29 - Text
Removed
~429~
An attempt to explain the problem as a
midwayer fault is specious. I, as a
human mortal, would not make such a momentous error, yet Sadler
resorts to weak human error as
attributable to immortal beings. Such explanation was sadly
inadequate to reality and to the evidence.
Sadler had good reason for assigning it to
the midwayers. He fully believed the
text was approved in the “third presentation,” and that this
approval came from the authors of the
Jesus Papers, the midwayers.
The ancient Jewish observance of Pentecost
was based on instructions given to
Moses.
From
Vine’s
Expository Dictionary:
pentekostos:
Strong’s #4005, an adjective
denoting “fiftieth,” is used
as a noun, with “day” understood, i. e.,
the “fiftieth” day after the Passover,
counting from the second day of the
Feast, Acts 2:1; 20:16; 1
Cor. 16:8. For the divine instructions
to Israel see Exod. 23:16; 34:22;
Lev. 23:15-21; Num. 28:26-31; Deut.
16:9-11.
The “Feast” was the Feast of Unleavened
Bread. The beginning of the Feast
coincided with the sacrifice of the Paschal lamb on the evening
which began the Passover.
Exod 12:14-21
“This day shall be for you a memorial
day, and you shall keep it as a
feast to the LORD . . .
Seven days you shall eat unleavened
bread . . .
On the first day you shall hold a
holy assembly, and on the seventh day
a holy assembly . . .
And you shall observe the feast of
unleavened bread . . .
n the first month, on the fourteenth
day of the month at evening, you
shall eat unleavened bread, and so until
the twenty-first day of the month at
evening . . .
Then Moses called all the elders of
Israel, and said to them, “Select
lambs for yourselves according to your
families, and kill the passover lamb.
(The ancient
people were in conflict on the exact meaning of the Passover
“Sabbath,” and how to calculate the 50 days. Some
understood the Sabbath, literally “day
of rest,” as the day of the Passover celebration. Others
understood it to mean the first
Sabbath after the Passover day.)
The Urantia Papers
are
well detailed on the movement of the apostles during
the forty days between the crucifixion and the ascension,
describing all the morontia
appearances of Jesus. Specific dates with days of the week are
given. Matt Neibaur, a serious student
of the Papers, with scientific background, calculated sample
dates to verify their technical accuracy, according to
our present calendar, which is the
calendar used in the
Papers.
~430~
The Birth of a Divine Revelation
The Revelation states that the Crucifixion
took place on a Friday. This day of
the week appears to be confirmed in John’s Gospel, 19:31. John
said that particular Passover Sabbath
was a “high day.” Most biblical scholars understand that
phrase to mean that the Passover in that year took place
on a Saturday Sabbath, and not another
day of the week. Hence, Friday was the eve of the Passover
celebration for that year. According to Neibaur’s
calculations the Passover could occur
on a Sabbath Saturday only on 7 April in the year 30 and 3 April
in the year 33. The
Papers
give
Friday, April 6, 30 AD as the date of the crucifixion.
If you follow the
sequence of events from page 2057 you will find that Jesus
ascended about 7:45 in the morning. P 2057, p 7.
The apostles then returned to the city.
Whereupon Peter called a meeting at the home
of Mary Mark. By 10:30, 120 disciples
had gathered. P.2057 - p 8.
Peter offered a thrilling report on the
ascension. P.2058 - p1.
They went downstairs and cast lots to replace
Judas. P.2058 - p2.
Paragraphs 3 & 4 on page 2058 are
interspersed comments.
About noon they returned to the upper
chamber. P.2058 - p5.
P.2058193:6.6 - “And then Peter called all of the believers
to engage in prayer, prayer that
they might be
prepared to receive the gift of the spirit which the Master had
promised to send.”
This statement on page 2058 is the last
sentence in Paper 193.
The first sentence of Paper 194 is on page
2059.
P.2059194:0.1 -
“About one o’clock, as the one hundred and twenty believers were
engaged
in prayer, they
all became aware of a strange presence in the room.”
P.2059 - p1.
Clearly the opening
scene of Paper 194 on page 2059 continues the closing
scene of Paper 193 on page 2058. The chronology in the
time of day is continuous from morning
to afternoon. These two statements have no intervening text.
