How can Exodus 12:10 be connected to Jesus as the Passover Lamb? Text: Exodus 12:10 “Do not leave any of it until morning; before the morning you must burn up any part that is left over.” Why the Detail Matters • The Passover lamb had to be completely dealt with in one night. • Nothing could linger into the next day; whatever wasn’t eaten was burned. • The command underscores urgency, completeness, and holiness. Key Themes in the Original Instruction • Total consumption: every family had to take in the full provision God gave. • No corruption: meat that sat overnight would spoil—God forbade decay in this sacrifice. • Finality: by sunrise, the lamb was either consumed or completely reduced to ashes. Jesus and the Passover Pattern “Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed” (1 Corinthians 5:7). Exodus 12:10 lines up with Jesus in several striking ways: 1. Complete Provision • On the cross Jesus declared, “It is finished” (John 19:30). Nothing of His saving work was left undone. • Believers must receive His sacrifice in full—there is no partial salvation (Hebrews 10:10, 14). 2. No Overnight Exposure • The Passover lamb couldn’t stay till morning; likewise, Jesus’ body did not remain on the cross overnight. • “Because it was the Preparation Day… they asked Pilate that the legs might be broken and the bodies removed” (John 19:31). • He was buried before sunset, fulfilling the pattern of not letting the sacrifice linger. 3. Freedom from Decay • The command guarded the lamb from corruption; prophecy promised Jesus’ body would not see decay (Psalm 16:10; Acts 2:31). • He rose on the third day—death could not corrupt Him. 4. Judgment Consumed the Remainder • Any leftovers were burned, symbolizing judgment. • All the sin Jesus bore was fully judged by God’s holy fire (Isaiah 53:5–6, 10). Practical Takeaways • Receive the whole Christ—nothing held back, no “leftovers” of self-reliance. • Trust that His sacrifice is complete; we add nothing to it. • Rest in the assurance that sin and death have been totally consumed in His once-for-all offering. |