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CHAPTER 1: Israel's Prophetic
Spring Feasts |
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ny serious study of Bible prophecy should begin with the
feast days of Israel that are found in the law. The feast days provide us with
the basic outline of the plan of God of salvation for the individual, as well as
an outline of God's plan (as Paul states) to "put all things under His feet."
Too many books on Bible prophecy show very little understanding of the feast
days, resulting in some popular but misleading views. The purpose of this book
is to give the reader an understanding of Israel's prophetic feast days first,
and then build upon that foundation with other laws that prophesy about Christ's
second coming. In correlating the New Testament teachings with these
lesser-known--but very important--laws of the second coming, the coming of
Christ takes on new clothing.
After Jesus' resurrection, He
appeared to two disciples on the road to Emmaus and explained to them the
meaning and purpose of Passover and why He had had to be crucified on that day.
Luke 24:27 says,
27And
beginning with Moses and with all the prophets, He explained to them the
things concerning Himself in all the Scriptures.
Later, Jesus appeared to His
disciples and explained to them how the law of Passover had prophesied of
His death and resurrection. Luke 24:44 and 45 says,
44
Now He said to them, "These are My words
which I spoke to you while I was still with you, that all things which are
written about Me in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms must
be fulfilled." 45
Then He opened their minds to
understand the Scriptures.
There is no doubt that Jesus
explained to these people how He had been crucified in order to fulfill the
Feast of Passover and how He had fulfilled the wave-sheaf offering in His
resurrection. It is likely that He also gave them some understanding of the
Feast of Pentecost before telling them to tarry in Jerusalem (Luke 24:49).
We who have been endowed with
20/20 hindsight often marvel at how the people of Jesus' day--including the
disciples--could have had so little understanding of the real meaning of
Passover. As Christians, the prophetic significance of this feast seems so clear
to us now. But even today these things are not at all clear to those whose eyes
are blinded by traditional Judaism. Even more astounding is that there are so
few Christian books outlining the autumn feast days, showing how they prophesy
of the second coming of Christ. As a result, the end-time Church today is,
generally speaking, as blind to the prophecies of His second coming as the
people of Judah were to His first coming--because they do not understand the
meaning of the biblical feasts.
This book is written to explain
the second coming of Christ, beginning with Moses. Even as Passover, the
wave-sheaf offering, and Pentecost were fulfilled in the first coming of
Christ, so also the Feast of Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, and the Feast of
Tabernacles prophesy of events surrounding the second coming of Christ.
But before we discuss the autumn feasts and the second coming of Christ, we must
give a brief teaching on the spring feasts and how Jesus might have explained
them after His resurrection.
Jesus was crucified on the
fourteenth day of the first month of the Hebrew calendar. This was the day
Israel was to slay the lambs and put the blood on the lintels and door posts of
their homes (Exodus 12:6, 7). The law in Exodus 12:6 specified that the people
were to kill a lamb or a goat in the afternoon between noon and sundown, or "between
the two evenings" (literal Hebrew text). The first evening was at noon, when
the sun began to go down; the second was at sundown, when the sun actually set.
In his book, The Temple, Alfred Edersheim says on page 211,
"According to the Samaritans,
the Karaite Jews, and many modern interpreters, this means between actual sunset
and complete darkness (or, say, between six and seven p.m.); but from the
contemporary testimony of Josephus, and from Talmudic authorities, there cannot
be a doubt that, at the time of our Lord, it was regarded as the interval
between the sun's commencing to decline and his actual disappearance. This
allows a sufficient period for the numerous lambs which had to be killed, and
agrees with the traditional account that on the eve of Passover the daily
evening sacrifice was offered an hour, or if it fell on a Friday, two hours,
before the usual time."
The people were not to kill
their lambs prior to the evening sacrifice in the temple. The evening sacrifice
was normally killed at 2:30 p.m. (in the middle of the ninth hour of the day)
and offered to God an hour later at 3:30 p.m. However, on the eve of Passover (Abib
14) the evening sacrifices were killed an hour earlier, unless this day fell on
Friday, the preparation day for the Sabbath, in which it was killed at 12:30
p.m.
In our next section we will show
from early Church writings that Jesus was crucified on a Friday. This is
disputed by some, but we mention this here only to show that the evening
sacrifice at the time of Jesus' crucifixion was to be killed two hours
early--that is, about 12:30 p.m. This was normal practice when Abib 14 fell on a
Friday. Only then could the Passover lambs begin to be killed. Yet the lambs
certainly also had to be killed by mid-afternoon in order to have them fully
cooked by sundown, for all had to be in their houses by that time. Exodus 12:22
tells us,
22
And you shall take a bunch of hyssop and dip
it in the blood which is in the basin, and apply some of the blood that is in
the basin to the lintel and the two doorposts; and none of you shall go
outside the door of his house until morning.
