LCN Article
Lessons from Four Passovers

March / April 2010

John H. Ogwyn (1949-2005)

Our celebration of God’s annual festivals plays a major part in helping us really understand His great plan. That plan begins with the Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread, which come in the early spring. While the importance of the final Passover season of Christ’s life is easily recognized, few focus on how significant were each of the four Passovers during His ministry. Did you know, for instance, that Jesus’ public ministry both began and ended in Jerusalem during Passover seasons three years apart?

During His lifetime, Jesus Christ observed all of God’s Festivals, and often traveled to Jerusalem to keep them. His words and actions at various Festival seasons are recorded throughout the Gospels, particularly in John. However, of all the Festivals, it is only the Passover season for which the Bible records all four that occurred during Jesus’ ministry.

This record of the four Passovers during Christ’s ministry serves several purposes. It provides a time frame for His ministry, and helps us harmonize the four Gospel accounts. But, even more importantly, it records Jesus Christ’s words and actions at each of these Passover seasons! Have you ever wondered what sermon Jesus would give if He were speaking on a particular Holy Day? Thanks to Scripture, we can actually know some of what He did preach during each of the four Passover seasons of His ministry! It is vitally important that we understand what Jesus Christ was teaching!

In this article, we will examine each of the four Passovers of Jesus’ ministry, and will see the lessons that He taught during the Passover.

Identifying Four Passovers

How do we know that there were four Passovers during Christ’s ministry? No single Gospel writer records all four.

From the prophecy in Daniel 9:25, we know that there would be exactly 483 years from the decree to rebuild Jerusalem until the appearance of the Messiah. We arrive at this figure by using the day-for-a-year principle (Numbers 14:34; Ezekiel 4:6), after we have calculated the number of prophetic “days” that comprise the 69 “weeks” (69 x 7 = 483). Ezra 7:7–26 locates the issuing of the decree in 457bc, in the seventh year of King Artaxerxes. Shortly before the fall festivals of 457bc, Ezra arrived in Jerusalem and read the decree. During the fall of 27ad—483 years later—Jesus came to where John the Baptist was baptizing. John, who had begun preaching and baptizing six months earlier, proclaimed Jesus as the promised Messiah (John 1:29). At Jesus’ baptism, God the Father supernaturally confirmed Jesus’ Messiahship when a dove descended upon Jesus and a voice spoke from heaven (Matthew 3:16–17).

Jesus’ ministry lasted three-and-a-half years, from His baptism in the fall of 27ad until His crucifixion in the spring of 31ad. He was “cut off” in the midst of a prophetic “week,” as we learn from Daniel 9:26–27. During His ministry, there were four Passovers. Soon after His baptism, Jesus went into the wilderness for 40 days of fasting and prayer, during which He resisted Satan’s temptation. After returning from the wilderness, Jesus began working with His disciples. In Galilee, while attending the wedding feast at Cana, He performed His first miraculous sign (John 2:11). Soon afterward, He and His disciples traveled to Jerusalem for the first Passover of His public ministry—in 28ad.

Fulfilling the prophecy of Malachi 3:1 that the Lord would appear as “Messenger of the Covenant” and would come “suddenly” to His temple, Jesus arrived in Jerusalem shortly before the Passover celebration. Seeing how a corrupt and venal priesthood had commercialized God’s House, He wove leather cords into a whip, and strode boldly into the outer courtyard of the temple complex. Quickly, He opened the gates of the corrals and pens, and drove out the cattle and sheep that were destined to be sold at inflated prices to Passover pilgrims seeking temple sacrifices. In the process, He threw over the tables of the moneychangers, and told them to leave!

Needless to say, this provoked quite a stir among the priests and religious leaders. Even so, the miraculous signs that He performed in the temple, as He taught the crowds that gathered around Him, were enough to convince these religious leaders that He was not some self-appointed prophet, but was indeed sent from God (John 3:1–2). This Passover season of 28ad marked the dramatic opening of Christ’s ministry.

What took place during the second Passover season of Jesus’ ministry? Mark 2:23–28 (there are parallel accounts in Matthew 12 and Luke 6) tells the story of Jesus and His disciples walking through the grain fields, and the disciples plucking heads of grain to eat. From the arrangement of the story, especially in Mark’s and Luke’s accounts, it is clear that this occurred very early in Jesus’ ministry. Luke, alone, makes clear the exact timing of this event, telling us that it occurred on “the second Sabbath after the first” (Luke 6:1). What does that mean? The Greek term is sabbato deuteroproto. This refers to the second Sabbath of first rank; in other words, the last Holy Day of the Days of Unleavened Bread. Luke, therefore, places this event in the second Passover season of Jesus’ ministry, 29ad.

