BRI Release 3 2
BRI Release 3 2
BRI Release 3 2
RELEASE
03
Israelite
Festivals
and the
Christian
Church
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Israelite Festivals
and the Christian Church
I. Introduction
1
“A sheaf of this grain was waved by the priest before the altar of God, as an
acknowledgment that all was His. Not until this ceremony had been performed
was the harvest to be gathered” (E. G. White, Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 540).
2
E. G. White, Desire of Ages, p. 77.
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expression of gratitude for the grain prepared as food, two loaves
baked with leaven were presented before God. The Pentecost
occupied but one day, which was devoted to religious service.”3
The feast was also associated with the experience of Israel at
Sinai when the covenant was established. According to Exodus
19:1 the Israelites reached Sinai on the third month after the Exodus
from Egypt. Pentecost was celebrated during the third month of
the year. The celebration of the feast was probably a memorial or
a reaffirmation of the covenant between God and Israel (cf. 2 Chr
15:10-13). It was on account of the covenant that the nation of
Israel came into existence (Exod 19:5-6).
The New Testament establishes a clear connection between
Pentecost and the Christian church. It was during the feast
of Pentecost that the disciples received the baptism of the
Holy Spirit and the church as such came into existence as the
new people of God (Acts 2:1-4). Then the new covenant was
established (3:25). But it also pointed to something that took
place in the heavenly sanctuary: “The Pentecostal outpouring was
Heaven’s communication that the Redeemer’s inauguration was
accomplished. According to His promise He had sent the Holy
Spirit from heaven to His followers as a token that He had, as
priest and king, received all authority in heaven and on earth, and
was the Anointed One over His people.”4
E. Feast of Trumpets
3
Idem, Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 540.
4
Idem, Acts of the Apostles, p. 38.
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The feast is described as a memorial (Lev 23:24) but we are
not informed concerning that which it memorializes. It is possible
that the purpose of the feast may have been to remind the people
that God was the Creator and Judge of the world in preparation
for the Day of Atonement ceremonies. This is suggested by some
passages in the Psalms where mention is made to the sound of the
horn and the making of “joyful noise” before the Lord (cf. Ps 95-
100). Some of those Psalms associate that experience with a call
to praise God as King, Judge of the world (47:5-7; 98:6-9), and as
Creator and preserver of His people (100:1-5).5
In the New Testament the feast of trumpets is not explicitly
mentioned making it difficult to identify its typological
significance. However, the book of Revelation makes reference
to seven trumpets that are sounded before the consummation of
salvation and that come to an end with a vision of the most holy
place in the heavenly temple. “Just as the Feast of Trumpets . . .
summoned ancient Israel to prepare for the coming of the day of
judgment, Yom Kippur, so the trumpets of Revelation especially
highlight the approach of the antitypical Yom Kippur. . . . The
trumpets seem to reach backward in salvation history as tokens
through the Christian Era that God will ‘remember’ (that is, act on
behalf of) His people and as warnings to prepare for the antitypical
F. Day of Atonement
The Day of Atonement was celebrated during Tišri 10, but in
contradistinction to the other feasts this was a day of fasting for
the people of Israel (Lev 23:29); it was not a festival. It was a
ceremonial Sabbath during which no work was to be done (v 28).
During this day the high priest performed the yearly service on
behalf of the Israelites. That day the sanctuary was cleansed from
all the sins, transgressions, and impurities of the people of God
(Lev 16:16, 21, 30). It was a day of judgment in Israel.
The Day of Atonement is not related to any particular event
in the history of Israel. Rather it pointed to God’s future action of
judgment and cleansing. Micah uses terminology and ideology
from the Day of Atonement to describe God’s future work on
behalf of His eschatological remnant. He describes God as He
who forgives “transgressions” (7:18; pešac = “rebellion;’ Lev
16:16, 21), “iniquities” (7:19; cawôn = “offense;” Lev 16:21), and
“sins,” (hatta’t = “sin;” Lev 16:21, 30). At that time the Lord will
dispose of “all their sins” (7:19; Lev 16:21, 30), removing them
from His presence and showing His steadfast love to the remnant
(7:20).