This law settles the question
men have had about the timing of the last supper that Jesus ate with the
disciples. There are some who teach that the Last Supper, which Jesus ate with
His disciples, was the Passover meal and was eaten on the night of Abib 14 after
all the lambs had been killed. That view teaches that Jesus was crucified the
following day, Abib 15. This view is based on Jesus' statement in Luke 22:15,
"I have earnestly desired to eat this
Passover with you before I suffer."
It was, indeed, a Passover meal, but it could only have been eaten on the
evening after Abib 13, because after this meal, they sang a hymn and then went
outside to the Mount of Olives (Mark 14:26), where Jesus was arrested. If they
had eaten the Passover meal on the night after Abib 14, it would have been
unlawful for them to leave the house.
Edersheim tells us in The Temple, page 213, that "at the first
Passover it was said, 'None of you shall go out of the door of his house until
the morning,' which did not apply to later times." This law
perhaps did not apply insofar as the rabbinic traditions were concerned. One
cannot easily dispute with so great an authority as Edersheim. Hence, it was
probably a common practice for people to be outside their houses on the evening
of Passover. However, the real question here is whether Jesus fulfilled the law
in its every detail in regard to Passover. We do not believe that Jesus would
have given credence to the rabbinic traditions that were in violation of Exodus
12:22, especially in view of the fact that this Passover had to be fulfilled
precisely in accordance to biblical law.
Therefore, we must conclude that the Last Supper and Jesus' subsequent
arrest took place on Thursday evening, the beginning of Abib 14 (as the Hebrews
reckoned days). His trial took place that same night, and He was crucified in
the morning or at noon.
Jesus was put on trial that same
night in front of the Sanhedrin. The following day Jesus was crucified. Mark
15:25 says, "And it was the third
hour when they crucified Him," perhaps, when Pilate sentenced Him to be crucified. Ignatius,
bishop of Antioch, wrote some decades later that Pilate sentenced Jesus to death
at the third hour of the day, but that Jesus was actually put on the cross at
the sixth hour, that is, at noon. The third hour of the day was about 9:00 a.m.,
which was the time of the morning sacrifice in the temple.
At noon, or the sixth hour of
the day, a strange thing happened. The sky suddenly became dark. From Ignatius'
letter, which we will quote later, it appears that the sky was darkened for
three hours to mark the time that Jesus actually hung on the cross. Matthew
27:45 says,
45
Now from the sixth hour
[noon] darkness fell upon all the land
until the ninth hour [3:00 p.m.].
This was not a natural
solar eclipse, for astronomers have charted all the lunar and solar eclipses
visible in the Middle East for the past 5,000 years. In fact, since Passover
always fell on a full moon, it was impossible to have a solar eclipse at
Passover, for solar eclipses can occur only at the time of the new moon (that
is, when no moon appears in the sky at night). Likewise, eclipses of the moon
are seen only at the time of the full moon. And so, while there have been lunar
eclipses at Passover on occasion throughout history, there has never been a
natural solar eclipse on that day. The darkness that fell over the land at noon
during the time Jesus hung on the cross was supernatural, not natural.
Astronomers tell us that in the
late afternoon of Passover, Friday, April 3, 33 A.D., while Joseph of Arimathea
and Nicodemus were hurrying to bury the body of Jesus, there was also a lunar
eclipse. The eclipse began in Europe at 3:01 p.m. when Jesus died, and it was
already eclipsed when the moon rose over Jerusalem at 5:10 p.m. that evening.
It is impossible to have a lunar
eclipse and a solar eclipse on the same day, because the sun and the moon must
be in opposite positions in the sky for these two kinds of eclipses. Yet on this
great day in history, God marked the time for all to see by a spectacular
miracle. In Bonnie Gaunt's book, The Bible's Awesome Number Code, page
55, we read:
"It was on a lonely
hill outside the walls of Jerusalem that this Heavenly One, who came to earth to
be born, to suffer, and to die as a man, hung on a cruel cross that afternoon.
The hill was called Calvary. Its Greek name was Kranion, whose numeric
value is 301.
"At 3:01 in the
afternoon, as he looked heavenward and said, 'It is finished,' the moon
began to eclipse. It was at 3:01 Greenwich Time that the eclipse began. God
makes no mistakes with His timing, nor does He rely on coincidences. The word
'moon' in the New Testament is Selene, and its Gematria is 301. Yes, He
who had formed the moon and put it into its orbit around the earth, now had
given up His human life at 3:01, on a hill called Calvary (301) precisely when
the moon (301) began to eclipse. It was the exact hour when the priests were
killing the lambs for Passover. 'Lambs' [in Hebrew] has a numeric value of 301."
