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Thursday, November 15, 2018

CHANGING TIME: The 10th Plague

Blogging Exodus 12 

Times change.  

The increments by which we measure hours, days, weeks, months, and years are invented things which we alter according to need and import.  In the world before fast-moving trains, international shipping lanes, and global communication forced standardization with Western time-keeping, a major cultural change, like a new king, a new religion, or a natural disaster was frequently commemorated by changing the calendar. God participated in that tradition,  marking the emancipation of the Old Testament Hebrews by changing the count of time.
 


Freedom is revolutionary, so God cleverly ordained that the Jews should equate their national liberation as a new year, a new “revolution” around the sun.   

 

This month shall be your beginning of months; it shall be the first month of the year to you (Exodus 12:2).   

But, at the beginning of Exodus chapter 12, freedom for Israel did not feel imminent. Pharaoh had resisted Moses, Moses’ God, and their radical progressive agenda of liberation and ethnic self-determination.   Through 10 rounds of negotiation, Pharaoh had  refused to let God’s people go.  When last Moses had approached Pharaoh, the king ended talks by threatening to have the prophet executed.  

Then Pharaoh said to him, “Get away from me! Take heed to yourself and see my face no more! For in the day you see my face you shall die!” (Exodus 10:28)

Yet, God promised that within 2 weeks of the beginning of their new, new year Pharaoh Pharaoh will let you go from here. When he lets you go, he will surely drive you out of here altogether (Exodus 11:1).

Pharaoh had grown more and more hard-hearted with each cataclysm God sent upon Egypt.  Why would he change his mind now?  How could the times change THAT quickly?    

Why did the United States of America abolish slavery after a century of protecting the wicked institution? It wasn’t because the leaders of the United States suddenly felt morally convicted by the abolitionist sermons they’d ignored all their lives.   


America freed its slaves because the Civil War killed or wounded more than 5% of the population  (1.5 million reported casualties, not counting civilians, of an 1860 population of 31 million people).  The Civil War was the great plague necessary to force the liberation of God’s Black people in America.

Some times only change because the times are made so brutally hard that the powers at the time are forced to change. 

At  midnight on the 14th day of the first month of their changed time, God would send a final plague upon the Egyptian slaveholders.  A deliberate, intelligent spirit, an angel from God, would kill every man, woman, child, and domesticated animal in Egypt that was the firstborn of its family.   The casualties would be so high that Egypt, like 1860’s America, would let God’s people go.

Some times only change because the times are made so brutally hard that the powers at the time are forced to change. 

Without the great plague that was the Civil War, American abolition would have been delayed indefinitely.  Without the horrors of the first Passover, Pharaoh would not have let God’s people go.

PASSOVER is the celebration, the sanctification of blood shed in the revolution of liberation.    On the 10th of their new, new year’s month, the descendants of Israel held  in Goshen were to gather as families and eat their LAST SUPPER as slaves. 

Speak to all the congregation of Israel, saying: ‘On the tenth of this month every man shall take for himself a lamb, according to the house of his father, a lamb for a household. . .  Your lamb shall be without blemish, a male of the first year. You may take it from the sheep or from the goats (Exodus 12: 3 - 5).

PASSOVER was offered to every member of God’s community.  No one, no matter their socioeconomic condition was to be excluded from the table.

And if the household is too small for the lamb, let him and his neighbor next to his house take it according to the number of the persons; according to each man’s need you shall make your count for the lamb (Exodus 12:4). 

The enslaved community came together, pooling their resources around the Lord’s table as a united community.  A community union.  A COMMUNION.

PASSOVER, COMMUNION, THE LAST SUPPER of a people in bondage took place under THE BLOOD.

And they shall take some of the blood and put it on the two doorposts and on the lintel of the houses where they eat it (Exodus 12:7).

People who prefer their steaks and chops rare claim that the meat is “juicy.”  That’s not juice, though.  That’s blood.  In our “civilized” era, most people are far removed from the bloody process of taking an animal and turning it into meat.  Ancient people couldn’t delude themselves about the ugliness required to provide for their families.  Israel’s new ritual required them to take a sheep (representing innocence) or a goat (representing mean guilt) slit its throat, drain the blood into a basin, take that blood, and put it on the two doorposts and on the lintel of the houses where they eat it (Exodus 12: 8). 

Up-and-down and then across, every Hebrew home was marked with THE BLOOD.  The blood of the innocent who took upon Him the guilt of a people.  Up-and-down and then across, the people of God marked the change in the revolutionary change in their times by coming under THE BLOOD of the Innocent who was killed like the guilty are killed; who gave body and blood to His people to set the people free.    On a night of wrath, and death, and revolution, the blood of the lamb purchased mercy for those in a believing household.  


Redemption is freedom from sin and the condemnation of eternal death.  All freedom is revolutionary, and every revolution is an ugly, brutal thing.  The Civil War, the death of the firstborn in Egypt, the Cross. 

Jesus, as God manifest, transcends time.  He is “I am.” He is present, future, and past; so His death as the innocent lamb of God was the revolutionary sacrifice that liberates believers across time from the slave wages of sin.  The judgment of God passes over us who are under the blood of Christ.  It is a new birth.  A new life.  A new beginning that extends into all time.


Times change, but more importantly, Christ changes ---- everything.


---Anderson T. Graves II   is a writer, community organizer and consultant for education, ministry, and rural leadership development.

Rev. Anderson T. Graves II is pastor of Bailey Tabernacle CME Church in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. He writes the popular blog: A Word to the Wise at www.andersontgraves.blogspot.com

Follow me on twitter @AndersonTGraves 

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