Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Exodus 12:14
And this day shall be unto you for a memorial; and ye shall keep it a feast to the LORD throughout your generations; ye shall keep it a feast by an ordinance forever.
14. this day ] not, as might seem at first sight, the 14th of the month, the day on which the Passover was observed, but the 15th, the first day of the feast of Maoth.
a memorial ] viz. of the Exodus ( v. 17): ‘memorial,’ as Num 16:40, Jos 4:7.
a feast ] a pilgrimage (see on Exo 5:1): as Exo 23:15; Exo 23:17 shew, a pilgrimage to a sanctuary was an essential feature in the feast of Maoth.
throughout your generations an ordinance for ever ] both standing expressions of P. ‘Ordinance for ever’ ( o ‘lm, also rendered ‘statute for ever,’ ‘perpetual statute’) recurs v. 17, Exo 27:21, Exo 28:43, Exo 29:9; Exo 29:17 times in Lev., Nu. ‘Generations’ ( drth) means successive generations: cf. v. 42, Exo 27:21, Exo 30:10; Exo 30:21, Exo 31:13; Exo 31:16, Exo 40:15.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
14 20. Regulations for the pilgrimage of Maoth (or Unleavened Cakes) according to P. Unless the writer has expressed himself loosely, vv. 14 20 can hardly be the original sequel of vv. 1 13: as Di. observes, not only is there nothing in vv. 1 13 to which ‘this day’ in vv. 14, 17 can refer, but a memorial day ( v. 14) would not be appointed before the event which it was to commemorate had taken place, and v. 17 speaks of this as past: it is possible, therefore, that in the original text of P vv. 14 20 stood somewhere after v. 41, perhaps before v. 50. The feast of Maoth, though it followed immediately after the Passover, was quite distinct from it (Lev 23:5-6): it lasted ( v. 15) seven days. Its original intention was in all probability to celebrate the beginning of harvest: cf. p. 241, and on Exo 23:15 a.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
A memorial – A commemorative and sacramental ordinance of perpetual obligation. As such, it has ever been observed by the Hebrews. By the Christian it is spiritually observed; its full significance is recognized, and all that it foreshadowed is realized, in the sacrament of holy communion.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Exo 12:14
A feast to the Lord throughout your generations.
Analogy between the Jewish Passover and the Lords Supper
I. The Jewish institution was commemorative; so is the Lords Supper.
1. It was a memorial of a deliverance from the most cruel bondage.
2. It was a memorial of a deliverance from the most cruel bondage by the sacrifice of an innocent victim.
3. It was a memorial of a deliverance wrought by the sovereign compassion of God (Exo 3:7-8).
II. The Jewish institution was social; so is the Lords Supper.
1. Here all feel that they are in the same moral condition.
2. Here all feel that they are dependent on the same Redeemer for salvation.
3. Here all feel that they are members of the same family and destined for the same house.
III. The Jewish institution was binding; so is the Lords Supper.
1. It is binding on all.
2. It is binding on all perpetually. (Homilist.)
The Passover
I. The preparation for the Passover.
1. Divinely commanded.
2. The Passover a new era.
3. Details explicitly given.
(1) Indicating the importance of having a Thus saith the Lord for every ordinance religiously observed.
(2) Indicating the importance of observing every Divine ordinance as divinely ordained.
(3) In the ease of the Israelites, to deviate from the prescribed form would indicate insubordination.
(4) The lamb is Divinely declared a type of Christ.
(5) The lamb being kept up from the tenth to the fourteenth may be a type of the time when the promise of Christ was given in Eden, and of His crucifixion on Calvary.
II. The blood of the Passover.
1. The disposition to be made of it.
2. The purpose.
(1) A sign for the angel of death to exempt the house thus marked.
(2) This sign thus became the ground of peace and security to the Israelites.
(3) This was also a sign that this exemption, peace, and security, were not of works, but wholly of grace.
(4) The application to the believer, covered by the precious blood of Jesus (1Jn 1:7; 1Pe 1:18-20; 1Co 5:7-8; Rom 3:24-25).
