Magnified

MAGNIFIED: The Feast of Tabernacles

Is the Feast of Tabernacles relevant in 2023? Observing this annual festival gives us a window into God's thinking and shows us what's still ahead in His plan for all people. So, why does it pass by every year with so little attention?

Transcript

Micah: You're invited to the feast. Let me finish. You're invited to the Feast of Tabernacles.

Kid: Watcha talking about, Willis?

Micah: Fair enough. What is that? Well, the short answer is that it's a holy gathering that God commanded Israel to keep annually. It reminded Israelites of their place in the world, and it taught them about God's ultimate plan for mankind. But the long answer is...

So first off, the word feast could actually be translated as festival, which is simply a time marked by celebration. And as for tabernacle, that word is often translated as booths, which in this context are...nope.

Man 2: No.

Micah: Not even close. The word booth here means a temporary dwelling, something more like this.

Steve: This game never stops surprising me.

Micah: This day was celebrated in ancient Israel by traveling somewhere, building a temporary dwelling, and living there together for a whole week. It was marked by sacrifices, worship, music, and, of course, food.

This practice reminded Israel of the temporary homes they had while wandering in the wilderness before they found the homeland promised to them by God. Even though the meaning of this feast has stayed the same, some of the practices are a little different today.

For example, since Jesus Christ fulfilled all requirements of animal sacrifices, we don't do that anymore. And for the most part, we stay at hotels, rather than building our own temporary dwellings. But we're still celebrating that we are pilgrims on the earth, that we're living and working abroad, waiting for our own homeland promised by God.

Now, even though the Feast of Tabernacles only happens once a year, we're preparing for it all year long. We set aside 10% of our yearly income specifically for this feast. And what do we spend that money on when the feast comes? Whatever our heart desires.

Let's take a second to appreciate that. God commands celebration. Even though that isn't God's main reason for instituting the Feast of Tabernacles, I think it's one of the most valuable insights into his mind. We often talk about God's law, like, following it is a chore, just more obligations, like paying our rent or eating our vegetables. But one of the lessons of tabernacles is that God's laws are for us.

So, is it a sacrifice to set aside 10% of your annual income? Sure. Is it a sacrifice to take a week off of school and work? Yeah. But God Himself commands us to go and have a good time. And there's no catch. Just leave your day-to-day life behind for a week, and spend that time and money on yourself, your loved ones, and God.

Combine that with the knowledge that tabernacles represent God's ultimate plan for humanity and you can really get a sense of his love for mankind. Sounds pretty important, doesn't it? So why does the Feast of Tabernacles pass by every year with so little attention?

First of all, many believe that the Feast of Tabernacles belongs to other people. They think it's a Jewish holiday or an ancient Israelite holy day that belongs in the past. But in Leviticus 23:2, God says that these feast days are the feasts of the Lord, which you shall proclaim to be holy convocations. These are My feasts.

So, whose feasts are they? Not ancient Israel's, not the modern-day Jewish peoples, but the Lord's. And when God says He has made something holy and that we're supposed to proclaim it holy, it's probably a good idea for us to keep it holy. Now you might be thinking, "But Micah, this command was for a certain people at a certain time." When God said, "You shall proclaim them holy convocations," He was speaking to ancient Israel, not any old plaid shirt Henry you might pass on the street on his way to a beer garden.

Well, the evidence just doesn't bear this out. In fact, God seems to have planned out the feast days long before Israel even existed. In Genesis 1:14, all the way back to the beginning, God says, "Let there be lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide the day from the night, and let them be for signs and seasons." This word for signs doesn't mean...and seasons doesn't mean...they mean respectively, distinguishing marks of remembrance and appointed meetings.

Actually, out of the 160 times this word seasons is used, 135 of those times refer directly to the appointed feast days we're talking about right now. So, way back before mankind even existed, let alone ancient Israel, God instituted these feasts. And the whole time, there has been this dream that one day, everyone will keep it. And Jesus Christ Himself kept the Feast of Tabernacles.

In fact, Jesus was so dedicated to keeping this feast that He attended, even though the Jewish people were searching for him there to kill Him. You might ask, "Didn't Jesus live and die to do away with the law so that we don't have to keep archaic days like the Feast of Tabernacles?" Well, Jesus certainly died to forgive us of our sins, and cover us who all sin and are found guilty of keeping His law in a perfect way.

But if He had wanted us to get rid of the entire Feast of Tabernacles, why would He command that it be kept in the future? Zachariah prophesized that it shall come to pass, that everyone who has left of all the nations which came against Jerusalem, shall go up from year to year to worship the King, the Lord of hosts, and to keep the Feast of Tabernacles.

So, if God had the feast days in mind since the beginning and Jesus living a perfect life kept the feast days in His time, and even the enemies of God will one day keep them, what makes us think that we as followers of God, are on a hiatus from them now.

The Feast of Tabernacles might be a brand new concept for you, and that is great. It's never too late to start keeping God's feasts. What some see as an old and irrelevant practice is actually law. Not a burdensome law, but a law for our own good. It is the command of a consistent God to His people throughout all time to assemble together with Him.

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Jamie Schreiber

Jamie Schreiber works in the Media Department at the Home Office in Cincinnati. He studied Digital Video and Media Production in Minneapolis, MN.

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Welcome to the Feast!

Why and how we celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles. God gives us the reasons. Lets examine how we are obeying God and the joys that are coming in the future that God is preparing us for.

Transcript

[Mr. Frank Dunkle] Isn't it great to be here, to keep the Feast at Lake Junaluska? And for those of you that are watching on your computers, wherever you might be, we're still celebrating God's Feast of Tabernacles. And I want to say, welcome, as of so many before me, here tonight—well, not so many, it's been a few—in many ways, it's not my place to welcome you though here, because as the Bible says in many places, "This is a Feast of the Lord, of the eternal one."

