This is “Keeping Passover and Unleavened Bread in 2022.” This will be part two (2) of a three (3) part discussion on Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread or Chag HaMatzah, which I’ve elected to entitle this particular discussion: “Keeping Passover by Way of the Original Covenant.”
As it relates to the honoring of the Passover of the Original Covenant, we must be on guard for those rabbinic traditions that nullify or diminish Yah’s Torah.
We should first be aware that Passover/Pesach is a one-day festival that immediately precedes–is actually adjacent–to the seven-day pilgrimage feast of Unleavened Bread, otherwise referred to in Hebrew as Chag HaMatzot. These two distinct festivals occur seamlessly synchronous: Passover occurs and then blends right into the start of Unleavened Bread (ULB). Pesach ends and ULB immediately begins. Because of this seamless synchronicity, most Torah-observant people view and treat Passover and Unleavened Bread as one, eight-day feast.
In our last post, entitled Shabbat HaGadol-The Path to Redemption and Atonement-we discussed the Jewish concept of “z’man cheiruteinu,” which essentially assigns Passover the central theme of it being a time to honor and reflect upon Yisra’el’s freedom from abject bondage and redemption from Egyptian slavery by the Mighty hand/arm of YHVH.
Rav Shaul (the Apostle Paul) wrote to the Messianic Assembly of Believers in Colossae:
(16) Therefore, let no one pass judgment on you in questions of food and drink, or with regard to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath. (17) These are a shadow of the things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ (Mashiyach). (Col. 2:16-17; ESV)
The AENT rendering of this passage is as follows:
(16) Let no (pagan) therefore judge you about food and drink, or about the distinctions of festivals and new moons and Shabbats (17) which were shadows of the things then future; but the body of Mashiyach.
Here is another example of Shaul having to put into proper perspective questions and issues related to his readers’ respective walks in Messiah that one way or another made it to his attention. In this case, the Colossae assembly seemed to be undergoing some criticism from outsiders (of the assembly and general Body of Messiah) regarding the keeping of the dietary laws and the various feasts and special days of Yah that are part and parcel of Yah’s calendar year. These criticisms no doubt were concerning to the assembly members. It’s conceivable that these criticisms may have even introduced some degree of confusion and uncertainty as it relates to the appropriateness of the members of the Colossian Assembly keeping such mitzvot, traditions, and observances.
Shaul attempts to refocus the Colossian Messianics’ fears by counseling them to not pay those outside criticizers any mind. In fact, the only individuals who they should consult in terms of these mitzvot, traditions, and observances is the true Body of Mashiyach. Not unconverted family members and so-called friends. Not denominationalist teachers, preachers, and self-professing scholars. Not bosses or coworkers. Not only are these outsiders ignorant of the true importance of Yah’s Torah to Yah’s set-apart people, their motives may be less than honorable and pure. These are journeying on a pathway that leads only towards darkness and ultimately destruction (Mat. 7:13; Luk. 13:24).
Sadly, this Colossians passage has been hijacked by denominationalists who use it as one of their anti-Torah proof passages. These insist that Shaul here (and in other similar passages) was effectively instituting a life of lawlessness for the New Testament people of God. Such thinking and twisting of Shaul’s writings, as we’ve discussed numerous times on this platform, are just that: A twisting of the apostle’s words, which effectively is a twisting of our Master’s teachings since we’ve shown also countless times that Shaul and Yahoshua our Master were in “lock-step” as it related to their teaching and preaching of the Gospel message.
So then, Shaul suggests that we consult only the [true] Body of Mashiyach as it relates to any questions or issues we may have regarding the keeping of feasts, the Sabbath, the calendar, and the food laws. And today, since the [true] Body of Mashiyach is so scattered, this is accomplished in whatever manner you are so led by Yah’s Ruach (eg., your local fellowship; ministries based on the internet that you trust; the written words of Yah’s anointed teachers, preachers, and so forth).