Daniel’s apocalyptic visions point to a time when the sanctuary
will be cleansed just before God establishes his kingdom on earth
(8:13-14). This suggests that the Day of Atonement is essentially
typical rather than commemorative. It may point to the past only
to the extent that it deals with all the sins of the people of Israel
committed during the previous years. But the fact that it takes place
year after year makes it a type of the future and ultimate cleansing
of God’s people in preparation for the messianic kingdom. It is to
this typological dimension that Micah and Daniel are pointing.
“These are the Lord’s appointed feasts, which you are to proclaim
as sacred assemblies for bringing offerings made to the Lord by
fire” (vs. 37). The Hebrew proposition le (“for”) is used here to
express the idea of purpose. There is no indication in the Bible
that during the festivals a spiritual sacrifice could take the place of
a material one. The feasts could not be celebrated without offering
sacrifices. In any case there is no instruction given in the Bible
concerning how to keep the feast without a sacrificial victim.
Those who promote the observance of the festivals have to create
their own personal way of celebrating the feasts and in the process
create human traditions that are not based on an explicit biblical
expression of God’s will.
10 In Hosea 2:11 the prophet states, “I will stop all her celebrations:
her yearly festivals, her now moons, her Sabbath days–all her appointed
feasts” (Hosea 2:11). Here the Sabbath is included together with the
feasts. This has been interpreted by some to indicate that if the Israelites
could not keep the feasts during the exile neither were they going to be
able to keep the Sabbath. This is a misunderstanding because, first, we
know that the Israelites kept the Sabbath during the exile but not the feast
because the feast required the temple services. Second, this passage is
simply indicating that God was bringing to an end the whole corrupted
Israelite system of worship. It is not addressing the question of whether
or not they will be able to keep those festivities and the Sabbath during
the exile. It is in Hosea 9:5 that the issue of keeping the festivals in
a foreign land is raised and the answer given is a negative one. It is
important to notice that in that in 9:5 the Sabbath is not included.
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memorials was once more begun. It was God’s design that these
anniversaries should call Him to the minds of the people. But with
few exceptions, the priests and leaders of the nation had lost sight
of this purpose. He who had ordained these national assemblies
and understood their significance witnessed their perversion.”11
Any attempt to justify their celebration independent of the Israelite
Temple is simply a human determination without any biblical basis
and can be described, once more, as a human tradition.
11 Desire of Ages, p. 447. There are several passages were the Israelites
are told to keep the festivals “wherever you live” (Lev 23:14, 21), giving
the impression to some that this is referring to any place in the world. But
that is certainly not the case. The Israelites were heading to Canaan and
that was the place where they will reside and where they were expected
to celebrate the festivals. That was the land the Lord gave them “as a
home” (Num 15:2; cf. Ezek 6:6).
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the festivals exactly as the Lord instructed the people in the Old
Testament. Christians who are interested in keeping the festivals
face the problem of providing the biblical evidence that would
support the way the festivals should be observed independent of
the temple services in lands outside Israel. If they cannot provide
the evidence then they are formulating their own non-biblical
traditions.
The Bible establishes the fact that the festivals were instituted
in Israel at Mount Sinai, as part of the covenant between God
and Israel. Some have suggested that Gen 1:14 indicates that God
instituted the festivals before Sinai because the passage states, “Let
there be lights in the expanse of the sky to separate the day from
the night, and let them serve as signs to mark the seasons [môcēd]
and days and years.” The Hebrew term môcēd, translated here
“seasons,” is the technical term used to designate the festivals. For
instance, in Lev 23:2 we read, “These are my appointed feasts, the
appointed feasts of the Lord;” here the plural môcadîm is rendered
“appointed feasts.” But it is unsound to transfer that meaning to
Gen 1:14. First, the Hebrew term môcēd is often used in the sense of
“appointed time” and expresses the idea of “season,” a particular
time of the year when an event takes place like, for instance, when
the birds migrate (Jer 8:7; cf. Gen 17:21), or the harvest of grapes
is ready (Hosea 2:9). It does not exclusively refer to the festivals.