And I do believe that God, the Father, and Jesus Christ have welcomed us here. They're very pleased. But still, I'm privileged to be the one to speak to you tonight. And one of the things I thought I would say to make you all feel very happy is that Mr. LaBissoniere said, it would be a sermon, but that's kind of a generous statement for how long I plan to speak tonight. But I am very thankful for all the hard work that went into making this Feast site happen. I can't take credit for any of that, but I'm really glad that a lot of people worked hard and did this.

Tonight, I just want to make a few points to direct our thinking about this Feast and our purposes—why we're gathered here. As I said, it is God's festival, but it is certainly for us. It is a Feast for all of us. The Feast isn't just for ministers. It's not for heads of household only, not even for baptized members of the church. The Feast of the Tabernacles is for young and old, men and women, rich and poor, married and single. I want to turn to Deuteronomy 16, if you'll join me there. I'm going to repeat something that we heard a little child's voice read during the introductory video. Actually, I was pleased with my message, but I thought maybe I should have spoke first and done the video last, it summed things up so well. But

Deuteronomy 16:13 "You shall observe the Feast of Tabernacles seven days when you've gathered in from your threshing floor and from your winepress."

Of course, this is a Fall Festival. God gave it at a time when people were living in an agricultural society. So, of course, that's in the Northern Hemisphere. Most of us are not gathering on our crops and bringing a tenth of that, we're bringing in second tithe based on a salary. But still, it's the same.

Deuteronomy 16:14-15 " And you shall rejoice in your Feast." That is to say, you are keeping of this Feast, "You, and your son, and your daughter, and your male servant, and your female servant, and the Levite." We could say the minister is among you, "The stranger and the fatherless, the widow, who are within your gates, seven days, you shall keep it a sacred Feast to the eternal, your God and the place, which the Lord chooses."

For us, that place is Lake Junaluska, Alaska. And I would say... Did I say... Somehow that “aluska” yeah, boy… If anybody's on the webcast in Alaska, you're probably very happy about that. I was going to say, wherever you are, you're in spirit, you're joining us here. And I remember about seven years ago, my son was born, he was due right about Feast time. And so we had a satellite Feast site of our own. And I learned to appreciate the webcast, a great deal, me and the 25 people that were gathered in my living room that year at the Feast. But no, we're in Lake Junaluska, North Carolina, where God has placed His name and brought us here. Did I finish what I was saying here?

Deuteronomy 16:15 "The place which the Lord your God chooses because the Lord your God will bless you. He will bless us, and He has blessed us and all your produce and in all the work of your hands so that you surely rejoice."

Hold that thought of rejoicing, as one of our major purposes for being here, we will come back to that. But remember what we read there about all those people. Let's set it in our minds that God has called all of us here. Now, we often read the next scripture and appropriately so where it says, "Three times in a year, all your males will appear." And women and children might think, "Okay, well, the men have to go, and it's just a nice extra if I get to go." But no, we just read, the Feast is for men and women, young and old, every single one of us. Parts of the ritual sacrificial system might have been limited to men, but we want to keep in mind what it says in Galatians 3:28. I won't turn there, but you can make note of it. But the Apostle Paul wrote that "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, and neither male nor female. You're all one in Christ Jesus." So, the Feast is for all of us. Being in God's church and among His people is a special calling.

We know, as Jesus Christ said in John 6:44. He said, "No one can come to me except the Father who sent me draws him." That's what I tell my students. I call one of the grandma scriptures. One of the ones that my grandma had me memorize beginning when I was 10 years old. But that's so important. We're here because God, the Father called us. You are here, each and every one of you, because God, the Father, spoke your name. He chose you to be here. He wants you to be keeping His Feast with your brethren. That's wonderful. And we have a beautiful setting here. Wonderful opportunities for fun and enjoyment. Now, among us, some may have come on limited means, some have limited incomes, perhaps a little or no titheable income. I want to turn to a scripture in Nehemiah, but I'll warn you, I want to come back to Deuteronomy. So, if you have a marker or a spare finger, you can leave it here in Deuteronomy. But I want to go to Nehemiah 8. This was one of my favorite stories about keeping the Feast. And I know it's in my Bible here somewhere. Nehemiah 8, we'll begin at the start of the Chapter.

Nehemiah 8:1-3 It says, "Now all the people gathered together as one man in the open square that was in front of the Water Gate, and they told Ezra, the scribe, to bring the Book of the Law of Moses, which the Lord had commanded Israel. So, Ezra, the priest, brought the law before the assembly of men and women and all who could hear with understanding on the first day of the seventh month." We remember the first day of the seventh month, two weeks ago, we were celebrating another annual Holy Day. And verse 3 it says, "Then he read from it in the open square that was in front of the Water Gate from morning until midday before the men and women, and those who could understand in the ears of all the people were attentive to the Book of the Law."

I want to drop down to verse 8, and it says,

Nehemiah 8:8-10 "So they read distinctly from the book, in the Law of God, and they gave the sense and helped them to understand the reading. And Nehemiah, who was the governor, Ezra, the priest and scribe, and the Levites, who taught all the people, said to the people, ‘This day is holy to the Lord your God, do not mourn nor weep.’ For all the people wept when they heard the words of the Law. Then, he said to them, 'Go your way, eat the fat, drink the sweet.'"

I should say that means enjoy the finer things to eat and drink. It doesn't mean go find a glob of butter or something like that to eat. It means enjoy the best things. Summed up in that language, eat the fat and drink the sweet. And I lost my place. "And send portions to those for whom nothing is prepared." I wanted to stop and emphasize that. "Send portions to those for whom nothing is prepared, for this day is holy to our Lord, do not sorrow for the joy of the Lord is your strength. "

This indicates that some of the people there were less prepared than others, perhaps from lack of awareness, but some of them from lack of resources. And whatever the reasons, though, people did as it commanded.

Nehemiah 8:12 "And all the people went their way to eat and drink, and to send portions, and to rejoice greatly because they understood the words that were declared to them."

