#Passover

דער קערפער פֿון השםdukepaaron@babka.social
2026-01-29

"Rooted in his personal experience and perspectives, this #play explores memory, identity, and ritual through #spokenword, #dance, and #music, using the metaphor of the #seder to question how we remember, tell, and live with our history.

Seder confronts inherited stories as #Jewish tradition meets contemporary artistic expression. Thought-provoking, tender, sometimes angry and poignant, it wraps personal feeling into wider global narratives and contemporary social contexts.

At the heart of Seder is the ritual of the #Passover meal. In #Jewishtradition, the seder is an act of collective memory – the retelling of the #Exodus story; in #Kammerling’s work, it becomes a space to examine fractured histories and the weight of inherited trauma."

jewishnews.co.uk/why-adam-kamm

Dr. Folke Bernadotte 🇪🇺folkebernadotte25
2026-01-14

Text: In the synagogue, this passage is read as the Haftarah on the last day of Passover.

📅 Next Reading: April 6, 2026 (Diaspora) / April 5, 2026 (Israel).

But the spiritual preparation begins now, in the month of Shevat (January/February). It’s the season of the "Shoot from the stump of Jesse"—the awakening of new life from old roots.


youtu.be/ALx_ocpRAAc?si=ikKF2E

Dining and Cookingdc@vive.im
2026-01-09

Classic Italian Jewish Recipe for Passover | Holiday

Buon Appetito! A great cookbook does not just give the reader narrow-focus, step-by-step instructions for how to prepare a food. A great cookbook expands its focus to sho…
#dining #cooking #diet #food #Italianholidayrecipes #holidayrecipes #Italia #Italian #italianholidayrecipes #italiano #italy #louisfinkelman #Passover #passover2023 #Passoverrecipes
diningandcooking.com/2460631/c

Scott LaPierrescottlapierre
2025-12-29

Jesus the Passover Lamb was examined and declared innocent—yet punished so the guilty could go free. Exodus 12 meets Luke 23.

Blog: scottlapierre.org/jesus-the-pa

Sermon: youtu.be/vdg-G3GEejo

Samaritanism

Samaritanism is an Abrahamic monotheistic, ethnic religion. It comprises the collective spiritual, cultural, & legal traditions of the Samaritan people.

Often preferring to be called Israelite Samaritans, who originated from the Hebrews & Israelites. They began to emerge as a relatively distinct group after the Kingdom of Israel was conquered by the Neo-Assyrian Empire during the Iron Age. The Neo-Assyrian Empire was the 4th, & penultimate, stage of ancient Assyrian history.

Central to their continuity as an Indigenous Heritage in the Holy Land is keeping the Patriarchal & Mosaic covenant as specified in the Samaritan Torah. Samaritans believe this is the original & unchanged version of the Pentateuch (which is the first 5 books of the Hebrew & Christian bible) since Moses & the Israelites at Mount Sinai.

The Abisha Scroll is traditionally held by the community to be the oldest existing scroll written by Abisha, son of Aaron the priest, around 3,000 years ago based on living tradition. However, Jewish & Christian theologians have made attempts to dispute this claim which proved unsatisfactory.

Judaism claims Samaritanism developed right alongside their own religion. Samaritanism asserts itself as the true preserved form of the monotheistic faith that the Israelites kept under Moses. Samaritan belief also holds that the Israelites’ original holy site was Mount Gerizim, near Nablus, the State of Palestine (West Bank).

They also believe that Jerusalem only attained importance under Israelite dissenters who had followed Eli (In the Book of Samuel, Eli was a priest & judge of the Israelites in the city of Shiloh) to the city of Shiloh.

The Israelites who remained at Mount Gerizim would become the Samaritans in the Kingdom of Judah. Mount Gerizim is revered by Samaritans as the location where the Binding of Isaac occurred. In comparison to the Jewish belief that it occurred at Jerusalem’s Temple Mount.

Today there are only about 900 registered communal members. This puts Samaritanism as 1 of the smallest ethnoreligious groups globally in the Abrahamic faiths. Samaritans believe that this is a prophecy fulfilled from the scriptures: “You’ll be left few in number.”

Though they hope for a future time when a prophet like Moses known as the “Taheb” (Restorer) will perform 3 signs, namely the jar of manna, the staff of Moses, & Cherubim, or the Golden Candlestick.

This time period they believe is when an era of Divine Favor would return, & the hidden tabernacle of Moses would miraculously be revealed for the Israelite people & Mount Gerizim is restored to its former glory.