Peter then proposed that they go to the
Jerusalem Temple, which everyone did.
P.2059 - p2.
The remaining paragraphs to the bottom of
page 2059 are again interspersed
comments.
The first paragraph at the top of page 2060
then begins the events at the Temple.
P.2060194:1.2 - “It
was about two o’clock when Peter stood up in that very place
where his
Master had last
taught in this temple . . .” P.2060 - p2
.
“
They
talked for more than an hour and a half and delivered messages
in
Greek, Hebrew, and
Aramaic, as well as a few words in even other tongues with
which they had a
speaking acquaintance.”
P.2060194:1.4 - “By
half past four o’clock more than two thousand new believers
followed
the apostles down
to the pool of Siloam, where Peter, Andrew, James, and John
baptized them in
the Master’s name. And it was dark when they had finished with
baptizing this
multitude.” P.2060 - p4
.
(Baptism at Pentecost was a Jewish custom.)
29 - Text
Removed
~431~
Without any question ten days are missing in
the account. Why Sadler would resort
to his strange explanation is very difficult to understand —
except that he was at a total loss to
justify the damaging omission.
The biblical account is in Acts 1 and 2.
According to that account they
returned to the upper room from the ascension where “all these
devoted themselves to prayer.” This
parallels the last sentence of page 2058 of Paper 193. Acts
1:15 states “In those days Peter stood up among the
brethren,” to give a discourse to 120
assembled persons, after which they cast lots for the selection
of Matthias, as in the
Urantia Paper
account. Acts 2 then opens with “When the day
of Pentecost had come they were all together in one
place.” The structure of the biblical
account thus has parallels with the Revelation. However, the
intervening Greek word,
sumplerousthai
conditions this picture. The word strongly suggests
an intervening interval between the return to the upper
room after the ascension (40 days),
and the day of Pentecost (50 days). Much debate has centered
around this Greek word translated “had
come.” One scholar referred to it as an obnoxious
word. Sometimes it is translated as “had fully come,”
meaning that the 50 days of the
Pentecostal period were now complete.
The Encyclopedia Britannica states the
following:
The Ascension of Jesus is mentioned in the
Apostles’ Creed, a profession of faith
used for baptism in the early church. The feast of the Ascension
ranks with Christmas, Easter, and Pentecost in the
universality of its observance among
Christians. The feast has been celebrated 40 days after Easter
in both Eastern and Western Christianity since the 4th
century. Prior to that time, the
Ascension was commemorated as a part of the celebration of the
descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost.
A distinctive feature of the feast’s liturgy in the
Western churches is the extinguishing
of the Paschal candle after the Gospel has been chanted, as a
symbol of Christ’s leaving the earth. Despite the idea of
separation indicated in this act,
which might be expected to set a note of sadness, the whole
liturgy of Ascensiontide, through the
10 days to Pentecost, is marked by joy in the
final triumph of the risen Lord. One of the central
themes of the feast is the kingship of
Christ, and the theological implication is that the Ascension
was the final redemptive act
conferring participation in the divine life on all who
are members of Christ. In other words, Christ “was lifted
up into heaven so that he might make
us partakers of his Godhead.”
Thus we can see that the ascension and
Pentecost were closely related in the
worship sentiments of the early Church. But the fact that “the
Ascension was commemorated as a part
of the celebration of the descent of the Holy Spirit at
Pentecost” does not provide foundation for confusing the
two events. This schedule was later
abandoned by Christianity.
~432~
The Birth of a Divine Revelation
In attempt to clarify the schedule of the
Jewish festivals, and the timing of
Pentecost with respect to the Passover, I consulted several
sources on Jewish calendars and
religious festival celebrations. Was it possible, by some
chance, the 50 days might shift around
the month from year to year? If so, how much? Although
such suggestion was in defiance of the Mosaic law, I felt
I should investigate to remove all
doubt.
The first important command given to Moses
was as follows:
Lev 23:15-16
“And you shall count from the morrow
after the sabbath, from the day
that you brought the sheaf of the wave
offering; seven full weeks shall they
be, counting fifty days to the morrow
after the seventh sabbath; then you
shall present a cereal offering of new
grain to the LORD.”
