Pentecost
NEARLY
6,000,000,000 human beings are
alive today.
This vast majority, your
Bible reveals, will be called
later
-most
not until after Christ's return. These
thousands of millions cannot come to Christ and become part of God's Church now
-
even if they try!
Jesus said so, plainly,
"No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him" (John
6:44). Comparatively speaking, God has been drawing
only a few in this age, but for a great
purpose.
Why has God called the few He has? For what purpose has God drawn and put into
His Church His firstfruits? Has God drawn these few and put them into His
Church, as some think, just so they can get salvation and enjoy the fellowship
and social life of the local congregations?
Where We Are Now
in God's Plan
God has a Master Plan pictured by seven annual festivals.
The first festival is Passover.
It pictures the Messiah-Christ
-who volunteered before the foundation of the
world to be slain as the Passover Lamb, the Savior of the world (I Pet. 1:19-20).
The second festival, the Feast of
Unleavened Bread, pictures
overcoming sin. The first humans, Adam and Eve, disobeyed God and sin entered
the world. God then sentenced the human family to 6,000 years of spiritual
exile, during which the human family is, as a whole, cut off from the
possibility of salvation (except for those few He would choose for a special
purpose).
We
are now near the end of the first 6,000 years, during which humans have
experimented with every imaginable form of government, relgion, social and
economic idea. Soon the fourth
step
in God's plan will occur
-
the return of Jesus Christ to restore the government of God on
earth. This event is pictured by the fourth Holy Day, the Feast of Trumpets. It
is after that event that the vast majority will be called to salvation in a
world ruled and guided by God's Family. But before the vast majority can live in
such a world and be taught the true way to salvation, rulers and teachers must
be trained. That is where we who are the firstfruits of salvation in God's plan
enter the picture!
New Testament Church Began on Day of Pentecost
Jesus told His
disciples shortly before His trial and crucifixion: "I will not leave you
comfortless: I will come to you" (John 14:18). Christ would continue to teach
and support the apostles, but not in person, for He ascended to heaven. So how
would He come to them?
-
by means of the Holy Spirit.
1. Did Jesus promise His disciples they would receive power from heaven?
Luke 24:49. Where did He tell them to wait for this power? Same verse and Acts
1:4-5, 8.
2. In what miraculous way did God's Spirit come to Christ's disciples?
Acts 2:1-6. What was the name of the day on which this great display occurred?
Verse 1.
COMMENT: The day of Pentecost is the third annual festival given to ancient
Israel. Its Old Testament name was Feast of Firstfruits, since it came at the
end of the first or spring harvest in the Northern Hemisphere (Ex. 23:16; 34:22;
Num. 28:26). It was also called the Feast of Weeks, since it came seven weeks
after the first Sunday after Passover (Deut. 16:9-10, 16). Since it was also the
fiftieth day of the spring harvest season, Greekspeaking Jews and Christians
called it
pentekoste,
which means "fiftieth."
Pentecost
A.D. 31 marked the beginning of God's Spirit-begotten New Testament Church.
Ekklesia,
the Greek word for "church," means an assembly of "called-out
ones." The whole world is not "called out"-only a tiny minority are predestined
to be called for a special purpose. This is pictured by and commemorated by the
annual Festival of Pentecost.
World Cut Off from Holy Spirit
Why does God
call
people to salvation? Why is God calling only a few before He
calls the vast majority? Once a person is called and put into God's Church, what
does he or she DO?
1. As the first step in reproducing Himself, God created Adam and Eve and
gave them basic instructions in the right way to live. Did God offer Adam and
Eve an opportunity to receive His Spirit? Gen. 2:8-9,16-17.
COMMENT: Adam had mortal life. The tree of life
represented
eternal
life,
which can come only from God's Spirit. If Adam had eaten of that tree, he would
have received God's Spirit, been begotten as a son of God. Adam, conditionally,
would have received the earnest or down payment of eternal life. God's Spirit
would have enabled Adam and Eve to overcome temptation, grow in righteous
character and become perfect, eventually ready to be given spirit-composed
eternal life unconditionally. Even Jesus had to grow, learn, overcome and
become
perfect (Luke 2:40; Heb. 5:8; Rev. 3:21; Heb.
2:10).
2. Adam and Eve, however, did not eat of the tree of life. From which
tree did they choose to eat? Gen. 3:1-6.
