Reading Jesus and the Cross into Torah
Question: My next door neighbor is a Christian, and constantly reads Jesus and the cross into the Torah. Lately she’s asking me about the significance of the Jews in Egypt putting the blood of the Paschal lamb in three places – the lintel and two side posts. Previously, she has argued that the populations and arrangements of the tribes around the ark in the desert would have formed the shape of a cross from above. I don’t buy into these arguments, but I’m not certain how to reply her back. She is convinced that there allusions to Jesus all by the place. Argh! Any help (short of calling the movers…) would be great.
Answer: I can understand how frustrating that must be. Unfortunately, Christians do read Jesus into every page of the bible, including the Hebrew Scriptures. But just considering someone wants to see it, doesn’t invent it true.
The blood was applied to the lintel and the door posts of the house considering that is what God asked the Jewish public to do. It was a simple act of obedience. The blood did not mold a cross, it formed a squared-off, upside-down “u”. They can read into it what they want, but that had nothing to do with Jesus. Moreover, it wasn’t applied in three places, it was applied in one place – the door frame (which includes a top and two sides).
Unfortunately, that is nearly like a mold of Christian superstition: whether someone wants to see images of Mary in pancakes, or cheese doodles in the shape of Jesus, they will see it; and whether someone wants to see a cross in every story of the Torah, they will see that, too.
All the best,
Penina Taylor
Original post by ATR
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