Persian Kings, the Jews, and Purim

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By Steve Daskal

Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

“[Where is a good place to read about and clarify all the different Xerxes, Artaxerxes, Ahasuerus, Cyrus, (etc) characters?

There are several issues that come up when trying to align the timing and order of the Persian kings with their Old Testament references and interactions with the Jews. 

There’s a problem between using the Anglicized Hebrew names for these monarchs, as in the story of Esther, and the more commonly used Anglicized versions of Greek names [from Herodotus’ History] for the Athenians’ hated enemy rulers.  Especially since Anglicization of Hebrew is inconsistent [e.g., do we use “ch” or “kh” for the guttural, back of the throat sound of the Hebrew letters khes and khuf]. 

    • Ancient and modern historical sources disagree, attributing different Persian kings as being the kings described in Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther, originally in Aramaic, but in modern English translations Greek names are used, which may or may not properly correspond to the Aramaic or original Persian.
    • There is also a difference between familial names of at least some of these kings and their “official” reign names, which were usually “revivals” of the names of famous, successful earlier monarchs [e.g., Darius II & III]. 

    Based upon Halley’s Bible Handbook [25th edition, Zondervan] & The Timetables of History [3rd ed., Touchstone-Simon&Schuster], I came up with this:

    ~539-530 BC — Cyrus [Daniel, Azariah, Hananiah, Mishael; Zerubbabel leads the first Aliyah to rebuild the Temple in Jerusalem about 538BC;]

    530-522 BC — Cambyses [possibly the Artaxerxes who stopped work on the Temple]

    522-486 BC — Darius I  (Doryawesh – Hebrew/Aramaic] reauthorized completion of the Temple.

    485-464 BC — Xerxes (Greek)  [Akhaseurous / Ahasuerus Aramaic/Hebrew]

     Mordecai & Esther (~479-472BC) about 15 yrs before Ezra’s Aliyah to Jerusalem, about 28 years before Nehemiah’s Aliyah]

    464~423 BC — Artaxerxes I [Longimanus]  [Nehemiah]

    423-405 BC — Darius II 

    405-359 BC — Artaxerxes II

    359-331 BC — Darius III, last Achmenaed king of Persia, who was overthrown by Alexander of Macedon [“the Great].  

    Conclusion

    Some additional background.  Haman is described as an Agagite; many modern scholars identify the Agagites as the descendants of the scattered survivors of the Amalekites, the semi-nomadic tribe living in the area east and south of the Dead Sea and westward into Sinai and the Negev that repeatedly attacked the Israelites on their exodus from Egypt and after their settlement in the Promised Land [see Exodus 17:8-16; also Numbers 14, Judges 6-7, I Samuel 15, 27, 30].  In Exodus 17, we read that God swore to annihilate Amalek, and Moses prophesied that Israel would war on Amalek from generation to generation.  The prophesy was finally completed in the time of Mordecai and Esther, during the Persian Empire’s dominance of the Near and Middle East.

    Several Persian “king of kings” during this era were friendly towards the Jewish people, beginning with the first Medeo-Persian king Cyrus, who after defeating the Neo-Babylonian Empire and conquering Babylon, encouraged the Jews [who had been enslaved there] to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the Holy Temple.  He even gave them money and provisions, all of the remaining Temple artefacts that could be found in Babylon, and letters of authorization requiring local governors west of the Euphrates River to assist the Jews.  Nevertheless, when Esther was called to enter the contest to become successor to Queen Vashti, her uncle Mordecai urged her to hide her Jewish identity [Est 2:20].  This was all part of God’s sovereign plan to protect His chosen people and to finish the elimination of Amalek.

    What Else Can We Learn from the Story of Esther?

    God was there then, just as He is here now. Even when He isn’t named or acknowledged, He is there, a Rock of constancy, the Light of Truth. He is sovereign, and the seemingly “coincidental” or “lucky” ISN’T.

    Not all of God’s people are as bold and openly loyal to him when living among non-believers as Daniel, Shadrakh, Medrakh, Abed-Nego, Nehemiah, and Ezra had been.

    The Jewish people, even when assimilated and hiding their faith and heritage, remain under God’s protection, because His covenants are eternal, and His mind does not change. Mordekhai was, as my grandfather would have said, “a good Jew.” Yet, he encouraged his niece to compete to replace Queen Vashti even though as a non-Persian she was not eligible to compete, and as a Jew, she should not have sought to marry a Gentile — even if he was the King of the Medes and Persians. But God remained true to His covenant, and is still true to His covenant to this very day, to ensure the survival and salvation of the Jewish people (not all of them, but a Remnant from every generation, and not without Messiah, but through Him).

    Unfair Grace

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    Provided by Steve Daskal

    Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

    Jonah 3: 3bNow Nineveh was an exceedingly great city, three days’ journey in breadth. 4 Jonah began to go into the city, going a day’s journey. And he called out, “Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown!” 5 And the people of Nineveh believed God. They called for a fast and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them to the least of them.

    6 The word reached the king of Nineveh, and he arose from his throne, removed his robe, covered himself with sackcloth, and sat in ashes. 7 And he issued a proclamation and published through Nineveh, “By the decree of the king and his nobles: Let neither man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste anything.

    Let them not feed or drink water, 8 but let man and beast be covered with sackcloth, and let them call out mightily to God. Let everyone turn from his evil way and from the violence that is in his hands. 9 Who knows? God may turn and relent and turn from his fierce anger, so that we may not perish.”

    10 When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil way, God relented of the disaster that he had said he would do to them, and he did not do it.  

    GOD DELIGHTFULLY RESPONDS TO REPENTANCE WITH MERCY. 

    THE PEOPLE’S RESPONSE

    What a beautiful story of mercy and grace.  “And the people of Nineveh believed God.”  The people of Nineveh repented in their thinking.  They redirected their worship.  They redefined their personal worth.  They took off their Gucci, their Versace, their Armani, and they put on sackcloth.  They renounced their privilege from the greatest to the least and were all equal — all sinners and all in need of mercy. 

    THE KING’S RESPONSE

    “The word reached the king of Nineveh, and he arose from his throne, removed his robe, covered himself with sackcloth, and sat in ashes.  And he issued a proclamation and published it throughout Nineveh, ‘By the decree of the king and his nobles…” (Jonah 3:6-7).  The king responded to God.  He redefined his personal worth and laid aside his robe.  He repented, covered himself with sackcloth, and sat in ashes.  Finally, he used his position and influence to redirect worship to God (he published a decree).  We’ve got a whole city now ready to accept the Gospel and turn in repentance to God.  That’s a leadership call to righteousness. 

    God has positioned you for influence.  God has given you position.   He’s given you a robe and a throne.  Each and every one of you is influential in one way or another. 

    A MESSAGE OF MERCY

    There are people who, before I give them the Bible and before I share the Gospel, they are wondering, “Is mercy available? If I repent, will God forgive my sin and wash me clean?  Will he take me back?” 

    It’s covered with arrogance.  It’s covered with “Oh, I don’t believe there is a God.” It’s covered with atheism, scholastic arguments, and science, but deep down, every heart wants to know, “God will you forgive me?”  Every time we share the Gospel, we are declaring that our God is a merciful God. 

    Who are you convinced is not going to believe?  Your spouse, cousin, brother, sister, or colleague?  God the Father is drawing people, and He knows that when the Gospel is given, they will repent.  The Gospel is that God is willing to show mercy. 

    1. Mercy is something that must be asked for.  It is also something that’s available in abundance.  God is willing to show mercy to those who ask in humility. 
    2. The preaching of the Gospel requires an accurate message.   the preaching of the Gospel requires a call to turn, to repent, to change, to forsake, to stop, to give up.  A Gospel that doesn’t call people to right standing with God and right living with men is a false Gospel. 
    3. The love of God is not how God feels about us.  It’s that He values us despite our sin.  You and I value ourselves by our sin, by the use and abuse of this life.  God values us despite the sin.  He will show mercy to cover your sin so that He may bring back what is valuable to Himself, and that is you.  That is the Gospel. 
    4. The Gospel is not your testimony.  Your testimony is evidence that the Gospel is real.  We value testimonies because we want to see the Gospel at work. 
    5. It takes deep faith.  It takes deep faith to believe the message of God’s love draws repentant hearts, and it takes deep faith to believe God responds with mercy to repentant hearts.  You know this verse, “Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage?  He retaineth not his anger for ever, because he delighteth in mercy” (Micah 7:18, KJV).  My father delights in mercy.  Repentance will be met with mercy.  The Gospel is that when people repent, God shows mercy. 
    6. God has called you to be a witness.  With every Scripture … [you share] … you are declaring, “My God is a merciful God.  He wants you back.  Repent of your sin.  Forsake the violence of your hands.  Jesus wants you back.”  There is mercy to be had if it is sought after.  

