Posts Tagged ‘Passover’

What the Former Hitler Youth Told Me

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

hitler youth poster

Recently, on a beautiful sunny, breezy day, I was walking into a building and noticed the name tag of the security guard.  The first and middle names were strong German ones.  The last one was my maiden name! (My paternal grandfather was a German Jew).

I asked where he was from.

“East Germany.”

“When did you come here?”

I can’t remember the exact year that he told me, but it was decades ago.

“How did you get out of East Germany, since there was a wall?”, I inquired.

“I escaped before they built the wall.  I was lucky.”

“Well, it really wasn’t luck.  Someone was watching over you.”

I asked him, “How old were you during the Holocaust?”

He then proceeded to tell me that he was eleven when Kristallnacht happened.  For those of you unfamiliar with Kristallnacht, it means “The Night of Glass,” when the Nazis smashed the glass windows of Jewish homes and businesses, and went on a murderous rampage.  It happened November 9-10, 1938.

With a painful look in his eyes, he said, “It was terrible.”

Since we shared a generally Jewish surname, I asked if he was Jewish.

“No.”

Then I asked if he had been a member of Hitler Youth.

“Yes, we had to be.  I was sixteen.  They would have hurt us if we didn’t join.”

Then, in a distinctly broken voice, he shared how he had been in Dresden:  “They bombed us three months before the war ended.”  You may recall from the history of World War II that Dresden was decimated.

“How did you survive?”

“I hid underground for months.  I was lucky.”

Again with “lucky.”  “No, Otto, Someone was watching over you,” I countered.

I then asked if he was Lutheran, which many Germans are.

He replied that he had no faith.  This is not unusual for those who lived through the hell of World War II.

I began to share the Good News with him.  Unlike the nonsense propagated in the 1960’s, that everyone was good and there really wasn’t a thing called ’sin’, it wasn’t hard to introduce into the conversation the idea of evil, because he had seen it firsthand.

I explained that a Holy God must punish sin–there is a cost to sin, a price to be paid.  It just doesn’t go away.

“You know, the Living God, the God of Abraham, was watching over you all these years.”

I could have used the generic, “Lord” or “God”, but I wanted to relate to him that the Almighty, who is in covenant with the Jewish people, had also seen every painful event in the Holocaust.  I wanted Otto to know this merciful God of Abraham had protected him as a young man, even though he had participated in evil against His people.

I didn’t know if he understood the power of the message of the Good News of Messiah…that Messiah paid the price for all of our sins.

“Otto, are you familiar with the Jewish holiday, Passover…it was just celebrated?”

“Yes.”  I was a bit surprised.

I then briefly reviewed the story.  The Israelites had been enslaved in Egypt for 430 years.  God had sent nine plagues into Egypt as judgment.  The final plague, the tenth plague, was the slaying of the first born of the Egyptians.   The Israelites were told through Moses to take a one year old, unblemished male lamb, examine it, slaughter it and place some of the blood on the two doorposts and the lintel of the houses in which they ate it.

For God would send the Angel of Death through the land of Egypt on that night, to strike down all the firstborn there, “both man and beasts.”  Everyone who was in a house with doorposts covered with the blood would be spared, for the LORD said, “When I see the blood I will pass over you.” (Ex. 12:3-7,12-13)

I then explained that in the New Testament Yeshua (Jesus) is called “the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world,” and “Messiah our Passover!”

So here I was, a Jewish believer who had lost relatives in the Holocaust, speaking to a man who had the identical last name as my maiden name…and he had been in Hitler Youth.  How do I communicate?

I knew the love of God was in the whole situation, for who else could set up this type of unexpected encounter?

I asked if he wanted to receive forgiveness for his sins by believing in the Messiah’s finished work on his behalf; the Messiah, I assured him, who even bore all the sins of the Nazis, in His body on the tree.

“No.”  But it was said with gentleness.

Well, I went into my appointment and came out about one hour later.  I saw Otto again.

