
Bo (Go)
Exodus 10:1-13:16
Jeremiah 46:13-28
"A Perpetual Feast Forever"
POSTED 27 JANUARY, 2012
by Mark Huey
mark@outreachisrael.net
This week’s Torah portion, Bo,
very much summarizes the major theme of the Book of Exodus.
We witness not only the final plagues dispensed upon Egypt,[1]
but we see the institution of the Passover as a memorial
meal[2]
to be remembered by the future generations of God’s chosen
people:
“For I will go through the land of Egypt on
that night, and will strike down all the firstborn in the
land of Egypt, both man and beast; and against all the gods
of Egypt I will execute judgments—I am the
Lord. The blood
shall be a sign for you on the houses where you live; and
when I see the blood I will pass over you, and no plague
will befall you to destroy
you when I strike the land of Egypt. Now this day will be a memorial
to you, and you shall celebrate it
as a feast to the
Lord;
throughout your generations you are to celebrate it
as a permanent ordinance” (Exodus 12:12-14).
In Bo, the final three judgments upon
Egypt are executed (locusts, darkness, firstborn), and the
people of Israel are finally released to begin their journey
to the Promised Land.[3]
This reading gives us the first regulations about the Spring
festivals of the Lord, and how His people are to commemorate
the salvific events they memorialize.
Each year when
Bo is considered, the reference to Passover being a “permanent
ordinance” or “eternal decree” (ATS)[4]
always creates some interesting recollections that you might
be able to identify with. For years, prior to becoming
Messianic, every time I read this text I paused and thought
about the words “you are to celebrate it
as a permanent
ordinance.”
Reading Recollections
In the past, while reading through these passages, I remember going
back and rereading what is stated about Passover two or
three times, and thinking about what the text actually
meant. After all, the words “you
shall observe it as an ordinance for ever” (Exodus 12:14, RSV) are fairly easy and
direct to understand.
The problem I had was not in understanding the
plain English text. Rather, the problem was in heeding the
words spoken. I was confused because the commandment to
remember the Passover was very clear—and
Passover is by no means some obscure ritual to memorialize.
Like many who have been confronted by the simple text, I
first turned to my teachers for an explanation. Of course,
that is where my problems were compounded.
Many years ago in the 1980s, I was at the
mercy of dispensational Christian pastors and Bible
teachers, who were largely repeating what they had been
taught at Bible college or seminary (in this case, Dallas
Theological Seminary). Because of their dispensational
presuppositions—reading some parts of the Bible as only
applying to Israel, and other parts as only applying to “the
Church”—the command to celebrate Passover was not something
that apparently applied to me. My dispensational teachers
told me that Passover was something that the Jewish people
did, but it was not something that Christians today were
required to do, because there was a much more meaningful
observance that I could participate in called Easter. To a
relatively young and naïve Believer, their argument was very
persuasive. As I recall, the logic went something like this:
Remember that Jesus was our Passover Lamb. He came and was
sacrificed for us. Should we not be thankful for His
ultimate sacrifice and come together on the day which
celebrates the resurrection of Christ?
Of course, this justification for remembering
Easter instead of Passover made good sense. Further
questions I asked elicited more reasons to go along with
this practice, as I was also told by my dispensational
teachers:
You need to understand that this has been going on for
centuries, and certainly the ecclesiastical authorities who
instituted these events knew what they were doing. The Jews
will continue to do the Passover and the Christians will
continue to do Easter. Just celebrate Easter and do not
worry about what the Jews are doing. We live in the Church
Age!
Even though this sounded like a good argument
at the time, regardless of the explanation I heard,
inevitably, whenever I read these verses in Exodus, the same
nagging question arose in my spirit: What does the
Scripture mean when it says “forever” or “eternal”?
Maturing Messianic
Sometimes, it is funny how you remember
certain things in the past that prompted you to dig more
into the Word of God for greater explanation. For example,
the word “forever” (Heb.
olam,
~lA[) seems
to really stand out.[5]
As I was maturing in my study and pursuit of the truth, the
Lord chose to reveal more about Himself. As a seeker, I was
definitely finding Him by consistently and honestly asking
Him—just as Jeremiah promises:
“You will seek Me and find
Me when you search
for Me with all your heart” (Jeremiah 29:13).
