Exodus 12:1-30 · The Passover
The Blood Shall Be a Token
Exodus 12:1-30
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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Bible students and teachers have always connected the Old and the New Testaments by using types. That is, seeing in the Old Testament a type of what really is fully revealed in the New. This began with those who wrote the New Testament. Paul saw Jesus as the new Adam. Matthew saw him as a Moses. The writer of the epistle to the Hebrews interpreted the tabernacle of the Old Testament as a type for the ministry and mission of Jesus.

When we began this preaching journey through Exodus, we talked about Exodus as a pattern of the Christian pilgrimage. Israel in bondage to Pharaoh represents the picture of us human beings in bondage to sin and evil. Israel being delivered by God out of bondage, wandering in the wilderness, and at last reaching their Promised Land is a striking picture of the spiritual history of the individual moving out of bondage by the power of Christ, and by his grace and mercy finding that promised life of fullness and joy in a life in Christ and at death, eternal life.

We come today in our preaching journey through Exodus to the Passover, and this is one of the most vivid types. What the crucifixion is for Christians, the Passover was for Israel. So we are talking about Passover and Calvary.

Arthur Pink, in his book, Gleanings in Exodus makes a rich suggestion about verse 22 of our text. Listen to that verse again: “Take a bunch of hyssop and dip it in the blood which is in the basin, and touch the lentil and the two door posts with the blood.

This, suggests Pink, “is a marvelous picture of the suffering of our blessed Lord upon the cross.” The picture is marred a bit by the weak translation of the Hebrew word for basin. The word rendered “basin” is sap which is really an old Egyptian word for the step before a door, or the threshold of a house. That’s the way the word is translated in other sections of the scripture, threshold or door.

No direction was given about putting the blood upon the threshold. The reason is that the blood was already there. The lamb was evidently slain at the door of the house which was protected by its blood. This point is not simply one of academic interest, but concerns the accuracy of type. The door of the house wherein the Israelite was protected had blood on the lentil (the cross—piece), on the side posts and on the step. With vivid imagination, Pink sees this as a marvelous picture of Christ on the cross: “Blood above, where the thorns pierced his brow, blood at sides from his nail pierced hands; blood below from nail-torn feet!” (Gleanings in Exodus, Chicago: Moody Press, 1981, p. 9).

Now some may think that too much imagination, too much straining for a type. But there is no question about the connection between Passover and Calvary.

It was the Passover that Jesus was celebrating with his disciples on the eve of his crucifixion when he announced to them that he was the Passover Lamb to be slain for the sins of the whole world, when Paul called the Corinthians to a life of sincere Christianity – challenging them to put away all immorality and uncleanness, and be that people set apart by Christ, he used language that recalls the Passover. Listen to Paul: “Cleanse out the old leaven that you may be fresh dough - For Christ, our Pascal Lamb, has been sacrificed, let us therefore, celebrate the Festival…(I Corinthians 5:7, 8 RSV).

So, we’re going to talk today about The Passover and Calvary with a more specific theme, “The Blood Shall Be A Token.” We’ll come back to the connection between Passover and Calvary, but for now let’s focus on our scripture lesson itself. God has dealt with Pharaoh through the plagues – sending those nine plagues of judgment against Pharaoh’s rebellion, and now he is sending the tenth and the final one. The Angel of Death is going to come and is going to claim the firstborn of all the land. Those will be delivered who do what the Lord calls them to do – that is, slay a lamb that is without blemish and take the blood of it and mark their households with that blood.

Someone has put it crudely, perhaps harshly, but truthfully: In every house of Egypt that night, there was either a dead lamb or a dead firstborn. It is a picture, an awful picture, of judgment. And that’s where I want us to begin today - because we don’t think enough about judgment.

I

We need to mark this down before we move on. There is no covering up or diminishing the reality of Divine judgment. The fact is set forth on page after page of Bible history. God judged Adam and Eve, expelling them from the Garden and pronouncing curses on their future earthly life. God judged the corrupt world of Noah’s day, sending a flood to destroy human-kind (Genesis 6:8). God judged Sodom and Gomorrah, engulfing them in a “volcanic catastrophe” (Genesis 18: 19). God judged Pharaoh an the Egyptians just as he foretold he would (see Genesis 15:14), unleashing against them the terrors of the ten plagues (Exodus 7:12)

These are “big judgments” about which we all know, but apart from these, the pages of the Bible are literally filled with judgment. Those who don’t study the Bible seriously, nonchalantly suggest that when you leave the Old Testament and come to the New, the theme of Divine judgment fades almost to nothing. That isn’t so. Even a cursory reading of the New Testament reveals God’s action as Judge. In fact, the entire New Testament is overshadowed by the certainty of a coming day of universal judgment which was set forth by Jesus himself. It’s not easy to forget that picture — the powerful imagery of it - the sheep separated from the goats, the righteous on the on the right hand of God, the unrighteous on the left – the righteous moved into the presence of the Lord, the unrighteous condemned to eternal punishment where there is “weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth.”

So, don’t forget it: There is no way to cover up or diminish the reality of divine judgment.

II

And that leads to a second big point. We must not presume upon God’s grace. God’s grace must be seen in light of his sovereignty and his position as Judge.

It’s an awful picture, a severe one the Angel of Death moving over the land claiming the firstborn of the land but passing over those houses that had the token of blood the blood of the Passover lamb identifying them as those who had heard God’s call and were faithful.