In our modern era, we have some unique systems for sending portions. The church has a Festival Assistance Fund that provides financial help so that any member of the church who wants to and is able to keep the Feast can do so. But there are other ways that we can send portions and help. I remember my sophomore year at Ambassador College, it was my year to stay at the college—this was in Big Sandy, Texas—and I got to experience the legendary piney woods. I was gratified to see a couple of photos in the video of that. And this wasn't the '60s or '70s when thousands and thousands of people filled the woods. But in 1986, there were still hundreds of people out there.

And I was told in advance, "Students are welcome there." And remember, students, that's a short way of saying poor students, and that was me. But it wasn't just students, no person, I think, could walk through the piney woods without smelling the aromas and then being called in, "Come on in, join us, come on, sit down, here, have a Coke, or have a beer, sit and have some food with us." God's people love to share. Of course, we love to do two things, talk and eat. And the Feast of Tabernacles gives us ample opportunities to do both. Let's take advantage of that. Let's share these opportunities. Welcome people into your conversation as you're standing and talking with others.

I know a number of people here who have rented houses and have room for hospitality, it's a chance to invite people over, to talk and drink. I was given a flyer this after...or this evening coming into services. That's wonderful. And if you don't have a house at your disposal, you could invite someone to come out for a meal or a cup of coffee and just enjoy time together. And if you're not doing that, you can accept such an invitation. Remember, when you're accepting that invitation, you're giving something else, you're giving your time. And our time and energy is another thing that we can share, and I encourage us to. Another memory I have of that Feast in Big Sandy was seeing some men who were so happy to serve. It was an example that taught me, I don't know how much, because I had this special job at the Feast that year, I got to drive the garbage truck.

Every morning at 7:00 a.m., I had to pull the truck up there and go through the woods, which wasn't the most exciting thing I've done ever at the Feast. But what it taught me was the men who were there, who volunteered to pitch the trash in the back. There were two, or three, or four of them every morning. And they had the biggest smiles on their faces because they got to pitch garbage. No, what they were smiling for is they got to serve God's people. And they were overjoyed to use the energy, and the strength, and the time that they had. I was thrilled, it inspired me.

Now, as I said, we can share, we can give portions of our time, of our energy, of our resources, to help every other person to have a good Feast. Remember, the Feast is a special gift, not from each other, though, it is a gift from God that He gives to us. And what do we do while we're here? We've heard some of that. Let's move on to another major purpose, actually return to it. We just read in Nehemiah 8, that God's holy days are not times to be grieved or sad.

They're times of joy, to rejoice. We're going to come back to Nehemiah 8, but I want to go back to Deuteronomy 16. After I advised you to keep a finger there, I left mine.

Deuteronomy 16:15 Let's remember again, it says, "Seven days, you shall keep a sacred Feast to the Lord your God in the place which the Lord chooses because the Lord your God will bless you and all your produce and in all the work of your hands so that you surely rejoice."

Surely rejoice. Now, just in case you were wondering, you might ask, "What's to be so happy about?" I think you already know. And the most important reasons are the ones we're going to hear about over the next eight days in the various sermons and sermonettes, and certainly, the special music. The spiritual meaning of these Feast is, by far, the most important and greatest reason that we rejoice. Jesus Christ is going to bring a thousand years of peace, happiness, of healing to the whole world.

And there will be no Satan or his demons to corrupt it or lead people astray. And those whom God has called and working with now, that's us, will have a part in that. Will have special jobs and opportunities to serve and teach others. To help rebuilding this earth. And, of course, when that 1,000 years is over, there's going to be a great resurrection of all who have ever lived, and not yet known, God, but they'll get a chance and they will know Him. If that's not a reason to rejoice, I don't know what is. But I don't want to explore that further tonight. I'm going to leave that for the coming messages.

But I'll just summarize again by saying what these days picture should make us happy. And then if that weren't enough, the ways that God tells us to celebrate the Feast is wonderful. Back in Deuteronomy 14 this time, Deuteronomy 14 beginning in verse 22. You probably went over this in advance of the Feast of Tabernacles.

Deutieronomy 14:22-26 "You shall truly tithe all of the increase of your grain that the field produces year by year. And you shall eat before the Lord your God, in the place where He chooses to make His name abide. The tithe of your grain, your new wine, your oil, of the firstborn of your herds and your flocks, that you may learn to fear the Lord your God always. But if the journey is too long for you so that you're not able to carry the tithe, or if the place which the Lord your God chooses to put His name is too far from you, when the Lord your God has blessed you."

And, of course, most of us started off not with grain and firstborn flock and such, we started with what it says in verse 25, "Exchange it for money, take the money in your hand and go to the place which the Lord your God chooses. And you shall spend that money for whatever your heart desires, for oxen, or sheep, or wine, or similar drink, for whatever your heart desires. You shall eat there before the Lord's your God, and you shall rejoice, you and your household."

It's amazing. God planned a way for us to finance this special occasion. And then He tells us to come and live like kings for a week. I think it's interesting. God doesn't prescribe a specific menu. He tells us we can decide what's going to help us rejoice, filet mignon, baked Alaska, a Whopper with fries. I have to throw that in, a good friend of mine years ago, we were discussing our favorite foods at the Feast. And he said, "Oh, I love the taste of the flame-broiled Whopper." Well, if that's what you like, if that's going to help you rejoice, you're free to find your own way. But back in Nehemiah, I've still got it saved here. Back in Nehemiah 8, we add another point to rejoicing this Feast. It's still tied to rejoicing.

Nehemiah 8:14-16 "They found written in the Law, which the eternal had commanded by Moses, that the children of Israel should dwell in booths during the Feast of the seventh month. And that they should announce and proclaim in all the cities in Jerusalem, saying, "Go out to the mountains, bring olive branches, branches of oil trees and myrtle branches, palm branches, branches of leafy trees, to make booths as it is written." And the people went out and brought them and made themselves booths. Each one on the roof of his house, or on their courtyard, or the courts of the house of God, and in the open square of the Water Gate, and the open square Gate of Ephraim, the Gate of Ephraim."