COMMENT: Though God had warned them of the penalty of eating from the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil, Eve was persuaded by the devil's clever
arguments to eat of the fruit that led to self-centeredness and
death!
Adam also willingly ate the forbidden fruit.
Whether Adam fully realized it or not, he thus lost his opportunity to conquer
Satan and replace him as ruler of this world. Instead, Adam obeyed Satan,
placing himself under Satan's government.
3. What was Adam and Eve's punishment for disobeying God? Gen. 3:16-19.
Were they denied further access to the tree of life and therefore cut off from
God's Spirit? Verses 22-24.
COMMENT: After Adam disobeyed, God cut off all humanity from access to His
Spirit and thus cut them off from salvation! Until a son of Adam
-
the Son of Man-
could qualify where Adam failed, could
conquer Satan, pay the penalty of human sin and ransom the world from its
kidnapper, no one could restore God's government on earth, and no one could be
given salvation.
The Messiah, and He alone, could do all this. Of necessity, then, God's plan
required that mankind in general be
not yet
judged.
God has therefore not permitted them to have access to His Spirit, nor access to
salvation. They will have their opportunity for salvation in a special
resurrection to judgment, which will be
after
God's
government has been restored over the entire earth.
God Calling
Only a Few
The one great purpose now uppermost in God's
mind is
the
restoration of His government on
earth.
God set
apart a period of 7,000 years in which to accomplish His purpose. The first
6,000 years He sentenced mankind to be cut off from salvation.
For His supreme purpose, God has called a few. Hebrews 11 mentions Abel, Enoch,
Noah, Abraham and others. Apparently each was called for a special mission
preparatory to the salvation of humanity. In order for them to perform their
mission, it was necessary that an exception be made and they be empowered by
God's Spirit.
The work done by the patriarchs and prophets became the foundation on which the
Church was built (Eph. 2:20), and the Church, in turn, is the instrument God is
using to eventually bring about His Kingdom and the restoration of His
government over the entire earth.
Even ancient Israel,
as a whole, was never offered God's Spirit. They were given God's laws, but, as
a nation, they were purposely denied access to God's Spirit. God gave proof,
through Israel, that without His Spirit, humanity is helpless. The
ancient nation of Israel knew about God and could appeal to Him, but without His
Spirit in them, the Israelites could not have the love of God in them and they
consequently could not be spiritually righteous.
Nevertheless, after the nation of Israel became two people, the separate nations
of Israel and Judah were used by God to further His plan. God caused the nation
of Judah to preserve the knowledge of His law and His Word even though they did
not have a spiritual understanding of it. Into this nation Jesus Christ was
born. When
Jesus Christ came to earth nearly 2,000
years ago, it was not to set up His Kingdom
(John 18:36). Christ did not, at that time, come to restrain Satan from
deceiving the world. Let's understand why.
1. Did Jesus speak in parables to make His meaning clear, or to hide
His meaning from the general public? Matt. 13:10-15, 34; Mark 4:11-12. Was
this because the time had not yet come for most to be forgiven their sins and
converted? Mark 4:12.
COMMENT:
Christ preached the Father's Gospel to the public as
a
witness.
They heard it
but did not comprehend it. The only ones Jesus really wanted to understand the
truth were a few specially called and chosen students.
2. Can everyone who wants to come to Christ receive God's Spirit and
thereby become a member of His Church? John 6:44, 65.
COMMENT:
In this age before Christ begins to rule over the whole earth,
each person is specially chosen. Like the prophets before them, these first
fruits are called for a special mission
-
a purpose preparatory to the establishment of
God's Kingdom on earth and the salvation of the majority! Otherwise, no
exceptions can be made
-
the world as a whole must remain cut
off
from access to
salvation until Christ returns.
If God wanted everyone to understand,
everyone would. Instead, hardly anyone does. God's "hands off" policy that began
in the Garden of Eden will continue until just before Christ's return.
3. After Christ's resurrection, how many disciples were there? Acts 1:15.
Were they given God's Spirit, thus making them the first members of God's
Church? Acts 2:1-4; I Cor. 12:13.
