. God would
make a covenant or promise to the Jewish people that He would lead them to the
Promised Land. Moses told the Israelites
to prepare for this final plague by slaughtering an unblemished lamb and roasting
and eating it as a family. Many of the Jewish people were shepherds and had
flocks of sheep. Each family was to take the lamb’s blood and brush the blood
on the doorposts of their homes. (Exodus 12:29-31)
That night,
God would send an angel of death throughout Egypt and if blood from the lamb
was not brushed over the doorposts of the house, then death would enter that
house and take the firstborn boy. Also, death
came upon the firstborn of every flock of sheep. But when the angel of death would come to a
home where the blood of the lamb had been brushed on its doorposts, then death
would pass over this home.
Every Jewish
home and first- born child was saved because they obeyed God and applied the
blood of the lamb on their home’s doorpost.
But every Egyptian home, including Pharaoh’s was visited by the death
angel and there was great mourning throughout the land. Pharaoh called Moses and told him to tell all
of the several million Jewish people to go.
The nation of Israel was finally free and on their way with God guiding
them to their Promised Lane!
Down through
the thousands of years now the Jewish people have celebrated that night when God
freed them from slavery and death. That
night when the angel of death saw the blood of the lamb sprinkled on the
doorposts and passed over every Jewish home.
Every single Jew obeyed God’s instructions through Moses and so every
Jewish home had the blood of the lamb sprinkled on their doorposts on that terrible
night. Because the blood of the Lamb
covered each Jewish home, death passed over each home that night. And down through the ages the Jewish people have
celebrated this night when death passed over them. And God saved them from
slavery. Once a year they stop and celebrate their Passover Seder.
The early Christian
church saw the slaughter of the lambs used at Passover as giving us a picture
of the death of Jesus. Scripture says: “Christ
our Passover Lamb has been sacrificed for us, therefore let us keep the feast.”
(1 Corinthians 5:7-8a) Scripture says
that the blood of animals cannot actually take away sin. Only Christ, the Lamb of God, can do that.
Many Bible scholars believe that the shed
blood of unblemished lambs that were sacrificed in ancient Israel pointed to the
future unblemished Lamb of God, their Messiah, Jesus Christ. Jesus was described as, “the Lamb of God who
takes away the sin of the world.” (John
1:29) The lambs sacrificed in ancient
times had to be unblemished, perfect and healthy. That is another picture
pointing to Christ, the Son of God who is sinless and perfect.
Jesus’ last
supper with His disciples was on the night before His crucifixion during the
annual Passover celebration. It was not
by accident that Jesus’ death occurred at the same time that the Passover lambs
were being slaughtered. Jesus gave His disciples and all of us who love and
follow Him a new feast to celebrate and remember His sacrifice for us. With the breaking of bread Jesus told his
disciples, “This is My body given for you, do this in remembrance of Me.” And with the drinking of wine He said: This
cup is the new covenant (promise) in My blood, which is poured out for you.” (Luke 22:19-20)
Scripture
also says: “Without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sins.” (Hebrews
9:22) The Bible teaches that death is caused by the sin of the world. Scripture
says: “The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus
Christ our Lord” (Romans 6:23) He died that we might live. Jesus washes us from
our sins, covers us in His righteousness, and gives us eternal life.
For the
nation of Israel, God’s saving act on their behalf happened on the night when death
passed over them in Egypt and God liberated them from slavery and set them
free. And for Christians, God’s saving
act was the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God to take
away our sins. Death (physical death) passed over every Jewish house that had
the blood of the lamb sprinkled over the doorposts. And death (eternal death) will pass over every
person who has the blood of the Lamb of God, Jesus Christ, sprinkled over the
doorposts of their heart.
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