The Passover
The Chosen PeopleJanuary 22, 2026x
79
00:16:2915.14 MB

The Passover

🎙️ Aaron Salvato🎙️ Aaron SalvatoVoice Actor | Writer | Theology Consultant
Zak Shellabarger Zak Shellabarger Showrunner | Head Writer

# 79 - The Passover - In this episode of The Chosen People, we explore the transformative moment in Exodus 12 when God delivers His people through the blood of the lamb. Join us as we uncover the profound faith, obedience, and hope that shaped the Israelites' journey to freedom and still inspires us today.

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Episode 79 of The Chosen People is inspired by the Book of Exodus.

Today's opening prayer is inspired by 1 John 1:7, "If we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sin."

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00:00:00 Speaker 1: Previously on the chosen people. 00:00:04 Speaker 2: Happi, the God of the Nile, blood out before our eyes. Akeet, the frog goddess, left or rot in the streets. Geb, the God of the Earth, turned to dust and swarmed us with gnats. Capri, the god of life, swarmed against his own people as flies. And now Hathor, the goddess of livestock, watches as her herds lie dead in the fields. The Lord is striking down the gods of Egypt one by one. 00:00:37 Speaker 3: Then what would the Lord do when. 00:00:39 Speaker 4: Only one god is left standing? 00:00:42 Speaker 5: Which god are you talking about? Pharaoh, I will have monuments built to my glory. Long after your unnamed god has forgotten. 00:00:57 Speaker 2: You will know his name Rameses, for it will be on your lips. When your kingdom crumbles to dust. At midnight, the Lord will descend upon Egypt. Every first born in the land, every firstborn from your own son upon this throne to the lowliest slave in the mill, will die. There shall be a cry throughout the land of Egypt, a cry unlike any heard before nor ever will be again. 00:01:31 Speaker 3: One more plague will come upon Pharaoh and all of Egypt. After my judgment, he will let you go from this place. When he lets you go, he will drive you away completely into the wilderness. 00:01:55 Speaker 1: Moses and Aaron descended the jagged path leading down into Goshen. The people were waiting with bated breath, eager to hear how their last meeting with Pharaoh went. Miriam stood before them, anxious. 00:02:11 Speaker 6: What did Pharaoh say? 00:02:12 Speaker 2: Pharaoh has refused. The Lord will be sending a final plague. 00:02:19 Speaker 5: The people are terrified, Moses, how will they escape the wrath to come? 00:02:24 Speaker 1: Moses had mixed emotions. He had commands from the Lord. What was to come would be unlike anything they or their forefathers had ever witnessed. Not even Abraham witnessed the power about to be poured out upon the Egyptians. 00:02:41 Speaker 2: Gather the people. We have commands from the Lord. 00:02:46 Speaker 1: Miriam and Aaron gathered the congregation of Israel. Moses stood before them, hands trembling under the weight of the creator's decree. Moses turned to Aaron and permitted him to speak on the Lord's behalf. Iron raised his voice to the people, arms stretched out. 00:03:05 Speaker 4: Thus says the Lord. Each of you shall take a lamb to eat, each according to their father's house. If the household is too small for a lamb, then you shall share it with your neighbor who has another. The lamb should be a spotless male of only one year old. 00:03:24 Speaker 1: The people tilted their heads in confusion. Iron could sense their apprehension. They wanted to hear about the plague to come, but instead the Lord was giving them commands about a meal. What would a meal have to do with their salvation? 00:03:41 Speaker 4: The whole assembly shall kill their lambs at twilight. Then they shall take some of the blood and put it on the two doorposts and the lintel of their houses. The blood of the lamb will cover your household for the raft to come. Once your households are covered by the blood of the lamb, you shall feast on its flesh, which has been roasted on the fire. Eat the meat with unleavened bread and bitter herbs. Let none of it remain until the morning. Anything left over shall be burned in the fire. 00:04:16 Speaker 5: Why is the Lord commanding this? 00:04:19 Speaker 1: Aaron turned back to Moses, eyes searching for answers. Moses stepped forward, voice slightly wavering but gaining confidence. 00:04:29 Speaker 2: When you eat, keep your belts fastened, your sandals on your feet, and staves in your hand. Eat your meal swiftly, for the Lord is coming tonight. 