James the Just’s admonition, “But if any of
you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all
generously and without reproach, and it will be given to
him” (James 1:5), was also something that I prayed. I did
not want to find some kind of forgotten truth in the Bible,
but then misuse it in the sight of those who were not ready
to hear, and were not necessarily convicted by the Holy
Spirit at the time the same way I was. As one who believed,
and still believes, in the sovereignty of God—there is a
pre-determined time for people to come to a fuller knowledge
of Him.
At another reading of verses like Exodus
12:14—something dramatic occurred. One night while reading
this passage, the concept of “forever” repeated itself over
and over again in my spirit. All of a sudden, another
thought came immediately to mind:
“All Scripture is inspired by God and
profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, for
training in righteousness; so that the man of God may be
adequate, equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16-17).
When Paul wrote these words to Timothy, he was
referring to the Scriptures as they knew them in the First
Century, the Hebrew Tanakh (Genesis-2 Chronicles [or
Malachi]).[6]
Paul told the Romans a similar thing regarding the
Scriptures:
“For whatever was written in earlier times was
written for our instruction, so that through perseverance
and the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope”
(Romans 15:4).
I by no means thought that the writings of the
Apostles were not Scripture, but I did think that perhaps
too many Christians I knew were forgetting
what else composed
Scripture. Why did too many people just overlook God’s
revelation in the Old Testament, when the Apostles
themselves did not? While thinking through Exodus 12:14 on
Passover one year, a radical thought came to my mind:
Is it possible that the very concept of obeying this
commandment “forever” was something that would be profitable
for teaching and training in righteousness? Why would many
people overlook the Passover, and what it teaches us about
the sacrifice of Jesus?
Oftentimes when you have these types of
internal debates, you are actually being instructed by the
Holy Spirit. Remember that according to Yeshua, it is the
Holy Spirit who has been sent to teach His followers all
things:
“But the Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the
Father will send in My name, He will teach you all things,
and bring to your remembrance all that I said to you” (John
14:26).
This train of thought was really stretching me
away from some of the dispensational doctrines that I was
being taught. When I considered this those many years ago,
without any significant change with regard to the word
“forever,” I simply pondered these thoughts in my heart,
waiting for further instruction. At the time, I was not
quite ready for the transition to a Messianic lifestyle, nor
would I have been led to pursue the issue further. However,
with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight, it is clear now that I
was definitely being set up for the next stage in my walk.
In the 1980s I was thinking about things that would
significantly aid me during my spiritual pursuits of the
1990s.
The Seder Experience
In the early 1990s, just like what has
happened to thousands of other evangelical Christians in
recent years, I was asked to attend a sedar (rds)
meal to remember the Passover. Because of a tour to Israel
my wife Margaret and I had been on in 1994, we were very
open to the Jewish Roots of our faith, and in considering
the role of the appointed times for more than just
“enrichment.” This sedar was being held at the
Messianic Jewish congregation which we had started
attending. For the first time in my life, I was going to
keep the commandment to remember the deliverance from Egypt
in a very tangible way!
The very Torah portion that we are looking at
this week, Bo, was
being discussed in the context of a Passover remembrance.
The whole sedar experience was something to behold.
As the leader of the sedar went through a written
presentation or haggadah, the details of the
deliverance from Egypt were thoroughly discussed. Of course,
the parallels between the blood of the lamb and the Messiah
Yeshua, being the ultimate blood sacrifice, were mentioned
in great detail. Even the (later) Jewish traditions
regarding the unleavened bread or
matzah (hCm), and how it was to be
handled, all seemed to point to the work of the Messiah at
Golgotha (Calvary).
Throughout the evening I thought about the
commandment to remember the Passover forever. I
considered the history of the Jewish people and how they had
faithfully honored this commandment for millennia. It was
apparent that this, and other remembrances of the appointed
times, had kept them a unified and a separated people. And
now here I was, a non-Jew participating in the very same
celebration that was given not necessarily to just the
Jewish people, but to
all who serve the God of Israel.
