Thursday, April 7, 2016

I Am Weak.

There’s a lot to say about weakness, especially in a society where it is emphasized.  We don’t want anyone to look at our weaknesses because we see them as ugly, and we want to be accepted.  We get told not to look at other people’s weaknesses because we need to be accepting.  We need to look past the weakness to see who they really are underneath, and we don’t for one second pause to think that maybe that same weakness that we are hiding and locking in the cupboard or sweeping under the bed is part of what makes us who we are part of why we do what we do.

Our weaknesses are important.

If you look at Paul in 2 Corinthians 12:9-11, he talks about his weaknesses.  In fact, he loves them.  He says that power is perfected in weakness, so he rejoices in it!  He says that he will boast in weakness and is “well contented” with it, “for when I am weak, then I am strong.” 

Now let’s take a minute, because what I think you just read is “despite my weakness, I can still be strong.”  Or maybe you read “I am weak, but there’s time and I can still learn from it and be strong.”  These are things that you tell yourself, or maybe you even let others tell you, but that’s not what Paul is saying.  The difference between what you read and what Paul is saying is that Paul is telling you what God told him and that is because of my weakness, God gives me His strength, so I am strong.  Not in spite of your weakness, because it’s not like your weakness is something God didn’t know about and now has to work around.  Remember that He is your Creator, so He knows how you work and how you need to work to fulfill His purpose for you.  Where you are empty because of a weakness or deficiency that you have, God pours in His strength, which is more than any strength we could’ve already been programmed with, because God perfects His strength in our weakness.  He told us that His grace is sufficient for us, so when we are weak and broken and we don’t have what it takes, we only need to lean on Him because He is strong, He is not broken and can even fix us, and He always has what it takes.

Our weaknesses can actually become our strengths.  Not because God takes them away or helps us to overcome them (although God does help us to overcome things, I just don’t think He would want us to “overcome” something that He specifically programmed us to have), but because He teaches us how to use them.  In our weaknesses, God perfects His strength.  Through our weaknesses, we become more like Him.  I’ll say it again.  Through our weaknesses, we become more like Him.  God gave us these weaknesses that we have for a reason.  When we accept that we have them and that they are a part of us, and when we give the weaknesses and ourselves to God, then He can work.  When we acknowledge that we cannot do something ourselves and we let God step in, that’s when things actually start to happen, and it’s so much better than if we had tried to do it ourselves because God’s strength is stronger.  When we are weak, then we are strong.

Paul actually even takes it one step further than that, because he’s not just talking about loving our weaknesses, but he actually says that we should be “contented with” insults, distresses, persecutions, and difficulties that come our way because of our weaknesses.  These are part of what God uses to refine His strength in us.  These are some of the trials that we hear about in James 1 that we are told to consider pure joy, because they are testing our faith and making us stronger.  I know that the new thing these days is to call everyone who looks at you wrong a bully and to run crying and throw a fit until someone “accepts you,” but as believers we should be thanking the people who insult us, cause us distress, and even those who actually persecute us.  We should be happy when we are faced with our own weaknesses, and even when they are pointed out by others.  We don’t need to look for shallow acceptance from those around us, because the One who created us knows us better than any of those people ever could and loves us with an unconditional, everlasting love.  And He not only can see us as we are, but He can see who we can and will become in Him through His strength, which He will use to shape and mold us by using those exact weaknesses that the people were giving us crap about.

When we deny or ignore our weaknesses, or when we pass them off as just something that we are and determine to do nothing about it, we are denying God the opportunity to perfect His strength in us.  We are taking the reins in our own hands and using our own human strength, or lack thereof, to take us through life, which is why we will fail.  Our strength is not, and can never be enough.  It’s important to know our weaknesses and recognize them for what they are so we can give them over to God.  The cracks and holes that are our weaknesses create openings through which God can fill us with His strength.  If we try to patch them ourselves, not only will it look sloppy and not hold, but there will be nowhere for God to pour in His strength, and He’s not one to force it.

Only when we accept that we are weak can we accept God’s strength.
When we are weak, then we are strong.