COMMENT:
Out of the thousands who had heard Christ, about 120 believed
Him. Those 120 had been taught by Jesus. The 3,000 who were begotten of God
later that day (Acts 2:41) were from various parts of the world (verses 5,
8-11); they had not, as a whole, been taught by Christ. They were now being
taught by the apostles, who had been trained and commissioned to teach (Matt.
28:19-20).
The number of Christians continued to grow and may have increased to about
100,000. But then persecution began, just as Jesus had prophesied (John 15:20).
Persecution first came from the Jews, then later the Romans and false brethren
(Acts 20:29-30; III John 9-10). It was some decades later that these false
brethren outnumbered the true.
Most congregations were eventually taken over by men who attempted to combine
Christ's teachngs with traditional customs, compromising the truth by attaching
Christian
sounding names to pagan ideas. Satan, the god of this world, was deceiving many
with a counterfeit, falsely labeled Christianity.
True Christians remained a small minority
probably never more than about 100,000-fleeing
to new areas when persecution became too intense.
Why does God have this small flock? What is its purpose?
Church:Preparing for Kingdom of God
God created man incomplete-needing finishing touches. Man was given a human
spirit, needing God's Spirit. He was made mortal, needing to be given
immortality. He was created a free moral agent, needing to develop character.
Just as God does not create all at once, but in successive stages, so He is
bringing salvation to mankind in successive stages. Every stage is a progressive
step toward the goal of establishing His Kingdom and restoring His government on
earth.
1. Did Malachi prophesy that God would send a messenger to prepare the
way before the Lord? Mal. 3:1. Was this prophecy fulfilled by John the Baptist,
who came before the Lord's First Coming? Luke 7:24, 27. Did John prepare the way
by making a people ready for Christ? Luke 1:17.
COMMENT:
John preached repentance
-obedience to God's law
-
to turn the disobedient to the wisdom of the
righteous. Thus when Jesus began
preaching, some people were ready to listen. Many of John's disciples later
became Jesus' disciples.
God's Church is also preparing for God's Kingdom in another way. Those who
believe Christ's Gospel now are being prepared for a special role as part of
God's soon-coming Kingdom. Malachi 3:1 says the Lord will come to His Temple.
Let's notice what this means.
2.
What is the spiritual Temple Christ will return to at His Second Coming? I Cor.
3:16-17; 6:19; II Cor. 6:16; Eph. 2:19-21.
COMMENT:
God's Church, composed of those who have God's Spirit within
them, is the spiritual
Temple to which Christ will come. Paul told the Ephesians that
the Church must be "fitly framed together," growing, "builded together."
-
become the
instruments God will use to save the vast majority.
Church
Members Preparing for God's Kingdom
1. Did Paul understand that the people of Israel were spiritually
blinded? Rom. 10:16,18,21. (Although they heard the true Gospel, they did not
obey it.) Did God purposely allow their blindness? Rom. 11:8, 25, 32.
2. Nevertheless, did Paul know that the Israelites would have
a future
opportunity to receive salvation? Rom. 11:26. Did God purposely
blind the majority of Israelites so they could obtain mercy later
-through the mercy of those who were called first? Verse 31.
COMMENT: Verse 26, which quotes Isaiah 59:20, explains when most Israelites will
have their opportunity for salvation
-
after a Deliverer (Isaiah says "Redeemer") comes out of Zion to
call them to repent of ungodliness. The Redeemer from Zion is Jesus Christ, but
Paul was not referring to His First Coming, for Israel was still blinded at the
time Paul wrote this.
All Israel shall be saved when the Deliverer returns with power and glory to
rule.
And then, wrote Paul, the Israelites shall receive their
opportunity for salvation through the mercy of the firstcentury Christians and
those who would be called into God's Church through the centuries. When Christ
returns, all true Christians will be resurrected and/or changed to immortality
to help Him rule and teach the way of salvation to both Israelites and Gentiles.
3. Will many nations go to Jerusalem
and ask to be taught His way? Micah 4:2. Will the earth become
full of the knowledge of the Lord? Isa. 11:9.
4. In addition to being rulers, will the Spiritborn children of God also
be priests? Rev. 1:6; 5:10; 20:6. What is the function of a priest? Mal. 2:7;
Ezek. 44:23.
COMMENT: Just as ancient Israel's priests were
assigned to teach God's laws, Spirit-born members of God's Family
will be
teachers
of God's way of life, helping bring the knowledge of the way to
salvation to everyone.
