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Ambassador
College
Bible
Correspondence Course
Lesson 25
PASSOVER
The Beginning of God's Master Plan
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Paul said Christ is "our Passover" sacrifice. What did he
mean? Most people assume that Christ's death FINISHED the plan of God. Nothing
could be further from the truth. Let's understand why.
As Jesus Christ was expiring His last breath on the cross, He exclaimed:
"It is finished" (John 19:30). Traditional Christianity therefore has
assumed that the death of Christ finished God's plan of salvation.
But what was finished?
It was the work the Father commissioned Jesus to do (John 17:4). That work
included the sacrifice of His life as "our Passover" (I Cor. 5:7) to
pay the penalty of our sins.
But the death of Jesus did not finish the plan of salvation! Not at all. It
was only the beginning--the first step in God's Master Plan.
Passover Pictured Christ's Sacrifice
The first Passover was observed by the ancient Israelites just before their
exodus from Egypt. They had been slaves in Egypt for nearly a century before God
freed them through a series of plagues He caused to punish their Egyptian
captors for refusing to let them go. The 10th and last plague was death for
every firstborn in Egypt.
But none of the Israelites were harmed.
God, through Moses, had instructed every Israelite family in Egypt to
sacrifice a lamb and smear some of its blood on the doorposts of their houses.
On the night this was done, the death angel passed over every house marked with
lamb's blood.
God protected the ancient Israelites from physical death through a
symbol--the blood of these lambs. This was symbolic of the blood of Christ, the
"Lamb of God" (John 1:29), which would be shed much later to make
possible the spiritual salvation of mankind.
With the institution of the Passover, God began to reveal to His newly
forming nation and congregation ("church"--Acts 7:38) seven annual
festivals, and commanded that they be observed forever.
Why These Festivals?
God's annual festivals and Holy Days have tremendous spiritual meaning. They
not only bring His people together in holy convocations (commanded religious
assemblies), but more importantly, they reveal His great Master Plan by which He
is fulfilling His awesome purpose for humanity!
The annual observances God instituted reveal a step-by-step outline of how He
is accomplishing His supreme purpose. Each portrays a great event in God's plan
for the salvation of all mankind.
But the vast majority are deceived by Satan, the "god of this
world" (II Cor. 4:4; Rev. 12:9). They don't understand the true way to
salvation. That's because they do not know what sin is, nor what its penalty is.
Consequently they don't really know why man needs a Savior! The meaning of
repentance is not understood, or what God's way of life is all about. They don't
understand what God's Spirit is, why we need it, or how to receive it.
The religions of this world do not understand the processes of spiritual
begettal, growth and birth into God's divine Family. They do not know that God
is now calling only a few into His Church, or that those few are now being
trained to rule in Christ's soon-coming world-ruling government. Nor do they
realize that the vast "unsaved" majority will be given their
opportunity for salvation in a later, more favorable age, when Christ and His
Spirit-born assistants are ruling the earth.
All this truth is pictured by God's annual festivals and Holy Days! Those who
faithfully observe these commanded days are reminded of these spiritual truths
every year.
Just as the weekly Sabbath, if kept the way God intended, keeps man in a
right relationship with his Creator and in the understanding of His great
purpose for mankind, so the annual festivals and Sabbaths keep the Church in a
right knowledge of His plan. Any group that refuses to keep holy the days God
made holy is not in a right relationship with God, and simply does not
understand the true way to salvation!
God's days are for God's people--His Church. It will be through His Church,
during Christ's coming reign on earth, that the rest of the world will learn of
these days and their vitally important meaning for mankind.
New Testament Memorial of Christ's Death
God commanded the ancient Israelites to observe the Passover as a yearly
reminder of His delivering their firstborn from death in Egypt. Christians today
are also commanded by God to observe the Passover, with its New Testament
symbols of unleavened bread and wine, as a yearly reminder of His delivering
them from the penalty of eternal death through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ,
"our Passover" (I Cor. 5:7), who became the New Testament Passover
"Lamb" (John 1:29).
The Bible clearly shows that the death of Christ is the first event, the
first step, in God's great plan for eventually bringing thousands of millions
into His divine Family. The Passover, the first of God's annual festivals,
pictures that event. Jesus commanded that it be observed every year, with new
symbols, so we would always remember His great sacrifice for us.
The Church Jesus built and promised to preserve understands that the New
Testament Passover is the annual memorial of the suffering and death of Jesus
Christ--that it pictures our being reconciled to God through a Savior who
rescued us from the penalty of our past sins.
But this deceived world does not understand the real meaning of Christ's
sacrifice. Instead of keeping the Passover, traditional Christianity observes
Easter, supposedly in honor of Christ's resurrection. Yet the Bible nowhere
commands us to celebrate His resurrection. And the world even has the
resurrection on the wrong day! (The origin of Easter, and what the Bible says
about this and other religious holidays, will be covered in a future lesson.)
God's Church has the precious knowledge of His truth, and His Spirit-begotten
children faithfully observe all of His annual festivals!
You are about to begin a fascinating series of lessons that will thoroughly
explain the meaning of God's seven annual festivals and Holy Days. Let's begin
studying the details of the first step in God's marvelous Master Plan--the
Passover.
LESSON 25
Passover Lamb Prophetic of Christ's Sacrifice
God's annual festivals are full of meaning. They were given to teach us the
knowledge of the seven steps in God's plan for our spiritual salvation and
Sonship in His Family.
God first began to reveal His festivals and Holy Days to the ancient
Israelites while they were slaves in Egypt. It was then that God commanded His
people to observe the Passover. Today, we can understand that this festival
pictures the first step in God's Master Plan.
The Old Testament Passover was a commemoration of the first Passover God
instituted for the deliverance of the Israelites' firstborn from the plague of
death. God had been pouring out His plagues on Egypt to influence the Pharaoh to
free the Israelites so they could worship Him in the wilderness (Exodus chapters
5 through 11).
We find the historical record of the first Passover in the 12th chapter of
Exodus.
1. Before God delivered His people from slavery in Egypt, did He reveal when
the new year should begin? Ex. 12:1-2. What is the name of the first month of
the year as God counts time? Ex. 13:4.
COMMENT: The Israelites had been in Egyptian bondage for nearly a century.
