The Passover: A Journey of Redemption and Transformation

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The Passover is not merely a historical event but a pivotal moment that reveals the unique nature of God's relationship with humanity. It is a story that centers on the bloody death of a helpless victim, a lamb, which serves as a profound symbol of substitution and redemption. [00:03:12]

The bloody death of a helpless victim, there's no other religion like that. At the very center of the center of biblical faith, of the biblical vision of ultimate spiritual reality, is the bloody death of a helpless victim. Now why? What does it mean? [00:03:58]

The story of the Bible actually, the narrative plotline of the Bible, essentially is the narrative, the story of the Lamb. So we want to understand the account of the offering of the Lamb first, then we need to put it in the context of the story, the whole story of the Lamb. [00:04:36]

The Destroyer is no respecter of persons, and this is what's amazing. He says, look, Israelites, you are the oppressed, they are the oppressor. You worship the true God, they worship idols, and yet in yourself, if you were to meet judgment tonight, you would find... [00:26:03]

In every single house in Egypt that night, I hate to say it this way, but I've got to do it just to be vivid here, there was either a dead son or a dead lamb. Was one or the other. In other words, the lamb got what the son deserved. [00:27:18]

Jesus Christ, on the night in which he was betrayed, celebrates the Passover meal. He asks his disciples to come together and say, let's celebrate the Passover tonight. So they all get together, the Passover, and when Jesus Christ stands up, there are two enormous shocks. [00:31:02]

The lamb was deliberately removed from the Passover meal because Jesus Christ is saying tonight, I am the lamb. My death, he's saying, is the central event to which all of the history of God's relationship to the world has been moving. [00:33:02]

Behold the Lamb of God means think, realize it, take it in, look, look, look, look, see. No, he's not just saying, oh, there's the Lamb of God. He says, think about it, realize it, grasp it, do you? [00:35:44]

If you are exploring Christianity, if you're one, if you're somebody who's sort of looking into Christianity, the one question I get over the years in New Yorkers, and it's an absolutely natural question for people who are explaining, I do not understand why Jesus had to die. [00:36:05]

If you look at what he's done, it'll transform your attitude toward other people. Hebrew is no better than Egyptian. If you buy this understanding of the Passover, God, the god of the Cross, you realize that you are no better than anyone else. [00:39:36]

Christianity is an eternal Passover meal in which you get together with other Christians, other people who have had the same experience, and you say, why did this happen? What does it mean? And you Behold the Lamb of God together until it sinks in and you're transformed. [00:41:25]

Everything in the history of the world, everything in the history of the Bible, all climaxed on the day that Jesus Christ became the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. [00:42:39]

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