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Text -- Exodus 12:1-50 (NET)

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Context
The Institution of the Passover
12:1 The Lord said to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, 12:2 “This month is to be your beginning of months; it will be your first month of the year. 12:3 Tell the whole community of Israel, ‘In the tenth day of this month they each must take a lamb for themselves according to their families– a lamb for each household. 12:4 If any household is too small for a lamb, the man and his next-door neighbor are to take a lamb according to the number of people– you will make your count for the lamb according to how much each one can eat. 12:5 Your lamb must be perfect, a male, one year old; you may take it from the sheep or from the goats. 12:6 You must care for it until the fourteenth day of this month, and then the whole community of Israel will kill it around sundown. 12:7 They will take some of the blood and put it on the two side posts and top of the doorframe of the houses where they will eat it. 12:8 They will eat the meat the same night; they will eat it roasted over the fire with bread made without yeast and with bitter herbs. 12:9 Do not eat it raw or boiled in water, but roast it over the fire with its head, its legs, and its entrails. 12:10 You must leave nothing until morning, but you must burn with fire whatever remains of it until morning. 12:11 This is how you are to eat it– dressed to travel, your sandals on your feet, and your staff in your hand. You are to eat it in haste. It is the Lord’s Passover. 12:12 I will pass through the land of Egypt in the same night, and I will attack all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, both of humans and of animals, and on all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgment. I am the Lord. 12:13 The blood will be a sign for you on the houses where you are, so that when I see the blood I will pass over you, and this plague will not fall on you to destroy you when I attack the land of Egypt. 12:14 This day will become a memorial for you, and you will celebrate it as a festival to the Lord– you will celebrate it perpetually as a lasting ordinance. 12:15 For seven days you must eat bread made without yeast. Surely on the first day you must put away yeast from your houses because anyone who eats bread made with yeast from the first day to the seventh day will be cut off from Israel. 12:16 On the first day there will be a holy convocation, and on the seventh day there will be a holy convocation for you. You must do no work of any kind on them, only what every person will eat– that alone may be prepared for you. 12:17 So you will keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread, because on this very day I brought your regiments out from the land of Egypt, and so you must keep this day perpetually as a lasting ordinance. 12:18 In the first month, from the fourteenth day of the month, in the evening, you will eat bread made without yeast until the twenty-first day of the month in the evening. 12:19 For seven days yeast must not be found in your houses, for whoever eats what is made with yeast– that person will be cut off from the community of Israel, whether a foreigner or one born in the land. 12:20 You will not eat anything made with yeast; in all the places where you live you must eat bread made without yeast.’” 12:21 Then Moses summoned all the elders of Israel, and told them, “Go and select for yourselves a lamb or young goat for your families, and kill the Passover animals. 12:22 Take a branch of hyssop, dip it in the blood that is in the basin, and apply to the top of the doorframe and the two side posts some of the blood that is in the basin. Not one of you is to go out the door of his house until morning. 12:23 For the Lord will pass through to strike Egypt, and when he sees the blood on the top of the doorframe and the two side posts, then the Lord will pass over the door, and he will not permit the destroyer to enter your houses to strike you. 12:24 You must observe this event as an ordinance for you and for your children forever. 12:25 When you enter the land that the Lord will give to you, just as he said, you must observe this ceremony. 12:26 When your children ask you, ‘What does this ceremony mean to you?’– 12:27 then you will say, ‘It is the sacrifice of the Lord’s Passover, when he passed over the houses of the Israelites in Egypt, when he struck Egypt and delivered our households.’” The people bowed down low to the ground, 12:28 and the Israelites went away and did exactly as the Lord had commanded Moses and Aaron.
The Deliverance from Egypt
12:29 It happened at midnight– the Lord attacked all the firstborn in the land of Egypt, from the firstborn of Pharaoh who sat on his throne to the firstborn of the captive who was in the prison, and all the firstborn of the cattle. 12:30 Pharaoh got up in the night, along with all his servants and all Egypt, and there was a great cry in Egypt, for there was no house in which there was not someone dead. 12:31 Pharaoh summoned Moses and Aaron in the night and said, “Get up, get out from among my people, both you and the Israelites! Go, serve the Lord as you have requested! 12:32 Also, take your flocks and your herds, just as you have requested, and leave. But bless me also.” 12:33 The Egyptians were urging the people on, in order to send them out of the land quickly, for they were saying, “We are all dead!” 12:34 So the people took their dough before the yeast was added, with their kneading troughs bound up in their clothing on their shoulders. 12:35 Now the Israelites had done as Moses told them– they had requested from the Egyptians silver and gold items and clothing. 12:36 The Lord gave the people favor in the sight of the Egyptians, and they gave them whatever they wanted, and so they plundered Egypt. 12:37 The Israelites journeyed from Rameses to Sukkoth. There were about 600,000 men on foot, plus their dependants. 12:38 A mixed multitude also went up with them, and flocks and herds– a very large number of cattle. 12:39 They baked cakes of bread without yeast using the dough they had brought from Egypt, for it was made without yeast– because they were thrust out of Egypt and were not able to delay, they could not prepare food for themselves either. 12:40 Now the length of time the Israelites lived in Egypt was 430 years. 12:41 At the end of the 430 years, on the very day, all the regiments of the Lord went out of the land of Egypt. 12:42 It was a night of vigil for the Lord to bring them out from the land of Egypt, and so on this night all Israel is to keep the vigil to the Lord for generations to come.
Participation in the Passover
12:43 The Lord said to Moses and Aaron, “This is the ordinance of the Passover. No foreigner may share in eating it. 12:44 But everyone’s servant who is bought for money, after you have circumcised him, may eat it. 12:45 A foreigner and a hired worker must not eat it. 12:46 It must be eaten in one house; you must not bring any of the meat outside the house, and you must not break a bone of it. 12:47 The whole community of Israel must observe it. 12:48 “When a foreigner lives with you and wants to observe the Passover to the Lord, all his males must be circumcised, and then he may approach and observe it, and he will be like one who is born in the land– but no uncircumcised person may eat of it. 12:49 The same law will apply to the person who is native-born and to the foreigner who lives among you.” 12:50 So all the Israelites did exactly as the Lord commanded Moses and Aaron.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Aaron a son of Amram; brother of Moses,son of Amram (Kohath Levi); patriarch of Israel's priests,the clan or priestly line founded by Aaron
 · Egypt descendants of Mizraim
 · Egyptians descendants of Mizraim
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel
 · Moses a son of Amram; the Levite who led Israel out of Egypt and gave them The Law of Moses,a Levite who led Israel out of Egypt and gave them the law
 · Pharaoh the king who ruled Egypt when Moses was born,the title of the king who ruled Egypt in Abraham's time,the title of the king who ruled Egypt in Joseph's time,the title of the king who ruled Egypt when Moses was born,the title of the king who refused to let Israel leave Egypt,the title of the king of Egypt whose daughter Solomon married,the title of the king who ruled Egypt in the time of Isaiah,the title Egypt's ruler just before Moses' time
 · Rameses a town in the east Nile delta, from where the Exodus began (IBD),a district in the east Nile delta, allotted to the Israelites
 · Succoth a place where the Israelites camped as they left Egypt,a town of Gad in the Jordan Valley opposite Shechem


