Purpose of the Pesach/2

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Purpose of the Pesach

Exegetical Approaches

Protection Ritual

The Pesach served to protect the Israelites from the plague wrought on the Egyptian firstborns. Commentators differ in their understandings of the character of this ritual:

Apotropaic Blood Rite

Redemption of the Firstborn (פדיון בכור)

The Paschal lambs served as an exchange for the lives of the Israelite firstborns, and their blood symbolized the consecration of the Israelites to God's worship.

Petitionary Offering

The Pesach was brought as a request for Hashem's protection, and the sheep represented the Israelites' dependence on Hashem to be their shepherd.

Demonstrative Act Against Idolatry

The Pesach was an educational/religious act which declared the Israelites' loyalty to Hashem and His supremacy over the Egyptian gods. This approach subdivides regarding the intended audience.

Educating the Israelites

The Pesach was intended to transform the Israelites into a God-fearing nation that rejected Egyptian idolatry.

Proclaiming to the Egyptians

The public sacrifice of the sheep served to teach the Egyptians the worthlessness of idolatry, as their gods were disgraced and proven incapable of defending themselves.

Thanksgiving Sacrifice