Salvation for all mankind in the world tomorrow will come through the life and
work of Christ.
Is God unfair to give these positions of leadership to only the few He has
specially chosen? Not at all. God has not called anyone for special favors
-
He has called them for a special purpose
-
a tremendous job to do. God rewards us according to our
works
(Matt. 16:27). Those called now have to overcome Satan and his society. That
requires effort, self-denial and willpower, a price most humans are not willing
to pay.
Before Jesus could qualify to rule, He had to overcome Satan while Satan was
ruling. Since the Church will rule with and under Christ, Church members must
also qualify by resisting and overcoming Satan while he is still ruling (Rev.
3:21).
That will not be required of the overwhelming majority. God will call them to
salvation when the world is ruled by Christ and the saints
-
when it will undoubtedly be easier to live God's way. It will be
easier because of the
advance work
now being
done by God's firstfruits.
In order to qualify for their future jobs, those whom God has called into His
Church have been freely given God's Spirit and the opportunity for salvation.
The rulers and teachers of God's Kingdom are, by necessity, given opportunity
for salvation before their future students can be. The Church is a necessary
instrumentality preparatory to bringing salvation to all humanity!
The only
reason
any
person is
called to salvation in this age is to qualify to help in ruling and teaching in
the world tomorrow
-
to help call and save those alive then.
God's Spirit
Empowers
1.
Could Jesus do any spiritual works, including obedience to God, with just His
human strength? John 5:30; 8:28. Where did He get the necessary power? John
14:10, last part.
COMMENT: The Father "dwelt" in Jesus through the Holy Spirit!
2. Did Christ promise the same spiritual help to His disciples? John
14:16. What is the "Comforter"? Verse 26. Does Christ, through the Holy Spirit,
live in His followers today? Rom. 8:9-10; Col. 1:27; I John 3:24.
COMMENT:
Jesus Christ went to the Father's throne in heaven to send God's
Spirit to His disciples (John 16:7). Through God's Spirit, Christ lived in them
-
not in person, but in spirit. True Christians' hope of
glory
-our hope of becoming part of God's glorious Family
-is in Christ, our Savior, living in us through the Holy
Spirit.
3. Is it necessary to obey God to receive the gift of the Holy Spirit?
Acts 5:32. Did Jesus obey God, and does He expect Christians to obey Him today?
John 15:10. Are Christ's commandments exactly the same as His Father's? John
14:24.
4. Must Christians not only have God's Spirit, but also be yielded to it,
letting it transform them so they become more like Christ and the Father? Rom.
6:13; 8:14; Phil. 2:5; II Cor. 10:5.
COMMENT:
God's Holy Spirit gives His Spiritbegotten children supernatural
power to help them live the way today that Jesus Christ lived more than 1,900
years ago. Through that Spirit, Christ is enabling them to obey God, overcome
sin and endure to the end of this age. God's Spirit is the power by which God's
firstfruits are now being prepared for their jobs in God's Kingdom.
5. By what power was the work of God done during the days of God's
servant Zerubbabel, who built the physical Temple (later refurbished) to which
Jesus came? Zech. 4:6. What power was given to Jesus' disciples to enable them
to perform their commission? Acts 1:8. Was this also the power by which Paul was
able to preach Christ's Gospel? Rom. 15:19.
Why Called Feast of Firstfruits?
Thus far in
this lesson we have referred to the Feast of Firstfruits only briefly-yet what
we
have
studied relates directly to the meaning of this festival! Understanding
God's plan of salvation and especially the Church's role in God's Master Plan
is essential to understanding the meaning of God's third annual Holy Day.
Why? Because the day of Pentecost pictures the firstfruits of salvation,
and the job they are now doing, empowered by God's Spirit!
God established His annual festivals and Holy Days in conjunction with the two
annual agricultural harvests in the land of Palestine. The Passover and the
Feast of Unleavened Bread come at the beginning of the spring grain harvest; the
Feast of Firstfruits or Pentecost comes at its end. The fall festivals are
associated with the large fruit harvest of summer and early autumn.
But it is the spiritual harvest God is most concerned with! The spiritual
harvests are patterned like the physical harvests-first a small harvest, then a
large one.
