Unleavened Bread
Christ's death, pictured by the Passover, was necessary to pay the penalty of
our past sins-to reconcile us to the Father. But His death alone will not save
us! Think,
for a moment, if Jesus Christ had died but not been resurrected. Would His death
alone make eternal life possible?
Of course not!
Accepting Christ's
sacrifice is only the first step in God's plan for bringing humans into His
divine Family.
Shall We
Continue to Sin?
What should we do once our past sins have been covered by the shed blood of
Christ? "Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound?" asked the Apostle
Paul. "Certainly not!" was his emphatic answer (Rom. 6:1-2). "Shall we sin
because we are not under [the penalty of the] law but under grace?
Certainly not!"
(verse 15).
We are saved by grace through faith (Eph. 2:8). "Do we then make void the law
through faith? Certainly not!
On the contrary, we
establish the law" (Rom. 3:31).
Someone once asked Jesus:
"Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?" Jesus
answered: "If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments" (Matt.
19:16-17).
As we learned in
previous lessons, God is now in
the process of
creating holy, righteous, perfect spiritual character in those whom He has
called into His Church. Man, now only a clay model, is to be created in the
character-image of God Almighty.
Since the Ten Commandments describe God's nature and character, keeping His Law
is absolutely necessary for spiritual character growth. We must therefore obey
the Master Potter, allowing Him to mold His character in us while we are still
flesh and blood.
We Must Forsake Sin
Our acceptance of Christ's
sacrifice in payment for the penalty of our sins is only the first step toward
salvation. Once we have repented of our sins and been forgiven by God, He wants
us to
forsake sin!
God commands us to come out of this world's ways of sin (Rev. 18:4)
-
just as ancient
Israel left Egypt, a symbol for sin (Heb. 11:25-26). We must
be striving to come
out of all sin. That is OUR PART,
with Christ's help,
in God's plan of salvation.
To keep us in the knowledge of the second step in God's plan, Christ, the LORD
of the Old Testament, instituted the second annual festival
-
the Feast of
Unleavened Bread. The observance of this Feast impresses upon us that we must do
our part to keep the sins Jesus covered with His shed blood out of our lives
henceforth.
Leaven is also a symbol for sin (I Cor. 5:8). God commanded the ancient
Israelites to put all leaven out of their homes and off their property and eat
unleavened bread
during this seven-day Festival. And so the Feast of Unleavened Bread is to
remind God's people today that they are to strive to put
SIN completely out
of their lives!
After repentance and baptism, God expects us to strive to keep His Law-to
spiritually "unleaven" our lives, just as we are to physically unleaven our
homes before the Feast. The act of eating unleavened bread during the Feast
teaches us the opposite of sin
-
OBEDIENCE to God!
The Feast of Unleavened Bread pictures the keeping of God's commandments, which
is another way of saying the putting away of sin.
To observe only the Passover, and then fail to keep the Feast of Unleavened
Bread, is comparable to accepting Christ's sacrifice and then saying the Law of
God is done away-that because we are "under grace" we have permission to
continue to sin. Your Bible shows Christ is not a "minister of sin"! (Gal.
2:17).
"Let Us Keep the Feast"!
In the simplest and
clearest New Testament command to observe God's annual festivals and Holy Days,
the Apostle Paul wrote to the Gentile Christians at Corinth: "Christ our
passover is sacrificed for us: therefore let us keep the feast" (I Cor. 5:7-8).
The context, as we shall see in this lesson, makes it very clear that Paul was
referring to the Feast of Unleavened Bread!
Christians today are not only to commemorate Christ's sacrifice by observing the
Passover, they are also to keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread. These two annual
festivals are inseparable, both historically and in spiritual meaning for us
today.
Let's begin to understand the full meaning of this second annual festival
picturing the next step in God's plan. Let's learn what the Bible tells us about
our part in God's Master Plan.
The First Feast of Unleavened Bread
Our study of God's second annual festival begins with the events of the very
first Feast of Unleavened Bread, instituted at the time of Israel's exodus from
Egypt. As we learned in previous lessons, the Israelites had been slaves in
Egypt. God,
through a series of miraculous plagues, began to deliver them from their
captors.
Recall that in the evening of the 14th of Abib each Israelite family killed the
lamb it had selected, and then smeared some of its blood on the doorposts of
their houses. This protected their firstborn from the plague of death (Ex.
12:6-7, 12-13). Each lamb was symbolic of "Christ our passover," the "Lamb of
God," and its blood pictured Christ's blood, which would be shed much later to
pay the penalty of our spiritual sins
eternal death.
1. For how long were the Israelites to remain in their houses on the
night of the 14th? Ex. 12:22, last part. What were they to do early in the
morning? Verse 10.
2. What did the people do during the night of the 15th? Verses 37, 42;
Num. 33:3; Deut. 16:1. Was the 15th the first day of the Feast of Unleavened
Bread? Lev. 23:6.