    A leader must be courageous, secure, founded in God…not a Jonah who runs, but a Jonah who obeys. 

    Let’s look again at the king.  It takes leadership to set an example and command change.  You don’t bring change from the bottom up.  You bring change from the top down.  It takes leadership, and we talk about nations, we talk about governments, we talk about families, we talk about churches — it’s got to be the leadership that changes.  A leader must be courageous, secure, founded in God… not a Jonah who runs, but a Jonah who obeys. 

    REAL MEN

    My heart bleeds for real men, especially in this culture.  Have a burden for men.  Everyone will follow suit because a man will take his family with him.  He will take his nation with him.  He will take a city with him.  Let me tell you about real men: 

    1. Real men take responsibility.  The king heard the words of Jonah.  He took charge.  He did something. 
    2. Real men give God the throne of their lives.  They surrender power easily knowing it was never theirs in the first place.  They know it’s not theirs to keep.  They also know it’s not about them.  They are worshippers. 
    3. Real men find their identities in Jesus Christ. They’re not identified by their accessories, their clothes, their name plates, their cabins, or their appearance in the eyes of other men or women.  Jesus is not their friend.  Jesus is their Commander-in-Chief.  Men have a different way of relating to God.  Every morning, men get their orders from their Commander-in-Chief. 
    4. Real men speak up.  The king said, let us turn, give up, cry out so that we will not perish. 
    5. Real men lead from humility.  they will be the first to say sorry, the first to make amends, the first to show remorse.  It’s not weakness, it is strength.  When you admit you are wrong, people will forever respect you.  When you are proven wrong, people will forever dishonor you. 
    6. Real men use their influence to redirect worship to God.  The king of Nineveh said, “Let everyone turn from his evil way.”   He didn’t take a vote.  How many of you identify with this?  That’s leadership, and that’s what the world needs today.  It’s what churches and families need today.  They will lead their sons in masculine spirituality (give up the violence that is in their hands).  They will command worship. 
    7. Real men will lead in prayer.  Come on men, cry out to God.  He will listen. 
    8. Real men will bring everything that is under their influence, under the influence of God.  If it’s under me, it’s going to be ruled by Jesus.  If it’s my family, Jesus is king.  If it’s my church, Jesus rules here.  If it’s under my influence, I’m going to bring it under the influence of God.  That is the kind of influence God backs you up with.  Angels, power, wisdom, finances, God will go to town to back you up when you are ready to exalt Jesus. 
    9. Real men must set an example.  You want to take the Gospel to your city?  Imagine if the church, the families, the leaders, all said, “Let us repent; let us get right; and let us get mercy from the Lord, and let Him turn from His desire to punish.  Let Him show mercy on my city.”  Imagine churches abandoning their little silos of self-help and praying for the city to be saved.  Imagine if governments had believers walking through the corridors of power, praying for people to be saved. 

    What if we all stood for our city and made our churches and ministry about the city?  What if we became shepherds over our city and prayer warriors over our city, strategically working through the city?  We have to believe that our God responds to repentance with mercy. 

    Who are you convinced will not believe? 

    It is not what you say when you … [share the Gospel] that turns a life around, it is that you … [share the Scriptures] that turns a life around. 

    God will work through His Word.  His Word will bring them back.  

    God is merciful, but most of us… we are like Jonah.  We believe in hell and heaven, but we want hell for certain people and we want heaven for certain people.  We have a greater faith that many are going to hell, but we don’t have enough faith that many are going to heaven.  The Father desires that all should be saved, “And this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come (Matthew24:14).”   

    Faith begins with us, not with the unbeliever.  We’ve got to believe that God is more interested in getting people into heaven than sending people to an eternal, Christless place.  There are people who will believe… they will respond, and they’re waiting for you to tell them.  They’re waiting for a Bible.  They’re waiting for a moment with God.  They’re waiting to hear. 

    Nineveh was waiting while Jonah was swimming.  Nineveh was waiting while Jonah was getting his act together with God.  The whole world is waiting for us to get our act together.  Today, are you wondering which chapter of Jonah you are in?  There are two directions you can go:  Tarshish or Nineveh.  Which will you choose? 

    Conclusion by Steve Daskal

    Which chapter in Jonah does your life and ministry resemble more?  Jonah chapter 1, where Jonah hears God’s call, believes God’s call, but runs away because he KNOWS God is merciful but he doesn’t care about the people of Nineveh — he doesn’t want them to be saved?  Or chapter 3, where, after his three days submerged in the belly of the “great fish,” his heart and will transformed, he follows his calling and brings a dire warning of doom to Nineveh, and Nineveh is transformed, from the king down to the slaves, and is saved for a generation?  ** God created humanity “in Our own image” so that He could have loving personal relationships with us.  It was the rebel Satan’s will, not God’s, that human beings would rebel against God and be driven from a loving relationship in His presence, as Satan himself had been.  It is not God’s desire that any should perish “in the outer darkness, where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth,” but rather that all would be redeemed, restored to relationship with Him — so much so that He sacrificed His beloved Son to redeem those who would trust in Him. 

    The originator of this work is…

    Rev. Jeremy Dawson

    Importance of Reading the Old Testament [Tanakh]

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    Provided by Steve Daskal

    Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

    The Old Testament (OT) is big and can feel daunting, especially because it is filled with perspectives, powers, and practices that seem so far removed from Christians today. While we know that the psalmist found in it a perfect law that revives the soul, right precepts that rejoice the heart, and true rules that are altogether righteous (Ps. 19:7–9), we can struggle to really see how spending time in the initial three-fourths of the Christian Scriptures is really “sweeter than honey and dripping of the honeycomb” (Ps. 19:10). How can we nurture delight in the OT?

    Remember that the Old Testament is Christian Scripture.

      What we call the OT was the only Scripture Jesus had, and the apostles stressed that the prophets wrote God’s word to instruct Christians. Paul says, for example, that God’s guidance of Israel through the wilderness was “written down for our instruction, on whom the end of the ages has come” (1 Cor. 10:11). Indeed, “whatever was written down in former days was written for our instruction, that through endurance and through the encouragement of the Scriptures we might have hope” (Rom. 15:4).

      Peter emphasized that “it was revealed to them [i.e., the OT prophets] that they were serving not themselves but you”—the church (1 Peter 1:12). This means that Moses and the prophets recognized that they were writing for a future community that would be able to know, see, and hear in ways most of Israel could not (Deut. 29:4; Deut. 30:8; Isa. 29:18; Isa. 30:8; Jer. 30:1–2, 24; Jer. 31:33; Daniel 12:5–10). In short, the OT is Christian Scripture that God wrote to instruct us. As Paul tells Timothy, these “sacred writings… are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus,” and it is this “Scripture” that is “profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness” (2 Tim. 3:16). Old in OT does not mean unimportant or insignificant, and we should approach the text accordingly.

      Interpret the Old Testament with the same care you would the New Testament.

      To give the same care to the OT as to the NT means that we treat it as the very word of God (Mark 7:13; Mark 12:36), which Jesus considered authoritative (Matt. 4:3–4, 7, 10; Matt. 23:1–3), believed could not be broken (John 10:35), and called people to know so as to guard against doctrinal error and hell (Mark 12:24; Luke 16:28–31; Luke 24:25; John 5:46–47)

      Methodologically, caring for the OT means that we establish the text, make careful observations, consider the context, determine the meaning, and make relevant applications. We consider genre, literary boundaries, grammar, translation, structure, argument flow, key words and concepts, historical and literary contexts, and biblical, systematic, and practical theology. We study each passage within its given book (close context), within salvation history (continuing context), and in relationship to Christ and the rest of Scripture (complete context).

      Many Christians will give years to understanding Mark and Romans and only weeks to Genesis, Psalms, and Isaiah, while rarely even touching the other books. When others take account of your life and ministry, may such realities not be said of you. We must consider how the OT bears witness about Christ (John 5:39; cf. Luke 24:25–26, 45–47) and faithfully proclaim “the whole counsel of God” (Acts 20:27), ever doing so as those rightly handling “the word of truth” (2 Tim. 2:15).