The name of this Feast is Feast of Tabernacles, it comes from the Hebrew word Sukkot, which is here, translated as booths. It can also be translated as tent, shelter, hut. We interpret it in modern times, to mean a temporary dwelling. And that can encompass a motel room, a camper, a nice condo, or a rented house. I've met some people who still wonder, think that it should be made of leafy branches. I don't think that's... That's not the part of rejoicing that God meant.

Of course, we want to remember it's the temporariness that has the meaning. Otherwise, we could just keep the Feast where we keep every weekly Sabbath. And people could ask, "Why should we stay in a temporary dwelling when I've got a perfectly fine permanent dwelling back home?" Well, God's word tells us to come and do that. That's enough of a reason. Reminds me, when I was young, be told to do something and I'd ask my mom, "Why?" She said, " Because I said so." But, "Why did you say so?"

Well, God tells us so, but He also gives us good reasons. The spiritual meaning behind that of is, of course, it reminds us that our bodies are temporary dwellings. That this world and Satan societies that have developed they're temporary. We want to be like the patriarchs that are described in Hebrews 11. I won't turn there, but Hebrews 11, especially verses 9 and 10, it reminds us that they were pilgrims looking for a future home, a time ahead, a permanent dwelling, a permanent country that would be provided by God.

We're reminded when we're in this temporary setting that, "This earth, as it is now is not our home, not our real home. We're looking forward to the kingdom of God." That's very important.

Nehemiah 8:17 "The whole assembly of those who had returned from the captivity made booths and sat at under the booths. Since the days of Joshua, the son of Nun, until that day, the children of Israel had not done so. And there was very great gladness."

I love that. Very great gladness. I'm not sure that...no, I shouldn't say I'm not sure. I'm pretty certain that it wasn't sitting in huts made out of leaves that made them so glad. And they were thrilled that they were obeying God and reaping the blessings of it. Hopefully, though, our accommodations will make us happy. And we have some beautiful settings here. Now, we checked into a home that was even nicer than we expected.

Although I have to say, it was 56 degrees when we got in there and it took us a while to figure out that computerized thermostat. I fiddled with that for probably a half hour, and my wife figured it out in two minutes. But I've heard a number of ministers make the point to us, though, it's good that, in another way, it's temporary because we're still living surrounded by this world. And after seven or eight days in this temporary dwelling, many of us are ready to go home. We're going to be ready and hopefully prepared to go back to the lives we have to live, the work we have today that is preparing us for the time when the Feast of Tabernacles will be fulfilled. And we have to carry on until Christ returns. And we are carrying on, but for this next eight days, we have a respite and we want to enjoy that away from the normal things.

It's interesting to think, God, didn't stipulate very many specifics about how to keep the Feast of Tabernacles. I've gone over some. He tells us to go to the place that He chooses, stay in temporary dwellings, eat what you want, rejoice! And there's one more thing. One more very important thing. I want to look one more time to Deuteronomy 14, and I'm going to go back to Nehemiah 8, if you didn't already pull your finger out of there.

Deuteronomy 14:22 "You shall truly tithe of all the increase of your grain that the field produces year by year. And you shall eat before the Lord your God and the place where He chooses to make His name abide," the tithe of all that stuff, "That you may learn to fear the Lord your God always."

To learn to fear the Lord. Keeping the Feast is a learning experience. Now, I'm not going to go into detail about how, where it says, "To fear the Lord God,” doesn't mean to be in terror of Him or afraid, but rather to respect Him, and love Him, and adore Him. Although certainly, we want to have a healthy fear of not obeying Him. But we can see some of how we'll learn back in Nehemiah 8. Nehemiah 8, beginning in verse 8. Let's review what we read there.

Nehemiah 8:8 "So they read distinctly from the book, in the Law of God, and they gave the sense and helped them to understand the reading." Down in verse 18 of the same Chapter.

Nehemiah 8:18  "Also day by day, from the first day until the last day, he read from the book of the Law of God. And they kept the Feast seven days."

Okay. The Feast of Tabernacle is seven days. And then, of course, after that, "On the eighth day, there was a sacred assembly according to the prescribed manner."

Now, I'm not going to...Oh, it's in my notes here somewhere here. I say, I'm not going to turn there, but back in Deuteronomy 31, I'll let you off this time. But you might make note of it. In Deuteronomy 31:9-10, there was a command that God gave within the law of Moses for the children of Israel, that every seventh year at the Feast of Tabernacles, they were to read the book of the law, just as we saw described there in Nehemiah, the people would gather and they would read it to them.

We don't have to do it that way now for a very good reason we have the Book. Back then people didn't have it. And many people might not have known how to read anyways, but we're filthy rich compared to them. We can all afford our own copies of the Bible. So we're not going to come here every day and have someone stand up, and for two hours, just read from the Bible. But our messages will quote scripture. And as it said in Nehemiah, Give the sense, an understanding of the word.

You already know that our services here and the teaching is the center part of the Feast. And Mr. LaBissoniere made that point very well. Even as we enjoy the wonderful physical pleasures that we can have, the food, and the comforts, and the homes, the fun that we can go out and do, along with that physical food, we want to look forward to coming here and enjoying the spiritual food of instruction in God's word.

And something I'll comment on. I'm always deeply moved when I come to a festival and there are older experienced members of the church who are still excited about coming to services every day. It's humbling for me as a younger minister because I think, "What do I have to teach someone that's been in God's church longer than I've been alive in some cases?" Although, I can't say that as easily as I used to.

But I'm amazed at how older members apply their experience and their wisdom and knowledge to gaining more out of the message sometimes than the minister put into it. You have the opportunity to do that. Of course, we also have here younger members or those with shorter tenure in God's church. And the Feast of Tabernacles is a wonderful opportunity for concentrated instruction and a chance for teaching every day. Not to mention we have a larger number of elders readily available.

