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Seven Annual Sabbaths
1. As God was speaking the old covenant from Mt. Sinai,
what kind of annual festivals did he command? Ex. 23:14-17. What other names were given to
these festivals? Deut. 16:16.
2. What customs were included in the Passover festival?
Ex. 12:1-14; Lev. 23:5; Deut. 16:1-2. Were these customs commanded for future generations?
Ex. 12:14, 17. Were the lambs and the blood also commanded for all future generations?
Verses 21-24. What was required for participation? Verses 43-44, 48.
3. What commands were given for the Festival of
Unleavened Bread? Ex. 12:15-20; 13:3-10; Lev. 23:6-8; Deut. 16:3-8. What did this
observance commemorate? Ex. 12:17; 13:3, 8-9; 23:15; 34:18; Deut. 16:3.
Comment: God commanded the Israelites to observe these
festivals. He did not command gentiles to keep these festivals — he did not expect
Hittites, for example, to commemorate the Israelites' exodus from Egypt. The early church
recognized this when it agreed that gentiles did not have to be circumcised (Acts 15).
Because circumcision was a requirement for participation in
the Passover celebrations, and gentiles did not have to be circumcised, the early church
recognized that gentiles were not required to participate in the Passover commanded in the
law of Moses.
The early church was not making an exception to the law, and it was not
saying that gentiles did not have to obey God. It was recognizing that gentiles never did
have to keep the Passover. God had never required such a thing. This law, like many laws
of Moses, simply did not apply to them.
Of course, if gentiles were not required to keep the old
covenant Passover, they were not required to keep the Festival of Unleavened Bread,
either. The two festivals were commanded at the same time, for the same people, to
commemorate the same event. Although gentiles were permitted to participate if they wished
to, God never required them to.
Nevertheless, the Passover and Unleavened Bread festivals are
educational customs. They were symbols that pointed to Jesus Christ, just as the
sacrifices were. Hebrews 10:1 says that the sacrificial laws were shadows of "things that
are coming." The sacrifices symbolized various aspects of the work of Jesus Christ.
Colossians 2:16-17 uses the same Greek words to say that the food and drink
regulations, festivals and Sabbath were also shadows of things to come. These customs
symbolized what Christ would do.
Now that the reality has come, the shadows or imitations are
not necessary, even though they still provide good illustrations for the Christian life.
Paul exhorted the Roman Christians to be living sacrifices (Rom. 12:1), but he did not
expect them to maintain the practice of animal sacrifices in order to understand what he
meant. Similarly, he called Jesus Christ our Passover lamb (1 Cor. 5:7), but he did not
suggest that the Corinthians should kill lambs every year in order to remember the
symbolism that Jesus fulfilled.
When Paul exhorted the Corinthians to "keep the
festival"
(verse 8), he was not commanding gentiles to keep an old covenant festival commemorating
Israelite history. Rather, he was using the festival as an illustration of Christian
living, just as he used circumcision as a metaphor for conversion, without
implying that people should be circumcised (Col. 2:11).
Paul did not command the Corinthians to put yeast out of their homes
— he
commanded them to put a sinful person out. Throughout this passage, Paul uses "yeast" in
a figurative way to refer to sin. Paul talks about how the sinful man in the congregation
is leaven. In verse 6, he urges them to put out that leaven.
We should put malice and wickedness out of our lives
throughout the year, not just for one week, and we should have sincerity and
truth instead. Paul urges us to keep the festival figuratively, with bread of sincerity
and truth (he's not talking about real bread). We should do this throughout the year, not
just for one week. When we put out malice and wickedness and live in sincerity and truth,
then we are obeying the command Paul gave. In this way, Christians fulfill the symbolism
of the Festival of Unleavened Bread. There is no need for gentiles to begin obeying an old
covenant command that never applied to them before.
4. How was the Feast of Harvest (also called the Feast of
Weeks) to be celebrated? Ex. 23:16; 34:22; Lev. 23:15-21. What does the New Testament say
about this festival? Acts 2:1; 20:16.
Comment: This festival was also commanded for Israelites. It
was a harvest festival celebrating the end of the grain harvest in Canaan.
The date was calculated from the beginning of the harvest (Lev. 23:10-16). The timing of
the festival would not make sense in other regions, and people in other regions would be
unable to observe the festival as it was commanded. Nor would they need to, because God did not
command them to. The calendar by which the festivals were calculated was given to the
ancient Israelites as part of the law of Moses (Ex. 12:1-2).