III. Eating this Passover. Its typical significance. Lessons:
1. The Old Testament seems typical of the New Testament.
2. Doctrine and practice vividly portrayed. (D. C. Hughes, M. A.)
Eastertide memories
1. It is a day that reminds us of the deep sympathy of mind with nature. The springtime of the year has many meanings for us all. The face of the earth is renewed; and in imitation of it we renew our dress and the face of our homes. And for thoughtful and sensitive minds, doubtless the lesson goes very deep and very far; they feel the gentle hint that old dust and cobwebs should be swept out of the mind, and that they should seek for a fresh stock of impressions to carry the work of imagination cheerfully on.
2. We are reminded of our part in the lot of humanity. A long history seems to close; a new one opens on us Easter Day. We derive the name of Easter from an ancient heathen goddess, Ostera, worshipped by our ancestors. A thousand years ago, her priestesses on Easter eve washed their faces in clear springs: it was a kind of sacrament in her worship. Then, too, the Easter fires were kindled on many a height, as the name Osterberg, which often occurs in Germany, reminds us. The Easter water and the Easter fire had substantially one tendency and one efficacy–to cleanse from evil, to drive away evil spirits, to bring blessing to the hearth and home, to the fields and the toil of the husbandman. How far and wide the notion of a purgation, in the most comprehensive sense, of the doing away with the old and a new beginning, has extended through the world! We may begin our inquiries in the East of London, where the Jews make a thorough cleansing of the house and of the utensils against the Passover season. With the old leaven let malice and wickedness go out of the heart, and let it recover its unleavened state of sincerity and truth. Corresponding customs to those of the Jews are practised among peoples in all parts of the world, and there is not a tribe of black or brown men from whom we may not learn something edifying for ourselves. At a feast of first-fruits of a tribe of North American Indians, they provide themselves with new clothes, new pots and pans; they collect all their worn-out clothes and other despicable things, sweep and cleanse their houses, squares, and the whole town of their filth, which, with all the remaining grain and other old provisions, they cast together into one common heap, and consume it with fire. After having fasted for three days, all the fire in the town is extinguished. During the fast they abstain from the gratification of every passion and appetite whatever. A general amnesty is proclaimed; all malefactors may return to their towns. On the fourth morning the high priest, by rubbing dry wood together, produces new fire in the public square, whence every habitation in the town is supplied with the new and pure flame. Then there is feasting and rejoicing, and on the following days they receive visits from their friends of neighbouring towns, who have in like manner purified and prepared themselves. A man of genius, in describing these things, says, I have scarcely heard of a truer sacrament–i.e., an outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace–than this, and I have no doubt that they were originally inspired from heaven to do thus, though they have no Biblical record of the revelation.
3. But this feast reminds us of deeper things–of things that never were, nor could be, learned from nature–of the hope of humanity, of triumph over death. If we look at the imagery and traditions of the nations, there is evidence of an overwhelming persuasion that the soul has a life distinct from the body, and that the soul will live again. One strong belief was, when the body was consumed on the funeral pyre, the human burden, as a Roman poet calls it, was cast away, mortality ceased, and higher life began. The phoenix bird, which arose from out of the ashes, was one of the symbolic images in which antiquity found this thought expressed. In another way we may see the same belief forming the very basis of worship. And at the great feasts of the year, such as Eastertide, the first thing was to bring offerings to the spirits of the departed, solemnly to commemorate them, and to unite with them in the social feast. What made those high days so peculiarly solemn, was the thought that the ancestral spirits had come back from the viewless regions to hold communion with their living posterity, and to impart to them a fresh blessing. And here, again, at the head of this belief, is something sweet and sound. If we let the hearts logic have its way with us, we shall hold that the life of humanity is continuous and unbroken, and that they who have gathered with us in the house of God in times gone by return from time to time to visit us in our lingering exile from bliss, and, it maybe, secretly to inspire us to follow their faith and to attain whither they have attained. (E. Johnson, M. A.)
The Passover
I. Obedience. Lamb to be killed, prepared, eaten, None to be left till morning. Eaten in a certain form and manner. Christ, the Lamb, slain for us, to be received as a whole. His yoke, His cross, as well as His crown. Example. Redeemer. Righteousness.
II. Faith. More reasonable that they should shed the blood of their enemies than of the lamb, and use the sword than the knife. Spreading fire and slaughter. More reasonable, apparently, to help and trust themselves than confide in a word spoken, and a few drops of blood on the door-post. Our faith, and Jesus the Lamb.
