(5) Regulations Concerning the Festivals
(5) Regulations Concerning
the Festivals
Leviticus 23:1-2 “The Lord said to Moses, ‘Speak to the children of Israel and
say: These are My festivals, the festivals of the Lord which you are to
proclaim as holy assemblies.’”
This is a passage recorded in
the first year in the wilderness after the Exodus. Men were required to come to
the temple three times a year. The major festivals of Israel are Passover,
(Feast of Unleavened Bread, Feast of Firstfruits), Pentecost, the Feast of
Trumpets, and (Day of Atonement, Feast of Tabernacles). Passover, Pentecost,
and the Feast of Trumpets are observed as important festivals.
The festivals of Israel are
called “Moed.” The first reason Israel observed
these festivals was to transmit their historical significance. Exodus 12:24-25
states that after the Passover ends, it becomes a future feast to be observed
from generation to generation. "This is to be a statute for you and your
descendants to keep forever; you shall keep this rite when you come to the land
that the LORD is giving you, as promised."
Second, the feasts united the
people as a community. In Deuteronomy 6:4, "Hear, O Israel, the LORD our
God is one LORD." The Israelites proclaimed this message when they
gathered for the feasts. This teaches us that we must maintain a sense of
community even in the New Testament era. In Ephesians 4:3-4, "Make every
effort to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace, for there is one
body and one Spirit, just as you were called to one hope of your calling."
Third, it was a
festival of joy. Romans 14:7 states, "For the kingdom of God is not eating
and drinking, but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit." The
feasts of the Old Testament are a type of the New Testament. They were a type
of earnestly waiting for Jesus Christ. However, with the coming of Christ in
the New Testament, the feasts have now been fulfilled.
If one attempts to
observe the Old Testament festivals today, it is tantamount to not believing in
the coming of Christ. Colossians 2:16-17 states, "Therefore let no one
judge you in matters of food and drink, or in regard to festivals, new moons,
or Sabbaths. These are a shadow of things to come, but the body is
Christ's."
In 1 Corinthians
5:8, the Apostle Paul said, "Therefore let us keep the feasts, not with
old leaven, nor with leaven of evil and malice, but with unleavened bread of
sincerity and truth." Although there is no need to observe feasts in the
New Testament era, the message is to remember them. It means to fully
understand the meaning that these feasts of God hold for the saints. Through the
feasts, God reveals the sinfulness of humanity. He also reveals salvation.
Through these feasts, we must understand how those who have departed from the
Kingdom of God return to it.
Regarding the feasts, the Old Testament era consisted of sacrifice and
the Sabbath. Sacrifice signifies worship today. Worship is not about form, but
about offering it in spirit and truth. Churchgoers tend to think of worship as
"performing it in a specific place through formal rituals or procedures
and offering it to God," failing to consider the worship that takes place
within them.
If the pastor's sermon was moving amidst a solemn atmosphere and
magnificent hymns, they think, "I offered good worship today and received
much grace." They should know for sure whether God accepted the worship or
not, but since there is no way to verify this, they simply think, "I
offered it well." God delivered the Israelites from Egypt, gave them the
Tabernacle, and also gave them the Law.
God
said, "Offer sacrifices according to the law." Israel offered
sacrifices and gifts for 40 years, from Mount Sinai until they entered the land
of Canaan; however, Amos 5:25 states, "God did not accept them." Yet,
if the church today thinks, "We offered worship through certain forms and
procedures," it will result in the same outcome as when the Israelites of
the Old Testament era did not accept the sacrifices and gifts they offered in
the wilderness for forty years.
Leviticus 23:3 “Six days you shall work, but the seventh day is a Sabbath
of rest; it is a day of holy assembly where you shall do no work. It is the
Sabbath of the Lord, which you are to keep in all your dwelling places.”
Observing the feasts was
linked to rest. We must examine how the Bible explains the Sabbath. In Hebrews
4:8-10, if Joshua gave rest to Israel, that was the land of Canaan. The land of
Canaan is a shadow symbolizing the Kingdom of God. This means it is not true
rest. Therefore, it implies that the time for rest remains for God's people.
True rest is precisely entering the Kingdom of God through Jesus Christ. This
is because God is the true rest.