Clearly, the foundational element of Passover is Yisra’el’s exodus out of Egypt/Mitsrayim. And many of us in this faith community place a great amount of emphasis on this reality. I’ve said this many times on this platform: We essentially remain at the base of Mount Sinai. But if we can shift around our focus to that of the Renewed Covenant, using the Torah of the Original Covenant as our foundation and guide, we will understand how to operate effectively in the Renewed Covenant.
Some have likened our present situation in the Body of Mashiyach to that of our ancient Hebrew cousins: That we are effectively residing in the abject, bitter spiritual bondage of this world. And that it is scripture that tells us of a “Greater Exodus” to come, whereby those of us who will be chosen to be a part of it, will have to have an understanding of how to operate within the framework of that Greater Exodus. And the first Exodus contains that knowledge–that information–that will be needed to effectively navigate the Greater Exodus.
We learn of this “Greater Exodus” in Jeremiah/Yirmeyahu 23:
(3) I will gather in the remnant of my people in every land, whither I have driven them out, and will set them in their pasture; and they shall increase and be multiplied. (5) Behold, the days come, saith the LORD, that I will raise unto David a righteous Branch, and a King shall reign and prosper, and shall execute judgment and justice in the earth. (7) Therefore, behold, the days come, saith the Lord, when they shall no more say, The Lord lives, who brought up the house of Isra’el out of the land of Egypt; (8) but The Lord lives, who has gathered the whole seed of Isra’el from the north land, and from all the countries whither he had driven them out, and has restored them into their own land (LXX).
Isaiah/Yesha’yahu also contributes to the discussion about the Greater Exodus in chapters 14 and 43 of the cepher that bears his name:
(14:1) And the Lord will have mercy on Jacob, and will yet choose Isra’el, and they shall rest on their land: And the stranger shall be added to them, yea, shall be added to the house of Jacob. (14:2) And the Gentiles shall take them, and bring them into their place: And they shall inherit them, and they shall be multiplied upon the land for servants and handmaidens: And they that took them captives shall become captives to them; and they that had lordship over them shall be under their rule. (43:5) Fear not; for I am with thee: I will bring thy seed from the east, and will gather thee from the west. (43:6) I will say to the north, bring; and to the south, keep not back; bring my sons from the land afar off, and my daughters from the ends of the earth; even all who are called by My Name: for I have prepared him for My glory, and I have formed him, and have made him (LXX).
Ezekiel 34:12-14–As the shepherd seeks his flock, in the day when there is darkness and cloud, in the midst of the sheep that are separated: So will I seek out my sheep, and will bring them back from every place where they are scattered in the day of cloud and darkness. And I will bring them out from the Gentiles, and will gather them from the countries, and will bring them into their own land, and will feed them upon the mountains of Isra’el, and in the valleys, and in every inhabited place of the land. I will feed them in a good pasture, on a high mountain of Isra’el: And their folds shall be there, and they shall lie down, and there shall they rest in perfect prosperity, and they shall feed in a fat pasture on the mountains of Isra’el (LXX).
As arduous and tragic as our ancient Hebrew cousins’ plight may have been during those many years of bitter bondage, that which hasatan meant for evil (such that the utter and complete destruction of the Hebrew nation), Yah ultimately turned those lemons into lemonade. The squeezing of Yisra’el during the time of their Egyptian enslavement served to keep the nation as one nation of people. For had there been NO bondage inflicted upon the people, it is likely the nation would have been absorbed into Egypt’s melting-pot of cultures and peoples. Yisra’el could have just as easily been a brief note in the pages of human history. But Yah’s plans for His bride Yisra’el would not be deterred by the enemy’s evil agenda, which in great part to destroy the people and lineage by which Mashiyach would ultimately come.
In the midst of Yisra’el’s bitter enslavement and bondage, Yehovah heard her cries and pleas for freedom. And it was the cries of the people that prompted Yah to remember the covenant He’d made with Avraham, Yitschaq, and Ya’achov. Thus, Yah chose Moshe to lead His bride, Yisra’el out of bitter Egyptian bondage.
