All rights reserved

Similar documents
YOVEL IN MESSIAH PASTOR ELY HERNANDEZ THOUGHTS ON TORAH BEHAR-BECHUKOTAI 120 JUBILEES

Bringing in the Harvest Matthew 28:18 19 at Shavuot

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of Yahweh

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of Yahweh

Christ in the Special Years of Rest and Release. Leviticus 25

Daniel and the Last Days. Vern S. Poythress, Ph.D., Th.D.

The Feasts of the LORD

Feast Tabernacles. Sukkot סוכות

The Jewish Feasts and Jubilee Years

The 120 Jubilee Year Calendar

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of Yahweh

Daniel s 70 Weeks By: Chad Knudson

ס פ יר ת ה ע ומ ר. Counting the Omer

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of Yahweh

The Two Loaves Of Shavuot

Justice and Righteousness are the Foundation of His Throne

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of Yahweh

The LORD s Progressive Revelation about His Plan of Redemption. The Seven Appointments of the LORD - 127

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of Yahweh

2015 Bible Reading Program. SUN MON TUES WED THURS FRI SABBATH Gen 1-3 Gen 4-7 Gen 8-11

Hebrews 3: Stanly Community Church

September 10th til September 30th, & Oct 1, 2018

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of Yahweh

God s Boundary Stones Part 2 Glenn Smith, April 2013, Ahava B Shem Yeshua

INTRODUCTION TO GOD S FEASTS AND WHY WE SHOULD STUDY. THEM Part Two AN EXCERPT FROM THE BOOK FALSE DOCTRINES WHY SHOULD WE STUDY THE FEASTS?

Significant Lessons From The Seemingly Insignificant #8 God s Sabbath Rest

THE SANCTUARY OF THE BIBLE.

THE SANCTUARY OF THE BIBLE. p. 1, Para. 1, [SANBIBLE].

The Sanctuary of the Bible

Blessed is He who comes in the Name of Yahweh

Revelation Part 4 Lesson 11 REVELATION REVIEW CHART

What then? Are we better than they? Not at all; for we have already charged that both Jews and Greeks are all under sin; as it is written,

The Sabbath: Entering Into Rest!

Did the Babylonian Captivity Really Last for 70 Years?

The Blood Moon Tetrad

Significant Lessons From The Seemingly Insignificant #19 Significant Events On Nisan 1 & Nisan 10

Parashah Sixty-Three Exodus 25:1 26:30; Isaiah 66:1 13; 1Corinthians 6: God Among His People

1 John Chapter 3. The world does not know God. It did not know the Son. It does not recognize us as adopted sons, either.

Yom T'ruah is different from the other Feasts in that it is the only Feast that happens during a new moon, when the sky is dark.

rmoa/ Emor/Speak Vayikra (Leviticus) 21:1-24:23

Romans Session 114 The Holy Spirit Guarantees Our Glory The inexpressible Groans For Glory 3

Inspired Aspirations The Holy Spirit Part 1

GETTING TO KNOW GOD. Bible Class Series Newton Church of Christ Newton, North Carolina

Session 4: Inviting Others to Encounter God By Ken Kessler

Truth For These Times

Sabbath Reading For the Feast of Trumpets, September 29, 2011

WHAT IS SH'MINI ATZERET? By Apostle Jacquelyn Fedor

148 [3:19 20] The First Epistle of John: Chapter Three

rh;b Behar/In the Mount Vayikra (Leviticus) 25:1-26:2

GETTING TO KNOW GOD. Bible Class Series Winter Park Church of Christ Wilmington, North Carolina USA

Pentecost or Shavuot? Act 2:1 When the day of Pentecost arrived, they were all together in one place.

Welcome To Sunday Night Bible Fellowship

Scripture It is Written, My Heavenly Father says.

BELIEVING IN YESHUA THE MESSIANIC WAY

Torah Time.

Revelation 11: Stanly Community Church

You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free. Yeshua

WHAT IS SHIMINI ATZERET AND SIMCHAT TORAH? Shimini Atzeret is the feast celebrated on the 8 th day, counting

A PEOPLE AFTER THE ORDER OF MELCHIZEDEK. Part One. Through baptism our souls and spirits are made immortal. However, the

Will there be a Tribulation? YES! Why? Because the Bible teaches us so.

