Showing posts with label Shavuot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shavuot. Show all posts

Sunday, June 8, 2014

The Mystery of the Date of Pentecost - Zola Levitt Ministries

The Mystery of the Date of Pentecost


by Thomas S. McCall, Th.D.
Dr. Thomas McCallDr. Thomas McCall, the Senior Theologian of our ministry, has written many articles for the Levitt Letter. He holds a Th.M. in Old Testament studies and a Th.D. in Semitic languages and Old Testament. He has served as Zola’s co-author, mentor, pastor, and friend for nearly 30 years.
This article appeared originally in the July 1995 Levitt Letter.

Introduction

For believers in Jesus the Messiah, the dating of Pentecost is one of the most exquisite examples of type and fulfillment in the Scriptures. Pentecost means fifty, and is actually fifty days from another feast, First Fruits. These calculations are explained in Leviticus 23:10–1115–17. The feast of First Fruits was to occur on the day after the Sabbath (verse 11), which was always the Sunday of Passover week. Pentecost, then, was the day after the seventh following Sabbath (verses 15–16), which would be the fiftieth day after First Fruits and also on a Sunday.
The fulfillment of these feasts is striking. Jesus died the Friday of Passover week and had to be buried hastily before sunset, which was when the Sabbath began. His body remained in the borrowed sepulchre throughout the Sabbath day, but on that Sunday morning, when the priest was to offer the First Fruits offering in the Temple, Christ arose from the dead, the first fruits of them that slept (I Cor. 15:20).
For forty ensuing days, the Lord appeared to His disciples in His resurrection body, and then ascended into Heaven. Ten days later, the Sunday of the Feast of Pentecost, the Holy Spirit descended upon the believers in Jerusalem and created the ekklesia, the called out body of Christ, the church. These fulfillments were obviously no coincidence, but were part of the overall plan and purpose of God in verifying the powerful meaning of the death and resurrection of Christ, and the establishment of the new body of believers.
From then on, the Jewish believers in Christ must have repeatedly informed the people of Israel about the nature of the fulfillment of Passover, First Fruits and Pentecost. It must have made a great impact on the Jewish people who lived between the resurrection of Christ and the destruction of the Temple in 70 AD, a span of about forty years.

The Rabbis’ Problem with Vagueness

This brings us to the explanation of First Fruits and Pentecost offered in a recent article by Moshe Kohn in the Jerusalem Post.Students of the New Testament might well be mystified over the tortured reasoning concerning what he perceives as the singular vagueness in the Torah about these two feasts:
It is strange that of all the festivals the Torah ordains, Shavuot [Weeks, Pentecost] alone the anniversary of the event that marks the birth of the Jewish people is given no specific date. The Torah only tells us that at a vaguely specified time during Pessah, from the day after the shabbat … there shall be seven full weeks. Till the day after the seventhshabbat you shall count 50 days (Leviticus 23:15–16).
Why is the day after the Sabbath considered vague? It seems pretty definite to us! It means the day after Saturday, that is, Sunday. This is the way the Sadducees and the later Jewish sect of the Karaites understood the Scriptures, as Kohn explains:
This vague formulation was in dispute between Jewish sectarians and the Sages. The Sadducees maintained thatshabbat in this passage is a proper noun referring to the weekly Shabbat.
According to this understanding, accepted by the Karaites and Samaritans, the omer count begins the first Sunday after the first Shabbat of Pessah, so that Shavuot always falls on Sunday seven weeks later (as it happens to fall this year).
The normal Saturday meaning of the Sabbath in this passage was the view of the Sadducees. They were the priestly party and had control of the Temple, where the feasts were focused until the Temple was destroyed. The view of the Sadducees appears to be supported by the Septuagint, which was the translation from Hebrew to Greek by Jewish scholars in Egypt around 180 BC. In rendering the two Hebrew words mimmacharat hashabbat (on the morrow after the Sabbath) in Lev. 23:11, they used the Greek word protos (first). This would indicate the first day of the week, or Sunday. Thus, the Septuagint suggests that the Sunday First Fruits and Pentecost was observed throughout the centuries before the First Coming of the Messiah.
However, Kohn explains that the Sages, the rabbis who compiled the Talmud after the destruction of the Temple, had a very different interpretation of the term Sabbath in this passage:
The Sages’ view … was that this shabbat is the generic for day of rest, referring to the first day of Pessah. Accordingly, the count begins the second day of Pessah rather the night before and Shavuot always falls on Sivan 6.
No less strange is that the Torah doesn’t name this 50th day as the day of the Mount Sinai event. Again it is the talmudic Sages who ruled that the date is Sivan 6. (Shabbat 6b, Pessahim 68b)
Now, this is strange! The rabbis decided that in this case the term Sabbath did not mean Saturday, but something else: the first day of Passover, or, more precisely, the first day of Unleavened Bread (the second day of Passover). What justification do they have for changing the meaning of Sabbath that way? Kohn does not say, but there must have been a very strong motive to cause the Sages to interpret Sabbath as something other than the regular sacred Saturday Sabbath.
We have no proof, but suggest that the change came some time after the resurrection of Christ and before the destruction of the Temple. Think of the impact the Jewish believers must have had as they described the Lord’s resurrection on the Sunday of Passover week at First Fruits and the coming of the Spirit seven Sundays later on Pentecost. The leaders must have been hard pressed to explain away the relevance of the feasts and their fulfillment in the Messiah.
The solution they came up with was to obfuscate the calendar in such a way as to make the connection less clear between the feasts and their fulfillment in Christ and the Holy Spirit. The strategy apparently worked because most Jewish people today see no connection whatever between the Feasts and the Messiah. By the time Josephus wrote his history about the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD, the Jewish authorities had established the concept that First Fruits was always on Nisan 16, and Pentecost on Sivan 6. Josephus went through a rather lengthy explanation that the Sabbath of Lev. 23:11 meant the first day of Unleavened Bread, not Saturday. Thus, apparently some time before the destruction of the Temple, the practice of observing First Fruits and Pentecost on Nisan 16 and Sivan 6 was in place.
Instead of causing Jewish leaders to marvel over the relationship between the Feasts and the Messiah, the current festival schedule leaves scholars like Moshe Kohn scratching their heads. They are perplexed over the vagueness of the dates of First Fruits and Pentecost, and why there is no clear statement in the Torah that Pentecost is the day Moses received the Law, which is the teaching of the Sages. Such appears to be part of the veil over the eyes of the majority of Jewish people that so tragically obscures the truth about the Messiah in the Law.
Nevertheless, many Jews today and a lot of Gentiles who have no background in these matters are being graciously enlightened and are receiving the Lord.

