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Jesus’ Last Days- April 2 sundown to Friday, April 3 sundown

Simon Peter answered, “You are the Anointed, the son of the living God.” then he ordered his students to tell nobody that he himself was the Anointed. After that Jesus began to show his students how he had to go off to Jerusalem, and have many things done to him by the elders and chief priests and canon-lawyers, and be killed, and rise up the third day.—Matthew 16:16, 20, 21.

By Leonard Griehs

Nisan 14 Thursday, April 2 sundown to Friday, April 3 sundown

Jesus sat down at the table. “I wanted with all my heart to eat the seder with you before my suffering begins, because I’m telling you, I’ll never eat it again until it is fulfilled in the kingdom of God.” Jesus spoke to them of brotherhood and service. Judas was getting restless. Jesus looked at him. “Do what you’re doing and be quick about it,” he said. Judas picked up a piece of bread and made his way to the door. Despite their protests, Jesus washed their feet and sat back down. After sharing bread and wine with them and asking them to remember him by doing this, Jesus took his disciples out to Mount Olive.

“All of you will let me down tonight—just like the scripture says, `I will strike at the shepherd, and the sheep in his herd will scatter.’ But after rising up I will go on ahead of you into Galilee.”

Peter protested, “Even if everyone lets you down, I will never let you down.”

Jesus gazed into Peter’s eyes, .”I promise you, in the night ahead, from now till cockcrow, you will say you don’t know me three times.”

Again Peter protested, “Even if I had to die with you, I would never say I didn’t know you.” All echoed Peter’s response.

Jesus led them across the side of the mountain to Gethsemane.

“Sit here till I’ve finished praying,” he told them.

Twice Jesus came back to find them sleeping and rebuked them. Finally, he heard a commotion in the garden. “Up now!” he said. “Come on! Here he comes, my betrayer!” The disciples couldn’t believe it! There was Judas with a group of soldiers. He stepped up to Jesus.

“Good evening, master,” he said as he kissed Jesus.

“Judas, are you going to betray the son of humanity with a kiss?” Jesus stepped around to confront the group behind Judas. “Who are you looking for?” he asked.

“Jesus of Nazareth.”

“Here I am.”

The men drew back so quickly that some tripped and fell. Jesus asked them again, “Who are you looking for?”

“Jesus of Nazareth.”

“I told you, here I am, so if you’re looking for me, let these people go.” The group came slowly forward.

Peter jumped in front of Jesus. He drew his sword and cut off the ear of the fellow about to grab Jesus.

Jesus stopped him, “Let’s stop short of that.” He picked up the ear and healed the man. “Put your sword back where it belongs,” he told Peter, “those who fight swords with swords are lost. You think I can’t call on my Father and have him supply me even now with more than twelve legions of his messengers? But how will scriptures be fulfilled that say this must happen?” Jesus turned back to the mob surrounding him.

“As if in pursuit of a robber you came out to get me with swords and clubs? I used to sit in the daytime in the temple when I was teaching and you didn’t take me then. This has happened to fulfill all the prophet’s writings.” As the mob descended on Jesus, the disciples turned and fled. They tried to grab a young boy who was in the garden with them but he got away.

The mob took Jesus to the house of Annas. Peter followed at a distance behind and lingered outside as the priest questioned Jesus. A maid at the door spotted him. “You aren’t one of that fellow’s students too, are you?” Peter replied quickly, “No, I’m not.”

Inside Jesus responded to the inquiries of the former high priest. “I have publicly spoken to the world. I constantly taught in synagogues and in the temple, where all Jews gather, and I said nothing in secret. What are you asking me? Ask the ones who heard me what I said to them. See these people? They know what I said.”

One of the servants slapped Jesus, “Is that how you answer the high priest?”

Jesus showed no fear. “If I said something bad, testify about the evil. If I spoke well, why are you beating me up?”

Eager now to punish Jesus, they rustled him about and took him to the house of Caiaphas. There the priests tried to find some who would talk against Jesus, but no two could give the same testimony. Jesus refused to answer the false accusations. Caiaphas was frustrated and finally decided he had had enough. He would take matters into his own hands Caiaphas moved face to face with Jesus. “Are you the Anointed, the Son of the most blessed?” he asked Jesus.