COMMENT: The Israelites were protected from the death angel as a result of
applying lamb's blood
to the doorposts of their
houses and remaining inside that night. Early in the morning they burned the
leftovers of their roasted lambs. Then on "the morrow after the passover," they
started "out of Egypt by night."
3. Were the
Israelites to especially remember their deliverance from Egypt? Ex. 13:3-4. In
what way did God, through Moses, command the Israelites to commemorate their
deliverance? Verses 3, last part, 6-7; Ex. 12:15-20.
COMMENT: Moses had told the people to put out all of their leaven according to
God's instructions. And in their escape from Egypt, their dough did not have
enough time to naturally ferment and rise (Ex. 12:33-34, 39). Therefore the
eating of unleavened bread was to be an appropriate yearly reminder
-
a memorial
-
of the haste with
which they fled Egypt.
But as we'll learn later in this lesson, much greater symbolic meaning is
attached to leaven in the New Testament. We'll come to understand the spiritual
meaning of putting leaven out and eating unleavened bread during the annual
Feast of Unleavened Bread.
4. After camping at Succoth, where did God tell the Israelites to go? Ex.
13:20; 14:1-2. Did Pharaoh and his army pursue them? Ex. 14:5-8. Where did the
Egyptian army catch up with the Israelites? Verse 9.
COMMENT: It was on the sixth day of Unleavened Bread that the Egyptian army
overtook the Israelites encamped near Pihahiroth. Mountains made escape
impossible to the south and west. The Red Sea, to the east, was nearly eight
miles across at that point, and Pharaoh's army stood due north of the
Israelites. They
were trapped!
Knowing that Pharaoh would
pursue his exslaves (Ex. 14:3-4), God told the Israelites to leave the normally
traveled road. He led them into a trap for their own good to prove to them, and
to us today, that He alone offers salvation
-
if we will trust
Him. (This vital truth will be discussed again later in this lesson.)
5. When the people understood their predicament, what was their reaction?
Ex. 14:10-12.
COMMENT: Elation and joy turned into fear and anger when the Israelites realized
it was humanly impossible to escape from Pharaoh.
6. How did God provide an escape route for the trapped Israelites? Verses
13-16, 19-22. What did He do to the Egyptian chariots when Pharaoh's army tried
to follow? Verses 23-25. What happened to the Egyptians? Verses 26-28.
COMMENT: The supernatural pillar of the cloud and fire, by which God led the
Israelites (Ex. 13:21-22), moved behind them to protect them from the Egyptian
army. Then God, altering the forces of nature, opened a pathway through the Red
Sea to allow the people to walk across. God Almighty miraculously delivered
Israel from Pharaoh's army!
Tradition has it that the miraculous opening of the Red Sea and the completion
of the Israelites' escape from slavery took place before dawn on the seventh and
last day of the first Feast of Unleavened Bread. Then on the daylight part of
this annual Holy Sabbath, there was great rejoicing in celebration of their
complete delivery from bondage in Egypt (Ex. 15:1-21).
The Feast
in Ancient Israel
After the Israelites were delivered from slavery in Egypt, they promised to obey
God.
But
they failed utterly
except for the times God gave them a righteous ruler. Under the leadership
of Joshua, who
succeeded Moses, the Israelites obeyed God (Judg. 2:7). But after his death and
the death of the elders of that generation, the next generation did not.
God punished the people for their disobedience, but when they cried out to Him
for help, He sent a righteous ruler to deliver them. After he died,however, the
people went even further into sin, especially idolatry (verses 10-12, 18-19).
This cycle was repeated many times during the period of the judges.
During the reign of righteous King David, the Israelites prospered greatly as
they did in Solomon's reign. But all of the later kings of Israel and most in
Judah disobeyed God, leading the nations further and further into sin. They were
cursed and eventually taken captive; Israel first and then Judah more than 100
years later.
1. Prior to Judah's captivity, however, a king named Hezekiah did what
was right in God's sight (II Chron. 29:1-2). Did Hezekiah realize that Judah's
national troubles were the result of the nation having forsaken God? II Chron.
29:6-9.)
2. What did Hezekiah therefore begin to do to the Temple of God, which
had fallen into disrepair? Verse 3. And what did he command the Levites to do?
Verses 4-5, 10-11.
3. What did Hezekiah do after the priesthood had been rededicated to the
service of God? II Chron. 30:1-5. Did he know that the Feast of Unleavened Bread
was also to be kept? Verse 21.
COMMENT: During the reigns of the wicked kings before Hezekiah, God's Temple had
been closed. The people had forgotten God's laws and festivals, and were
following the idolatrous practices of the heathen nations around them. But when
Hezekiah became king, he restored the true worship of God, including the
observance of His annual festivals.