They were forced to work seven days a week and adapt to the Egyptian calendar
and Egyptian holidays. It was now God's time to reverse this situation and claim
these descendants of righteous Abraham as His own chosen people (Deut. 7:8).
They needed a complete reorganization of their social, religious and work
customs.
God began by correcting the way they were keeping time. He commanded that the
month Abib (which came to be called Nisan after the Babylonian captivity--Esther
3:7) be their first month. "Abib" is derived from the Hebrew word aviv,
meaning "ears" or "green ears of grain." It is the month in
which green ears of grain ripen--barley first, then winter wheat, which is
usually still in green ears when the barley ripens. Thus God's calendar begins
in the spring in the Northern Hemisphere.
It should be noted, however, that the civil New Year celebrated by the Jews
today is in the autumn. Although the Jews use Abib as the first month for
religious reckoning, they use Tishri, the seventh month of God's calendar, as
the beginning of the civil and governmental year.
As we learned in Lesson 23, God has used the Jews to preserve the Hebrew
scriptures and calendar by which His Church, using the instructions preserved in
the Bible, can accurately calculate when God's festivals are to be observed.
2. What was each Israelite family to do on the 10th day of Abib? Ex. 12:3.
Were they to select lambs without any deformities, diseases or imperfections?
Verse 5. What is Jesus Christ called in John 1:29? Were the Israelites' lambs
therefore prophetic of Christ, our Savior "Lamb," who was
sinless--without spiritual blemish or spot? I Pet. 1:19.
3. On what day of the first month were the Israelites to slay the lambs they
had selected? Ex. 12:6.
COMMENT: The Hebrew from which "in the evening" is translated
literally means "between the two evenings" (see margin of most King
James Versions). The Jewish Publication Society translated this phrase "at
dusk" (1955 edition of The Holy Scriptures) and "at twilight"
(1962 edition). To judge from this translation, the first evening is when the sun
goes over the horizon and the new day begins; the second evening when it has
become dark and the stars are visible.
Some Jewish commentators redefine this phrase. But the teaching of the Church
of God is that the lambs were killed just after sunset, in the very beginning of
the 14th of Abib.
4. As soon as the lambs were killed, what was to be done with some of their
blood? Verses 7, 22. Were the Israelites then to roast and eat the lambs with
unleavened bread and bitter herbs? Verse 8.
5. What happened to the Egyptian firstborn on this night of the first
Passover? Verses 12, 29. Had God promised not to kill--to "pass
over"--the Israelites' firstborn? Verse 13. Was it the lambs' blood they
had struck on the side and upper doorposts of their houses that saved the
firstborn from death? Same verse.
COMMENT: The Israelites' firstborn clearly were protected from the plague of
death by the blood of the lambs that had been applied to the doorposts of their
houses. It was a "token" or sign showing that the household was to be
spared.
Today, we can be protected from the penalty of eternal death our sins have
earned through the blood of Christ, "our Passover" Lamb, who was
"sacrificed for us" (I Cor. 5:7).
God had Israel act out, in a physical way, a type or foreshadow of Christ,
"the Lamb of God"--"Christ our Passover"--who would come
nearly 1,500 years later to shed His blood, giving His perfect, sinless life as
a sacrifice to pay the penalty of our transgressions of God's law.
6. For how long did God command Israel to keep the Passover? Ex. 12:14, 24.
COMMENT: Before making His covenant with the Israelites at Mt. Sinai, God
commanded them to keep the Passover forever--not just until Christ's death,
which ended that covenant. When God declares a law to be everlasting, He means
it! No authorization from God was ever given to cease observing this
tremendously important festival!
From its first institution in Egypt, the Passover became a yearly memorial of
the Eternal's passing over Israel and sparing their firstborn from death. But
the Passover also looked forward to the time when the Savior of all humanity
would come to shed His blood, paying the penalty of human sin in full by His
sacrifice, thus making possible the remission of our sins upon repentance and
baptism.
Jesus Kept the Passover
1. When Jesus was young, did He go to Jerusalem with His parents, who kept
the Passover every year? Luke 2:40-42.
2. When Jesus began His ministry, did He continue to observe the Passover?
John 2:13, 23.
COMMENT: Before and during His ministry, Jesus kept all of God's annual
festivals, including the Passover. He, as the LORD of the Old Testament, is the
One who revealed these festivals to ancient Israel and kept them Himself during
His life on earth as a human being!
Before His crucifixion, Christ instructed His disciples how the New Testament
Passover should be observed by true Christians in remembrance of His suffering
and death, as we'll see a little later in this lesson.
3. Did Jesus observe with His 12 disciples on the night before He was
crucified? Matt. 26:17-21; Luke 22:13-15.
COMMENT: Just before instituting the New Testament Passover symbols on the
evening of the 14th of Abib, Jesus and His disciples ate roast lamb, as He
ordained for the original Old Testament observance of this festival.
It should be noted, however, that they were not eating a sin offering. The
Passover lamb is nowhere called a sin offering in the Bible. The Bible plainly
shows that sin offerings were not instituted until after the Israelites had come
out of Egypt--until after the Ten Commandments were given at Mt. Sinai and
broken.
The Passover was instituted in Egypt weeks before the Israelites arrived at
Mt. Sinai and was repeated in the covenant made at Sinai, but it was not
instituted by that covenant! The sacrifices instituted after the covenant was
made and ratified at Sinai ceased to be necessary at Christ's death. Therefore
they were not perpetuated by symbols in the New Testament Church. Only the
Passover is continued; and it only with the new symbols of unleavened bread and
wine. This was thoroughly explained in Lesson 17.
4. Were the Jews of Judea in Jesus' day observing the Passover one day later
than He and His disciples? John 18:28; 19:14.
Comment: The Apostle John shows that the Pharisees and the Sadducees
held the
Passover at a later time than did Christ. The Jews in Judea did not observe the
biblical Passover at the beginning of the 14th of Nisan (Abib). They killed
their lambs toward the end (in afternoon) of the 14th and ate them on the night
of the 15th, the first Holy or High Day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread!