Jesus’ eyes did not move from Caiaphas’ eyes. “Yes I am, and you will see the son of humanity sitting on the right hand of power and trailing the clouds of the sky.”

“What do we need witnesses for any more?” shouted Caiaphas as he turned to the others. “You heard that blasphemy! How does it look to you?” They all judged that he should be killed.

They began spitting on Jesus, and covering his face while they punched him and said, “Prophesy! Who just hit you?” They hit him again and again.

Peter stood outside in the courtyard, warm now from the fire. “You were with the Nazarene too —you know: Jesus,” those around him said.

“I don’t know or understand what you’re talking about.” Peter ran the other way. The girl at the door saw him again.

“This guy is one of them.” she said. Others said “Of course you’re one of them. After all, you are a Galilean.”

“Fellow, I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Peter shouted. Suddenly, he heard a rooster crow. Peter looked inside the house and saw Jesus, bound and bleeding from the beating, turn and look at him. Peter ran away and wept more bitterly than he had wept in his whole life. Caiaphas ordered his men to put Jesus in the cellar for the night.

Early Friday morning, they took Jesus to Pilate’s mansion. Meanwhile Judas went back to the elders at the temple.

“I was wrong to betray innocent blood,” he protested.

“What’s that to us? That’s your problem.” They were happy now.

Judas threw down the silver at their feet, turned and ran outside. Later they found him hanging from a tree outside the temple.

“What charge are you bringing against this person?” asked Pilate.

“If he wasn’t doing something wrong, we wouldn’t have handed him over to you,” they protested.

Pilate hated dealing with these Jews. “Take him yourself and try him by your own law.”

“We’re not allowed to kill anybody. We caught this guy undermining our society and keeping people from paying taxes to Caesar and saying he had been anointed the king.” Pilate summoned Jesus in front of him. “You’re the king of the Jews?” he asked.

Jesus looked at him. “Are you saying this on your own, or did others tell you about me?”

“Do I look like a Jew?” Pilate was annoyed. “Your people and your high priests handed you over to me. What did you do?”

“My kingdom is not of this world. If my kingdom was of this world, my servants would fight to the death for me not to be handed over to the Jews; but in fact, my kingdom isn’t here.”

Pilate kept up the inquiry. “So you are a king?”

“You say I am a king. What I was born for and what I came into the world for was to testify to the truth. Everyone who is of the truth responds to my voice.”

“What is truth?” asked Pilate, without expecting a reply. He went back out to the Jews. “I don’t see any charge against him.”

The priests protested, “He’s inciting the populace, teaching all through Judea, starting with Galilee and ending here.”

Pilate saw his opportunity to get rid of this once and for all. He sent Jesus, a Galilean, to Herod, the governor of that region, who happened to be in Jerusalem during the festival. Herod was excited. He had heard about Jesus but had never seen him. Jesus refused to talk. As Herod listened to the accusations he grew disappointed that Jesus wouldn’t do or say anything. Finally Herod ended it. He put Jesus in a robe and sent him back to Pilate. Pilate smiled at Herod’s joke.but Pilate was done dealing with the Jews’ stupidity.

“You brought me this person on the grounds that he was undermining society and you see how I examined him in front of you and found no charge against the fellow of the kind you accused him of. Nor could Herod. That’s why he sent him back to us. He just hasn’t done anything worthy of death. So we’ll whip him to teach him a lesson and let him go.”

The crowd would have none of it. “Keep him and release Barabbas,” they shouted. “Crucify him, crucify him.”

Pilate couldn’t understand it. “But what did he do wrong? I couldn’t find any capital charge against him. So I’ll whip him soundly and let him go.” But the Jews still protested for Pilate to order Jesus’ execution.

Pilate’s wife sent word to him. “Have nothing to do with that innocent man,” she said. “I dreamt last night that I suffered horribly because of him.” Finally, Pilate tried one last gesture. He washed his hands in front of the crowd and said, “I am innocent of this man’s blood, see to it yourselves.”

The crowd cried in unison, “Let his blood be on us and our children.” Pilate’s soldiers dressed Jesus in a crown of thorns and cloak of purple. They spit on him and hit him over the head with a cane. Pilate led Jesus out on the arch that stood above the city.

“See, I’m bringing him out here to let you know that I see no charge whatever against him. Here’s the fellow.”

“Crucify, crucify,” the crowd shouted.