The Covenants of YHWH

Revelation Chapter 22

LINE UPON LINE. Lesson #15 God's Prophetic Timetable. The Day of the Lord (Sabbath), Part 1. Line Upon Line, Hebraic Heritage Bible Study Course

Baruch atah YHVH, Eloheynu, Melech ha- Olam, asher bachar banu m kol ha-amim, v natan lanu eht Torah-to. Baruch atah YHVH, noteyn ha-torah. Ameyn.

Ulises Acosta drash Ki Tavo September 1, 2018

Let s have a look at the root language of Scripture to determine the meaning of the word [weeks] as used in Scripture...

Great Authority Hebrews 1:1 God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, 2 has in these last days

Matthew s Gospel. Chapter 16b-17a. Why did Yeshua begin to proclaim His rejection, suffering and death at this time?

BAPTISM OF THE HOLY SPIRIT When we are born again we receive the holy spirit within for salvation. When we are baptized in the holy spirit it is for

by Tim Kelley The importance of the sheaves and the barley NKJ ESV NKJ

LORD YESHUA. KING of Heaven HIGH PRIEST of Heaven

The Festivals & Jesus

The Revelation of Jesus Christ The River and the Tree of Life

LOOKING BACK AT THE CREATION OF MAN

Sermon : Why Christians Assemble Page 1

Parashah Ninety-Two Leviticus 22:1 23:44; Zechariah 14:1 19; Colossians 2:16 17

At Creation. Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5 Day 6 Day 7 Day 8 Day 9. 7 Days

Hebrews 7: Stanly Community Church

Yom Kippur. Michael Rudolph. Delivered to Ohev Yisrael on October 4, 2014

The Jewish Holidays - A Simplified Overview of the Feasts of the LORD

Elohim blessed the seventh day and set it apart, because on it He rested from all His work which Elohim in creating had made.

The Atonement (Pt. 2)

Parashah Eighty-Seven Leviticus 16:1 34; Isaiah 60:15 22; Titus 3:4 7 notes by Tim Hegg. God s Way of Atonement

A Torah Study Guide for the Young & Young at Heart. by Ya acov Natan Lawrence & his kids

Stewardship Giving To The Work of The Lord I Chronicles 29:1-21

~ HaMoyadim ~ These are times when Elohim, the God of the Universe, has requested we meet with Him and times that He meets with us.

2013 Bible Reading Program

The Answer to Daniel s Prayer

Seventy Weeks. The Seventeenth in a Series of Sermons on the Book of Daniel. Texts: Daniel 9:20 27; Revelation 21:9-27

Keeping Feasts unto God Three Times a Year Typifying the Full Enjoyment of the Triune God in Christ

Valley Bible Church. Valley Bible Church Adult Class UNDERSTANDING END TIMES PROPHECY FOCUS #8 THE MILLENNIAL REIGN OF CHRIST REVELATION 20:1-10

The Seventy Sevens Scripture Text: Daniel 9:24 27

Parashah Twelve Genesis 15:1 21; Zephaniah 3:8 20; Romans 4:1 9

THE THEOLOGY OF THE NEW TESTAMENT

Graduated Catechism Memory Program for All Ages

FEED 210 Mentoring Through The Old Testament Session 2B: Leviticus to Deuteronomy

The goal is orthopraxy (right living), through orthodoxy (right teaching). -- Cultivating the heart.

Parashah Sixty-Six Exodus 29:1 49; Isaiah 61:7 62:5; Hebrews 2:10 18 notes by Tim Hegg. Filling the Hands of Aaron & His Sons

The Breath of Almighty God

Should Disciples of Messiah Celebrate the Biblical Feast Days?

