Exodus 12:1-30 · The Passover
Passover and The Lord's Supper
Exodus 12:1-30
Sermon
by Elizabeth Achtemeier
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The same Old Testament text is used for Maundy Thursday in all three cycles of the lectionary. The preacher may therefore wish to consult the expositions in Cycles A and B along with this one.

 In the oldest tradition that we have of the celebration of the Lord's Supper, Paul tells us in our Epistle lesson that on the night he was betrayed, Jesus celebrated the Passover with his disciples. While Passover and the Lord's Supper are very different in many respects, they share some features in common. Perhaps those common characteristics can deepen our understanding of what we are about on Maundy Thursday.

 As it now stands, the institution of Passover is embedded in the story of the exodus, falling immediately before the account of the final plague on the Egyptians in the form of the death of the firstborn. And it is the Passover ritual that is designed to protect the enslaved Israelites from that plague.

 According to the dating in our passage, the Passover is to be celebrated on the fourteenth day of the month of Nisan, which is our March/April. It is a family festival, sometimes shared with a neighbor. The food that is eaten is the food of travelers in a hurry: the unblemished lamb of a sheep or goat, roasted on an open fire, instead of in a cooking pot; bread without leaven, because leavened bread takes too long to rise; bitter herbs that are some kind of uncultivated vegetable, pulled up from the ground. Moreover, the participants are to be prepared for flight, with their long robes pulled up and girded, their sandals on their feet, and their staffs in their hands.

 The whole lamb is to be eaten and any parts remaining are to be burned. But the blood of the lamb is to be smeared on the framework of the Israelites' doors. When God sees the blood, he will "pass over" the houses of the Israelites and not slay their children. The slaying of the firstborn of the Egyptians, however, will prompt the Pharaoh to let Israel go from slavery. Thus, the blood itself is not what saves. Rather, it is a "sign" to God and the symbol of his promise that he will save his people from bondage. 

 In short, Passover is a celebration of God's redemption of Israel from Egyptian slavery. Moreover, it is at the time of the Passover and exodus that Israel is constituted as a nation and is chosen by God as his people and as his adopted son (cf. Hosea 11:1; Jeremiah 3:19; 31:20; Isaiah 63:16). In every succeeding generation, therefore, Israel is to celebrate the Passover as the memorial of God's redemption of his people.

 We share the same memorial, don't we? Our Epistle lesson from 1 Corinthians 11:23-26 tells us that as often as we eat the bread and drink the cup, we "show forth" the Lord's death until he comes again. We remember Jesus' death on the cross. In fact, in the Gospel according to John, Jesus' crucifixion takes place on Passover day. So John the Baptist can call our Lord "the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world" (John 1:29). Similarly, Paul reminds us that "Christ, our paschal lamb, has been sacrificed" (1 Corinthians 5:7). We were "bought with a price," he tells the Corinthians (1 Corinthians 6:20; 7:23). That is, we were "bought back," we were "redeemed," which is the meaning of "redemption," by the death of Christ on the cross. Christ's cross is the New Testament parallel to the story of the Passover and exodus in the Old Testament. As Israel was redeemed from slavery in Egypt, so we are redeemed by the sacrifice of our Lord on Golgotha. And Christ's blood, symbolized for us in the cup of the Lord's Supper, is the "sign" of God's promised redemption, as the blood on the doorposts of the Israelites was the sign of God's promised deliverance of them.

 Israel remembers the Lord's redemption of her every time she holds her Passover feast, and we remember Christ's redemption of us every time we celebrate the Lord's Supper. But "remembering" for Israel was much more than simply calling to mind a past event. Rather, when each subsequent generation of Israelites remembered their deliverance from slavery by celebrating the Passover, that became a present event for them. "The Lord brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand," they confessed (Deuteronomy 26:8). We were there. God did his mighty deed for us who are living now.  So we are now a free people, chosen by God to be his.

 So it is too with us. God's redemption of us by the cross of Christ was not just a past event. It is the redemption of you and me, right now, in our situation. The old Negro spiritual has it right. "Were you there when they crucified my Lord?" it asks. Yes indeed, we were there. Christ died for us. Christ set us free from slavery, our slavery to sin and death. His mighty act of love is wrought for us here and now. And we not only "remember the Lord's death until he comes," but we participate now in the results of that death. We are redeemed and free, redeemed from all of the sins and guilts of the past that held us captive, and free from the clutches of death forever. Right now, at this Lord's table, you and I, are a delivered people.

 We all join together in that common deliverance, don't we? As Israel was first made a people at the Passover and exodus, so we too here at the Lord's Supper are united once again as one people of God. This is "communion" at this supper. We are chosen here to commune once again with our God, and to commune once again with one another. And the unity that we share at this supper is not to be broken.

 The Israelites were a traveling people, waiting at that first Passover event with their loins girded and their feet shod to set out on the adventure of God. The Lord had a destination for his people and a journey to be undertaken. They were not at home in Egypt. There was a promised land awaiting them. And you and I are not at home where we live either. The land that we inhabit is much too filled with violence and corruption, with evil and hatred to be called God's kingdom. We cannot be satisfied with the status quo, for it does not at all match what God desires for us and for all people. And so God says to us, as he said to Israel, be prepared to travel. Set out on the journey of faith to make your home, your neighborhood, your society into new places worthy of God. Follow the leading of the Lord Christ who promises to be with us always. Be prepared to go wherever God will lead you. For at the end, there is indeed a promised land called the Kingdom of God.

CSS Publishing, Preaching and Reading from the Old Testament: With an Eye to the New, by Elizabeth Achtemeier