As we approach the Easter season again, I want to share our passion for celebrating Passover as Christians. There is such a richness to becoming part of a service that has been observed for thousands of years, and a meal that Jesus Himself sat down to eat.
It has normally been an elaborate part of early spring for us. We have low tables we set up, long tablecloths to iron, hand stamping placecards with the kids, hosting 10 guests, and planning a meal and driving all over our scarcely Jewish area to gather what is needed.
But some years the month is too busy for all of those details and it’s important to slow down, simplify, and remember what our intention was the first place.
One of my favorite years of Passover celebration was our simplest. With too many major things going on, we decided to observe a simple dinner with just our children on Resurrection Sunday. We had “missed” the Passover date.
We spent the week with mid-day and evening readings of Jesus’ last week and it was a good culmination, tying in His work of redemption for us, which is also characterized in the rescue of God’s people through Moses in the Exodus.
There are several things I appreciate about this evening, observing the Seder and its part in our lives.
Like my role as a woman lighting the Passover candles, giving light to the table, just as Jesus was born of a woman, giving light to the world.
The toughness we learned last year of Why the youngest is chosen to answer the 4 questions when it would be easier to chose the oldest. So they are not left out of being taught! This exercise is such a good reminder and we patiently sit through the halted reading, giggles and un-serious answers.
And the humbling ritual of my husband washing our feet as Jesus did for His disciples. It’s awkward and freezing and hard not to giggle, and we come to the table with relatively clean feet, but it’s sobering to think of Jesus stooped to wash the dust of this world off the feet of His closest friends that did not understand why and did not fully appreciate what He was doing. We enter into that moment with Him as our children too do not fully understand what work we are about.
But the moments where they do step into their roles certainly bless us.
I appreciate the small moments like my 7 year old putting on a wrinkled white button up shirt and tucking it in, to look “special” for the occasion. The joy in hearing him read the responses for the first time since he has learned this year to read. Watching the boys’ excitement for the chocolate coins (which I bought instead of making this year, cutting corners everywhere I could!) given in exchange for the hidden matzah. And ending the evening on the floor as we took requests for hymns and my 3 year old chose the “Grow, grow, grow” song.
It wasn’t big or perfect or the best thing I have ever organized but it was special for us. And its meaning and significance has easily replaced other distracting traditions of this season. I pray it will be something my children will grow to understand and always remember.
“Truly, we can say Hallelujah for the great redemption which God
has wrought on our behalf.”
-from the Haggadah
–
We lift the cup of Praise because He has made us His people!
To explore other Passover ideas check out our Free curriculum:
- 8 Days of Christian Passover: Jewish History as Christian Prophecy
- Christian Passover: Easter Jesse Tree
- 8 Easy Passover Easter Jesse Tree Display Ideas
I love these ideas, I have been looking for some more Easter traditions to do with my kids!
We did a study of Biblical holidays one year as part of our homeschool and it was so enlightening. Such important lessons embedded in the practices.
I believe more Christians should celebrate the Jewish feasts, not just Passover. What a wonderful, continual reminder of God’s power and love if we did. Not to mention the symbolism of everything. Very impactful. I just wrote about Purim on my blog, coincidentally. Thank you for a beautiful, inspiring article.
I’m trying to find a simple script for our attempt at a Christian Seder. We have a long script that has been difficult to execute with our little ones. (Age 6 and 7) Would you share yours?
Thank you. Love your info.
Amy