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Passover | Moses | Blood | GENESIS, 1-2 | Lies and Deceits | Quotations and Allusions | Sin | EXODUS, THE BOOK OF, 2 | EXODUS, THE BOOK OF, 1 | Judgments | LORD'S SUPPER; (EUCHARIST) | Egyptians | EXODUS, THE BOOK OF, 3-4 | TALMUD | RANSOM | Israel | Month | Symbols and Similitudes | LAW OF MOSES | Sacrifice | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Exo 12:1 Heb “saying.”

NET Notes: Exo 12:2 B. Jacob (Exodus, 294-95) shows that the intent of the passage was not to make this month in the spring the New Year – that was in the autumn. R...

NET Notes: Exo 12:3 Heb “house” (also at the beginning of the following verse).

NET Notes: Exo 12:4 The reference is normally taken to mean whatever each person could eat. B. Jacob (Exodus, 299) suggests, however, that the reference may not be to eac...

NET Notes: Exo 12:5 Because a choice is being given in this last clause, the imperfect tense nuance of permission should be used. They must have a perfect animal, but it ...

NET Notes: Exo 12:6 Heb “between the two evenings” or “between the two settings” (בֵּין הָעַ...

NET Notes: Exo 12:8 Bread made without yeast could be baked quickly, not requiring time for the use of a leavening ingredient to make the dough rise. In Deut 16:3 the unl...

NET Notes: Exo 12:9 This ruling was to prevent their eating it just softened by the fire or partially roasted as differing customs might prescribe or allow.