What’s your weakness?

Sunday, January 31, 2016

The Adulteress

This (story, poem, call it what you will) is based on the adulteress found in John 8:3-12.  She bears the powerful story of someone who fell, but stood back up.  I think we can all learn a lesson from her, regardless of where we've been and what we've done.  

What I have written is fiction based on facts recorded in the Bible.  You can read the real account in John 8, but this is my speculative interpretation of her story.



I will never forget his tear streaked face;
My husband,
As he led the crowd
Of my accusers.
As they were dragging me,
A filthy adulteress,
Unfit to even lay eyes on,
I wept.
I was guilty.
They were right to persecute me;
What’s done is done
What will be will be
I knew it to the depths
Of my profane, useless soul.
So I let them lead me
To my much deserved death.

The sudden silence filled
My now empty heart;
We had arrived.
I felt His gaze sweep over me
As I heard their condemning words
But I could not,
Would not look up
Unworthy filth that I was,
I shouldn’t even be standing.

“Teacher, this woman,”
Words flung with disgust
“Has been caught in the act of adultery”
From the lips of my beloved,
Though I was his no longer.
“The Law of Moses commands us
To stone such a woman.
What say you?”
Spoken with not just question,
But mockery
As if to test Him
When we all knew the answer.
I knew my fate.
Through my tears of anguish,
As I struggled to remain standing
I saw movement on the ground
In front of my own stooped figure.

What was He doing?

Writing?

Berated with questions
Holding my fate in His hands,
Yet scribbling in the dust?
I leaned forward
Ever so slightly
To see what He wrote,
But He stood up
And I cowered back
Awaiting the verbalization
Of my premature death.

Sorrow swept over me
As He stood, about to speak
And the men,
My accusers,
Picked up stones at their feet.
Tension encrusted the air
And the good Teacher spoke:
“Let him who is without sin among you,
Be the first to throw a stone at her.”

Silence.

Utter silence.

Then I heard a thud
The first stone hitting my sinful flesh
Didn’t they know the pain
That I was already feeling?
I am my beloved’s
But my beloved is not mine.
I hadn’t even felt their stone,
So deep was my sorrow.
Then I heard another,
But still I felt nothing.

I looked down at my body,
Still standing,
Still without blemish,
And realized that the thuds
Were that of stone on earth.
One by one they dropped them,
One by one they silently fled
Until there were none.
Slowly, I straightened
And looked around me.
The only One still there
Was the good Teacher,
Bent over and scribbling in the dust.
He stood and looked at me
Straight into my eyes
And for a moment,
I could not look away.

“Woman, where are they?
“Has no one condemned you?”
Regaining some composure,
I trained my gaze on the ground.
Despite my lack of condemnation,
I was still no better
Than the very dust on which I stood.
“No one, Lord,”
My whispered reply
Barely audible
As I trembled
Not knowing how he would punish me
Now that we stood alone
On a quiet street
“Neither do I condemn you;”
Said with such tender grace
“Go, and sin no more.”
This was all that was asked?
That I go and live purely?

I fell to my knees
With my face to the dirt
How did I get here?
Then I heard him speak again
Addressing those around Him
His faithful followers
Hanging on His every word.
He said those who follow Him
Know not the darkness around them.
The very darkness
That gripped my fragile soul.
That had gripped it for so long
That I had let rule me.
The darkness
That had been my demise.
And great was my fall.


I looked up in wonder
At the stoic face
Eyes encouraging, confirming,
And as I stood to go
Remarkably not dead
And perhaps to live
For the very first time
I thought
Maybe it’s true,
What they say about Him.
Maybe this Yeshua
This Teacher, this Man,
Is truly the Messiah
Here to save not just me,
But all of us.

So I went,
And I believed.
I had found it.
The One true source of Light.
I would go.
I would sin no more.
I would live.
I would walk in the Light
As He is in the Light.
And I would take back

What the darkness had stolen.