III. Humiliation. Eaten with bitter herbs. Penitential recollections. They prevented mere carnal delight in the feast. Our bitter herbs: remembrance of sin; of our condition; of our prospects, etc.
IV. Deliverance. Last night in Egypt. The blood sprinkled. The destroying angel. Door of every Israelites home opens, and the family comes out. The escape. Learn:
1. That God gives songs in the night. In darkest shades, if Thou appear.
2. That Christ our Passover was slain for us (1Co 5:7).
3. That we should receive Him with all humility, obedience, and faith.
4. That trusting in Him, we shall have a great deliverance. (J. C. Gray.)
A laudable custom
Rev. Joseph Sortain, the eloquent Brighton preacher, was of Huguenot extraction. He always observed the custom of his persecuted ancestors of reading the twenty-third Psalm at family worship on Saturday evening. When sometimes asked by guests why he had a special portion of Scripture for that evening, he would reply, It was the custom of my Huguenot forefathers, and I wish to gain inspiration for my Sundays duties by the associations it calls up. (J. Tinling.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 14. A memorial] To keep up a remembrance of the severity and goodness, or justice and mercy, of God. Ye shall keep it a feast – it shall be annually observed, and shall be celebrated with solemn religious joy, throughout your generations – as long as ye continue to be a distinct people; an ordinance – a Divine appointment, an institution of God himself, neither to be altered nor set aside by any human authority.
For ever] chukkath olam, an everlasting or endless statute, because representative of the Lamb of God who taketh away the sin of the world; whose mediation, in consequence of his sacrifice, shall endure while time itself lasts; and to whose merits and efficacy the salvation of the soul shall be ascribable throughout eternity. This, therefore, is a statute and ordinance that can have no end, either in this world or in the world to come. It is remarkable that though the Jews have ceased from the whole of their sacrificial system, so that sacrifices are no longer offered by them in any part of the world, yet they all, in all their generations and in all countries, keep up the remembrance of the passover, and observe the feast of unleavened bread. But no lamb is sacrificed. Their sacrifices have all totally ceased, ever since the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans. Even the flesh that is used on this occasion is partly roasted and partly boiled, that it may not even resemble the primitive sacrifice; for they deem it unlawful to sacrifice out of Jerusalem. The truth is, the true Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world has been offered, and they have no power to restore the ancient type. See Clarke on Ex 12:27.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
For a memorial, or monument, both of this deliverance from Egypt, and moreover of your redemption by Christ, of which that is a type, as even the ancient Jews understood it, who also noted that Israel was to be redeemed in the days of the Messias upon the same day on which they were delivered from Egypt, to wit, upon the fifteenth day of the month of Nisan. Upon which day our blessed Lord was crucified for the redemption of his people. You shall observe it for a solemn feast or festival time.
For ever, i.e. so long as your state and church continues, or till the coming of the Messias. This word doth not always signify eternity, but any long time, as Pro 29:14; Dan 3:9, and oft elsewhere.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
14. for a memorial, &c.Theclose analogy traceable in all points between the Jewish andChristian passovers is seen also in the circumstance that bothfestivals were instituted before the events they were to commemoratehad transpired.
Ex12:15-51. UNLEAVENEDBREAD.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
And this shall be unto you for a memorial,…. To be remembered, and that very deservedly, for the destruction of the firstborn of the Egyptians, and for the deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt, and as memorable a day it is, and much more so, for the redemption of the spiritual Israel by the Messiah; for it was on this selfsame day that he suffered for the redemption and salvation of his people: the Jews not only having a saying,
“that in the month Nisan they were redeemed, and in the month Nisan they will be redeemed g”
but they expressly say,
“on the same day, the fifteenth of Nisan, Israel is to be redeemed, in the days of the Messiah, as they were redeemed on that day, as it is said, according to the days, c. Mic 7:15 h:”
and you shall keep it a feast to the Lord throughout your generations as the fifteenth day was properly the Chagigah; or festival day, when they made a feast both of the flock and of the herd, of both sheep and oxen, De 16:2
you shall keep it a feast by an ordinance for ever; unto the end of the Jewish economy and church state, until the Messiah come, the true passover, and be sacrificed for us.
g Roshhashanah, fol. 11. 1. 2. h Cabalistae apud Fagium in loc.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Verses 14-17:
The Passover was thus established to be an ordinance “forever” in all future generations of Israel. It was to be observed annually, at the stated time. It was a “memorial ordinance,” a constant reminder to future generations of Israel’s deliverance from Egypt by the mighty power of Jehovah.