However, the first Passover and Feast of Unleavened Bread to be kept in many
years were not observed in the month of Abib. The priesthood was not properly
prepared in time, and the people had not yet gathered in Jerusalem to attend
these festivals. Following the principle in Numbers 9:912 for observing the
Passover one month later if necessary, they observed it and immediately
afterward the seven-day Feast of Unleavened Bread in the second month.
God prospered the nation for returning to Him under the righteous rule of
Hezekiah. But after Hezekiah's death, the Jews again forgot God and His
festivals. They returned to idolatry under the wicked rule of kings Manasseh and
Amon. Not until the reign of Josiah were God's annual feasts again restored.
4. Was Josiah a righteous king? II Chron. 34:13. Had the Temple again
fallen into disuse and disrepair before his reign began? Verses 8-11. After the
repair work had begun, what did the high priest find in the Temple? Verse 14.
What did Josiah publicly promise to do? Verse 31. Did he?
The Israelites, most of whom were living in the land of Goshen, kill and eat the
Passover lamb on the evening of the 14th and stay in their homes until morning
(Ex. 12:6-8, 22). Pharaoh, after midnight, calls for Moses to tell them to leave
Egypt (verses 29-31). The Israelites then gather at Rameses during the daylight
part of the 14th (verses 33-37).
They leave Rameses on the night of the 15th and encamp at Succoth (Deut. 16:1;
Num. 33:3; Ex. 12:37) on the weekly Sabbath during this first Feast of
Unleavened Bread.
God does not lead the Israelites by "the way of the land of the Philistines," the shortest route to Canaan (Ex. 13:17). Instead, He leads them southeast, toward Mt. Sinai, at first along "the way of the wilderness of the Red sea" (verse 18). This is to fulfill His promise to take them first to Mt. Sinai (Ex. 3:1-12).
From Succoth, the Israelites go to Etham, at the edge of the wilderness (Ex. 13:20). God then tells them to turn south and go into the wilderness west of the Red Sea (Ex. 14:1-2).
On the sixth day of the Feast, the Israelites encamp by the seashore northeast of the Pihahiroth range of mountains, which jut abruptly into the sea. There they are trapped by the mountains to the south and west, the Red Sea to the east and Pharaoh's army to the north (verses 3-10).
God then opens a pathway through the Red Sea, allowing the Israelites to walk across (verses 21-22). Pharaoh's army pursues and is drowned (verses 23-31). On the east coast of the Red Sea, there is great rejoicing in the camp of Israel on the seventh and last day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread (Ex. 15:1-21).
The Israelites then travel
southeast, roughly parallel to the Red Sea. Along the way they stop at a number
of places, including Marah and Elim (Ex. 15:22-23, 27), before heading east,
arriving at Mt. Sinai (Ex. 19:1-2) nearly seven weeks later.
5. What did Josiah command the people to do regarding the Passover? II
Kings 23:21; II Chron. 35:1. Did he understand that God expected His people to
keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread also? II Chron. 35:17.
COMMENT: After Josiah died, most of the Jews again lost sight of God, ignored
His weekly Sabbaths and rejected His annual festivals. To bring the people to
repentance, God punished them by allowing the entire nation of Judah to be
militarily defeated and taken captive by the Babylonians.
6. Seventy years later, God allowed as many
Jews as wanted to
return to Jerusalem to do so and rebuild the Temple. What did they do after the
Temple had been built and dedicated? Ezra 6:19-22.
COMMENT: Notice that each time the worship of God was restored, the keeping of
His Holy Days was also resumed and emphasized. God was pleased with this
national repentance because He knows that when people have the right attitude
toward His Holy Days, they will learn to have the right attitude toward all His
commandments, for it is on God's Holy Days that His people learn about His Law.
Kept by the New Testament Church
1. Who instituted
the seven annual festivals, including the Feast of Unleavened Bread? Lev.
23:1-2, 6. Therefore whose feasts are they? Verse 2, last part. Are God's people
to keep His feasts forever? Ex. 12:14, 17; 13:10.
COMMENT: God the Father is the supreme Lawgiver, but He gave His laws through
His Spokesman, the One who later became Jesus Christ. As the LORD of the Old
Testament, Christ delivered to ancient Israel the knowledge of God's laws,
including His Sabbaths and festivals. And He made sure this knowledge would be
preserved for His New Testament Church (Acts 7:38), as we learned in Lesson 23.
God's early New Testament Church kept His annual festivals and Holy Days. Let's
examine the proof.
2. Did Jesus, as a child, keep the Passover and the Feast of Unleavened
Bread? Luke 2:41-43. In the year Jesus was crucified, were His enemies expecting
Him to keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread? Mark 14:1.
3. More than 20 years after Jesus had been crucified and resurrected, is
there clear indication that His disciples still kept the Feast of Unleavened
Bread? Acts 20:6. Also notice the mention of these days in Acts 12:3.
COMMENT: In Acts 20:6, Paul and his companions plainly had observed the Feast of
Unleavened Bread at Philippi. This Feast was still being kept by God's Church-it
was not abolished at Christ's death! God would not have inspired this reference
to the "days of unleavened bread" if, in His sight, His festivals had ceased to
exist.