Monday, January 25, 2016

Labels and Lies

When you go grocery shopping, if you’re anything like me, you read just about every word on every food item that you buy, and on lots of food items that you don’t buy (because how else are you going to know that you don’t want it?!).  In other words, you judge your food by the labels assigned to it.  Now, this is good when we’re talking about food, because it’s good to know what you’re putting into your body and make educated choices on what to buy.  However, the practice of label reading has made its way over into our social and personal lives, and it is definitely not a good thing.

There are so many labels that we not only allow society to put on us, but that we also put on ourselves.  Some people think of it as “finding a group that you belong to,” or “finding people just like you,” but I call it “limiting the ways in which you see yourself and allow the world to see you.”  There are so many seemingly innocent labels that shape us into how we are, what is acceptable for us to do or not do, who we talk to, how we dress, what we think we are capable of, and how we live our lives.  We are introverts, extroverts, too skinny, too fat, too tall, too short, hyperactive, sensitive, prone to accidents, hipsters, gamers, musicians, artists, losers, preppy, goth, punk, hippies, sad, happy, old, young, writers, uptight, scared, intuitive, smart, dumb, creative, deadbeat, and oh so much more.  Or are we?

You may have read that list and thought “Yeah, I am some of those things, but it’s true!  That’s just who I am and that’s okay.”  That mentality is your problem.  It’s everyone’s problem.

There are all these little tests out there that I see people taking all the time.  What’s your personality type?  Are you more introverted or extroverted?  Who’s your perfect guy/girl?  What’s your dream job? They’re meant for fun, sometimes they’re meant to educate people on why they might feel how they feel sometimes, or even to help people figure out what they want, but all they’re really doing is putting people in boxes.  And there are all kinds of articles like “10 Things Introverts Want You to Know but Won’t Tell You,” “How Extroverts See the World Differently,” etc. etc. etc.  It makes people think “oh yeah, I’m an introvert, so when I don’t ever talk to people and just binge watch Netflix every day of my life, that’s normal and okay,” or “I’m not overbearing, I’m just an extrovert and when I yell at people for being stupid and they don’t like it, it’s just because they really are stupid and they can’t handle who I am as a person.”  This is wrong.  We need to stop telling people how to feel.

I realize that this kind of thing can occasionally give someone a feeling of belonging or validity when they find out that someone else has the same idiosyncrasies that they do, and that’s great.  But everyone is different.  Just because a group of people have a few things in common doesn’t mean that they all operate on the same frequency.  Each of us is a unique, special design created by the Almighty who has a specific plan for each and every one of His creations (Psalm 139:13-16).  There is no one else in the entire world that is just like you.  Yes, we all find people with characteristics that we share, and that can be fun, but we should never let it define us.  The second that we start to shape ourselves, we are stepping away from letting God shape us.  This is why, as believers, we often feel like we don’t fit into society because of our beliefs and convictions.  It’s because we don’t!  No one does!  In fact, we are told not to fit in.  In Leviticus 20:26, God days “You shall be holy to me, for I the Lord am holy and have separated you from the peoples, that you should be mine.”  The Hebrew word for holy is kadosh, which means set apart.  God commands us to be set apart and different.  He has separated us from everyone else so we can be His.  In Romans 12:2 we are told not to be “conformed to this world.”  I think that can also mean not to let ourselves be conformed to the labels that this world puts on us. 

The next time the world tries to tell you who you are, just remember that the only thing you are that truly matters is a child of God.  You are not a slave to this world or what it wants to call you.  You are not confined by the categories that you fall into, you are free to be whoever God intends for you to be, and He is the only One who actually knows what and who that is.  Only if you let Him shape you will you ever reach your full potential.  Let Him show you your talents and how to use them to His glory.  Don’t get trapped into thinking that you need to act a certain way because that’s what “people like you” do.  Let God guide you with His Word and His Holy Spirit.

Wake up and be aware of what’s going on around you.
Let go of the ways of this world. 
Learn to be strong and courageous.

Let God show you who you are.   
But let your identity not be found in who you are, but in Whose you are.