Pilate was at the end of his wits. “Take him yourselves and crucify him. I don’t see any charge against him.”

“We have our law and by that law he deserves to die because he made himself out to be the son of God.”

Pilate’s face showed a blush of sudden fear. He knew stories of Roman gods visiting the earth to test human compassion. He took Jesus back inside.

“Where are you from?” he asked. Jesus did not answer.

“You won’t talk to me? Don’t you know I have the power to let you go and also the power to crucify you?”

Finally Jesus spoke,.”You would have no power at all over me if it wasn’t given you from above. So that the one who handed me over to you has the greater fault.”

That was it. Pilate told the Jews he had made a judgment to let Jesus go.

“If you let this guy go you’re no friend of Caesar’s. Anyone who makes himself out to be a king is speaking against Caesar.”

Pilate was shattered. He could not let Caesar think he was disloyal. After all, this man was just another Jew. He gave orders for the execution. The crowd cheered.

As Jesus was led through the streets, they grabbed a man named Simon to carry his cross. Women wept as they watched Jesus pass by. He turned to them, “Daughters of jerusalem, don’t cry for me, cry for yourselves and your children, because watch, there will come days when they will say, ‘Lucky for those who were sterile, for the wombs that never bore and the breasts that never nursed.’ Than they will start saying to the mountains, ‘fall upon us’ and to the hills, ‘cover us up’ and if they do that when the wood is still green, what will they do by the time it dries?”

They reached Golgotha outside the city, nailed Jesus to the cross and hung him between two criminals. The crowds passed by on their way into the city and mocked Jesus as he hung there. One of the criminals hanging with him joined in the jeering, “Aren’t you the Anointed? Save yourself and us.” The other interrupted, “Do you have no fear of God, just because your sentence is the same? We’re rightly getting what’s coming to us for what we did, but he did nothing unlawful.” He turned his eyes toward Jesus. “Jesus, remember me when you get to your kingdom.”

Jesus looked at him.”I promise you today you will be with me in Paradise.”

Jesus looked down at his mother standing by John. “Madam, here is your son.” He looked at John. “Here is your mother.”

As the afternoon wore on, the light began to dim. By three o’clock came it was dark all over the land. Jesus looked up and cried out, “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?”

Those around wondered why he was calling Elijah.. Finally, Jesus cried out again. “It is finished. Father, I put my spirit in your hands”. As Jesus dropped his head, the Jews all over Israel killed their lamb for the Passover feast which would start at sundown.


All quotes are as translated by The Unvarnished New Testament, translated by Andy Gaus. The order of scriptures is designated by comparative studies of the four gospels, and citations are available on request

PRECIOUS PROMISES – Memorial Reflections

“Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises: that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature.” – 1 Peter 1:4

We might think of them as tools to help fix a problem in our thinking.

We might think of them as incentives in times of discouragement when we grow weary in the fight in our minds.

We might think of them as messengers when we are confused as a double-mindedness is neigh.

We might think of them as a life preserver when we are overwhelmed with the fight.

We might think of them as a balm for the heart when we feel despaired of life.

We might think of them as a drink of cool water when we are spiritually dry.

We might think of them as a staff of support along our weary way.

We might think of them as a phone call to a parent.

We might think of them a light of hope when we are in a dark place at night.

We might think of them as a medicine when spiritually sick.

We might think of them as gifts from our loving Father above who desires that we use them in our every time of need. He really only asks that we believe – that we trust and that we believe in Him and in Jesus and that we try to do our best even after the times of repeated daily failures. That if we are still trusting in the blood and holding the head, we might partake with the deepest gratitude of the simple glorious feast saying in our heart of hearts glory to the lamb that was slain, worthy to receive power and riches, wisdom and strength, honor and glory.

Br. Rick Cunningham, Detroit Convention March 29, 2015

Passover Perspectives Exodus 12: A Night of Watching

#346  Passover Perspectives  Exodus 12:  A Night of Watching

A night of watching   Exodus 12:42  “It was a night of watching unto the LORD for bringing them out from the land of Egypt; this same night is a night of watching unto the LORD for all the children of Israel throughout their generations.”  (Masoretic Text)

This is the call for our Gospel Age experience, to watch and pray.

