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Exodus 12:1-14                                              

 

Overview- In chapters 12-13, the concern is with specific regulations for worship regarding the exodus. The Passover and Unleavened Bread mentioned here suggest that later generations are called to celebrate this moment via liturgical reenactment. Typically, remembering and celebrating are acts that need have no great historical interest but rather events that recalls and hands on to the present and future generations the ancient victory and liberation that is Israel’s. [1]

How We Worship - This chapter/lesson in Exodus 12 gives us pause to reflect on the importance and necessity of worship for the maintenance of community identity. It also speaks to the importance of doing worship right. Much Christian worship is either excessively doctrinal and cognitive or didactic and moralistic. However, as this lesson reminds us, worship includes a suspension of judgment, an imaginative reentry into the story, and a willingness to allow the story itself to shape and inspire faith for both parents and children. Our communities of faith should always-in every place and in every time, be prepared to reengage the ancient, faith-fueling stories of the Bible. [2]

 

What great moments do you celebrate with your family? Any peculiar celebrations that originated with them? What is the ritual of the celebration?

  • What do you find noteworthy about this Passover observance?
  • What is the impact of this celebration on future Israelites? What does this Jewish feast have in common with its Christian counterpart (Holy Communion)? [3]

 

Walter Brueggemann reflects on Exodus, chapters 11 and 12 in his sermon, “The Midnight of Power and Weakness, though he is more interested in the death of the firstborn and its implications than with the liturgical directions for Passover. [4]

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[1] The New Interpreter’s Bible I (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1994), page 773.
[2] Ibid., page 778.
[3] Questions adapted from Serendipity Bible (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1998), p. 137.
[4] The Threat of Life: Sermons on Pain, Power, and Weakness (Minneapolis: Augsburg Press, 1996), pp. 24-29..