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The seven feasts of the Lord
We have now come to the feasts (Lev. 23). It is the full* year of the counsels of God towards His people, and the rest which was the end of those counsels. There were consequently seven — a number expressive of perfection well known in the word: the sabbath, the passover and the feast of unleavened bread, the firstfruits of harvest, Pentecost, the feast of trumpets in the seventh month, the day of atonement, and the feast of tabernacles.
If the sabbath be separated and reckoned by itself, the
passover would be distinguished from the feast of unleavened bread,
which would make the seven. I do not say this to preserve the
number, but because the chapter itself speaks thus: having counted
the sabbath amongst the others, it resumes and calls the others
(without the sabbath) the solemn feasts. For, in one sense, it was
indeed a feast; in another, it was the rest, when the whole was
ended.* In general these feasts present us, then, with all the
bases on which God has entered into relationship with His people;
the principles on which He has gathered them around Him, in His ways
with this people, upon the earth. Their bearing was wider than that,
in other respects; but it is in this point of view that these
circumstances, that is, these facts, are here considered. They are
seen in their accomplishment upon the earth. The moral distinction of the feasts
There is another way of dividing them, by taking the words,
"And Jehovah spake unto Moses"* as the title of each part: the
sabbath, the passover, and the unleavened bread (vers. 1-8); the
firstfruits and the Pentecost (vers. 9-22); the feast of trumpets
(vers. 23-25); the day of atonement (vers. 26-32); the feast of
tabernacles (ver. 33 to the end). This latter division gives us the
moral distinction of the feasts; that is, the ways of God
therein. Let us examine them a little more in detail. The Sabbath, the passover and the feast of unleavened bread, as a whole
The very first thing presented is the sabbath, as being the
end and the result of all the ways of God. The promise is left us of
entering into God's rest. It is a feast to Jehovah; but the feasts,
which present rather the ways of God to lead us there, begin again
at the fourth verse, as we have already said (compare vers. 37,
38). This distinction being noticed, we can take the sabbath,* the
passover, and the feast of unleavened bread as making a whole (vers.
1-8). Of the two latter, the unleavened bread was the feast,
properly speaking; the passover was the sacrifice on which the feast
was grounded. As the apostle says, "Christ our passover is
sacrificed for us: therefore let us keep the feast, not with
leaven," etc.
What was indeed necessary for the sabbath, for the rest of
God, was the sacrifice of Christ, and purity; and though all these
feasts lead on to the rest of God, yet these two, the passover and
unleavened bread, are the basis of all, and of the rest itself for
us. Christ's sacrifice and the absence of all principle of sin,
form the basis of the part we have in the rest of God. God is
glorified in respect of sin; sin is put away for us, out of His
sight, and out of our hearts. The perfect absence of leaven marked
Christ's path and nature down here, and is accomplished in us, so
far as we realise Christ as our life, and recognise ourselves,
though the flesh be still in us, as dead and risen with Him.* It
is thus that we have seen the manna connected with the sabbath in
Exodus 16. To be without leaven was the perfection of the Person of
Christ living upon earth, and becomes in principle the walk upon
earth of him who is partaker of His life. In the true and final
sabbath, of course, all leaven will be absent from us. The sacrifice
of Christ and purity of life render one capable of participating in
God's rest. The firstfruits — ChristAfter that comes power, the firstfruits; that is, the resurrection of Christ on the morrow after the sabbath — the first day of the week. It was the beginning of the true harvest — harvest gathered, by power, outside and beyond the natural life of the world. According to the Jewish law nothing of the harvest could be touched before: Christ was the beginning, the firstborn from the dead. With this first of the firstfruits were offered sacrifices for a sweet savour, but not for sin. It is clear there was no need for it. It is Christ who has been offered to God, quite pure, and waved before God — placed fully before His eyes for us, as raised from the dead, the beginning of a new crop before God — man in a condition which not even innocent Adam was in, the Man of God's counsels, the second Man, the last Adam: not, all hanging on obedience which might fail, and did, but after God had been perfectly glorified in the place of sin, past death, past sin (for He died unto sin?, past Satan's power, past judgment, and consequently by thus wholly out of the scene where responsible man had stood, on a totally new footing with God after His finished work, and God perfectly glorified; such a work too as gave Him title to say, therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life that I might take it again, and made it God's righteousness to set Him at His right hand in glory. Pentecost — firstfruits of those who are Christ'sConnected with that comes the meat-offering at the end of the seven weeks. It is no longer Christ here, but those who are His, the firstfruits of His creatures; they are considered as being upon earth, and leaven is found in them. Therefore, though offered to God, they were not burned as a sweet savour (Lev. 2:12); but with the loaves was offered a sin-offering, which answered by its efficacy to the leaven found in them. They are the saints of which Pentecost commenced the ingathering. The provision of grace — the Church periodThis feast was followed by a long