      Treat properly the covenantal nature of the Old Testament.

      The two parts of the Bible are called the Old and New Testaments because they each principally address the old and new covenants, respectively. We call Jesus’s Bible a testament because of its covenantal quality (testamentum is Latin for “covenant”). The OT addresses how God establishes and enforces his Mosaic covenant. And unlike the NT, which addresses a multinational church and was written in the common language of Greek, the OT was written to Hebrews in Hebrew. The OT bears a historical particularity that requires us to observe, understand, and evaluate carefully before application. To engage the OT as a testament requires that we recognize the distinct covenantal elements in the text and then consider how Christ’s coming influences our understanding of every passage.

      Remember why the Old Testament is called old.

      Building on the previous point, the OT details the Mosaic covenant of which Christians are not a part and that has been superseded by the new (Jer. 31:31–34). This fact requires that Christians carefully consider how Christ fulfills every OT story, promise, and law before establishing its relevance. Indeed, all history (Mark 1:14), every promise (2 Cor. 1:20), and the entire law covenant (Rom. 10:4) point to him. While Moses’s instructions still have value for Christians, they do so only through Christ (Deut. 30:8; Matt. 5:17–19). Similarly, while every promise is yes for Christians, it is so only in Jesus (2 Cor. 1:20). He is the seed of Abraham (Gal. 1:16), and we become Abraham’s offspring only in Christ (Gal. 3:29).

      As Christians, we must interpret the OT in light of Jesus’s coming. His person and work realize what the OT anticipates (Matt. 5:17–18; Luke 24:44; Acts 3:18), he stands as the substance of all OT shadows (Col. 2:16–17), and he embodies every ethical ideal found in both the law and wisdom (Rom. 5:18– 19; 1 Cor. 1:30). We need to recognize that one of the OT’s fundamental purposes is to help us celebrate Christ and all God would accomplish through him. We must consider God’s whole counsel (Acts 20:27) in relation to the cross (1 Cor. 2:2).

      Read the Old Testament through the light and lens of Christ.

        Jesus supplies both the light and lens for reading the OT rightly. “Light” indicates that interpreting the OT properly is possible only for those who have seen “the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ” (2 Cor. 3:4). Only spiritual people can read a spiritual book (1 Cor. 2:13–14). “Lens” stresses that Jesus’s life, death, and resurrection disclose truths in the OT that were always there but not yet clear, at least to the majority (Rom. 16:25–26; 1 Cor. 3:14). Christians must recognize that there are significant continuities between the Testaments, such that many righteous people saw Christ from a distance (Matt. 13:17; Luke 10:24; John 8:56; 1 Peter 1:10–12). On the other hand, there are also significant discontinuities, in that the rebel population was not given a heart to understand (Deut. 29:4; Isa. 6:9–10), nor did God disclose the mystery of the kingdom until Christ came (Daniel 12:8–10; Mark 4:11–12).

        The NT provides both the answer key and the algorithm for reading the OT in its fullness. By elevating Christ’s person and work, the NT signals the substance of all previous shadows, realizes the hopes of all previous anticipations, and clarifies how the various OT patterns and trajectories find their resolve. Through Jesus, God enables and empowers us to read the OT as he intended. Jesus is both our light and lens, and we read the OT rightly only through Christ and for Christ.

        Consider how faithfully to see and celebrate Christ in the Old Testament.

        Christians must seek to analyze and synthesize how the whole Bible progresses, integrates, and climaxes in Christ. Following the lead of Scripture itself, we can see and celebrate Christ from the OT in numerous ways.

        Consider how Christ stands as the climax of the redemptive story.

        Identify how Christ fulfills messianic predictions.

        Recognize how Christ’s coming creates numerous similarities and contrasts between the old and new ages, creations, and covenants.

        Determine how Christ is the antitype to OT types.

        Reflect on how Yahweh’s person and work anticipates Christ.

        Contemplate how Christ embodies every ethical ideal from OT law and wisdom.

        Instruct from the OT through Christ’s mediation—both through the pardon he supplies, which secures both promises and power, and the pattern of godliness that he sets.

        Assess how the New Testament authors are using the Old Testament. The early church devoted itself to the apostles’ teaching (Acts 2:42), and the whole church is built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Jesus as the cornerstone (Eph. 2:20). Yet what Bible were the apostles using? They were using the OT, and they were making much of Christ from it. The NT is loaded with quotations of and allusions to the OT, and we should note the significance of these citations.

        When Paul asserted to the Corinthians, “I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified” (1 Cor. 2:2), he did so as an OT preacher. And when he claimed that “all Scripture… is profitable” (2 Tim. 3:16), the “Scripture” he principally had in mind was the OT. You will help yourself and your people to cherish the whole counsel of God (Acts 20:27) and to appreciate the whole Bible when you take the time to wrestle with the NT’s citations of the Old.

        Conclusion

        The OT is Christian Scripture, and we can enjoy it best when we approach it through Christ and for Christ. The OT magnifies Jesus in numerous ways, and his person and work clarify how to rightly discern the continuities and discontinuities of salvation history. Through the light and lens that Christ supplies, Christians can enjoy the same God and the same good news in both Testaments. We can also embrace all God’s promises and rightly apply Moses’s law as revelation, prophecy, and wisdom. Start delighting in the OT through Christ and for Christ!

        After-thought by Steve Daskal

        I was led by a wise old church elder, Bill Poston, to recognize that my Jewish Messiah, the “Hope and Redeemer of Israel,” through the TaNakH — the Old Testament.  If he hadn’t been able to show me all the prophesy in the Old Testament that was fulfilled by Jesus in the New, and had not been able to show that the Old Testament did not rule out God having a different nature than humanity [being triune] nor did He ever deny Himself the ability to “take on human flesh,” I would not be writing this comment or posting these messages to you.  The Old Testament is the gateway to the New.  One cannot understand the fulness of God’s omniscience, omnipotence, love, and grace without fully understanding the Old Testament.  This become especially clear when trying to read and understand John’s Revelation — all the symbols and imagery in that Book are originally found and explained in the Old Testament prophets. 

        The originator of this work is…

        Jason S. DeRouchie

        Crossway.org

        The meaning of the Seder is also meant for Christians

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        By Steve Daskal

        Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

        The Seder ceremony was also the Last Supper

        God brought Israel out of Egypt, as recounted in the Book of Exodus, which was written by Moses under God’s inspiration.  God sent Moses, His prophet, and Aaron, Moses’ brother, to confront Pharaoh and demand that the Jews be released to worship Him.  Pharaoh refused, despite Moses’ demonstrating miraculous signs.  God then directed Moses to call down ten plagues upon Egypt, the last of which was the Angel of Death collecting the first born of every living thing in Egypt.  Only those — Jews and any others in Egypt who were willing to follow God’s decrees — who followed a special procedure to make a “covering” — a kipporoth — over their homes would be spared.  

        This is the same “seder” or “order,” that Jews carried out in Moses’ time, observed in King David’s time, had restored in the time of King Josiah, was still celebrated among the Jews in the time of Jesus, and with very few changes, Jewish people still carry it out today

        There is more discussion of the Passover and all of the rules & remembrances around it in the rest of Exodus 12, in Leviticus 23, in Numbers 9, and in

        Deuteronomy 16.  God had Moses repeat the commandments about Passover over and over throughout the Torah, to ensure that the Jews were constantly reminded of it.  It is the first festival of the Jews, and marks the beginning of the year and of spring-time.   It is also a remembrance of God’s promises, and His faithfulness, even after the Children of Israel had forgotten them during their 400 years of slavery in Egypt.

        So, now you know why there is a seder, and why there is matzoh — the unleavened bread, and why the holiday is observed.  Now, let’s talk about what happens at the seder….  