The spring festivals illustrate to God's Church yearly that those He calls into
His Church in this age are the "firstfruits"-the first group to be given God's
Spirit and offered salvation
-
the relatively small beginning of His spiritual harvest.
1. What were God's instructions regarding the Feast of Firstfruits? Lev.
23:15-17, 20. Was this Feast an annual Sabbath on which the people were to
assemble? Verse 21.
2. How long is the Feast of Firstfruits
-
Pentecost
-
to be kept annually by God's people? Lev. 23:14, 21. Did Christ's
disciples know they should keep the day of Pentecost? Acts 2:1; 20:16; I Cor.
16:8.
COMMENT: Jesus did not abolish Pentecost or any other annual Holy Day. Quite to
the contrary, Christ told His disciples to be in Jerusalem so on that Holy Day
they would receive God's Spirit. If the disciples had not been observing God's
Holy Days, they would not have been there to receive God's Spirit! And long
after Christ's death, Paul, the apostle to the Gentiles, kept the Festival of
Pentecost with Gentile converts.
The Encyclopaedia Britannica has this to say about the New Testament
Church's observance of Pentecost: "The Jewish feast was primarily a thanksgiving
for the firstfruits of the wheat harvest, but the rabbis associated it with
remembrance of the Law given by God for the Hebrews to Moses on Mt. Sinai. The
church's transformation of the Jewish feast to a Christian festival was thus
related to the belief that the gift of the Holy Spirit to the followers of Jesus
was the firstfruits of a new dispensation that fulfilled and succeeded
the old dispensation. .. " (article "Pentecost," 15th edition).
3. What special offering did the Old Testament priests make on the day of
Pentecost? Lev. 23:17. Does the leaven in these loaves typify sin? I Cor. 5:7.
COMMENT: Since the Feast of Firstfruits was a harvest festival, representing an
end result, baked loaves, rather than unbaked flour, were waved to be accepted
by God. The leaven in the loaves represented the fact that God's spiritual
firstfruits had sin in their lives. (Of course, they had to repent of sin and be
cleansed by Christ to be acceptable to God.) There were two loaves
-
one to represent the patriarchs, judges, prophets and kings of
the Old Testament period whom God called and the other to represent the true
Christians of the New Testament Church.
Pentecost, or Firstfruits, pictures God's first spiritual harvest
-
mortal human beings translated into Spirit-composed God Beings!
God's Church shall be that firstborn harvest (Heb. 12:23)-born into God's Family
at Christ's return.
4. Are Spirit-begotten Christians the firstfruits of God's Master Plan of
salvation? Jas. 1:18. Do Christians today have the firstfruits of God's Spirit?
Rom. 8:23. Are specific Christians also called firstfruits in the Bible? Rom.
16:5; I Cor. 16:15; Rev. 14:4.
COMMENT: The 144,000 of Revelation 14:1-5 are not the only firstfruits (the
Greek text has "firstfruits," not "the firstfruits"). All who will be in
God's first spiritual harvest, the first resurrection, are firstfruits. This
will include Old Testament prophets and all true Christians.
5. What defines whether one is a member of God's Church and part of the
spiritual firstfruits? Rom. 8:9, 11, 16; I Cor. 12:12-14. Did the Old Testament
patriarchs and prophets have God's Spirit? I Pet. 1:10-11. But when was the
first time God gave His Spirit to a large group? Acts 2:1-4. Did the day of
Pentecost thus mark the beginning of the New Testament Church? Verses 1, 41, 47.
COMMENT: On the day of Pentecost, A.D. 31, God sent His Spirit to begin His
Church
-
to beget and strengthen the firstfruits He was beginning to call
into His Church, symbolically represented by one of the "wave loaves." The New
Testament Festival of Pentecost is now a memorial commemorating the
founding of the New Testament Church of God through the receiving of the Holy
Spirit.
God's Church observes the Feast of Firstfruits as an annual
reminder of this step in God's Master
Plan: God's people today are merely the firstfruits-the small
first group to be offered salvation through Christ.
The world, except for the few called, is cut off from God-not yet called to
salvation
-
neither saved nor lost
-
not yet judged. But the members of God's Church ARE being
judged (I Pet. 4:17)
judged in how well they are preparing for God's Kingdom!
The day of Pentecost pictures the Church being called and trained for the
special mission of preparing for the time when God will open salvation to the
world, when they will be kings and teachers under Christ.