Most critical scholars believe that in Gen 1:14 the term also refers
to the cultic festival. That conclusion is based on their conviction
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that Genesis was written during the post-exilic period and that
Moses did not write it. We disagree with them.
Second, if we want to define the meaning of the term lemôcadîm
in Gen 1:14 more specifically, we should look for a context in which
the creation of the moon and the sun is being discussed and not to
its usage in contexts of cultic discussions. We find such context in
Ps 104:19, where God’s creative purpose and power is described:
“He made the moon for the seasons.” The Hebrew phrase lemôcadîm
specifies the purpose or function of the moon and probably refers to
the phases of the moon or more correctly to the function of the moon
as the celestial body that determines the fixed time called “month.”
Third, the passage in Gen cannot be used to argue that the festivals
were instituted at creation because the passage is not dealing with
the regulation of festivals but with the specific functions of the sun
and the moon. The thematic and terminological connection between
Gen 1:14 and Ps 104:19 indicates that the term lemôcadîm is used in
Gen to designate the fixed period of time we call “month,” a word
that is not employed in the passage. In Genesis “a threefold function
is assigned to these celestial light bearers: to separate between day
and night, to serve as signs of the passage of time, and to illuminate
the earth.”12
Some have even suggested that the Sabbath was also considered
to be a festival and that, therefore, if the festivals were abolished
the Sabbath also would have been abolished. This is obviously
incorrect. First, the Sabbath was instituted long before Sinai,
even before the entrance of sin into the world; more specifically,
during the creation week. It is not a shadow pointing to Christ
and his work. Second, Lev 23:2 is a parenthetical statement and
not the first feast listed in the chapter. It is true that in 23:1 it is
said, “These are my appointed feast. . .” and then the Sabbath
commandment is immediately mentioned. But notice that in 23:3,
after the reference to the Sabbath, we again find the introductory
will burn forever refers to a fire that will burn until it consumes its object
and then it will extinguish itself. The feast were to last until the time they
found their fulfillment in the work of Jesus.
14 White, Patriarchs and Prophets, p. 539.
15 Idem, Desire of Ages, p. 652.
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some feasts but that is not clearly stated in those passages (Acts
20:6, 15; 1 Cor 16:8).16 We should also keep in mind that Paul on
one occasion went to the temple in Jerusalem and offered sacrifices
(Acts 21:17-26) and even allowed Timothy to be circumcised
(Acts 16:1). Yet he was fully aware of the fact that such practices
were not required from Christian believers.17
her. The Feast of Tabernacles was a harvest festival but in the Christian church
the true harvest is the harvest of souls that will take place at the moment of the
Second Coming. Then, as pointed out already, the Feast will be celebrated before
the throne of God (Rev 7). The celebration will take place after and not before
the harvest.
18
F. F. Bruce, The Acts of the Apostles: The Greek Text with Introduction
and Commentary (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1951), p. 455. The fasting
mentioned in Acts 13:2-3 has nothing to do with the Day of Atonement.
19
For evidence see, Troy Martin, “Pagan and Judeo-Christian Time-Keeping
Schemes in Gal 4.10 and Col 2.16,” New Testament Studies 42 (1996):105-119.
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and the evidence indicates they opt for the former.”20 Therefore
we should not conclude that the references to feasts in the New
Testament necessarily mean that the apostles and the churches
were celebrating those feast.
IV. Conclusion
20 Ibid., p. 108. He mentions 1 Cor 16:2, where Paul refers to the “first day
from the Sabbath” and not to the day of the sun. It would be incorrect to conclude
that because of the fact that Christians had accepted the Jewish calendar they
also accepted or celebrated the Jewish festivals. Martin adds, “Following the
destruction of the temple in 70 EC, the Jewish temporal system remains intact
even when the Jews are no longer able to offer the prescribed sacrifices” (pp.
110-111)
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Biblical Research Institute
General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists
Website: adventistbiblicalresearch.org
E-mail: biblicalresearch@gc.adventist.org
Phone: 301-680-6790
Fax: 301-680-6788