Barnes’ Notes
offers these remarks:
The original word, “omer”, means
either a sheaf or a measure. The
offering which was waved was most likely
a small sheaf of barley, the grain
which is first ripe. The first fruits of
the wheat harvest were offered seven
weeks later in the loaves of Pentecost.
“On the morrow after the sabbath” most
probable denotes the 16th of
Abib (Nisan), the day after the first
day of holy convocation, and that this was
called “the Sabbath of the Passover”,
or, “the Sabbath of unleavened bread”.
The
Jamieson, Fausset, and Brown
Commentary offers these
remarks:
[Ye shall count . . . from the morrow
after the sabbath] - i. e., after the
first day of the Passover week, which
was observed as a Sabbath.
[Number fifty days.] The 49th day after
the presentation of the first-fruits,
or the 50th including it, was the feast
of Pentecost (see also <Exo. 23:16;
Deut. 16:9>).
Although there is some difference in
understanding of how to compute the 50
days, or where the count should start, the fact of 50 days is
without dispute.
This difference in computation shows among
the ancients. Some computed from the
day after Passover, the 16
th
of the month of Nisan, while others
computed from the next Saturday
sabbath. The “seventh sabbath” meant seven weeks,
where weeks were identified as “sabbaths.”
The second important command given to Moses
was:
Deut 16:9-10
“You shall count seven weeks; begin
to count the seven weeks from the
time you first put the sickle to the
standing grain. Then you shall keep the
feast of weeks to . . .”
29 - Text Removed
~433~
From the Jamieson, Fausset, and Brown
Commentary:
[Seven weeks shalt thou number] — the
feast of weeks, or a WEEK OF
WEEKS; the feast of Pentecost. As on the
second day of the Passover, a
sheaf of new barley, reaped on purpose,
was brought into the sanctuary and
presented as a thank offering to God, so
on the second day of Pentecost a
sheaf of new wheat was presented as
first-fruits - a free-will spontaneous
tribute of gratitude to God for his
temporal bounties. This feast was instituted
in memory of the giving of the law -
that spiritual food by which man’s soul is
nourished.
Clearly, the count was fifty days.
The two festivals of the Passover and
Pentecost were tied to one another by
ancient custom. Each was originally a grain harvest celebration,
with the “first fruits” offered to the
gods. The first stalks of harvested grain would be set aside
for offering to the gods, or the god of vegetation. These
pagan customs were later adapted by
the Hebrew people as an offering to the LORD, and incorporated
into the Mosaic laws to verify their blessing by God. The
first festival was based on the barley
harvest, the first of the grain harvests. The second festival,
“feast of weeks,” was based on the
wheat harvest, which came seven weeks after the
barley.
In an article titled
Passover And Pentecost — Timing
Problems,
in an issue of the Urantia
Foundation’s Journal of
the International Urantia Association
in
1999, Seppo Kanerva developed this error in
The Urantia Papers.
Seppo stated:
“We learn that not a word is said
about the Passover feast. The fifty
days to Pentecost are not counted from
Passover but rather from the day
after the Sabbath on which you bring
your sheaf to the Lord. Another pericope,
in Deuteronomy (the fifth Mosaic Book),
says that the feast of Spring Harvest,
Pentecost, is to be dated seven weeks
from the time you first put the sickle to
the standing grain. [Deut. 16:9]. Not a
word about Passover as the day wherefrom
the count is to be performed. The exact
day of the “day after the Sabbath
on which you bring your sheaf”, or “the
time you first put the sickle to the
standing grain” is not determined
anywhere in the Bible, yet it must have
been the same date every year, since the
Pentecost had a fixed date, it was
one of the three annual temple
pilgrimage days, and these festivals were
considered a moed, which meant
observance on the same date annually.
Evidently the Spring Festival must at
least in some years have fallen on a
date in close proximity to Passover. The
Spring Harvest Festival, the scholars
believe, was originally timed so that it
overlapped or nearly overlapped with
Passover, and since it was intolerable
to have two days obligated with a pilgrimage
to Jerusalem to fall on the busiest
agricultural season of the year,
the Spring Harvest Feast was deferred
with fifty days to a later date, hence
the name Pentecost.