My husband said to me, “You really need to share this verse of Scripture with him, ‘For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through Him might be saved.’” (John 3:17 KJV)

I told him those words and gave him some literature which he received with thankfulness.  We said goodbye.  I did not sense a shred of hostility from him, only a broken gratefulness.

Do you need His mercy today?  We all do.  The fact that the LORD reaches out to people we would deem ‘unworthy’ proves how gracious and merciful, slow to anger, and of great kindness…” (Joel 2:13 KJV) He is.  That’s a “whole ‘nother discussion” about the redemption of deeply evil people.

We must remember that there is no sin which Yeshua did not bear in His Body on the tree when He provided atonement for us all 2,000 years ago.

None of us really knows the depth of evil in our own hearts.  We are all capable of evil acts. Of course, many evil people already have a seared conscience and are unable to respond to the Gospel.

But the Scripture says, For thou, Lord, art good, and ready to forgive; and plenteous in mercy unto all them that call upon Thee. (Ps. 86:5 KJV)  “And it will come about that whoever calls on the name of the LORD Will be delivered.” (Joel 2:32 NASB)

Even a former Hitler Youth!

No Passover Seder, but The Passover Lamb!

Sunday, May 10th, 2009

passover sederIt was an hour before sundown when Passover would begin this year.  I still needed a few items for our Seder.  For those of you who are unfamiliar with a Seder, “seder” is Hebrew for “order”.  Passover has been observed continuously by the Jewish people throughout the world for approximately the past 3500 years.  The modern seder involves the recounting of the Exodus story, including the essential elements of bitter herbs representing the bitterness of slavery, unleavened bread (matzah), (the bread was unable to rise because the Israelites had to leave Egypt in haste), and the shank bone of the lamb, symbolizing the slain Passover lamb, described below.

The Feast of Passover is an eight day long feast that the Jewish people were commanded to observe throughout their generations (Exodus 12:7).  We learn of the history of the Israelites’ enslavement, leading up to their deliverance,  in Exodus chapters 1-11.  Please note that the command to observe this as a perpetual statute was given before the giving of the Law (also known as “The Torah” or “instruction”) found in Exodus chapters 19 and 20, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy.

Back to my true story.

I went to the dairy aisle to get cheese, as I thought I could make “Matzah pizza” (only unleavened bread is to be eaten during the eight days of Passover).  There was a woman pushing a cart loaded to the brim with frozen pizzas.  I thought, “Well, I know she’s not Jewish and certainly not observing Passover.”

Then I heard her literally crying to someone on her cellphone.  “This is the first time in all my years that I haven’t had a Seder.”  The woman was about seventy years old.

I waited until she completed her call and said, “I’m sorry, but I overheard what you said about not having a Seder.”

She explained that she was visiting from another country.  She had just had the flu.  Her husband, a Holocaust survivor, was a doctor who was back home with his medical practice.  There was really no one to join her here.

We started to chat.  I empathized with her plight of loneliness, particularly during a significant holy day.  I thought about having her to my home, but she was still a bit sick, and I was a bit hesitant to expose my husband and me to her illness.

“You know, I have been in the same situation, Sylvia.”

I tried to comfort her that the same One who delivered our people from bondage is near to her broken heart. (Psalm 34:18)  She continued weeping and wiping her tears.

I then began to talk to her about the primary significance of Passover.

“You know, Sylvia, it’s not just about the Seder.  It’s about the fact that the deliverance of our people was real. Consider what the God of Israel required for such deliverance and for the sparing of the firstborn son of each family…blood upon the door!  He said, “‘For I will go through the land of Egypt on that night, and will strike down all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and beast; and against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgments–I am the LORD.  ‘The blood shall be a sign for you on the houses where you live; and when I see the blood I will pass over you, and no plague will befall you to destroy you when I strike the land of Egypt.” (Ex. 12:12-13)

We decided to exchange phone numbers.  I happened to have some literature in my purse entitled, “How would you recognize the Messiah?”  The graphics on it showed a large fingerprint, for indeed there are many clues in the Hebrew Scriptures describing the Messiah’s birth, life, purpose, death, burial, resurrection.