Transcription:

נ מ צ נ מ (שׁ י ע צ רת) Shemini Atzeret The Festival of Sukkot contains an enigma: is it prescribed in the Torah to be 7 days long or 8? The text in Lev 23 seems a bit ambiguous: (vv. 33-36): Again Adonai spoke to Moses, saying, Speak to the sons of Israel, saying, On the fifteenth of this seventh month is the Feast of Booths for seven days to Adonai. On the first day is a holy convocation; you shall do no laborious work of any kind. For seven days you shall present an offering by fire to Adonai. On the eighth day you shall have a holy convocation and present an offering by fire to Adonai; it is an assembly. You shall do no laborious work. The festival is specifically detailed as lasting seven days, yet a command is given regarding the eighth day. This is reiterated a few verses later in Lev 23: (v.39): On exactly the fifteenth day of the seventh month, when you have gathered in the crops of the land, you shall celebrate the feast of Adonai for seven days, with a rest on the first day and a rest on the eighth day. ע רת In fact, this eighth day is regularly referred to as an assembly or a holy assembly, which is in the Hebrew, and thus י ע צ רת,שׁ Shemini Atzeret. Atzeret is from the root עצר which means to restrain, hold back, and thus the Sages understand the designation to be referring to a holding on to the festival so as to restrain it from ending making the festival last for yet another day. But since the text clearly states that one is to dwell in the Sukkah for 7 days (not 8), the eighth day was understood by the Sages as a separate festival, yet one which is, in every way, connected to the 7 days of Sukkot, and maintains the character of Sukkot. In the triennial cycle the Torah section chosen for Shemini Atzeret was Deut 14:22ff, a section that teaches about the Shemita year (sabbatical year) as well as the pilgrimage festivals (Pesach, Shavuot, Sukkot). In linking this Torah section with the eighth day, the Sages intend to emphasize that Shemini Atzeret is symbolic of the conclusion of the whole festival cycle, In fact, if the history of the earth is patterned after the 7 day week, with the 7th day (Shabbat) symbolic of the Millennial reign of Yeshua, then the eighth day represents the World to Come in which (like the Sabbatical year and especially the Jubilee) everything returns to its rightful owner, all debts are cancelled, and freedom is proclaimed for all slaves. Thus, Shemini Atzeret is to Sukkot what the Shemita year is to the cycle of 7 years, and what the Yovel is to the cycle of 7 groups of 7 years. The Yovel (,יוֹב ל Jubilee) takes its name from the verb,יבל derived either from a word meaning ram (and thus ram s horn ) or from a word meaning to produce, and thus putting attention upon the promise HaShem made that He would cause triple production of the crops in the 6th year so that the people would still be eating the produce in the 9th year (Lev 25:21-22). One question that has always arisen regarding the Jubilee year (both in ancient times as well as in modern) is exactly how one is to reckon the 50th year. The Torah commands that we are to count 7 years for each Shemita (Sabbatical) year, and after 7 Sabbatical years (7 X 7 = 49), the 50th year is the Jubilee. (This is demonstrated in miniature by the counting of the omer from Pesach to Shavuot, in which Shavuot is the 50th day after counting 7 weeks [sabbaths]). But here is the question: is the 50th year the start of the next cycle of 49 years, or is it a year independent of the Shemita cycle? 1

7 14 21 28 35 42 49 50 7 14 21 28 35 42 49 99 years 7 14 21 28 35 42 49 50 7 14 21 28 35 42 49 98 years It seems that the biblical text supports counting the cycle by groups of 49 (where the Jubilee year, number 50 is the first year in the next cycle of 49). Some have suggested that this can be shown by taking the biblical chronology of Israel. If Israel entered the Land in 1424 BCE and Jerusalem was destroyed in 554 BCE, if one counts using the 49 years cycle, 70 Shemita years are neglected by Israel during the 430 years following the building of Solomon s Temple (Ezek 4:5-6), requiring 70 years of exile. G-d decreed that the Land should receive her sabbaths which Israel had failed to observe (Lev 26:43; 2Chron 36:21). This reckoning only works if one counts cycles of 49 years. A second corroboration for counting 49 year cycles is Ezekiel 40:1 In the twenty-fifth year of our exile, at the beginning of the year, on the tenth of the month, in the fourteenth year after the city was taken, on that same day, the hand of the L-rd was upon me and He brought me there. This must be a Jubilee year because it begins on the 10th of the month (which only happens in the Jubilee year), and the chronology is specifically given to us as the 25th year of the exile. Once again, counting the Jubilee years as cycles of 49 years inclusively, the 18th Jubilee corresponds to the 25th year of the exile. This counting of Jubilees may give us a clue to a possible interpretation of Daniel 9:24 Seventy sevens have been decreed for your people and your holy city, to finish the transgression, to seal up sin, to make atonement for iniquity, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and (the) prophet, and to anoint the most holy. This language sounds entirely inclusive, as though this describes the complete plan of G-d in His eternal work of salvation. If so, perhaps we should understand the opening chronological note as meaning 70 Jubilee cycles have been decreed, since a Jubilee cycle is a unit of 7 Sabbatical years. If so, the prophet may be telling us that the span of earth s history will be calculated as 70 Jubilee cycles. Would this mean we could predict the exact chronology of the end? Hardly! In G-d s providence the precise keeping of the years has escaped us. But if this is the proper interpretation of Daniel s proph- 2