For those unfamiliar with
numeric values (gematria), the Hebrew and Greek letters served as their numbers
as well as letters. Hence, each letter carries a numeric value, and one can add
up the value of each letter to obtain the numeric value of any word or sentence
in the Bible. In this manner, Bonnie Gaunt shows mathematically the precision of
God in timing the first minute of His death (3:01 p.m.) in accordance with an
eclipse of the moon (301) on a hill called Calvary, whose numeric value is 301.
His death coincided with the Passover "lambs" (301) that were being killed at
that same moment.
Why did God also blot out the
sun at noon on the day Jesus was crucified? Astronomers tell us that on Abib 14,
33 A.D. at noon, the sun was positioned on a star called El Nath in the head of
Aries, the ram. El Nath means "the wounded, or the slain." That was the moment
the sun was darkened. Assuming there were no clouds to block their vision, if
the people in Jerusalem had looked up to see where the sun had been shining,
they would have seen El Nath, the slain ram.
Some say the darkness at noon
was a sign of creation in mourning. No doubt it was, but the divine law sheds
additional light on this event. If we explain this phenomenon beginning with
Moses, we note first that no one was allowed to kill the Passover lamb while it
was dark. If the darkness had not ended in mid-afternoon, the people could not
have observed the Passover that year, because they were forbidden to slay the
lambs after dark. But the darkness lasted only until the ninth hour, or
mid-afternoon. The sun came out, and the people began to kill their Passover
lambs.
At that moment Jesus spoke His
final words and died (Matthew 27:46-50).
God brought darkness so that no
one would kill the lambs until Jesus died. This certainly identified Him as the
fulfillment of the Passover lamb. He was, as John the Baptist had proclaimed,
"the Lamb of God who takes away the sin
of the world" (John 1:29). It was important enough in the plan of God
that no one should kill the Passover lambs until the moment Jesus died on the
cross. Jesus could not have died on any other day than Abib 14, for this was the
appointed time set by the prophetic law of Passover.
Furthermore, God blotted out the
sun for three hours in order to prevent the people from killing the Passover
lambs until the moment Jesus died on the cross. As we showed earlier, rabbinic
tradition allowed them that Friday to kill the Passover lambs as early as 12:30
p.m. after the evening sacrifice had been slain. So God brought darkness to the
land in order to force them to conform to the time of Jesus' death--as the law
said, "between the two evenings." It was the precise moment in history
when the Lamb of God was destined to die for the sin of the world.
The law said that the priest was
to wave a sheaf of barley up and down "on
the day after the sabbath" after
the Passover (Lev. 23:11). The Pharisees taught that this was to be done on a
fixed day of the month, that is, Abib 16, the day after the Passover, which was
an extra sabbath day, regardless of the day of the week on which it fell. The
Sadducees, on the other hand, taught that the sheaf of barley was to be waved on
the day after the WEEKLY Sabbath--that is, on the day the Romans called Sunday.
In 33 A.D. Abib 14 fell on a Friday, and the day of Passover fell on Abib
15, which was also the weekly Sabbath that year. Therefore, the wave-sheaf
offering fell on Sunday, Abib 16. It met the requirements of both the Pharisees
and the Sadducees that year. This was convenient for them, but unfortunate for
us, because Jesus' resurrection on that day did not settle the legal dispute or
tell us which sabbath was indicated in the law.
In the early Church, Ignatius, bishop of Antioch and a disciple of John
the revelator, wrote a number of letters that give us some useful information on
this subject. In chapter nine of his letter to the Trallians, he writes,
"On the day of the preparation [Friday], then, at the third hour, He received
the sentence from Pilate, the Father permitting that to happen; at the sixth
hour He was crucified; at the ninth hour He gave up the ghost; and before sunset
He was buried. During the Sabbath [Saturday], He continued under the earth in
the tomb in which Joseph of Arimathea had laid Him. At the dawning of the Lord's
Day [Sunday] He arose from the dead, according to what was spoken by Himself,
'As Jonah was three days and three nights in the whale's belly, so shall the Son
of man also be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.' The day
of the preparation, then, comprises the passion; the Sabbath embraces the
burial; the Lord's Day contains the resurrection."
From this we see that Ignatius, bishop of Antioch, and a Jewish Christian,
saw no contradiction in the fact that Jesus was raised on the third day from His
crucifixion, rather than after 72 hours that comprise a literal three days and
three nights. He may have understood three days and three nights to be a Hebrew
idiom meaning continuous time that would never contradict the many other
places where Jesus said that He would be raised on the third day. Lamsa
says in his Idioms in the Bible Explained, page 46, that in the East
those who are "in difficulties and a dilemma" are said to be "in the belly of
the whale." It is a Hebrew idiom, drawn, no doubt, from the story of Jonah.
