Holy Week: The Passover of Our God
![The Passover](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4091/955/200/passover.jpg)
The Passover foreshadowed the events of Holy Week, exactly as God intended. The Son came to earth to assume human flesh and to live perfectly in the stead of imperfect humanity. He carried our weaknesses in himself, resisting temptation to depart from his chosen path. He came knowing not only that he would die on our behalf, but choosing so to do. His death came during the time of Passover in Judah, as the children of Abraham praised God for his deliverance of his people from Egypt, the land of bondage.
![Red Sea Crossing](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4091/955/200/red_sea.jpg)
God established the Passover as the defining moment of His chosen people Israel. Through it, He called them out of slavery and into His family. Hundreds of years later, all of human history reached its defining moment as God used His Son to call people out of slavery to sin and into the family of Jesus Christ.
![Maundy Thursday](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4091/955/200/maundy_thursday.jpg)
Christ passed over from life to death to life forevermore. As God used Moses with his staff, so on a far greater scale the Father used Jesus and His cross. Moses stretched out the staff in his arms to rescue God’s people from death on the shores of the sea. Jesus stretched out His arms on the cross to rescue all people from eternal death in hell. He leads the believers across death to life eternal in heaven. His Passover becomes ours. His resurrection is the guarantee that we too will rise to new life.
![Good Friday](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4091/955/200/good_friday.jpg)
As we grow in the Faith, Easter takes its rightful place as the defining moment in our lives. Knowing better our sinfulness, we appreciate better our salvation. We need not fear death, grave, and decay: We will rise to live with our Savior forever. All sins, great and small, are washed away and Christ dresses us as kings and priests. God treats us as His dear children rather than as the illegitimate offspring of Satan.
![The Resurrection of Our Lord](http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/4091/955/200/resurrection.jpg)
God grant you full measure of that joy as you pass with His Son through this life and into life eternal, singing with all Christ’s Church our “hymns of victory.”
Visit LutheranHymnal.com for MIDI audio for The Day of Resurrection.
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Walter Snyder is the pastor of Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Emma, Missouri and coauthor of the book What Do Lutherans Believe.
Technorati Tags: Passover | Holy Week | Maundy Thursday | Good Friday | Easter | crucifixion | resurrection
1 Comments:
Let us not forget that the Messiah is, as he said, the Bread from Heaven (John 6:51) in addition to being the (Passover) Lamb who takes away the sins of the world (John 1:29).
This is how Jesus gives us clear instruction on how to worship: "Jesus took some bread, and after a blessing, He broke it and gave it to the disciples, and said, 'Take, eat; this is My body.'" (Matthew 26:26; Mark 14:22; 1 Corinthians 11:23-25)
But we are not to take just any bread, but specifically unleavened bread, as at the Passover, which by the power of the Holy Spirit becomes the Bread of Life, Jesus himself, so that we may obey his command in John 6:51: "I am the living bread that came down from heaven; whoever eats this bread will live forever; and the bread that I will give is my flesh for the life of the world."
Hence our partaking of the Eucharist - the Bread of Life come down from Heaven - every Sunday to commemorate (literally be with him in) His passion, death, and resurrection as he instructed us. "As often as you shall do these things, in memory of me shall you do them." (1 Corinthians 11:25)
He is our Passover Lamb, and as the Old Covenant commanded that we celebrate the Passover as an everlasting memorial (that we are mystically there again at the deliverance from captivity in Egypt), the New Covenant commands that we continually celebrate (and are mystically there again) the Last Supper which began our deliverance from captivity to sin.
Thank you, God, for providing the Lamb (as you provided for Abraham and Isaac) to be the true Manna from Heaven, that we may eat your flesh, present to us in what once was bread but transubstantiated by the power of the Holy Spirit in your True Presence in the Eucharist. All praise, honor, and glory be Yours, Lord, now and forever. Amen.
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