LCN Article 3/26/2019
Footwashing | LCN Article | Living Church of God
Footwashing March / April 2013 Dexter B. Wakefield
On the evening of Sunday, March 24, 2013, the Church of God will observe the Passover, and we will be doing it at the same time and in the same basic manner that it was done in the Church of God in the 1st century ad. As a matter of history, the Roman Church in the 2nd and 3rd centuries called our brethren that did this “Quartodecimans”—meaning literally “fourteenth-ers” because they kept the Passover on the 14th day of the first lunar month, instead of keeping Easter. They kept it—and we keep it—at the same time and in the same manner that Jesus did and that Paul taught both the Jewish and the Gentile believers to observe it. Passover evening seems different from all other Church gatherings. There is a strong feeling of love and unity, but in a different mood. The brethren seem somber, quiet and reflective. There is a sense of the enormity of what took place long ago—and a sense of the profound importance of the acts we do that evening beginning the 14th of Nisan. We need to approach the Passover in the right frame of mind—reflecting Jesus’ attitude of humility, love and obedience. In the evening before his death, Jesus taught His Church to perform the foot washing. When we perform the foot washing ceremony, there are two things that we need to be very aware of as we perform them. We wash and we are washed. And both have important meanings—so important in fact that God has us act out these meanings as a constant, annual reminder. Let’s go over these things in this article, so we can think about them as we do them on Passover. Putting on Christ
https://www.lcg.org/lcn/2013/march-april/footwashing
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