The present is represented in the Scriptures to be “the hour of temptation” or testing at the close of this age.  It is the Gethsemane hour, in this sense of the word, to all who are the Lord’s people, fully consecrated to him.  It is the hour, therefore in which we, like our Lord, should be seeking the Father’s face to receive the full assurance that we are his, and that he is ours; and that we may rely confidently on his strength to carry us through this time…

We are to watch, and to be on our guard against the encroachments of the world, the flesh and the devil.  We are to watch for all the encouragements of the Lord’s Word, the evidence of their fulfillment, the signs that betoken his presence and the great changes of dispensation just at hand.  We are to watch for everything that will strengthen us in faith and hope and loyalty and love; and while watching we are to pray without ceasing.  We are to pray together as the Lord’s people; we are to pray in our homes, as families; we are to pray in secret, in private.  We are to have the spirit of prayer in all that we say and do: that is to say, our hearts should be going out continually to the Lord for guidance in all of life’s affairs, that we may do with our might what our hands find to do, in a manner that will be acceptable to him, and that we may be shielded by him from temptation that would otherwise be beyond our endurance, and that we be ultimately delivered from the evil one, and have a place in our Lord’s kingdom.”  R2775

Let us watch the Word of God and pray for insight and inspiration.

Let us watch to be aware and pray to be ready for the next step of deliverance.

Let us be aware of the waves, but watch and pray to not get over focused on them, eyes riveted on Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith.

Let us watch to be aware of our patterns of weakness, and pray to be regulated by the spirit of love, power and of a sound mind.

Let us watch and pray in gratitude for so great a deliverance on our behalf, and soon for Israel and all the families of the earth.

Let us honor him by watching and praying with him, and with one another.

 


 

Jesus stood and returned to his disciples.  He found them sleeping.

“Simon,” he said to Peter, “are you asleep?”

Three sets of heavy eyes strained to focus their attention on the one who spoke.

“Were you not able to watch with me one hour?

Watch and pray, that you enter not into temptation:

the spirit is ready but the flesh is weak.”  Matthew 26:41


Let us honor our Precious Savior by watching and praying and remembering him and the cost of his sacrifice,

to the praise of The Father through the Son,

a night of watching unto the LORD,

a LIFE of watching unto the LORD during this dark night of sin and death.

Passover Perspectives Exodus 12: The Protection of the Father in the Midst of the Cross

#345  Passover Perspectives  Exodus 12:  The Protection of the Father in the Midst of the Cross

Not a bone broken   Exodus 12:46  “It must be eaten inside one house; take none of the meat outside the house.  Do not break any of the bones.”

“Many are the afflictions of the righteous; but the LORD delivers him out of them all.

He keeps all his bones;  Not one of them is broken.”  Psalm 34:19-20

The Father exercised His all powerful and wise deliverance in the life of His Son.  Every challenge was met with the Father’s overruling.  John 5:30  Many were the afflictions of Christ, and yet God exhibited His power to limit these afflictions when He ordained that the Passover lamb would not have any bones broken.  The custom of the day was not allowed to be carried out in the case of Christ. John 19:31-36

This is an assurance to us.  We also will experience many afflictions.  But our challenges are limited by the wisdom of a loving Father.  No evil power or scheme will have the power to be break the hope and strength of His people.

Psalm 22 begins with the words from the cross “My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken me?” and ends with the final word from the cross “It is finished.”  This suggests that Psalm 22 was a focus of Jesus thoughts when he was on the cross.

Again the Father supplied specific prophecy and assurance for Jesus, an anchor of light in his darkest hour through this Psalm, written thousands of years before the crucifixion of Christ.

 


 

Please accept this dramatic rendition of Jesus last hours on earth as an attempt to make his loving sacrifice more of a reality. Some parts of Psalm 22 are paraphrased.