In English, the equivalent of this idiom is to be "in a pickle" or "in a
jam." From the time Jesus was in the garden, where He was arrested, Jesus was
"in the belly of the whale" for three nights and part of the third day when He
was raised from the dead. This also occurred "in the heart of the earth," for to
the Hebrew people, Jerusalem was considered to be the center, or heart of the
earth. Hence, we could say that, like Jonah, Jesus was in a stressful situation
for three days and three nights in Jerusalem, the heart of the earth.
Ignatius was reputed to have been the child whom Jesus set forth in the
midst of His disciples in Matthew 18:2 as an example of how one must become as a
little child to enter the kingdom of heaven. While some think this to be
mythical, all historians recognize that Ignatius was born about 30 A.D. and, as
a child, met Jesus personally. In fact, he tells us specifically that he had
personally met Jesus in his letter to the Church of Smyrna, Chapter 3. Jerome,
who translated his letter into Latin some centuries later quotes him:
"In this last he [Ignatius] bore witness to the Gospel which I have recently
translated, in respect of the person of Christ, saying, 'I indeed saw him in
the flesh after the resurrection, and I believe that he is'."
Thus, Ignatius was an eyewitness of Jesus Christ not only before His
crucifixion, but also after He had been raised from the dead. Though young, he
was one of the 500 or so people who saw Him after His resurrection (1 Cor.
15:6). He later became a disciple of John, whom Jesus loved, and eventually he
died as a martyr in 107 A.D. It is highly doubtful, then, that Ignatius would
have been mistaken in regard to the date and timing of Jesus' death and
resurrection.
Justin Martyr (c.114-165 A.D.) was another early Church writer. He wrote
in chapter 67 of his First Apology about the timing of Jesus' death and
resurrection:
"And on
the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country gather together
to one place, and the memoirs of the apostles or the writings of the prophets
are read, as long as time permits . . . But Sunday is the day on which we all
hold our common assembly, because it is the first day on which God, having
wrought a change in the darkness and matter, made the world; and Jesus Christ
our Saviour on the same day rose from the dead. For He was crucified on the
day before that of Saturn [i.e., the day before Saturday]; and on the day
after that of Saturn, which is the day of the Sun [Sunday], having appeared to
His apostles and disciples, He taught them these things, which we have submitted
to you also for your consideration."
Using the names of the Roman weekdays to accommodate his audience, Justin
tells us specifically that Jesus was crucified on a Friday, the day before
Saturday. He also tells us Jesus was raised from the dead on Sunday. This tells
us that Jesus was crucified in 33 A.D., for in that year Abib 14 fell on a
Friday. Justin also agrees with all other writers of the early Church in telling
us that Jesus rose from the dead on Sunday to fulfill the wave-sheaf offering.
Again, in his Dialogue With Trypo (the Jew), Chapter 107, he speaks
of the sign of Jonah, obviously understanding the "three days and three nights"
to mean "the third day."
"And that he would rise again on the third day after the crucifixion, it is
written in the memoirs that some of your nation, questioning Him, said, "Show us
a sign;' and He replied to them, 'An evil and adulterous generation seeketh
after a sign; and no sign shall be given them, save the sign of Jonah.' And
since He spoke this obscurely, it was to be understood by the audience that
after His crucifixion He should rise again on the third day. And He
showed that your generation was more wicked and more adulterous than the city of
Nineveh; for the latter, when Jonah preached to them, after he had been cast
up on the third day from the belly of the great fish . . . ."
Though Justin was a Greek philosopher and a convert to Christ in the
second century, he did learn the Scriptures from the disciples of the Apostles.
His view is not unique in the writings of the early Church, nor does it differ
from the New Testament.
Jesus' resurrection on Sunday, Abib 16, did not tell us how to interpret
the law about waving the barley sheaf on the day after the sabbath, because the
Passover sabbath coincided with the weekly sabbath that year. Nonetheless, the
early Church writings clearly show that from the beginning they universally
adopted Sunday as their holy day in commemoration of Jesus' resurrection. One
clear statement comes from the Epistle of Barnabas, Chapter 15:
"Further, He says to them, 'Your new moons and your Sabbaths I cannot endure.'
Ye perceive how He speaks: Your present Sabbaths are not acceptable to Me, but
that is which I have made, when, giving rest to all things, I shall make a
beginning of the eighth day, that is, a beginning of another world [age].
Wherefore, also, we keep the eighth day with joyfulness, the day also on
which Jesus rose again from the dead. And when He had manifested Himself, He
ascended into the heavens."
