Hag
HaMatzah
The Feast of Unleavened Bread
This Feast is the
fifteenth day of the month of Nisan, which is the day following Passover (Pesach). It is a
seven-day
festival to the L-rd (Leviticus [Vayikra] 23:6-7; Exodus [Shemot] 12:7-8,14-17). On the
fifteenth of Nisan and for the
next seven days, G-d forbade the people to have any leavened bread in their houses.
The festival of Unleavened Bread can be found in Exodus (Shemot) 12:14-17, as it is
written:
Now this day will be a memorial to you, and you shall celebrate it as a feast to the Lord;
throughout your generations you
are to celebrate it as a permanent ordinance. Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread,
but on the first day you shall remove
leaven from your houses; for whoever eats anything leavened from the first day until the
seventh day, that person shall be cut
off from Israel. And on the first day you shall have a holy assembly, and another holy
assembly on the seventh day; no work at
all shall be done on them, except what must be eaten by every person, that alone may be
prepared by you. You shall also
observe the Feast of Unleavened Bread, for on this very day I brought your hosts out of
the land of Egypt; therefore you shall
observe this day throughout your generations as a permanent ordinance (Exodus [Shemot]
12:14-17 NAS).
The Book of Exodus (Shemot), chapter 12, describes the Egyptian Passover. After the lamb
was killed, the blood was to be put
on the doorposts. The lamb was to be roasted in fire and eaten with matzah (unleavened
bread) and bitter herbs (Exodus [Shemot]
12:7-8).
Purging Leaven From the House (Bedikat HaMetz)
G-d gave a ceremony of searching and removing leaven from the house prior to the festival
of Unleavened Bread in preparation
for the festival. In Hebrew, this ceremony is called Bedikat HaMetz, which means "the
search for leaven" The ceremony is as
follows:
The preparation for searching and removing the leaven (Bedikat HaMetz) from the house
actually begins before Passover
(Pesach). First, the wife thoroughly cleans the house to remove all leaven (HaMetz) from
it. In the Bible, leaven (HaMetz) is
symbolic of sin.
Spiritual Application (Halacha). Spiritually, the believers in the Messiah Yeshua are the
house of G-d (Hebrews 3:6; 1 Peter
2:5; 1 Timothy 3:15; Ephesians 2:19). Leaven (sin) is to be cleaned out of our house,
which is our body (1 Corinthians 3:16-17;
6:19-20; 2 Corinthians 6:15-18).
In cleaning the house, the wife is instructed to purposely leave ten small pieces of
leaven (bread) in the house. Then the father
takes the children, along with a candle, a wooden spoon, a feather, and a piece of linen
cloth, and searches through the house for the
ten pieces of leaven. By nightfall on the day before Passover (Pesach), a final and
comprehensive search is performed. At this time,
the house is completely dark except for the candles. Once the father finds the leaven
(bread), he sets the candle down by the leaven
and lays the wooden spoon beside the leaven. Then he uses the feather to sweep the leaven
onto the spoon. Without touching the
leaven, he takes the feather, spoon, and leaven, wraps them in a linen cloth, and casts
them out of the door of the house. The next
morning (the fourteenth of Nisan), he goes into the synagogue and puts the linen cloth and
its contents into a fire to be burned.
Spiritual Application (Halacha). Spiritually, we are to cleanse the leaven (sin) from our
houses (lives) by allowing the Holy
Spirit (Ruach HaKodesh) to reveal to us, through the knowledge of Yeshua and the
Scriptures, the sin that is in our lives. It is only
through G-d's Word that we are able to identify sin in our lives as it is written in Psalm
(Tehillim) 119:105, "Thy word is a lamp unto
my feet, and a light unto my path." So the spiritual understanding of the candle is
that it represents the Word of G-d. The feather
represents the Holy Spirit (Ruach HaKodesh). Even though we have the Word of G-d, we need
the Spirit of G-d (Ruach
HaKodesh) to illuminate the entire Bible to us, including the Torah and the Tanach (1
Corinthians 2:11-14).
Messianic Fulfillment. The spoon represents the tree that Yeshua died upon (Deuteronomy
[Devarim 21:22-23). The leaven
(HaMetz) (sin) was swept on the spoon (the tree) as part of the ceremony. Likewise, our
sin was swept or cast upon Yeshua (2
Corinthians 5:21) when Yeshua died upon the tree. The leaven (Yeshua upon the tree) was
then wrapped in linen and Yeshua was
cast out of His house (His body) and went to hell, which is a place of burning (Luke
16:19-24). Thus He fulfilled the part of the
ceremony where the father takes the linen cloth and its contents and casts it into the
fire to be burned.
