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Passover Celebration2010-04-01 18:01 2010-04-01 20:01 DescriptionTraditional Passover ExperienceA great way to deepen our Easter Week experience. Details6:00 at the Lambkins | 403 East 14th St., North Vancouver What's a Passover Meal? | A Quick RefresherEvery year Jew's were called to gather in Jerusalem to celebrate this most sacred of all festivals. It was a weak long affair that would culminate in homes around the city with families celebrating a highly symbolic meal together. The meal was intended to commemorate the "Passover" - the greatest event in their history in which God delivered them from their slavery to Egypt - and everything at the meal was designed to recall that great event. So at the meal they would (to name just a few things):
Bottom line, the meal served one purpose: to recall the day that God freed his people from their slavery to Egypt. Yet something more needs to be said: as the years went by, and slavery in various forms continued for the Jews, the meal also began to look forward - anticipating the great day when all slavery would come to an end. As they understood it, in the coming future, God was going to establish a kingdom on earth, and in that place he would draw all his people out of their slavery and into his freedom and peace. While looking back with thanks, the meal also looked forward to this great day with anticipation. Even to this day, the Passover Meal remains the most sacred of all Jewish festivals - recalling the past freedom and anticipating a future freedom. It's celebrated (with some variations) in homes all around the world. What does this meal have to do with Christ followers?The night before Jesus died, he celebrated this meal with his closest friends - its become known as "the Lord's Supper". Except, as you may recall, he made the meal all about him (he was now the cup and the bread!). And in making the meal about him, he was saying something to his followers: everything they recalled and anticipated in the Passover meal was, in an even deeper way, happening in and through him! As he made the meal about him, Jesus was in effect saying: “I will now be the lamb you celebrate and my blood shed will make the way for death to "passover" you - forever. And I will deliver you out of your true slavery - not to a foreign army - but to sin, death and the Kingdom of darkness.” The point at that final meal was clear: "the passover is about me! I will be your final passover lamb and I will lead you to a final freedom in the Kingdom of God." Why would we celebrate the Passover meal in a traditional way?In some senses, with its close links to the "Lord's Supper", we celebrate the passover meal every-time we break the bread and share the cup. At that time, we reenact the passover meal again, reminding ourselves of the Lamb and how his blood has caused death to "passover" and in this God has delivered us from our exile/slavery to sin and into his kingdom. But that said, there is something special about once a year celebrating the full meal - as Jesus would have on that night. Let me give just a few reasons why: Bottom line, as it always has, the meal continues to serve one main purpose: to recall the day that God freed his people from their slavery. Sign-upsYou must be signed into your simplechurches web account to sign up below. » calendar
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