~434~
The Birth of a Divine Revelation
“It then is another matter that in
colloquial language Pentecost was
said to be fifty days from Passover; but
it was only colloquial parlance; the
exact date only occasionally coincided
with the Passover date (since Passover
was a moving feast); it was, thus, just
an approximation to say that
Pentecost was fifty days later than
Passover, Pesah.”
These statements by Seppo are simply not
correct. Pentecost always fell
“
fifty
days to the morrow after the seventh
sabbath.”
Seppo assumed that
“it must have been the same date every year, since
the
Pentecost had a fixed date, it was one of the
three annual temple pilgrimage days,
and these festivals were
considered a moed, which meant
observance on the
same date annually.”
By “same date annually” he meant by a solar
calendar.
But the old Hebrew practices did not
calculate according to a solar calendar;
they calculated according to a lunar calendar. The first
day of the first month of the Hebrew
religious year, Nisan 1, was determined by the appearance of the
first new moon near the vernal equinox, calculated so
that the Passover (Paschal)
celebration would not fall before the equinox. Nisan 1 occurred
no earlier than fourteen days before
the vernal equinox, and no later than fourteen days after the
vernal equinox. Hence, Passover (full moon) drifted
around the solar calendar by as much
as 28 to 29 days.
The ancient Hebrew people, (later Jews), had
to understand the cycles of the earth
around the sun, and had to be able to calculate the vernal
equinox. Otherwise they could not
determine when the first new moon would appear, centered
on the equinox, and would not be able to calculate the
day of Passover (full moon).
Everyone in the many Jewish communities
scattered throughout the Roman empire
at the time of Jesus understood how this was the “same date
annually,” calculated according to the
lunar cycles, based on new moons, (revolution
of the moon around the earth), related to the vernal
equinox based on solar cycles,
(revolution of the earth around the sun). Hence, no one in those
Jewish communities had any difficulty
estimating the time of the Passover, and could
make the pilgrimage to Jerusalem in time for the Passover
celebration.
According to the ancient custom, the
religious ruling body in Jerusalem, the
Sanhedrin, would station observers at convenient
geographical locations within the
environs of Jerusalem, to verify the first appearance of the New
moon near the equinox. They then would
send forth a proclamation to the scattered Jewish
communities for the beginning of the new religious year,
and the celebration of the Passover on
Nisan 14, two weeks later. But this was a formality, to give
official sanction to the date.
The time of travel to distant locations
around the Roman empire would prohibit the
appearance in Jerusalem of Hebrew males, according to the
Mosaic dictum, sometime during the
next thirty days, if they depended upon an “official” word to
first tell them. While the travelers
may not have known the exact date, within a few days, they could
make their pilgrimage to Jerusalem in time to hear the
official proclamation.
29 - Text
Removed
~435~
Hence, it was no problem for them to make the
temple pilgrimages, not on the same
solar date annually, but on the same lunar date annually,
clocked to the solar equinox event.
The other part of this problem is the timing
of the harvest. How did the Hebrew
people know the grains would ripen in synchrony with the full
moon?
I recall as a boy my grandfather and
grandmother planning their spring farm
crops of barley, oats, wheat, and corn, according to the “signs”
— which meant the phases of the moon.
All old people planted according to the cycles of the
heavens, believing that the fecundity of the crops
improved if one planted on those
schedules. While the spring season was determined by the cycles
of the sun, the old people followed
the moon to determine the best time to place the
seed in the ground. This practice prevailed around the
world in ancient times.
If the Hebrew people planted their crops
according to the “signs,” they then
could predict, within a few days, the time of the harvest. Thus
they could synchronize the harvest
with the religious festival, based on the cycles of the moon.
Some debate exists about “green” grain on the
stalk being offered to God, or whether
this was “ripe” grain. Also, for higher elevations, the weather
might not be compatible with the
“official” planting date. The plantings might vary, and
the grain might not ripen as fast as in lower elevations.
These practices should be understood
from their ancient origins, where the community of believers was
local, and geographical variations did not disturb the
calculations.
From these factors we can see why Seppo’s
surmise is not correct. He simply did
not understand the ancient practices.
I felt that I should firmly establish the
exact count of fifty days to Pentecost.
I went to various other sources. Those included:
The Jewish Encyclopedia
,
Funk and Wagnalls, New York, 1905:
“Pentecost falls on the 6th of Siwan
and never occurs on Tuesday, Thursday,
or Saturday.”