00:04:41 Speaker 1: The crowd stirred and excited. Unease fell upon them. 00:04:46 Speaker 5: What is happening tonight, Moses? 00:04:48 Speaker 2: And why do we have to paint our doors with the blood of goldium. This is the Lord's passover, Thus says the Lord. I will pass through the land of Egypt and strike all the first In the land of Egypt, both men and beasts shall fear my name, and all the gods of Egypt will execute judgments. But I am the Lord. The blood shall be assigned for you. When I see the blood, I will pass over you, and no plague will befall or destroy you when I strike the land of Egypt. 00:05:22 Speaker 1: The people trembled when they heard the decrees. They had yearned for deliverance, but now that it was within reach, they seemed uneasy. 00:05:32 Speaker 4: My brethren, remember tonight. This day shall be a memorial for us. We will repeat this feast throughout the generations. It shall be a day of remembrance. Hundreds even thousands of years from now, our children will remember the deliverance fot and One by the God of all creation. 00:05:56 Speaker 1: The crowd irrupted in cheers for the first time in generations. They allowed themselves to hope the bitterness and mourning would turn to singing and laughter, but not too soon. The Lord had work to do on their behalf. Moses turned to Aaron and Miriam. 00:06:16 Speaker 2: Call all the elders of Israel. We need to be unified and prepared. 00:06:21 Speaker 1: The elders all gathered together. Moses looked out at them all. Since he had arrived, he relied solely on Aaron to correspond with them. If he was being honest with himself, he felt guilty commanding them. He hadn't grown up as one of them, nor had he felt like he earned their respect. They had no shared toil or history. But what bound them together was a calling to lead God's people out of slavery. Moses drew a deep breath and steadied his heartbeat. 00:06:55 Speaker 2: The end is near, brothers, The end is near. The Lord will come tonight, and we must be prepared. Everything must be done according to the Lord's commands. 00:07:06 Speaker 6: Go on, Moses, speak and we will listen. 00:07:09 Speaker 2: Select lambs for yourselves and for every household in your clans. Kill them as the passover lambs or the blood in him to a basin. Then take his up branches and dip them into the blood. Spread the blood on the door posts. When the Lord passes through Egypt, the blood will be assigned for him to pass over you. When your children ask about the lamb and the blood, tell them that this is a sacrifice to the Lord, because he's going to strike down the Egyptians and set us free. But listen to me, this is important. None of you shall go out of the door until morning. Under no circumstances will you exit your homes. 00:07:53 Speaker 7: What will happen in the morning, Moses. 00:07:56 Speaker 8: In the morning, you will exit your homes, and you will walk out as free men. We will leave Egypt together and begin our journey to the Promised Land. 00:08:10 Speaker 1: Every man was silent for a long while. Then one by one they fell to their knees and worshiped. Hymns both ancient and guttural poured forth from their lips. They felt connected to the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. That night they began to truly act like God's chosen people. The night was heavy with silence, a silence that clung to the earth like a shroud. A cold wind whispered through the streets of Egypt, carrying with it the scent of death. Beneath the distant stars, obscured by the towering temples and the grandeur of the Pharaoh's palace, people awaited the judgment of a god they had yet to understand. The moon hung low over the Nile, its waters dark and still, as if even the river Mighty as it was, dared not stir. From the grand cities to the lowliest villages, from the palatial estates of nobles to the clay walled hovels of slaves, all who slept that night would wake to a terror beyond reckoning. For at midnight it began. A shadow passed through the streets of Egypt, unseen yet felt. 00:09:39 Speaker 3: It was not the. 00:09:40 Speaker 1: Wind, though the curtains moved and the candles flickered in its wake. It moved with purpose, slipping through doors that were left unmarked, where no lamb's blood clung to the lintel. The air grew thick, laden with a weight that pressed upon the chest, that caused breath to quicken and eyes to widening, a terror they could not name. In the haws of the Pharaoh, guided