One who has died of the old
self with Jesus Christ and been born into new life with Jesus Christ is one who
has already entered into rest. To those who have entered into rest, it is said,
"Do not do your own work." The phrase "your own work"
refers precisely to "loving the world." Those today who say, "We
must keep the Sabbath," or "We must keep the Lord's Day holy as it
replaces the Sabbath," are essentially confessing that they "have not
yet entered into rest." This is because they believe that they must keep
it holy to enter into rest.
It is not much different from
the case where one is still waiting for Christ even though Jesus Christ has
come. Those who are still waiting for Christ are not in Jesus Christ, and
therefore are not in the rest of the Kingdom of God. Only those who are in
Jesus Christ can be said to have already entered into rest.
Leviticus
23:4-8: “These are the feasts of the Lord to be proclaimed as holy assemblies
at the appointed times. The evening of the fourteenth day of the first month is
the Passover of the Lord, and the fifteenth day of the month is the Feast of
Unleavened Bread of the Lord. For seven days you shall eat unleavened bread. On
the first day you shall assemble in a holy assembly and do no work. For seven
days you shall offer burnt offerings to the Lord. On the seventh day you shall
also assemble in a holy assembly and do no work.”
The phrase “at that appointed time” (Bemoadam, the base form is
Moed) comes from the same root as “festival” (Moed), meaning “at a designated time.” Passover (Pesach) is derived from the word “Pasach,” meaning “to pass over” or “to skip over,” and is a festival originating
from the fact that during the tenth plague inflicted upon Egypt—the plague of the death of the
firstborn—death passed over the house of Israel.
Passover is a
festival commemorating God’s deliverance of the Israelites from their slavery in Egypt, and it was
observed on the evening of the 14th day of the first month, Nisan (Abib). The
first month, or Nisan, corresponds to the seventh month in the Hebrew civil
calendar, which corresponds to March or April in the solar calendar. Meanwhile,
this Passover event prefigures the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.
The Feast of Unleavened
Bread (Hammazot, הַמַּצֹּ֖ות; the base form is Matcha) is derived from 'Machats,' meaning to suck
milk, and signifies unleavened bread, or bread without yeast. Therefore, the
Feast of Unleavened Bread was a festival to commemorate the Israelites' exodus
from Egypt, during which they ate unleavened bread for a week. Eating
unleavened bread along with bitter herbs for seven days was intended to remind
them of the suffering of slavery in Egypt and the urgent circumstances of the
Exodus (Exodus 12:15-20).
Meanwhile, this
verse records the number of days for eating unleavened bread as seven, whereas
Deuteronomy 16:8 states that it is eaten for six days. In other words, this
verse emphasizes the number of days for eating unleavened bread, so it mentions
exactly seven days, whereas Deuteronomy 16:8 emphasizes the 'holy assembly'
itself, so it distinguishes the seventh day (holy assembly) from the other days
for eating unleavened bread and calls it six days (Exodus 12:18).
On the other hand,
in several places in the Bible, Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread are
not distinguished and are used interchangeably (Exodus 12:3-20; 13:3-8; Luke
22:1). This is because not only were the rituals of the two feasts performed
simultaneously within a single week, but the food of Passover itself was unleavened
bread.
Therefore, the
term Passover was used across all unleavened festival days, and at the same
time, the term Feast of Unleavened Bread was also used to refer to the Passover
ritual. However, strictly speaking, Passover refers to a ritual observed for
only one night on the evening of the 14th day of the month of Abib as a
festival to commemorate the 'death of the firstborn,' whereas Feast of
Unleavened Bread refers to a week-long festival of unleavened bread that
includes the evening of the 14th day as a festival to commemorate the
'liberation from Egypt.'
Unleavened bread
refers to bread made without yeast, which acts as an enzyme. This reflects the
urgent situation of the first Feast of Unleavened Bread, when there was not
even time to leaven it. Furthermore, because yeast often symbolizes sin, false
teachings, or the old way of life in the Bible (1 Corinthians 5:5-7),
unleavened bread, which contains no yeast, also symbolizes the spiritual food
that the redeemed holy people are to eat.