Egypt’s pharaoh would not, however, release Yisra’el from her bondage without having to endure a series of 10-plagues that Yah declared would serve as judgment against the tribulators of His people and the gods of Egypt:
(12) And I hearkened to the groaning of the children of Isra’el and I remembered the covenant with you”…(15) and I will go throughout the land of Egypt in that night, and will smite every first-born in the land of Egypt, both man and beast, and on all the gods of Egypt will I execute vengeance: I am the Lord” (Exodus/Shemot 12:2).
Just prior to the final plague Yah would bring against the Egyptians and their gods, Yah’s providence and foresight brought Yisra’el to be favored by their Egyptian overlords. Those Egyptian overlords lavished their Yisra’eli slaves with great material wealth (Exodus/Shemot 11:2-3, 35-36). And thus, Yisra’el did not leave Egypt as paupers, but as a wealthy nation.
It was immediately after Yisra’el “plundered” her overlords that Yah instituted the very first pesach/passover ritual:
(1) And the Lord spoke to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, saying, (2) this month shall be to you the beginning of months: It is the first to you among the months of the year. (3) Speak to all the congregation of the children of Isra’el, saying, On the tenth of this month let them take each man a lamb, according to the house of their fathers, a lamb for an house: (4) And if they be few in a household, so that there are not enough for the lamb, he shall take with himself his neighbour that lives near to him, –as to the number of souls, every one according to that which suffices him shall make a reckoning for the land. (5) It shall be to you a lamb unblemished, a male of a year old: Ye shall take it of the lambs and the kids (Exodus/Shemot 12:1-5). (If you’ve not already done so, and are led to do so, I would humbly invite you to read and or listen to our discussion entitled “Shabbat HaGadol: The Pathway to Redemption and Atonement.”)
This unblemished, perfect lamb upon being selected by each household, was to be kept by that household, in their dwellings, from the 10th to the 14th day of the Month of the Aviv. But then, sometime between noon and dusk on the 14th, we were instructed to slaughter the animal (Exodus/Shemot 12:6; cf. Deuteronomy/Devarim 16:6).
Two things were to happen to the carcass of the slaughtered lamb or kid: (1) Collect the animal’s blood and apply it to the door-posts and lintel of each home/dwelling; and (2) roast and eat the flesh of the animal along with unleavened bread and bitter herbs in haste (the Hebrew being “b’chippazown” which means to go as in a hasty flight) and while fully dressed (that being our loins girded or belt on our waists, our sandals on our feet, and our staffs in our hands) (Exodus/Shemot 12:7-11).
Beloved, there is nothing likened unto the fancy, shmancy, elaborate Seders many Jews and Messianics have come to enjoy each Pesach/Passover season. Maybe those modern Seders have lost something in their “translation” or application of this solemn meal, and many of us have as a consequence become somewhat jaded by the event. It’s important to know the fullness of what happened back then, and what Yah wants us to get out of this set-apart day. Certainly the forefathers did not have the luxury of such an elaborate occasion as many in our faith enjoy today. But that’s just me.
The prophetic shadows of this ritual are easily recognized. Clearly the unblemished lamb that would be selected on the 10th day, kept and tended to by each family, and then slaughtered 4-days later is emblematic of our Master Yahoshua Messiah. Each of the elements of the meal carried with it a spiritual meaning: the bitter herbs representing the harshness and bitterness of our captivity; the unleavened bread representing our move towards living a sinless life, as well as it represented the haste by which we were to prepare and consume the meal. We were being readied for a hasty departure out of Egypt early in the morning. Finishing the entire meal that night without leaving any for the next day; burning whatever was left.
The blood that was applied to the entrances of our homes was indicative of our obedience to Yah’s instructions (Exodus/Shemot 12:12-13). For the difference between life and death that night was our obedience Yah’s instructions. Those who obeyed Yah and applied the blood of the lamb/kid to the door-posts and lintels of our homes as instructed would be spared grief and death and misery, while those who for whatever reason chose not to obey Yah suffered greatly. Those who obeyed got to leave Egypt and leave their life of bondage behind them. Conversely, those who for whatever reason chose not to obey Yah no doubt stayed behind and had to endure whatever life awaited them in a land of many gods who would that night be judged by the One True and Living Elohim: Yehovah. Death would bypass those marked homes that terrible night. And as a shadow of that terrible night, we know that Yahoshua’s blood when applied to our lives also spares us from eternal death and separation from Yah.
