Sacrificial Lambs are no longer required

Passover Lamb was slain at Calvary for the sins of the world.

He will replace the symbolic precursors of the Old Covenant: the bronze laver, the table of shewbread, and the golden lampstand, for He is the New Testament fulfillment of the Old Covenant. Jesus is the Living Water, the Bread of Life, and the Light of the World; He is the Lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world. We no longer have to sacrifice lambs and rams to atone for our sins, for Christ became our Passover Lamb. It is by His flesh (the veil of the temple) that we are able to enter into the Holy of Holies and commune with our High Priest - Jesus Christ (Hebrews 10:20-21). Hallelujah!

Jesus came to Earth to do His father's will. What this entailed is that He, Jesus, would make Himself the 'Sacrificial Lamb' in order for man's sin to be redeemed. The sacrificial lamb, as is described in the Old Testament was literally hung from a post with his front legs spread apart, just like the cross. The lamb was then killed. This was done to have the sins of the Hebrews forgiven or atoned for.

While the Jewish people have celebrated Passover annually since the time of Moses, in reality, there was only one Passover. It occurred almost 3500 years ago down in Egypt. It was there, at that time, that a lamb was sacrificed, and the blood was applied to each doorpost and lintel. When done in faith and in obedience to God's command, that home was "passed over" by the death angel and the firstborn was spared. All subsequent observances over the centuries were memorials of that one and only first Passover.