The Case for Sunday for First Fruits and Pentecost

There are strong arguments for the Sunday interpretation for First Fruits and Pentecost in the Leviticus passage:
  1. The basic meaning of the term Shabbat in the Torah is Saturday. There are some rare exceptions to this rule, but the context usually clarifies the meaning when there is an exception. It would appear that the burden of proof would be with anyone who claims that Shabbat means anything other than Saturday. Thus, the morrow after the Sabbath must mean Sunday unless there are compelling reasons for understanding otherwise.
  2. Even if the Sages could make a case for the first day of Unleavened Bread (the second day of Passover) to be considered a Sabbath, how could the seven succeeding Sabbaths be considered anything other than Saturdays? In order for Pentecost to fall always on Sivan 6, the seventh Sabbath after First Fruits has to be understood as something other than a Saturday. If it was difficult to consider the first day of Unleavened Bread as a Sabbath, it would appear almost impossible to consider Sivan 5 (seven weeks later) to be a Sabbath, no matter what day of the week on which it fell. Yet this is what the Sages are asking us to believe in order to accept what they have ruled.
  3. All the other Mosaic feasts are given specific dates, such as Nisan 14, Tishri 1, Tishri 10, and so forth. If the Lord intended for First Fruits and Pentecost always to fall on Nisan 16 and Sivan 6, why did He not so specify as He did with the other feasts? Why go through the elaborate process of counting the seven Sabbaths, unless it was clear that these two feasts were moveable, and would fall on different days of the month each year? It seems that the emphasis in these two feasts is that they would always fall on the same day of the week (Sunday) every year, rather than on the same numerical day of the month.
  4. As indicated above, the Septuagint appears to confirm the Saturday meaning of Sabbath in Lev. 23:11 because it usedprotos to translate the phrase on the morrow after the Sabbath. The testimony of the Septuagint is important because it represents the thinking of Jewish authorities long before the first coming of Christ and the development of the Talmudic positions on controversial matters.
Thus, the great weight of evidence is that First Fruits and Pentecost were always intended to fall on Sundays, without regard to the day of the month they occurred. As for the New Testament record, it is clear that Jesus arose from the dead on Sunday, the First Day of the Week, the day after the Sabbath, as the fulfillment of the feast of First Fruits. What day of the month was this that year? We believe that Thursday was Nisan 14, the day the Passover lambs were sacrificed. Jesus ate the traditional Passover and died on Friday, Nisan 15, and arose from the dead on Sunday, Nisan 17. This would mean Pentecost fell that year on Sivan 7.