Christ First of the Firstfruits
The Feast of Firstfruits
(Pentecost)
pictures
God's firstfruits
-
all who will be born into God's Family at the first resurrection
-
the first group of humans to be harvested by God and given
glorious, powerful immortal life.
But one human has already been born of God
more than
2,000
years before the first resurrection. He is the first of the firstfruits,
and was pictured in Old Testament rituals by a symbolic ceremony during the
Feast of Unleavened Bread, 50 days before the Feast of Firstfruits. The meaning
of this ceremony is important, even though it is no longer performed since the
Old Testament priesthood is no longer needed.
1. Was the first part of the spring grain harvest to be waved before God
to be accepted by Him? Lev. 23:10-11
.
COMMENT: Since most modern translations use the word "sheaf," the traditional name for this wave offering has been "wavesheaf." However, the priests did not wave a sheaf.
The word
"sheaf" is translated from the Hebrew word omer, which means a
measurement of about two quarts or two liters. The Jews traditionally cut a
sheaf, beat out the grain, then ground the first of the firstfruits into flour
and offered an omer of that flour. (See the Jewish Encyclopedia, article
"omer.")
Some modern translations of the Bible have given the passage describing this
wave offering the erroneous subhead "the Feast of Firstfruits." Subheads are
not part of the original text; they are not inspired. The wave offering was not
a "feast"; it was merely a ceremony that involved primarily the priests. The
difference is clear when we look at the original Hebrew words.
As we learned earlier in this lesson, the Feast of Firstfruits is another name
for the Feast of Weeks or Pentecost. In the verses that refer to the Feast of
Firstfruits (Ex. 23:16; 34:22; Lev. 23:17, 20; Num. 28:26), "firstfruits" is
translated from the word bikkuwr. It refers to the results of the entire
spring harvest.
However, the firstfruits referred to in Leviticus 23:10-11 are reshiyth,
perhaps better translated "first of the firstfruits." This was the very first of
the spring harvest, during the Feast of Unleavened Bread.
2. On what day was the first of the firstfruits wave offering made? Lev.
23:11.
COMMENT:
The Pharisees interpreted "the morrow after the sabbath" as the
day after the first annual Sabbath of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. The
Sadducees, who were mostly priests, said the wave offering should be made on the
day after a
weekly
Sabbath
-always on a Sunday. The correct day becomes clear when we
examine the context.
3. Must the date for the Feast of Weeks be
counted
beginning on the day the first of the firstfruits was offered? Lev. 23:14-16;
Deut. 16:910.
COMMENT:
According to the reasoning of Rabbinic Judaism, Pentecost is on
the 6th day of the third month.
4. The offering of the first of the firstfruits marked the beginning of
the first harvest of each year. Now let's notice the way in which Jesus Christ,
the first of God's spiritual harvest, became the spiritual
fulfillment
of
that offering. Who was the first to be resurrected from the dead into God's
Family? Acts 26:23. Was He therefore the first of the firstfruits of God's
spiritual harvest? I Cor. 15:20, 23; Col. 1:13-15, 18.
COMMENT:
All who will be born into God's Family at the first resurrection
will be firstfruits, the
results of God's first spiritual harvest. They are pictured by
the Feast of Firstfruits. Christ, who became a born Son of God at His
resurrection more than 1,900 years ago (Rom. 1:4), was the
first
of
the firstfruits, pictured by the first of the firstfruits ceremony
-
50 days before Pentecost.
5. After Christ was resurrected from the dead, did He have to ascend to
His Father in heaven? John 20:17. On that same day, after returning to earth,
could His disciples then touch Him? Read Matthew 28:1-10, especially verse 9,
and John 20:19, 27. What day of the week was it? John 20:19, first part.
COMMENT:
Early on the Sunday morning during the Feast of Unleavened Bread,
Christ would not let anyone touch Him because He had not yet ascended to His
Father. But later that same day, Christ did allow His disciples to touch Him.
This clearly shows that Christ ascended to heaven and was accepted by His Father
as the spiritual "first of the firstfruits" on the same day the Levitical
priests were commanded to offer the first of the firstfruits to be accepted by
God!