To this day, the Jews do not distinguish between the night of the Passover
(Ex. 12:22 and the night after the Passover, when the Israelites left Egypt
(Num. 33:3; Ex. 12:42). Therefore the Jews today do not keep the real Passover
at the time or in the manner Jesus instructed His disciples. They eat their
ceremonial Passover meal, consisting of roast lamb and bitter herbs, on the
evening of the 15th.
CHRIST OUR PASSOVER
(I Corinthians 5:7)
Chronology of events on the day of Christ' crucifixion, A.D. 31 |
14th of Abib |
Evening
(after sunset) |
Night
(before dawn) |
Morning
(after dawn) |
Afternoon
(about 3 pm) |
| Christ institutes ordinance of foot washing and
new symbols of unleavened bread and wine during His last supper.
Matt. 26:20, 26-29
Mark 14:17, 22-25
Luke 22:14-20
John 13:1-17 |
Christ teaches His disciples, is betrayed and
arrested, questioned by Annas and informally tried by Sanhedrin
Matt. 26:30-75
Mark 14:26-72
Luke 22:24-65
John 13:31-18:27 |
Christ is formally tried and condemned, appears
before Pilate, Herod, Pilate again, scourged and nailed to the stake.
Matt. 27:1-45
Mark 15:1-33
Luke 22:66-23:45
John 18:28-19:27 |
Christ is speared in the side by a Roman soldier and killed;
His body carried to the tomb just before sunset.
Matt. 27:46-60
Mark 15:34-46
Luke 23:46-54
John 19:28-42 |
| A.D. 31 |
1st Month Abib-Nisan |
A.D. 31 |
| Sun |
Mon |
Tues |
Wed |
Thurs |
Fri |
Sabbath |
| |
|
|
|
1-New Moon |
2 |
3 |
| 4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
| 11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15-1st D.U.B. |
16 |
17 |
| 18 |
19 |
20 |
21-Last D.U.B. |
22 |
23 |
24 |
| 25 |
26 |
27 |
28 |
29 |
30 |
|
D.U.B.= Day of Unleavened Bread
Christ Institutes Ordinance of Humility
On the evening before Jesus Christ's crucifixion, while He and His disciples
were partaking of the Old Testament Passover lamb for the last time, Jesus gave
some specific commands for His New Testament Church. The Apostle John recorded
the first vital part of Jesus' institution of the New Testament Passover.
1. Did Jesus wash His disciples' feet as part of the new way of observing the
Passover? John 13: 1-5.
COMMENT: In verse 2, the words "and supper being ended" should
properly be rendered "and during supper," as it is in a number of
modern translations. The washing of feet was not part of the Old Testament
Passover. This was being instituted for the first time by Christ Himself!
2. Did Peter, at first, refuse to allow Jesus to wash his feet? Verses 6-8.
Could Peter have any relationship with Jesus unless he allowed him to wash his
feet? Verse 8.
COMMENT: Since open-toed sandals were the customary footwear of the day, feet
could become quite dirty. Foot washing, upon entering a house, was considered a
menial task, usually done by the lowest servants.
Peter, not yet understanding the purpose of the ceremony Jesus was then
instituting, protested. But Jesus explained that unless Peter took part in the
foot-washing ceremony, he could have no relationship with Him--he could not be a
Christian! Neither can we.
3. Why did Jesus institute this new observance of foot washing in connection
with the New Testament Passover? Verses 12-16.
COMMENT: By washing their feet, Jesus was illustrating to His disciples that
He had come to earth to serve mankind. Shortly afterward, He proved the extent
of His willing and loving service when He gave His very life for the sins of all
mankind! (John 15:13). He suffered the most humiliating and excruciatingly
painful death imaginable in order to save us all from the penalty of eternal
death!
Jesus explained that if He, being the Master, would serve mankind, then His
disciples ought to also serve one another and the world. Jesus instituted foot
washing in connection with the New Testament Passover as a symbol of service. It
is a physical reminder of the principle He had taught them before: that they
ought to be "as the Son of Man [who] did not come to be served, but to
serve, and to give His life a ransom for many" (Matt. 20:28, RAV).
A willingness to serve and help others is an essential part of every
Christian's training to be a loving ruler in God's Kingdom, where every ruler
will administer God's government for the benefit of others rather than himself
(Luke 22:25-27).
Notice what the Apostle Paul, who practiced what he preached, tells us about
having a servant's attitude: "Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain
conceit, but in humility consider others better than yourselves.... Your
attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: Who...made himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant.... He humbled himself and became obedient
to death--even death on a cross!" (Phil. 2:3, 5-8, NIV).
The New Testament shows that Christ's apostles did serve, just as He did,
preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom of God. History records that most of them
also gave their lives in that service.
4. Did Jesus plainly command His disciples to wash one another's feet? John
13:14-15. Were they to teach the world to do likewise? Matt. 28:19-20.
COMMENT: Some today, who are not yielded to God's will and are unwilling to
be servants, do not want to humble themselves by washing someone else's feet.
But Christ made it absolutely clear that all Christians should follow His
example of service to others! If Jesus is our Lord and Master, we also
"ought to wash one another's feet" at the Passover service once each
year.
5. What special blessing is promised to those who obey Christ's words by
participating in this meaningful ceremony at the Passover service? John 13:17;
14:23.
The New Symbols
Now let's notice what else Jesus commanded His disciples to do after He
finished washing their feet.
1. What completely new way of observing the Passover did Jesus institute
shortly before His crucifixion? Luke 22:19-20; Matt. 26:26-29.
2. Was unleavened bread to symbolically represent Christ's body, which was to
be brutally beaten and cut open for mankind? Luke 22:19; Matt. 26:26.
COMMENT: We know that Jesus was using unleavened bread because the Old
Testament Passover was always eaten with unleavened bread (Ex. 12:8).
3. Was wine to symbolically represent His blood, which was to be shed for the
forgiveness of past sins? Luke 22:20; Matt. 26:27-29; Rom. 3:25. (More about the
meaning of breaking and eating the unleavened bread and drinking the wine
shortly.)
COMMENT: The "fruit of the vine" Jesus gave His disciples was
fermented wine, not grape juice. Grape juice could be made only in the autumn,
and could not be preserved until spring. It was either fermented into wine, or
else made into a heavy syrup that was used as a sweetener.
This definitely was not grape juice or syrup! In Jesus' day, the Jews used
only fermented wine at the Passover.
