7-1 The Passover And The Breaking Of Bread
If we can establish that the breaking of bread service is intended as
a similar feast to the Passover, we can look back to the details of the
Passover in Exodus 12 and get deeper insight into the true nature of the
memorial meeting.
1. Jesus instituted the breaking of bread in the Upper Room instead of
the Passover; as the Jews physically associated themselves with the body
and blood of the Lamb, so we do the same in symbol in our service.
2. In doing so, He pointed out that the bread represented His flesh,
and as He said earlier " except ye eat the flesh of the Son of Man,
ye have no life in you" . To a Jew, the phrase 'eating flesh' would
immediately take them back to the Passover, where the flesh of the lamb
was to be eaten; thus in the new Passover, we eat the flesh of the lamb
as we eat the bread.
3. In advising the Corinthians to withdraw their fellowship from the
wrongdoer, Paul says that " Christ our Passover is sacrificed for
us...let us keep the feast not with the old leaven (the wrongdoer- 'deliver
such an one to satan...purge out the old leaven...I have written unto
you not to keep company if any man that is called a brother be a fornicator'),
neither with the leaven of malice.." ; therefore Paul is likening
the breaking of bread service at which the wrongdoer should not be present
to the Passover, with the unleavened bread representing error in practice
or attitude.
General Points
In Lev. 23 we learn that on the morning after the Passover Sabbath a
sheaf of firstripe barley must be waived (i.e. passed to and fro) before
the Lord; this represents the resurrection of Christ and the fact He is
a firstfruits of us; but so encouragingly, a few weeks later at Pentecost
the corresponding wave offering before the Lord was two loaves baked
with leaven. Leaven always represents sin or corruption. They represent
Jews and Gentiles who because of Christ's resurrection and triumph can
come into the presence of God despite their leaven, our natural wretched
man of the flesh, not having been completely purged out of them. Personally
I feel that the N.T. indicates that it is God's desire that we should
break bread weekly; if so, then the seven days of unleavened bread afterwards
then represent our restrained lives in the coming week until we come to
break bread again.
We each come to keep our Passover with different feelings and needs.
But because the Passover incorporates every kind of sacrifice, all our
needs ought to be able to be met by our memorial meeting. The eating of
unleavened cakes was like the meal offering, the total burning of the
remains of the meal was like the burnt offering, the eating of the lamb
as a holy meal was like a peace offering, and the smearing of the blood,
which in Hezekiah's time seems to have been replaced by the priest sprinkling
the people with the blood, corresponds to the smearing and sprinkling
of the blood of a sin offering. So whether we feel a great need for forgiveness
(cp. the sin offering), personal rededication (burnt offering), fellowship
with God and our brethren (peace offering) or expressing our thanks to
God (meal offering), our breaking of bread, Christ our Passover, is designed
to have all that we need. Whether our experience of the breaking of bread
is indeed this fulfilling is a question we need to meditate upon. If our
taking of the emblems is like eating the Passover, then the intensity
of the actual meal should be seen amongst us as we partake of the emblems.
All distractions should be removed as far as possible.
The Exodus Record
Ex. 12:10 implies they spent the whole night eating the meal as zealously
as possible, because the aim was not to have any left by the morning.
So we must make the maximum possible use of the spiritual help and forgiveness
given in Christ, before the morning of His coming is here and it is too
late to gain help. Dt. 16:7 also indicates the whole night was spent eating:
" Thou shalt roast and eat it in the place which the lord shall chose;
and thou shalt turn in the morning, and go unto thy tents" . On this
first occasion, they literally left Egypt that same night. The sense of
urgency and intensity is hard to miss, yet so difficult to replicate in
our own experience. And yet we are either in Egypt, or redeemed. At this
moment in time, your name is either in the book of life or not. You either
have unforgiven sins hanging over you or you don't. Now is the time as
soon as possible to repent, to gain full forgiveness, to gain full freedom
with God. They ate the feast standing up, terrified of Egypt as we are
of sin, awed by the sense of the presence of God, as we should be the
presence of Christ Himself in the midst of us gathered here. Likewise
Hezekiah's people ate the feast with their minds prepared, or standing
up. The very meaning of the words used in this chapter indicate the sense
of intensity; they were to strike the blood on the door, to 'lay hand
on' the blood, to grasp; the word is used in the Law about a rapist ceasing
or kidnapping his victim. That's the intensity we must have in seizing
Christ's sacrifice, or as the N.T. puts it 'apprehending' that for which
we are apprehended, taking our place in the Kingdom almost by violence,
taking hold of it by force. And that's just what the phrase in v.21 means-
" draw out a lamb" - seize hold of one. And so like
the drowning men and women we are, we grab hold of the lifebelt of Christ
and cling to Him. He is the only way to save us from our sins, from the
bondage and death of Egypt.