If you have time you want to talk to someone, we know Mr. Kubik likes to talk to people. If you have questions, not only of the elders but experienced mature members. Let's not forget that we are away from our homes. We don't have to go to our jobs or go to school. We don't have the normal household chores. So, we certainly should have more time for Bible study, more time for prayer, for meditation.

I would think walking around that, walking trail in this beautiful lake would be a wonderful opportunity for meditation, thinking about God's wonderful plan and His works, and what He has ahead for us. We have more time for Bible study and prayer, for studying and learning and talking.

Let's make good use of that time. Learning to fear our great God. So, here we are. We're here because God Almighty called all of us to be here. And we're here to rejoice, enjoying the food and drink, the fellowship, the temporary dwellings that we have. Most of all, we're here to learn to fear the Lord our God. So, brethren, welcome to the Feast.

 

Jamie Schreiber works in the Media Department at the Home Office in Cincinnati. He studied Digital Video and Media Production in Minneapolis, MN.

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Let Us Keep the Feasts: Celebrate the Feasts

43 minutes read time

This is part 1 in the Bible study series: Let Us Keep the Feasts. Should we observe the Biblical Festivals? In this study we'll examine the Biblical teaching of Christ and the disciples. Our discussion will also pose the question: Are these days necessary for Christians today? Join Steve Myers as he digs in to Scripture to find the example of the New Testament Church.

Transcript

[Steve Myers] Good evening, everyone. Welcome to our midweek Bible studies. We're going to be starting a new series tonight that's called, "Let Us Keep the Feast." And so we're going to be exploring many different aspects of God's plan of salvation that's revealed through His Holy Days. So we're going to be exploring the festivals. We're going to be looking at why did God give these days. We're going to be looking at different aspects of why we should keep them, what's the meaning behind them, and try to get in to some details maybe perhaps we haven't delved into in our personal studies. And so this is going to start those series of Bible studies that will continue on all the way up to the very end of May. And so we're going to be in this series for just a little bit, and I think it'll give us a good opportunity to discover more of what God has to say about his holy days. And so we're going to begin the very first one tonight.

So before we begin, let's go ahead and bow our heads and ask God's blessing on our study. Great loving Heavenly Father, God, thank you so much for your wonderful blessings. We are so thankful for your love and your mercy and your way. Thanks for caring for us God. Thank you for your wonderful plan of salvation that we're going to delve into tonight and try to gain a deeper understanding of. We pray for your blessing. We pray for your inspiration. We pray for your guidance on every aspect of our study tonight. Just give us an attentive ear that we may hear and understand things more deeply for ourselves so that we can be more pleasing in your sight. So we thank you for these things and pray for your guidance on the whole evening as we put it into your hands. Praying this and asking your blessing by the authority of our savior, Jesus Christ we pray, Amen.

Well, this first study tonight in, "Let Us Keep the Feast." I thought it might be helpful to try to understand the feasts themselves and why we should keep them. Why would these days of God be any better than traditional days of man? Why would these be the days that we should concentrate on? After all, most of the Christian world doesn't think too much of the festivals that God mentions in the Bible. Why is that? Why are they important to us but not important to the majority of Christians? Is there something behind that? What does God say about his purpose and his plan? I thought that might be a helpful place to begin with as we begin this entire series about keeping the Feast.

There is one passage I think that sets the tone a little bit for what God is doing and there's...it's a passage that's over in the book of Jeremiah. You want to turn over Jeremiah 29:11. God tells us about the plan that He has for us, for each and every one of us, and He tells us the type of plan that it is. So God doesn't just haphazardly do things. There is a purpose and a reason behind the things that God does. He does have a purpose. In fact, Jeremiah 29:11, tells us exactly about God's perspective on each and every one of us. Here's what he says, Jeremiah 29:11. He says, "For I know the plans I have for you," says the Lord, "they are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope."

What a wonderful blessing it is to have hope, to have hope for the future as He spells out here. Now, I believe this, in a way, points to what God is doing. What is God doing? What is His plan? What is His purpose? We know that when Jesus Christ first began preaching about God's purpose and His plan, in the book of Mark, right at the very beginning chapter 1:14 points to the fact that He came preaching the Kingdom of God is at hand. And he said, "Repent and believe the gospel." Believe the good news. Believe that God has a plan and a purpose that He is working out. That things aren't just happening by chance, but that God has a specific purpose in mind. That the gospel message, the good news, involves the message that Jesus Christ preached, what He taught. It certainly involves Jesus Christ himself and His sacrifice for each and every one of us, and yet, God gives us another way that we can gain insight into what He's doing. What is God's purpose? What is His plan?

Well, we can begin to understand more about that plan through the days that He set aside to be observed, the days that spell out his plan. Now, part of the reason tonight is to go through these days but in a way that shows us why we need to keep them. Not so much the purpose behind them. We're going to have quite a few studies to get in to more of that. I thought it might be helpful to recognize, what are these days and why do we need to keep them? Is there importance to observing the days? God set aside certain festivals to be kept, but why should I keep them, and why aren't they important to others? Well if God has a future and a hope that's spelled out in His plan, I believe that it is illustrated in the purpose behind His holy days, and He tells that we should keep them. It's interesting there's a passage all the way back in the book of Exodus that begins to show us some insight into why. Why should I observe the festivals of God? Why should I celebrate his feast?

Well way back in Exodus 23:14, I think begins to give us a little bit background of why we need to do this. In fact, makes maybe an important point to begin with. Exodus 23:14, here God is speaking Himself, and He says, "Three times you shall keep a feast to me in the year. You shall keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread." Then He says, "You shall eat unleavened bread seven days, as I commanded you at the time appointed in the month of Abib, for in it, you came out of Egypt. None shall appear before me empty." Then verse 16 He says, "And the Feast of Harvest. The first fruits of your labors, which you have sown in the field and the Feast of Ingathering at the end of the year, when you've gathered in the fruit of your labors from the field." Now, many would look at this, and say, "Well, God is speaking to ancient Israel, so what does this have to do with me? What does this have to do with modern Christianity? Isn't this all something that was way in the past that doesn't even apply to Christians today?"

