Salvation in the Old Testament - Episode 414
Blood on the doorposts. A roasted lamb consumed entirely. A meal eaten standing up, staff in hand, sandals on feet. And seven days without leaven anywhere in the house.
The Passover wasn’t just a memorial dinner—it was a prophetic picture of salvation itself. Gabriel and Sonny unpack the four requirements God gave Israel for the original Passover night and reveal what they teach us about faith, urgency, commitment, and holiness.
In this episode, we explore:
Blood on the Doorway
• Why the mark mattered: demonstrating you’re on God’s side
• The requirement wasn’t just belief—it was visible identification
• The uncomfortable truth: salvation requires taking a side
Eat the Whole Lamb (or Burn the Leftovers)
• Why nothing could remain until morning
• What this reveals about the imminence of God’s salvation
• “Burn the ships”: when you believe God is about to save you, you hold nothing back
• The call to total commitment in light of coming deliverance
• How half-hearted participation wasn’t an option
Eat in Haste
• Dressed for travel: sandals on, staff in hand, belt fastened
• Why they ate standing up, ready to leave at a moment’s notice
• Living like you actually believe what God promised
• From the moment the meal begins, they’re already living as free people
• The connection between faith and action: belief changes behavior immediately
Remove the Leaven
• Seven days of unleavened bread: thorough removal, not token gesture
• The preparation required before God’s salvation: dealing with sin
• How holiness and deliverance are inseparably linked
• Why you can’t participate in God’s rescue while clinging to what enslaves you
From the blood that protected Israel’s firstborn to the urgency that proved their faith to the purity God required before deliverance—discover how every detail of the Passover meal points forward to the salvation God offers through Christ.
The Passover wasn’t passive. It required action: marking your home, consuming everything, living ready, removing sin. Faith that saves is faith that obeys—immediately, completely, publicly.
Join this father-son duo as they explore what the original Passover reveals about the nature of salvation and the kind of response God expects from His people.