Notice what Hastings' Dictionary of the Apostolic Church says about these New Testament references to God's annual festivals and Holy Days: "Nothing could show better than these scanty notes of time how deep-rooted the custom was, how the feast was observed as regularly as the year came round. Men spoke naturally of `the days of unleavened bread' as a significant point in the calendar.... Ordinary dates dwindle into insignificance beside these fixed, outstanding seasons....
"The question arises, as in
the matter of keeping [the] Sabbath on the seventh day, whether the early
Christians continued to observe these festivals.... In all probability they went
on for years observing the festivals" (article "Passover," pages 132-133).
4. Did the Apostle Paul, inspired by God, say New Testament Christians
should keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread? I Cor. 5:7-8. What did he say that
clearly shows the Church of God at
Corinth was, at the
time he wrote, keeping the Feast of Unleavened Bread? Verse 7. Notice the words
"as ye are unleavened."
COMMENT: The Apostle Paul was telling the Corinthian church members to put out
spiritual leaven, just as they had already put out all physical leaven in
preparation for this Festival. They were to keep the Feast not only with
unleavened bread, but also with the spiritually "unleavened" attitude of
righteousness, sincerity and truth.
This is a direct command from God's apostle to New Testament Christians to keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread! Because "Christ our passover is sacrificed for us," we must also keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread, which pictures our putting the leaven of sin out of our lives. (More about the symbolic meaning of leaven later in this lesson.) But what about Paul's statements in verses 14 through 17 of Colossians 2? The verses most often quoted against keeping God's festivals are, when properly understood, proof that they were being kept by the New Testament Church!
Let's understand the
context of Colossians 2 and see what Paul, who kept God's Holy Days and clearly
commanded the Corinthians to keep them, actually wrote to the Colossians.
5. Were the Colossian Christians Gentile by birth? Col. 1:21; 2:13. Had
they become obedient Christians? Col. 2:5-7.
6. Exactly what did Paul tell the Colossians about observing Holy Days
and Sabbaths? Col. 2:16.
COMMENT: These Colossians were Gentile converts living in a Gentile city. They
had previously known nothing of God and His Holy Days. Unless the ministers of
the Church of God had taught them to observe these days, they would never have
been "judged" by their pagan relatives and neighbors for doing so.
Paul did not say that Christians should not observe God's Holy Days. He merely
said that they should not let anyone judge them for observing these days!
Nevertheless, some have connected this reference to God's Holy Days and Sabbaths
with a misinterpretation of verse 14, claiming that all of God's laws,
festivals, Holy Days and Sabbaths were "nailed to the cross."
7. What actually was "nailed to the cross"? Verse 14.
COMMENT: The "handwriting of ordinances" was nailed to the cross. "Handwriting"
is translated from the Greek cheirographon, which means a handwritten
note of debt. So what was "nailed to the cross"? A note of debt
-guilt-
that was incurred as
a result of breaking God's Law by following human ordinances and traditions,
including pagan holidays.
Verses 8 and 20-22 show which ordinances Paul was referring to: "the
commandments and doctrines of men." Those were the restrictive rules and
traditions of ascetic Greek philosophy, which prohibited even the moderate use
of many foods and drink. It was the false religious traditions of men, not God's
Law, that Paul said were "contrary to us" (verse 14).
The note of sinful guilt
was "against us" until Christ lifted its penalty from us. His crucifixion allows
us to be forgiven those sins. Christ symbolically nailed that note of sinful
debt to the cross because He paid that debt for us!
What do these verses show us when we understand the context? The Christians at
Colosse were being criticized by their pagan relatives and neighbors for
violating their ascetic customs, which included the observance of pagan
holidays. The Christians ate meat the pagans prohibited, drank what they did not
allow, and observed God's weekly Sabbath and annual Holy Days. (The new moons,
the observation of which was then made necessary by the Jewish authorities over
the calendar, determine the correct dates for God's festivals. It is not
necessary to observe new moons today because the Hebrew calendar has been
authoritatively fixed worldwide and published in advance.) Paul told the
Colossians to ignore the criticisms, and to continue in their Christian conduct
just as they had been taught by the Church (verse 7).
8. Who did Paul say has authority to "judge" Christians? Col. 2:17, last
part.
COMMENT: This part of verse 17 is not translated clearly in most English
versions. The verb "is" is in italics in the King James Version, meaning that it
does not appear in the original Greek text. The Greek simply reads: ". . . but
the body of Christ." The body of Christ, as we learned in previous studies, is
the Church of God (Col. 1:18; 2:19).
Paul was declaring that no unauthorized person is to sit in judgment of a true Christian's conduct. That is the responsibility of God's Church-the "body of Christ." The Church is to teach from the Bible the proper use of food and drink, the proper time and manner of observing God's festivals and Sabbaths, and other doctrinally related matters.
