Passover
Did we Jews in the time of Yahshua celebrate the Passover the same way as
they do today? Substantially yes, for Jews preserve their traditions tenaciously
and faithfully.
Passover and Christianity's Easter whose basis in rooted in paganism, generally coincide
in time (usually March or early April). In the first 200 years or more Easter
was not celebrated independently. And in the Greek the word is always Passover
incorrectly translated as Easter. It was the institution of the apostate church,
which instituted a different day from that which G-d Almighty instituted on the
15th of Nissan. We should be warned for we read in Mark 7:7, “Howbeit in vain
do they worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.” As with
all Hellenistic pagan rituals we can find a spiritual interdependence and unity
between them. But behind this replace of the date G-d commanded is the premise
that man’s traditions or “legalism” supercedes G-d’s commandments.
Wherever there is a city with a major Jewish population we may observe
the feverish preparations for the Passover. It is a joyful and solemn occasion,
officially designated the “Season of Liberation” and also the “Season of
Joy”.
The deliverance of Israel from Egypt is the central point in Jewish
history and worship, even as Calvary is the central point in the Christian
faith. For on Calvary the work of redemption was accomplished for every believer
as was the redemption of Israel from slavery in Egypt.
On the eve before the day of Passover, Jewish homes are cleansed of all
leaven, in accordance with the command of G-d in Exodus 12:15 “Seven days
shall ye eat unleavened bread; even the first day ye shall put away leaven out
of your houses; for whosoever eateth leaven bread from the first day until the
seventh, that soul shall be cut off from Israel.”
The youngest son of the Jewish household has a hand in helping the father
perform the Mitzvah (a good deed). Obligingly the little boy probably has
scattered a few crumbs in the corners of the house so that the father might be
able to sweep them away and pronounce the traditional benediction for the
occasion.
“Blessed art thou, Lord our G-d, King of the universe who has
sanctified us with thy commandments and commanded us to remove all leaven from
our household.”
For days and weeks the mother would have been busy cleaning, in
preparation for that great season of Pesach, the Passover. All the pots and pans
have had to be cleansed in boiling water from all vestige of leaven that might
possibly cling to them, before they could be used for the feast of the
“Unleavened Bread.”
Only then could the “matzos,” the unleavened bread, be brought into
the house.
In the evening after the service at the synagogue the father returns to a
festively decorated house. The family is dressed in holiday finery assembled
around the table. Now the father is ready to preside, reclining in kingly
manner, and to conduct the celebration. The traditional symbols of the Passover
are spread on the table. The house is well lit even as were the Hebrew homes
when darkness descended in Egypt.
A special place of honor is reserved for Elijah, the herald of Messiah,
in case he comes on this most solemn night and announce the joyful news that the
Messiah has at last come, for the rabbis say Messiah is most likely to come the
night of Passover. And so a place at the table is set for Elijah, the
traditional cup of Elijah is filled with wine, and empty chair awaits the
heavenly guest. Will he come? Will he sip the wine? These are the secret
questions of every heart. What high hopes that cup symbolizes and what dreams
are shattered at the sight of it remaining untouched.
On the Passover table we see a glass of salt water, symbolic of the Red
Sea through which G-d led His people, and also reminiscent of the tears of the
Hebrew ancestors shed during their enslavement.
Also the unleavened bread, or the matzos, three of them, are covered with
a white napkin. theses matzos are descendants in a straight line from the
original unleavened cakes which Jews hastily prepared when Pharaoh at last
decreed that the Jews might leave-immediately.
Prominent among the Passover symbols is the shank bone in place of the
lamb which G-d commanded be eaten
in every Jewish house hold on the night of Passover.
In Exodus 12:3 it states: “In the tenth day of the month they shall
take to them every man a lamb, according to the house of their fathers, a lamb
for an house”
This is the eternal reminder that it was the blood of the lamb, sprinkled
on the doorposts of every Jewish home, which stood between them and the death on
that Passover night when G-d brought his wrath upon the firstborn of Egypt.
