Now to fully appreciate this command, we have to remember that at this supper Jesus and the disciples were obeying God’s original command to the Jews to remember the Passover. The Passover meal celebrated God rescuing His people from Egypt, as described in the book of Exodus. For Jesus to have the audacity to offer a “new” command when the old one was such an important part of Israel’s history, is astounding enough. But Jesus went even further. Rather than remembering the redemption of their forefathers from Egyptian tyranny and the way the angel of death “passed over” the homes with lamb’s blood on their doorposts, they were now to remember His broken body and His shed blood. In Christ’s death, death itself is not just avoided; it is defeated.
The new commandment to love others is able only through the sacrifice of Jesus. We can know and experience the forgiveness of sins and the full love of God through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Jesus loved his enemies to the point of death and we are called to show the same level of love to everyone. God loved us while we were yet sinners (Romans 5:8) and the gift of salvation calls us forward to do likewise.
As Jesus washed the disciples' feet on Maundy Thursday, he set into motion what would be completed on Easter Sunday. His sacrificial example calls for us to love as he has loved us.
What else happened on Maundy Thursday?
Maundy Thursday was filled with significant events. Not only did Jesus share the Passover meal and communion, but is also the day he retreated to the Garden of Gethsemane.
While Judas left to go to the Jewish leaders to betray Him, Jesus knelt in agony, prayer, and surrender.
Writing for DesiringGod.org, David Mathis says in the article "The House Had Come: Maundy Thursday in the Garden of Agony" that Maundy Thursday marks the time when "the hour had come."
The Bible often records Jesus saying His hour had not yet come (John 2:4), but on Maundy Thursday, he knew that the beginning of the fulfillment of His greatest mission on Earth had come.
"All Jesus’s human life had anticipated this hour," writes Mathis. "Every careful attempt at keeping the messianic secret. Every emotional investment poured gladly into his disciples. Every glimpse of the ocean of his kindness as he healed the blind, the mute, the lame, the demonized, and even raised the dead.
Now the hour has come. All history hinges on this hour. And it is utterly terrifying. Jesus must decide: Will he protect his own skin, and soul, or will he embrace his Father’s perfect and painful will?"
On Maundy Thursday, Jesus agonizes over what He is about to face on the cross and he "prayed more fervently, and he was in such agony of spirit that his sweat fell to the ground like great drops of blood" (Luke 22:44).
How Should Christians Observe and Celebrate Maundy Thursday?
As mentioned, Good Friday gets a lot of attention, as well as Easter Sunday, of course, but the events of Maundy Thursday, while not as dramatic and monumental as Christ's death and resurrection, are integral to the story that God has been writing since the beginning of time. In Jesus' act of washing the disciples' feet and in His crying out to His Father to "let this cup pass from Me," (Matt. 26:39), we see his humanity and the great sacrifice He paid for our sins.
And that is something we would do well to reflect upon often. While Scripture doesn't specifically mention a day to commemorate Maundy Thursday, we are to continue observing communion. Many churches observe Maundy Thursday with a special communion service that includes a foot-washing ceremony. Doing so helps us to remember the selfless sacrifice of Jesus and our call to love and serve one another. These services may include scripture readings recounting the events of the Last Supper, prayers, hymns, and sermons reflecting on the significance of Jesus' actions.
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