(This proscription is a later development.)
This shows that Pentecost always fall on the
same date annually, in the Jewish
lunar calendar.
Dictionary of the Apostolic
Church
,
James Hastings, Charles Scribner’s Sons,
New York, 1918:
“Although there has been much dispute
as to the exact meaning of ‘the
morrow after the sabbath,’ it is
generally agreed to treat the 16th Nisan as the
day when the wave-sheaf of early barley
was offered and as the day when
they began to ‘count the omer’.”
(Counting the ‘omer’ was the count to Pentecost.)
The International Standard Bible
Encyclopedia
,
The Howard-Severance Company, Chicago,
1925:
~436~
The Birth of a Divine Revelation
“As the name indicates, (pentecoste = 50)
this second of the great Jewish
national festivals was observed on the 50th day, or seven weeks,
from the Pashal Feast, and therefore
in the OT it was called ‘the feast of the weeks’.”
Encyclopedia Judaica
,
The Macmillan Company, New York, 1971:
“Shavout (Hebrew ‘weeks,’ Pentecost, ‘the
50th day’), the festival celebrated on
the sixth of Sivan.”
The New Catholic Encyclopedia
,
San Francisco, 1971:
“Later, the Pharisees identified the Sabbath
of the Feast of Unleavened Bread with
the feast day itself on the 15th of the first month (Nisan), and
computing the 50-day period from the 16th, they
celebrated Pentecost on the 6th day of
the 3rd month.”
A statement from Remy Landau,
an expert on Jewish calendrics:
“The count of the Omer is always fixed. In
the prevailing practice, day 1 of the
Omer is Nisan 16. Adding 49 days to that date gets you to Sivan
6, coinciding with Fri 21 May this
year (1999).”
Thus we can see universal agreement. The date
of the Paschal celebration was set by
the beginning of the Hebrew new year according to the phases of
the moon, and that Pentecost was
always fixed to that date, at 50 days.
Hence, the descriptions in
The Urantia Papers
wherein the events of Pentecost
occurred on the same day as the ascension of Jesus, forty days
after his resurrection, cannot be
correct.
We cannot accept that the missing ten days is
an accidental omission. The sequence
of events from the ascension at 7:45 in the morning to the end
of the baptism at dark is explicitly
described. The non-human authors of the Paper must
have known they were missing those ten days.
But the error is more substantial than
missing text. The continuity of the
account makes it flow directly into Pentecost at forty days. An
explicit statement is made which shows
that the designers of the account knew they were using
forty days, not fifty.
P.2060194:1.1 -
The apostles had been in hiding
for forty days. This day
happened to be the
Jewish festival of Pentecost, and thousands of visitors
from all parts of
the world were in Jerusalem.
Sadler’s reaction to Adams shows that he was
aware of the problem but had no
adequate explanation. It seems to have come to his notice as
though he was unaware that text had
been cut. His remark about deletion of material does not
help:
29 - Text
Removed
~437~
You should remember that the
midwayers prepared a narrative that was
many times larger than was finally given
us as Part IV of the Urantia Book. It
may be that in deletion some
difficulties were encountered.
How did he know the midwayers had prepared a
larger narrative? Was larger text
given and then cut? Or did he know only the narrative that “was
finally given us” in 1935? If the
latter he must have been told that there had been a narrative
“many times” larger.
But why give this information? Why would the
midwayers have tantalized Sadler and
the Forum members with such information?
We have an easy explanation. If a malevolent
influence was attempting to justify
“its” instructions to Sadler to make changes, “it” would provide
a reason. Caligastia told Sadler the
original 1935 account was many times larger to justify
changes he was making to the text, under the guise of
being the midwayer commission. These
newer cuts were merely part of that editing process.
But the flow of the account from Papers 193
to 194 means that the Papers were
being rewritten, not merely being edited with a deleted
paragraph or two. The flow of events
with the hours of the day takes place from page 2057 to 2060,
nearly four pages. Sadler had to know about such major
rework. And yet it seems he did not
know about it.