Sylvia then said two things that startled me.  She asked, “Have you ever read the Zion Chronicles?”

I replied, “Oh, the historical novel series by Bodie Thoene?  No, but I bought one of those books as a gift for someone.  I know they cover the period from WWII to the establishment of the modern State of Israel.”

Sylvia, amazed that I had heard of the series, said these words:  “Well, I read all of them.  Afterward, I was thinking of converting.”  Those were her words!  Implied in the word “converting” was her impression that she had to leave her Jewish heritage and adopt a new one.  The Biblical usage of the term, “to convert” really means “repent” ( “t’shuvah (Biblical Hebrew–’to literally turn around’).  It applies to both Jewish people and Gentiles, for all people need to have a change of heart with respect to who the Messiah is;  and how they can become rightly related to a Holy God.  As God Himself has said through the Prophet Isaiah:

“Let the wicked forsake his way
And the unrighteous man his thoughts;
And let him return to the LORD,
And He will have compassion on him,
And to our God,
For He will abundantly pardon.” (Isaiah 55:7)

So, though Sylvia obviously thought she would have to switch “religions”, actually she needed to discover that the “converting” she considered is actually the universal need for rebellious mankind to “turn” from their wicked, sinful ways, and “return” to a Holy, sinless God, and receive salvation through the precious, sacrificial blood of the pure and spotless Lamb of God — the Messiah of both Israel and the whole world.

To my surprise, she then added, “And who is this pastor…?”  She couldn’t remember his name.
I suggested she might be speaking of the very pro-Israel Pastor John Hagee.

“Yes, that’s him!”, she exclaimed.  “My husband and I watch him every week!”

Well, the ground of her heart was prepared.  I told her, “You weren’t able to have a seder tonight, but God sent a Jewish believer in Messiah to tell you about The Passover Lamb.  Do you know that Yeshua of Nazareth was called the Lamb of God (John 1:29) and The Passover Lamb in the New Testament ( 1 Corinthians 5: 7)?

She did not.  I explained the prophetic significance, how the blood on the door of the Israelites’ homes protecting their firstborn sons relates prophetically to the blood of Messiah protecting us from the consequence of our sin — eternal separation from the Holy One of Israel.

She understood.  She was smiling.

She remarked, “This is amazing.  I was crying before, but now I am not sad anymore.  Thank you.”

I told her, “Don’t thank me, thank the One who arranged this meeting, knowing your loneliness, sadness and frustration…He’s the same one that planned the deliverance of the Israelites, and whose eye has been upon you, and who has sought to comfort and encourage you with His personal love.”

We planned to get together before she returned to her country.  I thought I would simply give her some of my Prophetic Prints and that we would chat for ten minutes.

We met the next weekend.  I brought an Isaiah chapter 53 print, matted in her favorite color – blue, and these other prints:  “The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves those crushed in spirit.“  (Psalm 34:18), “A Father of the fatherless is God in His holy habitation.” (Psalm 68:5).  The latter print was particularly appropriate for her husband, about whom she had previously spoken.

“My husband lost his dad during the Holocaust.  His father was killed by the Nazis.  When my husband was thirteen, he was forced to board a cattle car to Auschwicz.  Someone told him and his family to move to the last car.  When the train pulled out, the last car remained; someone had detached it from the rest of the train!!

Then Sylvia continued, “I was three when my father died.  My mom was left to raise many children alone.”

So the print was obviously appropriate.

The ten minute conversation turned into two and a half hours, as we sat on the bench outside the grocery store where we had originally met.  She shared her amazing history.  She grew up in a place where I did not even think any Jewish people lived.  Her family was part of a small, thriving Jewish community there.  I also learned that her mother and my grandmother were from the same city in Eastern Europe.  Her history was richly woven, with much pain and much blessing.  There was interaction between her family and the non-Jewish neighbors.  After her mother had been orphaned, a little non-Jewish girl had compassion on her; upon seeing her difficult situation, she loaned Sylvia’s mom her school books overnight.  The two remained friends into their eighties.  The woman’s son later became famous in that country.