Well, I think that's a reasonable question, one we should probably look at for just a moment. If we really dissect what He's saying here, we recognize immediately who these Feasts, what these festival days are doing. He says we're keeping the Feast to who? Who is being honored by the observation of these Feasts? He says verse 14, "Keep a feast to me." So God starts out all the way back here at Exodus by giving us a command. Let's notice this that God actually commands these days to be kept. He says, "It wouldn't be nice." He doesn't say, "Well, why don't you think this? Why don't you consider doing this," or, "It might be a nice idea if you observe these days." No, he says, "You shall. You shall do this. You shall observe a festival to me." And he immediately names three aspects with the Days of Unleavened Bread, he says also the First Fruits, which points to the Feast of Pentecost, and then he says the Ingathering, the Feast of Tabernacles at the end of the year.

Now, it's also interesting, when did He actually give this command? Was it something that was just for the Israelites that were coming out of Egypt at the time? They were exiting away from Pharaoh, and so some people would say, "Well that was for them and not for me today." One of the interesting things about this, it's before the time that sacrifices were offered. This is before the sacrificial system was instituted. So it was long before that that these days were revealed to God's people. And so I think that's an important thing to recognize, that Holy Days do not require or they're not intricately connected to these physical harvests. So immediately we begin to see there's more to it that just an Israelite thing or just a Jewish thing. In fact, we'll talk more about that in just a little bit. And so we begin to see there's more to the story, that God actually says, "Keep them to me." God says that He is honored by these days.

So as we begin to consider why celebrate the festivals, why keep the Holy Days, God says we should. He says we honor Him by these days. Of course, one of the challenges I think for all of us is, is Old Testament scripture really that important? Is it really that important? Or is that something that's old and it's Old Testament and so it's not as valuable as the New Testament? I know a while back we had met in a hall that had these various pews, and they had Bibles in the back of the pews. In fact, even on the cover of the Bible, it said, "The Holy Bible." I picked it up, and it only was the New Testament. I was like, "What happened to the other part of the Bible?" Because oftentimes, even Christians, feel that, "Well that's old, and it's done away, and I don't have to be that concerned with that." But I think to help give us a little perspective, we cannot forget what the Apostle Paul told Timothy.

If you look over at 2 Timothy 3:16, spells out something interesting about the Old Testament. 2 Timothy 3: 16 gives us some direction, I think, when it comes to the entire Word of God. And so as we look at 2 Timothy, notice what Paul wrote to the young minister about scripture. He says, "All scripture is given by inspiration of God." Now of course, it's important to recognize when Paul was writing this to Timothy, what was considered scripture? Well, didn't really have the New Testament at that time. So he's talking about what we would call "Old Testament Scripture." He says, "All of that, those writings are given by God's inspirations." So God inspired what we read in Exodus 23. God inspired that, and notice what he says about Old Testament scripture. He says, "It's profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness that the man of God may be complete, thoroughly equipped for every good work."

And so as we begin considering how God commands these festivals to be observed, we can't deny the fact of what Paul told Timothy. That scripture, Old Testament scripture is good for righteousness. It's to thoroughly equip us in every way. And so amazing that we could learn how to be righteous from Old Testament scripture. So it's not a part of the Bible that we could just take and tear this book in half and just keep the new, doesn't work that way. There are valuable things that we can learn, and one of the things that we see immediately here, is when it comes to observing the festival days, God says, "Do it to honor me," that this is good for instruction. This is good to fully equip each and every one of us as God's people.

And so I think one the chief reasons we begin to understand a deeper meaning in God's Holy Days is to recognize the fact that God commands us, for our own good, for our own reproof, for our own correction, for our own instruction, for our own equipping that we can learn about God. We can learn about His plan. We can learn about His way, and we can understand His purpose more effectively because we obey God and because we keep His days. And so these Holy Days are intricately tied into God revealing what his purpose is all about.

Now, that brings us to a second thing that we can find right here in the Old Testament. If we look back just a few passages, if you go back to Exodus 12, we were revealed something else. Something else I think that is important when it comes to recognizing why. Why should I keep these days? So if you go back to Exodus 12, look at verse 14. In Exodus 12:14, we see some instruction that God gives about one of those festivals where he talks about the Passover and then the Days of Unleavened Bread. And he says, "This day shall be to you a memorial. You should keep it as a feast to the Lord." So we recognize once again it's God's feast. He says on the first…then he says, "Throughout your generation, you should keep it as a feast by an everlasting ordinance." Then he goes on in verse 15, "Should eat unleavened bread," and He points out how we remove leaven from our homes, from the first day to the seventh day.

And so He begins to point out here in Exodus 12. In fact, it's interesting to note, when was this given? When did God make this command? Well once again, we see this was before Mount Sinai. This was before what people often call the Old Covenant or Moses' Covenant. This is before that time, and He talks about the Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread. He talks about two of these feasts to the Lord, and he tells us something interesting about them. How do we keep them? How long are they valid? Well, He points out the fact that these are forever. These are forever. These days are to continue to be kept. Now, I know some people will argue, "Well, sometimes forever in the Bible, or this phrase, 'throughout your generations.'" People might argue, "Well that doesn't mean it goes on, and on, and on forever and ever." Some people would say, "It just really means age lasting or for a specific era."

