Exodus 12
These plagues could not continue forever. The Lord had a
plan that included more than judgment. Redemption had to come and the
fullness that atonement would bring to the Lord's people. It was
finally time for Israel to be brought out of the house of slavery. It
was time for the Lord to save.
In creating His nation and bringing them into The
Promised Land, the Lord provided the way for His beloved to look at
the world around them and to think about the part that their lives
played in His glorious decrees. Looking at the world and one's own
life well involves understanding the times. For the nation of Israel,
it all began with Passover. Therefore it was fitting that, according
to the Hebrew Bible, the month of Passover would be the first month
of the year for Israel.
God commanded them to perform certain rituals during
that first month, not just once, but forever. Those rituals center
around the blood of a sacrificial lamb. Think of all the lambs that
would be slaughtered in the years that would follow. All were to be
without blemish, all slaughtered at twilight on the fourteenth day of
that first month. On the first Passover, the blood of the sacrifice
would be a sign before the Lord who was coming in vengeance upon the
land of Egypt. The blood on the homes of the Israelites was a
testimony to their own need for a death that would take away the
wrath of God. It spoke a word about universal guilt, but also a
second word about particular redemption. The redemption was for all
who would believe the Lord's Word about the blood. The only
alternative to faith and participation was the wrath of the Lord upon
the firstborn. It was redemption through sacrificial blood along with
God's people or death.
The lamb that would be the source of the atoning blood
was not to be thrown away after giving the necessary life for this
ritual. It was eaten. The details of the meal underscored the need
for haste. No one should linger in the place of judgment.
This was the meal that God instituted as an annual
commemoration. It was a statute forever. Connected to this one day of
blood that turned away divine wrath was this urgency of moving out of
the place of bondage. There would be no time to let bread rise
according to the old ways under slavery. The future celebration of
this ritual would include getting rid of all leaven. At Passover and
during the Feast of Unleavened Bread, the Lord's nation would need to
remember that it was time to move forward in obedience to the Voice
of the Lord. To ignore this was as serious as ignoring the ritual of
circumcision. The person who treated these commands so lightly that
he did not bother to obey them would be cut off from the togetherness
of the Lord's household. He would no longer be a part of the
congregation of Israel.
Moses instructed the elders of Israel on these important
matters, and they in turn brought the message to all the tribes and
clans of Jacob. On that first Passover, the people of Israel in their
families would be the ones who would kill the lambs and sprinkle the
blood on their homes for the protection of ceremonial cleansing. They
would stay within their homes until the danger of the wrath of the
Lord was past. The Lord would use His destroyer against the firstborn
of Egypt. Israel was not to go out into that dangerous Day of the
Lord. But once the wrath of God had passed them by, they were to move
out of Egypt in haste.
This day of judgment upon Egypt would be a day of
redemption for Israel, a day to be celebrated and taught about in
Hebrew families for many generations to come. The children would
learn about “the sacrifice of the Lord's Passover” from the
adults. This defining event of the people of Jacob would be part of
the foundational heritage of those who worshiped the Lord.
Finally the moment of redemption came on that first
Passover. At midnight “the Lord struck down all the firstborn in
the land of Egypt.” Death was everywhere in Egypt, but the people
of Israel lived because of the blood of the lamb.
Pharaoh summoned Moses and Aaron, and this time he urged
them to go, asking for their blessing. In haste, the people of Israel
went out from Egypt, and they left with the jewelry of the Egyptians
according to the Lord's instruction. The wealth of this Gentile
nation came into the hands of the Lord's chosen people.
Six hundred thousand men of fighting age went out, and
all the women and children with them. They left at the urging of the
man who had resisted their freedom through many previous signs of
God's power. They had been in Egypt for over four hundred years. It
was time to move on. They and a mixed multitude that associated
themselves with them left the land of Pharaoh that night.
Anyone from the nations who might ever desire to eat of
the Passover had to come in to the nation of Israel through the gate
of circumcision. Then they too could partake.
But now another door into the Lord's household has been
opened wide for us, a better door than the ceremonial Law of God.
Through the one Lamb of God who was cut off for our sake, that one
true Lamb from heaven who has taken away the sins of the world, we
have been grafted into the Lord's saving purposes for Israel. No
longer must we be circumcised to have communion with the God of the
Jews. Nor do we all need to continue in the ritual of the Passover
ceremony. Our consciences have been sprinkled through the blood of
the true Lamb of God. We have communion in His flesh and blood with
all Jews and Gentiles who receive God's final redemptive Word and
believe. We have become sons of God by receiving Jesus.
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