Liberating Gospels The Passover with the Disciples Live in the light of God (Isaiah 2:5)
Deuteronomy 16:1-17 The Voice16 Moses: During the month of Abib at the beginning of spring, celebrate Passover in honor of the Eternal, your True God. In that month, He brought you out of Egypt at night. 2 Take an animal from your herd or flock, go to the place He will choose for His name and offer a Passover sacrifice to the Eternal your God. 3 Don't eat any leavened bread with it. Eat unleavened bread during the seven days of this celebration because "suffering bread" is what you made when you quickly left your suffering in Egypt. If you eat it again each year, you'll always remember the day you left Egypt. 4 For these seven days, no one in the whole country should have any yeast. And none of the meat from the sacrifice you offer on the first night of the celebration should be left over on the next day. 5 Don't offer the Passover sacrifice in any of the other cities the Eternal your God is giving you. 6 Even if it's some distance, make the journey to the place He will choose for His name. Offer the Passover sacrifice in that place, in the evening, at sunset—the time when you left Egypt. 7 Cook it, and eat it in the place He chooses. In the morning, you can return to your tents, 8 but you must still only eat unleavened bread for the next six days. On the seventh day, the last day of the celebration, soberly gather together to worship Him. Don't do any work on that day.T 9-10 Another celebration the Eternal your God wants you to have is the Feast of Weeks. Hold this celebration seven weeks after you first begin to cut and harvest the barley in your fields. Each of you will choose something to contribute out of what He has blessed you with. 11 Go to the place He chooses for His name; and have a celebration there in His presence with your sons and daughters, your male and female slaves, and the Levites, foreigners, orphans, and widows who live in your city. 12 Remember you were slaves in Egypt, and obey these regulations carefully. 13 Later in the year, at the end of the harvest after you've finished threshing all your grain and making all your wine, celebrate the Feast of Shelters for seven days. [The Israelites made temporary shelters and lived in them for a week to remember how they lived in temporary shelters when they left Egypt] 14 Celebrate with your sons and daughters, your male and female slaves, and the Levites, foreigners, orphans, and widows who live in your city. 15 Celebrate for seven days in honor of the Eternal your God, in the place the Eternal will choose. The Eternal your God will bless you with abundant produce; He will bless everything you do, and you'll have a lot to celebrate! 16 Three times each year, every male Israelite must appear before Him in the place He chooses for the Feast of Unleavened Bread (Passover),for the Feast of Weeks (Pentecost),and for the Feast of Shelters (Tabernacles). Don't come empty-handed! 17 Decide what amount you want to contribute voluntarily out of what He has blessed you with, and bring that as a gift. For Reflection"There are a number of celebrations found in the Hebrew Scriptures, but only three great feasts are part of the Mosaic law. They retell the story of their covenant relationship with the Lord and provide occasions to share generously with those in need. They give the people the opportunity to acknowledge publicly that God is the source of their abundance, so they won't be tempted to think they've prospered on their own and forget Him. Each of the three great celebrations is a reminder of the servitude in Egypt. Passover, followed by the week of unleavened bread, is a reminder of God redeeming His people from Egypt and falls within March or April each year. The Feast of Weeks, known as Pentecost to Christians, is 50 days after first fruits or the beginning of the barley harvest and comes in May or June. They are told to remember that they were once slaves in Egypt. The last of the great celebrations, the Feast of Shelters, comes in September or October. It is a reminder of the provision of God when the nation lived in temporary shelters while wandering in the wilderness." Commentary from The Voice.
Most of our contemporary celebrations are remembrances. How do you commemorate your journey with God?
Pray Pray and let the Holy Spirit guide your life. Pray and remember the journey in which God has accompanied you. Pray and celebrate the friend you have in Christ.
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