        As Christians, we, too, share in the blessings of Passover, because even as God saved Israel out of bondage in pagan Egypt to be sanctified to Him by the blood of a lamb without blemish, so too He saved all mankind out of sin and disobedience to Him by the blood of the one John the Baptist referred to as “the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.” (Jn 1:29) This is because Gentile Christians are grafted into the True Vine of Israel, which is Jesus Christ.  (See Jn 15, Rom 11) — This Feast of Unleavened Bread – why unleavened?  Because leaven, yeast, is a symbol for sin in the Bible (Matt 16, Mk 8, Lk 12, 1 Cor 5:6)

        The seder is what Jesus and the Apostles were observing when they had what we know as the Last Supper — Jesus’ last meal with His beloved Apostles.  (See Mat 26:17-35, Mk 14:12-31, Jn 13)

        Hand-washing, and then Washing of the Feet. 

        From Moses’ time onwards, there were ritual cleansings — hand washings, which the Jews have always observed, as symbolic of cleansing from sin before any sacramental ceremony or time of prayer and worship. went further at the Last Supper — He washed His apostles’ feet after they washed their hands.  This was shocking — and made it clear that this was going to be a very unique seder; indeed, it was the last that the Lord Jesus enjoyed, or will enjoy until His return.  

        Breaking the Middle Matzoh — Here is a VERY unusual part of the Seder, a part that was added sometime after the destruction of the Temple in 70AD.  The rabbis do not agree on the origins or meaning of this part of the ritual.  Some say it remembers the three patriarchs of Israel: Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.  Others say it stands for the three divisions of Israel in Temple times:  Kohanim — priests, Levi’im — Levites, or deacons, and Yisroel — Israel, the congregation.  A special cloth container is filled with three boards of matzoh, each fitting into a pocket.  If you look at the matzoh, you will see dark and light stripes from the baking, and also rows of little holes.  Remember them.  Now, the requirement is to take out the middle piece, break it in half, and “hide” one half elsewhere in the room.  Remember that piece — it is called the Afikomen — the after-part [and that isn’t a Hebrew word; it is from Greek, but is used even by Orthodox Jews].  Keep this in mind; we will come back to it later.  

        Then the remaining matzohs are held up, and the head of the household would say “This is the bread of affliction, which we ate in the land of Egypt.  Then we were slaves; now we are free! We celebrate the Lord’s Passover here today; next year God willing in Jerusalem.” 

        Now the afikomen, the middle matzoh of the three, which was two other similar-looking things, something striped and pierced, and broke it.  Does that remind you of anything?  It should!  Remember this?: “He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not. Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the LORD hath laid on him the iniquity of us all….” (Isaiah 53:3-6 KJV) Those of us who believe in Y’shua HaMashiakh, that is, Jesus Christ in Hebrew, can surely recognize this symbolism.  

        Remember, this is the bread of which Jesus said “And He took bread, gave thanks and broke it, and gave it to them, saying, ‘This is My body which is given for you; do this in remembrance of Me.’” (Luke 22:19, NKJV). This unleavened (sinless) body that was broken, is striped and pierced, and was taken away, but is now brought back, even as we know our Messiah will return.  

         After the afikomen is recovered, we drink the 3rd cup of wine, the cup of redemption, at which point the Gospel of Matthew says, “Then He took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, ‘Drink from it, all of you. For this is My blood of the new covenant, which is shed for many for the remission of sins.  But I say to you, I will not drink of this fruit of the vine from now on until that day when I drink it new with you in My Father’s kingdom.’ ” (Matt 26:27-29, NKJV) This is the wine that we drink when we commemorate communion, or the Lord’s Table, or the Lord’s Supper.  (See 1 Cor 5:7-8, 11:23-26)

        Even as John the Baptist fulfilled the role of Elijah the Prophet in Malachi’s prophecy, as Jesus acknowledged:  “Assuredly, I say to you, among those born of women there has not risen one greater than John the Baptist; but he who is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he.… 13 For all the prophets and the law prophesied until John. 14 And if you are willing to receive it, he is Elijah who is to come. 15 He who has ears to hear, let him hear! (Matt 11:11, 13-15, NKJV) 

         As believers in the God of the Patriarchs, of Moses, and as followers of the Messiah, the Anointed One of Israel, we can all enjoy this important Feast!  

        Conclusion by Steve Daskal

        This year, 2024, the first night of Pesakh [Passover], the first seder night, will begin at sundown on Monday April 22nd.  I hope this information helps you to remember, or perhaps understand for the first time, the meaning of the holiday and its significance to both the Jew and the Gentile Christian.

        A Story for Passover

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        Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

        Outlasting Oppressors [Moishe Rosen)

        My daughter is Jewish. Our distant ancestors were slaves in Egypt. They endured hard servitude under cruel taskmasters. They may have labored to produce the pedestal for the very image at which she stopped to gaze.

        My daughter still has many years before her. But her ancestors’ taskmasters, where are they? Their proud kingdom was leveled, their own people became slaves, their wisdom was lost, their idols were thrown down and crushed, their treasures were sacked to become museum curiosities and their monuments are now tourist attractions.

        But we, my daughter and now even her children, are here. Our synagogues grace the avenues of great cities. Our writers have their books in every library.

        Our scientists have unlocked secrets that even the Egyptians did not know and have answered questions those Egyptians couldn’t guess. Our physicians have blessed and healed multitudes. Our men and women have occupied high government office. After two thousand years of eclipse, our homeland, Israel, has been born anew and stands among the other nations.

        Why Have We Survived?

        The Egyptians were only the first of a long line of oppressors. The Assyrians and Babylonians in turn made us captive. The Romans showed us no mercy. The horrors of recent years have surpassed anything imagined by our ancient oppressors. But where are these empires? Their relics, too, have found a place in the world’s museums.

        Why have we survived? It would be human to say that it was because we are a proud, independent people who rebelled at being slaves, too tough ever to be extinguished, too exclusive to meld with our neighbors and lose identity. But would it be true? A look at Jewish history through our own writing seems to say otherwise.

        What the Record Reveals

        Did we survive because of our pride, our love of freedom? The historical record says no. In the face of every difficulty during the Exodus account, our ancestors wept and wanted to return to Egypt:

        Didn’t we say to you in Egypt, ‘Leave us alone; let us serve the Egyptians?’ It would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die in the desert!” (Exodus 14:12)

        Did we survive because we were so numerous? The Scripture says:

        “The Lord will scatter you among the peoples, and only a few of you will survive among the nations to which the Lord will drive you.” (Deuteronomy 4:27)

        Perhaps we were too exclusive to merge with our neighbors and lose our identity:

        “Moreover, in those days I saw men of Judah who had married women from Ashdod, Ammon and Moab. Half of their children spoke the language of Ashdod or the language of one of the other peoples, and did not know how to speak the language of Judah.” (Nehemiah 13:23-24)

        Was it because we were a strong, tough people?

        The prophet Isaiah says:  “Why should you be beaten anymore? Why do you persist in rebellion? Your whole head is injured, your whole heart afflicted. From the sole of your foot to the top of your head there is no soundness, only wounds and welts and open sores, not cleansed or bandaged or soothed with oil.”(Isaiah 1:5-6)

        Our faithfulness did not preserve us either, for Moses himself says: 

        “You deserted the Rock, who fathered you; you forgot the God who gave you birth.” (Deuteronomy 32:18)

        We are the Conquerors

        Yet we are here. And we are the conquerors. We have survived. Our oppressors have vanished. We must come to museums to study their way of life. They are not here to look at us.

        Yes, our own prophets scold us. But they also comfort us. Moses accuses us, but Moses blesses us also. The Bible gives us the answer to our survival. The Psalmist tells us:  “…indeed, he who watches over Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.” (Psalm 121:4) And he has not slept, not during the bondage in Egypt, nor during the successive oppressions of Assyria, Babylon and Rome, nor in the more recent oppressions of Russia and Germany. Through it all God was keeping us. That is why we have survived and our oppressors have perished.

        God Made a Promise

        We have survived because God made a promise. He made a promise to our father Abraham, of a land, a nation and a blessing.

        “The Lord said to Abram, ‘Leave your country, your people and your father’s household and go to the land I will show you. I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse; and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.'” (Genesis 12:1-3) The land was Israel, the nation was the Jewish people, the blessing was the Messiah.

        “In that day the Root of Jesse will stand as a banner for the peoples; the nations will rally to him, and his place of rest will be glorious.” (Isaiah 11:10)

        Blessing to all the World

        We have survived because God has a purpose. His purpose is to bless all the people of the world through us.

        “May God be gracious to us and bless us and make his face shine upon

        us; Selah.

        May your ways be known on earth, your salvation among all nations.

