Although Passover is celebrated annually, the Israelite
homes were never again smeared with blood from the Passover lambs.
THIS WEEK'S TORAH PORTION:
Pesach (פסח | Passover)
Torah: Exodus 12:21-51
Haftarah: Joshua 3:5-7, 5:2-6:1, 6:27
Blood on the Doorposts
Moreover, they shall take some of the blood and put it on
the two doorposts and on the lintel of the houses in which they eat it. (Exodus
12:7)
Moses commanded the children of Israel to mark their
homes with the blood of the Passover lambs. They were to dip hyssop into the
blood and smear it on their doorposts. Although Passover was thereafter
celebrated annually, the Israelite homes were never again smeared with blood
from the Passover lambs. The smearing with blood was a one-time ritual. Every
Passover thereafter, the blood of the Passover lambs was splashed on the altar
in the Tabernacle/Temple as a remembrance of the plague of the firstborn and
the blood on the doorposts of Israelite homes in Egypt.
Try to imagine the Passover in the Temple on the day the
Master died. While His precious body hung dying on the cross, a short distance
outside the city walls pilgrims were flooding the Temple courts, leading their
lambs to slaughter. While His blood stained the stones beneath the cross, the
priesthood of Israel was splashing basin after basin of Passover blood against
the stones of the Temple altar. While the women wept at the foot of the cross,
the Levites in the Temple courts were chanting the songs of the Hallel: Psalms
113-119. Once slaughtered, the lambs in the Temple were hung from iron hooks in
crucifixion poses for skinning, and once skinned, they were bound by the
hooves, hand and foot as it were, to wooden poles, to be carried from the
Temple on the backs of the worshippers. Meanwhile, the Master hung in
crucifixion pose from iron nails, bound hand and foot to a wooden pole.
Believers have traditionally interpreted the Passover
blood on the doorway as a symbol of Messiah's blood. Consider a few of the
parallels. Messiah is called our Passover Lamb. He died at Passover time. Just
as the death came upon Egypt to claim the firstborns, so too all mankind is
given over to death. Just as those under the protection of the Passover lamb's
blood markings were protected from death, so too those who take refuge under
the blood of Messiah are protected from condemnation. They are given eternal
life and will overcome death in the resurrection.
What is more, Messiah's blood marked the soil of
Jerusalem, the city in which the Holy Temple is located. According to Jewish
tradition, Jerusalem and the Temple therein are called the "gateway to
heaven." It is as if Messiah's blood was smeared upon the doorposts of
heaven.
-First Fruits of Zion
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