Samaritans trace their history, as a separate entity, to a period soon after the Israelites’ arrival into the “Promised Land.” Samaritan historiography traces the schism to High Priest Eli leaving Mount Gerizim, where stood the 1st Israelite altar in Canaan, & building a competing altar in nearby Shiloh.

The dissenting group of Israelites who followed Eli to Shiloh would be the ones who, in later years, would head south to settle in Jerusalem (the Jews). Whereas the Israelites who stayed on Mount Gerizim, in Samaria, would become known as the Samaritans.

Genetic studies in 2004 suggest that Samaritans’ lineages trace back to a common ancestor with Jews in the paternally-inherited Jewish high priesthood (Cohanim) temporally near to the period of the Assyrian conquest of the Kingdom of Israel. They’re probably descendants of the historical Israelite population. The Cohanim refers to the Jewish priestly class, male descendants of Aaron the priest.

The Hasmonean king, John Hyrcanus, destroyed the Mount Gerizim Temple & brought Samaria under his control around 120 BCE. This led to a long-lasting sense of mutual hostility between the Jews & Samaritans.

From this point, the Samaritans likely sought to consciously distance themselves from their Judean brethren. Both peoples came to see the Samaritan faith as a religion distinct from Judaism. By the time of Jesus, Samaritans & Jews deeply disparaged one another, as shown by Jesus’ Parable of the Good Samaritan.

The main beliefs of Samaritanism are:

  • There’s 1 God, Yahweh, the same God recognized by the Jewish prophets.
  • The Torah is the only true holy book & was given by God to Moses. The Torah was created before the creation of the world & whoever believes in it is assured a part in the world to come. The Torah’s status in Samaritanism as the only holy book causes them to reject the Oral Torah, the Talmud, & all the prophets & scriptures, except for a version of the Book of Joshua (which they don’t hold as Scripture), whose book in the Samaritan community is significantly different from the Book of Joshua in the Jewish “Bible.” Moses is considered to be the last of the line of prophets.
  • Mount Gerizim, not Jerusalem, is the 1 true sanctuary chosen by God. The Samaritans don’t recognize the sanctity of Jerusalem & don’t recognize the Temple Mount, claiming instead that Mount Gerizim was the place where the Binding of Isaac took place.
  • The Apocalypse, called “the day of vengeance,” will be the end of days. When an entity called the Taheb (basically the Jewish Messiah equal) that comes from the tribe of Joseph will come, be a prophet like Moses for 40 years & bring about the return of all the Israelites, following which the dead will be resurrected. The Tahib will then discover the tent of Moses’ Tabernacle on Mount Gerizim, & will be buried next to Joseph when he dies.

The Samaritans have retained the institution of a high priesthood & the practice of slaughtering & eating lambs on Passover Eve. They celebrated Pesach, Shavuot, & Sukkot. But they use a different method from that used in mainstream Judaism in order to determine the dates annually.

For example, Yom Teru’ah (the biblical name for Rosh Hashanah), at the beginning of Tishrei (This is the 1st month of the civil year & the 7th month of the ecclesiastical year in the Hebrew calendar.), isn’t considered a New Year as it is in Rabbinic Judaism.

Their Sabbath is observed weekly by the Samaritan community every week from Friday to Saturday, beginning & ending at sundown. For 24 hours, the families gather together to celebrate the rest day: all electricity with the exception of minimal lighting (kept on the entire day) in the house is disconnected, no work is done, & neither cooking nor driving is allowed.

The time is devoted to worship which consists of 7 prayer services, reading the weekly Torah portion, spending quality time with family, taking meals, rest & sleep, & visiting other members of the community.

Passover is particularly important in the Samaritan community, climaxing with the sacrifice of up to 40 sheep.

The Counting of the Omar remains relatively unchanged. The Counting of the Omar is a ritual in Judaism that consists of a verbal counting of each of the 49 days between the holidays of Passover & Shavuot. However, the week before Shavuot is a unique festival celebrating the continued commitment Samaritanism has maintained since the time of Moses.

During Sukkot, the Sukkah (the temporary hut built for use during Sukkot) is built INSIDE of houses, instead of OUTSIDE like mainstream Judaism. This Samaritan tradition is traced back to the persecution of the Samaritans during the Byzantine Empire.

