The Passover Visit
Among the Jews, the twelfth year was the dividing
line between childhood and youth. On completing
this year, a Hebrew boy was called a son of the
law, and also a son of God. He was given special
opportunities for religious instruction, and
expected to participate in the scared feasts and
observances. It was in accordance with this
custom that Jesus in His boyhood made the
Passover visit to Jerusalem. Like all devout
Israelites, Joseph and Mary went up every year to
attend the Passover; and when Jesus had reached
the required age, they took Him with them.
There were three annual feasts, the Passover, the
Pentecost, and the Feast of Tabernacles, at which
all the men of Israel were commanded to appear
before the Lord at Jerusalem. Of these feasts,
the Passover was the most largely attended. Many
were present from all the countries where the
Jews were scattered. From every part of Palestine,
the worshipers came in great numbers. The journey
from Galilee occupied several days, and the
travelers united in large companies for
companionship and protection. The women and aged
men rode upon oxen or asses over the steep and
rocky roads. The stronger men and youth journeyed
on foot. The time of the Passover corresponded to
the close of March or the beginning of April, and
the whole land was bright with flowers, and glad
with the songs of birds. All along the way were
spots memorable in the history of Israel, and
fathers and mothers recounted to their children
the wonders of God had wrought for His people in
ages past. They beguiled their journey with song
and music, and when at last the towers of
Jerusalem came into view, every voice in the
triumphant stain,
Our
feet shall stand
within thy gates, O Jerusalem
Peace be within thy walls,
And prosperity within thy palaces.
Psalms
122:2-7
The observance of the Passover began with the
birth of the Hebrew nation. On the last night of
their bondage in Egypt, where there appeared no
token of deliverance, God commanded them to
prepare for an immediate release. He had warned
Pharaoh of the final judgment on the Egyptians,
and He directed the Hebrews to gather their
families within their own dwellings. Having
sprinkled the doorposts with the blood of the
slain lamb, they were to eat the lamb, roasted,
with unleavened bread and bitter herbs. And
thus shall ye eat it, He said, with
your loins girded, your shoes on your feet, and
your staff in your hand; and ye shall eat it in
haste: it is the Lords Passover.
Exodus 12:11.
At midnight all the first-born of the Egyptians
were slain. Then the king sent to Israel the
message, Rise up, and get you forth from
among my people;
and go, serve the Lord,
as ye have said. Exodus 12:31. The
Hebrews went out an independent nation. The Lord
had commanded that the Passover should be yearly
kept. It shall come to pass, He said,
when your children shall say unto you, what
mean ye by this service? That ye shall say, it is
the sacrifice of the Lords Passover, who
passed over the houses of the children of Israel
in Egypt, when He smote the Egyptians. Thus,
from generation to generation the story of this
wonderful deliverance was to be repeated.
The Passover was followed by the seven days
feast of unleavened bread. On the second day of
the feast, the first fruits of the Lords
harvest, a sheaf of barley, was presented before
the Lord. All the ceremonies of the feast were
types of the work of Christ. The deliverance of
Israel from Egypt was an object lesson of
redemption, which the Passover was intended to
keep in memory. The slain lamb, the unleavened
bread, the sheaf of the first fruits, represented
the Savior.
With most of the people in the days of Christ,
the observance of this feast had degenerated into
formalism. But what was its significance to the
Son of God!
For the first time the child, Jesus looked upon
the temple. He saw the white-robed priests
performing their solemn ministry. He beheld the
bleeding victim upon the altar of sacrifice. With
the worshipers, He bowed in prayer, while the
cloud of incense ascended before God. He
witnessed the impressive rites of the paschal
service. Day by day, He saw their meaning more
clearly. Every act seemed to be bound up with His
own life. New impulses were awakening within Him.
Silent and absorbed, He seemed to be studying out
a great problem. The mystery of His mission was
opening to the Savior.
Rapt in the contemplation of these scenes, He did
not remain beside His parents. He sought to be
alone. When the paschal services were ended, He
still lingered in the temple courts; and when
worshipers departed from Jerusalem, He was left
behind.
In this visit to Jerusalem, the parents of Jesus
wished to bring Him in connection with the great
teachers in Israel. While He was obedient in
every particular to the word of God, He did not
conform to the rabbinical rites and usages.
Joseph and Mary hoped that he might be led to
reverence the learned rabbis, and give more
diligent heed to their requirements. But Jesus in
the temple had been taught by God. That which He
had received, He began at once to impart.
At that day, an apartment connected with the
temple was devoted to a sacred school, after the
manner of the schools of the prophets. Here
leading rabbis with their pupils assembled and
hither the child, Jesus came. Seating Himself at
the feet of these grave, learned men, He listened
to their instruction. As one seeking for wisdom,
He questioned these teachers in regard to the
prophecies, and to events then taking place that
pointed to the advent of the Messiah.
