This chapter gives  an account of one of the most memorable ordinances, and one of the most  memorable providences, of all that are recorded in the Old Testament. I. Not one  of all the ordinances of the Jewish church was more eminent than that of the  passover, nor is any one more frequently mentioned in the New Testament; and we  have here an account of the institution to it. The ordinance consisted of three  parts:—1. The killing and eating of the paschal lamb (v. 1-6, 8-11). 2. The sprinkling  of the blood upon the door-posts, spoken of as a distinct thing (Heb. 11:28), and peculiar to  this first passover (v. 7), with the reason  for it (v. 13). 3. The feast of  unleavened bread for seven days following; this points rather at what was to be  done afterwards, in the observance of this ordinance (v. 14-20). This institution  is communicated to the people, and they are instructed in the observance, (1.)  Of this first passover (v. 21-23). (2.) Of the after  passovers (v. 24-27). And the  Israelites’ obedience to these orders (v. 28). II. Not one of  all the providences of God concerning the Jewish church was more illustrious, or  is more frequently mentioned, than the deliverance of the children of Israel out  of Egypt. 1. The firstborn of the Egyptians are slain (v. 29, 30). 2. Orders are  given immediately for their discharge (v. 31-33). 3. They begin  their march. (1.) Loaded with their own effects (v. 34). (2.) Enriched  with the spoils of Egypt (v. 35, 36). (3.) Attended  with a mixed multitude (v. 37, 38). (4.) Put to their  shifts for present supply (v. 39). The event is  dated (v. 40-42). Lastly, A  recapitulation in the close, [1.] Of this memorable ordinance, with some  additions (v. 43-49). [2.] Of this  memorable providence (v. 50, 51).
Moses and Aaron  here receive of the  Lord what they were  afterwards to deliver to the  people concerning the  ordinance of the passover, to which is prefixed an order for a new style to be  observed in their months (v. 1, 2): This shall be to  you the beginning of months. They had hitherto  begun their year from the middle of September, but henceforward they were to  begin it from the middle of March, at least in all their ecclesiastical  computations. Note, It is good to begin the day, and begin the year, and  especially to begin our lives, with God. This new calculation began the year  with the spring, which reneweth the face  of the earth, and was used as a  figure of the coming of Christ, Cant. 2:11, 12. We may suppose  that, while Moses was bringing the ten plagues upon the Egyptians, he was  directing the Israelites to prepare for their departure at an hour’s warning.  Probably he had be degrees brought them near together from their dispersions,  for their are here called the congregation  of Israel (v. 3), and to them as a  congregation orders are here sent. Their amazement and hurry, it is easy to  suppose, were great; yet now they must apply themselves to the observance of a  sacred rite, to the honour of God. Note, When our heads are fullest of care, and  our hands of business, yet we must not forget our religion, nor suffer ourselves  to be indisposed for acts of devotion.
I.  God appointed that on the night wherein they were to go out of Egypt they  should, in each of their families, kill a  lamb, or that two or  three families, if they were small, should join for a lamb. The lamb was to be  got ready four days before and that afternoon they were to kill  it  (v. 6) as a sacrifice;  not strictly, for it was not offered upon the  altar, but as a religious  ceremony, acknowledging God’s goodness to them, not only in preserving them  from, but in delivering them by, the plagues inflicted on the Egyptians. See the  antiquity of family-religion; and see the convenience of the joining of small  families together for religious worship, that it may be made the more  solemn.
II.  The lamb so slain they were to eat, roasted (we may suppose, in its several  quarters), with unleavened bread and bitter herbs, because they were to eat  it in  haste (v. 11), and to leave none  of it until the morning; for God would have them to depend upon him for their  daily bread, and not to take thought for the morrow. He that led them would feed  them.
III. Before they ate  the flesh of the lamb, they were to sprinkle the blood upon the  doorposts, v. 7. By this their  houses were to be distinguished from the houses of the Egyptians, and so their  first-born secured from the sword of the destroying angel, v. 12, 13. Dreadful work was  to be made this night in Egypt; all the first-born both of man and beast were to  be slain, and judgment executed upon the gods of Egypt. Moses does not mention  the fulfillment, in this chapter, yet he speaks of it Num. 33:4. It is very  probable that the idols which the Egyptians worshipped were destroyed, those of  metal melted, those of wood consumed, and those of stone broken to pieces,  whence Jethro infers (ch. 18:11), The Lord is  greater than all gods. The same angel that  destroyed their first-born demolished their idols, which were no less dear to  them. For the protection of Israel from this plague they were ordered to  sprinkle the blood of the lamb upon the door-posts, their doing which would be  accepted as an instance of their faith in the divine warnings and their  obedience to the divine precepts. Note, 1. If in times of common calamity God  will secure his own people, and set a mark upon them; they shall be hidden  either in heaven or under heaven, preserved either from the stroke of judgments  or at least from the sting of them. 2. The blood of sprinkling is the saint’s  security in times of common calamity; it is this that marks them for God,  pacifies conscience, and gives them boldness of access to the throne of grace,  and so becomes a wall of protection round them and a wall of partition between  them and the children of this world.