        May the peoples praise you, O God: may all the peoples praise you. May the nations be glad and sing for joy, for you rule the peoples justly and guide the nations of the earth. Selah.

        May the peoples praise you, O God; may all the peoples praise you.

        Then the land will yield its harvest, and God, our God, will bless us. God will bless us, and all the ends of the earth will fear him.”

        (Psalm 67)

        We have survived because God has a destiny for us. Our sufferings have had a goal. God called us once that through us he might transmit his truth to the whole world. He called us again that through us his Messiah might come to bless the whole world. He is calling us again that through us he might be glorified before the whole world.

        “Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord rises upon you. See, darkness covers the earth and thick darkness is over the peoples, hut the Lord rises upon you and his glory appears over you. Nations will come to your light, and kings to the brightness of your dawn.”(Isaiah 60:1-3)

        The three-year-old has long since had a three-year-old of her own; two in fact. Neither of my grandchildren is an expert in Egyptology. But like their mother, they are here, celebrating Passover. They are here and they are free. Free to be Jews, free to serve God, free to face oppressors in this age, knowing that God will preserve their progeny until all his world is redeemed.

        Conclusion by Steve Daskal

        This is a classic Messianic Jewish perspective on Passover.  God chose Abram son of Terakh out of Ur a Chaldean city, to establish the Hebrew line.  He led Abram to what was then pagan Cana’an, giving him a new name [Abraham] and establishing a permanent covenant with him. [Abram had fulfilled his part of the covenant by following God’s call to the Promised Land “sight unseen,” not knowing where God was leading him.] Out of that covenant came the promise that from his seed all mankind would be blessed.  From his seed came Isaac, Jacob, Judah, David, Solomon, and Jesus of Nazareth… the Anointed One, Messiah of Israel, redeemer of every person who puts their faith in His sacrifice on the cross as the sole means of reconciliation with God, forgiveness of sins, and eternal life in His presence.

        The originator of this work is…

        Moishe Rosen,

        Jews for Jesus

        Good Friday…Resurrection Sunday

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        Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

        Good Friday…Steve Daskal

        We read in John’s Gospel [18:12-14] that about this time nearly two thousand years ago, Messiah Jesus had just been seized, and taken before Annas, the father-in-law of the Kohen Gadol [High Priest] Caiaphas for His first mock trial. Why Annas? Because he had been High Priest until the Romans forced his removal and replaced him with his son-in-law. Annas did not get the answer he expected from the Lord, and sent Him on, bound, to Caiaphas, who had engineered Jesus’ arrest with the Levitical scribes and some of the leading Pharisees through the betrayer Judah ben Simeon, better known as Judas Iscariot. Caiaphas had assembled the Sanhedrin in the middle of the night, which was after the seder earlier that evening on the holy day of Pesakh, the beginning of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. This was highly irregular because the Sanhedrin did not meet at night, and a violation of Torah because night was a Sabbath-like holy-day night on which no one was to work. Apparently, once the decision was made to arrange the death of this Man who had never once violated either the Torah or Roman code, other violations of the Torah and Roman code were shrugged off as “means to an end.” But the Holy Temple they thought they were protecting is destroyed; the Sanhedrin no longer exists; the Kohanim and Levi’im [Levites] no longer have any authority among the Jews; but the Son of Man sits at the right hand of the Father in heaven, and His church is the salt and light of the world, and in the Father’s perfect sovereign timing He will come to glorify His people and judge the world and those who rebelled against Him. AMEN!

        Easter…C.S. Lewis

        As we meditate on the events of Holy Week and celebrate Easter, let us ponder the nature and depth of God’s love for us, as we bring forth our thanks and praise.

        “In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent  his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him.

         In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us  and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins.”

        1 JOHN 4:9-10 (ESV)

        God is love. Again, ‘Herein is love, not that we loved God but that He loved us’ (I John 4:10). We must not begin with mysticism, with the creature’s love for God, or with the wonderful forestates of the fruition of God vouchsafed to some in their earthly life. We begin at the real beginning, with love as the Divine energy. This primal love is Gift-love. In God there is no hunger that needs to be filled, only plenteousness that desires to give. The doctrine that God was under no necessity to create is not a piece of dry scholastic speculation. It is essential. Without it we can hardly avoid the conception of what I can only call a ‘managerial’ God; a Being whose function or nature is to ‘run’ the universe, who stands to it as a headmaster to a school or a hotelier to a hotel. But to be sovereign of the universe is no great matter to God. In Himself, at home in ‘the land of the Trinity’, he is Sovereign of a far greater realm. God, who needs nothing, loves into existence wholly superfluous creatures in order that He may love and perfect them. He creates the universe, already foreseeing—or should we say ‘seeing’? there are no tenses in God—the buzzing cloud of flies about the cross, the flayed back pressed against the uneven stake, the nails driven through the mesial nerves, the repeated incipient suffocation as the body droops, the repeated torture of back and arms as it is time after time, for breath’s sake, hitched up. If I may dare the biological image, God is a ‘host’ who deliberately creates His own parasites; causes us to be that we may exploit and ‘take advantage of’ Him. Herein is love. This is the diagram of Love Himself, the inventor of all loves.

        Christ’s Two Appearances

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        Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

        The two great links between earth and heaven are the two advents of our Lord; or, rather, he is himself, by his two appearances, the great bond of union between earth and heaven.  When the world had revolted against its maker, and the Creator had been defied by his own creatures, a great gulf was opened between God and man.  The first coming of Christ was like a bridge which crossed the chasm, and made a way of access from God to man, and then from man to God.  Our Lord’s second advent will make that bridge far broader, until heaven shall come down to earth; and ultimately, earth shall go up to heaven. 

        Here, too, is the place for us to build a grand suspension bridge, by which, through faith, we ourselves may cross from this side to the other of the stormy river of time.  the cross, at whose foot we stand, is the massive column which supports the structure on this side; and as we look forward to the glory, the second advent of our Lord is the solid support on the other side of the deep gulf of time.  By faith, we first look to Jesus, and then look for Jesus; and herein is the life of our spirits. Christ on the cross of shame, and Christ on the throne of glory:  these are our Dan and Beersheba, and all between is holy ground.  As for our Lord’s first coming, there lies our rest; the once-offered sacrifice that put away our sin, and made our peace with God.  As for his second coming, there lies our hope, our joy; for ‘we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is.’ The glories of his royal priesthood shall be repeated in all the saints; for he hath ‘made us unto our God kings and priests;’ and we shall reign with him for ever and ever. 

        At his first advent, we adore him with gratitude, rejoicing that he is ‘God with us,’ making himself to be our near kinsman.  We gather with grateful boldness around the infant in the manger, and behold our God.  But, in the anticipation of his second advent, we are struck with a solemn reverence, a trembling awe.  We are not less grateful, but we are more prostrate, as we bow before the majesty of the triumphant Christ.  Jesus in his glory is an overpowering vision for mortal man to behold.  John, the beloved disciple, writes, ‘When I saw him, I fell at his feet as dead.’  We could have kissed his blessed feet till he quitted us on Mount Olivet; but, at the sight of our returning Lord, when heaven and earth shall flee away, we shall bow in lowliest adoration.  His first appearing has given us eternal life, and that holy confidence with which we are looking forward to his glorious appearing, which is to be the crown of all his mediatorial work. 

        There are many contrasts between our Lord’s first and second appearances, but the great contrast is, that, when he comes again, it will be ‘without a sin offering unto salvation.’ The end and object of his first coming was ‘to put away sin.’ The modern babblers say that he appeared to reveal to us the goodness and love of God.  this is true; but it is only the fringe of the whole truth.  The all-important fact is, that he revealed God’s love in the provision of the only sacrifice which could put away sin.  Then, they say that he appeared to exhibit perfect manhood, and to let us see what our nature ought to be.  Here also is a truth; but it is only part of the sacred design of Christ’s coming to earth  He appeared, say they, to manifest self-sacrifice, and to set us an example of love to others; by his self-denial, he trampled on the selfish passions of man.  We deny none of these things; and yet we are indignant at the way in which the less is made to hide the greater.  To put the secondary ends of our Lord’s first advent into the place of the grand object of his coming, is to turn the truth of God into a lie.  It is easy to distort truth, by exaggerating one portion of it, and diminishing another; just as the drawing of the most beautiful face may soon be made a caricature rather than a portrait by neglect of the rule of proportion.  You must observe proportion if you would take a truthful view of things; and in reference to the first appearing of our Lord, his chief purpose was ‘to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself.’ 