Let's think about that for just a moment. What era would these things apply to? What age that would continue to last do these days apply to when he says, "Forever, of an everlasting ordinance," because he does say this several times throughout scripture. In fact, there's a section of scripture that labels all of these days over in Leviticus 23. If you just want to flip really quick over to Leviticus 23, not going to spend a lot of time here, but just want to point out this fact of the "everlasting ordinance," or, "throughout your generations." Those two phrases point to similar things there that they're age lasting ordinances. And so when we look at Leviticus chapter 23, it begins to label God's feast days. In fact, right at the very beginning, it talks about these are feasts not of men, not of Old Testament times, but he says, "They're feasts of the Lord." They're God's feasts, just like we read in Exodus 12, just like we read back in Exodus 23 as well, that they're God's feasts.

And when we read about them, we see it starts with the Sabbath as a feast to God. And so that's where it begins, and then it goes through the Passover, then it goes through Unleavened Bread. In fact, down in verse 15, we find Pentecost mentioned. Leviticus 23:15 begins a little section that talks about Pentecost, and that it is one of those everlasting ordinance that applies throughout your generations. Atonement is mentioned in verse 26. These days are also mentioned over in Deuteronomy 16. Now, not every section of scripture mentions every single one of these days. I think it's in Deuteronomy 16 where it doesn't mention Atonement. Each section is not a complete listing of every day, but here it is very praying that Atonement is one of the festivals of God that does need to be observed. But let's think about, who does it apply to, who needs to observe it and why? Well what does this mean, "Throughout your generations," keep that in the back of your mind.

Back to Leviticus 23 for a moment, down in verse 33, we see the Feast of Tabernacles mentioned. Just before that, verse 23 the Feast of Trumpets is mentioned, and we see for Tabernacles, it says, "It's a statute forever in your generations." So as we begin to think about what is forever, what is this "throughout your generations," or what is "age lasting," I think we can begin to have a little bit of insight when we fast forward to the New Testament, because I think we have to look what did Christ say about it? If Christ is our savior, if He's our Lord, if He's our master, what He said about these writings should be very important to us. It should begin to help frame what these words are all about. Did it really mean we need to keep those today? Did it really mean they're going to be kept until the end of the age, or what exactly was He talking about?

Well, look over at John. The Gospel of John, John 5:46. The Book of John, we find Christ Himself teaching, and at this time, many of the Jews wanted to kill Him because of His words, and they accused Him of trying to make himself equal with God. Well, we know He was God in the flesh, and here He is describing some of the issues that the leaders at that time had with Him. And one of the things He tells them, down in verse 46 is very interesting. He says, "If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote about me," and Christ then went on to say in verse 47, "If you do not believe his writings, how will you believe my words?" You see, the interesting thing is Jesus Christ is the one that inspired those words that were written in Leviticus 23.

Jesus Christ is the one that inspired those words that were written back in Exodus 23, or back in Exodus 16, or Exodus 12. He inspired those words. He was the one behind those things. And so He could say, "If you don't believe what I inspired, you don't understand who I am." You can't understand what He's doing. In fact, He even said just a little bit before this, if you look back at verse 17, he said, "Don't think I came to destroy the law or the prophets." In fact, many would lump these days, these festival days in with the law, and try to say, "Well they're done away with."

Go back to Mathew 5:17 not John 5. Mathew 5:17, he says that very clearly, "Don't think I came to destroy the law of the prophets," but that's exactly what most people think that these things are done away. But instead, he says, "I didn't come to destroy but to fulfill." So He came to fulfill what these days were all about. Well, does that mean He fulfilled them, and they're done away, and we don't have to worry about them? Is that the implication here? I know many take it that way, but if you really dig into the meaning behind Christ's words, fulfill doesn't mean done and gone and done away with. He's talking about filling them to the full. He's talking about showing what the true meaning behind those commands are all about. What is the meaning behind those days that He said to celebrate? Is it just some physical thing that we have to go through, or is there more to the story?

Well, if you read the story of what Christ was all about, He constantly showed the spiritual meaning behind His commands, and of course, the Jewish leadership of the day didn't get it. They didn't understand it. They didn't see that spiritual meaning. They didn't understand that Christ wasn't doing away with anything. He was showing the spiritual meaning behind His law, His way, His word. And so these days are to be kept, and He says they're to be kept throughout your generations. They're to be kept forever until that time that probably the father comes down from heaven. They're age lasting way into the new heavens and new earth, and we'll see more about that in just a minute as well.

So Christ came to show a spiritual meaning behind these days. And as you begin to think about that, it begins to make more sense, well what is the spiritual meaning behind these various harvest festivals? What was that? Well, we'll put that on the show for a moment. We're going to come back to that a little bit later, and we'll certainly deal with it in some of our future studies as well. But certainly God made this command. In fact, when we recognize who was this God who was making these commands, we find that it's Jesus Christ. The Gospel of John shows very clearly, this is Jesus Christ. If you don't believe what he said, he says, "You don't understand." You can't understand. "If you don't believe the Old Testament," Christ says you don't believe Him. You don't believe Him. It's impossible to separate those two things.

But let's look at his example for a minute because I think that's a third step in what God reveals to us. When we recognize what Christ Himself did, as the Emmanuel, as God with us. Look at Luke 2:41. Oh, flip to the New Testament here for a moment because oftentimes, people will say, "What about the New testament? Don't we find anything here that would lead us to these conclusions that we need to keep these days?" Well Luke 2:41, we find a young Jesus Christ with his parents, and notice the scenario of what's happening at this time. Luke 2:41, it says, "His parents went to Jerusalem every year at the Feast of the Passover." So here we are at the Passover time. Of course Days of Unleavened Bread immediately follow. It says, "He was 12 years old when they went up to Jerusalem according to the custom of the feast."

So immediately we see Christ and His parents kept these days. They observed those days that we recognized in Leviticus 23 and Deuteronomy 16, and those also we read about it Exodus. They kept the Holy Days, and if you skip down just a little bit, go all the way down to verse 49, Christ hung around there while his parents went home, and they forgot about Him, it seems. When they came back to get Him, they found Him. What did He say He was doing? And I think this…what He was doing also included keeping the Passover and keeping the Days of Unleavened Bread. Well He says, "Didn't you know I would be about my father's business?" Christ seems to say that those festival days, observing those days, were part of doing God's business because He recognized the command. He recognized what it stood for, and it wasn't something that He only did himself. It was so much more than that.