There are some who, for various doctrinal reasons, have tried to argue
that Jesus rose from the dead on Saturday afternoon just before sundown and that
no one knew of it until the following morning when they came to the tomb with
spices. However, this is highly improbable, since the priests did not even
seal and guard the tomb until the end of the sabbath just before His
resurrection. In other words, the guards were placed at the tomb about the
time that Jesus supposedly was raised from the dead. This we read in Matthew
27:62 to 28:1.
62
Now on the next day
[Saturday], which is the one after the preparation [that is, the
day after Friday], the chief priests and the Pharisees gathered together with
Pilate, 63
and said, "Sir, we remember that when
He was still alive that deceiver said, 'After three days I am to rise
again.' 64
Therefore, give orders for the grave to be
made secure until the third day, lest the disciples come and steal Him away and
say to the people, 'He has risen from the dead,' and the last deception will be
worse than the first."
65
Pilate said to them, "You have a guard; go,
make it as secure as you know how."
66
And they went and made the grave secure, and
along with the guard they set a seal on the stone.
1
Now after the Sabbath, as it began to dawn
toward the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary came
to look at the grave.
In the original language there were no chapters and verses as we see them
in our Bibles today. These were done by Stephen Langton around 1228 A.D. for
easier reference. Likewise, in the original Greek there was no punctuation and
no space between the letters and words. So punctuation is also a mere
convenience to make it easier for us to read the Scriptures. However, at times
the translators put punctuation in the wrong places. This was one of those
times. The last two verses above should be read and punctuated as follows:
66
And they went and made the grave
secure, and along with the guard they set a seal on the stone, but after the
Sabbath.
1
As
it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the
other Mary came to look at the grave.
In other words, they set the seal upon the tomb in the evening after the
Sabbath. They had not had time to do so on the Friday afternoon of His burial,
because the Sabbath was drawing near. So they had to wait until the next evening
when the Sabbath had passed. If Jesus had already been raised from the dead at
that time, the stone would have been rolled away, and the soldiers would have
come rushing back to report the news immediately. But the tomb was not opened,
so they set a seal upon the stone.
Then the soldiers camped next to the tomb that night to make sure no one
stole Jesus' body. Then as it began to dawn the next morning, Mary and Mary came
to the tomb and found it empty and no one guarding the tomb. The soldiers had
already gone to report the resurrection to Pilate.
Pilate himself reported to Tiberius Caesar about these events in a letter
that is now lost but what was available for centuries in the early Church. There
is a document called Acta Pilati published in the late 1800's by Rev. Mahan
which purports to be the original document discovered in the Vatican Library.
However, subsequent investigators disputed his claims, saying that he could not
possibly have done so at the time he claimed to be in Rome and in
Constantinople. According to Edgar J. Goodspeed's book,
Strange New Gospels
(1931),
"Mr. Mahan . . . gives no reference to manuscript numbers which
might aid anyone to find and examine the books he claims to have found. The
mention of Hilderium with Shammai and Hillel (p. 215) may be a reminiscence of
Ilderim in 'Ben Hur'; there is no such Jewish name. As in 'Ben-Hur,' the Wise
Men are a Greek, a Hindu, and an Egyptian. This with the story of Balthasar's
death on the afternoon of the crucifixion, which was absent from the original
form of the "Report," had important consequences.
"For Mr. Mahan's colleagues in the ministry were not slow to
perceive his indebtedness, in Eli's "Story of the Magi," published in 1884, to
'Ben-Hur,' published in 1880. Chief among them was the Rev. James A. Quarles,
then head of the Elizabeth Aull Seminary at Lexington, Missouri, and afterward
professor in Washington and Lee University. . . .
"Mr. Quarles attacked the genuineness of Mr. Mahan's discoveries
in the Boonville Weekly Advertiser, with great keenness. He pointed out
that Mr. Mahan was back in Boonville on November 6, 1883, although he claimed to
have been discovering manuscripts in Constantinople on October 22, 1883. We may
add that the best opinion today in Boonville is that Mr. Mahan did not get
farther away than Rome, Illinois, a little village north of Peoria, and that his
foreign letters were dispatched from that place. He was absent from Boonville
less than two months in the autumn in which he claimed to have visited Rome and
Constantinople, discovering and copying manuscripts."
Goodspeed mentions also that Mahan answered Quarles' contentions,
"admitting that there were misprints in the book," but Goodspeed does not say
whether or not Mahan had misprinted the dates that he was supposed to have been
in Rome and Constantinople. Mahan apparently continued to stand by the truth of
his manuscripts, though he was "summoned before the Lebanon presbytery in
September 1885 to answer charges of falsehood and plagiarism." In that
investigation, General Wallace could find no evidence from U.S. Embassy
officials in Constantinople or from other missionaries in the area that any of
them had seen or talked with Mahan. In other words, Goodspeed says that they
could find no one who could verify that Mahan had ever gone to Constantinople.
