The Seudah (communion) - Passover Fulfilled
SCRIPTURE EVIDENCE
The Se’udah is directly derived from Passover, and was instituted by Messiah Yeshua. He took that part of the Seder following the Passover meal, and gave new meaning to the Aphikomen(the matza) and the cup of Blessing (the third cup).
In all these passages, He made it clear that the true spiritual meaning of Passover is found in Him as the Antitype(the Fulfiller of the type). When He said ‘Do this in remembrance of Me’ He was referring to the Se’udah, not the whole Seder. Following His resurrection and ascension, the earliest believers gathered regularly to celebrate Se’udah and to share a meal together. Both are referred to as the ‘breaking of bread’; in the following passages, Scripture is careful to distinguish between the two:
Summarizing all the above texts, while the literal Passover ceremony was observed once a year, the spiritual counterpart(the Se’udah) is often observed. Just as the Passover ceremony differed from the inaugural one in Egypt, so our observance of the Se’udah differs from the inaugural one in the Upper Room. There is thus a similarity as to the substance, but a dissimilarity in the observance. HISTORICAL EVIDENCE Dr. Ray Pritz in his study of the earliest Jewish believers, entitled Nazarene Jewish Christianity, describes Messianic beliefs and practices from the second temple period until their disappearance in the Fourth Century. He writes(page 109), ‘The Nazarenes, as Jews, continued to observe certain aspects of Mosaic Law, including circumcision and the Sabbath, and it was this which brought about their exclusion from the Church.’ The historian Pliny the Younger, who wrote in the first century C.E. described the practices of Jewish and gentile believers in Pontus and Bithynia. Amongst other matters, he mentions their habit of meeting before daybreak to worship and to break bread. TYPE AND FULFILMENT Messiah chose the matza not the lamb, as the type of His body given for us. This is in keeping with His declaration that He is the Bread of Life. Under the First covenant, the weekly shewbread was the symbol of this Bread. Every Sabbath it was renewed, and the replaced loaves were eaten by the priests. As they partook weekly of it, so may we partake weekly of Messiah in the Se’udah, although we may choose the frequency of the Se’udah. Passover is the anniversary of three events: the Akkedah in Genesis 22, the Exodus in Exodus 12, and the Last Supper in the Brit HaChadasha. The themes are Sacrifice and Redemption. The type leads to the Antitype (see 1 Corinthians 15:46-49)..... A final word: If centuries later an idolatrous church misappropriated and misused the Se’udah shall we renounce its regular celebration? Shall we refuse to eat that which is good because sinful men spoil it? |