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

What is Love? Part 2: Love is not Rude


This is the second post in a series on 1 Corinthians 13, and it's all about love.  In my first post on this subject, What is Love? Part 1: Love is Patient and Kind, I wrote about the first part of this passage.  In this post, I will discuss 1 Corinthians 13:4-5.

“Love does not envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude.” (1 Cor. 13:4-5)
Most of these words are pretty straight forward and mean what you’d think they mean.  Other versions say things like “love is not jealous,” “does not vaunt itself,” “is not puffed up” or “proud.”  But then we get to how love isn’t “rude.”  Other versions in English said that love “doesn’t behave indecently,” instead of “isn’t rude,” but both of those terms seemed pretty broad and vague to me.  The word being translated here in Greek means to be unbecoming or behave unseemly, and that word is derived from another word that means shapeless or inelegant.  To me this seemed like it meant that love is appropriate, and doesn’t step out of line.  Whether that’s in a romantic relationship, work relationship, friendship, or whatever, it’s a good rule to abide by. 

Think of how many friendships and romantic relationships have fallen away because of someone acting inappropriately or out of line?  And this could mean so many things.  If someone is spreading rumors about you behind your back while proclaiming love to your face, that is inappropriate, indecent, and rude.  If someone pressures you into divulging some intimate or painful detail about yourself before you are ready or when the time is not right, that is out of line and unbecoming.  Neither of these show love.

Love does not manipulate or behave like a child out of jealousy, but instead has confidence in the love that they show.  Love does not boast and put itself over others out of pride, but instead puts pride aside to embrace those around them and welcome them into their love.  Love is not rude, is not inappropriate, and does not step out of line, but is instead mindful of those around them; not poking at their sore spots, but trying to promote healing.      

Sunday, August 16, 2015

World Changer


I have always wanted to impact the world in some way.  Everyone does, right?  That’s the “American dream.”  Fame, fortune, name in lights and on the lips of people all around the world.  And why?  Because I did something.  Me.  I am the great and powerful world changer.  Proclaim my name and talk about me. 

That’s exactly what I wanted a few years ago, until my soul had a crisis and I figured out that that way of thinking is just all wrong.

You will only be capable of changing the world when you are able to realize that you can’t.  Yes, you read that correctly; you cannot change the world.  In fact, there is very little that you yourself can actually do.  I am by no means saying that you are useless.  On the contrary, each and every person on this earth is an extremely valuable tool.  We are the most useful when we entirely surrender ourselves to our Master.  Imagine trying to build something when all your hammer wants is to go off and do its own thing. 

When we try to make a name for ourselves is when we will fail.  That’s when we start serving the wrong master; the master of death and destruction.  That’s what happened in Genesis 11, you may know it as The Tower of Babel Fiasco.  At that time, all of the people in the whole earth spoke the same language.  The people decided to build themselves a city with a tower “with its top in the heavens” and they said “let us make a name for ourselves,” (Genesis 11:4).  They were attempting to make a name for themselves and empower themselves, trying to physically put themselves on the same level as God.  So God confused their language.  He scattered them over the whole earth and made it so they could not understand each other.  This is just one example of our destiny of failure, if we take the path of self-righteousness.

In John chapter 15, verses 4 and 5, Jesus said “Abide in me, and I in you.  As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me.  I am the vine; you are the branches.  Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing.”

As a believer in the Bible and Jesus, I firmly believe His words.  Without Him, we can do nothing, and with Him, we can do anything.  “I can do all things through Him who gives me power,” (Philippians 4:13).  If we want to change the world, I suggest that we put our own desires to do so aside, and instead seek what He wants for us.  

2 Corinthians 4:5-6 says “For what we proclaim is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, with ourselves as your servants for Jesus’ sake.  For God, who said ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.” The only way to change the world as we know for the better it is to speak life and truth and follow through with actions validate our words.  We need to proclaim the Light of Yeshua and the Truth of God and His Word, not ourselves.  Anything that we are outside of God is not worth proclaiming.

