Maundy
Thursday
Ex
12:1-14
3/28/24
It
turns out that in eastern Europe, people don’t want to remember. After the end of World War II, the Soviet
Union built numerous memorials to the Red Army and its soldiers in the
countries where it defeated Nazi Germany.
These countries then became areas that were dominated by the Soviet
Union. They were forced to become communist as true free elections were
denied. They were places where free
speech was not allowed, and the state police repressed all opposition. These nations were basically colonies of the
Soviet Union, and the Soviets invaded Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in
1967 in order to maintain this control.
With
the break up of the Soviet Union in 1991, these nations have regained their
full independence. However, the past remains.
When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, it prompted a reaction across eastern
Europe. Places like Ukraine, Latvia,
Lithuania, Poland and Bulgaria began tearing down Soviet Union memorials in
their lands. These countries don’t want
anything to remind them of how the Soviet Union oppressed them.
In
tonight’s Old Testament lesson we hear about a memorial with completely
different associations. Yahweh
institutes the Passover as a memorial that will recall his rescue of Israel
from slavery in Egypt. We learn tonight
that the Passover lamb was something that pointed forward to the great rescue
Jesus Christ has won for us. At the Last
Supper, Jesus took the Passover meal and transformed it into the means by which
he gives that rescue to us.
Israel
had been enslaved in Egypt. Yahweh had
sent Moses to Pharaoh with the message that he must let God’s people go. Pharaoh had refused, and so God had sent a
series of nine plagues upon the Egyptians.
Now,
in preparation for the tenth and final plague, Yahweh told the Israelites to
take a lamb and kill it at twilight.
They were to take some of the blood and put it on the two doorposts and
lintel of their houses. Then they were
to roast the lamb with fire, and eat it with unleavened bread and bitter herbs.
This
was no ordinary meal. Yahweh told them:
“In this manner
you shall eat it: with your belt fastened, 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 to
go, because God was going to act.
He told them, “For I will pass
through the land of Egypt that night, and I will strike all the firstborn in
the land of Egypt, both man and beast; and on all the gods of Egypt I will
execute judgments: I am the LORD.”
Yahweh promised that the blood on the houses would be a sign, and that
no harm would befall the Israelites on that night when he struck the Egyptians.
God would rescue them, and this meal would
not be a one time thing. Instead, Yahweh
said, “This day shall be for you a memorial day, and you shall keep it as
a feast to the LORD; throughout your generations, as a statute forever,
you shall keep it as a feast.” The continued celebration of the Passover meal
would cause the Israelites to remember how God had rescued them from Egypt.
At midnight Yahweh went through the
land and struck down the first born of all the Egyptians. However, wherever the blood of the lamb was
on the house – God passed over that house and the Israelites were spared. The
trauma was so great that Pharaoh finally commanded the Israelites to leave.
God
acted through the Passover lamb to rescue Israel from slavery. This action by
God was type. It was an event in the Old Testament that pointed forward to what
God would do in the New Testament. St.
Paul told the Corinthians, “For
Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed.”
In our text we learn that the Passover lamb was to be blameless. Jesus Christ was the sinless Son of God who entered the world as he was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the virgin Mary. Born without sin, he perfectly kept the Law and fulfilled God’s will.
The
Passover lamb was killed and its blood was placed on the houses. This blood marked the house and caused God’s
judgment to pass over the Israelites. Jesus Christ’s blood was shed on the
cross for us. Paul told the Ephesians, “In
him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our
trespasses.” Because of the shedding of
Jesus’ blood for us, God’s judgment has passed over us. God acted in the
Passover to rescue Israel from slavery.
God acted in Jesus Christ, the Passover Lamb - to rescue us from slavery
to sin.
This is
deliverance that we needed because we were conceived and born as fallen, sinful
people. We were unable to free ourselves
because our actions simply pile one sin upon another. In thought, word, and
deed we continually generate sin and so we have no basis for living with the
holy God. Yet Jesus Christ’s death has
won for us the forgiveness of sins and rescued us from God’s judgment.