I also learned that Sylvia had been a scientist. A searching one at that!

Finally, she wanted to know how I prayed.  I found this interesting.

“Do you just pray the Shema?”  (“Hear, O Israel! The LORD is our God, the LORD is one!” – Deut. 6:4), she inquired.

I explained the life of prayer. I don’t pray rote prayers.  I talk with Abba, the Heavenly Father.  I pour out my heart to Him about everything and anything…at any time, in any place!

Then we got back to the Passover.

“Sylvia, remember we spoke about the Passover lamb’s blood protecting the Israelite firstborn son?  Eternal life depends on believing what THE Passover Lamb did for you two thousand years ago on the tree (1 Peter 1:17-20; 2:24).  Even as it says in Exodus 13:8, “You shall tell your son on that day, saying, ‘It is because of what the LORD did for me when I came out of Egypt‘.”

“Would you like to receive Him now?”

“I’m not ready.”

“I respect that.”

It turns out she just thought of sin as the biggies:  Murder, adultery, theft–which she had not committed.  She did not understand that we are accountable for sins of the spirit:  Hatred, coveting, bitterness, etc.  If we don’t see that we have the sickness of sin, we certainly won’t seek to have the Great Physician’s remedy for this sickness.  In other words, why seek a savior if we don’t think we need to be delivered from anything?

Once that was explained, it seemed like a light went on.

Sylvia, our hearts lie open before Him to whom we will have to give an account (Acts 17:30-31).

“Ooooh, now I understand.”

But she was not yet ready to pray.  That’s OK, because no one can make this life changing decision for another.  We must individually understand, and be convicted of the awfulness of sin, and the awfulness of eternal separation from a Holy God.  A parent can’t do this transaction for a child, a husband can’t do this for a wife, and a friend can’t do this for a friend.

That is uniquely the role of the Ruach HaKodesh (The Holy Spirit) — to “convict the world concerning sin and righteousness and judgment.”  (John 16:8)

She still wanted to ponder the truths I had shared.  She mentioned her interest in the Book of Revelation, which addresses events in the last days.  I ”just so happened” to have a copy of the Book of Revelation on CD in my purse and gave it to her.  She was amazed!

We parted as friends.  Sylvia will be back here in a few months.  She volunteered her home address and phone number, and asked that we keep in touch.

I just love watching the LORD at work, drawing people to Himself…designing appointments that are so personal to the one is ordained to hear the Good News.  That’s the business He’s in!  And, the Messiah told us to pray and ask that more laborers be sent into fields (of people) to gather in the harvest.  The hour is very late.

*Image courtesy of datafox from Wikipedia Commons. Image was resized to 250×300 pixels.

There’s Eternity in Your Heart

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

Last year, my elderly cousin, a Conservative/Orthodox Jewish woman, whom I will call Ida, asked me if there was an afterlife.  She had asked the same question of her rabbi and a pastor at her grandson’s wedding (it was an intermarriage).

Here’s what I wrote to Ida…


Dear Ida:

It’s always wonderful to speak with you!  I am glad Sam and Angela had a beautiful wedding.

You told me a few weeks ago that you asked your rabbi if there was an afterlife.  Then you told me you also asked the same question of the pastor that officiated at the wedding.

Here’s what the Hebrew Scriptures teach:

When King David had a son with Bathsheba (before Solomon) and that first baby was very ill, King David fasted.  Then the baby died.  Afterward King David ate food.  He said to his servants, “While the child was still alive, I fasted and wept; for I said, ‘Who knows, the L-RD may be gracious to me, that the child may live.’  “But now he has died; why should I fast?  Can I bring him back again?  I will go to him, but he will not return to me.”  (2 Samuel chapter 12 verses 22-23)  King David obviously knew that the baby went somewhere after his death, and after his own death, he would also go there.

