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Holy Days
Overview (Click on heading [Passover, Pentecost, etc.] for
explanation)
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Unleavened Bread |
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Trumpets |
Atonement |
Feast of Tabernacles |
Last Great Day |
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Oct
21 |
Passover and the Days of
Unleavened Bread
Passover and Days of Unleavened Bread. The Passover lamb was
slaughtered on the 14th of Nisan. It was eaten with unleavened bread and
bitter herbs on into the evening. That night the death angel passed,
spared the Israelites who had put the blood of the lamb on the doorposts,
and slaughtered the Egyptian firstborn. This began a period of seven days
of eating unleavened bread. The 15th and 21st days were holy days on which
no work was to be done. The intervening days were not holy days, but no
leaven was to be eaten or any leavened products to be in the houses. It
was on the Sunday during this period that the first sheaf (omer) of the
new harvest—was offered as the Wave Sheaf offering. Only after this
offering could the spring harvest begin.
The Church keeps God's
annual holy days in their true spiritual intent as constant reminders of
the plan of God. It stresses their spiritual meaning just as Paul did in 1
Corinthians 5 when he wrote: "Let us, therefore, celebrate the festival
with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth."
Passover: The
bread and wine which Jesus instituted at His last supper and which are
taken yearly by the Church today are explained symbolically both by Jesus
Himself and by the apostle Paul. The wine represents the shed blood of
Jesus who gave Himself as an offering to pay for all the sins of mankind.
That full and complete sacrifice makes it possible for one to have any and
all sins forgiven upon repentance. The wine also represents the New
Covenant made between God and the Christian by the blood of
Christ.
The bread represents the body of Jesus which was torn and
beaten for us all, in Christ's ultimate sacrifice for mankind. Perhaps the
fullest discussion of its meaning is found in John 6, in which it is shown
that Jesus is the "bread of life." The eating of the bread and the
drinking of the wine represent partaking of the eternal life which only
God can give. The beaten body of Christ also represents the stripes He
took on His back enabling us to claim the gift of divine healing for our
physical infirmities (Is. 53:4-5; 1 Pet. 2:24).
The purpose of the
foot washing ceremony is explained by Jesus Himself as being to show true
humility and the proper sense of service (John. 13:12-17). No one can be
greater than His Lord, who is Jesus Christ; yet Jesus was the greatest
servant of all and gave more than anyone else for mankind. This spirit of
Christian love and service is expressed symbolically by washing another
person's feet and then allowing that person to reciprocate.
Thus,
the Passover represents Christ's sacrifice for all— both the individual
and the world—and pictures the initial step in salvation. Only through
acceptance of this sacrifice can one repent and be forgiven. Repentance is
the first stave in individual conversion.
The Feast of Unleavened
Bread: Leaven is used to symbolize a number of things, both good and bad.
In relation to this festival it is a negative symbol, representing sin (1
Cor. 5:6-8). The putting out of leaven from one's house pictures ridding
one's life of sin as a continual process. It also represents the action of
the new convert in attempting to leave the world (symbolized by ancient
Egypt) and in removing sin from his life. Conversely, the positive act of
eating unleavened bread represents our conscious desire to actively seek a
sinless way of life in following God's laws.
The crossing of the
Red Sea is symbolic of baptism (1 Cor. 10:1-2). Ancient Israel crossed the
Red Sea sometime during the Feast of Unleavened Bread (some commentators
suggest on the last day). The new convert soon finds that it is not so
easy to leave "Egypt" (the world), that "Pharaoh's army" (sin) comes
pursuing him. But God provides help and leads him safely through baptism,
driving back the power of temptation, sin and the world through His Holy
Spirit.
The Passover is observed on the evening at the beginning of
Nisan 14 in a very solemn ceremony, the most structured of any of the
annual assemblies. The order, is first the foot washing service, then the
taking of the bread, and finally the drinking of the wine. Before each
part of the ceremony appropriate scriptures are read. The service is
concluded by a reading of selections from John 13-17. The next night, the
evening at the end of the 14th and the beginning of the 15th, is marked by
a joyous celebration of small groups in individual homes. This is, of
course, the time of the Exodus of Israel from Egypt. The entire seven-day
period is a time of eating only unleavened food products. All leaven is
removed from the homes before sunset at the end of the 14th.
Pentecost
Pentecost (Feast of Weeks): This festival took its name from the manner
in which it was determined. Rather than being celebrated on a particular
calendar day, it was counted seven weeks or fifty days from the Wave Sheaf
Day—hence the term "Feast of Weeks" in the Old Testament and "Pentecost"
(Greek "fiftieth") in the time of the New Testament. It marked the end of
the spring harvest. The basic instructions for determining the date of
Pentecost are clear in Leviticus 23:15-16 which reads as follows according
to the Hebrew text: "You shall count beginning with the day after the
Sabbath, the day on which you brought the wave sheaf (seven Sabbaths shall
be completed), to the day after the seventh Sabbath; you shall count fifty
days." In other words, one begins and ends counting with a Sunday, hence a
Sunday is the day of Pentecost. This interpretation is confirmed by the
practice of the conservative and priestly groups represented by the
Sadducees, the Samaritans and the Karaites.*
Granted, other groups
used either the first or last holy day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread as
their reference for counting, rather than the weekly Sabbath. This
interpretation evidently originated in the change of the meaning of the
Hebrew word shabbat. This is the word occurring three times in Leviticus
23:15-16 (and translated "Sabbath" each time in the translation above).