Additional conditions were added to this ordinance, for its future observance. It was to be the beginning of a week-long solemn festival. This week was to be a “holy convocation” or assembly.
All leaven was forbidden throughout Israel during this week. Any violation would result in immediate expulsion from the congregation.
Leaven typifies sin, throughout the Scriptures. This provision of the Paschal observance symbolizes the purity which should characterize those who are redeemed by our Passover, 1Co 5:7, 8.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
14. And this day shall be unto you. This is spoken of its annual celebration, which was as well a monument of their exodus as a symbol of their future deliverance. As to its being called a rite, or ordinance for ever, (edictum soeculi,) I admit that by this expression perpetuity is meant, but only such as would exist until the renovation of the Church; and the same explanation will apply to circumcision, as well as to the whole ceremonial of the Law; for although by Christ’s coming it was abolished as concerns its use, yet did it only then attain its true solidity; and therefore the difference between ourselves and the ancient people detracts nothing from this perpetual statute; just in the same way as the new Covenant does not destroy the old in substance, but only in form. A little further on, where he says, “save that which every man must eat, that only may be done of you,” verse 18; the meaning is, that they must cease from every work, except the preparation of their day’s food; and this exception is expressly made, that they may not permit themselves to violate their sacred festivals by other business.
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Exo. 12:14-20
THE SACRAMENT OF THE LORDS SUPPER
I. It is the memorial of a glorious fact. The Passover was commemorative of the safety of the children of Israel when the destroying angel passed through the land, and also of their deliverance from the bondage of Egypt. And so the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is commemorative of important facts in the moral history of men. It is a memorial of the death of Christ upon the cross, and of the freedom then rendered possible to human souls. God will have the great facts of the Churchs history well remembered; hence He provides monuments of them to succeeding generations.
II. It is the token of abiding mercy. The Passover, whenever it was celebrated, reminded the Israelites of the abounding mercy of God to them, and in after-years this would be pre-eminently the case. And surely no true soul can draw near to the table of the Lord to partake of His Holy Sacrament, without being sensitive to the continued mercy of the Infinite. Hence the Sacrament is not merely a monument of bygone history, but of the continual compassion of God to the penitent sinner. His mercy endureth for ever.
III. It is the time of joyous festival. The Passover was not merely a sacrifice; it was also a feast. The sacrificial part of it found its counterpart in the death of Christ, but the eucharistic part still pertains to the Supper of the Lord. Hence it is only priestly arrogance and pretence that turns the table of the Lord into an altar of sacrifice; only superstition will be deceived by such artifice. The Supper of our Lord is a glorious festival, where men of varied customs, experiences, and temperaments are united in deepest sympathy. This feast is a bond of union. It celebrates the most jubilant memories of the soul.
IV. It is of perpetual obligation. The Passover was binding upon the Jew. The Sacrament of the Lords Supper is obligatory upon the Christian, and that to the end of time. Its obligation will never be removed by Christ, and no other authority is able to remove it. Let all Christian people realise not only their obligation, but the joy of coming to the table of the Lord; there they obtain the richest feast the soul can have. LESSONS:
1. That the Sacrament of the Lords Supper is a Divine institution.
2. That it is commemorative of great facts and truths.
3. That it is to be observed by all Christly souls throughout the universe.
THE FEAST OF UNLEAVENED BREAD; OR, THE ORDINANCES OF GOD, AND THE MANNER IN WHICH THEY SHOULD BE OBSERVED
The feast of unleavened bread was a distinct ordinance from the Passover, though following immediately upon it. At this feast the Israelites were to eat unleavened bread; probably to commemorate the fact that they had left Egypt in such haste that they had no opportunity to leaven their dough, and were consequently obliged to eat unleavened cakes. It would also remind them of the power of God in bringing them out of Egypt when they were without provision for their journey, and it would teach them a lesson of trust in the Divine providence. This feast was an ordinance of God. We observe in reference to it
I. That the ordinances of God are clearly made known and enjoined upon man. This feast of unleavened bread was clearly made Known and enjoined upon the Israelites. And so all the ordinances of God are plainly revealed in the Scriptures, and require the observance of man.