Again, the prophetic shadows are too great to overlook or deny. The Pesach or Passover Lamb plays centrally in the 10th day of the Month of the Aviv, as well as the Pesach sacrifice and how the sacrifice is treated. Yochanan the Immerser (aka John the Baptist) declared of Yahoshua:
“…Look! God’s lamb! The one who is taking away the sin of the world” (Joh. 1:29; CJB).
Our Jewish cousins cannot appreciate Exodus/Shemot 12 as much as we can. For the first Pesach/Passover was not just the precipitating event that ushered in the Hebrew nation’s exodus out of Egypt, but it was also an emblematic rehearsal of the Passion of our Master and Saviour Yahoshua HaMashiyach. And as wondrous as the elements of the first Passover may appear to those of us in this faith community, we must keep all those elements within their proper perspective. In other words, we must factor in the requirements of the Renewed Covenant that our Master set forth for us, while honoring and keeping Pesach/Passover in its proper Spirit and Truth paradigm. We’ll talk more about that in a moment.
We find then in verses 14-18 that Yah instructs us to keep the feast of Pesach/Passover, which includes both Passover night and the 7-days of Matzah/Unleavened Bread. Passover/Pesach is to be an “everlasting ordinance” for the people of Yah. During the 7-days of Matzot/Unleavened Bread, we are required to remove all leaven from our dwellings, NOT consume leavened foods, and eat unleavened bread, perform no work and convene a sacred convocation on the first and 7th-day of that 7-day feast week (Exodus/Shemot 12). You may hear from time-to-time, especially in Jewish and in some Messianic circles that the first and last day of HaMatzot/Unleavened Bread (ULB) are “high Sabbaths” or “high holy days.” These days are meant to focus our attention on Yah and the things He is doing for His people, and not get caught-up with the cares of this life. These are rest days. We are commanded to convocate or be a part of a sacred gather to worship Yah and learn of Him and His Ways. We are permitted to prepare meals on that day, so as to enhance the celebratory nature of these set-apart days. There should be no other tasks or preparatory things done on these days.
Yah is emphatic that we have no leaven in our homes during these set-apart days; that we not consume any leaven during these set-apart days; and that we instead consume unleavened bread (verses 19-20). And this regulation still applies to us today. It is imperative that we go through our cupboards, pantries, refrigerators, and freezers and rid them of any leavened, or leavened-based products.
Now, I will not take it upon myself to instruct you on precisely which items fall within this category of leavened products. Based upon the level of zeal we possess in serving and obeying Yah’s instructions in righteousness will determine to what extent we rid our house of any leaven or potential leavened products. And then after that, not consume unleavened bread, and also consumed matzah throughout the 7-days of Chag HaMatzah/Unleavened Bread. Hilary and I each year go out and purchase one of those big family-sized boxes of matzah, and we eat matzah with whatever main dishes we intend to eat each day. It essentially becomes a part of our lives for those 7-days. And we look forward to it each biblical calendar year.
And thus, the first Pesach was inaugurated in the land of Egypt. The firstborn of those dwellings that did not have the blood of the Pesach applied to it, as well as the firstborn of the cattle all died that night, including Thutmose IV’s firstborn son. The firstborn of the homes, primarily those of the Hebrews, that had the Pesach’s blood applied to them, Yah spared, as the destroyer went throughout the Land of Egypt (Exodus/Shemot 12:23, 29). There’s a lot to be said about the issue of the firstborn being the target of Yah’s judgment. Recall back in chapter 2 of Exodus/Shemot that an unidentified Pharaoh commanded the Hebrew midwives to kill the boys of those born to Hebrew mothers at their birth, while sparing the girls (verses 15-16). And when that didn’t quite pan out because of Yah’s mercy and grace, Pharaoh commanded the citizens of Egypt to cast every boy born to a Hebrew family into the Nile River, while sparring the Hebrew girls (verses 17-22). This obviously upset Yehovah immensely.