The eating of the meal with girded loins (Ex. 12:11,13) is seen by Peter
as meaning we should have our minds girded, gathered up, in place
and order (1 Pet. 1:13). Note how 1 Peter is replete with Passover allusions
(1:17 cp. sojourning with fear in Egypt; 1:18 silver and gold taken from
Egypt; 1:19 the Passover lamb; 1:23 corruptible seed= leaven; 2:9,10 cp.
leaving Egypt at night, led from darkness to the glory of Sinai, where
they became a nation.
Yet it was not all fear and intensity. Ex. 12:11 says they were to eat
in haste. The Hebrew word translated " haste" is only ever used
in the context of the Passover; it comes from the word for the weasel,
because of its sense of quick, smooth, gliding motion. There was to be
no panic in their leaving Egypt, but calmness. It is a different word
to that used in Ex. 12:.33, where we read that the Egyptians sent the
people out in haste; this is a different word, implying fear on the part
of the Egyptians, a desire to rush the people out in panic. So in our
leaving of the flesh, we must not be driven by a sense of panic
and fear of rejection, but above all by a gliding, ever flowing love of
God's commands.
The meal was followed by the seven days of unleavened bread: " no
manner of work shall be done in them, save that which every man must necessarily
do to eat, that only may be done of you" (Ex. 12:16 LXX). So our
daily work should be limited to providing for ourselves the necessities
of life, so that the rest of our thoughts and desires can be directed
to the meditation and service of God. To live up to the teaching of all
these types is hard mental work; thus in Ex. 12:25 Passover is called
a " service" , a word which normally refers to hard physical
work, tillage, bondservice, as if to say that the battle for spiritual
alertness is just as hard work as the physical labour from which they
were freed. Similarly in Dt. 16:3 the unleavened bread is called the "
bread of affliction" , whilst in 1 Cor. 5:8 it is called the "
unleavened bread of sincerity and Truth" , as if being sincere and
true and not having malice and bitterness in our hearts is a result of
much mental affliction and exercising of the mind. So to keep the feast
we have to search our houses, our lives, for anything like leaven- anything
that puffs us up, that distorts us from the true smallness and humility
we should have, that corrupts our sincerity. By nature we have so much
pride in us, so much that puffs us up. We should always find some leaven
in us every time we examine ourselves. The Jews used to search their houses
with candles, looking for any sign of leaven. So we too must look into
every corner of our lives with the candle of the word. Similarly before
the great Passovers of Hezekiah and Josiah there was a searching for idols
which were then thrown down.
Passover was intended as a personal looking back to their beginnings,
both as a nation and individually . It was to remind them of the day they
came out of Egypt, all their lives (Dt. 16:3). This was written in the
40th year of their wanderings, as they were about to enter Canaan. Those
who had literally come out of Egypt were largely dead; this verse is a
general command to Jews of all generations. So God wanted them to see
that in a sense they personally came out of Egypt at that time, even though
they were not then born. So with us, while we were yet sinners, before
we were born, Christ died for us. On the cross all God's people were as
it were taken out of Egypt, in prospect delivered from sin. So we look
back to the slain lamb in our feast, to us there in God's plan and delivered
from sin, the power of the devil, sin in us destroyed by Christ's death
in prospect on that cross. There is so much to personally meditate upon
in this feast; the physical organization of the breaking of bread should
never be rushed. It's better to allow ample time for meditation rather
than, e.g., insist on doing long Bible readings which may not be directly
relevant.
Leviticus Details
There are some fascinating details in the Leviticus record of the Passover.
The wood was to be placed in order on the fire (Lev. 1:7), suggesting
the use of several bits of wood to be laid in order, with the parts also
laid in order upon them. This was as if each part of the Lord's life (and
ours) had its own cross. The offerer " shall cut it into his pieces"
(1:12)- the pieces of the animal were the pieces of the offerer, so the
ambiguous genitive suggests. The offerer was represented by the sacrifice.
The parts were washed in the water (of the word) before the final crucifying
of flesh. Lev. 1:15 A.V. mg. stipulates that if the offering was a bird,
" pinch off the head with the nail" - as if a nail used in the
process, perhaps for nailing the parts to the wood (cp. the cross). All
this is picked up by Paul in Rom. 7 where he says that he delights in
God's law after the inward man, or innards. He sees himself as cut open
and offered to God. All this provokes powerful self-examination. Does
the zeal of God's house consume every part of the offering of our lives
as we lay ourselves before Him at the Passover meal? Does it eat us up?