What do we know about the Passover season of 30ad—one year before Jesus’ crucifixion? Matthew 14:13–33 recounts Jesus’ miraculously feeding five thousand men and their families, and His walking across the water that night to join His disciples in the boat during a storm. There are parallel accounts in Mark 6, Luke 9 and John 6, but only from John’s account do we learn that the feeding of the 5,000 took place immediately before the Passover (John 6:4). John is also the only Gospel writer to record what Jesus taught the people whom He had miraculously fed. He records the sermon that Jesus gave just a short while later, in a synagogue in Capernaum, to many of these same people (John 6:24–59).

Scripture describes Jesus’ final Passover season—31ad, when He was crucified—in great detail. All four Gospel accounts describe the time from Jesus’ arrival in Bethany (a small suburb of Jerusalem) about a week before the Passover, up through His crucifixion and resurrection. Almost one-third of the Gospel text is devoted to the events surrounding Jesus’ final Passover.

Now, we will look at each of these Passover seasons in more detail.

Passover 28ad: For God So Loved the World

Thousands of people from Judea and the surrounding area had gone out to the wilderness near the Jordan River to hear John the Baptist. From the time that John had begun preaching a message of repentance, his reputation had spread. He baptized many, and great crowds hung on his every word. When John’s reputation was at its height, Jesus of Nazareth came to see him and requested baptism. After the baptism, John acknowledged Jesus as “the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world” (John 1:29) and as the Son of God (v. 34). Soon afterward, Jesus left for the Judean desert, and disappeared from public view for several months.

When He walked into the temple complex on a bright spring day just before Passover in 28ad, Jesus very quickly became the talk of Jerusalem. He challenged the religious establishment by cleansing the temple and driving out the moneychangers, and by doing miracles in open view of temple crowds (John 2:23). Even many religious leaders acknowledged privately that this teacher from Galilee must be someone sent by God (John 3:1–2). On one evening during the Days of Unleavened Bread that year, Nicodemus (a Pharisee and member of the Sanhedrin) came privately to Jesus, who gave him an important message about salvation—explaining much of the real meaning of the Passover ceremony God had instituted more than 14 centuries earlier.

Jesus told Nicodemus that in order to inherit the Kingdom of God, he would have to be “born again.” This new birth could only come from above—from God—not from below, as in physical birth. It would be a birth of the Spirit—an actual entrance into the spiritual realm. Further, Jesus went on to explain that He—the Son of Man—would have to be lifted up, as had been prefigured many centuries before when Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness to stop a plague (John 3:14).

However, the real meaning of the Passover is summarized in one of the best-known verses in the entire Bible: “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16). The message of the Passover is, first and foremost, a message about God’s love—and about the redemption He offers us because of His great love. This was a major theme of Jesus’ message during the first Passover season of His ministry.

Passover 29ad: Mercy Rather Than Sacrifice

The Pharisees became outraged when they saw Jesus and His disciples emerge from the footpath and come into town. The disciples were chewing on kernels of fresh grain they had plucked from barley stalks that bordered the path where they had walked. Although the Torah explicitly allows travelers to pluck fruit or grain to satisfy their hunger as they pass by a field (Deuteronomy 23:24–25), the Pharisees objected to the disciples doing so on the Sabbath. Though Matthew and Mark also recount the incident, only Luke records that it occurred during the Passover season—on the last Holy Day of Unleavened Bread (Luke 6:1).

Jesus undoubtedly knew what the Pharisees’ reaction would be, so He purposely allowed His disciples to do something that would provide a setting for a very important lesson. During the Days of Unleavened Bread, we focus on righteousness and putting away sin. The Pharisees’ approach was to think themselves more righteous by adding human rules to God’s law. In fact, in their quest to achieve righteousness, they became “more ‘righteous’ than God”—and actually lost sight of what God really sought. Jesus defended His disciples’ behavior by quoting examples from Scripture, and by asking the Pharisees to explain the meaning of those examples. On the Last Day of Unleavened Bread, through those illustrations from Scripture, Jesus explained what God truly wants of us.

One of Jesus’ main examples was from 1 Samuel 21, where David and his men came to the Tabernacle at Nob. They were tired and hungry, and David asked Ahimelech the priest for something to eat. The priest explained that they had no ordinary food to give him, only showbread—the holy bread that had just been removed from the table in the Holy Place. According to the law, this bread, once it had been presented to God as an offering, was not to be used for ordinary secular use. Since the bread was consecrated, it was to be treated with respect even after removal from the table of the Lord. As such, it was to be eaten only by the priests who were serving the Tabernacle (Leviticus 24:5– 9). Yet Ahimelech understood something that the Pharisees simply did not grasp; he understood the spirit of the law, and how to apply the principles of God’s word in making a judgment with which God would be pleased. Since God allowed the priests to consume the bread as food, Ahimelech realized that God would not be displeased if the bread were shared with the hungry David.