ecy, we can certainly say that we are living in the end times, for if Jubilees began being counted 49 years after Israel entered the Promised Land, then surely we are nearing the full count of 70. While we cannot know the exact time, if the above explanation is correct, we may at least surmise that we are approaching the time when our Messiah will return. What, then, is the central theme of Shemini Atzeret as it symbolizes the final Jubilee the final eighth day the olam haba (World to Come)? It is communion with G-d. Sukkot envisions G-d dwelling with man, and thus Shemini Atzeret symbolizes this dwelling together forever and so shall we ever be with the L-rd (1 Thess 4:17). This is the return to Gan Eden (Garden of Eden, cf. Ps 36:8) where everything is brought back to its true beginning and the full design of HaShem is realized. This is a return to walking with G-d in the cool of the day (cf. Gen 3:8, 9). Thus, the haftarah for Shemini Atzeret is 1Ki 8:54-66, the prayer of Shlomo in the dedication of the Temple (which took place at the time of Sukkot), the place where G-d would manifest His presence and desire for communion with His people. Shlomo would have to send the people away on the eighth day (v. 66) because they desired to linger (atzeret) there forever. But the Temple, in all of its glory, was still only a symbolic representation of the final eighth day, the eternal Jubilee, in which G-d and man will dwell together forever, never again to be separated by the sin and rebellion which entered into that first Eden. If this is where it is all going communion with G-d, fellowship with His Ruach, then it is a pity if those who claim to be His children actually have little or no desire to have such communion. If the end of all of our striving to grow in holiness and to conform to the righteous ways of G-d is so that we might have communion with Him, yet in our hearts we have very little desire to actually seek His face or listen to His voice, then how disappointed we will be with the world to come! For nothing is more clear than this: the eternity which HaShem has planned for His children is a never ending Eden in which the primary joy will be simple communion with the Creator and fellowship with all of His children. The compactness of the Fall festivals in which we find ourselves over and over again together in fellowship and meals is a visual reminder that G-d s idea of the highest pleasure is uninterrupted fellowship between Himself and His children and the communion they enjoy together in His presence. It appears that Yeshua had this same general thought in mind (that our striving for righteousness in this life is a preparation for our communion with HaShem in the olam haba [world to come]) when He speaks of the final judgment day: Matt. 7:22 Many will say to Me on that day, Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name, and in Your name cast out demons, and in Your name perform many miracles? 23 And then I will declare to them, I never knew you; DEPART FROM ME, YOU WHO PRACTICE LAWLESSNESS. The context of Yeshua s words is His warning about false prophets and teachers. They come as wolves in sheep s clothing, meaning they pretend outwardly to conform to the righteousness of G-d, but inwardly they desire to devour the sheep like a wolf. Their motivation for outward righteousness, then, is not with a true heart to please their Creator, but as a means to further their own agenda. Yet Yeshua teaches that the fruit of their lives will reveal their true nature. Fruits of righteousness come only from a genuine root of righteousness. But though they may fool the sheep by their outward façade, they will not fool the One Who judges all things righteously. As the writer to the Hebrews says, 3