Crucified

“The evening of overwhelming emotion, the night of sleepless anxiety and suffering, the three trials and three sentences of death he received before the Jewish officials, the endless scene before Pilate, then Herod, the mockings and the beatings, then the final verdict of the people and the final scourging had totally sapped Jesus of his physical strength.”  (Life of Christ by Fenton Ferrar, pg 634)

Jesus was utterly exhausted as he staggered beneath the weight of sin’s cruelty that had been placed on his shoulders.  The greatest weight had been placed on his heart.  The people who pushed by him and stared and hurled insults at him were his people, the lost sheep of the house of Israel.  He recognized many faces.  Many he had healed, many had followed him, many had hailed him a king just a short time ago when he had entered Jerusalem on the donkey’s colt.  Many more made the pilgrimage to Jerusalem in order to observe the Holy Passover.  He sensed the oppressive darkness in their lives, a separation from God that made them blind. He sensed the fear and the engulfing confusion of those who had seen his miracles and believed him to be the Messiah.  He read their nobility and he read their depravity.  ‘For this cause I came into the world, to open the eyes of the blind,’ he uttered in prayer to his Father.

Jesus was stripped of his clothing and nailed to the cross.  The cross was slowly raised to its height and then dropped into a deep hole in the ground, in full reach of any of the gaping onlookers who may choose to strike him or inflict on him some other gesture of insult.  (Life of Christ by Fenton Ferrar, pg 640)

For six hours Jesus experienced excruciating pain, dizziness, cramping, and a raging thirst.  (Life of Christ, pg 641)

The Jewish officials were smug in their victory until they noticed the wooden sign that had been nailed to the top-most portion of Jesus cross.  An inscription was smeared in black letters, in three languages, and it read:  “The King of the Jews.”  Enraged, they sent their chief priests to beg Pilate to change the inscription to read “HE SAYS he is the King of the Jew,” but the Governor refused.  And so the truth was openly victorious, even on the cross.   Colossians 2:15

Suddenly the noonday sun turned to darkness.  The crowd was filled with fear and misgiving.  Jesus uttered the first verse of Psalm 22 in prayer to his Father.  His words were audible and tortured.

“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”

His mind labored to focus beyond the pain in order to silently speak the Holy Word.  He recalled the Psalm in a monotone of thought, the words rising and falling and melting into one another in quick succession as he struggled to breathe in and out.  He prayed the remaining verses inaudibly, his lips barely moving.

‘O my God, I cry out by day, but you do not answer…

Yet you are enthroned as the Holy One; You are the praise of Israel.

In You our fathers put their trust; They trusted and You delivered them…

But I am considered a worm, helpless, yet the blood of deliverance is in me,

Scorned by men and despised by the people…

Do not be far from me, for trouble is near and there is no one to help…

I am poured out like water and all of my bones are out of joint…

And my tongue cleaves to the roof of my mouth…’

“I thirst,” Jesus cried out.  A man took a sponge and dipped it in some wine, and using a stick of hyssop as an extension, he held the sponge up to Jesus parched lips.   (Life of Christ by Fenton Ferrar, pg 650)

Jesus continued to pray the Psalm with great effort.

“…They pierced my hands and my feet…they divided my garments

and cast lots for my clothing…

O my Strength, come quickly to help me…

I will declare your name to my brothers;

In the congregation I will praise you…

Praise Him, all you descendants of Israel.

For he has not despised or disdained the suffering of the afflicted one;

He has not hidden his face from him but has listened to his cry for help…

All the ends of the earth will remember and turn to the Lord,

And all the families of the nations will bow down before him,

For dominion belongs to the Lord and he rules over the nations….

“Father,” he cried out with all the strength that was left in his body, “into your hands I commend my spirit.”  He willed his thoughts to continued to follow the Psalm.  The words he uttered built up to a crescendo speed, spilling over one another as his hard breathing quickened with the determination to finish the Psalm.

‘All the rich of the earth will feast and worship;

all who go down to the dust will kneel before him—

those who cannot keep themselves alive.

In the future everyone will serve him;

Future generations will be told about the Lord.

They will proclaim his righteousness

To a people who do not yet have real life.

For he has finished it.’

“It is finished!” he shouted.

The earth shuddered and twisted in rage, rending the rocks and tearing the thick veil of the Temple in two.

Passover Perspectives Exodus 12: Living Unleavened

#341  Passover Perspectives  Exodus 12:  Living Unleavened

Leaven cleansed from your homes   Exodus 12:15 “For seven days you are to eat bread made without yeast.  On the first day remove the yeast from your houses, for whoever eats anything with yeast in it from the first day through the seventh shall be cut off from Israel.”   Exodus 12:18-20   “In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month at evening, you shall eat unleavened bread, until the twenty-first day of the month at evening.  Seven days there shall be no leaven found in your houses; for whoever eats what is leavened, that person shall be cut off from the congregation of Israel, whether he is an alien or a native of the land.  You shall not eat anything leavened; in all your dwellings you shall eat unleavened bread.”