NET Notes: Exo 12:11 The meaning of פֶּסַח (pesakh) is debated. (1) Some have tried to connect it to the Hebrew verb with the same radi...

NET Notes: Exo 12:12 The phrase אֶעֱשֶׂה שְׁפָטִים (’e’es...

NET Notes: Exo 12:13 For additional discussions, see W. H. Elder, “The Passover,” RevExp 74 (1977): 511-22; E. Nutz, “The Passover,” BV 12 (1978): ...

NET Notes: Exo 12:14 Two expressions show that this celebration was to be kept perpetually: the line has “for your generations, [as] a statute forever.” “...

NET Notes: Exo 12:15 In Lev 20:3, 5-6, God speaks of himself as cutting off a person from among the Israelites. The rabbis mentioned premature death and childlessness as p...

NET Notes: Exo 12:16 Heb “all/every work will not be done.” The word refers primarily to the work of one’s occupation. B. Jacob (Exodus, 322) explains th...

NET Notes: Exo 12:17 See Exod 12:14.

NET Notes: Exo 12:18 “month” has been supplied.

NET Notes: Exo 12:19 Or “alien”; or “stranger.”

NET Notes: Exo 12:21 The word “animals” is added to avoid giving the impression in English that the Passover festival itself is the object of “kill.̶...

NET Notes: Exo 12:22 Heb “and you, you shall not go out, a man from the door of his house.” This construction puts stress on prohibiting absolutely everyone fr...

NET Notes: Exo 12:23 “you” has been supplied.

NET Notes: Exo 12:25 The verb used here and at the beginning of v. 24 is שָׁמַר (shamar); it can be translated “watch, keep, prot...

NET Notes: Exo 12:26 Heb “what is this service to you?”

NET Notes: Exo 12:27 The two verbs form a verbal hendiadys: “and the people bowed down and they worshiped.” The words are synonymous, and so one is taken as th...

NET Notes: Exo 12:28 Heb “went away and did as the Lord had commanded Moses and Aaron, so they did.” The final phrase “so they did,” which is somew...

NET Notes: Exo 12:29 The verse begins with the temporal indicator וַיְהִי (vayÿhi), often translated “and it came to p...

NET Notes: Exo 12:30 Or so it seemed. One need not push this description to complete literalness. The reference would be limited to houses that actually had firstborn peop...

NET Notes: Exo 12:31 It appears from this clause that Pharaoh has given up attempting to impose restrictions as he had earlier. With the severe judgment on him for his pre...

NET Notes: Exo 12:32 Pharaoh probably meant that they should bless him also when they were sacrificing to Yahweh in their religious festival – after all, he might re...

NET Notes: Exo 12:33 The phrase uses two construct infinitives in a hendiadys, the first infinitive becoming the modifier.

NET Notes: Exo 12:34 The imperfect tense after the adverb טֶרֶם (terem) is to be treated as a preterite: “before it was leavened,”...

NET Notes: Exo 12:35 Heb “from Egypt.” Here the Hebrew text uses the name of the country to represent the inhabitants (a figure known as metonymy).

NET Notes: Exo 12:36 See B. Jacob, “The Gifts of the Egyptians; A Critical Commentary,” Journal of Reformed Judaism 27 (1980): 59-69.

NET Notes: Exo 12:37 For more on this word see 10:10 and 24.

NET Notes: Exo 12:38 Heb “and very much cattle.”

NET Notes: Exo 12:39 The verb is עָשׂוּ (’asu, “they made”); here, with a potential nuance, it is rendered “the...

NET Notes: Exo 12:40 Here as well some scholars work with the number 430 to try to reduce the stay in Egypt for the bondage. Some argue that if the number included the tim...

NET Notes: Exo 12:41 This military term is used elsewhere in Exodus (e.g., 6:26; 7:4; 12:17, 50), but here the Israelites are called “the regiments of the Lord.̶...

NET Notes: Exo 12:42 Heb “this night is for Yahweh a vigil for all Israelites for their generations.”

NET Notes: Exo 12:43 This is the partitive use of the bet (ב) preposition, expressing that the action extends to something and includes the idea of participation in ...

NET Notes: Exo 12:48 אֶזְרָח (’ezrakh) refers to the native-born individual, the native Israelite as opposed to the “...

NET Notes: Exo 12:49 Heb “one law will be to.”

NET Notes: Exo 12:50 Heb “did as the Lord had commanded Moses and Aaron, so they did.” The final phrase “so they did,” which is somewhat redundant ...

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