“Gathering in a
holy assembly” The first and last days (the seventh day) of the Feast of Unleavened
Bread are days to gather in a holy assembly before God. Therefore, these days
are holy Sabbath days, and all physical labor related to one’s livelihood is strictly
prohibited. One must give glory to God through prayer, praise, and meditation
while deeply reflecting on the meaning of the feast with a holy heart.
“You shall do no
work”—the Hebrew word for “work” here, *meleket* (the base form is *melaka*), means “laborious work.” Therefore, the “work” mentioned here superficially
refers to all livelihood activities related to one’s profession. However,
spiritually, it refers to one’s own work that is opposed to God’s work. Consequently, such work
was prohibited during all festivals when people gathered for holy assemblies.
In contrast, however, the word “work” (*melaka*) appearing in Exodus 20:10 and elsewhere encompasses all
trivial matters, such as preparing food or kindling a fire for that work; these
activities were specifically forbidden only on the Sabbath and the Day of
Atonement.
“You shall offer
a burnt offering.” This is a regulation regarding offering sacrifices to God, especially
grain offerings, burnt offerings, and sin offerings, as burnt offerings during
the Feast of Unleavened Bread (Num 28:16-25). This is an expression of
gratitude for the atonement of the Israelites and for becoming God’s people.
Leviticus 23:9-14 “The Lord said to
Moses, ‘Speak to the children of Israel and say: When
you enter the land I am giving you and harvest your grain, you shall bring the
first sheaf of your grain to the priest. The priest shall wave it on your
behalf before the Lord so that it may be acceptable to him; he shall wave it on
the day after the Sabbath.
On the day you wave the sheaf, you shall offer to the Lord a year-old,
unblemished ram as a burnt offering, and for the grain offering, two-tenths of
an ephah of fine flour mixed with oil, as a burnt offering to the Lord, to be a
pleasing aroma. For the drink offering, you shall use one-fourth hin of wine.
You shall not eat bread, roasted grain, or fresh ears of grain until the day
you bring your offering to your God. This is a perpetual statute for you all
generations to observe in every place where you dwell.’”
This is the
ordinance concerning the Feast of Firstfruits. This feast is a celebration in
which the first fruits of the barley harvest are first offered to God, and it
is observed on the day following the Sabbath during the Feast of Unleavened
Bread (Nisan 15–21). Therefore, no one could eat the fruits of the barley harvest
before the Feast of Firstfruits was performed, in which the first sheaf of
harvested grain was presented to the priest as a wave offering, and burnt
offerings, grain offerings, and drink offerings were offered together.
Regarding “the first sheaf of grain,” the Jewish barley harvest in the
Palestine region begins in the month of Nisan, which corresponds to March or
April in the modern solar calendar. The Feast of Firstfruits, in which the first
sheaf of the harvested grain is offered to God, was held on the day following
the first Sabbath after Passover. Meanwhile, this first sheaf of grain
symbolizes Christ as the firstfruits of the resurrection and serves as a
guarantee of the resurrection of all believers (1 Corinthians 15:20-23).
“The priest
shall wave the sheaf for you before the LORD to be accepted; he shall wave it
on the day after the Sabbath.” That sheaf refers to a barley sheaf. This is because in the region of
Canaan, all harvests begin with barley, which is harvested from around
mid-April to early May. And wheat began to ripen only two to three weeks after
barley.
Regarding the day
after the Sabbath, the Feast of Unleavened Bread was strictly observed for a
week from the 15th to the 21st of Nisan in the Jewish religious month. The
Feast of Firstfruits was observed during this period of Unleavened Bread, but
there is disagreement among scholars regarding the exact date.
“It will be
shaken,” signifying that the priest offers a wave offering to God. Since the
wave offering carries the meaning of giving to God and receiving it back, it
symbolizes both the death on the cross and the resurrection simultaneously.
The burnt offering
is a voluntary offering symbolizing complete devotion to God and the
maintenance of a normal relationship; it is a sacrifice in which all parts of
the offering, except for the hide, are burned on the altar. The grain offering
is a voluntary offering in which grain is presented as a token of gratitude and
loyalty to God. The grain offering is usually offered together with the burnt
offering and the peace offering, and it symbolizes the death and resurrection
of Jesus Christ on the cross.