The Bible nowhere condemns the drinking of alcoholic beverages--only their
abuse. If we obey Jesus' command--"This do...in remembrance of me" (I
Cor. 11:25)--we will drink a very small amount of wine once each year at the
Passover service in remembrance of Christ's shed blood.
4. Had Jesus previously told the Pharisees, in a statement they did not
understand, that unless a person symbolically eats His body and drinks His
blood, he has no hope of receiving eternal life? John 6:48, 53-54.
COMMENT: Some believe that when Jesus said "This is my body...this is my
blood," or spoke of eating His flesh and drinking His blood, He meant those
statements to be understood literally--that the bread and the wine miraculously
become His literal flesh and blood. This is not what Jesus meant at all!
The word "is" (in both Greek and English) also means
"represents." That is its obvious meaning in Matthew 13:38, for
example. The unleavened bread and wine are symbols that represent the body and
blood of Jesus Christ!
5. Does Jesus' command to follow His example in taking unleavened bread and
wine at the Passover (Luke 22:19-20) also apply to Christians throughout all
ages? Matt. 28:19-20; I Cor. 11:23-26.
COMMENT: Jesus instituted this ordinance on the eve of His crucifixion. He
showed His disciples how to keep the New Testament Passover and commands us to
follow that example today.
Jesus did not abolish the Passover--He merely changed the symbols used.
Instead of shedding the blood of a lamb and eating its roasted body, we are now
to use unleavened bread and wine.
Why Christ Had to Suffer
After Christ instituted the New Testament Passover symbols, He gave His
disciples some final instructions and warnings, as well as encouragement. These
are recorded for us by the Apostle John in John 13:31 through 16:33.
Read this entire passage and notice how Jesus used this opportunity not to do
away with God's law, but to emphasize it! He warned the disciples of His
imminent crucifixion and that they would also be persecuted. He promised that He
would be resurrected and that they would receive the Holy Spirit. He promised to
answer their prayers, giving them the authority to use His name in their
requests to the Father.
Then, in John 17, we find the true "Lord's prayer," which Jesus
Himself prayed. In it He committed not only His disciples into His Father's
care, but all whom He would call into His Church through the ages. After Jesus
finished this prayer, He and His disciples sang a hymn and went to the Mount of
Olives (John 18:1; Matt. 26:30; Luke 22:39).
There He prayed again. Knowing how excruciatingly painful His death would be,
Jesus prayed with great fervency to escape the extreme pain and suffering that
was to come (Luke 22:41-44). Three times He asked His Father if it would be
possible to begin His plan of salvation for mankind in some other way (Matt.
26:39-44). "Nevertheless," Jesus prayed, "not my will, but thine,
be done" (Luke 22:42).
Then Christ, betrayed by one of His disciples, was arrested like a common
criminal, and all His friends deserted Him (Matt. 26:47-56). He was illegally
brought before the Sanhedrin (the Jewish court) by night, beaten and spit upon
(verse 67), then sent to Pilate and Herod and mocked by their soldiers (Luke
23:11; John 19:2-3). Yet in all this Jesus never sinned, never became angry or
vindictive--not even when crucified! (Luke 23:34). He knew all of this was an
essential part in God's plan to expand His divine Family. Seeing the end result,
He counted it all joy (Heb. 12:2).
1. Before delivering Christ to be crucified, did Pilate have Him scourged?
Matt. 27:26. Was He so brutally beaten that He became unrecognizable? Isa.
52:14. Also read Isaiah 52:13 through 53:12, and verses 1, 6-8, 13-18 of Psalm
22.
COMMENT: These prophecies in Isaiah and in the Psalms were written hundreds
of years in advance. They vividly described the suffering the coming
Messiah--our Savior--was to experience!
Scourging was a common punishment in the time of Christ, but in our modern
times we have difficulty imagining such cruelty. The victim was stripped to the
waist, bent over and tied to a post, and then beaten with a flagellum--a
multi-lashed whip made of leather thongs weighted down with broken shards of
bone and sharp jagged pieces of metal. In a Roman scourging, called the
"halfway death," the victim was beaten until just short of dying from
the multiple wounds.
Christ suffered this merciless beating, which tore open His flesh, disfigured
Him, and caused Him to bleed from dozens of open gashes and cuts. Even some of
His ribs were exposed. Most victims were allowed to recover, but Jesus was not.
Like a criminal, He was then forced to carry His own stake, but He was so
weakened by His terrible chastisement that He fell under its weight after only a
short distance. Outside the city, at the Place of the Skull (Golgotha), Jesus
was nailed to the cross.
Crucifixion was the most shameful--and most painful--form of execution. Not
only were spikes driven into the hands and feet and the body suspended from
these open wounds, but breathing was also agonizingly difficult. Victims would
sometimes struggle on their crosses for as long as three days, suffering pain,
sunstroke, heat exhaustion and loss of blood, finally dying from muscle
exhaustion and suffocation.
Our Savior suffered an incredibly painful, brutal death. And He did this
voluntarily. He did this for us--for the whole world!
2. Did Jesus suffer this excruciatingly painful torture so we might receive
healing of our bodies through faith in His beaten body? Isa. 53:5: I Pet. 2:24:
Ps. 103:2-3: Jas. 5:14-15.
COMMENT: Through His beating, scourging and crucifixion, Jesus Christ paid
the penalty of our physical sins--transgressions of God's laws of health--which
are the cause of all sickness (Matt. 9:1-7). He suffered so we, through faith in
His body that was beaten for us, may be forgiven all our physical sins--the
healing of our bodies when we are sick--in addition to being forgiven our
spiritual sins (the breaking of God's spiritual laws) through His shed blood.
That is why Jesus instituted the breaking of unleavened bread as part of the
New Testament Passover service. It is a symbol of His broken flesh to remind us
that it is by His "stripes we are healed." (For more information
about, this important subject, request our free booklet The Plain Truth About
Healing.)
Why Christ Had to Die
Jesus Christ did more than suffer for us. He who was God in the flesh
died--ceased to exist! In that day His thoughts perished (Ps. 146:4). Since He
was made flesh, He died the same kind of death all mortals do. But exactly why
did He have to die? Let's understand.
