Jewish Feasts: Leviticus 23
These
feasts were only Legitimate before the Church Age, before the Canon of
scripture was completed.
1) The Passover: Jesus Christ’s
death -- the cross. 1 Corinthians 5:7. Christ died on the last Passover (one
day in length).
2) Unleavened Bread: Spoke of
fellowship with the Lord. One week in duration.
3) Firstfruits: Jesus Christ’s
resurrection and resurrection of all believers. (1st Sunday in Unleavened Bread
Feast is when it was held): It was a gift offering -- Leviticus 2:12. Jesus
Christ rose on Firstfruits.
4) Pentecost : Beginning of the
Church Holy Spirit indwells all believers. 50 days after Firstfruits. It begins
the 5th cycle of discipline and dispersion of Israel. Sunday was when it was
held.
5) Trumpets: 2nd Advent. Israel
regathered, end of the 5th cycle of discipline.
6) Atonement: Salvation of Israel,
result of the baptism of fire. This is Yom Kippur. It speaks of the four
unconditional covenants to Israel at the second advent.
7) Tabernacles: Millennial reign of
Christ (7 days). Feast of Dedication, Feast of Lights, December 25, 164 BC
Between #4 and #5 is the Church Age.
The doctrine of the feasts
1. The feasts are derived from the
word chag. Chag has a root meaning to
dance, to be joyous. The feasts were designed to produce happiness and to
relate that happiness to Bible doctrine. They were designed to express the
blessing which comes from the study of the Word of God. They were designed,
then, to be related to Bible doctrine, to lead a believer to the ECS.
2. The feasts were also related to
the agricultural economy of Israel. The Passover was held during the time of
the latter rains or the barley harvest. The firstfruits was held at the time of
the wheat harvest. Pentecost was held at the time of the early figs ripening.
The Trumpets, Atonement and Tabernacles were held during the early rains or the
time of sowing. So the feasts were definitely related to the schedule of sowing
and reaping in the agricultural economy of Israel.
3. We have first advent feasts. We
have the Passover which represents the cross, the Unleavened Bread which
represents temporal fellowship with God. We have the firstfruits referring to
the resurrection of Christ, and Pentecost which represents the fifth cycle of
discipline or the time of Israel’s dispersion.
4. There is a big gap between the
first four feasts and the last three. We have four feasts which take us from
the Passover to Pentecost in June. Then we have a big gap and we start again in
October. This gap represents the period of the Church Age, the time of Israel’s
dispersion under the fifth cycle of discipline.
5. We have the second advent feasts.
The Trumpets depicted the second advent of Christ and emphasised the fifth
cycle of discipline. Israel was regathered under the principle of the trumpets,
the trumpets that blew the assembly, the regathering of Israel at the second
advent. Secondly, the feast of Atonement in which we have an emphasis on the
fulfilment of the unconditional covenants at the second advent. The regenerate
of Israel is restored to the land and the covenants are fulfilled. The third is
the Tabernacles which emphasises the Millennial reign of Christ. These are all
second advent feasts. The second advent begins the Millennium.
6. Not ordained but found in John
10:22 was the feast of dedication or Hanukkah which is the independent
celebration of the Jews. It was first celebrated on the 25th December, 164 BC, when the temple was cleansed as a result of winning independence in
the Maccabaen wars. All of the feasts in Leviticus, then, had a special
concept.
The doctrine of the feasts
1. Definition. The word “feast”,
like the Passover, is derived from the Hebrew noun chag. The word is taken from a verb which means to jump for joy, to
jump when you are happy, to celebrate. The feast was designated as
commemorations and celebrations of God’s grace. A feast, then, is the
celebration of the grace of God. They were tests of resident doctrine in the
soul, like the Lord’s table or the Eucharist is to us. The commemorated grace
blessings derived from doctrine resident in the soul. So we have to call them
grace orientation commemoratives.
2. The feasts related to the first
advent. There are four of them that were related to the first advent and the
first one is the Passover. The Passover occurred on 14 April, 1441 BC. Cf. Exodus 12:1-14; Leviticus 23:5. It portrays the work of Jesus
Christ on the cross with special emphasis on redemption. It also portrays one
other principle. It portrays freedom from slavery, the beginning of a nation.
All nations begin at the point they attain their freedom. Therefore it
recognises the principle of freedom in life. But it also recognises something
else. The Passover is not the only feast and by virtue of the fact there were
other feasts it is a reminder that no one enjoys freedom unless he is in God’s
plan of grace. One must have capacity for freedom and this comes from Bible
doctrine in the soul. The Passover is the first of the feasts, it has a dual
connotation: freedom and the beginning of a nation. It connotes at the same
time the beginning of God’s plan. God’s plan begins at the cross. Grace always
begins at the point of salvation.