Further, when investigators contacted the Vatican to talk with Father
Peter Freelinhusen, who was supposed to have shown Mahan the Acta Pilati, they
were told that no one by that name was listed in the annals of the Vatican
Library. Goodspeed continues,
"In the light of this and of other evidence, Mr. Mahan was found
guilty of falsehood and of plagiarism, and suspended from the ministry for one
year. He left the meeting of the presbytery, promising to withdraw the book from
circulation. But it was reprinted in St. Louis in 1887, in Dalton, Georgia, in
1895, and in Philadelphia, by the Antiquarian Book Company, in 1896."
We have taken the time to explain the circumstances surrounding Mahan's
Acta Pilati, because in the first edition of this book, we quoted from it
and were unaware that it had been discredited by investigations shortly after
its publication. This error is now corrected in our second edition with
apologies for any past confusion we may have caused.
Regardless of Mahan's forgery, the fact remains that Pilate did issue an
official report to Tiberius Caesar regarding the death and resurrection of
Jesus. Around the year 200 A.D., the Roman Christian lawyer, Tertullian,
referred to Pilate's official report to Tiberius in his Apology, V,
saying,
"Tiberius
accordingly, in whose days the Christian name made its entry into the world,
having himself received intelligence from Palestine of events which had
clearly shown the truth of Christ's divinity, brought the matter before the
senate, with his own decision in favor of Christ. The senate, because it had not
given the approval itself, rejected his proposal. Caesar held to his opinion,
threatening wrath against all accusers of the Christians."
The
editor's Elucidation IV of The Ante-Nicene Fathers says of the above
quotation:
"Great stress is to be
placed on the fact that Tertullian was probably a jurisconsult, familiar with
the Roman archives, and influenced by them in his own acceptance of Divine
Truth. It is not supposable that such a man would have hazarded his bold appeal
to the records, in remonstrating with the Senate and in the very faces of the
Emperor and his colleagues, had he not known that the evidence was irrefragable
[cannot be refuted or disproved]."
Tertullian reaffirms his statement (regarding Pilate's report to Tiberius) in
chapter XXI of the same book, saying,
"All these things Pilate
did to Christ; and now in fact a Christian in his own convictions, he sent
word of Him to the reigning Caesar, who was at the time Tiberius. Yes, and
the Caesars too would have believed on Christ, if either the Caesars had not
been necessary for the world, or if Christians could have been Caesars."
The fourth-century Church historian, Eusebius of Caesarea, records
Pilate's report as well in his History of the Church, II, 2, where he
writes:
"And when the wonderful
resurrection and ascension of our Saviour were already noised abroad, in
accordance with an ancient custom which prevailed among the rulers of the
provinces, of reporting to the emperor the novel occurrences which took place in
them, in order that nothing might escape him, Pontius Pilate informed Tiberius
of the reports which were noised abroad through all Palestine concerning the
resurrection of our Saviour Jesus from the dead.
"He gave an account also of
other wonders which he had learned of him, and how, after his death, having
risen from the dead, he was now believed by many to be a god. They say that
Tiberius referred the matter to the Senate, but that they rejected it,
ostensibly because they had not first examined into the matter (for an ancient
law prevailed that no one should be made a god by the Romans, except by a vote
and decree of the Senate), but in reality because the saving teaching of the
divine Gospel did not need the confirmation and recommendation of men.
"But although the Senate of
the Romans rejected the proposition made in regard to our Saviour, Tiberius
still retained the opinion which he had held at first, and contrived no hostile
measures against Christ. These things are recorded by Tertullian, a man well
versed in the laws of the Romans, and in other respects of high repute, and one
of those especially distinguished in Rome. . . ."
These early Church testimonies bear witness that Pilate did indeed send a
full report to Tiberius Caesar, which, though somewhat unknown or forgotten, was
for some time a matter of public record to those who had access to the Roman
archives.
Prophetically speaking, whether Jesus was raised late Saturday afternoon
or early Sunday morning is not the issue. The issue is whether or not Jesus
fulfilled the wave-sheaf offering on the correct day. This offering was waved in
the temple at the third hour of the day "on the morrow after the sabbath"
(Leviticus 23:11). Did the offering itself coincide with Jesus' resurrection?
No, Jesus rose from the dead before daybreak. Mary Magdalene went to the tomb "early,
when it was yet dark" (John 20:1), but found the tomb already empty. The
wave-sheaf offering did coincide, however, with His ascension to present Himself
as ALIVE in the temple in heaven. He ascended for this purpose a few hours
AFTER His actual resurrection, while the high priest was waving the sheaf of
barley in the temple. So Jesus fulfilled the law of the wave-sheaf offering, not
by His actual resurrection, but by presenting Himself alive in the temple of
heaven at the appointed time.
