Pesach Sheni | 2nd Passover:

Numbers 9:1-12.

 

Numbers 9:1-12.

1 \Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnestLOW”\. The Second Passover. .\Vce=Speaker=“LeslieEarnest”\

YHWH 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,
2 “Moreover let the children of Israel keep the Passover in its appointed season.
3 On the fourteenth day of this month, at evening, you shall keep it in its appointed season according to all its statutes, and according to all its ordinances, you shall keep it.”
4 Moses spoke to the children of Israel, that they should keep the Passover.
5 They kept the Passover in the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month, at evening, in the wilderness of Sinai. According to all that YHWH commanded Moses, so the children of Israel did.
6 There were certain men, who were unclean because of the dead body of a man, so that they could not keep the Passover on that day, and they came before Moses and before Aaron on that day.
7 Those men said to him, “We are unclean because of the dead body of a man. Why are we kept back, that we may not offer the offering of YHWH in its appointed season among the children of Israel?”
8 Moses answered them, “Wait, that I may hear what YHWH will command concerning you.”
9 YHWH spoke to Moses, saying,
10 “Say to the children of Israel, ‘If any man of you or of your generations is unclean by reason of a dead body, or is on a journey far away, he shall still keep the Passover to YHWH!
11 In the second month, on the fourteenth day at evening they shall keep it; they shall eat it with unleavened bread and bitter herbs.
12 They shall leave none of it until the morning, nor break a bone of it. According to all the statute of the Passover they shall keep it.

 

 

! !  End of Today’s FEAST Related Scriptures! Praise Yah!   (HNV-yet version, in the public domain.)

 


Pesach / פסח

Passover (Hebrew, Yiddish: Pesach, Modern Hebrew: Pesah, Pesakh, Yiddish: Peysekh, Paysakh, Paysokh) is a Biblical holiday and festival. It commemorates the story of the Exodus, in which the ancient Israelites were freed from slavery in Egypt. Passover begins on the 15th day of the month of Nisan in the Hebrew calendar, which is in spring in the Northern Hemisphere, and is celebrated for seven or eight days. It is one of the most widely observed Hebrew holidays.
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