Luke
22:19
And
he took bread, gave thanks and broke it, and gave it to them, saying, “This is
my body given for you; do this in remembrance of me.”
The Feast of Pesach is fast approaching, where Jews all
over the world will be celebrating the onset of the exile journey which their ancestors
undertook through the Sinai desert all those years ago. It began when they had
to paint their doorframes with the blood of a lamb in order that the angel of
death would pass over their home and not kill their firstborn sons. They
roasted and ate this lamb, dressed in travelling clothes, and then left on
their journey out of Egypt that very same night.
This feast is
celebrated with deeply embedded customs, some given by God in the Torah, some
evolving from the culture in which they found themselves.
One of the rituals involve having three pieces of
unleavened bread (called Matzah) on the table. Nobody in Judaism remembers why
it is specifically three. But in hindsight, we can see the beautiful symbolism
of their and our Messiah Jesus Christ in this Pesach practice. Three pieces of
unleavened bread points to the Trinity of Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The
middle of these three pieces (therefore referring to the Son) is removed, and
then broken in two. So too Jesus’s body was broken on the cross – which is what
Jesus alluded to when He took bread, broke it, and gave it to His disciples to
eat in remembrance of Him.
This broken piece of bread is called the afikomen,
meaning that which comes after. It is wrapped in a cloth and hidden away,
to be eaten after the main meal. Similarly, Jesus’s body was wrapped in burial
cloths and hidden away in a tomb. The missing bread is searched for, and when
found, unwrapped, and eaten. We know that Israel is still searching for her
Messiah, but He has come and will come again after great tribulation
befalls His people, and then their eyes will finally be opened – they will have
unwrapped senses to recognize Him!
We know from Rom 11: 25 (I do not want you to be
ignorant of this mystery, brothers and sisters, so that you may not be
conceited: Israel has experienced a hardening in part until the full number of
the Gentiles has come in) that the veil preventing Israelites from
recognizing Jesus in their feasts was put there so that we as Gentiles might
also participate in the salvation He brings. And for this we are eternally grateful!
But at the same time, let us fervently pray that our
Jewish friends will have the eyes of their hearts enlightened by Holy Spirit,
to fully comprehend the meaning of the feasts they so faithfully and
meticulously keep celebrating!
Pearls to ponder:
Let our hearts be filled with wonder and amazement when
we come to realize that our God has created His feasts with an incredible
amount of detail which all point to Jesus our Saviour – no earthly being could
have orchestrated this!
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