Regarding “two-tenths of an ephah of fine
flour,” while one-tenth of an ephah of fine flour was offered for the general
grain offering (Exodus 29:40), for the Feast of Firstfruits, twice that amount,
two-tenths (2/10) of fine flour, was offered. Meanwhile, the 'ephah' here is a
solid unit of volume used in the Old Testament era, meaning that 1 ephah is
equivalent to 23. Therefore, two-tenths (2/10) of an ephah is a unit of volume
equivalent to 4.6.
On the surface, it
may be a voluntary offering expressing gratitude for the harvest, but
spiritually, fine flour represents the form of one who has been broken and
ground, losing their original appearance and being born again. The first tenth
signifies the death of the old self, and the second tenth is an expression of
gratitude for the resurrection into the new self. In other words, the old has
died and one has become a new person.
As in Romans 6:7,
all sin disappears only when one dies. However, many churches today believe
that becoming fine flour is achieved through one's own determination,
suffering, and devotion. Before God, it is not effort, but the surrender of
one's own strength.
“You shall not
eat bread, roasted grain, or fresh ears of grain until the day you bring your
offering to your God.” In other words, this means that you must not eat the produce of the
land in any form before first offering the first sheaf of harvested grain to
the Lord. Here, the offering of the first sheaf carries the meaning that all
the harvest belongs to God. Thus, it signifies that everything came to God and
returns to God.
Leviticus 23:15-22 “On the day after the
Sabbath, that is, the day you brought the sheaves of grain as a wave offering,
count the seven Sabbaths and count fifty days until the day after the seven
Sabbaths. Then bring a new grain offering to the Lord. You shall bring two loaves
of bread made of two-tenths of an ephah from your dwelling place and wave them;
they are baked of fine flour with yeast. This is the first wave offering to the
Lord. You shall also bring with these loaves seven unblemished lambs of one
year, one young bull, and two rams. You shall bring these to the Lord together
with the grain offering and the drink offering as a burnt offering; this is a
fire offering, a pleasing aroma to the Lord. You shall also bring one male goat
as a sin offering, and two rams of one year as a peace offering. The priest
shall wave the two lambs with the firstfruits of the bread before the Lord as a
wave offering. These are holy offerings to the Lord, and they shall be given to
the priest. This "On that day you shall proclaim a holy assembly among you
and do no work; this is a perpetual statute for you to observe throughout your
generations in all your dwelling places. When you reap the grain of your land,
do not reap to the very corners of the field, nor gather the fallen berries, but
leave them for the poor and the sojourner. I am the LORD your God."
The day Jesus
resurrected was two days after the Sabbath. Easter is called the Feast of
Firstfruits. It signifies the harvesting of the first fruits. The wave offering
is a sacrifice offered by waving. Therefore, an earthquake occurred, the tomb
opened, and He resurrected; the instruction was to offer a new grain offering
(new bread) starting from the night of the 49th day (seven Sabbaths) from that
day, and continuing on the following day (the 50th). This is Pentecost.
Pentecost is not a sacrifice involving blood, but a day for offering bread.
Bread was offered first, followed by other offerings.
On the day of
Pentecost, sacrifices were offered by waving. Leviticus 23:17 states, "You
shall bring two loaves of bread made of two-tenths of an ephah from your
dwelling place and wave them; they are baked of fine flour with yeast, and they
are to be offered to the Lord as the first wave offering." Ephesians
states that this unites Gentiles and Jews. The two loaves of bread signify that
on the day of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit will come, and Gentiles will also
return to the Lord. Waving the offering signifies resurrection.
In Acts
chapter 2, God's power was clearly manifested. The Old Testament is a type and
shadow of the New Testament. The day of Pentecost was the day Moses received
the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai. It is described that
on that day, God gave a ring on the ringing hand. This implies that the stone
tablets of the covenant represent a marriage promise. The Spirit of God (the
Holy Spirit) was poured out on that day. Those who have received the Holy
Spirit—that is, those who have received the baptism of the Holy Spirit—are the
resurrected ones. Resurrection does not mean that the dead body comes back to
life, but rather that the spirit rises from the dead. In other words, it means
that the soul dies, and one is born from heaven clothed in a spiritual body. It
is putting on the clothes of the new man (the clothes of Christ).