1. They are Divinely authorised. This feast of unleavened bread was authorised by God. It was not established by Moses; he was but the exponent of the Divine will in the matter. And so the ordinances of the Christian life have higher authority for their existence than the injunction or desire of man; they are ordained of Heaven. Hence their authority is unquestionable, and will only be set aside by open profanity.
2. They are morally beneficial. The feast of unleavened bread was morally beneficial. It carried back the thought of Israel to the old days of bondage, and also to the mercy of God as displayed in their freedom. It was associated with memories the very reproduction of which in the soul could not but have a beneficial tendency. And so all the ordinances of God are morally elevating and instructive. They remind us of great truths, of glorious experiences, and animate with brilliant hopes. The ordinances of God are the banqueting places of the soul. They remind of the past; they strengthen for the present; they prepare for the future.
3. They are wofully neglected. In this respect the Jew furnishes a great contrast to the Christian. Few Jews would neglect the feast of unleavened bread; many more professing Christians neglect the ordinances of God. This neglect is prevalent; it is fearful; it is inexcusable; it is morally injurious; it will ultimately meet with its due punishment.
II. That the ordinances of God are to be observed in a spirit and temper free from sin. The Israelites in observing this feast were to put away all leaven; none was to remain in the house. And all who wish faithfully to observe the ordinances of God must put away all moral leaven from the soul. All who partake of the Passover must put away leaven; all who have been sprinkled with the blood of Christ must put away sin (1Co. 5:1-8).
1. The ordinances of God must be observed in a spirit free from hypocrisy. While observing the ordinances of God, the soul must be pure, free from all duplicity of motive, and perfectly in harmony with the solemn duty in which it is engaged. God seeth the heart, and knows whether the leaven of hypocrisy is expunged. lie cannot be deceived. Hence the need of sincerity.
2. The ordinances of God must be observed in a spirit free from malice and bitterness. Those who observe the ordinances of God must not be of cruel heart, of unrighteous character, infected with error, or filled with vexation. They must be compassionate; their dealings must be characterised by equity, their minds by true wisdom, and their souls by peacefulness.
3. The ordinances of God require that the home life be in sympathy with them. There must be no leaven in the house. A man who has leaven in his house cannot join in the feast of unleavened bread. What we are at home we shall be in the ordinances of God. The home life and the ordinary worship are inseparable; they are part of the same service, and must be pure.
III. That the ordinances of God are to be observed with solemnity and propriety of moral conduct and demeanour. And in the first day there shall be an holy convocation, and in the seventh day there shall be an holy convocation to you; no manner of work shall be done in them, save that which every man must eat, that only may be done of you. It may be asked why the Israelites were to eat unleavened bread for seven days. The number seven is not used here for an indefinite time, but probably to denote the length of time between Israel going out of Egypt and the overthrow of the Egyptians in the Red Sea. Seven days elapsed between these two events, and hence during this time they were to eat unleavened bread, as their freedom was not complete. The ordinances of God are solemn, and must be characterised by appropriate conduct. It was a holy convocation. This feast was set apart from all profane use, and consecrated unto God. Two days of it were not to be profaned by secular toil. On the first day of the seven, appropriate sacrifices were offered (Numbers 23.) During this time it was lawful to prepare food, which was not the case on the Sabbath (Exo. 35:3). The first and last days were regarded with peculiar sanctity; the intervening days, work could be done. All the ordinances of God are holy, they should be observed with appropriate sacrifices of the heart; but they are not intended to interfere unduly with the time allowed for our secular duties.
IV. That those who profane the ordinances of God are unworthy of them, and should be denied the privilege of them. That soul shall be cut off from Israel. Some interpret this to mean capital punishment; more probably it signifies the excommunication of the offender from the society and privileges of the chosen people, either by the public act of the proper officers, or by the direct hand of God (Gen. 17:14). And so men who neglect or abuse the ordinances of God are unworthy of them; they will derive no benefit from them; they will injure others in the use of them, and ought to be excluded from them until they return to a better state of mind. But such discipline was more rigorous in the Jewish Church than it is in the Christian. There ought, however, to be strict attention paid to the moral fitness of man for the ordinances of God. LESSONS:
1. That there are in connection with the Church of God many ordinances to be observed by men.
2. That these ordinances should be observed with due solemnity and appropriate conduct.
3. That neglect of these ordinances is disobedience to the command of God.
SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS ON THE VERSES
Exo. 12:14-20. Passover mercies and unleavened duties are joined together by the Lord.