Psalm 27:2 continues to drop further wisdom on the subject, when it says “Let someone else praise you, not your own mouth, a stranger and not your own lips.”  This is part of modesty.  We should not be proud and braggadocios, letting everyone know the good that we have done.  Instead, we should boast of our God, because to Him, all praises are due.  That way we will show the world what we are about, and what is good and true.

Psalm 44:8 “In God we have boasted continually, and we will give thanks to your name forever.  Selah.”

Psalm 52:1 “Why do you boast of evil, O mighty man?  The steadfast love of God endures all the day.”

Essentially, if you want to change the world, stop trying to.  Focus on God.  No matter what He tells you to do, do it.  It doesn’t matter how insignificant it may seem to you; if it is where God wants you, it is the most significant thing you could possibly do.  That is how you become a true world changer.

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

What is Love? Part 1: Love is Patient and Kind

Love is important, right?  I think that’s one of the very very few things that most people can all agree on.  Everyone wants (or maybe needs is a better word there) to feel loved.  Everyone loves something or someone.  We make important decisions based on love, and we wouldn’t want to live in a world void of love.  But what is love?  What is this driving force, this idea, this instinct that we all know and recognize as love?  And why is it so important?

Anyone who knows me personally knows that I’m going to look at this through a wonderful lens that I like to call the Word of God, also commonly known as the Bible.  We know that love is important from a Biblical perspective for many reasons.  I could list them all, but I think that I  can sum them up pretty well by citing Yeshua’s (Jesus’) answer to the Pharisees when they were testing Him and asked what the greatest commandment in the Torah was.  “And he said to him ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.  This is the great and first commandment.  And the second is like it: You shall love your neighbor and yourself.  On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets,’” (Matthew 22:37-40).  Yeshua himself said that the entire Law, or Torah, and every God-given word uttered from the prophets depends on love, so obviously, love is pretty important from a Biblical perspective.  But why?

In 1 Corinthians 13, the apostle Paul says that we are essentially useless and that we’re doing whatever it is that we are doing in vain if we are without love.  He says “If I give away all I have, if I give up my body to be burned, but have not love, I gain nothing,” (1 Cor. 13:3).  We can do all the “nice” and “good” things that we want.  We can help those around us, we can sacrifice ourselves for our cause, and we can do any number of things, but if we are not doing them out of love, then there is ultimately no point.

If we look back at the previous verse, we learn that this concept does not only apply to what we do, but also to what we know.  He says “If I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing,” (1 Cor. 13:2).  We can have all the Bible knowledge in the world, go through seminary, have read the Bible however many times, have all the street smarts in the world, and literally know more than any other human being on the planet about life, God, and all things in between, but if we do not have love, we are nothing.  Nothing.  And just because you believe in God doesn’t mean anything either, because Paul said that even if you have enough faith to remove mountains and are without love, you’re still nothing. 

But why?  Why is love so important?  Just one little word, and if we don’t have it, then what’s the point?  Well, unfortunately, in the English language, we only have one word for “love,” and that’s kind of ruining it for us.  Because we love peanut butter, and vacations, and our moms and dads, brothers, sisters, husbands, wives, tacos, art, water, scenic views, animals, good books, and God.  We bring God down to the same level as peanut butter.  Great.

I want you to take a look with me for a minute at the Biblical definition of love.  We can find this in 1 Corinthians 13:4-8.  You know, the part they always read at weddings.  I had read this many times before and definitely gained some perspective on what love was, but I still felt like something was missing, as I often do when I look at the Bible in only English, seeing as how it was written in Hebrew and/or Greek.  So I pulled out my interlinear Bible and my Strong’s Concordance, along with several versions of the Bible in English, and I had myself a good old-fashioned word study, and what I discovered greatly enhanced what I know to be “love.”  Allow me to break it down for you a bit.  In this blog post, we’re only going to look at the very first few words in this passage.

