"The Cross and the Passover" January 22 Readings: Exodus 9-12
Reading the Bible Chronologically in 2022
This year, instead of reading from Genesis to Revelation, we will read the Bible as the story flows, as it happened and was written. There are several plans out there and I have worked to combine them into a plan that lets the Bible tell its own story "as it happened." Remember, the Bible is inspired, but not in the order the books appear in our Bibles. The Old Testament is approximately 3/4 of the Bible, but I have divided it so that we will spend half the year in the OT, and half the year in the NT.
Bible Readings: Exodus 9-12
Background:
The plagues escalate throughout these readings until the climactic moment when the tenth and greatest one approaches, as the Death Angel passes through Egypt. The Passover is heavy in the symbolism of the death of Christ.
If you ever watch TV shows about the Exodus, they try to give natural explanations for the plagues. A volcano dropped ash in the Nile that turned it red, driving the frogs out. They died, drawing flies and causing disease, etc. Those of us who believe in a sovereign God need no such crutches. We believe in a God who can turn the Nile to blood and bring supernatural plagues to display his power.
If you ever watch TV shows about the Exodus, they try to give natural explanations for the plagues. A volcano dropped ash in the Nile that turned it red, driving the frogs out. They died, drawing flies and causing disease, etc. Those of us who believe in a sovereign God need no such crutches. We believe in a God who can turn the Nile to blood and bring supernatural plagues to display his power.
Daily Devotional: The Cross and the Passover
There are few places where foreshadowings of the work of Christ are clearly seen than in the Passover in Exodus 11 and 12. There is so much in the story of the death angel passing over that directly prophecies Jesus' Passion - his death, burial, and resurrection and their effect on us. Today, I am simply going to list some of those truths.
- 11:1 The last and the greatest of the plagues was death. The greatest enemy we face is death, both physical death, and spiritual/eternal death. Not only does physical death destroy life, separate families, and end hope, but it is symbolic of spiritual death with ends life and hope for all eternity. Death is the greatest plague on all humanity.
- 11:4-5 Death affects all people, high to low, rich and poor, regardless of wealth, talent, or other human issues. It is appointed to each of us to die once. All of us are under the same sentence of death. No one can escape it.
- 11-12 God has made a way of salvation for us. The distinction between those who live and those who die is whether they follow the way of salvation God gives.
- 11:9 God displayed his wonders in Egypt through the salvation of Israel while he poured out judgment on Egypt. Nowhere are God's glory and power more fully displayed than in the salvation of the lost by his love and power.
- 12:1 Israel's calendar was to begin at the Passover. Life only really begins when Jesus Christ redeems us from our sins. Death is the last plague. The Passover is the beginning of life.
- 12:1-7 A blood sacrifice was required to shield the Israelites from death. Jesus died as our Passover Lamb, bearing our sins and dying in our place. There is no salvation, no forgiveness outside of the blood of Christ, our eternal sacrifice.
- 12:5 The sacrifice must be unblemished. Only the sinless Son of God was able to atone for our sins since he had none of his own to die for.
- 12:7 The blood must be applied to the house to be effective. It was not enough that the sacrifice was made, the blood must be applied. Yes, Christ died for our sins, but that blood must be applied when, by repentance and faith, we come to Christ for salvation. It is not enough that Christ died for all. It is not even enough to believe that Christ died for you. I must repent and believe in Jesus that the blood might be applied to my "house."
- 12:10 The Israelites were to consume all of the sacrifice; no leftovers. We receive Christ as Lord of all. Jesus is not to be a part of our lives, but to be life itself! We cannot take a little of Christ or a part of him. We receive all of him!
- 12:13 The distinguishing mark between those who would die and those who would live is the blood on the doorposts. We are not better than others - self-righteousness has no place among the saved. We are different only because of the Blood applied to our lives!
- 12:14-16 The Passover was to be continually and faithfully memorialized among God's people. We ought to continually celebrate what Jesus has done for us by his death, burial, and resurrection. Glory to God for his Son our Savior!
- The blood WORKED. There is no record of a single death among the Israelites. Those who are covered by the blood live. We can rejoice that Jesus saves, he transforms and he never casts us away. Those of us covered by the Blood of Christ live!
We praise you, our Father, that you were willing to give your Son as the sacrifice for our sins; that you were willing to apply his blood to us so that the death angel might pass over us and we might live; that you have given us a path of salvation to free us from what our sins deserve. You are worthy to receive all praise!
Consider God's Word:
Take time today to consider the Passover and how it symbolizes the death of Christ for your sins.
Can you see other comparisons?
Remember and praise God for your redemption in Christ!
Can you see other comparisons?
Remember and praise God for your redemption in Christ!
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