1. Was Jesus Christ, before His human birth, the "Word" or
Spokesman of the God Family--the One by whom God the Father created all things?
John l:l-3, 14; Col. 1:l6-17; Eph. 3:9; Heb. 1:2, 10.
2. Did the God Family foreordain that the Spokesman would become a human who
would be slain, like a lamb, to become our Savior? I Pet. 1:18-20; Rev. 13:8.
------------ Inset ------------
TWELVE REASONS WHY JESUS' TRIAL WAS ILLEGAL
The trial of Jesus Christ was without legal precedent. He was convicted and
executed even though Pilate found Him innocent! Let's briefly notice the 12
outstanding reasons why the arrest, trial and conviction of Jesus were illegal.
-
There was no legal basis for Jesus' arrest because no one had presented a
formal charge of any crime; He simply was taken. Moreover, those who went with
Judas to have Jesus arrested included the priests and elders--His judges (Luke
22:52)--among whom were the ones who bribed Judas!
-
Jesus was subjected to a secret preliminary examination at night (John
18:12-14, 19-23), Jewish law permitted only daylight proceedings.
-
The indictment against Jesus was illegal because the judges themselves
brought up the charge without any prior testimony by witnesses. The Jewish court
(the Sanhedrin) by law was not allowed to originate charges.
-
The court illegally proceeded to hold its trial of Jesus before sunrise so
no one would be available to testify on His behalf.
-
The trial began on a day before an annual Sabbath (John 18:28), even
though Jewish law did not permit the trial of a capital offense to begin on a
Friday or the day before an annual Sabbath. Jesus was arrested and tried on the
14th of Abib, the day before the first annual Sabbath of the Feast of Unleavened
Bread.
-
Jesus' trial was concluded in one day. Jewish law says: "If a
sentence of death is to be pronounced, it [a criminal case] cannot be concluded
before the following day" (Mishna, "Sanhedrin" IV, 1). This was
to allow sufficient opportunity for any witnesses in support of the accused to
present themselves. Jesus' trial was conducted in private and completed in less
than nine hours!
-
Two false witnesses charged Jesus with saying He would destroy the temple
made with hands (Mark 14:58); yet He was condemned by the court on another false
charge--that of blasphemy. He was condemned on His own testimony (Luke
22:67-71). But according to Jewish law, a person could not be condemned on his
own testimony.
-
The merits of Jesus' defense were not considered. Despite Deuteronomy
13:14, the high priest did not "inquire, and make search, and ask
diligently" to see whether Jesus' statement was blasphemous. The law in the
Mishna says: "The judges shall weigh the matter in the sincerity of their
conscience" ("Sanhedrin" IV, 5). Instead, the court pronounced
sentence instantly and unanimously!
-
Those who would have voted against condemnation were not at Jesus' trial.
Joseph of Arimathaea was a member of the court, yet he was not there (Luke
23:50-51). Jesus' opponents had made sure that only those who hated Him would be
there.
-
The sentence was pronounced in a place forbidden by law. The trial took
place at the high priest's house (Luke 22:54). According to the law, a death
sentence could be pronounced only in the court's appointed place.
-
Most of the judges were legally disqualified to try Jesus. Some had
bought their way into office, according to Josephus. Also, since they were known
enemies of Jesus, Jewish law required that they disqualify themselves so He
could be tried by impartial judges.
-
The court illegally switched the charges from blasphemy to treason before
Pilate. Jesus' opponents wanted Him killed, but they did not want to do it
themselves. So they charged Him with treason (Luke 23:2)--a Roman crime--so the
Romans would be responsible for His death. No evidence was presented (John
18:29-30). Pilate, after a brief interview, saw that Jesus was not guilty (John
18:38; 19:4; Matt. 27:18). Fearing the crowd, however, he allowed the
crucifixion of an innocent man. Pilate did not even pronounce Him guilty; he
merely turned Him over to the soldiers.
What a mockery of justice this trial was! All this illegality, in addition to
His crucifixion, Jesus willingly suffered to pay the penalty of our sins in our
stead!
------------ End of Inset ------------
3. Did our Creator become a flesh-and-blood human being by being miraculously
conceived in a human woman? John 1:14; Matt. 1:20-21. Why was He made flesh?
Heb. 2:9. Is Jesus Christ plainly called "God" and "our
Saviour"? Tit. 2:13-14.
COMMENT: The penalty for human sin is death. But the two members of the God
Family, composed of spirit, could not die. Neither one of those immortal spirit
Beings could pay the penalty of human sin. It was therefore necessary that one
of the God Kingdom be born as a human being and die to pay the penalty.
The Word, the second member of the God Family, volunteered. He willingly gave
up His spirit composition and great glory to be begotten and born as a mortal
flesh-and-blood, air-breathing human being.
Since the Word had created all life, His life was worth infinitely more than
the thousands of millions who have ever lived. Had Jesus Christ been merely a
man, His death could have paid the death penalty perhaps for only one other
person. But Jesus was also God in the flesh!
By emptying Himself of His former power and glory and becoming a human being,
Christ became the perfect and complete sacrifice for all sins ever committed by
mankind. In no other way could God redeem a vast humanity condemned to the
penalty of death.
4. Was the Apostle Paul inspired to write that Christ is "our
Passover"--our Savior--today? I Cor. 5:7.
COMMENT: If the original Passover lambs had not been slain, the Israelites'
firstborn would have been killed in Egypt. And unless Christ was killed, we
would not have a Savior today.
The Israelites killed their Passover lambs by shedding their blood (Ex.
12:6-7). As these lambs were types of Christ "our Passover," and died
by bloodshed, so Christ's blood was also shed to pay for our sins--our
transgressions of God's law.
5. Does the Bible clearly show that it was necessary for Christ to die by the
shedding of His blood for the forgiveness of our sins? Heb. 9:22.
COMMENT: Only by Christ's shed blood can we receive the remission--
forgiveness--of our spiritual sins. (Of course, we know from Acts 2:38 that
repentance and baptism are also necessary in connection with His shed blood.)
6. Did Isaiah foretell that Christ would die as a lamb led to the slaughter?
Isa. 53:7-8. Does the conversation between Philip and the Ethiopian eunuch
plainly show that Isaiah was referring to Jesus Christ? Acts 8:32-35.
