They were to slaughter a young goat or sheep, drain its blood and place a mark on the doorways of their homes, and roast the meat. All of the meat was to be eaten.
Answer:In haste (Genesis 12:11).The Paschal Supper (Passover Seder).
There are two answers. 1) The first Passover was the day of the Exodus. The Israelites prepared the Pesach-offering and conducted the Seder-meal; at midnight, God smote the firstborn of the Egyptians; and the next morning, the Israelites left Egypt. 2) Every other Passover since then is a reliving of that first year. Passover is a Torah-festival. We eat unleavened bread (matzoh), and conduct the Seder meal.
Passover is not a time of fasting, so Jewish people can eat during the middle of the day during Passover.
Along with roasted lamb and unleavened bread, the Israelites were to eat bitter herbs on the first night of Passover (Exodus 12:8).
The Jews eat the Passover Seder meal on the night of Passover (Pesach). It makes little difference whether Passover begins on Shabbat or on a weekday. Note that there are festive meals on every Shabbat, but they are not called "seder" and the foods are different.
The meal was called the Passover or Pessach and involved both lamb, bitter herbs and unleavened bread, as indeed it still does today.
The Torah (Exodus ch.12) specifies matzoh, bitter hers and the meat of the pesach-sacrifice. Other foods are not mentioned, but wine, vegetables and fruits were probably on the menu.
Jews eat the Passover meal to commemorate what happen to them a long time ago. In the Bible, it explains that the Jews were taken out of Egypt, in a hurry. Their bread did not have a chance to leaven, and so they ate what they call "matzoh" Now Jews have a meal with "matzoh" in it, to commemorate it.
the passover The passover is not a Christian meal. It is a Jewish meal/holiday.
Charoset represents the mortar used in construction when we were slaves.
The Hebrews ate a special meal called the Passover meal before they left for freedom. It included roasted lamb, unleavened bread, and bitter herbs, and was eaten to commemorate the liberation of the Israelites from slavery in ancient Egypt.
The Passover celebration commemorates the flight from Egypt. There was no Passover meal before the flight.