The Fifteenth of Nisan -- Purging Out of Sin
The fifteenth of Nisan (Hag HaMatzah) marks the beginning of a seven-day feast period when
Israel was to eat bread without
leaven (sin) in remembrance of their baking Unleavened bread in their haste to escape
Egypt. The primary theme of this feast is the
purging out of leaven (sin). Historically, there are two notable events that happened on
this day.
1.The Exodus journey beginning from Egypt (Exodus [Shemot] 12:41). In Deuteronomy
(Devarim) 16:3, the bread is
referred to as "the bread of affliction."
2.The burial of Yeshua after His crucifixion, who is the Bread of Life (John [Yochanan]
6:35). In fact, the place of
Yeshua's birth, Bethlehem, comes from two Hebrew words, beit and lechem. Be it means
"house" and lechem means "bread."
So, Bethlehem means house of bread. Therefore, Yeshua, who is the Bread of G-d, was born
at a place called the house of
bread.
The festivals are fixed appointments (mo'ed) of G-d specifying what He will perform and
the exact time He will perform it. The
Jews had to hurry to put Yeshua's body in the ground because the sabbath was drawing near.
This sabbath was a high sabbath and
the first day of Unleavened Bread (Nisan 15). This can be found in (John [Yochanan]
19:31). This would mean that Yeshua died on
the fourteenth of Nisan, the day of Passover. Yeshua was in the sepulcher the day
following His crucifixion, which was the fifteenth
of Nisan, the first day of Unleavened Bread.
The Messianic Understanding of the Matzah in the Passover Seder
One of the 15 steps during the Passover Seder is a step called Yachatz. Yachatz is when
the middle of the three matzot is
broken into two. During the Passover Seder, there is a bag called the matzatosh which
contains three pieces of matzot. The middle
piece of matzot is removed, broken, wrapped in linen, and buried. This piece of matzah is
the afikomen. During this part of the
service, the afikomen was removed from sight (this represented Yeshua being buried) and it
remained hidden until later in the
service. Yeshua is the bread that was buried because He is the Bread of Life who came down
from Heaven (John [Yochanan]
6:35). Yeshua was removed from between the two thieves who were crucified with Him
(Matthew [Mattityahu] 27:38), wrapped in
linen, and buried in the earth (Matthew 27:59-60).
Toward the end of the Passover Seder, the twelfth step to the service is called Tzafun.
During Tzafun, the afikomen that was
previously buried is redeemed and ransomed. At this point in the service, the matzah,
previously characterized as the bread of
affliction, is now transformed and redeemed. This is a perfect picture of Yeshua, who
fulfilled the role of the suffering Messiah
known as Messiah ben Yosef. He suffered affliction while dying on the tree, but was later
redeemed when He was resurrected by
G-d the Father. In the Passover Seder service, the afikomen is redeemed by the children.
The children who find the buried
afikomen receives a gift. This gift is known as "the promise of the father".
Likewise, when G-d resurrected Yeshua after He was
buried in the earth, those who believed upon Him by faith (emunah) are given gifts by G-d.
When Yeshua ascended to Heaven, He
gave gifts to men (Ephesians 4:7-8). These gifts included righteousness (Romans 5:17-18),
eternal life (Romans 6:23), grace
(Romans 5:12,14-15), faith (Ephesians 2:8-9), and other spiritual gifts (1 Corinthians
12:1,4). Some other gifts include wisdom,
knowledge, healing, the working of miracles, prophecy, the discerning of spirits, tongues,
and interpretation of tongues (1 Corinthians
12:8-11), in addition to the gifts of helps and administration (l Corinthians 12:28).
The Feast of Unleavened Bread in the Bible
1.The Feast of Unleavened Bread was so much a part of Passover (Pesach) that the names of
Passover and
Unleavened Bread were used interchangeably or almost synonymously (Luke 22:1).
2.The feast was to be kept seven days (Exodus [Shemot] 12:15-19). The number seven is the
biblical number for
completion or fullness. The believer who keeps this feast is to keep it fully unto the
L-rd and set himself aside completely to
Him. The Feast of Unleavened Bread speaks of complete separation from all things that are
leavened (sinful) and feeding
upon Yeshua, who is the believer's bread (John [Yochanan] 6:32-36,38).
