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Every time the celebration
of the Passover occurs it always reminds me of the words that John the
Baptist chose to use to introduce the Messiah to Israel: ". . .behold the
Lamb of God" (John 1:36). There are some fascinating comparisons that exist
between the type and manner of lamb used to provide redemption for the
Israelites from the land of Egypt and the lamb of God used to provide
redemption for sin for all mankind.
The type of lamb slain by
the Israelites in Egypt was a male in its prime (1st yr.) (Ex 12:5) - the
Son of Man likewise died in the prime of his manhood (Mt 16:13, Lk 3:23).
The Passover lamb was brought in on the 10th day of the month Nisan (Ex
12:3) and Messiah was presented to Israel as He rode into Jerusalem on Palm
Sunday on the 10th of Nisan. From the 10th to the 14th the lamb was to be
inspected for any blemishes or spots (Ex 12:5) and Messiah's credentials
were examined during that interval and He was declared to be without fault
(John 18:38, 19:4, 19:6) or as Peter writes that He was brought as it were a
lamb without blemish or spot (1Pet 1:18-19). The Passover lamb was to be
killed on the 14th of Nisan literally "between evenings" (Ex 12:6) and
according to the Jewish historian Josephus, that time was somewhere between
approximately 12 noon and 2pm ("The Wars of the Jews," Book 6, Chap 9, Sec
3). The hours of 12pm to 3pm were the darkest hours of Messiah's agony (Mt
27:45). Without any explanation "why?" the Jewish people in Egypt were
instructed not to break any of the lamb's bones (Ex 12:46). John's gospel
indicates that the reason the Passover lamb's bones were not broken was to
prefigure Messiah's sacrifice which was offered without a bone of his body
being broken (John 19:36).
A shankbone of a lamb called "Z'ruah" is placed
on Passover Seder plates every year to remind the Jewish people that there
was death at every doorstep on the night of the 10th plague. It was either
their own firstborn son or a substitute lamb. The Jewish people were required
by God to trust in the blood of the Passover lamb to protect them from harm.
About 1400 years later God sent his firstborn son as ". . .the lamb of God
which taketh away the sin of the world" (John1:29). However, since God's
son is an everlasting being the value of the sacrifice provides an everlasting
benefit; such that whosoever puts their faith in the application of his blood
has everlasting life.
In closing let me share one final point. Isn't it
interesting that the same Hebrew word for shankbone ("Z'ruah") can also be
translated "arm"? Isa 53:1 reads: "Who hath believed our report? and to whom
is the arm ("Z'ruah") of the LORD revealed?" The shankbone on the Seder plate
reminds me that we should believe the report and have faith in the blood
provided by the "Z'ruah" of the LORD who, a little further down in Isa 53
it states of him that "He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened
not his mouth: he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before
her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth. He was taken from prison
and from judgment: and who shall declare his generation? for he was cut off
out of the land of the living: for the transgression of my people was he
stricken" (Isa 53:7-8). |