Therefore the complete
thought in Colossians 2:16-17 could be translated: "Let no man therefore judge
you ... but [rather let] the body of Christ [determine it]." Numerous Greek
scholars recognize that the first expression "let no man" demands that there be
a subsequent expression that tells who is to do the judging of the matter!
9. Why should we keep God's annual Sabbaths? Col. 2:17, first part.
COMMENT: The most important reason to keep God's Holy Days is simply because God
has told us to do so.
God gives understanding to those who show they are willing to obey Him (Ps.
111:10; Acts 5:32). They "foreshadow things to come," as the phrase in
Colossians 2:17 is better translated.
The seventh-day Sabbath pictures or foreshadows the seventh 1,000 years, during which man shall rest from his labors of sin. In like manner, the annual festivals were instituted by God as memorials and foreshadows of events to take place in His plan. They were given to His Church in order to keep it in the knowledge of the seven major steps in His Master Plan for reproducing Himself through mankind.
Only one festival has been
entirely fulfilled in type
-
the Passover. Yet
Jesus said we are to celebrate it each year in remembrance of His sacrifice for
us.
Having established this foundation for our understanding, let's see exactly how
the Feast of Unleavened Bread vividly pictures the second vital step in God's
great Master Plan of salvation for mankind.
The Symbolic Meaning of Coming Out of Egypt
The annual festivals
picture events of historic and future importance to ancient Israel, the world
and the Christian. Recall that when God revealed His weekly Sabbath to the
Israelites, it was a sign and a memorial so they would remember that He is the
Creator and that they were His people. God also gave them the annual festivals
of the Passover and Unleavened Bread as memorials to commemorate the nation's
deliverance from Egypt
-
a picture for His
Church today of the plan of God in eventually delivering the entire world from
sin.
Israel's departure from Egypt has great symbolic meaning. The spiritual lesson
that their deliverance from slavery teaches is vital to our complete
understanding of what God intends the Feast of Unleavened Bread to picture to us
today.
We learned that the Passover pictures the death of Jesus Christ-His shed blood
for the remission of our sins upon real repentance. The second festival pictures
our coming out of SIN as the Israelites came out of Egypt, a symbol for sin,
during the seven days of this Feast. Simply stated, the Feast of Unleavened
Bread pictures obedience to God-keeping His commandments!
Let's understand as the picture unfolds for us in the Bible.
1. Is Egypt a symbol for sin? Heb. 11:24-27; Rev. 11:8. Are sinners the
servants or slaves of sin? John 8:34; Rom. 6:16. Does God want us to escape the
slavery of sin by obeying Him? Rom. 6:17-18, 22.
COMMENT: The ancient Israelites were slaves in pagan Egypt. They were not
allowed to obey God. Therefore the Feast of Unleavened Bread, which commemorates
their coming out of slavery in Egypt, also pictures their coming out of sin.
Sin enslaves! Those who are not God's Spiritbegotten children do not realize
they are now the slaves of sin. Sin tends to increase in the one who indulges in
it. Sin punishes! It brings sorrow, remorse and anguish. It afflicts us with
physical injury, sickness and disease. It produces anxiety, frustration and
hopelessness. It leads to death. Man does not realize that only real
repentanceturning from sin to obedience to God through the living faith of
Jesus Christ
can free him from that
penalty! (Gal. 5:1).
The Feast of Unleavened Bread pictures, through symbols, the fact that God wants New Testament Christians (spiritual Israelites) to come completely out of the slavery of sin into obedience to Him! Just as the Israelites had to walk out of Egypt, we must willingly, of our own accord, start out of sin. Even so, it is God's goodness and mercy that leads us to this repentance from sin (Rom. 2:4; John 6:65), just as He led His chosen people from Egypt to freedom.
Eternal life is clearly a
gift of God (Rom. 6:23), but it is also clear that God wants us to be willing
and actually striving to obey Him. That is our part in His Master Plan.
Let's notice a few more parallels that will help us better understand the
spiritual meaning of this Festival.
2. Upon our repentance and baptism, all our past sins are blotted out by
the sacrifice of Christ our Passover (Acts 2:38; Rom. 3:25; I Cor. 5:7). When
Paul asked if we, after being forgiven, should continue in sin, what did he
answer? Rom. 6:1-2, 6, 15. What was his apostolic command? Verses 11-13.
COMMENT: If Christians keep the Passover, yet fail to keep the Feast of
Unleavened Bread, what they have done, symbolically, is accepted Christ's
sacrifice and then
continued in the slavery of sin. But Paul said Christ is not a minister of sin
(Gal. 2:17). Therefore we must come out of sin
-
quit sinning
-
by keeping God's
Law!
The Feast of Unleavened
Bread pictures the Christian's part in God's plan of salvation
-the keeping of
God's commandments, which is another way of saying the putting away of sin.