The original meaning of the word was the weekly Sabbath, but it was
occasionally used for the annual Sabbaths, as well, though always
clarified by the context. .However, during the intertestamental period,
the word came to mean "week."
Thus, the Pharisees took the word
"Sabbath" in the sense of "annual Sabbath" and "week," so that they
counted seven weeks" beginning with the first holy day. The Essenes, while
using a solar calendar, and the Falashas interpreted the word as "week,"
counting seven weeks from the Sunday after the Passover week. These
interpretations, although originating before the first century A,D., were
evidently incorrect. The term "Sabbath" was not likely to be used of an
annual Sabbath without clarification. Thus, the Pharisaic method was
unlikely interpretation. Further, to take the word "Sabbath" in the sense
of "week," as the Pharisees, Essenes and Falashas all did, was
anachronistic; the word did not have this meaning in Old Testament
times.
Spiritual Meaning for the Day of Pentecost
The
Church keeps God's annual holy days in their true spiritual intent as
constant reminders of the plan of God.
Pentecost is the anniversary
of the founding of the New Testament Church. It initiates God's plan of
salvation for the world. Just as Pentecost marked the spring or first
harvest, so Pentecost symbolizes the first small harvest of individuals
through God's Church. In the salvation of the individual, Pentecost
represents his receiving of the Holy Spirit after baptism. This Holy
Spirit enables him to do what he could not do before, just as the
disciples were able to go forward in spreading the gospel in a way totally
impossible before the Holy Spirit came. An example is Peter's boldness in
proclaiming the gospel so soon after clear cowardice when Jesus was
betrayed. (A late Jewish tradition holds that ancient Israel received the
law from God at Mount Sinai on Pentecost. This would make sense, since
only through God's Holy Spirit can a person keep God's law in its true
spiritual intent.)
Feast of Trumpets
This festival, on the first day of the 7th month
(Tishri), was celebrated by the blowing of trumpets—hencethe popular name.
The Old Testament significance of this day seems to have had its origins
in the trumpet sound of alarm used to call people to a state of general
warning or preparation for war (Ezek. 33). The spiritual significance will
be discussed later. In later times, it marked the beginning of the civil
year just as it does among Jews today. (However, it is not clear that this
was the case in Old Testament times. A popular theory among Old Testament
scholars has been that the new year began with this day in Old Testament
times, but recent studies have called this into question and have advanced
reasons for believing that in Old Testament times the new year began in
the spring with Nisan 1.)
Spiritual Meaning for the Feast of
Trumpets
The Church keeps God's annual holy days in their true
spiritual intent as constant reminders of the plan of God.
Trumpets
were an instrument often used to sound the alarm for war. They were also
the instrument of the watchman to arouse the sleeping populace if danger
threatened. This festival represents the preaching of the gospel to the
world by God's faithful watchmen who have the responsibility of arousing
the people from their spiritual slumber (Ezek. 33:1-16). At this point,
God has ceased to let mankind go his own way. The time has come to save
not just a few in His Church, but all peoples—to save man from himself.
Otherwise, man would succeed in destroying himself.
The Day of
Trumpets also symbolizes the resurrection of all who died in Christ and
the change of all who will be living in Christ. This stunning event—the
achievement of eternal life for millions through birth into the Family of
God—will occur simultaneously with the return of Jesus Christ at the last
trump. "In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for
the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and
we shall be changed" (1 Cor. 15:52).
Jewish tradition adds some
interesting parallels. For example, the Day of Trumpets (Rosh Hashanah) is
said to picture the most important judgment time, when the inhabitants of
the world shall be judged by the Creator. Furthermore, Tishri I was
considered by some Jewish commentators to be the beginning. of
Creation—which would create a complete parallelism, since this shall be
fulfilled by the "Day of the Lord," the time of the Creator's physical
return to His creation as Jesus Christ, King of kings and Lord and
lords.