“Love is patient and kind…” (1Cor. 13:4).
Other versions say that love is “long suffering” instead of patient.  The word used in Greek, makrothumeo, means to be long-spirited or patiently endure.  This made me think about the Israelites in the wilderness and their constant complaining and how God had to be quite long-spirited with them to eventually lead them to the Promised Land.  It also made me think of myself and how I know that I make the same mistakes time and time again, but God still loves me.  Because He is patient.  But what I really liked from this part was the word for “kind.”  The Greek word, chresteunomai, means to show oneself useful or act benevolently.  Many people see this word and think about being “kind” or “nice” to someone, like being polite or maybe even just tolerating them.  In reality, it means to be useful and help them, not for your own gain, but for theirs.  So if you find yourself being “nice” and dismissively “tolerant” to someone, you are not loving them.  The question you need to ask yourself is, is what you are doing useful?  Or is it useless?

Now I think you have to be careful when applying this specific principal to your interactions with others, especially in today’s world where we all have differing viewpoints on big issues and we all think we’re right.  Many people think that they are being useful, helpful, and kind to someone that they find to be in the wrong, but often that is just not the case.  There are basically two fields of thought among believers as to how we approach someone with a different opinion than ours on what we consider to be a “big issue,” such as gay marriage, the confederate flag, keeping Torah, etc. etc. etc. (yeah, I went there!). 

The first one is where they kind of just “live and let live,” for lack of a better term.  A believer knows that someone believes differently than them, but they’re not going to talk about it.  They think that they will not be able to convince the other person of the error of their ways, so why bother?  Let’s just keep the peace and be friends.  If it ever comes up, then I’ll let them know where I stand…unless it’s not a convenient time…and if I can think of a good way to say it…but pretty much I just want to make sure we’re still friends because I think I can be a good influence in their life.  Right?

The second one is where they will absolutely let everyone know what they believe and why everyone else is wrong if they don’t agree.  And they will make sure they touch all bases and cover every subject.  Look, I just want you to know!  Because I care about you!  So just listen to me, read your Bible, and WHY DON’T YOU AGREE WITH ME YET?!  You are living in SIN, my friend!

Now I’m not saying that all believers fall into one of those two categories, but many of them do.  In my opinion, neither of them are very good examples of “love is patient and kind.”  While it is necessary to maintain friendships and not make people uncomfortable all the time, it is also important that your friends know who you are and what you stand for.  You may be the only representation of God that a lot of people ever see, so be a good representation.  If you just sit back and pretend like your differing viewpoints are not at all important, you are not being kind.  You are being selfish.  You are watching your friends go down in flames while keeping any knowledge that you have of God to yourself.  That is not making yourself useful or acting benevolently.  It is not kind, and it is not love.

At the same time, if you are constantly nagging people and pushing your beliefs on them, that is not love either.  We need to “speak the truth in love,” (Ephesians 4:15).  Mostly, we need to make sure people know where we stand (without being obnoxious!) and love them regardless of whether or not we agree with them.  Remember, love is patient.  And you are not always going to be using words to get your point across.  People are supposed to be able to know us by our fruit.  If they can’t see Who we serve in the way we conduct ourselves in everyday life, then we are doing it wrong.  There are definitely times to take a stand, and I think we all pretty much know them when we see them, but those times will mean nothing to those around us if we have not created a foundation of love with them.


If we do not have love, we are nothing.

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

6 Reasons Every Believer in Jesus Should Celebrate Passover

Passover is a beautiful holiday that, like all of the Biblical holidays, I feel gets overlooked by many of today's believers.  So I have come up with 6 reasons why I think every believer in Jesus should celebrate Passover.

1) It's Biblical
There are 7 holidays that God specifically tells us to celebrate (check out Leviticus 23) in the Bible, and Passover is the first one.  No matter where you stand on the whole Torah/Old Testament/Covenant to-keep-or-not-to-keep controversy, it is still clear that these holy days belong to no one but God Himself.  He created them as yearly reminders of who He is, what He's done, and what He will do.  Celebrating these holidays that God custom made for us can draw us close to Him and show us aspects of His character that we may otherwise overlook.

