[Note: The following is the prepared text for a sermonette given to the Portland, Oregon congregation of the United Church of God on Sabbath, April 20, 2024.]
Good afternoon; I hope you are having a happy Sabbath as we approach the period of the Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread. Instead of beginning with a story, I would like to begin with a passage of the Bible that relates to this particular time we happen to be in and also is one that I have puzzled over since I was a small child, for reasons you will perhaps soon understand. Let us open the message today by turning to Exodus 12:1-5. Here, at the beginning of the Passover law, we read a passage about how the children of Israel were to prepare for the Passover. Exodus 12:1-5 reads: “Now the Lord spoke to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, saying, “This month shall be your beginning of months; it shall be the first month of the year to you. Speak to all the congregation of Israel, saying: ‘On the tenth of this month every man shall take for himself a lamb, according to the house of his father, a lamb for a household. And if the household is too small for the lamb, let him and his neighbor next to his house take it according to the number of the persons; according to each man’s need you shall make your count for the lamb. Your lamb shall be without blemish, a male of the first year. You may take it from the sheep or from the goats. “
As a child, I wondered what this meant. When someone took a sheep or goat from the flock to sacrifice for the Passover, how did they keep it for the three to four days before the Passover sacrifice? I imagined as a child a family bringing the lamb in the house, with the children of the household playing with the lamb or baby goat and petting it and treating it as a beloved pet, perhaps naming it. I imagined the parents feeling uncomfortable with explaining to the children that the animal was not a pet, but would soon be put to death, and households having to address the tension between having an animal set aside that was cute and innocent, without blemish, obviously something we would feel protective towards, yet at the same time doomed to die for our behalf. I wondered if God was trying to set up a situation where people would feel the tension between seeing the lamb or baby goat as a means to an end and in feeling some sort of emotional connection with a cute and innocent animal, if this awkwardness and tension was part of a larger plan to get people to think about themselves and the reason why a lamb would have to die for them. All of the questions I had about this aspect of the Passover amounted to a larger question: how was ancient Israel supposed to think and feel about the Passover lamb?
As it happens, the Bible does not give a lot of detail about how ancient Israel was supposed to think and feel about the Passover lamb, and at least according to all of the indications we have, whatever thinking and feeling people did about it was not the sort that led them to reflect on their own role in the sacrifice of the lamb. By the time of Jesus Christ, when the sacrifice of the lambs was not done in individual homes and families but was done by the ten thousands for believers at the temple, it seems that any sort of emotional connection that people would have had with a Passover lamb or baby goat separated from its flock as a special sacrifice had long been lost. Perhaps the change happened–whenever it happened we do not know–without any sense of regret, or any sense of loss in the meaning of the day. The Bible, though, does give us a great deal of information on a related question, and that is, what did Jesus Christ think and feel about being the Passover lamb?
It is no mystery at all to determine what Jesus Christ thought about being the Passover lamb. He stated his thoughts about his self-sacrifice plainly and obviously to his disciples (and to us). We can find a reference of this, shortly before His crucifixion, in John 10:11-18. John 10:11-18, part of Jesus’ parable of the good shepherd, is only one of several places where Jesus shows an absolute commitment to his role of laying down his life for His people along with the knowledge that he would take his life up again. John 10:11-18 reads: ““I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd gives His life for the sheep. But a hireling, he who is not the shepherd, one who does not own the sheep, sees the wolf coming and leaves the sheep and flees; and the wolf catches the sheep and scatters them. The hireling flees because he is a hireling and does not care about the sheep. I am the good shepherd; and I know My sheep, and am known by My own. As the Father knows Me, even so I know the Father; and I lay down My life for the sheep. And other sheep I have which are not of this fold; them also I must bring, and they will hear My voice; and there will be one flock and one shepherd. Therefore My Father loves Me, because I lay down My life that I may take it again. No one takes it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This command I have received from My Father.””