Furthermore, in the twelfth chapter of Daniel the Prophet it says, “Now at that time Michael (the archangel who protects Israel), the great prince who stands guard over the sons of your people, will arise.  And there will be a time of distress such as never occurred since there was a nation until that time; and at that time your people, everyone who is found written in the book, will be rescued.  Many of those who sleep in the dust of the ground (i.e. who are dead) will awake, these to everlasting life, but the others to disgrace and everlasting contempt…  Go your way, Daniel, for these words are concealed and sealed up until the end time.  Many will be purged, purified and refined, but the wicked will act wickedly; and none of the wicked will understand, but those who have insight will understand…But as for you, go you way to the end; then you will enter into rest and rise again for your allotted portion at the end of the age.”  (Daniel chapter 12 verses 1,2,9,10,13)

King Solomon wrote in Ecclesiastes 3 verse 11, “…He has also set eternity in their heart…”

Because He has set eternity in your heart, Ida:  That is why you are asking if there is an afterlife.  Generally we are distracted by daily chores, worries, activities, and fulfilling dreams in this life, and rarely, if ever, think about eternal matters.  However, you have asked one of the most important questions that can be asked!  Yes, there is an afterlife.  The issue is:  Will you, according to the Prophet Daniel, spend eternity in the Holy One of Israel’s presence, or in a place of disgrace and everlasting contempt? What is the basis of “rising to everlasting life” vs. everlasting separation from the Living God?

Here is the answer!

Two thousand years ago there were some Jewish siblings: Lazarus, Martha and Mary.  Lazarus was sick.  Yeshua (Jesus) knew about this.  Then Lazarus died.  “Now Bethany was near Jerusalem, about two miles off; and many of the Jews had come to Martha and Mary, to console them concerning their brother.  Martha then said to Yeshua, “Lord, if You had been here, my brother would not have died.  Even now I know that whatever You ask of God, God will give You.”

Yeshua said to her, “Your brother will rise again.”

Martha said to Him, “I know that he will rise again in the resurrection on the last day.”

Yeshua said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life; he who believes in Me will live even if he dies, and everyone who lives and believes in Me will never die.  Do you believe this?”

She said to Him, “Yes, Lord; I have believed that You are the Messiah, the Son of God even He who comes into the world.”  (John chapter 11 verses 18-27)

Then, Yeshua proved who He said He was by raising Lazarus from the dead! 

Also, a young Jewish ruler asked Yeshua, “Rabbi, what must I do that I may obtain eternal life?” (Matthew chapter 19 verse 16)

Clearly, two thousand years ago the idea of eternal life and the kingdom of heaven was part of Jewish thought.  The liberal rabbis of today, who discount the authority of the Scriptures, have dismissed this…possibly because of the agony of the Holocaust and the subsequent feeling of being abandoned by the G-d of Israel.

Nicodemus, the Teacher of Israel, came by night to Yeshua, afraid to be seen by his peers in the Sanhedrin.  After telling him that he must be born from above (born again), Yeshua said, “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness (Numbers chapter 21 verses 9-21) even so must the Son of Man be lifted up so that whoever believes in Him will have eternal life  (John chapter 3 verse 15)  Yeshua takes an event from Jewish history to explain what He came to do.  You see, fifteen hundred years prior, some Israelites were bitten by vipers and died in the wilderness.  Moses was told to make a bronze serpent and set it on a standard.  “And it came about, that if a serpent bit any man, when he looked to the bronze serpent, he lived.”  Messiah was lifted up on the tree (cross), raised from the dead, and gives eternal life to those who look to (believe in) Him.

Yeshua continues to tell Nicodemus:  “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.“  Truly, truly I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life.” (John chapter 5 vs. 24)

What is this judgment?

“Then I saw a great white throne and Him who sat upon it, from whose presence earth and heaven fled away, and no place was found for them.  And I saw the dead, the great and the small, standing before the throne, and books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the book of life; and the dead were judged from the things which were written in the books, according to their deeds.  And the sea gave up the dead which were in it, and death and Hades gave up the dead which were in them; and they were judged, everyone according to their deeds.  Then death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire.  This is the second death, the lake of fire.  And if anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire (Revelation chapter 20 verses 11-15)

All people have sinned and fall short of God’s righteous standard.  The composite of all the sins in this world is reflected in a world that is out of control with pain, violence, separation, poverty, injustice, etc.