3.The Feast of Unleavened Bread (Hag HaMatzah) is a high sabbath day. A high sabbath in
Hebrew is called a
shabbaton. During Passover, there is an extra sabbath besides the weekly sabbath. These
sabbaths are called high sabbaths.
The high sabbath of Unleavened Bread can be seen in John 19:31.
4.Unleavened bread is used for consecration and separation. It is also anointed with oil.
The believers in the Messiah
Yeshua are to be consecrated and separated to do the work G-d has called us to do and to
live a life that is holy to Him. If
we do this, the anointing of the Holy Spirit (Ruach HaKodesh) of G-d will rest upon our
lives.
a) The bread represents consecration (Leviticus [Vayikra] 8:1-2,26-27;
Exodus [Shemot] 29:2-23).
b) It was included in the sacred vow of separation of the Nazarites
(Numbers [Bamidbar] 6:1-21).
c) It was the food for the priests in the meal and peace offering
(Leviticus [Vayikra] 2:1,4,14-16; 6:14-18; 7:11-12).
d) It marked Israel's divine separation from Egypt's (the world's) life of slavery and
bondage (Exodus
[Shemot] 12:17,30-34).
e) All leaven was to be put away (Exodus [Shemot] 12:15,19-20). When leaven or yeast is
placed in an
unleavened batch of dough, the leaven puffs up the dough. Likewise, when we allow sin into
our lives, it will puff us up in
pride and arrogance.
In the Bible, G-d referred to the leaven of different groups of people. These are listed
as follows:
1.The leaven of Herod (Mark 8:14-15; 6:14-18; Matthew [Mattityahu] 2:7-12).
2.The leaven of the Pharisees (Mark 8:15; Matthew [Mattityahu] 16:5-12; 23:1-3; Luke
11:37-44; 12:1.
3.The leaven of the Sadducees (Matthew [Mattityahu] 16:6-12). The Sadducees did not
believe in the supernatural. They
denied the existence of the Spirit of G-d, angels, and the resurrection (Mark 12:18; Acts
23:6-8).
4.The leaven at Corinth. The leaven at Corinth was sensuality, chiefly fornication (1
Corinthians 4:17-21; 5:1-13;
6:1,9-11,13,16-18; 8:1; 13:4; 2 Corinthians 12:20-21).
How to Keep the Feast
Spiritual Application (Halacha). Spiritually, the feast is kept in sincerity and truth.
Sincerity involves purity and serving G-d
with a pure heart. It involves putting away the sin in our lives, and separating ourselves
from all evil that has a corrupting influence in
the life of the believer in Yeshua. Historically, Israel learned that keeping the feast
meant a complete separation from Egypt's religion,
bondage, food, and slavery, as well as its worldly glory, wisdom, and splendor.
The children of Israel took the dough before it was leavened because they could not tarry
in Egypt. There was no time to let the
leaven get in and work up the dough (Exodus [Shemot] 12:34,39). As believers, we are to
flee the world's ways and philosophies
that are contrary to the Word of G-d. Sincerity (1 Corinthians 5:7-8) involves purity and
sanctification, which means holiness and
separation. The Bible uses water and washing to instruct us concerning sanctification and
separation (Joshua [Yehoshua] 24:14;
Ephesians 5:26; 6:24; Philippians 1:10; 1 Peter [Kefa] 2:2). To sanctify means to make
holy, to purify, or to consecrate. The
believers are sanctified by obeying the entire Word of G-d, including the Torah and the
Tanach (John 17:17,19; Acts 20:32; 2
Chronicles 30:15; 35:1,6; Exodus [Shemot] 19:10,14; 28:39-41; Leviticus [Vayikra] 8:30;
11:44; 20:7; Hebrews 10:10,14; 1
Corinthians 1:2).
In First Corinthians 6:11, sanctification is connected to washing (Acts 22:16).
Historically, after Israel celebrated the Passover,
they were immersed (washed) in the water of the Red Sea (1 Corinthians 10:1-2). Likewise,
after we accept the Messiah into our
lives, we must immerse ourselves in studying the Bible and, by so doing, enable the
knowledge of the Word of G-d to transform and
change our lives.
this article was excerpted from Ed Chumney's book The Seven Festivals of the Messiah