Gods full time must be kept in unleavened duties toward Him. Unleavened services are appointed as a feast to Jehovah. Such festivals in type and truth are aimed by God to holiness. Holy convocations are intended to sanctify the name of God and His people by holy duties.
None of mans own works must come in to interrupt God at any time.
The strict service of God denies not daily food to His servants, but allows it.
Days of deliverance by God should be days of unleavened feasting to Him.
Memorials of such days are suitable to the generations of the Church.
Gods statutes alone must make such time to be observed by His people,
ILLUSTRATIONS
BY
REV. WM. ADAMSON
Memorial Feast! Exo. 12:14. A lover on the west coast of Scotland, when about to leave his heath-clad hills and shaggy woods for India, led his betrothed to a rugged glen, through whose precipitous channel flowed a foaming stream. Clambering down its steep and rocky sides, amid the calls and tears of the maid, he reached the edge of the flood, where grew a lovely forget-me-not Obtained at the peril, though not the cost, of his life, he presented it to her, begging that she would preserve it as the memorial of his love. Far more wonderful is that Crimson Passion-Flower, which, in the form of the Lords Supper, seems to say, Forget-Me-not; this do as a memorial of Me. As Thomas Watson says, If a friend give us a ring at death, we wear it to keep up the memory of our friend. Much more, then, ought we to keep up the memorial of Christs death in the Sacrament
Where flowers of heaven, divinely fair,
Unfold their happy bloom.
Bonar.
Supper-Songs! Exo. 12:14. If ancient history is worthy of credence, Cleopatra once made a great feast or banquet of wine. Into the cup which she presented to her guest she placed a jewel worth a kingdom. Into the sacred cup which Jesus presents to His people, filled with His precious blood-shedding, He has put a pearl of great priceHis Divine love. With such eucharistic joyfulness does this cup fill the believing recipient, that, like the Church in the Canticles, he exclaims: Thy love is better than wine,
That wine of love can be obtained of none
Save Him, who trod the wine-press all alone.
Trench.
Ordinances! Exo. 12:14-20. Fuller says that as it was necessary for the patriarchs to fix their residence near a well, so is it for believers to fix their residence near ordinances. They are morally beneficial. They refresh and strengthen. Yet not in themselves. As MCheyne puts it, when a man goes thirsty to a well, his thirst is not allayed merely by going there. An English sailor having escaped from his Moorish captors in Africa, found himself thirsty in the desert. Night came on, and his thirst increased. Amid the shadows he wandered on; then lay down under a tree with his thirst still unquenched. Had it been day, he would have perceived that he was lying beside a cooling spring. He had come to the well, but his thirst was not allayed by that act; on the contrary, his thirst was increased by every step he took. In the morning, it was by what he drew out of the well that he was refreshed and strengthened. Just so, it is not by the mere act or exercise of coming to ordinances that souls obtain life and joyfulness; but by the tasting of Jesus in the ordinances, Whose flesh is meat indeed, and His blood drink indeed
His fountains are deep, His waters are pure,
And sweet to the weary soul.
Commemorations! Exo. 12:14-20. During the reign of the Stuarts over the two kingdoms of England and Scotland, the youthful scion of a powerful Scotch house, whose family had once coerced their youthful monarch, was in revenge and fear confined in a dungeon. After upwards of twenty years solitary seclusion, where he beguiled his imprisonment with the education of a mouse, he was liberated. On the night previous to his liberation, he and the person through whose mediation his freedom had been secured, partook of a humble feast, which they always afterwards celebrated on the successive anniversaries of his liberty. With some such feelings of joyfulness and commemorative gratitude must Israel have feasted year by year. Year by year, it stirred the ashes of memory in the Jewish heart, and kindled them up into a flame of hope; while it taught them to look for a greater prophet than Moses, to long fur a grander sacrificial lamb than that of the passover, and to hope for a more glorious salvation than freedom from temporal oppression and bondage. So Christians commemorate with graceful praise the Feast of that great Paschal Lamb, looking in joyful anticipation to that full and final freedom in the Heavenly Canaan
Where peaceful hills and holy vales
Sleep in eternal day.