7. Did Isaiah also prophesy that Christ would die by pouring out His
"soul"--His life? Isa. 53:12. Is the life of all flesh in the blood?
Lev. 17:11.
COMMENT: Christ died by bleeding to death. This is evident from His
prophesied sacrificial role, and it is also supported by many ancient Greek
manuscripts. Fenton, as well Moffatt, correctly includes the following sentence
as the first part of Matthew 27:50 in his translation: "But another [one of
the Roman soldiers] taking a spear pierced His side, when blood and water came
out."
Notice also John 19:34. It may be translated "But one of the soldiers
with a spear had pierced his side...", indicating why He was already dead
(verse 33). For further proof that Christ bled to death, request our free
article "Did Christ Die of a Broken Heart?"
Most of us have never before understood Jesus' suffering and death. What a
mockery of justice it was! Can you imagine what it would have been like if you
had been on trial, if you had been treated like Jesus Christ was? Can you
imagine the agony involved in being scourged and crucified, and then murdered as
He was?
All this suffering Jesus voluntarily endured to pay the penalty of our sins
in our stead!
Just think of the tremendous price Christ paid so we might have our guilty
past blotted out, and the slate wiped clean.
Can you comprehend that our Creater--the One who gives us every breath-
-suffered and died for every one of us?
Kept by the New Testament Church
1. After Jesus Christ had changed the symbols of the Passover to unleavened
bread and wine, and commanded His disciples to keep this New Testament service
in memory of His suffering and death, is there indication that God's Church kept
the Passover more than 10 years after Christ's crucifixion? Acts 12:4.
COMMENT: The word Easter in the Authorized Version is a flagrant
mistranslation. The Greek word is pascha, which all modern translations
correctly render "Passover."
2. Did the Apostle Paul teach New Testament Christians to keep the Passover
by partaking of the symbols of unleavened bread and wine as Jesus had done and
commanded? I Cor. 11:23-26.
COMMENT: Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles, taught baptized Gentiles to keep
the Passover! Paul spent much of his time in and near Ephesus, which was in
western Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey). History shows that the churches in Asia
Minor continued to keep the New Testament Passover long after most other
churches had been taken over by a counterfeit Christianity.
The apostles appointed Polycarp over the Church of God in Smyrna, a city near
Ephesus. Notice what Eusebius, an early Catholic historian, wrote about him:
"While Anicetus was at the head of the church of Rome [about A.D. 154],
Irenaeus relates that Polycarp...had a conference with Anicetus on a question
concerning the day of the Pascal feast [the Passover].... But Polycarp also was
not only instructed by apostles, and acquainted with many that had seen Christ,
but was also appointed by apostles in Asia bishop of the church of Smyrna [Rev.
2:8].... He also was in Rome in the time of Anicetus and caused many to turn
away from the...heretics to the Church of God, proclaiming that he had received
from the apostles this one and only system of truth" (Ecclesiastical
History, book IV, chapter 14, in the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1).
While at Rome, Polycarp discussed the Roman practice of observing a pagan
festival in place of the Passover. Notice what Eusebius wrote about this
meeting: "Neither could Anicetus persuade Polycarp not to observe what he
had always observed [the Passover] with John the disciple of our Lord, and the
other apostles with whom he had associated" (book V, chapter 24).
The Passover controversy broke out again within 35 years. Victor, bishop of
Rome, attempted to excommunicate every church that observed the true Passover!
Eusebius further relates: "But the bishops of Asia, led by Polycrates [a
later bishop of Ephesus], decided to hold to the old custom handed down to them.
He himself, in a letter which he addressed to Victor and the church of Rome, set
forth in the following words the tradition which had come down to him: 'We
observe the exact day; neither adding, nor taking away. For in Asia also great
lights have fallen asleep, which shall rise again on the day of the Lord's
coming, when he shall come with glory from heaven, and shall seek out all the
saints.
"'Among these are Philip, one of the twelve apostles...moreover, John,
who was both a witness and a teacher, who reclined upon the bosom of the
Lord...and Polycarp in Smyrna, who was a bishop and martyr.... All these
observed the fourteenth day...the Passover according to the Gospel, deviating in
no respect, but following the rule of faith. And I also, Polycrates...do
according to the tradition of my relatives.... My relatives always observed the
day when the people put away the leaven [in preparation for the Feast of
Unleavened Bread]'" (book V, chapter 24).
3. Was it prophesied that the Church of God in Smyrna would suffer
persecution? Rev. 2:8-10. Who would be their persecutors? Verse 9.
COMMENT: The "synagogue of Satan," composed of those who claimed to
be "spiritual Jews"--that is, true Christians--but were not, is the
false religion now labeled "Christianity" and founded by the Simon
mentioned in Acts 8:9-24. Almighty God calls this counterfeit church the
synagogue of Satan the devil!
4. Will the Passover be kept by Christ and others after He establishes the
Kingdom of God on earth? Matt. 26:29; Luke 22:15-16. In the meantime, was the
Passover to be kept by God's Church as a memorial of Christ's suffering and
death? I Cor. 11:25-26.
COMMENT: Jesus commanded His disciples to keep the Passover in memory of Him
even until He returns, when He will keep it again. The apostles did keep it, and
God's Church today is still keeping it exactly as Jesus commanded!
A Memorial Commanded Once a Year
1. Was the yearly observance of the Old Testament Passover to remind the
Israelites of the meaning of this service? Ex. 12:24-27. Is the observance of
the New Testament Passover to remind Christians of Christ's sacrifice? I Cor.
11:23-26. Did Jesus institute this ordinance at a certain time as an example for
us? I Cor. 11:23; Luke 22:14-15.
COMMENT: Christ taught by His example that the New Testament Passover should
be taken only once a year--on the 14th of Abib, in the evening, after the 13th
has ended at sunset.
Christians today should keep the Passover not as often as they please or at
whatever time they please, but as often as and at the same time as Christ and
the apostles did. The Passover is a memorial we are to keep in remembrance of
Christ's suffering and death. Memorials of momentous occasions are always
observed annually--once a year--on the anniversary of the event they
commemorate.