Here is the sequence of events on that resurrection morning. When Mary
found the tomb empty, she began to run and soon met Peter and John who were also
on their way to the tomb (John 20:2). They all returned to the tomb to see for
themselves that His body was missing. Then Peter and John went home (John
20:10). Mary was left alone in the garden. By this time the sun had risen. Jesus
then encountered her, but at first she thought He was the gardener. When she
finally recognized Him and wanted to touch Him, He told her in John 20:17, "Touch
Me not, for I am not yet ascended to My Father" (KJV).
The ascension to which He was
referring was NOT His ascension on the fortieth day from the Mount of Olives,
which is recorded in Acts 1:3-9. We know this, because Jesus allowed His
disciples to touch Him later that same day (John 20:19, 20; Luke 24:39). So
Jesus must have ascended to His Father some time AFTER He talked with Mary but
BEFORE that same evening when He appeared to the disciples. The only possibility
is that He had to ascend at the third hour of the day in order to present
Himself as alive in the temple in heaven.
Jesus was actually alive BEFORE
the priest waved the sheaf in the temple, but He could not present Himself as
alive in heaven in order to be declared legally alive until the time that
the priest bore witness on earth. This is why the day of the wave-sheaf offering
is important in prophecy. Though it marked the DAY, it did not mark the MOMENT
of Jesus' resurrection. It marked the moment that He was declared legally alive
in heaven's court.
If a man were to be shipwrecked
and marooned on an island for ten years, he would be declared legally dead after
about seven years. If that man were then rescued by a passing ship, he would
have to go to the courthouse and present himself to the proper authorities in
order to be declared legally alive. This illustrates the distinction between
being actually dead and being legally dead. When Jesus rose from the
dead, He was actually alive, but He was not legally alive until the time
of the wave-sheaf offering, when He presented Himself to the Father in the
divine court.
This is another prime example in
the Bible of the importance of timing. Jesus fulfilled the law in every detail,
not only by WHAT He did, but also by WHEN He did it.
There are some who believe that
Jesus was crucified on Wednesday afternoon and spent precisely 72 hours in the
tomb. They believe that He was raised from the dead on Saturday afternoon, but
that this resurrection was not discovered until the following morning. This view
uses as its pretext Jesus' statement about being "three days and three nights in
the heart of the earth." However, upon closer examination, it is obvious that it
was invented primarily in order to undermine the observation of Sunday as a day
of worship, because the early Church writers are all unanimous in telling us
that they met to worship and "break bread" on Sunday. Their stated reason is
that on this day Jesus rose from the dead.
The only way that the Wednesday
crucifixion theory would work is if the Sadducees were right in their
interpretation of the wave-sheaf offering. If the Pharisees were correct in
their view, and the sheaf was to be waved on the fixed day of Abib 16, then the
Wednesday crucifixion view could not possibly be true. Jesus would be crucified
on Wednesday, Abib 14; then Thursday, Abib 15 would be the Passover Sabbath; and
then the sheaf would have to be waved on Friday, Abib 16. But if Jesus were
still in the tomb until late afternoon Saturday, Abib 17, then this law of the
wave-sheaf could not be fulfilled by Jesus' resurrection.
The only way one might salvage
this viewpoint is to adopt the Sadducees' position by saying that the wave-sheaf
offering came on the first Sunday after the weekly Sabbath. But even this
adaptation makes Jesus' resurrection occur on the day BEFORE the wave-sheaf
offering. This does not seem credible to us. It is our view that Jesus ought to
be raised from the dead on the same day as the wave-sheaf offering, even if He
did not present Himself to the Father in heaven until a few hours later.
I am told that the only year
around that time where Abib 14 fell on a Wednesday was in 28 A.D. This year
could not have been the year of Jesus' crucifixion, because John the Baptist did
not even begin to minister until the 15th year of Tiberius in the
Spring of 29 A.D. Tiberius began to reign at the death of his father, Augustus
Caesar, on August 19, 14 A.D. This is a well-known date in Roman history, which
we fully discussed in Chapter 9 of our book,
Secrets of Time. Jesus was
baptized in September of 29 A.D. and died in 33 A.D. when Abib 14 fell on a
Friday. The resurrection, then, occurred on the third day, the morning of
Sunday, Abib 16.
The day of Pentecost in Acts 2:1 occurred on a Sunday, the day on which
the people were normally observing the feast during that time of history. We
know from the biblical accounts that the Sadducees were in power in the Temple
up to the time of its destruction in 70 A.D. (See also Acts 4:1.) Paul Jewett's
book, The Lord's Day, includes a footnote on page 128, which says,
". . . the
reckoning of the Sadducees, whereby Pentecost fell on a Sunday, regulated the
Jewish observance as long as the temple stood. Hence the commemorating of
Pentecost as a Sunday (Whitsunday) in the Christian Year cannot be challenged.
