Monday, March 11, 2013

His unfathomable, unfailing love. . .

Last year, God impressed upon me to write about "Easter".  As I was reviewing this blog, I felt that I should share it once again.  This is a personal message to each of us from a very personal God, a personal Savior, Jesus Christ.  Have a very blessed and reflective Easter.  Shalom.



Settling down to complete some post graduate studies (and wishing more that I didn’t have to) my mind easily drifted off to other things, among them the holy season in which we are preparing to celebrate Easter, the most important day in Christian history,  referred to in Acts 12:4. In my study of God’s word, I do find it interesting to note that the word “Easter” that we Christians celebrate is mentioned only this one time in the Bible and only in the King James Version.   Hence, while I am impassioned to write, my very technological mind searches until it finds a satisfactory answer.
My findings indicate that the English word “Easter” is actually the Greek word pascha pronounced pä'-skhä. The paschal sacrifice (which was accustomed to be offered for the people's deliverance of old from Egypt) The paschal lamb, i.e. the lamb the Israelites were accustomed to slay and eat on the fourteenth day of the month of Nisan (the first month of their year) in memory of the day on which their fathers, preparing to depart from Egypt, were bidden by God to slay and eat a lamb, and to sprinkle their door posts with its blood, that the destroying angel, seeing the blood, might “pass over” their dwellings; Christ crucified is likened to the slain paschal lamb. [i]
While the actual word “lent” is not found in scripture, it is nonetheless a period marked for observing fasting, repentance, spiritual discipline, and reflection on Jesus Christ, His suffering and His sacrifice. The Lenten season begins on Ash Wednesday or 40 days preceding the crucifixion.  I further found that while the Bible does not speak of the custom of Lent, however, the practice of repentance and mourning in ashes is found in 2 Samuel 13:19; Esther 4:1; Job 2:8; Daniel 9:3; and Matthew 11:21. And, in my book, if anything can turn our thoughts toward Christ and cause us to melt in repentance, having a right view of the Lord, whether a “season” or a “holiday”, then why does it matter what we call it?
Last year, we took our ladies’ Bible study group through an intense study of the Old Testament tabernacle from Israel's exodus from Egypt through the wilderness wanderings to the conquest of Canaan.  I had studied the tabernacle, the duties of the Levite priests, but something deep within stirred when we studied the Passover. . .the time we Christians now refer to as Easter.   When we studied the attitude and the reverence by which the priests had to approach God in the Holy of Holies, the need for their purity of mind, heart, and body in comparison with the way we nonchalantly, when I need Him attitude come to Him today, is such a stark contrast, I am amazed that He ever made a way of escape for us!
And, what a contrast from the Old Testament Passover to the New Testament Passover! It was God’s wrath upon an idolatrous, heathen nation that hardened its heart toward the God of Israel that caused the first Passover in Egypt.  Yet, as we look to the cross, it was His love for mankind magnified through His son that so lovingly, so mercifully lay down His own life, and shed every drop of His precious blood that you and I might not have to face the death angel of the Old Testament Passover, but through His sacrifice have eternal life. 
We are told that he “eagerly desired” (Luke 22:15 ESV) to eat the Passover with his disciples. He wanted to share, once more, this special Jewish meal.  He yearned with all his heart to just one last time celebrate God, His Father, as Savior before He would suffer at the hands of his own a horrific death. Steve Wright stated, “That particular Passover meal was arranged secretly in an upper room. It was that final meal with his friends that has become the model for what we Christians have named the “Lord’s Supper.”
Antithetical to the God who regretted He had made man (“And the Lord regretted that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart.” Genesis 6:6 ESV) is our God-man (john 1:1-2), Jesus Christ, who willingly gave up His life so that the mankind he regretted creating would have a final Passover lamb that provided the way to eternal life with Him rather than eternal separation from Him.  His compassion.  His mercy.  His unfathomable, unfailing love. As I pause to remember the events of this Easter season, I pause to always remember that His compassion, His mercy, His unfathomable, unfailing love, saved me, keeps me, reminds me of where He brought me from and where I might have been. Whether it was all of mankind, or just me, or just you – if we were the only people ever in this world, God’s love would still have been poured out for us.
“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16 ESV




 [i] Strong’s Hebrew and Greek Lexicon/Concordance

3 comments:

  1. He died for just one of us (me) as if there was just one of us. This is personal. kl

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  2. Thank you for a wonderful Tuesday morning devotion Rhonda! Love you.

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  3. Thoughtful post--thanks Rhonda....I had no idea you had a blog...I'm going to be checking it out more....Shelley O

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