However, the good news is the Messiah bore our sins in His body on the tree when He purposefully came to provide atonement for us.  His blood atonement covers our sins, just like the Passover lamb’s blood on the lintel of the doorpost spared every Israelite firstborn who came inside the house, on whose doorposts the blood had been applied. (see “Post #1!”)

“For the penalty of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life through Yeshua the Messiah.” (Romans 6:23)  Yeshua is the Passover Lamb who delivers from condemnation, all and only those, who believe in Him.

Ida, The Scriptures are clear that there is no other way to obtain eternal life.

During Hanukkah two thousand years ago, Messiah Yeshua said, as recorded in John chapter 10 verse 18, “No man takes My life, but I lay it down on My own initiative. I have authority to lay it down, and I have authority to take it up again.  This commandment I received from My Father.” So much for the outrageous history of blaming Jews for the killing of Christ. Incidentally, please read Acts 4: 27-28 which clearly states who is indeed responsible, humanly speaking, for His death–”Herod (a convert to Judaism; Pontius Pilate–a Gentile; the Gentiles, and the people of Israel to do whatever Your hand and Your purpose predestined to occur.”  Wow!  The God of Israel predestined the Messiah to be put to death for the sins of all people.

This correlates with what we read in Isaiah chapter 53:  “It pleased Yahveh to crush Him, putting Him to grief; if He would render Himself as a guilt offering, He will see his offspring, He will prolong his days…”  This Messiah would be the guilt offering for Israel and the nations.  He would then see and have his days prolonged, clearly speaking of resurrection!. 

There is a lot here, Ida.  The main thing is the Good News:  The God of Israel loves you and your family.  He is offering you and them eternal life.  But an offer does not take effect until there is an acceptance of that specific offer.  This is a legal transaction resulting in grace and eternal life!  If anyone would come to Him, it must be completely on His terms and not our own! His terms are stated in Romans chapter 10, “That if you confess with your mouth Yeshua is LORD and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. For with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation, for the Hebrew Scripture says, ‘Whoever believes in Him will not be disappointed.’

For thirty four years I have prayed for you, almost daily.  If the nature of life and death; and these issues of eternal life and appearing before the Living God, either on our own merits/good works which are insufficient because they are tainted, or in the merits of Messiah’s perfect work on the tree, weren’t so serious, I wouldn’t be praying for you, nor would I have written you about what you could see as offensive.

I know if you humble yourself and ask the God of Israel if Messiah Yeshua is in fact the means by which you, Ida, can know you have eternal life when you pass from this place of pain...He will show you.

I love you!


The Well That Never Runs Dry

Friday, January 30th, 2009

wellWelcome to the Prophetic Prints blog!  May the content bring you a measure of encouragement, peace and joy…and cause you to open your heart to the love and wisdom of the Living God.

For over thirty-five years I have drawn water from the “wells of salvation” (Isaiah 12:3b)!  This blog will thus focus on what I have drawn from these wells.

The context of ‘wells of salvation’ is as follows:

“I will give thanks to You, O, Yahveh (Hebrew for LORD); For although You were angry with me, Your anger is turned away, And You comfort me. Behold, God is my salvation (Hebrew: Yeshuati), I will trust and not be afraid; For the LORD God (Hebrew: Yah Yahveh) is my strength and song, And He has become my salvation! Therefore you will joyously draw water from the wells of salvation.“  Isaiah 12:1-3

Today’s passage in Isaiah Chapter 12 shows us the progression from being separated from a Holy God (Yahveh) to being comforted, strengthened and refreshed:

1. “Yahveh was angry with me”

For some, the idea that the Master of the Universe is angry with you is outrageous and unrealistic because you doubt the very existence of a Supreme Being.  For others, you carry a heavy weight of sensing deep in your psyche, every day, that He is angry with you.  Most of us hope there is, in reality, a God who is indeed personal…so personal that He could touch us in the empty places of our hearts and lives.  The fact is He does know us and is indeed intimately acquainted with all of our ways (Psalm 139:3)  He also knows where we have blown it…come short of His holy standard (not your pastor’s, rabbi’s, priest’s, mother’s, friend’s standards). The God revealed in Scripture is indeed angry with sin and sinful, unredeemed mankind.  HOWEVER…Please note the tense of the action:  was angry.