We celebrate the delivering power of Christ in our lives by living an ‘unleavened life,’ a lifestyle that seeks the holiness of God.  1 Corinthians 5:7-8  We are empowered to live this holy life as followers of Christ throughout this Gospel Age and the seven stages of the Church.  Our spiritual life and blessing depends on our feeding on the example of the holiness of Christ and our surrender to him as he lives his holiness through our lives.   This lifestyle of purity is possible only as a result of the Passover-deliverance in our lives.

Exodus 12:34  “So the people took their dough before it was leavened, with their kneading bowls bound up in the clothes on their shoulders.”

The Bread of Affliction

On the first Passover the Hebrews had no time to cleanse the leaven out of their homes.  That direction was to be followed for the celebration of future Passovers.  But The LORD instituted the original eating of unleavened bread by the haste of the journey.  There was no time for the leaven to make the bread rise for the Passover meal and the bread they left Egypt with would have been unleavened.  The leavened bread is referred to as ‘the bread of affliction.’  “You shall not eat leavened bread with it; seven days you shall eat with it unleavened bread, the bread of affliction (for you came out of the land of Egypt in haste), in order that you may remember all the days of your life the day when you came out of the land of Egypt.”  Deuteronomy 16:3

It was referred to as the bread of affliction because it was prepared while in a state of stress and hardship as they hastily left Egypt.  (Soncino)

I heard the thought years ago that the bacteria for leavening is in the air, and so is the opportunity to sin.  We are vulnerable from the inside as well as from outside influences.  But if rightfully prepared and engaged in our Christian journey, we have no time for sin.  We have a standing of innocence in Christ and we live a sanctified life through his power amid the influences of Egypt.  These choices are challenging in the face of old habits from the old life, and are both a source of celebration and an experience of affliction.

We are to celebrate the feast that commemorates our deliverance with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.

1 Corinthians 5:1-7 admonishes us to cleanse out the old leaven, the old issues of sin, that you may be a new lump (of dough) just as you are unleavened (in your standing of innocence through Christ’s merit.)  We have the privilege of celebrating the sacrifice of Christ by choosing a lifestyle that matches our standing of innocence in Christ.  We celebrate Jesus sacrifice and the deliverance it brings us by living a lifestyle of purity.  The cleansing in this context includes the cleansing of the leaven in our hearts as well as the leaven in our fellowship.  We need to deal with the sin in ourselves and be a support and help for others to deal with their sins, all the while mindful of our common vulnerability and need for the strength and sacrifice of Christ.  Galations 6:1-10

Passover Perspectives Exodus 12: Eating on the Run

#340  Passover Perspectives  Exodus 12:  Eating on the Run

Eat it with unleavened bread and bitter herbs   Exodus 12:8  “And they shall eat the flesh that same night, roasted with fire, and they shall eat it with unleavened bread and bitter herbs…”

Exodus 12:39  “The dough was without yeast because they had been driven out of Egypt and did not have time to prepare food for themselves.”

Eat ready for a journey   Exodus 12:11  “Now you shall eat it in this manner:  with your loins girded, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand; and you shall eat it in haste—it is the LORD’s Passover.”

They were to eat it ready for travel at any moment.

As one Sister shared with me, “We have no time for sin.”

There is an urgency and “haste” in our lives as we absorb the offering of Christ in our hearts.  We partake with loins girded, shoes on our feet, and staff in our hand ready and motivated for a journey by the memory of the bitter oppression of sin and the contrast of his amazing deliverance.  We partake as pilgrims and strangers on this earth, “those who use the things of this world, as if not engrossed in them.  For this world in its present form is passing away.”  1 Corinthians 7:31  There was urgency in the quickly consuming trials of Christ.  There is urgency as we partake of the unleavened bread—the lifestyle of innocence and purity—we have no time for the leavening process of sin.

We wear the garb of travelers ready to leave because we do not identify ourselves with this world or with it’s Pharaoh.  “Beloved, I urge you as aliens and strangers to abstain from fleshly lusts, which wage war against the soul.  Keep your behavior excellent among the Gentiles, so that in the thing in which they slander you as evildoers, they may on account of your good deeds, as they observe them, glorify God in the day of visitation.”  1 Peter 2:11-12  We have left Egypt, and we are be ready to leave any remnants of sin habits from the old life.  When the LORD reveals the next step of our journey we are to be ready to respond.