Do our faces and words and way of speaking reflect the crucifixion of
every part of our lives? Or does our triviality, our inability to spiritually
concentrate our minds, our lack of sustained enthusiasm for the Lord's
work reflect the fact that we are not like that animal as it lay dead
and still in its parts on that altar, that we are not in the spirit of
Christ. Our attitudes to money, holidays, relationships, standard of living,
commitment to study of the word, zeal for preaching, all raise question
marks in our minds. It is easy to take immediate refuge in the fact that
salvation is through the grace of the Lord's sacrifice, not works. But
before we go on to those sentiments, let us accept that we do all have
an urgent need for improvement. If we face up to this, if our minds are
alert to this in everyday life, then are hearts will be prepared, standing
erect, the loins of our mind girded. We will be able like the unpurified
of Hezekiah's time to acceptably eat the feast. And thus we will be able
to rejoice throughout the long night of our lives, eagerly waiting for
the call to leave this world and be taken elsewhere. There is a wonder
in the whole Passover message; that something as simple as a sweet lamb
roasting and spitting in the middle of their home and the blood zealously
splashed on the door frame could bring such great deliverance. To cover
an average door frame with a small lamb's blood would require all the
blood to be used; and so we too zealously take hold of every part and
aspect of the Lord's sacrifice, symbolized by our solemn eating and drinking
of the symbols of His entire body and complete blood. " Drink ye
all of it" recalls how Israel had to eat every part of the lamb,
even the repulsive bits which their stomachs would have involuntarily
protested at (Ex. 12:9).
Hezekiah's Passover
Hezekiah and Josiah kept very successful Passovers, and the good points
from them seem good for us to emulate if we are going to make the breaking
of bread a successful spiritual experience. Reflect on the following observations
from 2 Chron. 30:
v. 21 They sang loudly and joyfully. That there was singing at most Passovers
is indicated by Is. 30:29, which prophesies concerning the joyful time
of Israel's salvation that " ye shall have a song, as in the night
when a holy solemnity [a feast] is kept" . Passover is the only feast
kept at night, and so this indicates that Israel were familiar with the
idea of joyful singing whilst keeping the feast. Thus the reality of our
deliverance from sin, or Egypt, should be a cause for true praise and
joy.
v. 22 the people were taught " the good knowledge of the Lord"
- i.e. they had some lively Bible study.
v. 22 They made confession of their human unworthiness.
v. 23 The spirit of the Passover continued- the people freely decided
to " keep other seven days with gladness" . So often we are
hardly out of the hall door before the spirit of our Passover leaves us.
v. 26 there was " great joy"
v. 19 Very relevantly to us, although the people were not officially
cleansed and therefore technically unable to partake of the Passover,
they dared to ask God for mercy that they may be able to partake of it.
And so we too in our unworthiness consider the salvation of the crucified
Christ, Christ our Passover slain for us, and recognize that by taking
the emblems we are committing ourselves to try to rise up to not only
His example but also the salvation He graciously offers; to crucify our
every desire, every particle of self within us. We are not alone in our
nagging sense of unworthiness; for the record stresses that at Hezekiah's
Passover " many" , " a multitude" (vv. 16,17) were
unfit to take the Passover. But because of Hezekiah's intercession for
them and because they " prepared their hearts" , they were able.
" To prepare" means literally to erect, to make upright. As
we will see later, the commands about how they were to keep the Passover
standing upright ready to go were to engender mental awareness, spiritual
alertness. So if we are like this, our many failures will be overlooked,
and we can keep the feast with joy. " To prepare" also means
to face oneself in a certain direction. If our hearts, our innermost motivations,
are pointing in the right direction generally, our occasional waverings
can be forgotten.
Burnt Offerings
Later references to the Passover show that burnt offerings were offered
by the worshippers as well; it seems that the lambs had the skin flayed
off them (2 Chron. 35:11), in uncanny prophecy of the Lord's scourging.
Dt. 16 says that they were to seethe or boil the Passover in the place
God would chose. But in Ex. 12 they were told they must not seethe the
Passover lamb; therefore we can conclude that there were other burnt offerings
which were included in the Passover. Thus we read that at Josiah's Passover
(2 Chron. 35:8,9,13,16) the princes gave 300 oxen- not lambs- " for
the Passover offerings.. they roasted the Passover with fire...but the
other holy offerings they sod in pots" . The burnt offering represented
rededication; these offerings were made in response to that of the slain
lamb. So this should be an element of our Passover, renewing our vows
to serve God, really meaning it, not just going through a ritual of promising
God to love Him more, but really deciding to desperately cling to Him
the harder. The burnt offering was cut into parts by the offerer using
a knife, showing how we should cut open our lives before God. Therefore
although we should mainly examine ourselves at this meeting to make sure
we are concentrating on Jesus, the lamb, there is also some place for
personal examination. For the sacrifice of the lamb must, inevitably and
inexorably, lead us to sacrifice in response. |