Anyone who ate leavened bread or had leaven, a symbol for sin, in his home
during this Festival was to be put out of the nation or congregation of Israel
(Ex. 12:15, 19). Similarly, God will not allow unrepentant sinners in His
spiritual nation
-
the Kingdom of God!
(I Cor. 6:9-10).
After the ancient Israelites had begun to leave Egypt, who pursued them? Ex.
14:5-8.
COMMENT: Just as Egypt is a type of sin, Pharaoh is a type of Satan the devil!
And just as Pharaoh did not want the Israelites to escape his bondage, Satan
does not want sinners to escape his bondage, which is slavery to sin.
Baptized Christians are often pursued by Satan. He will set obstacles in their way in an attempt to cause them to stumble and discourage them from obeying God. The devil will do anything he can to keep God's Spirit-begotten children from receiving eternal life. The devil will try to deceive them into thinking God's way is too difficult in order to get them to quit striving to overcome - to return to the life of sin they have forsaken.
As it was humanly
impossible for the Israelites to escape from Pharaoh, so it is humanly
impossible for Christians to overcome Satan's influence. But with God, all
things are possible (Matt. 19:26).
Just
as God made it possible for Israel to escape from Pharaoh's army through His
miraculous power, God, through His Holy Spirit, makes His children's spiritual
obedience, overcoming and growth possible.
A Warning Not to Look Back!
1. Did Christ foretell that the modern society of our end-time generation
would be much like the wicked city of Sodom? Luke 17:28-30. What is His warning
for Christians living in the end time? Verse 31, last part. Who should we
remember in connection with His warning? Verse 32.
COMMENT: Christ was referring to the destruction of sinful Sodom and Gomorrah,
the escape of Lot and his two daughters from Sodom, and Lot's wife being turned
into a pillar of salt.
Tradition says that these
events happened during the season of the Feast of Unleavened Bread (although
they occurred several centuries before the Festival was commanded by God). It is
interesting to note that unleavened bread is mentioned in connection with the
departure of Lot and his daughters from that sinful society (Gen. 19:3).
God had determined to destroy those two exceedingly sinful cities, which, like
Egypt, are symbolic of sin (Rev. 11:8). He sent two angels to warn Lot and his
family to leave the city (Gen. 19:1, 12-13).
2. Did everyone who was warned heed the warning? Gen. 19:14. Were Lot,
his wife and their two daughters warned not to look back? Verse 17. Who looked
back, and as a result did not make it to safety? Verse 26.
COMMENT: Lot and his family were commanded to leave
-
utterly forsake
-
the wicked city in
which they lived. Only by leaving could they avoid being destroyed with its
sinful inhabitants.
But Lot's wife disobeyed. She looked back. She wanted to return to sinful Sodom.
Perhaps she had grown accustomed to Sodom's sins, and didn't think they were all
that bad.
God will not save such a person!
Salt is symbolic of something that is enduring. God turned Lot's wife into a
pillar of salt as a perpetual symbol of one who was not willing to completely
and permanently forsake sin and submit to Him. Her example is a WARNING for us
to leave and not return to the temporary pleasures of sin this present evil
society has to offer, lest we be destroyed with it!
3. What does God say about a Christian who begins to live God's way but
later returns to the slavery of sin? Luke 9:62; II Pet. 2:20-22; Heb. 6:4-6.
COMMENT: God's Spirit-begotten children must live in this evil world, but they
must not be overcome by its sinful ways (John 17:14-15; Rom. 12:2). Just like
Lot, God's people must come out of and utterly forsake the sins of this world to
escape the plagues He will pour out upon the rebellious (Rev. 18:4). Those who
heed the warning before it's too late will be protected by God (Rev. 3:10;
12:14-17).
God wants those He has called and begotten to be overcoming sin
-
to be growing in His
character by striving to put sin out of their lives through obedience to Him. He
wants them to be doing their part in His Master Plan!
How Leaven Is Symbolic of Sin
The departure of ancient Israel from Egypt is clearly a physical type of the
Spirit-begotten
Christian's departure from
sin. But why is this commemorated by seven days without leaven or leavened
foods? We know that leaven itself is not harmful, for God allows it during the
other 51 weeks of the year.
God prohibits the presence and use of leaven during the Feast of Unleavened
Bread because it, like Egypt, is a symbol for sin. Let's understand how this is
revealed in the New Testament.
1. Is leaven clearly symbolic of sin? Matt. 16:6, 11-12; Luke 12:1; I
Cor. 5:8.
COMMENT: Leaven is referred to in the Bible as a type of or symbol for sin. For
those who have been called to Christ by the Father, putting all leaven and
leavened products out of their dwellings and off their property for the seven
days of this Festival pictures their putting sin out of their lives. And since
seven is the number God uses to denote completeness and perfection, the seven
days of the Feast remind us that God wants His people to work at putting sin
completely out of their lives.