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Celebrating Shavuot - Receiving the Torah

Israel Today Shop
Celebrating Shavuot
"Also on the day of the first fruits, when you present a new grain offering to the Lord in your Feast of Weeks, you shall have a holy convocation; you shall do no laborious work." Numbers 28:26
The Jewish holiday of Shavuot was celebrated yesterday. According to Jewish tradition Shavuot is the day the Children of Israel received the Torah at Mt. Sinai. According to the Talmud God gave the Ten Commandments to the Jews on the sixth night of the Hebrew month of Sivan. Shavuot always falls 50 days after the second night of Passover.



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Happy Shavuot! ✡ ""Moses Came Down From Mount Sinai"

When Moses came down from Mount Sinai with the two tables of the testimony in hand... he knew not that the skin of his face had become radiant.

EXODUS (34:29)
 

וַיְהִי בְּרֶדֶת מֹשֶׁה מֵהַר סִינַי וּשְׁנֵי לֻחֹת הָעֵדֻת בְּיַד מֹשֶׁה בְּרִדְתּוֹ מִן הָהָר וּמֹשֶׁה לֹא יָדַע כִּי קָרַן עוֹר פָּנָיו בְּדַבְּרוֹ אִתּו

שמות ל’’ד:כ’’ט


va-y'-HEE b'-re-DET mo-SHE may-HAR see-NAI u-sh'-NAY lu-KHOT ha-ay-DUT b'-YAD mo-SHE b'-rid-TO min ha-HAR u-mo-SHE lo ya-DA kee ka-RAN or pa-NAV b'-dab-RO i-TO

Today's Israel Inspiration

This is one of the worst example of a mistranslation from the original, Hebrew text of the Torah. The Hebrew words  קָרַן עוֹר / "ka-ran or" mean that his face was radiant, but when Pope Julius II commissioned Michelangelo to sculpt Moses receiving the Tablets, they misinterpreted the words to mean that there were horns of light coming from him, hence the now famous - but erroneous - depiction of a horned Moses sitting in Rome. There is nothing like studying the Bible in its REAL language: Hebrew!

The Day that Shook the World

Discover the most important intellectual development in human history - the giving of the Torah.
 

Teva's Parkinson Drug Comes to Japan

Israel's Teva Pharmaceutical has recently signed an agreement with Japan’s largest pharmaceutical company, Takeda, to commercialize the Israeli company’s innovative treatment for Parkinson’s disease, rasagiline, in Japan.
 

Moisturizing Skin Care

This moisturizing day cream, enriched with natural minerals from the Dead Sea, is great for soothing all skin types.
 

Today's Israel Photo

Photo of the hills of Haifa by Natasha Pnini. Haifa is a contraction of the two Hebrew words Hof Yafe - beautiful shore. Situated on a rounded bay, at the meeting place of mountain, valley and sea, Haifa does enjoy magnificent scenery.
 

Yesterday's Photo Trivia

Yesterday's beautiful photo by Yehoshua Halevi featured Mount Hermon, the country’s highest point with a 2,814-meter peak. It served as the northern boundary of the Promised Land (Deut. 3:8).

Thank You

Please help us continue to spread the beauty and significance of the Land of Israel!
 

“Enjoying the Israel Bible”

It’s great to hear from so many of you - stay in touch and let us know where in the world you are enjoying Israel365!
 
 
Thank you so much for your emails and the lovely information about the Land of Israel. I am enjoying the Israel Bible which comes every month. Ken S.

Love for Israel from the Philippines. Warlee T.
Wishing you a Happy Shavuot, a Chag Sameach / חג שמח!
Shalom,
Rabbi Tuly Weisz
RabbiTuly@Israel365.com
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Sunday, June 1, 2014

Jewish Festivals - Shavuot The Book of Ruth Recreated 100 Years Ago. This feature is one of our most popular posting.

Israel's History - a Picture a Day (Beta)


Posted: 31 May 2014
Photo portrait of "Ruth the Moabitess" (Library of Congress)
Ruth said, "Do not entreat me to leave you, to return from 

following you, for wherever you go, I will go...
Your people shall be my people, your God my God"
And Naomi and Ruth both went on until they arrived at Bethlehem

he Jewish holiday of Shavuot -Pentecost is celebrated this week.  The holiday has several traditional names: Shavuot, the festival of weeks, marking seven weeks after Passover; Chag HaKatzir, the festival of reaping grains; and Chag HaBikkurim, the festival of first fruits.  Shavuot, according to Jewish tradition, is the day the Children of Israel accepted the Torah at Mt. Sinai.  It is also believed to be the day of King David's birth and death.


