For the Jewish people, Passover is a day of remembrance of
the exodus from Egypt, but disciples of Yeshua have another important aspect of
Passover to remember.
THIS WEEK'S TORAH PORTION:
Pesach (פסח
| Passover)
Torah: Exodus 12:21-51
Haftarah: Joshua 3:5-7, 5:2-6:1, 6:27
A Memorial
Fourteen hundred years after the exodus from Egypt, Yeshua
went to Jerusalem with His disciples to keep the appointed time of Passover. He
and His disciples had been to Jerusalem to celebrate Passover many times, but
this time, as they neared Jerusalem, Yeshua said, “My time is near; I am to
keep the Passover” (Matthew 26:18). He knew that He was going to fulfill the
appointed time in a marvelous and unexpected way.
The Torah instructs the Jewish people to keep the first day
of Passover as a “memorial” of the exodus from Egypt. It works as one of God’s
reminders. God rescued Israel from Egypt and told the people to keep the
festival as an appointed time and a remembrance of their salvation.
Now this day will be a memorial to you, and you shall
celebrate it as a feast to the LORD; throughout your generations you are to
celebrate it as a permanent ordinance. (Exodus 12:14)
The Master kept the seder meal with His disciples in
Jerusalem. He took the unleavened bread and the customary Passover cup and
instructed His disciples to do so henceforth in remembrance of Him. On the day
of the sacrifice, He became a spiritual sacrifice—Israel’s Passover lamb. At the
appointed time for the Jewish people to sacrifice their Passover lambs in
remembrance of the nation’s salvation from Egypt, Yeshua went to the cross.
When believers keep Passover, we have two things to
remember. We remember the historic salvation from Egypt as the Torah commands
us, but we also remember the salvation granted to us through the sacrifice of
Yeshua. The two remembrances are not mutually exclusive. They naturally
complement one another.
Every year we keep Passover in remembrance of Yeshua.
Messiah Himself told us to do so: “And when He had taken some bread and given
thanks, He broke it and gave it to them, saying, ‘This is My body which is
given for you; do this in remembrance of Me’” (Luke 22:19). Did He have in mind
only the breaking bread and a sip from the fruit of the vine? No. He spoke
within the specific context of Passover. The commandment to do “this” in
remembrance of Yeshua refers to the Passover Seder meal. It is not one cup but
the traditional cups of Passover. It is not any bread; it is the unleavened
matzah bread of Passover. What could be more appropriate for a disciple of
Yeshua to do than to keep the festival of Passover in remembrance of Him, just
as He told His disciples?
-First Fruits of Zion
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