You are to offer to the LORD your God the Passover sacrifice from the herd or flock in the place the LORD will choose as a dwelling for His Name. Sermons
1. Pacificatory. In their blood-sheltered dwellings, the Israelites enjoyed the presence of God, communion with God, peace with God. A feast of peace was held upon the flesh, as in the later peace offerings. 2. Purificatory. It sanctified the people in view of their departure from Egypt; and separation as a peculiar people to Jehovah - in view also of his peculiarly near approach to them in their deliverance. 3. Protective. As warding off the stroke of the destroying angel. Later Passovers, as the yearly presentation of the blood implied, were not only commemorations, but in some sense also perpetuations of the original one. The Passover, as observed from year to year, was - I. A MEMORIAL. It stood as an historical monument, testifying to the reality of the events of the Exodus. In this view of it, it is of great value. No criticism of documents can impair its witness. It is a Bible outside of the Bible, confirmatory of the Bible narratives. No one has yet succeeded in showing how a festival like the Passover could have been introduced at any period later than that to which it historically refers. It has, so far as we can make out anything in history, been observed by the Jews from the very beginning of their national existence. Note to what it testifies - 1. To the fact of the Exodus. 2. That the Exodus was accomplished without warlike resistance from the Egyptians. 3. That it was looked forward to, prepared for, sacrifice offered, and a sacrificial meal eaten, in anticipation of it. 4. That the preparations for departure were hurried, yet orderly. 5. That on the night in question a judgment fell on Egypt, from which the Israelites were exempted - a circumstance which gives to the feast its name, the Passover. The festival has thus all the value of a contemporary witness, and fully corroborates the Scripture history. The Lord's Supper, in like manner, is an historical witness, not to be got rid of, testifying to acts and words of our Lord on the night of his betrayal, and furnishing clear evidence as to the light in which his death was regarded by himself. II. A TYPE. The typological features have often been dwelt on. 1. The lamb - select, unblemished, of full age, subjected to fire, unmutilated (John 19:36), fitness of the victim to represent Christ (Isaiah 53:7). 2. The blood - atoning, need of personal application, sole shelter from death, under its shelter inviolable security (Romans 8:1). 3. The feast - the slain lamb the food of a new life (John 6:51-57); a feast of reconciliation and peace, with fellow-believers, with bitter herbs (affliction, repentance), and without leaven - memorial of haste (ver. 3), but also emblematic of spiritual incorruption, of the purity which is to characterize the new life (1 Corinthians 5:7-9); no part of the flesh to remain till morning (ver. 4), for same reason, to avoid corruption; the feast to last seven days - a week, an entire circle of time, symbolical of life-long consecration to holiness of walk. 4. The redemption - great, once for all, a redemption, by blood and by power, from wrath, from bondage. All these types are conspicuously fulfilled in Christ. III. AN ORDINANCE. 1. The first and chief of the feasts (ver. 1). 2. To be observed regularly (ver. 1). So now the Lord's Supper (1 Corinthians 11:25). 3. At the central sanctuary (vers. 2, 5, 6). Christians should seek to realize their unity with all saints at the Lord's table. 4. With due seriousness and solemnity (vers. 2, 6). - J.O.
Thou shalt not respect persons, neither take a gift. Homiletic Monthly. I. SOME FACTS AND TENDENCIES IN LEGAL ADMINISTRATION.1. The sentence pronounced against a poor man is often very heavy, and that against a rich man very light. In New Jersey a poor man was sentenced to five years of hard labour in prison for stealing a ham; in the same court a rich banker, who had ruined two banks and stolen the money of hundreds of people, received the same sentence. 2. After conviction rich convicts receive favours. In the case just cited the poor man and the rich man went to the same prison. But the poor man was put at hard labour; the rich man was made clerk in the prison library. 3. Rich men have an unfair advantage over poor men when brought to trial. The big fee that hires the eloquent pleader "buys out the law." 4. Even judges are sometimes corrupt. 5. Juries are accused of taking bribes. II. THE PERILS OF THESE FORMS OF INJUSTICE. 1. They threaten the property and lives of the poor. 2. They weaken the spirit of obedience (Numbers 22:23). 3. They develop the communistic spirit of destruction. 4. We are all unsafe when one poor wretch is unsafe only because he lacks money or friends. III. THE REMEDIES FOR EXISTING EVILS. 1. More and better teaching, in home, school, and church, on God's law of equality. 2. Wiser conversation on such matters when citizens meet together. It is dangerous and unpatriotic to treat the miscarriage of justice as a jest. 3. A sound public opinion should be cultivated by press, pulpit, and platform. 4. Our social power may be used to condemn a triumph over the law. 5. Seek to associate in all minds the idea of obedience to God with that of just judgment. (Homiletic Monthly.) (Memoir of General Gordon.) People Levites, MosesPlaces Beth-baal-peor, EgyptTopics Animal, Cause, Choose, Chooses, Dwell, Dwelling, Establish, Flock, Hast, Herd, Marked, Offer, Offering, Passover, Passover-offering, Resting-place, Sacrifice, Sacrificed, TabernacleOutline 1. The feast of the Passover9. of weeks 13. of tabernacles 16. Every male must offer, as he is able, at these three feasts 18. Of judges and justice 21. Asherah poles and images are forbidden Dictionary of Bible Themes Deuteronomy 16:2 4605 animals, religious role 5312 feasting 4438 eating Library The Age of the Apostles (Ad 33-100)The beginning of the Christian Church is reckoned from the great day on which the Holy Ghost came down, according as our Lord had promised to His Apostles. At that time, "Jews, devout men, out of every nation under heaven," were gathered together at Jerusalem, to keep the Feast of Pentecost (or Feast of Weeks), which was one of the three holy seasons at which God required His people to appear before Him in the place which He had chosen (Deuteronomy xvi. 16). Many of these devout men there converted … J. C. Roberston—Sketches of Church History, from AD 33 to the Reformation Whether Six Daughters are Fittingly Assigned to Gluttony? Whether Pride Should be Reckoned a Capital vice? The Passing and the Permanent Obedience The Second Commandment Appeal to the Christian Women of the South The Life and Death of Mr. Badman, Deuteronomy Links Deuteronomy 16:2 NIVDeuteronomy 16:2 NLT Deuteronomy 16:2 ESV Deuteronomy 16:2 NASB Deuteronomy 16:2 KJV Deuteronomy 16:2 Bible Apps Deuteronomy 16:2 Parallel Deuteronomy 16:2 Biblia Paralela Deuteronomy 16:2 Chinese Bible Deuteronomy 16:2 French Bible Deuteronomy 16:2 German Bible Deuteronomy 16:2 Commentaries Bible Hub |