Jesus present Himself as one thirsting for a
knowledge of God. His questions were suggestive
of deep truths that had long been obscured, yet
which were vital to the salvation of souls. While
showing how narrow and superficial was the wisdom
of the wise men, every question put before them a
divine lesson, and placed truth in a new aspect.
The rabbis spoke of the wonderful elevation that
the Messiahs coming would bring to the
Jewish nation; but Jesus presented the prophecy
of Isaiah, and asked them the meaning of those
scriptures that point to the suffering and death
of the Lamb of God.
The doctors turned upon Him with questions, and
they were amazed at His answers. With the
humility of a child, He repeated the words of
Scripture, giving them a depth of meaning that
the wise men had not conceived of. If followed,
the lines of truth He pointed out would have
worked a reformation in the religion of the day.
A deep interest in spiritual things would have
been awakened; and when Jesus began His ministry,
many would have been prepared to receive Him.
The rabbis knew that Jesus had not been
instructed in their schools; yet, His
understanding of the prophecies far exceeded
theirs. In this thoughtful Galilean boy, they
discerned great promise. They desired to gain Him
as a student, that he might become a teacher in
Israel. They wanted to have charge of His
education, feeling that a mind so original must
be brought under their molding.
The words of Jesus had moved their hearts as they
had never before been moved by the words from
human lips. God was speaking to give light to
those leaders in Israel, and He used the only
means by which they could be reached. In their
pride, they would have scorned to admit that they
could receive instruction from anyone. If Jesus
had appeared to be trying to teach them, they
would have distained to listen. But they
flattered themselves that they were teaching Him,
or at least testing His knowledge of the
Scriptures. The youthful modesty and grace of
Jesus disarmed their prejudices. Unconsciously
their minds were opened to the word of God, and
the Holy Spirit spoke to their hearts.
They could not but see that their expectation in
regard to the Messiah was not sustained by
prophecy; but they would not renounce the
theories that had flattered their ambition. They
would not admit that they had misapprehended the
Scriptures they claimed to teach. From one to
another passed the inquiry, How hath this youth
knowledge, having never learned? The light was
shining in darkness; but the darkness
apprehended it not. John 1:5, R.V.
Meanwhile Joseph and Mary were in great
perplexity and distress. In the departure from
Jerusalem, they had lost sight of Jesus, and they
knew not that He had tarried behind. The country
was densely populated, and the caravans from
Galilee were very large. There was much confusion
as they left the city. On the way, the pleasure
of traveling with friends and acquaintances
absorbed their attention, and they did not notice
His absence until night came on. Then as they
halted for rest, they missed the helpful hand of
their child. Supposing Him to be with their
company, they had felt no anxiety. Young as He
was, they had trusted Him implicitly, expecting
that when needed, He would be ready to assist
them, anticipating their wants as He had always
done. But now their fears were roused. They
searched for Him throughout their company, but in
vain. Shuddering they remembered how Herod had
tried to destroy Him in His infancy. Dark
forebodings filled their hearts. They bitterly
reproached themselves.
Returning to Jerusalem, they pursued their search.
The next day, as they mingled with the worshipers
in the temple, a familiar voice arrested their
attention. They could not mistake it; no other
voice was like His, so serious and earnest, yet
so full of melody.
In the school of the rabbis, they found Jesus.
Rejoiced as they were, they could not forget
their grief and anxiety. When he was with them
again, the mother said, in words that implied
reproof, Son why hast Thou thus dealt with
us? Behold, Thy father and I have sought Thee
sorrowing.
How is it that ye sought Me? answered
Jesus. Wist ye not that I must be about My
Fathers business? And as they seemed
not to understand His words, He pointed upward.
On His face was a light at which they wondered.
Divinity was flashing through humanity. On
finding Him in the temple, they had listened to
what was passing between Him and the rabbis, and
they were astonished at His questions and answers.
His words started a train of thought that would
never be forgotten.
And His question to them had a lesson. Wist
ye not, He said, that I must be
about My Fathers business? Jesus was
engaged in the work that he had come into the
world to do; but Joseph and Mary had neglected
theirs. God had shown them high honor in
committing to them His Son. Holy angels had
directed the course of Joseph in order to
preserve the life of Jesus. But an entire day
they had lost sight of Him whom they should not
have forgotten for a moment. And when their
anxiety was relieved, they had not censured
themselves, but had cast the blame upon Him.