        The great object of our Lord’s coming here was not to live, but to die.  He appeared, not so much to subdue sin by his teaching, or to manifest goodness, or to perfect an example for us to imitate, but ‘to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself.’  That which the modern teachers of error would thrust into the background, our Lord placed in the forefront.  He came to take away our sins, even as the scapegoat typically carried away the sin of Israel into the wilderness, that the people might be clean before the living God.  Do not let us think of Jesus without remembering the design of his coming.  I pray you, know not Christ without his cross, as some pretend to know him. 

        We preach Christ; so do a great many more:  but, ‘we preach Christ crucified,’ so, alas! do not so many more.  We preach, concerning our Lord, his cross, his blood, his death; and upon the blood of his cross we lay great stress, extolling much ‘the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot.’ ‘Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners,’ by putting away their sin ‘by the sacrifice of himself.’ We will not deny, or conceal, or depreciate his master purpose, lest we be found guilty of trampling upon his blood, and treating it as an unholy thing. 

        The putting away of sin was a Godlike purpose; and it is a wellspring of hope to us that, for this reason, Jesus appeared among men.  If any of you are entertaining some so-called ‘larger hope,’ I would say to you, — Hope what you please, but remember, that hope without truth at the bottom of it, is an anchor without a holdfast.  A groundless hope is a mere delusion.  Wish what you will; but wishes without promises from God to back them, are vain imaginings.  Why should you imagine or wish for another method of salvation?  Reset you assured that the Lord thinks so highly of his Son’s one sacrifice for sin that, for you to desire another, is a gross evil in his sight. 

        If you reject the one sacrifice of the Son of God, there remains no hope for you; nor ought there to be.  Our Lord’s plan of putting away sin is so just to God, so honoring to the law, and so safe for you that, if you reject it, your blood must be upon your own head.  By once offering up himself to God, our Lord has done what myriads of years of repentance and suffering could never have done for us.  Blessed be the name of the Lord, the sin of the world, which kept God from dealing with men at all, was put away by our Lord’s death!  John the Baptist said, ‘Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.’ God has been able to deal with the world of sinners in a way of grace, because Jesus died. 

        I thank our Lord, even more, because the actual sins of his own chosen–all those who believe on him in every age–have been put away.  These sins were laid on Jesus; and in him God visited man for them. ‘He his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree,’ and so put them away for ever.  The putting away of my guilt as a believer was really, effectually and eternally accomplished by the death of my great substitute upon the bloody tree.  This is the ground of our everlasting consolation and good hope through grace.  Jesus did it, and did it alone, and did it completely; he did not only seem to do it, but he actually achieved the putting away of sin.  He blotted out the handwriting that was against us.  He finished transgression, and made an end of sin, and brought in everlasting righteousness, when once for all he died upon the cross. 

        I do not need, I hope, to linger here to warn you that it is of no use to expect that God will put away sin in any other way than that which, at so great a cost, he has provided.  If sin could have been removed in any other way than by the death of his dear Son, Jesus would not have died.  If there had been, within the range of supposition, any method of pardon except by the sacrifice of himself, depend upon it Jesus would never have bowed his head to death.  The great Father would never have inflicted the penalty of death upon the perfect one if it had been possible that the cup should pass from him.  He could never have imposed upon his well-beloved Son a superfluous pain.  His death was needful; but, blessed be God, having been endured, it has once for all put away sin, and hence it will never be endured again. 

        Yet Christ Jesus will appear a second time; but not a second time for the same purpose as when he came before.

        He will appear.  The appearing will be of the most open character.  He will not be visible simply in some quiet place where two or three are met together, in his name, but he will appear as the lightning is seen in the heavens.  At his first appearing, he was truly seen; wherever he went he could be looked at, and gazed upon, and touched, and handled.  He will appear quite as plainly, by-and by, among the sons of men.  The observation of him then will be far more general than at his first advent; for as John says, ‘every eye shall see him.’  Every eye did not see him when he came the first time; but when he comes the second time, all the nations of the world shall behold him.  They that are dead shall rise to see him, both saints and sinners; and they that are alive and remain when he shall come shall be absorbed in this greatest of spectacles.  Then Balaam shall find it true, ‘I shall see him, but not now:  I shall behold him, but not nigh.’  Though the ungodly shall cry, ‘Hide us from the face of him that sits on the throne,’ they shall cry in vain, for before his judgment seat they must all appear. 

        His second appearing will be without sin.  That is to say, he will bring no sin offering with him, for, having presented himself as the one sacrifice for sin, there is no need of any other offering.  When our Lord comes in his glory, there will remain no sin upon his people.  He will present his bride unto himself a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing.  The day of his appearing will be the manifestation of a perfect body as well as a perfect head.  ‘Then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun’ when their Lord’s countenance is ‘as the sun shines in his strength.’ As he will be “without sin,’ so will they be ‘without sin.’ Oh, what a glorious appearing will this be;–true appearing, yet the very opposite of the first! 

        If we are really expecting our Lord to come, we shall be concerned to have everything ready for his appearing.  I sometimes see the great gates open in front of the larger houses in the suburbs; it usually means that the master is expected soon.  Keep the great gates of your soul always open, ready for your Lord’s return.  It is idle to talk about looking for his coming if we never set our house in order, and never put ourselves in readiness for his reception.  Looking for him, means that we stand in a waiting attitude, as a servant who expects his master to be at the door presently. 

        Do not say, ‘The Lord will not come yet, and therefore I shall make my plans for the next twenty or thirty years irrespective of him.’ You may not be here in the next twenty or thirty minutes; or, if you are, your Lord may be here also.  He is already on the road; he started long ago, and he sent on a herald before him to cry, ‘Behold, I am coming quickly.’ He has been coming quickly over the mountains of division ever since; and he must be here soon.  If you are truly looking for his appearing, you will be found in the attitude of one who waits and watches, that when his Lord cometh he may meet him with joy.  Are you thus expecting him?

        I am afraid I shall only be speaking the truth if I say that very few Christians are, in the highest sense, waiting for the appearing of their Lord and Savior.  As to watching, this is still more rare than waiting.  The fact is, even the better sort of believers, who wait for his coming, as all the ten virgins did, nevertheless do not watch, as the whole ten waiters slumbered and slept.  This is a mournful business.  [Matt 25:1-13] A man who is asleep cannot be said to look; we ought to go up to the watchtower every morning, and look toward the sun-rising, to see whether Christ is coming; and our last act at night should be to look out for his star, and ask, ‘Is he coming?’ It ought to be a daily disappointment when our Lord does not come; instead of being, as I fear it is, a kind of foregone conclusion that he will not come just yet.  

        Many professing Christians appear to forget all about Christ’s second coming; others drop a smile when we speak about it, as though it was a subject that belonged only to fanatics and dreamers.  But you, beloved, I trust are not of that kind.  As you believe really in the first coming and the one great sacrifice, so believe really in the second coming without a sin offering unto the climax of your salvation.  Standing between Christ’s cross and his crown, between the cloud that received him out of our sight, and the clouds with which he will come with ten thousands of his saints to judge the quick and the dead, let us live as men who are not of this world, strangers in this age which darkly lies between two bright appearances, happy beings saved by a mystery accomplished, and soon to be glorified by another mystery which is hastening on to its fulfillment.  Let us, like that woman mentioned in the Revelation, have the moon under our feet, and keep all sublunary things together in their proper place.  May we even now be made to sit together in the heavenlies with Christ, that, when he appears, we may also appear with him in glory!  Amen. 

        Comment from Steve Daskal

        The New Testament clarifies and emphasizes that, while evident in the prophetic writings of the Old Testament [TaNakH], certain scriptural citations were either overlooked, misunderstood, or deliberately ignored by both the Jewish Temple elite [the Aaronic priests and Levites, some of whom were scribes and teachers of the Law], most of whom were of the Torah-centric Sadducee school, and the Jewish rabbinical elite [the rabbis and lay scribes, most of whom were not of the tribe of Levi]. 

        The originator of this work is…

        Charles H. Spurgeon

        PURIM: THE FEAST OF LOTS

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        Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

        “Haman sought to destroy all the Jews who were throughout the whole kingdom of Ahasuerus—the people of Mordecai…. They cast Pur (lot) before Haman to determine the day and the month until it fell on the twelfth month, which is the month of Adar” (Esther 3:6-7). Adar corresponds to our months of February or March.