We know that Yah has always had a special place in His heart for firstborn children, especially those firstborn of His covenant people. And when pharaoh launched a war against the male offspring of His covenant people, he crossed a line with Yehovah that could not be reversed. Yah viewed His covenant people as His firstborn—the shadows of this cannot be overstated. Of this issue related to the firstborn, Yah stated to Moshe:
(22) And you shall say to Pharaoh, “Thus said the LORD: My son, My firstborn, is Isra’el. (23) And I said to you, Send off My son that he may worship Me, and you refused to send him off, and look, I am about to kill your son, your firstborn (Exodus/Shemot 4).
Now back to the unleavened bread that the Hebrew had with their Pesach and bitter herbs during that “night to be most remembered,” there are tremendous spiritual and prophetic shadows associated with it, which we’ve touch ever so slightly in our discussion here, and we’ll certainly look at it later on. But there are also practical aspects of the unleavened bread as it related to the exodus. For we find in verse 39 of chapter 12 that practically speaking, that the Hebrews’ departure was of such a hasty manner that they did not have time to prepare meals for their journey. Therefore, they baked unleavened cakes for their journey. For there was no time to allow for the dough to rise.
The next several verses of the 12th chapter impress the swiftness of events that occurred that Pesach/Passover/night to be most remembered, all leading to the people’s immediate departure from Goshen in Egypt the very next morning. The text states:
“And it happened on that very day that the LORD brought the Isra’elites out of the land of Egypt in their battalions” (verse 51; Alter).
And so, we have the nuts and bolts of Pesach laid out before us here in the 12th chapter of Exodus/Shemot.
However, we find in Numbers/Bemidbar 9 record of the Hebrews’ second Passover observance (in the wilderness) where Yah added to the Exodus/Shemot 12 ordinance, the element and requirement of ritual purity for any who would keep Pesach (verses 1-3). Any who, during the appointed time of Pesach in the Month of Aviv, were found to be in a state of ritual impurity would be expected to keep Pesach on the 14th-day of Month-two of the calendar year at dusk. This Pesach/Passover is called Pesach Sheini.
Pesach is to be honored and kept by every Hebrew, and thus, Yah made provision for those who might find themselves in a position not to keep it. He is a merciful and loving Elohim.
But it should be understood that we have no record in Torah of the Hebrews keeping Pesach beyond the 2nd one as recorded in Numbers/Bemidbar 9. Not until the conquest of the Land of Promise:
(9) And the Lord said to Joshua the son of Nun, “On this day have I removed the reproach of Egypt from you:” And He called the name of that place Gilgal. (10) And the children of Isra’el kept the Passover on the 14th-day of the month at evening, to the westward of Jericho on the opposite side of the Jordan in the plain. (11) And they ate of the grain of the earth unleavened and new corn. (See, they’d not only kept Passover, but they also conducted Yom HaNafat HaOmer/the Wavesheaf Offering: A requirement in order for us to consume any new grain from the harvest of the Land that would be forthcoming.) (12) In this day the manna failed, after they had eaten of the corn of the land; and the children of Isra’el had not any more manna; but they did eat of the product of the Land of Canaan during that year (Joshua 5:9-12; LXX).
Thus, we have the template before us for keeping Pesach. There should be no excuses for keeping it by any of Yah’s covenant people.
But is this the whole of the story that we should follow or that our Ancient Hebrew cousins followed after they inherited the Land of Promise? And the answer is no. Yah actually made alterations to Pesach that all but eliminated the application of the Pesach’s blood to the door-posts and lintels of our homes, as well as the keeping of Pesach shifted from that of a family, home-centered observance, to that of a national observance at one central location.
Because we would be spread out across the Land of Canaan, Yah instructed that Pesach/Passover/Unleavened Bread be a required annual pilgrimage feast. Every household would be required to journey to the place where Yah chose to establish His Name for purposes of observing Pesach. The Pesach would now be sacrificed at the central location (I.e., at the place where the Tabernacle or the Temple stood).
