When God was about to lead the people of Israel out of Egypt, they were told to bring a lamb into their home on the 10th day of the first month (Exodus 12:3) before killing it on the 14th at twilight (Exodus 12:6).
A lamb in the home?
When the Passover is defined as a national feast in Leviticus 23 and Deuteronomy 16, there is no mention of any requirement to keep the
lamb beforehand. Was this just a once-off requirement as part of building up for the first Passover? If it was an ongoing rule, people who were having to travel to Jerusalem from all over Israel would need to either' bring the lamb with them or arrive in Jerusalem early enough to get a lamb by that date. There is no mention of this happening when the people entered the land with Joshua (Joshua 4:19) on the 10th day of the first month. All that is mentioned is that the
Passover was kept on the 14th day (Joshua 5:10) after the people were circumcised (as was required for any to take the Passover (Exodus 12:48)). Likewise, it seems that the selection of the lamb on the 10th day was not observed for the Passover in either the time of Hezekiah or the time of Josiah. It also seems reasonable to conclude that this was not wrong, but we can’t be sure.
The initial Passover seems to have been very much family-based. Families chose the
lamb, kept it in their house, killed it, cooked it and ate it. Originally the Passover was not spoken of as an offering, but later references to Passover offerings seem to refer to the lamb or young goat that was killed for the Passover (Deuteronomy 16:2, 5-6) and possibly other animals as well. The meat was still to be eaten with unleavened bread and bitter herbs (Exodus 12:8; Numbers 9:11).
The indications are that, later, the killing was done by priests, possibly
after checking that the lamb was flawless. Josiah gave orders that Levites should kill the lambs in the temple and give the blood to the priests (2 Chronicles 35:11) before skinning them. At that time, bulls were also provided in large numbers as burnt offerings, and it seems as if they were being offered at the same time – as seems to fit with the description in Deuteronomy 16:2 which refers to offerings from the herd[1]. The Passover lamb would then be roasted entire.
No bones were allowed to be broken or any parts removed (Exodus 12:46; Numbers 9:12).
The first Passover
Some other restrictions were placed on the people on that first Passover that are not mentioned elsewhere for subsequent Passovers:
- blood was to be painted with a branch of hyssop on the doorposts and lintels (Exodus 12:7, 22);
- the meat was not to be taken outside (Exodus
12:46);
- the people were to be dressed ready to leave (Exodus 12:11) and were not to go outside until morning[2] (Exodus 12:22).
Start or end?
One question that arises is when the lamb was to be killed. The time was twilight (apparently the Hebrew means “between the evenings” in Exodus 12:6 and Leviticus 23:5), but if the Hebrew day started at sunset, which end of the fourteenth day was
the lamb killed – the start or end of the day? Based on the need to eat it with unleavened bread and the fact that the Feast of Unleavened Bread started on the fifteenth, it seems likely that it would be at the end of the fourteenth so that, by the time the lamb was ready to be eaten, it was the fifteenth day of the month and the Feast of Unleavened Bread had already begun.
Notes
[1] Note also that some national offerings
were also required at the Passover and Feast of Unleavened Bread as detailed in Numbers 28:16-25.
[2] Note that Exodus 12:31 says that Pharaoh summoned Moses and Aaron that night to give them the message that the people could leave Egypt, but it is worth noting that the verse does not explicitly say that Moses and Aaron went to him, and, at their last meeting, he had told them that they were not to see his face again (Exodus 10:28-29). Possibly they were called but refused to go, so the
message was sent to them anyway.