God gave commands, and didn't always give details as to how to keep those commands. The answer in Judaism is that He gave the details in the Oral Torah. I can't find any evidence of an oral Torah.
So if God did not provide the exact details, a step by step, then there must be other ways to fill in the details. Either, a person individually does the requirements from their heart, or, there is a centralized method of agreement for the entire community.
The seder is the community agreement (set by the courts of judges). Contained in the seder is all of the commands. At the time of Yeshua, there was an agreed upon seder, which based on a comparison between the account of the Last Supper and the Mosaic law, fulfilled all the commands plus included many of the traditions which are also practiced today, such as reclining at the meal and the use of multiple cups of wine.
Yeshua did not object to traditions. Had the traditions which He did, been a violation of the law, then Yeshua would not be sin free. There is no objection to traditions as long as they do not violate the law. Jesus did object to adding to or taking away from the commands. So traditions are ok, but adding to or taking away from the commands is bad. The command for Passover, is to do it in remembrance of what God did when He brought the children of Israel out of Egypt. Adding another thing to remember would be adding to the command to remember one specific thing.
Where there is a change of priesthood, there is also a change of the law. The celebration of Passover changed, but that is ok. Only those who have Yeshua as the New High Priest celebrate the NT Passover.
Then your conclusion is still contradictive, because if Yeshua taught something that added to the Law of Moses, at that moment He became a sinner by adding to the commands of God.
The other point to make again, is that the Seder has a lot of symbolism in it that the Torah does not give or command, and much of it is in remembrance. So again your points are contradicting.
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