by statues of stone and gods of gold, the first cries ran out. It was a high pitched wail, a cry of disbelief, of a grief so sudden and so raw that it cut through the stillness like a knife. The servants rushed to the bedchamber of Pharaoh's eldest son, heir to the throne of Egypt, a boy no older than ten summers. He lay there still and pale, his eyes open but unseen, his skin cold to the touch. A sob tore from the throat of the queen, and the pharaoh himself, a man who had stared down armies and ruled with the weight of Ra's name upon his brow, fell to his knees beside the boy's bed. 00:10:53 Speaker 6: My my son, biber Man, come with once, pulling my child back to life. 00:11:05 Speaker 1: But the gods had been silent, the priests powerless in their incantations. No breath passed between the boy's lips, and no flicker of life stirred in his chest. Nothing moved but the shadow passing on beyond the palace walls. The whales began to rise, one by one, like the growing roar of the sea in a storm. In every house untouched by the blood of the lamb, the first born were found cold in their beds from the eldest son of the loneliest farmer to the first born calf in the fields. The land of Egypt, so proud in its splendor, so sure in the power of its gods, was brought low by a power it could not see nor. 00:11:50 Speaker 3: Fight through it. 00:11:52 Speaker 1: All the Israelites watched in silence in their homes. They gathered, huddled in tight circles, beneath the smear of blood that marked their doors, the blood of sacrifice, of obedience. The old ones whispered to the young stories of their forefathers, of promises made by a god more ancient than the gods of Egypt, a god who had heard their cries, who had seen their suffering, And now that God had answered. In the deep hours of the night, when the screams of grief had subsided into a hollow quiet, Pharaoh rose. His face, once proud and unyielding, was now drawn tight with pain, his eyes hollowed by the weight of the dead. He summoned his advisers, but they offered no counsel. The magicians stood silent, their tongues stilled by fear. There was no wisdom, no spell, no right that could undo what had been. 00:12:56 Speaker 7: Done bring them to me, Moses and Aaron before me. 00:13:06 Speaker 1: The brothers were brought to him, the tension of the night still hung in the air, like smoke after a battle. Pharaoh stared at them, his eyes red with sleepless grief, and for a moment the room was still, save for the flicker of torches. His boy was cradled in his arms, lifeless and cold. 00:13:29 Speaker 7: Go go and take your people, leave this land, take your flocks, your herds, your children, and be gone. And when you go, speak to your God, play to him for me, for my people. 00:14:04 Speaker 1: The brothers did not answer at once. They exchanged a glance, a moment of understanding, as though the weight of destiny pressed upon their shoulders. Aaron gave Moses a knowing glance and left first, leaving Pharaoh and Moses alone. The words were stuck in Moses's throat, his jaw tightened with grief and anger. Grief that the people he had once called kin were mourning the loss of their children, Anger that it all could have been prevented if Pharaoh had relented. 00:14:46 Speaker 7: You're what, Moses, You're sorry for my loss? Are your servant at the death of a generation? 00:14:58 Speaker 1: Moses was still, and the silent he thought of responding, but chose not to. What was done was done without a word. He turned and departed, leaving Pharaoh in the silence of his broken kingdom, a king brought to his knees not by armies, but by a plague of death sent by a god he could neither see nor challenge outside. The dawn was rising over Egypt, but for the people of the Nile there would be no light that day, only the long shadow of what had been lost. This Preyed Door conproduction is only made possible by our dedicated team of creative talents. Steve Katina, Max Bard, Zach Slabager, and Benammon are the executive producers of The Chosen People. Narrated by Paul Caltafianu. Characters are voiced by Jonathan V. Cotton, Aaron Salvato, Sarah Seltz, Mike Reagan, Stephen Ringwold, Sylvia Zaradoc, Thomas Copeland Junior, Rosanna Pilcher, and Mitch Leshinsky. Music by Andrew Morgan Smith, written by Aaron Salvato, bre Rosalie and Chris Baig. You can hear more Prey dot Com productions on the Prey dot Com app, available on the Apple app Store and Google play Store. If you enjoyed the Chosen People, please rate and leave a review.