In writing to the Church of God at Corinth, the Apostle Paul explained the
spiritual meaning and symbolism of the Feast of Unleavened Bread to the Gentile
converts there. Let's notice what Paul teaches New Testament Christians about
leaven,
and exactly why we need to
become spiritually "unleavened."
2. Were the Corinthian Christians permitting a person who was actively
and openly practicing sin to fellowship with God's Church? I Cor. 5:1.
3. Was this sin in their midst causing them to feel guilty, or was it
rather causing them to become vain-to be "puffed up"? Verse 2.
COMMENT: This sin of fornication was known to everyone in the Church of God at
Corinth, but no one had done anything about the problem. By their actions, they
seemed to think they could be more forgiving and therefore more righteous than
God by allowing this unrepentant fornicator to remain in their fellowship.
4. Knowing that this sin was causing certain members to swell with vanity
and become puffed up, Paul gave the Church specific instructions. What were
those instructions? Verses 3-5.
5. Did Paul compare the sinning member to a little leaven? Verse 6.
Again, what was his command regarding this sinner and their keeping of the
Feast of Unleavened Bread? Verses 7-8.
COMMENT: Paul explained that just a small amount of leaven
-
one sinful person,
by analogy
can cause the whole
lump of dough
-t
he whole Church,
again by analogy-to become saturated with sin. Tolerance of this blatant,
unrepented sin would eventually have caused other members to gradually let down
and return to their former sins, thus DISQUALIFYING them from being born into
God's Kingdom! (I Cor. 6:9-10).
Moreover, the whole Church had become guilty of vanity - pride - and was just as guilty of sin as the fornicator in its midst! Paul, using his Godgiven authority as apostle, commanded the Corinthian church members to put out the sinful, spiritually "leavened" member so the Church would become spiritually "unleavened."
By putting out the sinning member of their congregation, they put out the spiritual leaven that had begun to permeate the Church. Otherwise, sin would have spread in the lives of other Christians by the bad example of only one person, just as certainly as a little leavening in bread dough eventually causes the whole loaf to rise-to become "puffed up."
This was a spiritual quarantine, so to speak, intended to prevent someone with a contagious spiritual illness from infecting others. Happily, this action helped the sinner see the seriousness of his sin. He repented, and in Paul's next letter to the Church at Corinth, he admonished the members there to readmit the repentant man to their fellowship (II Cor. 2:4-10).
Paul commanded the
Corinthian Christians to keep the Feast without the spiritual "leaven" of sin,
just as they were already without the physical leaven of yeast (I Cor. 5:7). One
is clearly a type of the other. They were to keep the Feast not only by eating
unleavened bread, but also by having a spiritually "unleavened" attitude of
sincerity and truth (verse 8), which is the result of obedience to God.
6. Does God want Christians to continually strive-expend effort and
energy-to put the leaven of sin out of their lives? Heb. 12:1, 4.
COMMENT: If we are to become Spirit-born members of God's Family, we must prove
that we will obey God here and now by striving with all our heart, mind and
strength, together with God's help, to get the spiritual leaven of sin out of
our lives and keep it out! This is our part in God's great Master Plan. It's a
full-time job that continues for the rest of our natural lives.
Thus every spring the seven-day Feast of Unleavened Bread specially reminds
Spirit-begotten Christians of their continual need to keep God's commandments.
It is a time when they symbolically renew their resolve to live in harmony with
God's Law
-t
o rededicate their
lives to continual spiritual growth and overcoming.
Keeping the Feast Today
1. Are the first and seventh days of the Feast of Unleavened Bread annual
Sabbaths or Holy Days on which God's people are to rest and assemble for
worship? Ex. 12:16; Lev. 23:6-8.
COMMENT: The Feast begins on the evening of the 15th of Abib, the beginning of
the day after the Passover. It continues for seven days, ending with the 21st of
Abib. Both the 15th and the 21st are special Sabbaths-annual "holy convocations"
days of rest from
regular work.
Ordinary work may be done on the intervening days, except on any intervening
weekly Sabbath.
A "holy convocation" is a
commanded religious assembly
-commanded by God
Almighty Himself.
2. Does
God command His people to eat unleavened bread during this Festival? Ex. 13:7;
Lev. 23:6.
Saved by the LIVING Christ
The seven days of the Feast of Unleavened Bread following Passover picture the
putting away of sin-the keeping of God's Law-after past sins
are forgiven. This
Festival of God also pictures the life and work of the resurrected Christ, who
ascended to the throne of God, where He is now actively working on our behalf as
our High Priest, helping us put the leaven of sin out of our lives.
Understanding this vital aspect of the Feast is crucial to our developing the
character of God and being born into His universe-ruling Family at Christ's
Second Coming.
1. What did Christ's death make possible for us? Rom. 5:10, first part.
But does His death save us? Same verse, last seven words.
COMMENT: Jesus Christ's death does not save us-it merely reconciles us to God.
Those so reconciled are no longer cut off from God. Through acceptance of
Christ's sacrifice they have been restored to contact with God the Father
-
the One who can give
us eternal life.