Regarding the
Passover, Leviticus 23:4-8 states: "These are the feasts of the Lord to be
proclaimed as holy assemblies at their appointed times. The evening of the
fourteenth day of the first month is the Passover of the Lord, and the
fifteenth day of the month is the Feast of Unleavened Bread of the Lord. For
seven days you shall eat unleavened bread. On the first day you shall assemble
in a holy assembly and do no work. For seven days you shall offer burnt
offerings to the Lord. On the seventh day you shall also assemble in a holy
assembly and do no work."
The day the
Israelites left Egypt at night was the 14th day of the first month of the lunar
calendar. A week later, they crossed the Red Sea, and on this day, Jesus died
on the cross. Passover is the day that signifies the death of the Son of God.
Leviticus
23:15-16 states, "Count seven Sabbaths from the day after the Sabbath, the
day you brought the sheaves of grain as a wave offering, and count fifty days
from that day until the day after the seven Sabbaths, and offer a new grain
offering to the Lord." Thus, after the spring feasts passed and four
months had gone by, Leviticus 23:23 speaks of the Feast of Trumpets, where God
commanded, "Let the day of the Exodus be the first month." From that
time, the Jewish calendar began. The first lunar month became the month of
Passover. The seventh lunar month corresponded to September 1st in the solar
calendar. One can see Jews going to the synagogue dressed in formal attire.
Therefore, the Feast of Trumpets runs from the evening of September 29th until
dawn on October 1st. He commanded that trumpets be blown on this day.
While
Passover and Pentecost have been fulfilled in the New Testament, the Feast of
Trumpets has not yet been fulfilled. The Bible instructs that this day be
regarded as the New Year. It commanded that the 14th day of the first lunar
month, the day of the Exodus, be designated as the first month. This is
referred to as the first month of the religious calendar. However, the Jewish
calendar is produced based on the Feast of Trumpets, which is the civil
calendar.
Ten days
after the Feast of Trumpets, which is a festival in the seventh month, comes
Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. The Feast of Tabernacles lasts for eight days
starting from the 15th of the seventh month. All of these correspond to the
festivals of blowing trumpets. In Matthew 24:30-31, it says, "Then the
sign of the Son of Man will appear in the sky, and then all the tribes of the
earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds with
power and great glory. He will send out his angels with a great trumpet sound,
and they will gather his elect from the four corners of the earth, from one end
of heaven to the other."
Jesus died on
the day of Passover, resurrected on the Feast of Firstfruits, and the Holy
Spirit descended on Pentecost. For the people who left Egypt, Passover was the
day they applied the blood of the lamb, and on the day of Pentecost, they
received the two stone tablets at Mount Sinai; the Feast of Tabernacles was the
festival they observed after entering Canaan. The Feast of Tabernacles is God's
own feast.
The story from the Feast of
Trumpets to the Feast of Tabernacles is a story about the Son of God. However,
in the Feast of Trumpets, the trumpet is the sound of God's trumpet. In Exodus
19:16-19, it says, "On the morning of the third day, there was thunder and
lightning and a thick cloud on the mountain, and the sound of the trumpet was
heard very loudly, and all the people in the camp trembled. Moses led the
people out of the camp to meet God, and they stood at the foot of the mountain.
And there was thick smoke on Mount Sinai, for the LORD came down there in fire.
The smoke rose like smoke from a pottery kiln, and the whole mountain shook violently.
And as the sound of the trumpet grew louder, Moses spoke, and God answered him
with a voice."
God Himself
descended on Mount Sinai. Likewise, the same will be true when the Lord returns
in the New Testament. When He descended, the heavens became entirely filled
with fire. In Deuteronomy 5:23-24, it says, "When you heard the voice
coming out of the darkness, with the mountain burning with fire, the leaders of
your tribes and the elders came to me." Deuteronomy is the story of the
forty years in the wilderness.
In Revelation
1:7, it says, "Behold, He is coming with clouds, and every eye will see
Him, and those who pierced Him will also see Him; and all the tribes of the
earth will mourn because of Him. So be it. Amen. The Lord God said, 'I am the
Alpha and the Omega, the One who is, and who was, and who is to come, the
Almighty.'"