2) It's Mindblowing
Every year as my family celebrates Passover, it seems like I have some new revelation or realization that just blows me away.  In our home, we do a semi-traditional Passover Seder (order of the service/dinner) that uses many Biblically based traditions that the Jewish people have been using for centuries.  Every year I am just floored by how much I see Jesus in these Jewish traditions!  And every year I discover a little more of the deep intricacy of the whole Passover story and how God designed it so that Jesus would fit the bill perfectly when the time came for Him to be our Passover sacrifice.  It's something that you think you already know until you really start learning about it.

3) The Feast of Unleavened Bread
Many people think that Passover and Unleavened Bread are one and the same, but this is not true.  If you've heard anyone say anything about "Passover week," then they were mistaken because Passover isn't even really a full day.  The Passover occurs "between the evenings" (between sundown and complete darkness) on the 14th day of Aviv (the first month on the Hebrew calendar).  Unleavened bread is actually a separate holiday that starts on the next day, although we do start eating unleavened bread at Passover.  The Feast of Unleavened Bread ties right into Passover, especially for believers in Jesus.  Right after we celebrate not only God bringing His people out of bondage in Egypt, but also Him later bringing His people out of the bondage of sin through Jesus' sacrifice, we then celebrate 7 days of abstaining from leaven and cleansing our bodies and homes of it, symbolically cleansing our lives of sin.  Not only are we reminded that, because of Jesus, we can do this cleansing, we are also reminded that we have to do our part in turning from our sins in order to receive complete cleansing from them.

4) First Fruits
Passover is when we celebrate the death and sacrifice of Jesus, and First Fruits (a holiday that happens during the Feast of Unleavened Bread when the first fruits of the barley would be presented/given to God at the Tabernacle/Temple, and also when we start counting the omer -- 50 days until Shavuot/Pentecost) is when we celebrate Him rising from the dead, therefore becoming the first fruits of the resurrected.  First Fruits is celebrated on the day after the Sabbath (7th day of the week; a day of rest) after Unleavened Bread starts, so it's not always on the same day of the month, although it is always on the same day of the week every year.  In the year that Jesus was crucified on Passover, First Fruits fell on the 17th day of Aviv, which just happened to be the day that Jesus rose from the dead!  Coincidence?  I think not.

Most Christians celebrate this without realizing on Easter or Resurrection Sunday. Jesus' death is kind of celebrated on Good Friday, and sometimes Passover is celebrated or looked at on Maundy Thursday, which is great. I think everyone should celebrate all of it! If you celebrate Passover before First Fruits/Easter/Resurrection Sunday, then the latter holds so much more significance and is so much more sacred.

5) God Told Us To
We are told several times throughout the Torah (first 5 books of the Bible, also known as the Pentateuch and/or God's instructions for how we should live our lives) that we are to celebrate Passover from generation to generation forever.  And that was back when it was only to commemorate Him leading His people out of Egypt.  How much more should we keep it now that we are also celebrating His Son dying a horrible and undeserved death to free us from the bondage of sin?

6) Coconut Macaroons 
Okay, homemade coconut macaroons have got to be one of my favorite things to eat (and I make pretty good ones, if I do say so myself), but it's not just the macaroons that make Passover great, it's more the principle of them (and if you're allergic to coconut, I'm deeply sorry for your loss).  In case you're wondering, coconut macaroons are somewhat of a Passover tradition, since they're unleavened cookies, and we don't eat leavened things on Passover.  It's kind of hard to do desserts on Passover since most desserts have some sort of leaven in them, so coconut macaroons are quite popular (probably because they're so yummy!).  Anyway, back to the point.  Every Passover is so special and unique, such an enriching and powerful experience, that, like the macaroons, I long for it and look forward to it every year.  It's hard for me to imagine why anyone would not want to celebrate it, because I always get so much out of it.  It's definitely a time to draw near to our Creator and Savior, and in my opinion, it's something that everyone who believes in Jesus should do.

If you want to try celebrating is for yourself or with your family, I can point you to two Jesus centered haggadahs (orders of service to walk you through it) put together by friends of mine.

Our Passover Lamb: A Christian Haggadah is available on Amazon Prime for only $3.99, and
Broken for You is available for free download as an ebook, and is also available on Amazon Prime for $6.50 for a hard copy.