Exodus 12:1-30 · The Passover
Dog: Man's Best Friend?
Exodus 12:1-30
Sermon
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Everyone who has ever had a pet claims it is the "best"; whether it is a cat, horse, chimpanzee, goldfish, or dog makes no difference. But, for the most part, the dog usually comes out ahead. Almost everyone can tell you a favorite dog story. I like the one about the couple whose home had been burglarized and decided they needed a watch dog, so the husband went to the pet shop and told the owner what he wanted. The owner showed him a little French poodle named Fifi, and wanted to sell it to the man. The buyer said, "But you don't understand! We need a watch dog, a big dog, not a little old French poodle!" The owner of the pet shop said, "No, you don't understand. This, French poodle is trained in Karate, and would make you a very fine watch dog. Watch this." So the owner got a big board and put it in front of the dog and said, "Fifi, Karate, plank!" Fifi lunged at the plank and broke it in half. Then the owner got a brick and said, "Fifi, Karate, brick!" Fifi ran at the brick and broke it in two. So the man said, "I'll take the dog," and went home to show it to his wife. When his wife saw what he'd brought home for a watch dog she couldn't believe her eyes and said, "What do you mean, bringing a little old French poodle home to guard the house? You must be out of your mind!" The man replied, "But you don't understand. This dog is trained in Karate!" She responded angrily, "Karate, my foot!"

Not only do we tell dog stories, we also get very sentimental about them, and often dogs have been elevated to the title of "man's best friend." But I would like to submit, not the dog, but the lamb, as man's best friend.

It all started with the beginning of Exodus. The Hebrew people want out of Egypt. Nine disasters have now plagued the enemy, but it has not yet brought freedom to the people of God. Blood, frogs, gnats, flies, diseased and dying animals, boils, hail, locusts, and thick darkness have been very persuasive, but still not fully convincing.

Actually, the outcome of this battle was decided before it began. When you prepare for war with God, preparation for defeat should be made at the same time! You can't fool around with the great "I Am." He plays for keeps and means business in all his dealings. When will puny humanity understand that to declare war on God, to challenge him, to take the other side, is to invite certain death and defeat? So, to the nation who is about to be emancipated, without open warfare, without a blow struck, the command is given, "Get you a lamb! You must have a lamb! Not just any old lamb will do. It must be male, young, one year old, and without blemish." Every household (unless it is too few in number) must have a lamb. This lamb was to become their very best friend.

The Lamb is Safety (Salvation) - (v. 13)

The head of every household took its lamb and killed it. The main purpose of this rite was to provide safety for each member of the house by the covering of the sprinkled blood. It is the institution which later will be called the Passover. It was a necessary sacrifice so, when the death angel came to the land of the enemy, it would pass over the Hebrews and not destroy those inhabitants. The blood of the lamb was splashed on the doorposts and lintels of each house or tent.

Here we see again (as we saw in Genesis when an animal was slain to cover the nakedness - guilt - of Adam and Eve) the doctrine of substitution. When the Israelites sprinkled the blood of their lamb they confessed their impurity and their sins which made them bull's-eye targets for the destroying angel's visit. The blood was presented as their expiation (the means by which atonement was made).

It was an act of confession, deprecation, and faith in the blood of the lamb. It meant they were availing themselves of the God-appointed way of safety. It was their "means of grace." The lamb's blood, applied (and it must be applied), would exempt them from the fatal death stroke which fell on all the homes in Egypt, from palace to hovel, where the red streak was not found.

Any Jew who despised the protection offered by the blood would have been a victim of the avenging angel. Their obedience to God's command gave them escape from punishment.

Christians unapologetically and unashamedly interpret this passover account in the light of Christ. Paul says "... Christ, our Passover Lamb has been sacrificed." (1 Corinthinans 5:7) With John the Baptizer we proclaim, "Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world." (John 1:29) Another John, on Patmos, in his visions of the last days, wrote of the glories around the throne, and of "a Lamb as it had been slain."