"Behold
(Idu Ἰδοὺ)" draws the listener's attention. Nephelon (νεφελῶν) is a symbolic expression indicating God's presence. Erchetai (ἔρχεται) is not a future tense but a present
middle-deputous tense, meaning "to cause to come." Although the
middle-deputous tense has a passive form, its meaning is active. It signifies
an active action of being sent by others for one's own sake. It signifies the
establishment of the Kingdom of God within the hearts of believers. Since the
Logos is present within the hearts of believers, Heaven is not a separate
entity but is present right within the hearts of believers. Erchetai is used in
the present, not the future. Jesus Christ is coming now.
In the phrase “with (meta) the clouds (nephelon:
feminine plural νεφελῶν),” the word “together” carries the meaning of “to unite.” In Matthew 1:23, it says, “Behold, the virgin shall conceive and
bear a son, and his name shall be called Immanuel, which means, ‘God is with us.’” “God is with us” in Immanuel is the typological name of
the Messiah spoken of by Isaiah.
The cloud is a symbolic
expression. When used in the singular, it refers to a physical cloud. This was
expressed as the glory (presence) and judgment of Jehovah. However, when used
in the plural, it speaks of the saints. They are the words united with Christ.
They are the soldiers of Christ. They are those who proclaim the word of truth.
That is why the expression "coming with angels" was used. This is how
the events taking place within the hearts of the saints are described.
"Every eye
will see Him, and those who pierced Him will also see Him." This
symbolizes Israel. The ones who pierced Jesus Christ were the Jews. Those who
pierced Him witnessed the destruction of Jerusalem. It was fulfilled in
history. History is a shadow. The reality refers to what happens within the
heart of the saint. It is the destruction of the saint's old self (old temple)
and the building of a new temple. It expresses what happens within those who
have been born again of life. Therefore, it is incorrect to link this with the
Second Coming of Jesus.
"All the
tribes of the earth will mourn because of him; so be it. Amen." The
"earth" refers to all the tribes of Israel. In Zechariah 12:10, it
says, "I will pour out on the house of David and on the inhabitants of
Jerusalem a spirit of grace and supplication. They will look on him whom they
pierced, and mourn for him as one mourns for an only son; they will weep for
him as one weeps for a firstborn." Zechariah chapters 12 through 14
prophesy the coming of the Messiah to Israel. It expresses Israel's repentance
and mourning.
Leviticus 23:23-25: “The Lord said to Moses, ‘Speak to the children of Israel: The first day of the
seventh month is to be a day of rest for you, to blow the trumpet, a holy
assembly; you shall do no work, but offer a burnt offering to the Lord.’”
This is the
ordinance concerning the Feast of Trumpets. This day is also called the New
Year's Day. It was a day of rest, specially commemorated by blowing trumpets
throughout the country, and sacrifices celebrating the New Year were offered in
the central sanctuary. Meanwhile, chapters 23 through verse 23 to the end of
chapter 23 mention the various festivals for which one must gather in holy
assembly in the seventh month of the Hebrew religious calendar.
In the Hebrew
lunar calendar, the seventh month of the religious calendar corresponds to the
first month of the civil calendar, and this seventh month was densely packed
with important festivals such as the Feast of Trumpets (the first day), the Day
of Atonement (the tenth day), and the Feast of Tabernacles (the fifteenth day).
This is likely due to the unique biblical significance of the number seven,
which is associated with the duration of God's work of creation.
The seventh month,
or the first day of that month, signifies the first day of the seventh month
(Tishri); this is calculated according to the Jewish religious calendar and
corresponds to the first day of the new year in the civil calendar. Therefore,
the Feast of Trumpets was a festival for offering to mark the seventh month,
the month of rest, and involved sacrificial rites on a larger scale than those
for the ordinary New Moon.
On this day, the
sound of the trumpet was repeated at regular intervals throughout the day. This
was to announce the arrival of God's new day and to proclaim that the new day
should be welcomed with joy. In this sense, this trumpet sound symbolizes the
preaching of the gospel in the New Testament era and also evokes the sound of
the trumpet that will ring out at the Second Coming of Christ (Matthew 24:31; 1
Corinthians 15:52; 1 Thessalonians 4:16).