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
(14) Ye shall keep it a feast . . . by an ordinance for ever.The Passover is continued in the Eucharist (1Co. 5:7-8); and the Easter celebration, which the Church makes binding on all her members, exactly corresponds in time to the Paschal ceremony, and takes its place. In this way the Passover may be regarded as still continuing under Christianity, and as intended to continue, even to the end of the world.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
14. This day The fourteenth of Abib, or Nisan, which was forever to be memorable as Israel’s birthday . The day of the full moon in the “ ear-month” the full moon of the spring equinox, when nature begins her round once more was ever to be the great national festival of Israel.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Sweet memorial! and well may it be a feast when we celebrate that precious death which is the life of the soul. 1Co 5:7-8 ; Isa 25:6-9 . Well may we keep it forever, and cry out, Lord, evermore give us this bread.
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Exo 12:14 And this day shall be unto you for a memorial; and ye shall keep it a feast to the LORD throughout your generations; ye shall keep it a feast by an ordinance for ever.
Ver 14. By an ordinance for ever. ] Till “Christ our passover” should be “sacrificed for us”; 1Co 5:7 and then the Christian passover was to succeed.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
memorial: Exo 13:9, Num 16:40, Jos 4:7, Psa 111:4, Psa 135:13, Zec 6:14, Mat 26:13, Luk 22:19, 1Co 11:23-26
a feast: Exo 5:1, Deu 16:11, Neh 8:9-12
by an ordinance: Exo 12:17, Exo 12:24, Exo 12:43, Exo 13:10, Lev 23:4, Lev 23:5, Num 10:8, Num 18:8, Deu 16:1, 1Sa 30:25, 2Ki 23:21, Eze 46:14, 1Co 5:7, 1Co 5:8
Reciprocal: Exo 12:42 – a night to be much observed Exo 17:14 – memorial Exo 23:15 – the feast Exo 28:12 – for a memorial Exo 30:16 – a memorial Exo 32:5 – a feast Exo 40:15 – everlasting Lev 24:7 – a memorial Num 9:2 – his appointed Num 15:15 – an ordinance Deu 16:3 – mayest Jos 4:6 – a sign Jer 17:25 – and this Luk 2:41 – the Act 12:3 – Then Act 20:6 – the days Rom 14:6 – regardeth it 1Co 11:24 – in remembrance
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Exo 12:14-20. This shall be to you for a memorial It was to be annually observed as a feast to the Lord in their generations, to which the feast of unleavened bread was annexed. A holy convocation Such solemn festivals were called convocations, because the people were then assembled by sound of trumpet to attend the rites and ordinances of divine worship. The first day was to be a holy convocation, because of the feast of the passover; and the seventh, as being that day, after their exit out of Egypt, when Pharaoh and his host were drowned in the Red sea. A stranger A proselyte, Heathen were not concerned in the passover.
It must be here observed, that the whole of this ordinance of the passover was typical.
(1,) The paschal lamb was typical. Christ is our passover, 1Co 5:7. 1st, It was to be a lamb, and Christ is the Lamb of God, Joh 1:29. 2d, It was to be a male of the first year; in its prime. Christ offered up himself in the midst of his days. It denotes the strength and sufficiency of the Lord Jesus, on whom our help was laid. 3d, It was to be without blemish, signifying the purity of the Lord Jesus, a lamb without spot, 1Pe 1:19. 4th, It was to be set apart four days before, denoting the designation of the Lord Jesus to be a Saviour, both in the purpose and promise of God. It is observable, that as Christ was crucified at the passover, so he solemnly entered into Jerusalem four days before, the very day that the paschal lamb was set apart. 5th, It was to be slain and roasted with fire, representing the exquisite sufferings of the Lord Jesus, even unto death, the death of the cross. 6th, It was to be killed by the whole congregation between the two evenings, that is, between three oclock and six. Christ suffered in the latter end of the world, (Heb 9:26,) by the hand of the Jews, the whole multitude of them, Luke 23. 18. 7th, Not a bone of it must be broken, (Exo 12:46,) which is expressly said to be fulfilled in Christ, Joh 19:33; Joh 19:36.