The abrupt break between Paper 193 and 194
might have misled Sadler. As he said,
he saw the prayer of Peter at the end of 193, and the opening
prayer at the beginning of 194 as two
different scenes. He simply did not notice the forty-day
problem until years later, perhaps after the manuscript
had been typeset and galleys were
under proofreading. At least he was aware of it when the “Book
was going to press,” sometime in the
early 1950’s. The remark that “we all noted it
one time” suggests he was aware of it some time before
that.
Is it possible that the changes to the
Pentecost account were made at a
period far enough removed from his early detection that he
forgot about the changes to that
particular passage? Or were the changes to that passage part of
a larger array of changes which became lost in Sadler’s
memory?
Unless we obtain more concrete information we
can only speculate
The important aspect of this missing text is
that Sadler believed the midwayers
were responsible for the errors. He was told not only that the
midwayers wrote the text, but that
they were responsible for the changes made after 1935.
When faced with this rather obvious and acute
error, he assigned it to the midwayers,
with weakness equivalent to human.
How sad.
On the following pages are simple tutorials
on Calendars and Festivals.
Calendars
~438~
The Birth of a Divine Revelation
Three major calendars are in use around the
world today. They are solar, lunar,
and lunisolar.
A solar calendar is based on
the motion of the earth around the sun. It is
synchronized to the seasons of the year: the vernal and
autumnal equinoxes, and the summer and
winter solstices. Our modern western calendar begins a new
year just after the winter solstice. Our months
originated in the cycles of the moon,
but were later adapted to the solar cycle by adding a different
number of days to different months in
order that twelve months fill out one solar cycle of
365+ days.
-
A lunar calendar is
based on the motion of the moon around the earth. It
begins a new month each time the moon reaches a given
position in the sky. The lunar
cycle is about 29 and 1/2 days. Normally, calendars based on
lunar months have either 29 or 30
days to accommodate the half day. Lunar calendars make
no attempt to synchronize the months with the cycles
of the sun.
-
A lunisolar calendar was
used by the Hebrew people. It follows the cycles of
the moon, but is synchronized to reset the lunar year
to the solar year. Thus Nisan 1 is
the first new moon centered about the vernal equinox. Since
the Hebrew twelve months of 29 or
30 days add to only 354 days, the calendar gradually falls
behind the solar cycle over a period of about three
years. To resynchronize with a
full year of 365+ days, an additional month of 30 days is
occasionally inserted into the
calendar. This 13
th
month is known as a “leap month.” Nineteen years
bring the moon back to the (nearly) same position in
the solar sky. Therefore, the
extra month is inserted in the 3rd,
6th, 8th, 11th, 14th, 17th, and 19th
years of the 19-year cycle. In
this manner the Hebrew calendar could follow the lunar
cycles, while not becoming
disconnected from the solar cycles.
The Jewish religious calendar
begins with the spring month of Nisan. The
Jewish civil calendar begins with the fall month of
Tishri.
For an introductory description of calendars
refer to the article by L. E. Doggett
in
Explanatory
Supplement to the Astronomical Almanac,
P. Kenneth Seidelmann, Editor,
University Science Books, Saudalito, CA 94965.
Jewish Religious Festivals
The Jewish religious festivals had origins in
the dim mists of the past. All ancient
people gave respect to the gods through observation of yearly
cycles.
These religious cycles still persist in the
traditions of the modern Christian churches.
Incorporated into the yearly festivals was thankfulness
for the favor of the gods in vegetable
and grain produce. The people of ancient Israel planted grains
in the winter season, in order that
the grain ripen before the onset of the hot, dry summer. Seed
time was clocked by the phases of the
moon. Since the calendar of religious festivals was
also clocked by the moon, the first grain harvest came in
each year according to the position of
the moon. Thus the barley harvest could be expected around the
14
th
of
Nisan. If barley and wheat were both planted at the same
time, the ripening of the two grains
was separated by seven weeks.
29 - Text
Removed
~439~
Thus the religious calendar was based on
these harvests. This is the reason for the
commandments given to Moses.
FEASTS AND FESTIVALS
The following short dissertation on Hebrew
religious festivals is from
Nelson’s
Illustrated Bible Dictionary,
Copyright © 1986, Thomas Nelson
Publishers.
The Hebrew word for
“pilgrimage” seems to be reserved mostly for the three
great annual feasts of the Hebrew people: the Feast of
Unleavened Bread (Passover), the Feast
of Weeks (Pentecost), and the Feast of Tabernacles. These feasts
are discussed in Leviticus 23. They were very important
in the Jewish faith, and every male
was expected to observe them.