Christ
therefore fulfilled the symbolism of the first of the firstfruits on the morrow
after the
weekly
Sabbath
-
not an annual Sabbath. If it had been the first annual sabbath
that was intended by the words "the Sabbath" in Leviticus 23:11, then the sheaf
or omer would have been waved on Friday in
A.D.
31. But on
Friday the Messiah was
dead, buried in a sealed tomb. So the explanation in Rabbinic
Judaism of Leviticus 23:11 is incorrect.
Christ's resurrection or harvest was necessary before any of the remaining
spiritual harvests could be reaped (see Lev. 23:14 for this truth in symbol).
Now notice also how Pentecost is counted.
6. How are the authorities in the Church to count the days toward
Pentecost? Lev. 23:15-16.
COMMENT: The Hebrew wording in Leviticus 23:15-16 means "beginning with"
the starting point. The English word "from" is therefore misleading.
The New American Bible (1970) makes the correct method of counting very
clear: "Beginning with the day after the Sabbath, the day on which you
bring the wave-offering sheaf, you shall count seven full weeks, and then on the
day after the seventh week, the fiftieth day. .. ," you shall keep the Feast of
Firstfruits (Lev. 23:15-16).
The day of the wave offering, the Sunday during the Feast of Unleavened Bread,
was day one. Day seven would be the next weekly Sabbath. Day 49 would be the
seventh Sabbath, and the 50th day would be a Sunday, "the day after the seventh
week" or "sabbath" as the original Hebrew and the Authorized Version have
it.
The correct dates for Pentecost for the next few years are published in
the
Calendar
web site.
New Covenant Completion of First Harvest
The Sinaitic covenant, commonly called the "Old Covenant" by Christians, was a
marriage agreement between Israel and the Logos, the Spokesman of the God
Family. The basis of that covenant was the Ten Commandments, which Israel agreed
to obey, as a wife obeys her husband. According to Jewish tradition, the Ten
Commandments were given on the day of Pentecost. But the Holy Spirit was not
then given to the nation. The coming of the Holy Spirit did not occur until
another Pentecost (Acts 2) for the New Testament Church. The Sinaitic covenant
ceased to be in effect when the Logos, Christ, was killed. We now look
forward to a new covenant.
1. Has the Lord promised to make a new marriage covenant with His people?
Jer. 31:31-34.
COMMENT: The weakness of the Sinaitic covenant was not its laws, but in the
people (Heb. 8:8). They were not able to keep the law because they did not have
the Holy Spirit.
2. Under the terms of the proposed New Covenant, what will the Lord do?
Ezek. 11:19-20; 36:26-27; II Cor. 3:3.
COMMENT: The New Covenant will not be made with mortals who cannot keep their
promises
-
it will be established only with immortal spirit beings who have
proved, by their lives, their willingness to obey their future Husband, the
"LORD" of the Hebrew Bible who became, through human birth, the Jesus of the
Greek New Testament.
Although the New Covenant has been proposed, and Christians today overcome sin
and live by the laws of that covenant through the power of the Holy Spirit, it
will not be finalized until the first resurrection. Only then will God's
children be given the fullness of God's Spirit to enable them to perfectly
resist all sin.
3. Are Spirit-begotten Christians now engaged or betrothed to Christ?
Rom. 7:4; II Cor. 11:2. When will the marriage-the ratification of the New
Covenant-take place? Rev. 19:6-9.
COMMENT: God's Church will be the Bride of Christ. Christ, the Messenger of the
Covenant (Mal. 3:1), will come to His spiritual Temple, and make the New
Covenant
-
a marriage agreement. God's law will be written in their hearts
so completely that they can be perfect, righteous and able to assist Christ in
ruling, teaching and administering God's law perfectly.
The Spirit-born Church will become Christ's New Covenant wife, and that
divine marriage will produce children. Christ and His Spirit-born Bride will be
a ruling and teaching team. Through them God will open salvation to all,
ultimately producing thousands of millions of additional Spirit-born
children of God.
Notice in Revelation 19:7 that the Church will have "made herself ready." Each
member of God's Church must grow in righteous character and be prepared
-
ready
to help Christ rule and
teach. Jesus' parable of the wise and foolish virgins (Matt. 25:113) shows that
some who think they are prepared for the New Covenant marriage will be shut out.
When the Church is ready both in numbers and in character, and the world has
been sufficiently warned, Christ will
return.
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