Somewhere along the way I heard about the building of a lighthouse on a remote stretch of the coast up in Alaska. A couple of Eskimos took time off from seal hunting to serve as “sidewalk superintendents”. They were there when the project started, watched every step of its construction, and were present the day it was put into full operation. That night a heavy fog blew in. One Eskimo turned to the other and said, “I told you so. The White Igloo builder is no good. Light shine. Bell ding-dong. Horn woo-woo, but fog roll in all the same.”

Well that’s right – as the lighthouse could not control the fog and the storm.

So with God’s sovereignty — particularly God’s sovereign freedom — his function as Judge. We can’t control that or act as if that is not a part of who God is.

Do you see the point I’m trying to make?

I am struggling to express a profound truth. We must see God’s grace and mercy as a free decision of a sovereign God who is our judge. Only then, when we see that our destiny is dependent upon whether or not God resolves to save us from our sins — and that is a decision God makes, and that He doesn’t have to make it – only then can we grasp the Biblical view of grace, the extravagant, undeserved, mercy of God extended to us.

Now let’s look specifically at that grace. We see it in the Angel of Death sweeping over the land with piercing eyes, looking hither and yon and finding occasionally a door on which there was sprinkled the blood of un unblemished lamb. When that blood was seen, the Angel of Death passed over and that household was saved.

The Lord had said “The blood shall be a sign for you, upon the houses where you are; and when I see the blood, I will pass over you, and no plague shall fall upon you to destroy you, when I smite the Land of Egypt.” (Exodus 12:13).

The blood is the sign – the token as some translators have it. It was the token of redemption at the Passover – and how much more so at the Crucifixion for us Christians.

Three things are present in this token: One, protection; two, cleansing; and three, substitution.

Let’s look quickly at these tokens. First protection. The Hebrew word that is translated in verse 12a is really inadequately translated as “Passover” is really inadequately translated. The word is “pasach.” It closely resembles the Egyptian word “pesh,” which means, “to spread the wings over,” or “to protect.” So there is here the suggestion of such “sheltering and protection as is found under the outstretched wings of the Almighty God. (Pink, Ibid., p. 93)

“It was not merely that the Lord passed by the houses of the Israelites, - he stood on guard protecting each blood-sprinkled door.” (Pink, Ibid., p. 93).

Ponder the richness of that image. Protected — protected by the blood…and now protected by the cross, everlastingly so.

We could preach long about this. Some talk casually, even glibly about “eternal security” as though the burden was upon the Lord to keep us safe once we accepted Him as Savior. Remember what we said earlier. Don’t presume upon God’s grace. God has done his part. Christ has paid the awful price for our salvation, paid the price in His own blood. We are protected as long as we continually claim the power of the blood.

The hands of Christ seem very frail
For they were broken by a nail
But only they reach heaven at last
Whom those frail broken hands hold fast.

Protected!

The second word is cleansing. The lamb was to be an unblemished lamb, and the bread was to be unleavened. In scripture, “leaven” symbolizes evil. So the lesson here is of vital importance. It’s captured in verse seven of Chapter Eleven: “That you may know that the Lord makes a distinction between the Egyptians and Israel.”

Don’t forget this. The Lord accepts us as we are, but He does not leave us there. He makes a distinction between us and those who are not yet delivered. In New Testament language it is stated thus: “T blood of Christ cleanses us from all unrighteousness.” I used to have trouble with that image. We sang a spirited gospel song down in Mississippi during my childhood, the chorus of which went like this:

Are you washed in the blood
In the soul-cleansing blood of the Lamb,
Are your garments spotless,
Are they white as snow?
Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb?

Now that’s not easy symbolism for a child to grasp, not even easy for an adult. And the words of the verses were even stronger. Listen to one of those verses:

When the Bridegroom cometh, will your robes be white?
Pure and white in the blood of the Lamb?
Will your soul be ready for the mansion bright?
And be washed in the blood of the Lamb?

Now I now that’s not easy to grasp – “the blood of Christ cleanses.” Many people still don’t like that language. If you don’t like the language, you’ll have to argue with God. It’s the language of the Bible, both the Old and the New Testaments.

It is only when we are cleansed from what is repugnant to divine holiness that we can really be with Christ. As long as we continue indulging in known sin, there can be no communion with him, It is only as we “walk in the light as He is in the light” that the blood of Christ cleanses us from all sin, “we have fellowship with one another” (I John 1:7) Cleansed!

The last word is substitution. And here we come to a type again – a revealing symbol.

The lamb is the clear representative in the Old Testament. In the New Testament, the beloved disciple, John, called Jesus “the lamb slain from the foundation of the world” and John Baptist denoted him “the Iamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.”

See how clear the connection is between the unblemished Passover Lamb and Jesus – the Lamb slain forms the foundation of the world.

Now I hope we are wise enough and humble enough to know that no simple “theory of the atonement” can adequately contain the full meaning and mystery of what Christ did for us at Calvary. But I also pray with Spurgeon that “We do not subscribe to the lax theology which teaches that the Lord Jesus did something or other which, in some way or other, is in some degree or other, connected with the salvation of men.” (A Sermon, “The Sacred Love Token”, Sermons of C. H. Spurgeon New York: Funk & Wagnalls Company, London and Toronto, p. 247). What gobbley gook.

We’re more certain than that. We hold with faith that Christ died for us, and had he not died, eternal damnation would be our lot. He paid our debt, died in our stead, was a substitution for our punishment. Mercy and grace is the key - unmerited, undeserved, extravagant grace.

So, we are confident with the poet Doddridge that:

Grace first inscribed my name,
In God’s Eternal Book:
‘twas grace that gave me to the Lamb
Who all my sorrows took:

One story, hopefully, will tie it all together: The blood as a token protection, cleansing, satisfaction. The blood as a token calls us to commitment.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Maxie Dunnam