        Purim is a joyful holiday. In synagogues, the entire Book of Esther is read from a parchment scroll called the megillah, which means “rolled up.” Although God’s name is not mentioned, in no Book of the Bible is His presence more manifest on every page—especially in protecting and preserving His Covenant People.

        The Book of Esther opens with a feast given by King Ahasuerus, also known as Xerxes. When he orders his wife, Queen Vashti, to appear, she refuses and is thus deposed. King Ahasuerus holds out his golden scepter to choose Esther as his queen because of her great natural beauty. Unbeknownst to the King, Esther is a Jewish maiden whose cousin, Mordecai, “was sitting at the king’s gate.” When Mordecai learned of a plot to slay the king, he warned Esther, who took a risk by approaching the king without being summoned. She revealed the plot to the king and the king’s life was saved.

        Haman, the Prime Minister of Persia, walked through the “gates of the city” and demanded that every knee bow down to him. But Mordecai refused to “bend his knee” to anyone but the One True God—Jehovah! This infuriated Haman, so he began his attempt to annihilate God’s Chosen People by planning the extermination of all Jewish people and erecting a gallow upon which to hang Mordecai. When Esther revealed Haman’s plot to King Ahasuerus, he issued a new decree permitting the Jewish people to defend themselves against their enemies. Thousands of enemies were slaughtered as the Jewish people fought to protect themselves. Thus, Haman’s diabolical scheme was foiled, and Israel was saved. In the end, Haman and his 10 sons were hanged on the gallows that were prepared for Mordecai.

        Today, when the megillah is read in the synagogues and in homes on Purim, people cheer, whistle, and clap whenever the names of Queen Esther or Mordecai are mentioned. But when Haman’s name is mentioned, people boo, bang on pots and pans, stamp their feet, and twirl their groggers (noisemakers). They rejoice in witnessing God’s faithfulness to His Chosen People. The Jewish people still exist. Israel will never cease to be.

        “Thus says the Lord, Who gives the sun for a light by day, The ordinances of the moon and the stars for a light by night, Who disturbs the sea, And its waves roar (the Lord of hosts is His name): If those ordinances depart From before Me, says the Lord, Then the seed of Israel shall also cease from being a nation before Me forever”(Jer. 31:35).

        If the “scepter” had not been held out to Esther, she would never have become Queen, nor could she have approached her king. She and the Jewish people would have perished. Today, the “scepter” is a Person, extended to both Jew and Gentile alike. “A scepter shall rise out of Israel” (Num. 24:17). That “scepter” is the promised Messiah, Jesus, who became incarnate approximately 2,000 years ago. By His sacrificial death and resurrection He provides redemption for all who receive Him—and an audience with God, the Father!

        THE 14th OF ADAR

        Traditionally, Purim is one of the most fun and joy-filled celebrations on the Jewish calendar. Though it is generally seen as a holiday of lesser significance (compared to Passover or Yom Kippur), Purim is still an important celebration for the Jewish people.

        Purim is celebrated on the 14th day of Adar, which, on the secular calendar, usually occurs in March (but sometimes in February). Because the 13th day of Adar was the day that Haman decreed the extermination of the Jewish people, the 14th day is the day of celebrating survival and victory.

        “Therefore the Jews of the villages who dwelt in the unwalled towns celebrated the fourteenth day of the month of Adar with gladness and feasting, as a holiday, and for sending presents to one another” (Esther 9:19).

        THE FAST

        The holiday of Purim is typically preceded by a minor fast (the Fast of Esther), which takes place on the 13th of Adar—the date when Haman was to have the Jews massacred. This fast relates back to the three days Esther fasted and prayed before she approached the king to make an intercession for her people. Some Jews fast for the full three days before Purim, and others only fast on the day before—both of which are acceptable.

        THE MEGILLAH

        Purim’s first and primary command is to conduct a public reading of the Book of Esther, known as the Megillah. (There are five books of Jewish scripture that are referred to as megillahs. but Esther is usually the book people reference when they say “The Megillah.”) During this reading, the audience cheers when one of the hero’s names is mentioned (i.e. Esther or Mordecai) and boos, stomps, and uses noisemakers to drown out the name of Haman, the villain. The purpose of this custom is to “blot out the name of Haman.”

        THE FEAST

        Purim’s second custom is to “eat, drink, and be merry.”

        “As the days on which the Jews had rest from their enemies, as the month which was turned from sorrow to joy for them, and from mourning to a holidday; that they should make them days of feasting and joy, of sending presents to one to another and gifts to the poor” (Esther 9:22).

        On the day of Purim, a festive and traditional meal is held, called the Se’udat Purim. Drinking wine is featured prominently during this feast, and is required to maintain the holiday’s jovial nature. According to the Talmud, a person is required to drink until he cannot tell the difference between “cursed be Haman” and “blessed be Mordecai,” but should not become so drunk that he might violate other commandments or become ill. (Of course, recovering alcoholics are exempted from this rule.)

        SENDING OF PORTIONS

        The third custom of Purim is to give food, drink, and charity to the poor. According to halakha (the collective body of religious laws for the Jewish people), every adult is required to give two different foods (shalach manos ) to one person, and two charitable donations (mitzvah ) to two poor people.

        The mitzvah can be fulfilled by either giving food or an amount of money equivalent to purchase the same food eaten at a regular meal. Traditionally speaking, it is better to spend more on the mitzvah than on the shalach manos.

        In the synagogue, collections of charity are made during this festival celebration, and the money is later distributed among the poor and needy. Also note: anyone willing to accept charity is allowed to participate, thus somewhat blurring the definition of “poor.”

        HAMENTASCHEN, FAZUELOS, and KREPLACH

        A traditional treat among the Ashkenazi Jews [Jews of central and eastern European descent] during this celebration is a triangular, fruit-filled cookie that represents Haman’s three-cornered hat. These cookies, referred to as hamentaschen, or “Haman’s pockets,” are made by cutting sweet pastry dough into circles, and wrapping  a traditional poppy seed filling into the center of its triangular shape (with the filling either hidden or showing). More recently, prunes, dates, apricots, and chocolate fillings have been introduced.

        Among the Sephardic Jews [** Jews of southern European descent], a fried pastry, called fazuelos, is traditionally eaten, as well as a range of baked or fried pastries called orejas de Haman (Haman’s ears).

        Kreplachis a kind of dumpling filled with cooked meat, chicken, or liver; it’s traditionally served in soup. “Hiding” the meat inside the dumpling serves as another reminder of God’s “hiddenness” (as he seemingly works “behind the scenes”) throughout the story of Esther.

        MASQUERADE

        A masquerade is another Purim custom. The practice of donning a costume and/or mask originated with the Italian Jews at the end of the 15th century. Masquerading is not only a form of merry-making (a commandment on this holiday), but also originated as a way to emulate G-d, who “disguised” His presence behind the natural and seemingly coincidental events described in the Book of Esther. Since charity is also a central feature of this day, the donning of masks and costumes further preserves the anonymity of the giver and the dignity of the recipient.

        Conclusion by Steve Daskal

        What Else Can We Learn from the Story of Esther? 

        Some additional background.  Haman is described as an Agagite; many modern scholars identify the Agagites as the descendants of the scattered survivors of the Amalekites, the semi-nomadic tribe living in the area east and south of the Dead Sea and westward into Sinai and the Negev that repeatedly attacked the Israelites on their exodus from Egypt and after their settlement in the Promised Land [see Exodus 17:8-16; also Numbers 14, Judges 6-7, I Samuel 15, 27, 30].  In Exodus 17, we read that God swore to annihilate Amalek, and Moses prophesied that Israel would war on Amalek from generation to generation.  The prophesy was finally completed in the time of Mordecai and Esther, during the Persian Empire’s dominance of the Near and Middle East.

        Several Persian “king of kings” during this era were friendly towards the Jewish people, beginning with the first Medeo-Persian king Cyrus, who after defeating the Neo-Babylonian Empire and conquering Babylon, encouraged the Jews [who had been enslaved there] to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the Holy Temple.  He even gave them money and provisions, all of the remaining Temple artefacts that could be found in Babylon, and letters of authorization requiring local governors west of the Euphrates River to assist the Jews.  Nevertheless, when Esther was called to enter the contest to become successor to Queen Vashti, her uncle Mordecai urged her to hide her Jewish identity [Est 2:20].  This was all part of God’s sovereign plan to protect His chosen people and to finish the elimination of Amalek.