The roof of the Samaritan Sukkah is decorated with citrus fruits & branches of palm, myrtle, & willow trees. This is in accordance with the Samaritan interpretation of the 4 species designated in the Torah for the holiday. The 4 species are 4 plants (the etrog, lulav, hadass, & aravah) mentioned in the Torah as being relevant to the Jewish holiday of Sukkot.

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#120BCE #4Species #Aaron #Abisha #AbishaScroll #AbrahamicFaiths #AncientAssyria #Apoclypse #Aravah #BindingOfIsaac #BookOfJoshua #BookOfSamuel #ByzantineEmpire #Canaan #Cherubim #Christians #CitrusFruits #Cohanim #CountingOfTheOmar #Eli #Etrog #GoldenCandlestick #Hadass #Hasmonean #HebrewCalendar #Hebrews #HighPriestEli #HighPriesthood #IndigenousPeoples #IronAge #IsraeliteSamaritans #Israelites #Jerusalem #Jesus #Jewish #JewishProphets #Jews #Joseph #Judah #KingJohnHyrcanus #KingdomOfIsrael #Lulav #Manna #Messiah #MosaicCovenant #Moses #MountGerizim #MountSinai #Myrtle #Nablus #NeoAssyrianEmpire #OralTorah #Palestine #ParableOfTheGoodSamaritan #Passover #PatriarchalCovenant #Pentateuch #Priest #PromisedLand #RabbinicJudaism #RoshHashanah #Sabbath #SamaritanTorah #Samaritanism #Shavuot #Shiloh #StaffOfMoses #Sukkah #Sukkot #Tabernacle #Taheb #Talmud #TempleMount #Tishrei #Torah #WestBank #Willow #Yahweh #YomTeruAh

Yes I'm Antifa. Why Aren't U?MugsysRapSheet
2025-12-14

@Lilith111
You DO know started at sundown, right? 🤔

2025-12-06

Kosher le-Pesah in Hebrew; trans. Kosher for Passover. In the best Passover tradition! Goodman's Passover matzos square ca. 1963]
1 print (poster) : lithograph, color ; 116 x 77 cm. | Poster showing an enormous matzo.

#Kosherle-Pesah #Hebrew #Goodman #English #Matzos #Pesach #lithographs #advertisements #passover #matzos #posters #american #color #photopgraphy #LibraryOfCongress

loc.gov/pictures/item/20046751

The image features a poster with Hebrew text at the top and English below it, promoting Goodman's Matzos as part of Passover tradition. The central visual is an oversized depiction of matzo bread, showcasing its texture and pattern typical to this type of unleavened flatbread commonly consumed during Jewish holidays like Pesach (Passover). Inset within the poster are images of a specific brand of matzo: "Goodman's Matzos," with packaging displaying additional product details. The design utilizes bold typography for both languages, emphasizing readability against the backdrop which appears to be textured and beige in color, possibly mimicking the appearance of actual matzo bread.
דער קערפער פֿון השםdukepaaron@babka.social
2025-12-04

"The show, “#Art of Freedom: The Life and Work of #ArthurSzyk” (pronounced Shik), includes dozens of #artworks that have been rarely or never displayed. The #exhibit is a major step in a growing revival following decades of obscurity after heady celebrity during #WorldWarII and ignominy, though no prosecution, during the #RedScare of the 1950s.

The exhibit also portrays a lesser-known side of the stridently #antifascist #Szyk — as an avid popularizer of the #AmericanRevolution nearly a century before Ken Burns.

“I am but a #Jew, praying in art,” Szyk wrote in a dedication to one of his most famous #illustrated works, a #Passover #Haggadah.

Sara Softness, the show’s #curator, said it aimed to portray “an #artist rooted in his #Jewish identity, but not exclusively — a person of the world..."

nytimes.com/2025/12/04/arts/de

SFO Museum's Instagram Botinstagram@collection.sfomuseum.org
2025-11-16
"Directors Joe Stankus and Ashley Connor enlist close relatives to portray fictional versions of themselves in an onscreen story that reveals recognizable family dynamics and draws viewers into a world that feels honest, personal, and familiar." This was posted to our Instagram account on April 19, 2019 – https://millsfield.sfomuseum.org/instagram/1880151901/
Assembly BethesdaAssembly_Bethesda
2025-11-09

What Would Jesus Do… Flipping tables on corrupt merchants, scattering coins & driving out animals. Is not out of the range of possibilities.

assemblybethesda.com/?p=3155&p

2025-11-04

@bytebro

More than a thousand, for some degree of "worked" if we ignore people using different calendars's ideas of when the vernal equinox was.