Here we see a fervent knowledge on the part of Jesus Christ that he had come to earth with the role of dying and laying down his life for others and serving as the Passover lamb while also being aware that he was laying down his life for the other sheep in God’s flock, including we ourselves. This certainly complicates matters. Were the ancient Israelites aware, when they were sacrificing sheep and goats, that they were viewed by God in the same way by God, as part of a flock as well? Jesus knew, unlike those who were unfamiliar with the purpose of the Passover lamb when it was separated from the rest of the flock a few days before the Passover, that he had come to this earth to sacrifice himself. He knew that like the Passover lamb, He was doomed to die in a little while, but He knew why and in His mind He embraced that purpose and was committed to see it through to the end. Did this foreknowledge of His coming sacrifice color His own relationships with others? Knowing that he had but a short time to live, and that when He was resurrected He would then return to where He had come from, did this discourage at all His close relationships with others? It does not appear so, from scripture, even though His friendships with others must have been colored by this knowledge that He had a short time, shorter than most, to live on this earth before He would lay down His life and take it up again and return to the kingdom of heaven to await the time when He would return to bring earth under His rule and that of our Father.
We do know, though, that Jesus was not without deep and intense feeling about what it meant to lay down His life, though, and He felt deep agony about it. We see this, for example, in Luke 22:39-46. Here, while Jesus was praying, He fully vocalized his feelings about the suffering He was about to go through. Luke 22:39-46 reads: “Coming out, He went to the Mount of Olives, as He was accustomed, and His disciples also followed Him. When He came to the place, He said to them, “Pray that you may not enter into temptation.” And He was withdrawn from them about a stone’s throw, and He knelt down and prayed, saying, “Father, if it is Your will, take this cup away from Me; nevertheless not My will, but Yours, be done.” Then an angel appeared to Him from heaven, strengthening Him. And being in agony, He prayed more earnestly. Then His sweat became like great drops of blood falling down to the ground. When He rose up from prayer, and had come to His disciples, He found them sleeping from sorrow. Then He said to them, “Why do you sleep? Rise and pray, lest you enter into temptation.””
Here we see that although Jesus Christ had fully intellectually committed to laying down His life for His people and taking it back again, that His feelings about actually going through with the horrifying death of crucifixion after the horrors of scourging were not so positive. Without sinning in any way, He still prayed to Our Father three times asking, if it was the will of the Father, that the suffering that was imminent could pass to someone else. There was no one else, though, that the cup could pass to. No one else was worthy to be the Passover lamb. No one else could sacrifice themselves for the sins of humanity. No one else could give their lives for all others as He could. And so Jesus Christ, in agony as He was, had to bear the burden He had come on this earth to bear, regardless of His feelings. And He accepted that and was given additional strength to bear that terrible burden for our sakes and that of our brothers and sisters in the faith throughout all time.
For my final scripture today, let us turn to see what the author of Hebrews has to say about this sacrifice of Jesus Christ. In the midst of a long explanation of the symbolism of Jesus’ sacrifice as the Passover lamb for us, the author of Hebrews has this to say in Hebrews 9:11-15. Hebrews 9:11-15 reads as follows: “But Christ came as High Priest of the good things to come, with the greater and more perfect tabernacle not made with hands, that is, not of this creation. Not with the blood of goats and calves, but with His own blood He entered the Most Holy Place once for all, having obtained eternal redemption. For if the blood of bulls and goats and the ashes of a heifer, sprinkling the unclean, sanctifies for the purifying of the flesh, how much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot to God, cleanse your conscience from dead works to serve the living God? And for this reason He is the Mediator of the new covenant, by means of death, for the redemption of the transgressions under the first covenant, that those who are called may receive the promise of the eternal inheritance.”
When we reflect on the sacrifice of Jesus Christ for us, on His role as the Passover lamb, it is important for us to reflect not only on the act itself, but also on its purpose. We were sanctified not for our own purposes, but for the purpose of God, who wished to cleanse us from our sins so that we would be fit to enter into eternal life and, while we live, to serve the living God who made us and who reigns over us. We were not called to lay down our lives for others, as Jesus Christ was, but were called to live for Him. Nevertheless, we too, like the children of Israel long ago, are brought face to face to deal with a Passover lamb who died for us who was separated from His flock to die so that we may live. We do not know how much the people of ancient Israel ever thought or felt about this sacrifice or ever reflected on it, but we are called to reflect upon it and to live our lives differently as a result of knowing that Jesus Christ came to die for us so that we may live. How do we think and feel about the Passover lamb?