2. “Your anger is turned away”

How is His holy wrath turned away?  Let me use the truths drawn from the Passover story (Exodus Chapters 3 – 13) to illustrate.  For those unfamiliar with the facts related to the Jewish feast of Passover, I’d like to give you a brief summary: Thirty five hundred years ago, the Israelites were enslaved in Egypt for 400 years.  Moses, whose name means “drawing out of water”, was instructed by the One whose name is I Am That I Am (In Hebrew called Yahveh, Yehovah, Yod Hey Vav Hey, the tetragrammaton and commonly referred to by the name “LORD” in English) to deliver the Israelites out of bondage.  Thus he commanded Pharoah, the ruler of Egypt, “Let My people go!”  Nine plagues were inflicted on the land and people of Egypt, in response to Pharoah’s hardness of heart and refusal to let the Israelites go.  The final plague was the killing of the firstborn son of all the Egyptians.  Sadly, the consequences of bad leadership can affect an entire nation.  In Exodus Chapter 12, the LORD instructed Moses to tell the Israelites to take a lamb on the tenth day of the first month (Nisan–in the Spring), an unblemished male a year old; they were to examine it and keep it until the fourteenth day of the first month.  Then the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel was to kill it at twilight.  They were then instructed to “take some of the blood and put it on the two doorposts and on the lintel of the houses in which they eat it.”…The blood shall be a sign for you on the houses where you live; and when I see the blood I will pass over you, and no plague will befall you to destroy you.”  (Ex. 12: 7, 13)

Sometimes we excuse ourselves from adhering to G0d’s standards by thinking that we are sincere, relatively good people, we have a relative who is a rabbi, pastor or priest, or we’ve already suffered enough in life.  However notice, it was not enough to be sincere, to be related to Moses, or to claim that years of suffering should exempt one from this plague. Unless the blood was (1) on the doorpost of the house in which they abided,  and (2) the first born was in the house, the first born would have been destroyed.  Intellectual assent was not enough.  Action was required (go in the house).  Have you gone into the house?Also, In the Torah, in Leviticus Chapter 17, verse 11, it says:  “For the life of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it to you on the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the blood by reason of the life that makes atonement.

In the New Covenant (Testament), Yeshua (Jesus) is called the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world (John 1:29) by John the Baptist (who was not a Baptist, but an Essenic Jew).  Yeshua is also called the Passover Lamb (1 Corinthians 5:8).  In 1 Peter 18-19, we read:  “…we are redeemed from our futile way of life with precious blood, as of a lamb unblemished and spotless, of Messiah.”

Are you aware that Messiah Yeshua (Jesus the Messiah) was presented as the Passover Lamb to be slaughtered on the fourteenth day of the month (Nisan) approximately 2000 years ago?  As a Jewish child, I used to wonder why the Christians had their holiday (Easter) around the time of Passover.  It’s because the atonement and the resurrection were accomplished by the Jewish Messiah during this Jewish Feast in Israel!

In summary, the sacrifice of the Lamb (seen through the Passover story) is the means Yahveh (the LORD) initiated to atone for our sins and soothe His very real wrath.

3. “You comfort me”

In Revelation 7:13-17, we learn that those who had suffered (in the great tribulation) “have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. For this reason, they are before the throne of God; and they serve Him day and night in His sanctuary; and He who sits on the throne will spread His tabernacle over them.  They will hunger no longer, nor thirst anymore; nor will the sun beat down on them, nor any heat; for the Lamb in the center of the throne will be their shepherd and will guide them to springs of the waters of life; and God will wipe every tear from their eyes.” Note here that the believers are cleansed.  They are comforted.  They are shepherded by the Lamb Himself.  Yeshua the Messiah is the same: yesterday, today and forever (Hebrews chapter 13 vs. 8). This same Lamb can cleanse, comfort, and shepherd you today.