IV.  This was to be annually observed as a feast of the Lord in their generations, to  which the feast of  unleavened bread was annexed, during  which, for seven days, they were to eat no bread but what was unleavened, in  remembrance of their being confined to such bread, of necessity, for many days  after they came out of Egypt, v. 14-20. The appointment is  inculcated for their better direction, and that they might not mistake  concerning it, and to awaken those who perhaps in Egypt had grown generally very  stupid and careless in the matters of religion to a diligent observance of the  institution. Now, without doubt, there was much of the gospel in this ordinance;  it is often referred to in the New Testament, and, in it, to us is the gospel  preached, and not to them  only, who could not  stedfastly look to the end of these things, Heb. 4:2; 2 Co. 3:13.
1.  The paschal lamb was typical. Christ is our  Passover, 1 Co. 5:7. (1.) It was to be  a lamb; and Christ  is the Lamb of  God  (Jn. 1:29), often in the  Revelation called the Lamb, meek and innocent  as a lamb, dumb before the shearers, before the butchers. (2.) It was to be  a male of the first  year (v. 5), in its prime;  Christ offered up himself in the midst of his days, not in infancy with the  babes of Bethlehem. It denotes the strength and sufficiency of the Lord Jesus,  on whom our help was laid. (3.) It was to be without  blemish (v. 5), denoting the  purity of the Lord Jesus, a Lamb without  spot, 1 Pet. 1:19. The judge that  condemned him (as if his trial were only like the scrutiny that was made  concerning the sacrifices, whether they were without blemish or no) pronounced  him innocent. (4.) It was to be set apart four days before (v. 3, 6), denoting the  designation of the Lord Jesus to be a Saviour, both in the purpose and in the  promise. It is very 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. (5.) It was to be slain, and roasted with  fire (v. 6-9), denoting the  exquisite sufferings of the Lord Jesus, even unto death, the death of the cross.  The wrath of God is as fire, and Christ was made a curse for us. (6.) It was to  be killed by the whole congregation between the two evenings, that is, between  three o’clock and six. Christ suffered in the end of the  world (Heb. 9:26), by the hand of  the Jews, the whole multitude of them (Lu. 23:18), and for the good  of all his spiritual Israel. (7.) Not a bone of it must  be broken (v. 46), which is  expressly said to be fulfilled in Christ (Jn. 19:33, 36), denoting the  unbroken strength of the Lord Jesus.
2.  The sprinkling of the blood was typical. (1.) It was not enough that the blood  of the lamb was shed, but it must be sprinkled, denoting the application of the  merits of Christ’s death to our souls; we must receive the  atonement, Rom. 5:11. (2.) It was to be  sprinkled with a bunch of  hyssop (v. 22) dipped in the  basin. The everlasting  covenant, like the basin, in the conservatory of this blood, the benefits and  privileges purchased by it are laid up for us there; faith is the bunch of  hyssop by which we apply the promises to ourselves and the benefits of the blood  of Christ laid up in them. (3.) It was to be sprinkled upon the door-posts, denoting the open  profession we are to make of faith in Christ, and obedience to him, as those  that are not ashamed to own our dependence upon him. The mark of the beast may  be received on the forehead or in the right hand, but the seal of  the Lamb is  always in the  forehead, Rev. 7:3. There is a  back-way to hell, but no back-way to heaven; no, the only way to this is a  high-way, Isa. 35:8. (4.) It was to be  sprinkled upon the lintel and  the sideposts, but not upon  the threshold (v. 7), which cautions us  to take heed of trampling under foot the blood of the covenant, Heb. 10:29. It is precious  blood, and must be precious to us. (5.) The blood, thus sprinkled, was a means  of the preservation of the Israelites from the destroying angel, who had nothing  to do where the blood was. 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, Rom. 8:1.
3.  The solemnly eating of the lamb was typical of our gospel-duty to Christ. (1.)  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 and satisfaction in him, as we have in eating and drinking when we are  hungry or thirsty: see Jn. 6:53-55. (2.) 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. Is Christ  divided? Those hat gather  much of Christ will have nothing over. (3.) It was to be eaten immediately, not  deferred till morning, v. 10. Today Christ is offered,  and is to be accepted while it is called today, before we sleep the sleep of  death. (4.) It was to be eaten with bitter  herbs (v. 8), in remembrance of  the bitterness of their bondage in Egypt. We must feed upon Christ with sorrow  and brokenness of heart, in remembrance of sin; this will give an admirable  relish to the paschal lamb. Christ will be sweet to us if sin be bitter. (5.) It  was to be eaten in a departing posture (v. 11); when we feed upon  Christ by faith we must absolutely forsake the rule and dominion of sin, shake  off Pharaoh’s yoke; and we must sit loose to the world, and every thing in it,  forsake all for Christ, and reckon it no bad bargain, Heb. 13:13, 14.
4.  The feast of unleavened bread was typical of the Christian life, 1 Co. 5:7, 8. Having received  Christ Jesus the Lord, (1.) We must keep a feast in holy joy, continually  delighting ourselves in Christ Jesus; no manner of work  must be done (v. 16), no care admitted  or indulged, inconsistent with, or prejudicial to, this holy joy: if true  believers have not a continual feast, it is their own fault. (2.) It must be a  feast of unleavened bread, kept in charity, without the leaven of malice, and in  sincerity, without the leaven of hypocrisy. The law was very strict as to the  passover, and the Jews were so in their usages, that no leaven should  be found in their  houses, v. 19. All the old leaven  of sin must be put far from us, with the utmost caution and abhorrence, if we  would keep the feast of a holy life to the honour of Christ. (3.) It was by  an ordinance for  ever (v. 17); as long as we  live, we must continue feeding upon Christ and rejoicing in him, always making  thankful mention of the great things he has done for us.
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