No leftovers   Exodus 12:10  “Do not leave any of it until morning; if some is left till morning, you must burn it.”  Our ingestion of the life and offering of Christ is to be complete.  We are to eat fully so that all hunger of heart is satisfied.  The privilege of being part of the Kingdom of heaven is limited to this Gospel Age; it is an unrepeatable privilege to be part of the Church of the Firstborn with the heavenly reward of blessing all the families in the second passing over through the Red Sea.   Exodus 15:10, 16, 17; 2 Corinthians 6:2,3; 1 Corinthians 6:2

Our lives are surrounded by unrepeatable opportunities.  Our opportunity to encourage a brother or sister in Christ amid the tyranny of sin and death is limited to this Permission of Evil period.  Our opportunity to share the Hope for Kingdom blessing to the weary world when they see no hope, is limited to the present age, soon to be swallowed up by the reality of that Hope when all will know Him from the least to the greatest.  Jeremiah 31:33-34

May we absorb this sacrifice with the urgency and mission of being pilgrims and strangers.

The Physical Death of Jesus

Since this is the season of remembering Jesus crucifixion  and the value of his sacrifice on behalf of the whole mankind, we would refer you to the following site to realize at least in part how awful this way of death was and what it entailed: http://www.frugalsites.net/jesus/crucifixion.htm

Isaiah 53:4

3 He was despised and forsaken of men, A man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; And like one from whom men hide their face He was despised, and we did not esteem Him.

4 Surely our griefs He Himself bore, And our sorrows He carried; Yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted.

5 But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; The chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, And by His scourging we are healed.…

The Book of Micah on Human Condition

Micah 7:1-7

“Woe is me! for I am as when they have gathered the summer fruits, as the grapegleanings of the vintage: there is no cluster to eat: my soul desired the firstripe fruit.

The good  man is perished out of the earth: and there is none upright among men: they all lie in wait for blood; they hunt every man his brother with a net.

3 That they may do evil with both hands earnestly, the prince asketh, and the judge asketh for a reward; and the great man, he uttereth his mischievous desire: so they wrap it up.

4 The best of them is as a brier: the most upright is sharper than a thorn hedge: the day of thy watchmen and thy visitation cometh; now shall be their perplexity.

5 Trust ye not in a friend, put ye not confidence in a guide: keep the doors of thy mouth from her that lieth in thy bosom.

6 For the son dishonoureth the father, the daughter riseth up against her mother, the daughter in law against her mother in law; a man’s enemies are the men of his own house.

7 Therefore I will look unto the Lord; I will wait for the God of my salvation: my God will hear me.”

Passover Perspectives Exodus 12: The Fires that Proved Him Faithful

#339  Passover Perspectives  Exodus 12:  The Fires that Proved Him Faithful

The lamb roast with fire   Exodus 12:8-9  “That same night they are to eat the meat roasted over the fire…Do not eat the meat raw or cooked in water, but roast it over the fire—head, legs and inner parts.”

Christ’s life was in direct contact with trial, and his offering was consumed quickly in three and a half years.  May we fully appreciate the intensity of testing the our Savior endured.

“Therefore, If you would escape becoming weary and faint-hearted, compare your own sufferings with those of Him who endured such hostility directed against Him by sinners.”  Hebrews 12:3  Weymouth

Please accept any dramatic renditions as attempts to make the last experiences of Jesus more of a reality


The High Priest Caiaphas looked at Jesus with narrow eyes of contempt, his finger wagging in his face.  “Are you the Christ, the Son of the Blessed One?  I charge you under oath by the living God,” his voice was loud and demanding.  “Tell us if you are the Messiah, the Son of God.”

“Yes, I am.  It is as you say,” Jesus replied, looking straight into the High Priest’s eyes.  “But I say to all of you:  In the future you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of the Mighty One and coming on the clouds of heaven.”

Caiaphas tore his clothes in a show of dramatic frenzy. “He has spoken blasphemy!” the High Priest raved.  “We don’t need any more witnesses.  You have heard the blasphemy yourselves.  What do you think?”