Jesus then quoted Hosea 6:6: “I desire mercy and not sacrifice.” Had they really understood what that verse means, Jesus told them, they “would not have condemned the guiltless” (Matthew 12:7). The people of Hosea’s day had substituted mere ritual formality in place of a genuine life of heartfelt obedience. Jesus knew that most of the Pharisees of His day had fallen into the same trap. They did not understand the true righteousness God seeks in our lives. Understanding this concept properly is a vital lesson for the Days of Unleavened Bread.

Passover 30ad: Feed on the Bread of Life

One notable miracle of Jesus’ ministry was His feeding 5,000 men (and also the women and children present) with five barley loaves and two small fish. After the disciples had left by boat, Jesus dismissed the crowd and withdrew to the hills for a time of private prayer. Late that night, the disciples’ boat was still at sea, caught in strong winds. Jesus came down to the now-empty shoreline, then began to walk on the water to cross the lake and catch up to His disciples! Though at first frightened as they saw Him approaching, the disciples were then overwhelmed with a sense of who He really was—the very Son of God (Matthew 14:25–33). John tells us that this occurred immediately before the Passover (John 6:4), and is the only writer to recount what happened on the following day (vv. 22–25). Many whom Jesus had fed found Him in Capernaum, and He began to teach them.

John records the discourse that Jesus gave in the synagogue to many of those whom He had miraculously fed the day before. Taking advantage of their desire for physical food, He began to teach about the importance of seeking spiritual food. Jesus declared to them that He was indeed the “bread of life” that came down from heaven (vv. 33–35). He emphasized that He was the “living bread” and that the only way to receive eternal life is to believe in Him (v. 40). Believing in Christ involves truly “feeding” on Him—that is, seeking to live as He lived (v. 57).

His audience was thinking about bread. They had just eaten bread that had been miraculously provided, and they were entering the Days of Unleavened Bread, when they would be very conscious of avoiding leavened products and eating unleavened bread throughout the seven days of the festival. Jesus took advantage of their thoughts of physical bread, to teach them about the true bread. When you really study and meditate upon Jesus’ message as recorded in John 6, you realize that the unleavened bread we eat throughout the festival points us toward Jesus Christ. Just as we sustain our physical lives by feeding on physical food, we sustain our spiritual lives by feeding on Jesus Christ. We are to be nourished and fed by Him, day by day.

Passover 31ad: In Remembrance of Me

Almost one-third of the Gospel text is devoted to the events surrounding Christ’s final Passover. These events begin with His arrival in Bethany about a week before Passover (John 12:1), and a detailed account is given of Jesus’ words and deeds over the days following. We read of His encounters with the Pharisees and other religious leaders, and His triumphal entry into Jerusalem. We also have the account of His final Passover meal with the disciples, His subsequent arrest and crucifixion and, finally, His resurrection from the dead and appearance to the disciples. All the previous Passover celebrations pointed toward these events of Jesus’ final Passover.

By dying on the Passover, Jesus Christ fulfilled His role as the Lamb of God who came to take away the sins of the world. By being resurrected at the end of the Sabbath after three days and three nights in the tomb, then being presented to the Father the next morning, Jesus fulfilled His role as the wavesheaf offering, becoming the “firstfruits of them that slept” (1 Corinthians 15:20, KJV).

In addition to fulfilling the Old Testament types that pointed to His role as our Savior, Christ also used His final Passover to teach His disciples many lessons. He taught them the importance of serving and helping others (Luke 22:24–27, John 13:1–17). Not only were they to serve one another; they were to love one another with the same kind of love with which Christ Himself loved (John 15:12–13). Jesus told them about the Father’s great love for them (John 16:26–27) and of the promised Comforter—the Holy Spirit—that He and the Father would send them (John 14:16–17; 16:7).

In an upper room in Jerusalem, gathered together with His disciples after sunset at the start of Abib 14, Jesus celebrated the final Passover of His human life. On that night, a transition was made from the Old Testament observance to the New Testament Passover. At the close of the traditional meal of roasted lamb and bitter herbs, Jesus took some unleavened bread from the table, blessed it, broke it into small pieces, and told the disciples to eat it as a symbol of His body broken for us. Then He took a cup of wine, blessed it, and told them to all drink of it, as a symbol of His blood, shed for us. “Do this in remembrance of Me,” He told them (Luke 22:19).

As you prepare for the Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread, think about the lessons that Jesus Christ taught us by word and deed throughout His ministry. When you gather at the Passover service to share with other brethren in the symbols that “proclaim the Lord’s death till He comes” (1 Corinthians 11:26), be sure to realize deeply that this commemoration is being done in remembrance of Him.