After A.D. 70, the reckoning of the Pharisees became normative in Jerusalem,
whereby Pentecost falls on various days of the week."
Even as the Feast of Passover
marked the historic time of Israel's exodus from Egypt, so also the Feast of
Pentecost marked the historic time that God spoke the Ten Commandments to the
people from Mount Sinai. According to Edersheim in The Temple, page 260,
"According to unanimous
Jewish tradition, which was universally received at the time of Christ, the day
of Pentecost was the anniversary of the giving of the Law on Mount Sinai, which
the Feast of Weeks was intended to commemorate."
It was a time when all the
people heard the voice of God speaking in their own language out of the midst of
fire (Deut. 4:12). However, the people of Israel were too fearful of God's voice
to hear the rest of the law. We read in Exodus 20:19-21,
19
Then they said to Moses, "Speak to us
yourself and we will listen; but let not God speak to us, lest we die." 20
And Moses said to the people, "Do not
be afraid; for God has come in order to test you, and in order that the fear of
Him may remain with you, so that you may not sin."
21
So
the people stood at a distance, while Moses approached the thick cloud
where God was.
All the Israelites had enough
faith to leave Egypt and thereby keep the Feast of Passover, but very few of
them had the faith to experience Pentecost at Mount Sinai. Their fear prevented
them from hearing more than just the Ten Commandments, and so they sent Moses up
the mount to hear the rest of the law. Moses received it on stone tablets,
whereas if the people had been willing to hear the voice of God, He would have
written it on their hearts instead.
In Acts 2:1 we are told that the
Holy Spirit was given to the Church on the day of Pentecost. It is described as
a time when the Spirit came down as tongues of FIRE upon their heads. Even as
God came down as fire upon the mount in the days of Moses, so now He came as
fire upon the disciples. The main difference is that the fiery presence of God
was no longer external upon a mountain, but now internalized in men.
Furthermore, God did not accept the Pentecostal offering by fire in the temple.
Instead, He accepted the disciples themselves and the offering on the altar of
their hearts. This shows a change of temple that God would inhabit. He no longer
inhabits temples of wood and stone, for we are now the temples of God (1 Cor.
3:16). Corporately speaking, God is building a new temple with Jesus Christ as
the Chief Cornerstone, and the apostles and prophets as the foundation stones,
and others as living stones (Ephesians 2:20-22).
The disciples on the day of
Pentecost were filled with the Spirit and were doing and saying some strange
things. A few bystanders thought that the disciples must be drunk. Peter
answered them in Acts 2:15, "these men
are not drunk, as you suppose, for it is only the third hour of the day."
The third hour of the day was when the priest in the temple offered to God the
Pentecostal offering of two loaves of wheat bread that had been baked with
leaven (Lev. 23:17). The disciples no doubt would have wanted to receive the
Holy Spirit earlier, but God made them wait to the appointed time--not just the
right day, but even the precise hour of the day. This shows how important timing
is to God Himself. It is another example of how the feast days were prophetic of
events to come--not only WHAT was to come, but also WHEN.
If timing was so important in the fulfillment of the spring feasts, then
we believe that timing is equally important in the fulfillment of the autumn
feasts. There are many who do not fully appreciate God's timing. They see things
on an experiential level only. But the Word shows us that there is BOTH an
experiential application on an individual, personal level as well as an
appointed time on the historic, corporate level.
Men are to experience Passover within their hearts in order to receive
justification by faith in the blood of the Lamb. This was true in both the Old
Testament and the New. But this did not mean there was no need for Jesus Christ
to be crucified historically at the appointed time. In fact, there would be no
justification personally, if it were not for the historic fulfillment of this
feast.
Men are also to experience Pentecost within their hearts in order to be
sanctified by the Spirit. This, too, was true in both the Old Testament and the
New. Yet this personal application did not negate the need for the historic
occasion recorded in Acts 2. In fact, there would be no indwelling of the
Spirit, if it were not for the historic fulfillment of Pentecost in Acts 2.
It is our contention that the same holds true with the Autumn feast days.
Some people see only the personal application of these feasts, while others
cannot seem to see beyond the external rituals to be held each year at the
appointed times. We believe that each feast day has an intensely personal
application within the heart--but we also believe that the historic events
surrounding the second coming of Christ are manifested in the autumn feasts.
There is, of course, much more that could be written about these spring
feast days, but our purpose is merely to give some background that will prove
helpful in understanding the autumn feasts and their prophetic message relating
to the second coming of Christ.
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