        In Chapter 23 of Leviticus, the Lord spoke to Moses saying, “Speak to the children of Israel, and say to them: ‘The feasts of the Lord which you shall claim to be holy convocations, these are My feasts.’” He proceeds to explain each of the seven feasts of Israel and their “appointed times.” These feasts have been celebrated by the Jewish people from biblical times until the present, throughout their generations, just as the Lord commanded.

        However, there are also other feasts that have been celebrated from that time until the present. The best known of these feasts is the “Feast of Purim,” also known as the “Feast of Lots.” The Feast of Purim has its origin in the time of Esther when King Ahasuerus was king of Persia between 484-464 BCE. Hence, it is also known as the “Feast of Esther.” The name, “Purim” is the plural form derived from the word, “Pur,” meaning “lot.”

        God was there then, just as He is here now. Even when He isn’t named or acknowledged, He is there, a Rock of constancy, the Light of Truth. He is sovereign, and the seemingly “coincidental” or “lucky” ISN’T. 

        Not all of God’s people are as bold and openly loyal to him when living among non-believers as Daniel, Shadrakh, Medrakh, Abed-Nego, Nehemiah, and Ezra had been. 

        The Jewish people, even when assimilated and hiding their faith and heritage, remain under God’s protection, because His covenants are eternal, and His mind does not change. Mordekhai was, as my grandfather would have said, “a good Jew.” Yet, he encouraged his niece to compete to replace Queen Vashti even though as a non-Persian she was not eligible to compete, and as a Jew, she should not have sought to marry a Gentile — even if he was the King of the Medes and Persians. But God remained true to His covenant, and is still true to His covenant to this very day, to ensure the survival and salvation of the Jewish people (not all of them, but a Remnant from every generation, and not without Messiah, but through Him). 

        The Romans 8:28 covenant applies here as well — God used devout Jews, not so devout Jews, “good Gentiles,” and evil self-centered heathens to bring about His sovereign will that reinforced the Persians as protectors of the Jews, and rebuked some among their subject peoples who hated the Jews. 

        God’s church, similarly, remains under God’s protection, even when the world ignores, scoffs at, or threatens it. The “gates of hell will not prevail against it,” and it will be ready as a bride, pure, white and shining, for Messiah when He returns. 

        The originator of this work is…

        CJF MINISTRIES

        A Plan for Reading the Whole Bible

        Featured

        Provided by Steve Daskal

        Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

        Every historical narrative, every prophecy, every law, every theological argument contained in the Bible is a link in the chain of God’s development of His plan of salvation for humanity. The Bible is the whole story—God’s story and message for humanity. And to understand that story, and how the various parts are connected, we need to read the whole Bible.

        This paper describes a Bible-reading plan that has been especially helpful to a number of people connected with the C.S. Lewis Institute (CSLI). It is a simple plan, and one that you may find helpful in reading through the entire Bible not only once, but on a regular basis.

        When we read through the Bible, we are actually reading through a collection of 66 books, varying by type of literature, or genre. For example, a Book may be history, poetry, a letter, or some other genre.

        Perhaps the most common obstacle people encounter in trying to read through the whole Bible is getting bogged down in reading long passages, for days in a row, which may be difficult to understand. Genre-based Bible reading plans avoid this problem.

        Norma-Neal Gause developed a Bible reading plan based on “six natural divisions” of the Bible, which she explained in a booklet titled “How to Read the WHOLE Bible Without Being Bored.”1 The six divisions are:

        I. The first five Books of the Bible, often called the Law     or the Pentateuch—Genesis through Deuteronomy 

        2. The History of Israel and Judah—Joshua through Esther

        3. Poetical Books—Job through the Song of Solomon

        4. The Prophets—Isaiah through Malachi

        5. The Gospels and Acts—Matthew through Acts

        6. Letters to Churches—Romans through Revelation

        Ideally, you would read six chapters each day, one chapter from each of the divisions. This would take about a half hour a day or less, depending on your reading speed. However, the plan can be carried out at your own pace. You don’t have to read the same amount of Scripture each day, and if you miss days you just pick up wherever you left off. You cannot get behind!

        Under the plan, you will read each Book of the Bible from the first chapter through the last, but since you are reading passages from several genres of Scripture each day, you won’t become bogged down in your reading.

        To keep track of your reading, just record your reading on a chart. Blank charts are included at the end of this paper. Two sample charts are set forth below. The first chart has the first few lines filled in for a person reading six chapters each day, and beginning the plan (for illustrative purposes) on April 1; the second chart is an example for a person who varies their reading. If you print the blank charts at the end of this paper, you can fill them in by hand; alternatively, you can maintain the chart electronically.

        Once you complete reading the Books in a particular division, the plan calls for immediately starting over again in reading the Books of that division. Since there are different numbers of chapters in the six divisions, this means that, over time, you will always be reading a different set of Scripture passages each day.

        Under this plan, you will be reading the whole Bible, although you will read some portions, especially the Gospels and Acts and the Letters to Churches, more often than others. If you read six chapters of Scripture a day, you will read the entire New Testament three times a year and the entire Old Testament three times in about two years.

        The goal of reading the Bible is not simply to gain information, but to know God. As Tom Tarrants has stated, “Through the Scriptures, we learn of God’s character, His great deeds, His love for us, His will for us, His ways, His promises, and so much more. The Holy Spirit uses these truths as a major part of the process of transformation—of becoming conformed to the image of Jesus Christ.”[1] Following this Bible reading plan can be part of that process.


          The originator of this work is…

          C.S. Lewis Institute

          The Blessing

          Provided by Steve Daskal

          Christian Messianic Analysis and Apologetics

          Throughout the world, Christians are gathering virtually to sing a song of blessing over their country, state or region.  If you haven’t heard this beautiful song titled, “The Blessing,” written by Elevation Worship, you can find versions of it recorded in Hawaii, South Africa, the UK and other countries on YouTube.

          The universal appeal of the powerful lyrics is not due to happenstance as they come from a 3,000 year old blessing called, “The Aaronic Blessing,” found in Numbers 6: 22-26:

          Aaron’s Blessing

          The Lord spoke to Moses, saying, “Speak to Aaron and his sons, saying,

          Thus you shall bless the people of Israel: you shall say to them,  The Lord bless you

              and keep you;  the Lord make his face shine on you and be gracious to you;  the Lord turn his face toward you and give you peace.

          This ancient priestly blessing is given to Moses by God to speak over his brother, Aaron, the high priest, Aaron’s sons and the people of Israel around 1,400 B.C. They were in the midst of a challenging time of wilderness wanderings in preparation for their entrance into the Promised Land.

          This beautiful blessing has been sung and passed on from generation to generation in Jewish homes and synagogues for over 3,000 years. Christians have also spoken this blessing from the early days of the church to the present day for 2,000 years.

          This blessing is also the oldest surviving biblical inscription in existence today! In 1979, Dr. Gabriel Barkay and his archaeological team discovered what is now known as the Ketef Hinnom Silver Scrolls just outside the old city of Jerusalem.  These two tiny silver scrolls about the size of a cigarette found in a collapsed tomb were carefully unrolled and analyzed.  Written in paleo-Hebrew were the words of the Aaronic blessing from Numbers 6:24-26, something scholars have declared to be one of the most significant biblical archaeological finds in history!  These scrolls which also had verses from Deuteronomy written on them date to the 7th century B.C. of the 1st Temple Period.

          The Aaronic blessing of Numbers and the words of Deuteronomy found on the Ketef Hinnom silver scrolls have rocked the academic world, discrediting the idea of the German liberal scholar Wellhausen taught in seminaries throughout the world that the Torah wasn’t written down until the 2nd century B.C. and that it was written by 4 different authors.  Instead, this archaeological discovery points to a much earlier date for the writing of the Torah and helps affirm Jesus’ statements of the Mosaic authorship of the Law as found in the New Testament.

          The next time you hear, sing, speak or read the blessing of Aaron, may you know that this blessing comes from God and is just as real and powerful for you as it was for the children of Israel 3,000 years ago.

          The originator of this work is…

          Joel Woodruff, Ed.D.

          President, C.S. Lewis Institute