As Christ Himself commanded, true Christians today observe the Passover on
the evening of the day of His suffering and death. It is the most solemn and
sacred occasion of the year--definitely not a time for laughter or socializing.
It reaffirms year by year "till he come" (I Cor. 11:26) the true
Christian's faith in Christ's sacrifice for the forgiveness of sin.
Any other day is not a memorial of Christ's suffering and death, but is
merely an invention of men in contradiction to the direct command of Jesus
Christ!
The exact date for the Passover, and all of God's annual festivals, varies
from year to year on the Roman calendar. The correct dates for all the festivals
over the next several years are listed in our free publication God's Sacred
Calendar.
Taking the Passover Worthily
Before concluding this study of the first step in God's great Master Plan, we
need to realize that we could take the New Testament Passover
"unworthily"--if we do not heed a warning from the Apostle Paul. Let's
understand.
1. What did Paul warn the Corinthian Christians regarding their observance of
the New Testament Passover? I Cor. 11:27. What should a person do before taking
the symbols of the unleavened bread and the wine? Verse 28. What happens if the
symbols are taken "unworthily"? Verse 29. Is this why many of them
were sick and many had died? Verse 30.
COMMENT: Many today have not understood Paul's warning. Some, feeling they
are not "worthy" of Jesus' sacrifice, have concluded they should not
observe the Passover. Others have taken the New Testament Passover symbols in a
casual or ritualistic manner, not fully understanding their meaning. Both
extremes are wrong!
Paul was not saying a Christian must be "worthy" to take the
Passover. He wrote that no one should observe the Passover unworthily.
"Unworthily" does not describe the person--it describes the manner or
attitude in which a person eats and drinks the symbols. Most modern
translations, such as the Revised Standard version and the Revised Authorized versions, correctly render "unworthily" as "in an unworthy
manner."
Obviously, no one is worthy of Christ's sacrifice. Nevertheless, all true
Christians are commanded to observe this memorial of our Savior's death for our
sins. Notice Paul's command in verse 28: "Let a man examine
himself...." Why? To conclude he is not worthy, and to refuse to obey? No--
the person should examine himself "and so let him eat of that bread, and
drink of that cup."
Before each Passover, every true Christian should examine himself to more
fully understand his vital need to observe the Passover. A spiritual
self-examination will show each Christian that he or she is still a sinner in
desperate need of Christ's sacrifice. Observing the Passover is a profound
annual reminder of our physical and spiritual sins, and a reminder that Christ
has paid in full the penalty of those sins, as long as we truly repent of them
(I John 1:9).
Paul also wrote that certain of the Corinthian Christians were "not
discerning the Lord's body" (I Cor. 11:29). Many of them had not taken the
Passover in a worthy manner. They had not fully understood the fact that Christ
paid in His body the penalty of their physical sins, represented by the broken
bread, and thus their illnesses had not been healed. For that reason many of
them also had died (verse 30).
Many of these brethren were so lacking in discernment that they thought they
were coming together on the evening of the Passover to eat a regular meal. Some
even got drunk, says Paul! (verses 20-21, 33-34). Paul therefore had to sternly
correct them.
The symbols of the Passover should be taken thoughtfully and with renewed
faith--with a thorough understanding and comprehension of the REALITY these
symbols represent!
2. In ancient Israel, who was permitted to partake of the Passover? Ex.
12:48, last part. In New Testament times, is circumcision of the heart? Rom.
2:29.
COMMENT: In ancient Israel, only Israelites and circumcised Gentiles could
take part in the Passover. Today, whether Jew, Israelite or Gentile, one must
first become spiritually circumcised before he can participate in the New
Testament Passover service.
Our previous studies have shown that those who repent, are baptized and have
received God's Holy Spirit have become "spiritual Israelites"--have
become spiritually circumcised. If a person has not repented--not yet shown
faith in Christ as Savior through the symbolism of baptism--he or she is not
able to take the Passover worthily. Therefore the Passover, unlike any of God's
other annual festivals, is limited to baptized members of God's Church.
Do We Stop with the Passover?
Many religions of the Christian-professing world teach that Christ's
sacrifice completed the plan of salvation--that there is nothing more for us to
do but believe.
Nothing could be further from the truth!
Christ's Passover sacrifice only began God's Master Plan of salvation.
Christ's sacrifice, upon our repentance, paid the penalty of our past sins (Rom.
3:24-25). But it does not give us permission to break God's laws with impunity
in the future. We must strive to forsake sin--to put it out of our lives. That
is what the Feast of Unleavened Bread, the next annual festival and step in
God's plan, pictures for us.
Many professing Christians claim to "accept" Christ's sacrifice.
But God has not applied that sacrifice to them. They are still unrepentant
sinners--they refuse to obey Him, claiming His laws are done away.
Christ is not the minister of sin (Gal. 2:17). Not until we repent of sin,
believe and begin to obey God can we be forgiven. Christ's sacrifice will be
applied only to those who show by their actions that they are truly repentant.
If you have not yet begun to participate in God's great plan of salvation and
want to do so, then you will want more information regarding baptism so you can
keep the New Testament Passover as God commands. You may write or call our
office nearest you to learn how to contact a minister of the Worldwide Church of
God in your area. Be sure to mention that you have completed Lesson 25 of The
Ambassador College Bible Correspondence Course.
TEST
This multiple choice test is designed to help you review the preceding
lesson. It's an enjoyable way of putting to use some of the vital knowledge and
understanding you have gained through this lesson.
Select one of the four choices given under each question or incomplete
statement. The other three are incorrect--unless stated or indicated otherwise.
Take sufficient time to understand each question or statement, as well as the
choices. Try to do as many as you can without referring to the lesson. If you
have difficulty deciding on the correct answer, then review the part of the
lesson in question.
-
Christ's sacrifice on the cross
- completed God's plan of salvation.
- did not complete the work the Father had commissioned Jesus to do.
- was the first step in God's plan of salvation.
- was justly deserved because He was guilty of blasphemy and treason.
-
God's seven annual festivals and Sabbaths
- were for the ancient Israelites only.
- were ceremonial occasions needed only so long as the law of Moses was in
force.
- should be observed by Jewish Christians, but not by Gentile Christians.
- keep God's Church in a right understanding of the true way to salvation.