Angry voices cried out, “He is guilty!”  “He deserves to die!”  “Let him die!”  Jesus stood in fearless silence.   Matthew 26:63-66

The temple guards spit in his face.  They pushed him around.  They struck him.  They blindfolded him.  “Prophesy!” they demanded, “Who hit you?”  They insulted him.  They mocked him.  They jeered.  Matthew 26:67-68, Mark 14:65, Luke 22:63

“The Sovereign Lord has opened my ears, and I have not been rebellious; I have not drawn back.  I offered my back to those who beat me, my cheeks to those who pulled out my beard; I did not hide my face from mocking and spitting.  Because the Sovereign LORD helps me I will not be disgraced. Isaiah 50:5-7

 hey struck him repeatedly with their fists and he doubled over from the blows.  He sensed another kind of blow, a blow to his heart that hurt him far deeper than the physical blows which sent him reeling to the floor.  He sensed that Peter, in a second wave of temptation, was even at that moment denying with cursing that he ever knew Jesus.


One man had been watching Peter with suspicion.   He saw that Peter had denied his association with this man from Galilee a number of times.  The man was sure of his accusation.  “This man must have been with him, for he is Galilean,” he exclaimed   Luke 22:59

“Man, I don’t know what you are talking about.”  Peter felt his throat tighten and a nervous sweat beaded his forehead.  He cursed and swore.  “I don’t know the man.”  A rooster began to crow.

At that moment from across the Courtyard Jesus turned and looked upon Peter.  There was great sorrow and great love in the Master’s eyes.  Peter’s eyes met his Master’s gaze for a brief moment and then he looked away.  Peter felt the pain of a thousand knives sink into his heart.  He had failed his Master when he most needed a friend.  All was lost.  He flung his outer coat over his head, rushed out into the night and wept bitterly.  Luke 22:59-60, 61-62; John 18: 27, Matthew 26:67-75, Mark 14:71-72

Those who guarded Jesus continued their cruel sport for the remainder of the cold night hours.  They beat him.  They blindfolded Jesus again, while others struck him repeatedly with their fists and with rods.  They continued their taunts.  “Prophesy to us, Messiah.   Who is the one who hit you?”Jesus sensed the lonely pain of the calloused men who beat him.  He sensed the shame and anguish of those who had been victims at the hands of men such as these.  “For this cause was I born, and I came into the world,” he prayed, “to set such men free….”  Luke 22:63-65, 66

Because the Sovereign LORD helps me I will not be disgraced.  Therefore have I set my face like flint, and I know I will not be put to shame.  He who vindicates me is near.  Who then brings charges against me?  Let us face each other!  Who is he that will condemn me?  They will all wear out like a garment; the moths will eat them up.  (Their victory is only temporary.)”  Isaiah 50:7-9

Passover Perspectives Exodus 12: The Power of his Sacrifice

#338  Passover Perspectives  Exodus 12:  The Power of his Sacrifice

 Blood on the door frame  Exodus 12:7   “Then they are to take some of the blood and put in on the sides and tops of the doorframes of the houses where they eat the lambs.”

In a collective sense and in an individual sense the power of deliverance in the blood of Christ is applied to the doorway—the heart affections and conscience which allows or denies entrance to thoughts and influences.

The blood of Christ is here pictured as effecting our choices, our decisions of what to let in and what to let out of our lives.

“And if you address as Father the One who impartially judges according to each man’s work, conduct yourselves in fear during the time of your stay upon earth; knowing that you were not redeemed with perishable things like silver or gold from your futile way of life inherited from your forefathers, but with precious blood, as of a lamb unblemished and spotless, the blood of Christ.”  1 Peter 1:17-19

It is the power of his ransom sacrifice gives us a standing of freedom from sin, and that that leads to the power to free us from futile and empty sin habits inherited from Adam so that we can make sanctified choices.

May the sign of his sacrifice be evident to all who observe the influence of our lives.


While they were eating, Jesus took bread, the remaining half of the unleavened cake that had been set aside, and with a deliberateness that separated this part of the service from tradition, he gave thanks, and passed it to each of his disciples, saying,

“Take and eat.  This is my body given for you.  Do this in remembrance of me.”

And in the same way He took the cup after they had eaten, saying,

“This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood.”  Luke 22:20