At the end of our text God says,
“This day shall be for you a memorial day, and you shall keep it as a
feast to the LORD; throughout your generations, as a statute forever, you
shall keep it as a feast.” The Passover
meal was to be celebrated each year. It
would continue to call to remembrance what God had done for Israel. Later in this chapter Moses adds, “And when your children say to you, ‘What
do you mean by this service?' you shall say, ‘It is the sacrifice of the
LORD's Passover, for he passed over the houses of the people of Israel in
Egypt, when he struck the Egyptians but spared our houses.’”
Jesus, the Passover Lamb, had come
to Jerusalem to die at the time of the Passover. As he prepared to do so, he celebrated one
last Passover meal with this disciples.
He told them, “I have
earnestly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer. For I tell you
I will not eat it until it is fulfilled in the kingdom of God.”
But as the
fulfillment of the Passover Lamb – as the true Passover Lamb sent by God –
Jesus took the Passover meal and transformed it. He took bread and gave thanks. Then he broke it and gave it to his disciples
and said, “Take, eat; this is my body which is given for you. This do in
remembrance of me.” Then after supper he
took the cup, and when he had given thanks he gave it to them saying, “Drink of
it all of you; this cup is the new testament in my blood which is shed for you
for the forgiveness of sins. This do, as often as you drink it, in remembrance
of me.”
Jesus told the
disciples that he was giving them his body to eat. It was his body that was given for them. Then he told them that he was giving them his
blood to drink. It was the blood that established the new testament – the blood
shed for the forgiveness of sins.
At that last
Passover meal, Jesus instituted the Sacrament of the Altar. Jesus’ words do what they say. He declared that the bread was his body to
eat. He announced that the wine was his
blood to drink. These things are what
Christ declares them to be. And so in the Sacrament we eat and drink the true
body and blood of Christ.
Jesus gives his
body and blood to us for a reason. He
does so in order to give us the benefits that he won by his death on the
cross. We receive his body given on the
cross for us – the body nailed to the cross to rescue us. We receive his blood shed on the cross for
the forgiveness of our sins. Jesus the
Passover Lamb gives us the very price that he paid to rescue us from the
slavery of sin. He places it into our
mouth in order to apply the benefits of that redemption to us.
Jesus died on
the cross as the Passover Lamb. But on the third day God raised him from the
dead. It is the risen Lord who
continues to be the host of the Sacrament of the Altar. Our Lord speaks his words through the pastor.
The risen Lord gives us his true body and blood into our bodies. And in doing
so we receive the pledge and assurance that our bodies will be raised up on the
Last Day.
God had told
Israel that the Passover meal was to be a memorial – it was to be a yearly
reminder of the Passover and God’s rescues in the exodus. When Jesus fulfilled the Passover and
transformed the meal, he declared that it was still to cause remembrance. Yet now it reminds us of Jesus’s saving
death. Our Lord said that we are to
celebrate his Sacrament in remembrance of him.
For the
Israelites, the Passover meal was an act of remembering a past event. But in
the Sacrament of the Altar we do not have only a mental activity occurring – an
act of remembering. Instead, the
remembrance is caused by the true body and blood of Christ that is
present. Our Lord – the risen Lord -
comes bodily into our midst. We celebrate the Sacrament in remembrance of Jesus
because in this way he is present with us and gives us the benefits of his
saving death and resurrection.
In the Old
Testament lesson tonight we hear God establish the Passover meal as he rescues
Israel from slavery. The death of the
Passover lamb was the means by which God spared Israel from judgment. Jesus Christ is the true Passover Lamb whose
death has rescued us from slavery to sin. He has transformed the Passover meal
into the Sacrament of the Altar in which he gives us his true body and
blood. He causes us to remember his
death as he gives us the very price he paid to win us forgiveness. Here we have the assurance that we are
forgiven, and the pledge that the Lord will raise up our bodies on the Last
Day.
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