The Jewish Passover, for the Christian, is a picture of the Gospel before the Gospel. We know it is Christ, the Lamb of God, who shed his blood for us on Calvary's cross-tree, and through it we are cleansed, forgiven, and saved from the wrath of God. The center of all Christians believe is found in that Lamb on a Tree. Luther made a sharp distinction between the theology of the cross and the theology of glory. He said, "The theology of glory is like the King of England sitting on his throne. The theology of the cross is the King of England finding someone drowning in the river and pulling him out." Our Lamb plunged into the dark river of death, found us going down for the last time, and pulled us to safety. No wonder he has become Best Friend! Our Lenten hymns proclaim this truth over and over. Remember "There Is a Fountain Filled with Blood," which says, "Thou dying Lamb, thy precious blood, will never lose its power."

The Lamb is Sustenance (Food) - (v. 8)

But man's Best Friend does more. Now the blood has been applied to the house, the Hebrew family is safe, salvation has come to him and his household. They have all been saved from destruction and now they gather for the feast. What has been their safety now becomes their sustenance.

The lamb was roasted (not fried, boiled, or micro-waved). It was to be kept whole. (Recall, on the cross, Christ's legs were not broken - fulfilling the prophecy of him, "Not a bone of him shall be broken.") All the family ate of the one undivided whole, so they could be, in a real sense, one. It is still true the unity of the church comes from the oneness of the bread and the cup. We are one body, partaking of one Lamb, who is our Lord.

Bishop Roy Clark and I were both speakers a few years ago, at the Florida Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church. During that conference we were invited, with others, to be luncheon guests of Bishop and Mrs. Earl G. Hunt. At the close of the meal, Bishop Clark and I were each given a gift from Bishop and Mrs. Hunt. Upon opening it, we found each of us was the recipient of a lovely coffee cup. It was made in earth-tones with sea shells painted as a border. Now when I drink coffee, it is from a Bishop's cup! (Pretty heady stuff for an average Methodist preacher!) Later Bishop Clark and I were again speakers on the same platform: this time it was the Ministers' Week for the Mississippi Conference of the United Methodist Church. When I reminded him we had at least one thing in common, and that was our cup, he then, in his address to the conference, said, "We are the people of one cup." That's exactly what Christians are: people of one cup, the Blood of the Lamb! He is food, sustenance, strength, and all we need.

What a dramatic re-enactment of the first Passover the Christian-sees in Christ - the Christ-Lamb for us become Christ in us! We feast on him - on his Word, when we pray, in meditation, in Holy Communion. Christ is the true Paschal Lamb. His shed blood, sprinkled on our hearts by faith, shields us from judgment. Our deliverance was won at his cross, our sustenance is found at his table!

The Lamb is Sufficient - (v. 14)

Christ, God's Lamb, is sufficient for us. He is all we need. The blood of the Lamb is salvation. The body of the Lamb is sustenance. The wool of the Lamb is clothing and covering and warmth. The skin of the Lamb is parchment. The Lamb is not for sacred days only. He is fully a part of our secular lives as well. He befriends us in all of life. His benefits begin at Calvary, but they don't stop there, they go to all generations.

Christ is the Lamb for life - for all days and for eternity, for now and forever after. Around the throne in heaven we will still be singing the song of "Moses and the Lamb."

Henry H. M. Nouwen, in his book, The Way of the Heart, tells of three fathers who used to go and visit blessed Anthony every year; two of them used to discuss their thoughts and the salvation of their souls with him, but the third always remained silent and did not ask Anthony anything. After a long time, Abba Anthony said to him, "You often come to see me, but you never ask me anything." The other replied, "It is enough to see you, Father." Our Lamb is sufficient, he is enough - we need no other!

The Lamb Gets the Vote!

I had a couple of cats, I and 2 Timothy, that I liked a lot, as a child. We enjoyed a parakeet named Ike who enlivened our home with his high-pitched, squeeking voice, crying, "I like Ike. Ike's a good man!" (taught to say those words by my mother, who was a radical Republican, to harrass my father who was a dogmatic Democrat). We had a fine pair of rabbit-hunting dogs named Pansy and Petunia. We also owned some fine foxhounds, among them a special one named Dinah, with the best mouth in the country. My daughter, Jodi, loved her horses, Lon and Sox, almost more than she loved me.

But the Lamb still gets my final vote! My life will never again be the same for me since God's Lamb, Jesus Christ, came into my life and gave me safety, sustenance, and became my daily sufficiency. No doubt about it. The Lamb is man's Best Friend - and mine, too!

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