Ruth came to a field that belonged to Boaz who was 

of the family of Naomi's deceased husband
The reading of the Book of Ruth is one tradition of the holiday.  Ruth, a Moabite and widow of a Jewish man (and a princess according to commentators), gave up her life in Moab to join her Jewish mother-in-law, Naomi, in the Land of Israel.  She insisted on adopting Naomi's God, Torah and religion.





A central element of the story of Ruth is her going to the local fields where barley and wheat were being harvested so that she could collect charitable handouts.  She gleans in the fields of Boaz, a judge and a relative of Ruth's dead husband (as such he had a levirate obligation to marry the widow).  The union resulted in a child, Obed, the grandfather of King David. 


Boaz said to his servant, who stood over the reapers, 

"To whom doesthis maiden belong?"



Boaz said to Ruth, "Do not go to glean in 

another field...here you shall stay with my maidens"


















The members of the American Colony were religious Christians who established their community in the Holy Land.  They were steeped in the Bible and photographed countryside scenes that referred to biblical incidents and prohibitions.


Boaz said to her at mealtime, "Come here and partake

 of the bread..." He ordered his servants "Pretend to 
forget some of the bundles for her." 
Ruth carried it to the city and Naomi

saw what she had gleaned

















We have matched the pictures with corresponding verses from the Book of Ruth.

We present a few of the dozens of "Ruth" photographs found in the Library of Congress' American Colony collection.   See more of the pictures here.


Ruth came to the threshing floor and Boaz said, "Ready 

the shawl you are wearing and hold it," and she held
it, and he measured out six measures of barley....
A major effort was made by the photographers to re-enact the story of Ruth, probably in the fields near Bethlehem.  "Ruth," we believe, was a young member of the American Colony community; the remaining "cast" were villagers from the Bethlehem area who were actually harvesting, threshing and winnowing their crops.

Unfortunately, we don't know when the "Ruth and Boaz series" was photographed, but we estimate approximately 100 years ago.


Click on the pictures to enlarge. 
 Click on the caption to view the original.  




Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Feasts of the Lord - A Little Help In Understanding Them

The Feasts of The Lord - Biblical Holidays

Do you know and understand why the biblical Feasts of the Lord, which are found in the Bible (Torah, Tanak, New Testament) are for believers today? After all, these are our Jewish roots. They were first given to His Chosen Ones the Jews, to bring His light to the world, and then for all believers in Yeshua HaMashiach, Jesus Christ. It is one way God the Father has revealed His Son Yeshua (salvation in Hebrew) to the nations.

And how does He do this revealing? By instructing the Jews to keep His annual feasts, which then demonstrates His plan of salvation for the entire world, both for Jew and Gentile. 

Again, salvation ("Yeshua" in Hebrew) for all who would believe and receive.

Here are a few pieces of artwork to help further explain what He has done, and continues to do, for us.

Happy feasting! Chag Semach Pesach (Happy Passover!),

Steve Martin
Founder
Love For His People



Feasts of the Lord 
- to bring us to Yeshua (Jesus)

Known commonly as the Jewish feasts, 
they have been given as a
demonstration of His love for all of us.

Passover (Pesach) - Yeshua's (Jesus') death, burial 
and resurrection
on Resurrection Sunday

His sacrificial death on the cross 
- as a sheep led to slaughter (Isaiah 53)

Shavuot - Pentecost
- the first fruits, when the Holy Spirit came 50 days
after His resurrection


Announcing His soon coming triumphal return

Day of Atonement - 
reflecting on sin and His atoning Blood for us

Feast of Tabernacles - Sukkot
Spending time with Him in His eternal rest
of salvation


Monday, March 10, 2014

“Why Is A Gentile Like You Celebrating the Feasts of the Jews?” - Now Think On This by Steve Martin

                   

“Why Is A Gentile Like You
Celebrating the Feasts of the Jews?”
  
“These are the appointed feasts of the LORD, 
the holy convocations, which you shall proclaim 
at the time appointed for them. 
(Leviticus 23:4 English Standard Version)

After these things I looked, and behold, a great 
multitude which no one could count, from every 
nation and all tribes and peoples and tongues, 
standing before the throne and before the Lamb, 
 clothed in white robes, and palm branches were 
in their hands…” (Rev. 7:9 NAS)


Love For His People Editor's Note: As Purim, a celebration
from the book of Esther, comes March 16, 2014, I am again
sharing this article I originally published in Sept. 2013 as one
of my Ahava Love Letters. It is also a chapter in my 2nd book
of the same name, AHAVA LOVE LTTERS (Xulon Press, 2013)

With the Feasts of the Lord coming quickly upon us, as believers
in Jesus (His Jewish name is Yeshua) we can participate in His
feasts. 


