The Second Passover
By
Holy Moses
The Second Passover
Now
the Lord spoke to Moses in the Wilderness of Sinai, in the first month of the second
year after they had come out of the land of Egypt, saying: "Let the
children of Israel keep the Passover at its appointed time. On the fourteenth
day of this month, at twilight, you shall keep it at its appointed time.
According to all its rites and ceremonies you shall keep it." So Moses
told the children of Israel that they should keep the Passover. And they kept
the Passover on the fourteenth day of the first month, at twilight, in the
Wilderness of Sinai; according to all that the Lord commanded Moses, so the
children of Israel did.
Now
there were certain men who were defiled by a human corpse, so that they could
not keep the Passover on that day; and they came before Moses and Aaron that
day. And those men said to him, "We became defiled by a human corpse. Why
are we kept from presenting the offering of the Lord at its appointed time
among the children of Israel?"
And
Moses said to them, "Stand still, that I may hear what the Lord will
command concerning you."
Then
the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, "Speak to the children of Israel, saying:
'If anyone of you or your posterity is unclean because of a corpse, or is far
away on a journey, he may still keep the Lord's Passover. On the fourteenth day
of the second month, at twilight, they may keep it. They shall eat it with
unleavened bread and bitter herbs. They shall leave none of it until morning,
nor break one of its bones. According to all the ordinances of the Passover
they shall keep it. But the man who is clean and is not on a journey, and ceases
to keep the Passover, that same person shall be cut off from among his people,
because he did not bring the offering of the Lord at its appointed time; that
man shall bear his sin.
'And
if a stranger dwells among you, and would keep the Lord's Passover, he must do
so according to the rite of the Passover and according to its ceremony; you
shall have one ordinance, the same law, both for the stranger and the native of
the land.'"