And it is mostly just ordinary #astronomy. Three-body astronomy, but basically just luni-solar calculation.

You only really get into religion when you start asking why a mass-slaughter of animals and humans had to be celebrated at regular multiple lunar month intervals for millennia.

#Easter #Passover #Pascha #Exodus

Intentional Faithmhoggin@pastorhogg.net
2025-11-03

When Righteousness Is Rejected

A Day in the Life of Jesus

Scripture Reading: Matthew 26:1–5; Mark 14:1–2; Luke 22:1–2

The shadows were lengthening over Jerusalem. The city’s streets were crowded with pilgrims preparing for the Passover, a festival that celebrated God’s deliverance of His people from Egypt. Yet, as the lamps were being lit for worship, darkness gathered in secret places. In an upper chamber not far from the Temple, the most learned and religious men of Israel were plotting to kill the One who had come to fulfill the very law they claimed to defend.

Matthew writes with almost painful simplicity: “When Jesus had finished all these sayings, he said to his disciples, ‘You know that after two days the Passover is coming, and the Son of Man will be delivered up to be crucified.’” (Matthew 26:1–2, ESV). Jesus spoke openly of His death—not as a tragedy but as a divine appointment. Even as His enemies conspired, He remained obedient to His Father’s redemptive plan.

Meanwhile, at the home of Caiaphas, the high priest, the powerful were scheming in whispers. Their goal was not justice but preservation—of power, position, and appearance. The irony is thick: men sworn to uphold God’s law were secretly plotting to break the most sacred of commands—“You shall not murder.” (Exodus 20:13). As Wiersbe observes, “Religion without righteousness becomes the most dangerous force in the world, because it gives moral cover to evil intent.”

Caiaphas, a political appointee of Rome, had learned how to keep both the empire and the people in uneasy balance. John 11:49–50 reveals his calculating heart: “It is better for you that one man die for the people than that the whole nation perish.” He saw Jesus as a political problem to be eliminated, not a Savior to be embraced. Yet his cynical words would unwittingly prophesy the truth—Jesus would die for the nation, and indeed, for the world.

 

Easy to Justify

The article reminds us that it is frighteningly easy to justify sin. Caiaphas and his council cloaked their intent in national security and religious duty. They convinced themselves that ending Jesus’ ministry would prevent Roman retaliation and preserve peace. But sin always wears a disguise. What they called “protection of the nation” was in truth envy, fear, and self-preservation.

How often do we do the same? We justify our anger because we were “only defending ourselves.” We rationalize gossip because “people deserve to know the truth.” We ignore the poor because “we’re not responsible for their choices.” In each case, we find a way to make selfishness sound reasonable. That’s what sin does—it twists the light into shadow and calls it wisdom.

Jesus, by contrast, never justified anything sinful. He faced evil with open eyes and unflinching truth. He knew that obedience would lead to the cross, yet He never tried to bargain His way around it. Where Caiaphas calculated survival, Jesus chose surrender. Where the council plotted in secrecy, Jesus prepared His disciples in honesty. The difference is night and day—literally and spiritually.

 

The Heart of the Plot

The meeting at Caiaphas’ house reveals more than a conspiracy—it exposes the human heart. Religion can polish our image but cannot cleanse our motives. The Pharisees and priests had memorized Scripture, performed sacrifices, and fasted publicly, but their hearts were far from God. They believed they were serving righteousness, when in truth they were opposing the Righteous One Himself.

William Barclay once wrote, “The tragedy of the religious man is that he can be so preoccupied with the externals of religion that he forgets the living God.” That was the tragedy of Caiaphas and his council. Their outward piety had become a cover for inward rebellion.

It is worth asking: how do I respond when God’s truth threatens my comfort or challenges my control? Like Caiaphas, do I retreat into rationalization, or do I surrender to transformation? The crucifixion plot didn’t begin in a courtroom—it began in hearts unwilling to yield.

 

God’s Plan Prevails

Even in this dark moment, the light of divine purpose shines through. The priests agreed, “Not during the festival, lest there be an uproar among the people.” (Matthew 26:5). Yet God’s timing would overrule their schemes. Jesus would indeed be crucified during the Passover, not in spite of their plan but through it, so that He might become the true Passover Lamb. What they meant for evil, God intended for redemption.

David Guzik notes: “The religious leaders thought they were in control, but in truth, they were mere instruments in the sovereign plan of God.” That remains true today. Human rebellion can never frustrate divine mercy. The cross is proof that God can transform the most unjust act into the greatest display of grace.