“Do no work, but
offer a burnt offering to the Lord.” Work is doing one’s own business. Hebrews 4:10
states, “These are those who have already entered into rest.” Those who have entered into rest
are told, “Do not do your own work.” The phrase “your own work” refers precisely to “loving the world.” Today, those who say, “We must keep the Sabbath,” or “We must keep the Lord’s Day holy as it replaces the Sabbath,” are essentially confessing that
they “have not yet entered into rest.” This is because they believe
that one must keep it holy to enter into rest.
The burnt offering
is mentioned in Leviticus 1:9: "It is a burnt offering, a sweet aroma to
the Lord." Also, Ephesians 5:2 states: "Walk in love, as Christ loved
you and gave himself up for us as a sweet offering and sacrifice to God."
It says that becoming a sweet offering to God is precisely loving one's
brothers. The meaning of "loving brothers" is the act of seeking the
lost sheep (spirits). Saving the spirits that have left God and come into this
world is precisely what becomes a fragrance to God. Before the meaning of Jesus
dying on the cross was the atonement for human sin, it was the act of saving
the spirits that had turned away from God. That is why Jesus prayed for unity.
Leviticus 23:26-33: “The Lord said to Moses, ‘The tenth day of the seventh month is the Day of
Atonement. You shall hold a solemn assembly, afflict yourselves, and offer
burnt offerings to the Lord. You shall do no work on this day, for it is the
Day of Atonement, to make atonement for you before the Lord your God. Anyone
who does not afflict himself on this day shall be cut off from his people.
Anyone who does any work on this day I shall destroy him from his people. You
shall do no work. This is a perpetual statute for you to observe throughout
your generations in all your dwelling places. It is a Sabbath of rest. You
shall afflict yourselves and keep the Sabbath from the evening of the ninth day
of this month until the evening of the next day.’”
The Day of Atonement means "afflict
yourselves." It signifies that for ten days starting from the Feast of
Trumpets, one must remember suffering and tribulation. When these ten days end,
it becomes the Day of Atonement, and five days after the Day of Atonement, the
Feast of Tabernacles begins. The Feast of Trumpets signifies that the harvest
is complete. It means that the trumpet is blown because the harvest, which
lasted for four months starting from Pentecost, is completely finished.
Therefore, it signifies the end times. Today, we must not merely observe the
festivals of Israel from the Old Testament era, but remember them well. This is
because we can see that God's work is accomplished through these festivals.
Jesus died as the Lamb on the cross during Passover, resurrected during the
Feast of Firstfruits, and the Holy Spirit descended during Pentecost. And He
will return during the Feast of Trumpets.
The Feast of Tabernacles is
called Sukkot in Hebrew. It begins five days after the Day of Atonement and
lasts for a week; during this time, people build booths and live within them to
remember their history of wandering in the wilderness and their identity. God
commanded the observance of the Feast of Tabernacles so that future generations
would know that He had the Israelites dwell in booths when He led them out of
the land of Egypt. It embodies the message that although we are living as
sojourners in this world after coming from the Kingdom of God, God calls those
who are in Christ. A booth is also called a tent. The tent symbolizes Christ.
Being inside a tent signifies being in Christ.
God worked through the feasts. He
died on the cross as the Passover Lamb; Jesus was buried during the Feast of
Unleavened Bread; Jesus resurrected during the Feast of Firstfruits; and the
Holy Spirit descended upon this world during Pentecost. The Feast of Trumpets,
the Day of Atonement, and the Feast of Tabernacles remain to come. From the
Feast of Trumpets onward, the One who comes to this earth is God Himself.
The period from the Feast of
Trumpets to the Feast of Tabernacles, until the moment we meet the Lord, is the
story of the Son of God, and the period up to that time is the story of
salvation. Jesus will return to this earth as God and judge Satan as the Judge.
The message is that the saints, upon the fulfillment of Christ's Second Coming,
will rule the world with Christ as Kings of the Millennium Kingdom, and a new heaven
and a new earth will arrive.
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