4. “I will trust and will not be afraid for the LORD my God is my strength and my song”

Trust has to be earned.  The Living God can be trusted because He proved His love for us: “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son (the Lamb of God) that whosoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16) The reward of trusting God as your strength and song is your not being afraid! Hundreds of times in the Scriptures we are exhorted to not be afraid, because God is with us, God is for us, God Himself fights for us. Many times He commands us not to fear.  Why? Because He loves us, knows us, is with us, and wants to help us.  What a promise!  It is important to note that the basis of being fearless in this life is to change the object of our fear/fears: To fear (and reverence) the LORD rather than life, the economy, people, etc.”Do not fear, for I AM with you.  Do not anxiously look about you for I AM your God.  I will strengthen you, surely I will help you.  Surely I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.”  (Isaiah 41:10).  Messiah is the One seated at the Father’s right hand.  He became flesh and dwelt among us (John 1:14) and has been touched with the feeling of your infirmities (Hebrews 4:15 KJV) and knows the basis of your fears.  Trust Him.

5. “He also has become my salvation”

Notice however, that Isaiah says “Yahveh (the LORD) my God, is my strength and my song.” (Isaiah 12:2, italics mine)  This is not just an intellectual thing.  Yahveh must become your LORD, my LORD.  As Bob Dylan rightly sung a few decades ago, “You gotta serve somebody.”  We are all serving/trusting someone or something to make us feel valued, or simply feel better in this painful world. The Great Someone is the Master of the universe, whether we acknowledge Him or not.  “In Him (the Creator) we live and move and have our being/existence. (Acts 17:28).  To be disconnected from the Source of life is like an electronic device that is not plugged in.  It doesn’t work!

6. “Therefore you will joyously draw water out of the wells of salvation”

We already noted, in Revelation 7:17,  that the Lamb guides us to the springs of the waters of life.  However, He Himself is the well of salvation! The word “salvation” in Hebrew, as already noted, is “yeshua”/Yeshua (these translations have the same Hebrew root letters: yod, shin, ayin).  Indeed, Yeshua said in John Chapter 7, verse 37, on the last day of the Jewish Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot):  “If anyone is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink.  He who believes in Me, as the Scripture said, ‘From his innermost being will flow rivers of living water.’”

Are you thirsty?  Has life dealt you many heavy blows where you have felt sadness, disappointment and the lack of love?  Come to the Well of salvation.  “Whoever is thirsty let him come to Me and drink!”  (John 7:37)  This is a personal invitation from the One who proved His love for you!

Here’s what to do: Acknowledge the truth that your thoughts and actions, like mine, have offended a Holy God–the God of Israel.  “…if you confess with your mouth (acknowledge/declare) Yeshua as Lord, and believe in your heart that Yahveh raised Him from the dead, you will be saved; for with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses (literally ‘agrees with, acknowledges’), resulting in salvation.  For the (Hebrew) Scripture says (in Joel 2:32), “Whoever believes in Him will not be disappointed” (literally ‘put to shame’).  For there is no distinction (with respect to how we are saved and sanctified) between Jew and Greek (Gentile); for the same Lord is Lord of all, abounding in riches for all who call on Him; for ‘Whoever will call on the name of the LORD (Yahveh) will be saved’.”  (Romans 10 verses 9-13)

Please write and let us know if you went to the Well today in humble repentance.  There is much more to know about your inheritance as a child of the Living God!

Blessings and shalom!

P.S. There’s a simple Israeli folk dance called “Mayim”, which means ‘water’.  Many of you know it. The Hebrew words sung to the music are, “U-shav-tem mayim besasson, mi ma-ah-ney ha-yeshuah”.  Most of us did not know that what we were singing was, “With joy you will joyously draw water out of the wells of salvation!”

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