It was natural for the parents of Jesus to look
upon Him as their own child. He was daily with
them, His life in many respects was like that of
other children, and it was difficult for them to
realize that He was the Son of God. They were in
danger of failing to appreciate the blessing
granted them in the presence of the worlds
Redeemer. The grief of their separation from Him,
and the gentle reproof which His words conveyed,
were designed to impress them with the sacredness
of their trust.
In the answer to His mother, Jesus showed for the
first time that he understood His relation to God.
Before His birth the angel had said to Mary,
He shall be great, and shall be called the
Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give
unto Him the throne of His father David: and He
shall reign over the house of Jacob forever.
Luke 1:32,33. These words Mary had pondered in
her heart; yet, while she believed that her child
was to be Israels messiah, she did not
comprehend His mission. Now she did not
understand His words; but she knew that he had
disclaimed kinship to Joseph, and had declared
His Sonship to God.
Jesus did not ignore His relation to His earthy
parents. From Jerusalem, He returned home with
them, and aided them in their life of toil. He
hid in His own heart the mystery of His mission,
waiting submissively for the appointed time for
Him to enter upon His work. For eighteen years
after He recognized that he was the Son of God,
He acknowledged the tie that bound Him to the
home at Nazareth, and performed the duties of a
son, a brother, a friend, and a citizen.
As His mission had opened to Jesus in the temple,
He shrank from contact with the multitude. He
wished to return from Jerusalem in quietness,
with those who knew the secret of His life. By
the paschal service, God was seeking to call His
people away from their worldly cares, and to
remind them of His wonderful work in their
deliverance from Egypt. In this work, He desired
them to see a promise of deliverance from sin. As
the blood of the slain lamb sheltered the homes
of Israel, so, the blood of Christ was to save
their souls; but they could be saved through
Christ only as by faith they should make His life
their own. There was virtue in the symbolic
service only as it directed the worshipers to
Christ as their personal Savior. God desired that
they should be led to prayerful study and
meditation in regard to Christs mission.
But as the multitudes left Jerusalem, the
excitement of travel and social intercourse too
often absorbed their attention, and the service
they had witnessed was forgotten. The Savior was
not attracted to their company.
As Joseph and Mary should return from Jerusalem
alone with Jesus, He hoped to direct their minds
to the prophecies of the suffering Savior. Upon
Calvary He sought to lighten His mothers
grief. He was thinking about her now. Mary was to
witness His last agony, and Jesus desired her to
understand His mission, that she might be
strengthened to endure, when the sword should
pierce through her soul. As Jesus had been
separated from her, and she had sought Him
sorrowing three days, so when He should be
offered up for the sins of the world, He would
again be lost to her for three days. And as He
should come forth from the tomb, her sorrow would
again be turned to joy. But how much better she
could have borne the anguish of His death if she
had understood the scriptures to which He was now
trying to turn her thoughts!
If Joseph and Mary had stayed their minds upon
God by meditation and prayer, they would have
realized the sacredness of their trust, and would
not have lost sight of Jesus. By one days
neglect, they lost the Savior; but it cost them
three days of anxious search to find Him. So with
us; by idle talk, evilspeaking, or neglect of
prayer, we may in one day lose the Saviors
presence, and it may take many days of sorrowful
search to find Him, and regain the peace that we
have lost.
In our association with one another, we should
take heed lest we forget Jesus, and pass along
unmindful that he is not with us. When we become
absorbed in worldly things so that we have no
thought for Him in whom our hope of eternal life
is centered, we separate ourselves from Jesus and
from the heavenly angels. These holy beings
cannot remain where the Saviors presence is
not desired, and His absence is not marked. This
is why discouragement so often exists among the
professed followers of Christ.
Many attend religious services, and are refreshed
and conformed by the word of God; but though
neglect and meditation, watchfulness, and prayer,
they lose the blessing, and find themselves more
destitute than before they received it. Often
they feel that God has dealt hardly with them.
They do not see that the fault is their own. By
separating themselves from Jesus, they have shut
away the light of His presence.
It would be well for us to spend a thoughtful
hour each day in contemplation of the life of
Christ. We should take point by point, and let
the imagination grasp each scene, especially the
closing ones. As we thus dwell upon His great
sacrifice for us, our confidence in Him will be
more constant, our love will be quickened, and we
shall be more deeply imbued with His spirit. If
we would be saved at last, we must learn the
lesson of penitence and humiliation at the foot
of the cross.
As we associate together, we may be a blessing to
one another. If we are Christs, our
sweetest thoughts will be of Him. We shall love
to talk of Him; and as we speak to one another of
His love, our hearts will be softened by divine
influences. Beholding the beauty of His character,
we shall be changed into the same image
from glory to glory.
2 Corinthians 3:18.
|