We can find many Christians who celebrate Passover or Pesach as the most important day of the year. But there can also be found many Christians who do prefer to keep to the heathen traditional feasts of light and fertility (Christmas and Easter). For those Christians and others, it is not bad to have a closer look at the 14th of Nisan. The man which title gave the name to a religion (Christ > Christians) was himself a devout Jew who kept to the Jewish feasts which were ordered by the Only One God.
Too many Christians forget this Jewish connection and have forgotten the Law of God or His Words of which celebration was never to be left out. As such not only Jews should have to observe when the Israelites were passed over by the wrath of the Most High Elohim Hashem Jehovah, as He moved through Egypt slaying the firstborn of each family. Even before the first Passover occurred, Moses ordered that the day would be kept as a memorial and a feast (Exodus 12:14).Let us all remember.
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- Day of remembrance coming near
- Another way looking at a language #4 Ancient times
- Self inflicted misery #5 A prophet without a hedge around him
- The Advent of the saviour to Roman oppression
- Seven days of Passover
- On the first day for matzah
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- Jesus memorial
- Observance of a day to Remember
- A new exodus and offering of a Lamb
- In what way were sacrifices “shadows”?
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- Why did Jesus say he wouldn’t drink wine again until the kingdom when he ate and drank other things? (Mark 14:25)
- Children ate the OT passover so why not NT bread and wine?
- Deliverance and establishement of a theocracy
- 14 Nisan a day to remember #1 Inception
- 14 Nisan a day to remember #2 Time of Jesus
- 14 Nisan a day to remember #3 Before the Passover-feast
- 14 Nisan a day to remember #4 A Lamb slain
- 14 Nisan a day to remember #5 The Day to celebrate
- Around the feast of Unleavened Bread
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- The Song of The Lamb #7 Revelation 15
- Servant of his Father
- For the Will of Him who is greater than Jesus
- A Messiah to die
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- Death of Christ on the day of preparation
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- Misleading Pictures
- A time for everything
- 2013 Lifestyle, religiously and spiritualy
- Fixing our attention
- Control your destiny or somebody else will
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- A secret to be revealed
- Your Sins Are Forgiven
- Slave for people and God
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- Holidays, holy days and traditions
- A Holy week in remembrance of the Blood of life
- Peter Cottontail and a Bunny laying Eastereggs
- Bread and Wine
- Around the feast of Unleavened Bread
- The son of David and the first day of the feast of unleavened bread
- Deliverance and establishment of a theocracy
- Focus on outward appearances
- Fraternal week-end at Easter in Paris
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Passover (Pesach in Hebrew) is the most widely celebrated Jewish Holiday. It begins on the 15th of the Hebrew month of Nisan and lasts for either seven or eight days depending upon location and religious orientation. In Israel, all sects of Judaism celebrate Passover for seven days with one Seder (Passover ritual feast and in Hebrew means “order”) on the first night, while in the Diaspora (communities outside of Israel), traditional Jews celebrate it for eight days with two Seders held on both the first and second nights. This year Passover will commence at sundown on Monday, April 14th with the first full day celebrated on Tuesday the 15th. Passover is a Biblical Holiday, which commemorates the story of the Exodus—G-d freeing the Israelites from Egyptian slavery and bondage; establishing the Covenant with them as a people not just…
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