-
When God brought the Israelites out of slavery in Egypt, they
- were told to keep all their old customs.
- had to modify a few of their customs.
- needed a complete reorganization of their social, religious and work
customs.
- were allowed to continue to use the Egyptian calendar.
-
The first month of the year according to the Hebrew religious calendar
- was originally named Nisan by Moses at the time of the exodus from Egypt.
- is named Abib, from a Hebrew word meaning "ears" or "green
ears of grain."
- is in midwinter in the Northern Hemisphere.
- is the time when winter wheat and barley are planted in the Northern
Hemisphere.
-
God instituted the festival of Passover
- just before the Israelites left Egypt.
- after the Israelites had broken covenant and needed sacrifices.
- as a ritual sacrifice to pay for sins under the covenant made at Sinai.
- immediately after Adam and Eve sinned.
-
The lambs killed in the first Passover pictured the Messiah, who
- was slain on the 14th of Abib.
- was without spiritual blemish, sin or spot.
- is the Lamb of God.
- All of the above.
-
After the Israelites killed their Passover lambs,
- they remained outside their homes until they saw the death angel pass over
them.
- they drank a small amount of the blood in a symbolic ceremony.
- they smeared some of the blood on the doorposts of their homes.
- they boiled the flesh and ate it.
-
God protected the Israelites from the plague of death of the firstborn
- through the lamb's blood they had smeared on their doorposts.
- because the plague was a genetic disorder that affected only the
Egyptians.
- by leading them out of Egypt before the plague.
- because they had partaken of unleavened bread and a little wine.
-
Jesus Christ
- may have kept the Passover, though the Bible doesn't directly say.
- kept the Passover both as a child and during His New Testament ministry.
- never kept the Passover.
- told His disciples that the annual festivals would be unnecessary after
His crucifixion.
-
Jesus instituted the New Testament Passover service
- using new symbols to represent His sacrifice.
- on the eve of His suffering and death.
- and commanded His disciples to teach others to keep it also.
- All of the above.
-
Which one of the following statements is FALSE?
- Foot washing was an Old Testament ritual and therefore is part of the
Passover service today.
- Jesus instituted foot washing as part of the new way of observing
Passover.
- Christ told Peter he could have no part with Him unless he participated in
the foot washing.
- Christ commanded His disciples to teach others what they had been taught
by Him.
-
Jesus instituted the observance of foot washing in connection with the
New Testament Passover because it was a
- ritual cleansing of the dirtiest part of the body.
- symbol of service, an example His disciples and all true Christians were
to follow.
- symbol that He was no longer needed as their Lord and Master.
- All of the above.
-
After Jesus washed His disciples' feet, He instituted new symbols for the
Passover--
- special leavened wafers and grape juice.
- these become His literal body and blood.
- broken unleavened bread and wine.
- and commanded the disciples to use these symbols every Sunday.
-
Which one of the following statements is TRUE?
- Jesus was given the fairest trial possible.
- Despite the brutal treatment of Jesus, He never became angry or
vindictive.
- The soldiers knew Jesus was harmless and therefore treated Him gently.
- Pilate knew Jesus deserved to die.
-
Before Jesus was nailed to the cross, He was
- scourged with a multi-lashed whip.
- beaten and spit on.
- wounded with dozens of disfiguring gashes and bleeding cuts.
- All of the above.
-
Jesus suffered His excruciating torture and death
- so that He could pay the penalty of sins for all humanity.
- merely to fulfill prophecy.
- because He taught His disciples to disavow the laws of the Roman Empire.
- because He was guilty of blasphemy and treason.
-
By partaking of the unleavened bread at the Passover service, true
Christians
- symbolize Jesus' shed blood for the remission or forgiveness of sins.
- demonstrate a lack of commitment to God and His way of life.
- renew their commitment to be willing to partake of Christ's sufferings, to
suffer as a Christian for righteousness' sake.
- are reminded that everyone is called now to be a part of the body of
Christ.
-
Unlike many victims of crucifixion who agonized on their crosses for up
to three days, Jesus died in about six hours. Why did He die so quickly?
- The soldiers broke His legs and He suffocated.
- One of the soldiers speared Him in the side and He bled to death.
- His heart spontaneously ruptured from His emotional agony.
- He was in poor health and very weak.
-
Jesus Christ was able to pay the penalty of the sins of all mankind
because He was
- perfectly sinless and did not deserve to either suffer or die.
- our Creator and therefore worth more than all humanity put together.
- the Lamb of God, foreordained to shed His blood as our Passover Savior.
- All of the above.
-
Paul told the Gentile Christians at Corinth about the New Testament
Passover
- and commanded them to observe it.
- only for its historical analogy.
- because he had heard about it from the Apostle Peter.
- but explained to them that it was an optional service.
-
History records that the churches in Asia Minor
- soon began to celebrate Christ's resurrection rather than His crucifixion.
- kept the Passover long after most other churches had been absorbed by a
counterfeit Christianity.
- convinced the bishop or Rome to keep the Passover the way Christ had
commanded.
- had been taught by the apostles to observe Easter.
-
Which one of the following statements is FALSE?
- Polycarp, a bishop or elder from Smyrna, said he had observed the Passover
with the Apostle John.
- Polycrates, a later bishop who succeeded Polycarp, persisted in observing
"the day when the people put away the leaven."
- When Christ returns, He will abolish the Passover as completely fulfilled
and therefore unnecessary.
- Jesus commanded His followers to keep the Passover in memory of Him even
until He returns.
-
How often should the New Testament Passover, commonly called the
"Lord's Supper," be observed?
- As often as anyone wishes.
- this is established by the traditions of each denomination.
- Once in a lifetime, as an initiatory commitment.
- As often as Christ observed its Old Testament equivalent--as often as the
early true Church did--once each year.
-
Paul told the Corinthian Christians to
- not take the Passover in a disrespectful and unworthy manner.
- have a large potluck meal before the Passover service.
- examine themselves after each Passover.
- be worthy of Christ's sacrifice.
-
The Passover service is
- open to anyone who is curious.
- limited to baptized members of God's Church--spiritually circumcised
individuals who have faith in Christ's sacrifice.
- the only annual festival God commands His people to observe.
- unnecessary, despite what the Bible says.
Directory | Lesson 26
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