The second of the first advent
feasts was the feast of unleavened bread. It occurred immediately following -
15-21 April, a week-long feast. It portrays phase two or living grace. It
portrays the concept of everything that God has to do to keep a believer alive
in the devil’s world. It means that only God keeps any of us alive. Living
grace means that God keeps us alive, we do not earn it or deserve it or work
for it. The feast of unleavened bread is described in Leviticus 23:6-18 and in
1 Corinthians 5:8. Jesus Christ is called the Bread of Life and that is not
always a salvation title but a title of sustaining us in this life. We are here
and we are what we are by the grace of God. That is living grace, it means that
we are here and alive because of who and what God is and because of His grace.
The Bread of Life means something else. Bread means food, food sustains life.
When Christ is called the Bread of Life it means he is the sustainer of our
life on this earth, and we are alive by courtesy of our great high priest, the
Lord Jesus Christ. Unleavened bread is also a picture of the hypostatic union,
Jesus Christ as the God-Man and the one who is qualified to be and became the
only saviour.
The next feast is called the
firstfruits. The firstfruits always occurred the first Sunday after the
Passover and therefore it was in the feast of unleavened bread. Leviticus
23:9-14 portrays it. It is described in its significance in 1 Corinthians
15:20,23. It represents the resurrection. it also, then, becomes a picture of
surpassing grace or paragraph SG3, all that the believer will have
by way of reward in eternity. The Sunday of the feast of the firstfruits was a
reminder of a principle, that only in time can you acquire paragraph SG2,
dying grace, and paragraph SG3; they cannot be acquired in eternity.
They can only be attained by persistent, consistent, never-give-up, stubborn,
hard-headed, I’ll-never-change-my-mind, all the way. God gives you one day at a
time to take in Bible doctrine. Whatever else you do that day it is that which
is foremost and important, and it is that point which is tested every day.
Every day creates a free will issue: Will I take in doctrine or will I not? For
those who say yes every day to doctrine, they follow the colours to the high
ground to their paragraph SG2, they are on the road to glory, and
they acquire paragraph SG3 forever and ever and ever.
Sunday, by the way, has always been
the first day of the week because more important than anything else in life is
Bible doctrine. So the firstfruits was a sign of the resurrection, a picture of
the possibility of attaining SG3, and therefore it becomes another
picture of the glory road.
The fourth feast was the feast of
Pentecost, a one-day feast which occurred fifty days after the Passover. It
always occurred in the first week of June. Leviticus 23:15-21. It represents a
number of things. It represents the beginning of the fifth cycle of discipline
or the time of Israel’s dispersion. It represents also the beginning of the
Church Age and the calling out of the royal family of God. It also represents
the fact that no adversity in life is too great for the believer on the high
ground. There is no disaster, no adversity, no trial, no heartache, no problem
in life too great for doctrine in your soul. That is the only place where
doctrine copes with problems. If doctrine is not in your soul it doesn’t cope.
The only doctrine that you can use for disaster is the doctrine resident in
your soul. So in the days of blessing, the easy days, you accumulate doctrine
for the disaster days. When you do this the disaster days become easy days and
golden days just like all of the other days. So this is the concept of
Pentecost and these four feasts are related to the first advent of Christ.
3. Next we have the big gap, an
elapse of time where there are no feasts. The big gap is the elapse of time
between Pentecost and the feast of the Trumpets. That is a six-month elapse of
time. Again, it represents the calling out of the royal family, the time of the
Church Age. Remember that the Age of Israel was interrupted by the cross,
resurrection, ascension and session of Christ. The Church Age is simply an
insertion. Then the Age of Israel is continued with the Tribulation. In other
words, the doctrine of intercalation, the principle of the big gap or the
elapse of six months without a feast.
a) Intercalation means
insertion. The Jewish dispensation was interrupted by the strategical victory
of Christ, His death, burial, resurrection, ascension and session.
b) A new dispensation
was inserted called the Church Age.
c) Intercalation is the
intensified stage of the angelic conflict.
d) The Church Age as
intercalated is a mystery, not known to the Old Testament writers — Romans
16:25,26; Ephesians 3:1-6; Colossians 1:25,26. e)
Doctrines pertaining to the Church Age are not found in the Old Testament.
Where the Church Age information would have occurred in the Old Testament there
is a parenthesis.
f) Doctrine pertinent to
the Church Age is intercalated by the New Testament epistles.
g) The Old Testament
reveals doctrine up through the session of Christ, then skips the Church Age
and reveals the Tribulation, second advent and Millennium.
4. The second advent feasts. There
are three of them. The first of these is the feast of the Trumpets — Leviticus
23:23-25. This represents the termination of the fifth cycle of discipline to
Israel and the regathering of Israel and the establishment of them as a nation.