This message will give you reason to think on this.

Steve Martin, Author


P.S. If you live in the Charlotte, NC area, I know of several
locations you can go to have fun for Purim. 
Please e-mail me using the contact info below.


Growing up as a Roman Catholic, I don’t recall reading much of the Old Testament, or even the New Testament for that matter. I can’t even remember if I had a Bible myself. There was that big, fat white one that sat on our living room table, that we must have bought from the door-to-door salesman one summer. It was filled with family genealogy and had a few photos in it. Mostly it was for looks I think.

We left it up to the parish priests to read a few passages during the Sunday Mass, or the daily Mass for those rare people who attended. We saw it as his job – to read the Bible.

Our priest at St. Patrick’s in Cedar Falls, Iowa, Father Thomas Purtell, did speak to us in the eighth grade of Catholic traditions and rituals every week, but that really didn’t interest me much. Though I was even then considered a “religious” boy, by some standards, it was history, football and baseball, and that cute, petite Lisa which were my main interests. (You should read the story I share further about Father Purtell in my book, The Promise. We had some moments with him! Lisa was another story.)

For the most part, what the Catholics did in and out of church, or the Orthodox Greeks in the domed building across the street, the Protestants which seemed to be on every other corner, and the Jews, who I didn’t really know at all - well, it was pretty much known in town as each group “doing their thing” - whatever that thing was. Probably because of their culture, upbringing, and country’s history, as I thought.

It wasn’t until my only year in college did I begin to seek more, by getting out of my box. The box I had been in for those years in grade school and high school. A nice box, but a box. I discovered that there was more truth to be known, and now I was given the opportunity to seek it further.

Over the years, as I became involved with first a college campus Christian group, then the charismatic church meetings, moving on further to the Messianic Jewish gatherings many years later, I understood that all of the Bible is for all of us who know Jesus (Yeshua) as our Lord and Savior. It is not just the Old Testament for Jews and the New Testament for ChristiansKnowing this helped me see that the Jewish feasts/holidays are NOT only historic and prophetic, but they are the Lord’s Feasts, which definitely point to Israel’s and our Messiah. 

Learning from Bible teachers and ministers like Derek Prince, Zola Levitt, James Goll, Mahesh and Bonnie Chavda, Barry Segal and others from the 1970’s onward, I grew tremendously in my appreciation of how the Lord revealed Himself throughout history, primarily through the Jewish people. I learned that even Gentiles, as I am, now get to be included in the Lord’s love for family, fellowship and feasts. I learned how He has taught through living examples in the Scriptures, the Torah and the Tanakh, the Old and New Testaments, all primarily to reveal Yeshua, Jesus, as the Christ (or in Hebrew, HaMashiach, the Messiah) for all nations and people groups. Being grafted in, as believers, and knowing of our Jewish roots, is thus life changing.

My good wife Laurie and I enjoy getting with others who celebrate the Lord’s feasts – Passover (Pesach), Shavuot (Pentecost), Purim (remember Esther and Haman?), and especially the fall feasts of Rosh Hashanah (Feast of Trumpets/New Year), Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement), and the biggest of all, Succot, or Sukkot, the Feast of Tabernacles/Booths, which is a seven day celebration time!

I encourage you to “discover” your Jewish roots as a Christian. The entire Bible was primarily written by Jews, through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit (Ruach HaKodesh), for all of us who believe. Jesus, who was, and is, and is to come again, is a Jew. He celebrates His Feasts. I guess that is good enough for me, and so I will too!

Now think on this.

Steve Martin
Founder/President

     

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Ahava Love Letter #73   “What Is A Gentile Like You Celebrating the Feasts of The Jews?”  ©2013 Steve Martin 
Date: In the year of our Lord 2013 (09/03/13 Monday at 7:35 am in Charlotte, NC)

All previous editions of Ahava Love Letter can be found on this Blog:


Here are the last few:

They Are Loved Too (#72)
Oskars Needed Again? (#71)
Little Orphan Chuckie (#70)
Demons & Fire Trucks (#69)
I Like Mike (#68)
Disappointed with Small Beginnings? (#67)
Rise Again (#66)
The Cities (#65)
How can You Mend A Broken Heart (#64)
Anxious (#63)
Hidden (#62)
Get Back in the Boat (#61)

Need Money? (#60)