Jesus

What Passover Means to Christians

What Passover Means to Christians

Passover begins this evening.

It is one of the most significant Jewish Holidays, commemorating when the angels of God “passed over” the Hebrews as the firstborn children and animals of the Egyptians were killed—all because Pharoah would not set the Hebrews free as God commanded.

With this final plague on Egypt, Pharoah agreed to free the Hebrews so they might begin their journey to the promised land.

God instructed the Jews to commemorate the first Passover, when they had marked their houses with blood, alerting the angels to “pass over” their homes.

Christians draw parallels in their faith,

The Days After Easter...

The Days After Easter...

This week, I was listening to a minister on the radio who noted that in the days after His resurrection, Jesus did not appear to Pilate to tell him that he had been wrong in ordering His crucifixion.

Jesus did not appear to the Jewish leaders and chastise them for not believing and demanding His death.

He did not appear to the Roman soldiers who nailed Him on the cross.

Why?

When You Go Through the Deep Waters, I'll Be With You

When You Go Through the Deep Waters, I'll Be With You

Often, when those who do not believe in the God, we serve look at our lives, they question the very existence of God.

“If this God truly loves His people, why does He allow them the same pains and sufferings as those who don’t believe?”

Christians, too, have asked this question.

I have asked it myself.

But when I do,

The Gift of Galilee The Gift of the Galilean

The Gift of Galilee    The Gift of the Galilean

In 2018, my husband and I—on our own—took a trip to Israel.

I had always wanted to see the places of the Bible—Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Masada, Nazareth—and we did. We saw so many of those cities.

But what impressed me most was Galilee.

Going to Jerusalem is like visiting New York –busy, wall-to-wall people, tons of buses. Did I enjoy it? Yes—but it was a fast blur of heat, people, and historic sites.

Galilee, on the other hand, is soothing. It is slow-paced. It invites you to sit by the sea, take in Peter’s home, and see where Jesus preached his first message.

Drink—relax—reflect.

That is Galilee.