A Night to Remember
Opening Prayer
Creating God, complete in me what You have begun. By the Spirit, carve away at the raw timber of my life, and shape me like Jesus.
Read Exodus 12:1-30
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Scripture taken from the THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, NIV Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Meditate
We must remember with gratitude God’s redemptive work for us.
Think Further
Christians everywhere celebrate God’s greatest act of redemption–Jesus’ death and resurrection. The letter to the Hebrews describes it as atonement for sins and victory over the powers of darkness (2:14-17). The Passover story in Exodus 12 foreshadows this (1-13). Pharaoh’s intransigence and cruelty is about to be judged and punished (12). Despite its wealth, cultural achievements and occult powers, this proud regime cannot stop the plague that will bring death to every household.
Just the opposite was happening for the Israelites. They gathered together in household groups to roast a young goat or lamb. It was a sacrifice where a life was given so that a family could feast on fellowship with God (Lev. 17:15). As death unfolded around them, they were protected and carried to freedom.
There was to be much wailing in Egypt (29,30), and the tragic event is reported without gloating. The Israelites realized it was by God’s grace that they were on the move.
God’s victory is to be celebrated every year (14-30). The key feature of the Passover meal is the clearing out of all traces of yeast and eating only flat bread (15,19, and 20). Wild yeast occurs as fungi, so flour and water kneaded into dough and left in a cool place will eventually attract yeast and rise. A small piece saved from one batch speeds up the process for future baking. Over the course of a year the reserved dough gradually becomes sour with waste products. The week represented the annual clear-out of things that had become stale and corrupt in their lives.
Both Jesus and Paul used the symbolism of yeast. Jesus said the Kingdom of God was like yeast, working its way through flour (Luke 13:20,21), growing and spreading into something good. Paul suggested the same image (1 Cor. 5:8).
Apply
Are there “stale and sour” things in your life that need to be discarded? Attitudes, priorities or relationships? Confess them to the Lord and thank him for his forgiveness.
Closing prayer
Lord, today I am full of gratitude to You for Your saving work in Jesus. He died, that I might live. Hallelujah, what a Savior!
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