The fact that Israel will be regathered at the end of the Tribulation and at
the second advent is taught in Isaiah 5:26-30; 10:19-23; 11:11-16; 14:1-3;
60:4-6; Joel 2:16ff; Zechariah 10:6-12. So the feast of the Trumpets is a
regathering type of thing. In other words, it is a time when old friends meet
under perfect conditions. Therefore it represents in another beautiful way to
the supergrace believer the social prosperity of having true friends and great
friends and having something worthwhile for all eternity. The Trumpets is a
reminder that we will get together in eternity, even if not on earth.
The next feast is the feast of
atonement — Leviticus 23:26-32; Hebrews 9:24-28; Romans 3:23-26. It represents
the fulfilment of the unconditional covenants: the Abrahamic, Palestinian,
Davidic, and New covenants to Israel. These are given to the born-again Jews of
the past dispensation. The eternally saved of Israel will have the land and the
covenants forever under Jesus Christ, and this is a reminder of paragraph SG3.
The next feast is the Tabernacles.
This is blessing on earth; the atonement is blessing in eternity. The
Tabernacles: Leviticus 23:33-43; Zechariah 14:9, 16. It is a picture of the
Millennial reign of the Lord Jesus Christ. It is a reminder of what Jesus
Christ will produce on the earth — the prefect environment because Satan is
bound and demons are removed from the earth, as per Revelation 20; the optimum
spirituality which will exist in the concept of Isaiah 65:24 or Joel 2:28,29;
or Israel restored as a nation, the fulfilment of the unconditional covenants,
the objectivity in administration of justice, the perfect environment, creation
is loosened from the power of sin, the animal life loses its ferocity.
5. The feast of Hanukkah, 25
December through 1 January. This is where we got the idea of celebrating
Christmas. Christ was not born on 25 December, 25 December was when the temple
was cleansed from all of the pig’s blood of Antiochus Epiphanes and the human
blood of all the people he sacrificed. Hanukkah is the independent celebration
of Israel. It was first celebrated on 25 December 164 BC when the temple was cleansed from the corruption of Antiochus
Epiphanes. It meant freedom through military victory. Military victory always
is the basis for providing human freedom.
6. The relationship to the
agricultural economy of the ancient world. All of these feasts also had an
economic connotation.
a) The Passover was held
during the time of the latter rains or the barley harvest and was a reminder of
the importance of free enterprise.
b) The feast of the
firstfruits was held during the wheat harvest and it was a reminder that God
has provided through free enterprise, the only basis for sustaining a nation.
c) Pentecost was the
time when the early figs were ripened, a reminder to the Jews always that under
free enterprise there is opportunity for new business, and that it must be done
by following diligent laws of economy in establishment.
d) During the six months
between Pentecost and the Trumpets there was the great olive, fig, and date
harvest, depicting the principle that even the delicacies of life all come from
free enterprise.
e) The Trumpets,
Atonement, and Tabernacles were observed during the early rains and the time of
sowing, a reminder that as a nation sows against divine institutions they are
destroyed, as they sow by the utilisation of the divine institutions they survive
and become great. All great nations have been founded on the basis of the laws
of divine establishment. These three feasts were related to the sowing time of
the agricultural economy of Israel.
f) The feasts were
related to the practical everyday living of the Jews, and a principle emerges:
Bible doctrine has practical and temporal applications as well as spiritual
blessing. Bible doctrine is the producer of common sense.
g) We have the Sabbath
month as a feast. This is called Tishri. This was the seventh month, equivalent
to the last half of September and the first half of October. The Sabbath month
was a special month is all Jewish history. The Jews had a thirty-day month, a
twelve-month year. So to compensate for this they had to have a leap year in
which they added a month. On leap year they had 13 months in the year. The
seventh month or Tishri had seven feasts. The first day of the month they had
the feast of the Trumpets and the feast of the New Moon. On the third day of
the month they had a special commemoration for the murder of Gedaliah. On the
seventh day of the month they had the fast for the golden calf incident. The
tenth day of the month was the feast of Atonement. Then on 15-21 of the seventh
month the feast of the Tabernacles. On the 22nd day the solemn assembly and
prayer for rain, and on the 23rd day they celebrated the dedication of the
first temple.
“By means of doctrine resident in the soul he executed the Passover with
the result that it became a permanent institution.” It was Moses who under the
teaching of God set up the original seven feasts in Israel. Leviticus 23 is the
chapter and that chapter was written by Moses himself. All of the original
grace commemoratives were set up by Moses. In other words, the whole structure
of holidays was set up by Moses at the beginning of the Jewish nation. Other
holidays came along, but the structure of holidays is grace, doctrine resident
in the soul. The holidays are only meaningful to those who have doctrine
resident in the soul. A vacation is based upon capacity for life, capacity for
life is based upon maximum doctrine in the soul.