I looked down in my toaster and saw remnants of toast and bagels. I emptied the handy tray that is designed to catch them and looked again. The toaster was still littered with crumbs caught up in the coils and the edges of the toaster. I shook it upside down, to the side, right side up, and I banged on the sides of the toaster but only a few more crumbs came tumbling out. Short of immersing the toaster in warm water and letting it soak those crumbs are hanging on. How appropriate, I thought, considering the reason why I was even spending time and energy on removing the crumbs.
Lanny just bought these new little LED flashlights so I used one to help me search out any food items in the dark recesses of my pantry that might contain a leavening agent. I found a couple of items and pulled them out and placed them on the counter. Fortunately the pile of leavening agents or items containing leaven was small. It helps that for the past week or so I have been using or consuming things we have in our home that contain yeast or the like. But I've consumed so much that I'm beginning to feel puffed up myself! The break from leavened things comes at a good time. Ha.
What in the world am I doing? What's with this focus on leavening and removing it? Last year I wrote about yeast. And this year I'm back with some additional thoughts about it. Today is the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. In Leviticus 23 God tells his people to abstain from things with leavening for 7 days and to remove it completely from their surroundings for those 7 days as well. The observance begins with Passover, which is also commanded by the Lord to observe every year. In the New Testament Paul addresses the observance of the Feast of Unleavened Bread by saying, "Get rid of the old yeast, so that you may be a new unleavened batch—as you really are. For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed. Therefore let us keep the Festival, not with the old bread leavened with malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." And while what Paul says sounds like a metaphorical observance I am inclined to believe he was actually speaking literally. Why? One reason is that Paul was an observant Jewish man who happened to believe that Jesus was the Savior. He also happened to believe that Jesus meant what he said when he declared that he had come not to abolish the Law but to fulfill it. Paul followed God's commands to keep the biblical festivals and knew that observing the Feast of Unleavened Bread literally led to the metaphorical observance as well. And it does. God knows that we need something with substance to use for our metaphors and searching out and ridding our surroundings of leavening agents does the trick. God uses yeast and its function as a word picture for sin in our lives. And God desires to see us go after sin and remove it. He wants us to be diligent about it all the time but for 7 days we are to be hyper-diligent as a way to keep us humble before him. And it works.
If you read my post last year about yeast you'll remember that I was doing great at not partaking of any until a little slip-up which was a complete accident. Last year I participated in the Feast by not consuming any leavened food for the 7 days. This year I decided to observe it fully by also getting rid of any food items in our home that contained leavening. That's why I was looking in the toaster and using a flashlight to search the pantry. And the searching accomplished exactly what the Lord, I believe, intended for it to do. It revealed that just like leaven hides in places and things I wouldn't think it needed to be, so sin does the same thing in my life. It infiltrates my heart and hides in the places of my life where it needn't be. And in order to find it I need to intentionally search for it, just like with the leaven in my home. Not only was leaven hanging out in our kitchen but a look under our couch cushions revealed crumbs had made their way there and were hiding out. So I didn't have to just search the most obvious places for the hiding places, I had to search the whole house. The same is true of sin in my life. I shouldn't be searching for just the most obvious places within my life and heart for sin, I need to search all the nooks and crannies. And when sin is found take the necessary steps to remove it.
A week or so ago I was studying Leviticus 5 and the chapter deals with the unintentional sins we commit and the way to handle those. I know that in the coming week of observance I am sure to discover something that has leaven in it that I missed in my search or, just like last year, unthinkingly consume something that has yeast in it. Those are the unintentional sins Leviticus 5 refers to. Things I do or say that I'm not aware, at the time, offend our Holy God but once I am aware I am required to make right. God makes provision even for the unintentional. His grace is deep and wide.
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