The religious pilgrimage from the various
towns and cities to the Temple or to
the Levitical Cities scattered throughout the land became annual
events. This yearly event may also
have progressed from an annual “pilgrimage” early in Israel’s
history to a “processional” at the Temple or at the
Levitical center in later times. In
all the feasts and festivals the nation of Israel remembered its
past and renewed its faith in the Lord
who created and sustained His people.
Passover and the Feast of Unleavened
Bread.
References to the Passover and the Feast of
Unleavened Bread include Exodus
12:1--13:16; 23:15; 34:18-20,25; Leviticus 23:4-14; Numbers
28:16-25; Deuteronomy 16:1-8; Joshua
4:19-23; 5:10-12; and 2 Chronicles 30:2,3, 13,15.
The Passover was the first of the three great
festivals of the Hebrew people. It
referred to the sacrifice of a lamb in Egypt when the people of
Israel were slaves. The Hebrews
smeared the blood of the lamb on their doorposts as a
signal to God that He should “pass over” their houses
when He destroyed all the firstborn of
Egypt to persuade Pharaoh to let His people go.
Passover was observed on the 14th day of the
first month, Abib, (Nisan), with the
service beginning in the evening, Lev. 23:6. It was on the
evening of this day that Israel left
Egypt. Passover commemorated this departure from Egypt in
haste. Unleavened bread was used in the celebration
because this showed that the people
had no time to put leaven in their bread as they ate their final
meal as slaves in Egypt.
Several regulations were given concerning the
observance of Passover. Passover was
to be observed “in the place which the Lord your God will
choose.” This implied the sanctuary of
the tabernacle or the Temple in Jerusalem.
Joshua 5:10-12 refers to the observing of
Passover in the plains of Jericho near
Gilgal. Second Chronicles 30:1,3, 13,15 describes a Passover
during the reign of Hezekiah.
Messengers were sent throughout the land to
invite the people to come to Jerusalem to
observe the Passover. Many refused; some even scorned the
one who carried the invitation.
Because the people were not ready to observe the Passover, a
delay of one month was recommended.
That year the Passover was on the 14th day of the second
month. Even after the delay many still were not ready to
observe the Passover.
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The Birth of a Divine Revelation
In New Testament times, Passover became a
pilgrim festival. Large numbers gathered
in Jerusalem to observe this annual celebration. Jesus
was crucified in the city during one
of these Passover celebrations. He and His disciples ate a
Passover meal together on the eve of
His death. Like the blood of the lamb which saved the Hebrew
people from destruction in Egypt, His blood, as the
ultimate Passover sacrifice, redeems
us from the power of sin and death.
Feast of Unleavened Bread
This feast began on the 15th day of the month
(Nisan) as a part of the larger
celebration of Passover, Ex. 13:3-10; Lev. 23:6-8. Manual labor
was strictly forbidden. Strangers and
native-born people alike were punished if they failed to keep
this holy day. A convocation began the feast.
Only unleavened bread was to be eaten during
this feast. Bread without leaven
commemorated the haste with which Israel left Egypt. As the
blood was drained from the sacrificial
animal, so the life or the power of leaven was removed
from the bread offered to God during this annual
celebration.
Feast of Weeks
Biblical references to the Feast of Weeks
include Exodus 23:16; 34:22; Leviticus
23:15-21; Numbers 28:26-31; Deuteronomy 16:9-12; and 2
Chronicles 8:13. This feast was
observed early in the third month on the 50th day after the
offering of the barley sheaf at the Feast of Unleavened
Bread. It included a holy convocation
with the usual restriction on manual labor.
Numbers 28:26-31 describes the number and
nature of offerings and Deuteronomy
16:9-12 describes those who were to be invited to this feast.
They include servants, sons and
daughters, Levites, the fatherless, the widow, and the
stranger. Israelites were to be reminded of their bondage
in Egypt on that day.
This feast was also known as the Feast of
Harvest as well as Pentecost. The
early Christian believers, who were gathered in Jerusalem for
observance of this feast, experienced
the outpouring of God’s Holy Spirit in a miraculous way Acts
2:1-4.