Day of Atonement
The 10th day of the 7th month had quite an elaborate ritual
in Old Testament times and continued up until the destruction of the
Temple. It was a commanded fast day in which nothing was eaten or drunk
for 24 hours, from the evening of the 9th to the evening of the 10th. On
the day itself, the ritual of the two goats was enacted as described in
detail in Leviticus 16. Two goats were selected. By drawing lots, one was
chosen to represent God and the other to represent "Azazel." In later
literature "Azazel" was considered a name for the chief of the demons,
i.e. another name for Satan (1 Enoch 9:6. 10:4). The high priest first
sacrificed a bull for himself and entered into the Holy of Holies to
sprinkle the blood on the mercy seat. Then, he slaughtered the goat "for
the Lord" and sprinkled its blood on the mercy seat, as he had done the
blood of the bull. In this way the high priest was the only person to ever
go into the Holy of Holies, and then only on the Day of Atonement. At all
other times, and to all other people, it was off limits. The goat for
Azazel then had the sins of the people confessed over it by the high
priest. After that it was taken away live into the wilderness and turned
loose, symbolically removing all the transgressions of the people away
from the camp. Thus, the Day of Atonement symbolized the reconciling of
the Israelites to God. Spiritual Meaning for the Day of
Atonement
The Church keeps God's annual holy days in their true
spiritual intent as constant reminders of the plan of God.
The Day
of Atonement symbolizes both the reunion of God and man after Christ
returns to earth, and the binding of Satan to render him inactive. The
evils of human nature are the attitude of Satan the devil. As long as the
source of evil remains active, evil will have a part in subverting the
world. At this time, the sins of the world shall, correctly, be placed on
their source, as symbolized by the Azazel goat which was sent away into
the wilderness. Satan shall be chained and no longer allowed to deceive
the world (Rev. 20:1-3). This is not to diminish our own role in sin, for
the Day of Atonement also represents the reuniting of God and man through
the sacrifice of Jesus Christ for the sins of mankind.
The Day of
Atonement is kept by a complete fast (no food or drink) from sunset to
sunset. (Exceptions are of course made by the individuals themselves in
cases of serious illness and the like.)
Feast of Tabernacles
and The Last Great Day
Feast of Tabernacles and Last Great Day: This was a festival
period beginning with the 15th day of the 7th month, a holy day, and
continuing through the 22nd, another holy day. During this time the
Israelites were to build temporary shelters or booths (Hebrew) comparable
to that used by a watchman in a field or vineyard. This led to the
designation "Feast of Tabernacles" or "Feast of Booths" (Hebrew sukkot).
This festival corresponded to the end of the autumn harvest.
A
distinction is made between the first seven days of the festival, the
Feast of Tabernacles proper, and the last or eighth day. Some passages
refer only to a feast of seven days (Deut. 16:15). Leviticus 13:33-36
shows that the last or eighth day is in fact a separate festival. That is,
just as the Passover commences the Feast of Unleavened Bread but is a
distinct celebration, and just as the Wave Sheaf Day is a distinct
celebration even though falling within the Feast of Unleavened Bread, so
is the Last Great Day the consummation of the Feast of Tabernacles though
considered a festival in its own right.
Spiritual Meaning for
the Feast of Tabernacles and the Last Great Day
The Church
keeps God's annual holy days in their true spiritual intent as constant
reminders of the plan of God.
Feast of Tabernacles: This festival
analogously acts out the Millennium—the 1,000 years of Christ's reign on
earth. The true harvest of mankind can now take place. Without Satan—the
source of evil—around, all nations can be brought to God. For 1,000 years,
a Golden Age shall reign: happiness and peace shall be reality and
worldwide salvation shall be. This harvest of persons is far larger than
the first as the fall harvest is much the larger harvest season in the
agricultural cycle. The Millennium shall be the time when God sets His
hand to save the world. It shall be a time of rebuilding, the forging of a
new modern society under God's laws.*
* An interesting
interpretation of the Feast of Tabernacles as symbolic of the millennial
reign of Christ is found in the writings of the late third century
Catholic commentator, Methodius. Although he evidently did not keep the
festival himself, he perceived it—perhaps reflecting an earlier
tradition—as picturing a time when the "earthy tabernacles" would be put
off and Christians made immortal would celebrate the true feast (Symposium
9.1).
The Last Great Day: Despite a thousand years of peace and
happiness, it must be remembered that untold millions have lived and died
without ever having had the knowledge to understand salvation. The Last
Great Day represents the time when they shall be resurrected and given
that chance—not a second chance but a first chance, a chance they will not
have had before. Only then shall God's initial plan for mankind be at an
end. Thus, this last great holy day of God pictures the greatest period of
salvation for mankind—the Great White Throne Judgment (Rev.
20:11-15).
The culmination of the plan of salvation is marked by
the renewal of the whole creation in the new heaven and the new Earth
(Rev. 21). Death and destruction are now no more; human history is now at
and end. The Kingdom of God has become eternal.
The Feast of
Tabernacles is considered the highlight of the sacred year. It is
primarily for this festival that Church members save special funds. Since
the Feast of Tabernacles is celebrated only in certain central locations,
most members must travel a certain distance to attend, and spend the
entire time away from home. While actual booths are no longer built, the
same symbolism is maintained by the fact that Church members live in
temporary dwellings (motels, hotels, campsites) away from home. Of course,
in order to spend the eight days away from home, as well as to meet the
expense of travel to and from the place of assembly, saving ahead is
necessary (cf. Deut. 14:22-26).
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