Deuteronomy 16
The Old Testament calendar included the celebration of
Passover, Pentecost (the feast of Weeks), and Tabernacles (the feast
of Booths). As Moses prepared the people for life in the promised
land, he called upon the congregation of Israel to gather together
for these important feasts and to call upon the Name of the Lord
together.
Though these festivals were part of the Old Testament
Law, they testified to the grace of God. They gave the community an
annual rhythm that celebrated the deliverance of God, the
fruitfulness of His continued provision, and the faithfulness of the
Lord in moving His people toward a day when they would dwell with Him
in peace forever. Passover was a new beginning of grace, Pentecost
was a middle point of encouragement along that road of grace, and
Tabernacles was a celebration for the end of the journey, the
fulfillment of the Lord's promises of grace.
Passover was an early spring feast. The Lord's
deliverance through sacrifice, through the blood of a lamb, and
through His own powerful hand was all of grace. A system of
substitution where guilt was removed and righteousness was supplied
by another had to be based on grace. This grace that saved us and
purchased us also demanded a consecrated life for those who were
delivered from bondage. We were freed from the bondage of sin through
the Passover death of the Lamb of God not to be enslaved again by the
leaven of sin, but to live the unleavened life of sincerity and
truth. See 1 Corinthians 5:8. The beginning of the life of grace for
the children of God could only be in the Passover cross of Christ.
That cross claimed us for a new life through the resurrection of
Jesus, who is Himself the firstfruits of the resurrection.
Pentecost came seven weeks after Passover and was the
middle festival in the annual journey of the biblical Jewish
calendar. The worship that the Israelites offered as they gathered
together was an acknowledgment of the growth that the Lord was
providing. Though the spiritual fields today are white unto harvest,
and the Lord uses our hands in the process of bringing in His bounty,
and though one man plants and another waters, only God can bring the
growth. The fruitfulness of the gospel is all of grace. To gather in
worship on Pentecost was a communal recognition of the mercy of God.
As the Spirit of God hovered over the waters in anticipation of the
powerful Word of God in the first creation, any new creation must
come by the Spirit and the Word. Throughout this Pentecost era, the
grace of the Lord is gathering in the fruitfulness of the growth that
God has supplied.
According to the Old Testament calendar, the Lord's
servants were to gather a third time for the feast of Tabernacles.
This was a feast of the joy of the Lord. One day the gospel harvest
period will be over. Our union and communion with the One who came to
tabernacle with us will become the fulfillment of our holy longings.
No longer will we be assaulted by enemies within and without. No
longer will sin mar the sacred purity of the Lord's true
congregation. We will dwell with Him forever.
The land that the Lord ultimately provides for His
people, the renewed heavens and earth, will be the perfect
environment of full peace and provision. Injustice and oppression
will not have any foothold there. The worship of false gods will be
far from every heart. That will be the life! Therefore we worship the
Lord now in the Passover Lamb who is our life. We praise Him and live
for Him by the power of the Spirit of Pentecost. Finally, we wait for
the revealing of the fullness of God's promises in His coming again.
This is the new rhythm of our lives, a pattern of the grace of God
that was anticipated for centuries in the ancient Jewish festivals
during the time of the Law.
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