space of time, in which there was nothing new in the ways of God. Only they were commanded, when they reaped the harvest, not to make clean riddance of the comers of the field. A part of the good grain was to be left in the field, after the harvest was gathered into the garner, but not to be lost; it was for those who were not enjoying the riches of God's people, but who would participate exceptionally by grace in the provision which God had made for them — in the abundance which God had granted them. This will take place at the end of this age. The feast of trumpetsPentecostal work being ended, another series of events begins (ver. 23) with the words referred to, "And Jehovah spake unto Moses." They blow up the trumpet in the new moon (compare Ps. 81; Num. 10:3, 10). It was the renewal of the blessing and the splendour of the people — Israel gathered as an assembly before Jehovah. It is not yet the restoration of joy and gladness, but at least the renewal of the light and reflected glory which had disappeared takes place, and enlightens their expectant eyes; and they gather the assembly to re-establish the glory. But Israel must at least feel their sin; and in the solemn feast which follows, the affliction of the people is connected with the sacrifice of the day of atonement: Israel shall look on Him whom they have pierced, and mourn. The nation (at least the spared remnant who become the nation) will participate in the efficacy of the sacrifice of Christ, and that in their state here below, repenting, and recognised of God, so that the times of refreshing will be come. This is then the repentance of the people, but in connection with the atoning sacrifice. The efficacy is in the sacrifice; their participation in it is connected with the affliction of their souls (compare Zech. 12). But Israel did nothing — it was a sabbath — they were assembled in humiliation in the presence of God. They accept the pierced One under the sense of the sin of which they have been guilty in rejecting Him. The feast of tabernaclesThen follows the feast of tabernacles. They offered, during seven days, offerings made by fire unto Jehovah; and on the eighth day there was again a holy convocation — an extraordinary day of a new week which went beyond the full time — including, I doubt not, the resurrection; that is, the participation of those who are raised in that joy. It was a solemn assembly — that eighth day, the great day of the feast, on which the Lord (having declared of the then time that His hour was not yet come to shew Himself to the world — His brethren [the Jews] not believing in Him either) announced that for him who believed in Him there would be, in the meanwhile, rivers of living water which would flow from his belly; that is, the Holy Spirit, who would be a living power working in, and flowing forth from the heart, and in the expression of its intimate affections. Israel had indeed drunk of the living water out of the rock in the wilderness, the sojourn in which, now past when the feast of tabernacles is celebrated, was celebrated with joy in the memorial of that which was over, to enhance the joy of the rest into which they were ushered. But believers now meanwhile were not only to drink, for blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed; the river itself would flow from the heart; that is, the Holy Spirit in power, which they would have received through Christ before He should be manifested to the world, or they have their place in the heavenly Canaan. The joy of the MillenniumThus, the feast of tabernacles is the joy of the millennium, when Israel have come out of the wilderness where their sins have placed them; but to which will be added this first day of another week — the resurrection joy of those who are raised with the Lord Jesus, to which the presence of the Holy Ghost answers meanwhile. The day of joy yet awaiting the Centre and Spring of it allConsequently, we find that the feast of tabernacles took place after the increase of the earth had been gathered in, and, as we learn elsewhere, not only after the harvest but after the vintage also; that is, after separation by judgment, and the final execution of judgment on the earth, when heavenly and earthly saints should be all gathered in. Israel was to rejoice seven days before Jehovah. The passover has had its antitype, Pentecost its also; but this day of joy is yet awaiting Him who is to be the centre and spring of it all, the Lord Jesus, who will rejoice in the great congregation, and whose praise will begin with Jehovah in the great assembly (Ps. 22). He had already done it in the midst of the assembly of His brethren; but now the whole race of Jacob is called to glorify Him, and all the ends of the world shall remember themselves. The feast of tabernacles kept only in the landThe expression, solemn assembly, is not found applied to any of the feasts but this, except to the seventh day of the passover (Deut. 16), as it seems to me somewhat in the same sense. The feast of tabernacles could not be kept in the wilderness. In order to observe it, the people were to be in possession of the land, as is plain. It is also to be observed, that it never was kept according to the prescriptions of the law from Joshua till Nehemiah (Neh. 8:17). Israel had forgotten that they had been strangers in the wilderness. Joy, without the remembrance of this, tends to ruin; the very enjoyment of the blessing leads to it. It will be remarked that, properly speaking, all the feasts are types of what is done on earth and in connection with Israel, unless we except the eighth day of tabernacles. The church period, as such, is the lapse of time from Pentecost to the seventh month. We may, and of course do, get the benefit of, at any rate, the two first; but historically the type refers to Israel. |
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