Passover pictures the crucified
-the dead
Christ. But Christ
is not a dead Savior. He rose from the dead. He is our living Savior! Notice how
this fact is also pictured in the symbolism of baptism.
2. Is baptism symbolic of Christ's death and resurrection? Rom. 6:3-4. In
the context of baptism, are we saved through Christ's death, or through His
resurrection? I Pet. 3:21-22.
COMMENT: If Christ had not been raised from the dead, we would still be in our
sins (I Cor. 15:17). That could be symbolized by being immersed in water and
never coming back up-symbolically drowning in our sins! But coming up out of the
water of baptism is symbolic of Christ's resurrection from the dead. Clearly, we
can be saved only by Christ's life.
Part of God's instructions to ancient Israel for observing the Feast of
Unleavened Bread included the ceremony of the "firstfruits wavesheaf offering"
(Lev. 23:9-11, 14). God told the Israelites that the spring grain harvest could
not begin until this offering was made. But God does not require this offering
today. The Bible reveals that its symbolism was fulfilled by the resurrected
Christ (I Cor. 15:20).
Jesus Christ was the first resurrected Son of God
-
the first harvested
product of God's Master Plan. He became the "firstborn" Son of God (Col. 1:18)
-
the first human to
be born into God's divine Family. (The complete meaning of the wavesheaf
offering relates also to the third annual festival and
is explained in the
Pentecost article
in this series)
It is fitting that Christ, who was completely without sin, was resurrected and
born of God during the festival that pictures the absence of sin.
Therefore the Feast of Unleavened Bread, in addition to picturing the putting of
sin out of our lives, also, through the symbolism of the firstfruits wave
offering, pictures the resurrected living Christ, for it is the living Christ
who gives us the spiritual power we need to be able to overcome sin!
We must understand.
3. Do Christians still sin occasionally after having accepted Christ's
sacrifice in payment for their past sins? I John 1:8. (Notice that John included
himself by using the word "we.")
COMMENT: We are still flesh and blood beings. We can still be tempted. Satan can
still broadcast his attitudes of sin to our minds and influence us to break
God's commandments.
4. How can Christians be forgiven the sins they commit after baptism? I
John 1:9; 2:1-2. In what other ways does the living Christ now help God's
Spirit-begotten children? Rom. 8:34; Heb. 7:25-26; 4:14-16.
COMMENT: Christ, our ever-living High Priest, Advocate and Intercessor, acts as
a "bridge" between imperfect humans and our perfect Father in heaven. Our High
Priest can sympathize with our weaknesses because He, as the human Jesus, was
tempted just as we are, yet He overcame and promises to help us overcome too
(John 16:33; Phil. 4:13). Therefore, through our High Priest, we can come boldly
to God's throne and find grace, mercy, forgiveness and the help we need to
continue putting sin out of our lives.
5. Does Christ give us permission to pray directly to the Father, using
Christ's name in making those requests? John 15:16. Does Christ, acting as God's
administrative assistant, also answer those prayers? John 14:13-14.
6. Does Christ, through the Holy Spirit, live in God's Spirit-begotten
children? Gal. 2:20; Rom. 8:9-10; Col. 1:27; Phil. 2:5; I John 3:23-24. Must
Christians not only have God's Spirit, but also be led by it so their thoughts
may become more like Christ's and the Father's? Rom. 8:14; II Cor. 10:5.
COMMENT: The true Christian's hope of glory
t
he hope of attaining
membership in God's glorious Family
-
is in Christ, our
Savior, living in us through the Holy Spirit!
Christ is not only
the Author or Beginner of our salvation, but He is also its Finisher
-
He is the One who
completes our salvation (Heb. 12:2).
Jesus Christ told His disciples He had to go to His Father's throne in heaven to
send God's Spirit to them (John 16:7). They received the Spirit through the
resurrected, glorified, living Christ.
God's Spirit also imparts to us His love, which enables us to fulfill His Law
(Rom. 5:5; 13:10). It's not just us, through our own strength, striving to keep
God's commandments. It is the living Christ in us, in spirit, keeping His
Father's commandments by divine love, just as He did when He was the human
Jesus.
We know we cannot obey God on our own power and strength. But CHRIST IN US CAN!
Our living Savior gives us the POWER to become righteous-to become spiritually
unleavened! Through that power we are being prepared for our spiritual harvest
into the universe-ruling Family of God!
The Next
Step in God's Master Plan
God's Law is a spiritual law (Rom. 7:14). Consequently we must have God's Holy
Spirit to fully understand and keep it (I Cor. 2:11). God's Spirit imparts to us
the love of God and the faith of Christ. It is only through the power of the
Holy Spirit that God's holy, righteous character can be built in us. And it is
only by God's power that we will be born of God, if we have first been begotten
by His Spirit. God's Spirit is a vital part of God's Master Plan of salvation.
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