ו Heb. 4:13 And there is no creature hidden from His sight, but all things are open and laid bare to the eyes of Him with whom we have to do. Thus, in the day of judgment Yeshua will dismiss the imposters with the stern judgment: depart from me, you who practice lawlessness. This is a quote from Psalm 6:9, in which the word iniquity aven) is translated by the Lxx as ajnomiva, anomia. This Greek term (used also in Matt 7:22) is the,א ן ( common word used to translate Torah (usually translated in our English by law ) with the alphaprivative. This corresponds to our English prefix un meaning not, e.g., uninterrupted meaning not interrupted. Thus, anomia means not Torah. Those who are workers of iniquity are those who negate Torah who live un-torah lives. Those whose lives are characterized by breaking G-d s commandments will receive this stern rebuke of departure from Yeshua in the coming judgment day. And this leads us to the reason Yeshua would teach in this way: He intends that our pursuit of righteousness be from the heart and not for the applause of men. That is, our desire to obey Torah must be first and foremost a desire for communion with our Creator, not to please those from whom we desire commendations. This perspective, of pleasing G-d first, is illustrated in the Torah section chosen for Shemini Atzeret. The notice that generosity should be extended to the poor (Deut 15:7ff) is given with the sabbatical year in mind. Note verse 9: Beware that there is no base thought in your heart, saying, The seventh year, the year of remission, is near, and your eye is hostile toward your poor brother, and you give him nothing; then he may cry to the LORD against you, and it will be a sin in you. This is the very heart of the commandments G-d gives His children., G-d asks them to follow His ways and entrust the outcome to Him. When we are obedient to our Father, we may trust our lives into His care. This principle is active in our daily choices, but it also has a long-term reality: we may entrust our lives into His hands, and anticipate the world to come as unending communion with Him. Such a life of faith experiences a foretaste of that unending communion through the daily fellowship of the Ruach Who is with us and in us. Coming to recognize the presence of G-d with us and living each day in His presence becomes the training ground for our final and ultimate friendship with Him in the olam haba. This is the true motivation for righteous living: the realization that the final outcome of our salvation is the unending and unbroken communion with our Savior, a communion which we long for even now. As we struggle against the flesh and the sinful nature; as we attempt to put to death the evil inclination toward sin; as we strive to overcome the sins that easily entangle us, we do so with an eye to the future when we will dwell in His presence and when our eyes will behold the One Who died and lives for us. It is this perspective that aids in our purification: 1John 3:1 See how great a love the Father has bestowed on us, that we would be called children of God; and such we are. For this reason the world does not know us, because it did not know Him. 2 Beloved, now we are children of God, and it has not appeared as yet what we will be. We know that when He appears, we will be like Him, because we will see Him just as He is. 3 And everyone who has this hope fixed on Him purifies himself, just as He is pure. This perspective, of anticipating and hoping for the return of the Messiah and His reign upon the earth which will usher in the olam haba, is not the same as the apple pie in the sky, some kind of 4

escape-ism in which people are so much taken with heaven that they are of no earthly good. This perspective recognizes that the world to come is a return to Gan Eden in which mankind had responsibilities and commandments to follow. But the hope of the world to come is that those who attain it through the sacrifice of Yeshua will be changed: mortal will put on immortality, and the sinful nature against which we now strive will be gone. We will therefore be able to obey without hindrance, and there will be no possibility of lapse into rebellion the way there was in the original Gan Eden. Our great desire for this unhindered communion with G-d drive our current existence, and the choices we make in it. With our eye set upon the hope of the olam haba, we are purified from within through the work of the Ruach Who makes and molds us into a bride fit for the Royal Groom. We are becoming what we inevitably will be. He who began a good work in you will perfect it until [with a view toward] the day of Messiah Yeshua. Phil. 1:6 This is our hope. So as we celebrate Shemini Atzeret and recognize that it symbolizes the world to come, we are called once again to assess our personal friendship with G-d. Do we find in Him a joy and comfort which goes deeper than our circumstances? Can we find a soul-rest in His words of promise when there is no rest to be found elsewhere? Is His presence with us through the Comforter Whom He has sent something we strive to live within? Are our life s decisions made with His presence in view? And do we long and hope for the conclusion of all things in Him, when all will know that He is One and His Name is One? May our celebration of Shemini Atzeret cause us to focus on these things! 5