The early church, especially in
Jerusalem, continued observing many of the old covenant customs. However, this does not
imply a command for the church today to continue these same customs.
God performed a significant miracle on the Day of Pentecost,
pouring out the Holy Spirit on the beginning of the New Testament church, but the Bible
does not command us to commemorate this event, although we are free to celebrate it
annually if we want to. (As a comparison, God also did something significant when
he allowed his Son to die for our sins at the same time as Passover lambs were
being killed in the temple. Although
we commemorate the death of Christ, we are not required to do it at the same time of day
Jesus died, or in the same manner as the old covenant festival.)
Actually, if we want to obey the old covenant command, we
would have to keep the
Festival of Pentecost "with the firstfruits of the crops you sow in your field" (Ex.
23:16). The New Testament does not authorize a change in the way this festival is to be
celebrated. God commanded both the date and the manner, and we cannot of our own authority
choose to require the date but not the manner. Either we keep it the way it was commanded,
or we do not.
The truth is that Christians do not have to keep
the festival of Pentecost at all. The only commands for it are in a covenant
that is now obsolete. It is one of those laws commanded for Israelites in the land of
Canaan, but not for gentiles in other countries. The early church did not require gentiles to observe this
day. Although many Christian churches commemorate
the Day of Pentecost (Whitsunday), it is an optional observance.
5. What was the next festival God commanded the
Israelites? Lev. 23:23-25. And what came next? Verses 26-32. Were the people required to
deny or afflict themselves? Verses 27, 32. What was the purpose of this self-denial? Lev.
16:29-30. Has Christ now provided atonement and cleansing? Rom. 3:29; Heb. 2:17; 9:14;
10:22.
Comment: Gentiles who lived among the Israelites were once
required to fast on the Day of Atonement (Lev. 16:29), but gentiles who lived elsewhere
were not commanded to. But today, not even Israelites are required to fast on this day.
The Bible gives only one purpose for fasting on the Day of
Atonement, and for Christians, this purpose has been fulfilled in Jesus Christ. In his
death, Jesus fulfilled the spiritual meaning of the fast of Atonement, just as he also
fulfilled the spiritual meaning of the Passover lambs. There is no longer any biblical
reason to fast on this day.
Gentiles have never been under the old covenant, and
Israelites are no longer obligated to it, either, because it is obsolete. It has been
replaced by the new covenant mediated by Jesus Christ, and the new covenant does not
require fasting on the Day of Atonement — it doesn't require the Day of Atonement at
all.
Of course, Christians may observe the Day of
Atonement if they wish. Some early Jewish Christians did. Luke referred to it in Acts 27:9,
but that verse is not a command, just as John 10:22 is not. The New Testament gives no ground for retaining the Day of Atonement in the
new covenant.
6. In the old covenant, what was the autumn harvest
festival? Lev. 23:33-42. Who was commanded to keep it? Verses 34, 42. Was the
festival to be observed after the harvest? Verse 39. What customs were required? Verses
40, 42. What was the purpose? Verse 43.
Comment: Again, God tells us who the
festival is for, how it
should be observed, when it should be, and what the reason is. The festival simply did not
apply to gentiles in other regions. It was designed to commemorate Israelite history and harvest
seasons in the land of Canaan. God does not require us to select one part of the
festival,
such as the date, and ignore all the others. They are all equally part of a covenant that
has been declared obsolete. (We can observe the date if we wish, but we cannot teach it as a requirement for others.)
7. Did Zechariah predict that gentiles would keep the
Feast of Tabernacles after Christ returns? Zech. 14:16-19. What else did he predict?
Verses 20-21. What other worship customs were predicted? Isaiah 52:1-2; Ezek. 20:40; 44:9,
25-27; 45:17; 46:1-4.
Comment: The prophets described an ideal time in which all
peoples worship God. To communicate this concept to an old covenant nation, the prophets
described old covenant forms of worship, including new moon observances, sacrifices in the
temple, discrimination against uncircumcised peoples and avoidance of ritual uncleanness.
But these are not religious requirements now.
Will sacrifices be part of worship after Christ returns?
Some people think so, but whether or not, these prophecies cannot be used to prove the current
validity of these commandments. Prophecies are not a reliable source of commands regarding
Christian practice. Our doctrines must be based on scriptures that are applicable to
this age, in which our relationship with God is based on the new covenant.
In our next section, we will examine some of the laws of
ritual purity.
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Back to home page of Old Testament Laws
Written by Michael Morrison; copyright
1997 by author
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