(2,) The sprinkling of the blood was typical. 1st, It was not enough that the blood of the Lamb was shed, but it must be sprinkled, denoting the application of the merit of Christs death to our souls, by the Holy Ghost, through faith. 2d, It was to be sprinkled upon the door-posts, signifying the open profession we are to make of faith in Christ, and obedience to him. The mark of the beast may be received in the forehead, or in the right hand, but the seal of the Lamb is always in the forehead, Rev 7:3. 3d, The blood thus sprinkled was a means of the preservation of the Israelites from the destroying angel. If the blood of Christ be sprinkled upon our consciences, it will be our protection from the wrath of God, the curse of the law, and the damnation of hell.
(3,) The solemn eating of the lamb was typical of our gospel duty to Christ. 1st, The paschal lamb was killed not to be looked upon only, but to be fed upon; so we must by faith make Christ ours, as we do that which we eat, and we must receive spiritual strength and nourishment from him, as from our food, and have delight in him, as we have in eating and drinking when we are hungry or thirsty. 2d, It was to be all eaten: those that, by faith, feed upon Christ, must feed upon a whole Christ. They must take Christ and his yoke, Christ and his cross, as well as Christ and his crown. 3d, It was to be eaten with bitter herbs, in remembrance of the bitterness of their bondage in Egypt; we must feed upon Christ with brokenness of heart, in remembrance of sin. 4th, It was to be eaten in a departing posture, Exo 12:11; when we feed upon Christ by faith, we must sit loose to the world and all things in it.
(4,) The feast of unleavened bread was typical of the Christian life, 1
Corinthians Exo 5:7-8. Having received Christ Jesus the Lord, 1st, We must keep a feast, in holy joy, continually delighting ourselves in Christ Jesus; for if true believers have not a continual feast, it is their own fault. 2d, It must be a feast of unleavened bread, kept in charity, without the leaven of malice, and in sincerity, without the leaven of hypocrisy. All the old leaven must be put far from us, with the utmost caution, if we would keep the feast of a holy life to the honour of Christ. 3d, It was to be an ordinance for ever. As long as we live we must continue feeding upon Christ, and rejoicing in him always, with thankful mention of the great things he has done for us.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Exo 12:14-20. Ps Rules for Mazzoth.Immediately following the one feast of the Passover came the seven-day pilgrimage feast (cf. Exo 5:1) of Unleavened Cakes, probably originally an agricultural festival to mark the beginning of barley harvest (pp. 102f.) Falling at the time of year when the Exodus took place, it received a commemorative interpretation, which the plain and quickly prepared mazzoth fitted. The ritual prejudice against leaven (Exo 12:15) extended to all altar-gifts (Exo 23:18), and may be due to the persistence in religious ceremonial of primitive usage before leaven was known (Exo 4:25*), though the thought that fermentation involved corruption may also have had effect. Later Jews became most scrupulous in searching for the forbidden leaven, and, since unleavened cakes were eaten at the Passover, expelled all leaven before that feast. Paul (1Co 5:6-8, Gal 5:9), as well as our Lord (Mar 8:15, but contrast the Parable of the Leaven), makes leaven symbolic of evil. The penalty for disobedience was (Exo 12:15) excommunication: that soul shall be cut off from Israel (cf. Gen 17:14, Ezr 10:8). The first and seventh days (Exo 12:16) were to be an holy convocation (Lev 23:2 ff.*), kept with almost the rigour of the Sabbath. The reference to the Exodus as past (Exo 12:17) shows that Exo 12:14-17 did not originally follow Exo 12:1-13, but rather Exo 12:41, and probably came from another hand. And Exo 12:18-20 may also be an independent piece, inserted here by R. The reference to the sojourner (Exo 12:48*) is the only new feature: he might eat the mazzoth, for that was an act of temperance, not a partaking of holy food. The phraseology in Exo 12:1-20 is uniformly of the P school.
Exo 12:14. this day: is not the 14th (Passover) but the 15th (1st of Mazzoth).
Fuente: Peake’s Commentary on the Bible
12:14 And this day shall be unto you for a {h} memorial; and ye shall keep it a feast to the LORD throughout your generations; ye shall keep it a feast by an ordinance {i} for ever.
(h) Of the benefits received for your deliverance.
(i) That is, until Christ’s coming: for then ceremonies will end.