Keeping Pesach/Passover/Unleavened Bread is a requirement for every chosen child of the Most High. However, because Yah altered the parameters and elements of this ordinance, and we no longer have a true, functioning, Levitical Priesthood, nor a functioning, standing Temple or Tabernacle (for that matter), we cannot keep Pesach as Yah conveyed to us in Torah. However, under the auspices of the renewed covenant, we are compelled to keep the elements of the ordinance of Pesach/Passover that remain viable to us today, all in Spirit and in Truth. One of the things we as renewed covenant saints in training is that we follow the example of our Master in terms of our keeping the ordinance of Pesach. And we’ll discuss this in our next installment.
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Now, a handful of key concepts must be factored into our understanding and even keeping of Pesach as outlined in the Original Covenant:
- The Pesach of the Original Covenant (I.e., the covenant passed down to us through Moshe) was part and parcel of our leaving Egypt and going to a destination that Yah has chosen for us. From a historic standpoint, it was Yah remembering the covenant He’d made with Avraham, Yitschaq, and Ya’achov, redeeming them and leading them out of Egyptian bondage (both physical and spiritual) and to the Land that He swore to give to Avraham as an inheritance. From a spiritual standpoint, it symbolized Yah’s Plan of Salvation-Redemption-Restoration, whereby, Yah makes provision for His chosen ones who enter covenant with Him to leave Egypt. To depart Egypt. To rid themselves of anything having to do with Egypt. And so, Egypt and Babylon are symbolic of the “world.” Yah calls His own to leave the world—and go to the place—the life that He has established for them.
Yochanan (aka John) the Revelator records the words of a voice out of heaven that declared:
(4) …”Come out of her (ie., spiritual Babylon/Egypt) my people; that you may not participate in her sins, and may not partake of her plagues. (5) For her sins have reached up to heaven; and Elohim has remembered her iniquities…” (Revelation 18; AENT).
Yah, through the Prophet Jeremiah/Yirmeyahu admonishes Yisra’el to:
(6) “Flee from the midst of Babylon; let every one save his life! Be not cut off in her punishment, for this is the time of Yah’s vengeance, the repayment He is rendering her…Go out of the midst of her, my people! Let every one save his life from the fierce anger of Yah” (51:6, 45; ESV modified).
Likewise, the Prophet Isaiah/Yesha’Yahu in a prophetic sense admonishes Yisra’el, pointing to the coming Greater Exodus of Yah’s elect:
(20) Go forth of Babylon, thou that fleest from the Chaldeans: utter aloud a voice of joy, and let this be made known, proclaim it to the end of the earth; say ye, The Lord hath delivered His servant Jacob. (21) And if they shall thirst, He shall lead them through the desert; He shall bring forth water to them out of the rock: the rock shall be cloven, and the water shall flow forth, and My people shall drink (48:20-21; LXX).
Rav Shaul (aka the Apostle Paul) declares this same call of Yah’s people coming out of the world in his second letter to the Messianic Assemblies in Corinth:
(15) Or what agreement has the Mashiyach with the Accuser or what part has a believer with an unbeliever? (16) Or what agreement has the temple of Elohim with that of demons? For you are the temple of the living Elohim; as it is said, “I will dwell among them, and walk among them, and will be their Elohim, and they will be My people (17) Wherefore, you come out from among them, and be separate from them” says Master Yehovah, “and don’t come near the unclean thing (here talking about Yah’s insistence that His chosen ones remain in a state of spiritual and ritual purity at all times) and I will receive you; (18) And will be to you a Father, and you will be sons and daughters to Me,” says Master Yehovah the Almighty (chapter 6; AENT).
Thus, Passover/Pesach serves as a rehearsal and a foreshadowing of our departure from the world via what has been dubbed as a Greater Exodus, and our settling into a restored Land of Yisra’el (cf. Hebrews 8:5; 10:1).
- From a historic perspective, Yah required any who would partake of the Pesach/Passover be circumcised:
(48) And should a sojourner sojourn with you and make the Passover offering to the LORD, he must circumcise every male of his, then may he draw near to do it and he shall be like a native of the land, but no uncircumcised man shall eat of it. (49) One law shall there be for the native and for the sojourner who sojourns in your midst (Exodus/Shemot 12:48-49; Alter).
