Scott LaPierre Ministries
Jesus the Passover Lamb: Examined and Declared Innocent
Jesus the Passover Lamb stands at the center of Holy Week. Imagine Jerusalem 2,000 years ago during Passover—the city packed with pilgrims, families rehearsing the Exodus story, and lambs being selected and examined for sacrifice. Into that deliverance-soaked week, Jesus arrives, and everything the first Passover foreshadowed begins to find its fulfillment in Him. And then—into that Passover-soaked city—Jesus arrives. To understand Luke’s account of Jesus standing before Pilate, we have to begin where the Bible begins: Jesus the Passover Lamb. Once we see Him that way, everything else becomes clearer and heavier with meaning. https://youtu.be/vdg-G3GEejo Table of contentsJesus Is the True and Greater Passover LambExodus 12 Preaches Christ Before Luke Ever DoesThe Lamb Had to Be Without BlemishNisan 10–14 Prefigures Holy WeekThe Blood Had to Be Applied PersonallyThe Lamb Was ConsumedPassover Was Deliverance—and Communion Is Our MemorialThe Passover Lamb’s Examination Prefigures Christ’s ExaminationThe Examination Intensifies in Luke 20Pilate Unknowingly Inspected the Lamb and Declared Him Innocent“I Will Therefore Punish and Release Him”: The Gospel in One Unjust SentenceConclusion: Are You Under the Blood? Jesus Is the True and Greater Passover Lamb When John the Baptist first identified Jesus publicly, he didn’t begin with titles like “King of Kings” or “Son of God.” He began with the sacrifice: John 1:29 — “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” 1 Corinthians 5:7 — “Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed.” Revelation 5:6, 8, 12–13 — In the throne room of heaven, Jesus is repeatedly called the Lamb, and worship rises to Him because He was slain. Every Passover lamb that was ever sacrificed—millions across the centuries—was a shadow and type pointing forward to Christ. Exodus 12 Preaches Christ Before Luke Ever Does Before we return to Luke, Exodus 12 gives us the categories that make Holy Week and the cross come alive. The Lamb Had to Be Without Blemish Exodus 12:5 — “Your lamb shall be without blemish…” God required a spotless sacrifice. And although this reminds us God deserves our best, it more importantly reveals what God was willing to do for us: He gave His best—His Firstborn Son. Nisan 10–14 Prefigures Holy Week Exodus 12:3 — The lamb is selected on the 10th day. Exodus 12:6 — The lamb is killed on the 14th day. Those five days (Nisan 10–14) correspond to the final week of Jesus’ earthly life: Nisan 10 foreshadows Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem (the Triumphal Entry). Nisan 14 foreshadows the crucifixion. Just as the lamb lived with the family, Jesus lived in Jerusalem during those final days—present, seen, and examined. The Blood Had to Be Applied Personally Exodus 12:7 — Blood placed on the doorposts and lintel. It wasn’t enough for a lamb to die somewhere in Egypt. The lamb's blood had to be applied to that house. In the same way, it isn’t enough to know Jesus died on a cross. His blood must be personally applied through repentance and faith. The Lamb Was Consumed Exodus 12:8 — They ate the lamb. John 6:53 — Jesus speaks of eating His flesh and drinking His blood (receiving Him by faith). Passover Was Deliverance—and Communion Is Our Memorial Passover remembered deliverance from Egypt. God repeatedly told Israel not to forget that redemption. Exodus 12:14 — “This day shall be for you a memorial day…” 1 Corinthians 11:23–25 — Communion is the memorial of our greater deliverance in Christ. The Passover Lamb’s Examination Prefigures Christ’s Examination Here’s a sobering thought: if you were a Hebrew in Egypt and the only thing keeping the Destroyer out of your home was the blood of a spotless lamb, how carefully would you examine that lamb? You would scrutinize it relentlessly. And that is exactly what happened to Jesus after He entered Jerusalem. He was examined by the chief priests, scribes, elders, Pharisees, Sadducees—and then by Roman authorities. The Examination Intensifies in Luke 20 Luke 20:1–2 — “By what authority do you do these things?” Luke 20:21–22 — “Is it lawful for us to give tribute to Caesar, or not?” Luke 20:33 — A trap question about the resurrection. They tried again and again—and failed. Eventually, the leaders stopped trying to trap Him and moved to arrest and kill Him. The questions turned into trials—more intense examinations. Pilate Unknowingly Inspected the Lamb and Declared Him Innocent Luke brings us to the climactic public inspection: Luke 23:13 — Pilate gathers the chief priests, rulers, and the people—this is public, formal, judicial. Luke 23:14 — “After examining him… I did not find this man guilty of any of your charges…” Luke 23:15 — “Neither did Herod… Look, nothing deserving death has been done by him.” In other words: the Lamb is inspected, and even hostile authorities can’t find a blemish. And that’s part of what makes their testimony so powerful. If Jesus’ disciples testified to His innocence, skeptics would dismiss it as bias. But Pilate and Herod are not sympathetic witnesses. They have no love for Jesus, no devotion to Him, and every motive to end this problem quickly. Yet after examination, they still cannot condemn Him. That’s why Peter later writes: 1 Peter 1:18–19 — We were ransomed “with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot.” “I Will Therefore Punish and Release Him”: The Gospel in One Unjust Sentence Here is one of the most troubling lines in the account: Luke 23:16 — “I will therefore punish and release him.” It makes no sense if justice matters. If Jesus is innocent, He should not be punished at all. But that unjust sentence accidentally acts out the heart of redemption: The innocent is treated as guilty. The righteous suffers for the unrighteous. The spotless One is punished so the guilty can go free. 1 Peter 3:18 — “Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous…” That is substitutionary atonement: God’s wrath fell on Christ so it would not fall on us. And if you’re thinking, “Where is the guilty one who goes free?” Luke answers immediately: Luke 23:18 — “Away with this man, and release to us Barabbas…” Before Jesus ever reached the cross, He was already stepping into the role of Substitute. Conclusion: Are You Under the Blood? Let me end with a sobering reality. Pilate affirmed Jesus’ innocence, yet Pilate was still lost. He is like someone in Egypt who agreed judgment was coming, agreed the lamb was spotless, but never applied the blood to the doorposts. Pilate is a picture of many people today. They respect Jesus. They admire His character. They feel sympathy for His suffering. They might even say, “What happened to Jesus was wrong.” But none of that saves. It is possible to: acknowledge Jesus’ innocence, affirm His righteousness, feel sorrow for His suffering, and still reject Him as Savior and King. Salvation does not come from recognizing that the Lamb is innocent. Salvation comes from being under the Lamb’s blood—through repentance and faith. So the question that matters is not, “Do you respect Jesus?”It’s not, “Do you agree He was innocent?”It’s not, “Do you feel bad about what happened to Him?” It’s this: Are you under the blood? “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world.”





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