The four cups of red wine are symbols of the blood of the lamb, and the
hard boiled egg is symbolic of the second sacrifice for the Passover day. The
bitter herbs, usually horseradish, bring tears to the eyes of the participants
and remind them of the bitterness and the sorrow of slavery of their forefathers
under Pharaoh.
Then there is charoseth. It is a claylike substance made of apples and
nuts which typifies the clay from which the Israelites were forced to fashion
bricks to build the mighty cities and fortresses of the Pharaohs, Pithom and
Raamses.
It was probably at this point that Yahshua, our Savior washed His hands
and girded Himself with a towel and stooped to wash the feet of the disciples.
John 13:4,5 says: “He took a towel, and girded himself...and began to
wash the disciples’ feet.”
And now the father of this Jewish household washes his hands and
pronounces the benediction over the wine and all drink of it, even as our Lord
and His disciples did.
Then begins the long recital in sonorous chanting voice of the story of
G-d’s deliverance of His people from Egypt.
“We were slaves of Pharaoh in Egypt”...
For two hours he relates in detail the events preceding the Passover,
enlarging on every point, for it is a good and meritorious deed to make much of
G-d’s mighty exploits. At one point all the symbols on the table are
explained. The poor and hungry are invited to come in and to partake.
When counting the ten plagues which G-d sent on Pharaoh and his people,
the father dips his finger in the cup, causing one drop of wine to fall for each
plague, and counts: Daam, tsefardea, kinim - blood, frogs, vermin.
Year
by year with unfailing regularity Jews have been repeating the Passover story
drawing renewed hope and strength to carry them through whatever suffering and
persecution the years might bring along. G-d delivered his people from Pharaoh,
Haman, the Hitlers, the Stalins and He will not fail His people in the future as
the Bible records.
It was here in this Upper Room that Passover at last obtained its real
meaning and deepest significance.
He said: “With desire I have desired to eat this Passover with you
before I suffer” (Luke 22:15).
Even so the Yahshua HaMashiach sat down with His disciples and took the
bread, blessed it, broke it, and passed it around to His disciples, saying,
“Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for you: this do in
remembrance of me” (1 Cor. 11:24)
I
will praise thee, for thou has heard me, and art become my salvation.
The
stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner.
This
is the Lord’s doing; it is marvelous in our eyes.
This
is the day which the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it.
Yahshua arose, the first fruits of resurrection which is the next
festival G-d ordained. Because you see all the festivals are a prefigured type
of the Plan of G-d for humankind.
Today on Mount Zion in the Old City of Jerusalem is a shrine dear to the
hearts of Jews throughout the world. It holds the tomb of David, beloved King of
the Jews, upon which is engraved with golden Hebrew letters are the words, David
the King of Israel lives for evermore.”
I am sure the Apostle Peter must have known this tomb for he speaks about
it quite clearly in the Acts of the Apostles, when on the Day of Pentecost he
addressed a large number of Jews in Jerusalem, saying:
“Men and brethren, let me freely speak unto you of the patriarch David,
that he is both dead and buried, and his sepulcher is with us unto this day.
Therefore being a prophet, and knowing that G-d had sworn with an oath to
him, that of the fruit of his lions, according to the flesh, he would raise up
The Messiah to sit on his throne;
He seeing this before spake of the resurrection of Yahshua Ha Mashiach,
that his soul was not left in hell, neither his flesh did see corruption.
This Yahshua hath G-d raised up, wherefore we all are witnesses” (Acts
2:29-32)
As a result of this sermon 3,000 Jews became believers.
The Apostle Paul, writing by the Holy Spirit, summed up the significance
of this Passover for every child of G-d, when he wrote:
“Yahshua our Passover is sacrificed for us: therefore let us keep the
feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness;
but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth” (1 Cor. 5: 7,8)
Home