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[Darris McNeely] "NTBO” – what does it mean? It means the “Night to Be Observed”.
Where in the world do you get such an idea for a night to be observed? Well, you get
it from the book of Exodus. You get it during the story of Israel’s exodus out of Egypt.
We all know that story if we’ve watched the movie The Ten Commandments over the years
in our generation. We understand that the Israelites left Egyptian slavery under Moses
and they traveled to the Promised Land. But when they came out, the events that took place
at that time are packed with a great deal of teaching and meaning, spiritually, for
all of us. And for a Christian who sits down, as they will be very soon, to keep the Days
of Unleavened Bread, to keep the Passover observance, there is in Scripture an observance
that has become a tradition for Christians, to observe something about the night that
Israel left Egypt.
We can find it referenced in chapter 12 of Exodus, beginning in verse 37 through verse
42, where it talks about the exodus of the Israelites out of Egypt. After they traveled
from Rameses to Succoth, about 600,000 on foot there told. Others went with them, a
mixed multitude. It says they even baked unleavened cakes because they left in such a hurry out
of Egypt, they didn’t have the time to put in the leavening agents and in that, we get
the understanding and meaning toward the Days of Unleavened Bread. But they were put out
of Egypt – they did not wait, it says, neither had they prepared for themselves anything
to eat. And in verse 42 is the critical verse. It says, “It is a night to be much observed,
bringing them out of the land of Egypt. This is that night to be observed of all the children
of Israel in their generations.” It was a nighttime departure. And it was done in
a great deal of haste. They had to leave behind a lot of things, but they also took a lot
from the Egyptians. And it’s a very interesting concept because in this, there’s a margin
in many Bibles that say that on this night, there must be a vigil kept in honor of God
for their generations.
Today, Christians who observe this night at the beginning of the Days of Unleavened Bread
because it happens actually to be on the time of a Holy Day, the beginning of the Days of
Unleavened Bread, that begin that period. There is a gathering and a time for Christians
to come together to have a meal and to remember that God brought Israel out of Egypt, and
for a Christian today, it is – the meaning is that God, through His Son Jesus Christ,
Who is our Passover, has delivered us from sin, the penalty of sin. Egypt is a type of
sin. So there’s a great deal of symbolism in what is done here. The leavened bread represents
sin, but that’s a topic for another Daily that we will do. But on that night, they stopped
and they considered what God was doing in their life. And in every generation, every
annual commemoration of this from that point forward, they were to observe it and to remember
through a vigil, for a period of stopping and considering that God had delivered them
during that night.
A vigil. A vigil is a watching. Students of Scripture will know that throughout the New
Testament and the Old Testament, there is ample instruction for us to be watchful – to
be watchful of our spiritual lives, and of our spiritual condition. A Christian today
lives in a world that is not too friendly toward his beliefs, toward her actions and
wanting to obey God. We are in a very hostile world, much like Israel was in Egypt at that
time. And so, it is important that we stop and we consider our own lives and the world
we live in, and take note of where we are spiritually. As one begins the Holy Days – and
I think there is a note of – built into what God says here in Exodus 12 and a great
deal of teaching for us in the church, among Christians today, to observe this with an
understanding that we live in a world today that seeks to drain from us the vitality of
joy, hope, and our salvation. And we have to be on guard to guard against that. We live,
as Paul said in the book of Galatians, in an evil world that is bent upon our spiritual
destruction. No matter how affluent, wealthy, or even successful we might be, one who is
obeying God is under a great deal of stress.
To keep this night, the beginning of the Festival of Unleavened Bread, after keeping the Passover
service, is a very, very critical and important step to begin one’s observance of all of
God’s Holy Days. In part 2 of this, we’re going to come back and we’re going to talk
a little bit more about exactly how this can be done, and how a Christian today should
observe the Night to Be Much Observed.
That’s BT Daily. Join us next time.