Some of my questions from decades earlier
started to resurface in my thoughts. Now, however, I was in
a Messianic environment that would discuss some of the
historical realities of why centuries of Christians had
largely overlooked the Passover. I was finally exposed to
some of the decisions made by ecclesiastical councils from
the Fourth and Fifth Centuries, which forbade the Christian
Church from observing the appointed times. This information,
coupled with other data from my Torah studies that was being
regularly assimilated, significantly altered the lifestyle
of myself and my family.
As a family, we now consider it a great honor
and important responsibility to remember the Passover—just
as these passages remind us. We believe that we are some of
the “generations” that this commandment was directed to. Of
course, as we have discovered via experience, you do not get
to the point where you believe that remembering the Passover
is really for you until you have moved toward a Messianic
lifestyle that seeks to consciously follow the Torah and its
commandments. Furthermore, making the transition from a
neutered Easter celebration to a full-fledged Passover
remembrance is not always easy. Should you make this
transition, there is a definite need to extend the Lord’s
love and grace to others who do not share your conviction.
Rather than look at yourselves as being spiritually
superior, invite your evangelical Christian family and
friends to your Passover table.
Allow them to
experience the goodness of Passover the same way that you
have!
Who do you serve?
How might you figure into all of this? Have
you ever really celebrated Passover? If you have, do you
remember your first time at a Passover sedar? Did you
sense that you were obeying one of God commands, for all of
His people for all time?
Did you sense the Lord’s presence at this sedar
meal,
and learn important
things about your salvation in Messiah Yeshua? Do
you think it would be beneficial for Believers today to
remember the Passover, and for all of us to learn how we are
beneficiaries of Ancient Israel’s deliverance from Egypt?
By keeping Passover you will certainly be
establishing a good example of obedience. You could also use
this celebration as a backdrop for additional instruction
about how God has miraculously acted throughout history, and
how there will be a future deliverance of His people in the
end-times. We live in
interesting days when our firmly held beliefs and
convictions in Him will be challenged by the world. We
need to be convinced about who we are serving. By honoring
and following His Instruction, we send clear signals that we
are worshipping the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob—and not
someone or something else.
The Joshua generation that was allowed to
enter into the Promised Land faced some of the same
challenges that we face today. They had the words of Moses
to contend with, as well as fresh memories of their parents
and grandparents who were denied entrance into Canaan
because they did not believe and obey the Lord. At the end
of Joshua’s life, he reminded the people of Israel about all
the things that God had done for them over the centuries:
“Now, therefore, fear the
Lord and serve
Him in sincerity and truth; and put away the gods which your
fathers served beyond the River and in Egypt, and serve the
Lord. If it is
disagreeable in your sight to serve the
Lord, choose
for yourselves today whom you will serve: whether the gods
which your fathers served which were beyond the River, or
the gods of the Amorites in whose land you are living; but
as for me and my house, we will serve the
Lord” (Joshua
24:14-15).
For us today, these same words need to be
considered. Will we serve the Holy One of Israel with
diligence—correcting previous mistakes of the past—or will
we continue to be denied the blessings of remembering
Passover? Hopefully, our answer will echo Joshua’s
admonition to Ancient Israel to serve the Lord. Today, we
can visibly display our allegiance to the Lord by
continuing to make the Passover celebration a perpetual
feast forever! We can see people enriched in their faith, and understand all of the
great lessons that the Passover and Exodus teach us.[7]
Mark Huey (B.A., Vanderbilt
University in History and Graduate Studies at
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University) is the
Director of Outreach Israel Ministries (www.outreachisrael.net).
He is the author of several books, including:
TorahScope, Volumes I & II, and
Counting
the Omer: A Daily Devotional Toward Shavuot.
He is also co-author of
Hebraic Roots: An Introductory
Study.
NOTES
[1]
Exodus 10:1-11:10.
[2]
Exodus 12:1-32, 42-51.
[3]
Exodus 12:33-41.
[4]
Heb. chuquat olam
(~lA[
tQx).
[5]
BDB, pp 761-763; CHALOT,
pp 267-268; HALOT,
1:798-799.
[6]
The Jewish division of the Tanakh ends with 2 Chronicles,
whereas the current Christian division follows the Greek
Septuagint (LXX), which ends with Malachi. The LXX was used
in Jewish communities of the First Century.
[7]
For further teaching on the themes of Passover and the
Exodus, we recommend that you consult the
Messianic Spring
Holiday Helper by TNN Press.
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