So, Yah put forth the requirement of circumcision for any who would partake of the Pesach/Passover. And I’ve come across Messianic ministries that teach any male who would partake of the Pesach/Passover Seder today, they must be circumcised.
(I’ve expressed my personal views on the application of the mitzvah of physical circumcision for modern day Messianics in the post entitled: “Paul on Physical Circumcision for God’s People-A Question of One’s Jewishness Part 3.” If you’ve not had the opportunity to listen to or read that post, and you are so led, I would humbly encourage you to do so. Paul on Physical Circumcision for God’s People–A Question of One’s Jewishness Part 3 (themessianictorahobserver.org))
But I would go so far as to submit that under the auspices of the Renewed Covenant, we are all required to be circumcised first and foremost of the heart as taught by Rav Shaul:
(28) For he is not a Jew who is so in what is external (alone): nor is that (only physical) circumcision, which is visible in the flesh. (29) But he is a Jew who is so in what is hidden: And circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter, whose praise is not from men, but from Elohim (Romans 2; AENT; cf. Deuteronomy/Devarim 10:16; 30:6; Jeremiah/Yermi’Yahu 4:4; 2 Corinthians 10:18; Colossians 2:11; Philippians 3:3).
Physical circumcision for male believers aside, I believe covenant believer who is circumcised of heart is eligible to partake in the Pesach/Passover. Again, we cannot keep Pesach/Passover as conveyed to us by Yah for the previously stated reasons. Therefore, we keep Pesach/Passover in Spirit and in Truth, with a circumcised heart, with purity of heart, body, and soul.
Shaul admonished the Messianic Assembly in Corinth:
(7) Purge out from you the old leaven that you may be a new mass, as you are unleavened. For our Passover is the Mashiyach, who was slain for us. (8) Therefore, let us celebrate the festival, not with the old leaven, nor with the leaven of wickedness and bitterness, but with the leaven (or unleavened bread) of purity and sanctity (1 Corinthians 5; AENT).
Well, I pray that you got something out of this discussion on Keeping Passover and Unleavened Bread by Way of the Original Covenant. For we can’t fully appreciate and understanding keeping these set-apart days unless we have a full grasp of what the original covenant had to say about them.
In the third and final installment of this series, we’ll discuss Keeping Passover by Way of the Renewed Covenant. I’ll see you on the other side.
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And Yahweh said to Moses and to Aaron in the land of Egypt, saying, 2 “This month will be the beginning of months; it will be for you the first of the months of the year... “Observe the month of Abib, and you shall keep the Passover to Yahweh your God, for in the...
Why do we Dislike the God of the Old Testament? Thoughts & Reflections on Torah Reading 127
Introduction to Reading 127 This week's Torah Reading is contained in Deuteronomy 2.1-3.22. For all intents and purposes, it is a continuation of last week’s reading. It is the 127th Parashah of our 3-year Torah Reading cycle. I’ve been led to title this...
Deuteronomy-A Rehashing and Retelling of Torah to a New Generation-Thoughts and Reflections on Torah Reading 126
This week's Torah Reading, contained in Deuteronomy 1.1-46, is the 126th portion of our 3-year Torah Portion reading cycle. I’ve entitled this teaching: “Deuteronomy – A Rehashing and Retelling of Torah to a New Generation.” Deuteronomy is where we will be...
Explaining the Current Calendar Confusion Among Observational Calendar Keepers
Explaining the Current Calendar Confusion Among Observational Calendar Keepers Greetings Saints of the Most High. Trusting that this special post finds you, your families, and fellowships are well and blessed at the start of this new week. As I am...
The Torah of the Cities of Refuge–Thoughts and Reflections on Torah Reading 125
Shabbat Shalom. This week's Torah Reading, contained in Numbers 35:9-36:13, is the 125th portion of our 3-year Torah Portion reading cycle. And for our discussion today, we will focus only on verses 9 through 34 of chapter 35. This is, by the way, the final...