When we look at Caiaphas and his peers, we are tempted to shake our heads in disbelief. How could religious leaders plot the death of their own Messiah? Yet the sobering truth is that the same seeds of pride and fear exist in every human heart. We, too, are capable of rejecting God’s truth when it threatens our desires. That is why repentance must become not a one-time act but a lifelong posture.

 

Walking with Jesus Today

As I meditate on this passage, I find myself humbled. Jesus knew exactly what awaited Him—betrayal, arrest, humiliation, and the cross. Yet He did not resist the Father’s will. His courage was born of perfect love, not ambition or pride. To follow Him means learning to trust even when the path leads through shadows.

The religious leaders plotted in fear; Jesus acted in faith. They tried to preserve their status; He poured Himself out for others. They sought control; He offered surrender. And therein lies the contrast that defines true discipleship. When we choose humility over pride, forgiveness over resentment, and truth over convenience, we align ourselves with the heart of Christ.

John Stott once said, “The essence of sin is man substituting himself for God, while the essence of salvation is God substituting Himself for man.” Caiaphas and the council embodied the first; Jesus embodied the second. That is why, even in this grim chapter, there is hope. Because where sin conspires, grace prevails.

 

Personal Reflection

As the day unfolds, pause to ask: Where am I tempted to justify sin rather than confess it? The Holy Spirit’s conviction is never cruel—it is compassionate. He reveals truth not to shame us but to free us. The invitation today is simple yet searching: stop rationalizing, and start repenting. Stop defending self-interest, and start defending what is right.

Like those who prepared the Passover lambs in Jerusalem, we too must prepare our hearts for sacrifice—not of another, but of self. When we lay down pride and self-justification, we find the peace that only obedience can bring. The story of the plot against Jesus reminds us that even our worst intentions cannot derail the grace of God. His mercy runs deeper than our rebellion.

 

May the Lord Jesus Christ teach you honesty of heart.
May the Holy Spirit grant you courage to name your sin and grace to release it.
And may the Father draw you nearer through repentance, so that your life bears witness to His mercy in every thought, word, and deed.

Walk humbly, for Christ has walked before you.

 

Related Reading

For further reflection on this passage and Jesus’ obedience amid betrayal, visit
The Gospel Coalition – Jesus and the Passover: God’s Sovereign Plan of Redemption

 

FEEL FREE TO COMMENT SHARE SUBSCRIBE

 

#ADayInTheLifeOfJesus #Caiaphas #dailyDevotion #justificationOfSin #Matthew2615 #obedienceOfChrist #Passover #religiousLeadersPlotToKillJesus #Repentance #spiritualReflection

2025-10-22

@georgepenney My #Mommy used to make a lovely sponge cake for #Passover. Now I want sponge cake.

Nimona RESISTSvalen1@mstdn.social
2025-10-14

Just made popovers and realized: there's no leavening. The Jews could have made this instead of matzah.

#passover

2025-08-30

Dayenu is Hebrew for "it would have been sufficient." This Hebrew song is traditionally sung at the Jewish holiday of Passover, at the Seder. Our Jewish Dayenu design is great all year, but especially awesome for Passover!

Also available in pink lettering and on other products

Buy here: a.co/d/4wqSjAk

#BuyIntoArt #Dayenu #AmYisraelChai #Jewish #JewishGifts #Passover #Pesach

Dayenu is shown in blue lettering on a V neck T shirt.
Venice church of Christvenicechurch
2025-08-21

created , and therefore understands how children are naturally . They will ask questions about things they are seeing and doing.

If Israel observed the , their children would have opportunity to ask about what they were seeing and doing, and they would come to understand how YHWH delivered their ancestors and thus themselves.

If Israel did not observe the Passover well, the children would have no reason to ask, and might never know.

Alive in Christaliveinchristaz
2025-06-27

Explore the Old Testament Religious Year and Liturgical Year Divisions! Discover Jewish Sabbath observances, major festivals in Jerusalem, and the life, crucifixion, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Join us on this historical journey!

Alive in Christaliveinchristaz
2025-06-26

Experience the transformative power of Pentecost! Witness the apostles and believers in Jerusalem receive the Holy Spirit, speaking in different languages. Revisit Old Testament festivals like Passover and Pentecost, when Jewish people gathered in Jerusalem. Join us for a spiritual journey!

Praveen YadavPraveen_Yadav343
2025-06-08

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