He was the one who commanded ancient Israel to keep those days. He's the one that said even before the old covenant, these days were in effect. He also told others to keep the feast days as well. If you look over at the Gospel of John, John 7. He gives some instructions about keeping the Feast of Tabernacles. So in John 7, we can follow Jesus' example when it comes to observing these days and recognize the fact that He told others to keep these days. John 7:8, let's go down to verse 8. Here we'll recognize Jesus Christ telling others to keep this feast. In fact, it's His brothers. Verse 8, He tells his brothers, "You go up to this feast." Pretty direct command to them. "You go keep the feast," he says, "I'm not yet going up to this feast, for my time has not yet fully come." So here we are, just before the Feast of Tabernacles, and He tells His brothers, "You guys need to go and keep the feast." Now, He doesn't say, "I'm not keeping the feast," because we're a few days ahead of time yet.

He wasn't immediately going up. He was going to be there to keep those days, but people wanted to kill him. He had to show up for right at the beginning of that feast and not hang out for too long. And so he tells His brothers, "You go up." Then what does He say in verse 9? Says, "When he had said these things to them, he remained in Galilee, but when his brothers had gone up, then he also went up to the feast. Not openly, but as it were in secret." See Christ knew it wasn't time for him to be taken. And so he didn't want His brothers to know where He was so that they'd be put under pressure trying to figure out where Christ was. So He said, "You go to the feast," and then what did he do? He went up and kept the feast.

In fact, a couple of verses later, down in verse 14. It says that not only did He keep the feast, but He also taught at the feast, at the Feast of Tabernacles. Verse 14 it says, "The middle of the feast, Jesus went up into the temple and taught on that great day of the feast." If you look down to verse 37 and verse 38, He stood up and He cried out. During one of the great traditional things that they did during the feast, He taught, and He called out to the people, and He taught about the plan of God, and He taught about the fact that He was Savior. And He showed the plan through these Holy Days. And so over and over again, Christ points to His example. Think about that for a minute. How important is the example of Christ? Many people would say, "Well of course Christ kept those days, He was a Jew, right? So why wouldn't He keep them? Why wouldn't His parents keep those days because He's a Jew? And so He'd be obligated to keep those days." But is that all there is to it? Does that mean after His crucifixion that we don't have to worry about those things? Maybe a question that needs to be answered is why would Christ say, "Follow me"?

If you look through the gospels, over, and over, and over again, Christ says, "Follow Me." I think if you started listing out how many times He said that, it seems like there's 20 times throughout the New Testament, he says, "Follow Me." In fact, there's a great example right near here. If you go over to chapter 13, John 13. If you're still there in John 7, just flip over to John 13:15. Here we are during the Passover, and Christ is keeping the Passover with His disciples. In fact, not just any old Passover, but just like he came to fulfill and show the true meaning behind these days, He's showing the true meaning behind the Passover to His own disciples here. And it's interesting, in John 13, He says, after going through part of the ceremony at the Passover, He says, "I have given you an example that you should do as I have done to you."

Certainly, that applies to a specific example there, but it applies even bigger because He's pointing back to "Follow Me." Do the things that I have done. In fact, it's interesting, if you read this section of scripture in the Knox translation, it says, "I have been setting you an example." And it wasn't just this one evening that He was setting an example. For all those years that He was with the disciples, He was setting that example. And he also says a little bit later here, down just a verse or two, in verse 17, He says, "If you know these things, happy are you if you do them." So there's something to doing. There's something to following Christ's example. He tells them specifically, "You need to follow my example."

And there's a wonderful passage all the way back in the book of 1 John that points back to Christ's example itself. If you want to just write down 1 John 2:6. It talks about abiding in Christ. Do you want to remain with Christ? Do you want to be close to your Savior? John says what we need to do is to walk as He walked, or some of the translations have an alternate version of that that says, "Live as He lived." And I love that version because it's not pointing to a resurrected Christ. To walk as He walked. That's not saying here He is today at the right hand of the Father and glory. No, it's not saying that. If we walk as He walked or live as He lived, that points back to His example. That points back to what He did when He walked the earth. What was His example? Can we just dismiss it? Well, no.

The Bible very clearly says, "We're to live like he lived," or some other translations say, "Follow that example. The same way that He walked, the same way that He lived, we should live." Now, can anyone criticize the way that Christ lived? Well, I think you probably could, but you shouldn't because He lived a perfect life, and to follow his example, I think is an important aspect of what it means to understand the festival days and why we need to celebrate those days. Our Lord and our Master, our High Priest kept these days and said He was setting an example for us to follow. I suppose that number three alone should be a good enough reason to say, "All right, I do need to keep these days." These are something that were important to Christ.

They should be important to me as well, but it doesn't stop there because oftentimes, like we had mentioned, it seems like well Christ was a Jew, so these things were only for the Jews. Well, is that true? Let's think about that for just a second. Because people will often say, "Well, these days well Christ was just keeping them because He was Jewish, and after the crucifixion, it really doesn't matter anymore," or, "It's just an Old Testament thing," or, "It's just an old covenant thing. How would it possibly apply today?" Well, a couple of things to think about. There's an interesting list over in Hebrews 11. Oftentimes it's called the Faith Chapter, and when you begin to look through some of those names, there are people that are listed there, like Abel, or Enoch, or Noah that are said to all have died in the faith. They all died in the faith. So these were faithful people, faithful men who all died before any Jews existed.

Okay, why would that be important? They died in the faith. What does it mean to die in the faith? Is there such a negative connotation when it comes to this? Oftentimes say, "It's a Jewish thing, so I don't have to do it." What about that? What about that? I think one of the passages that gives us some perspective is over in Romans 2. Romans 2:28 gives us some guidance as we think about this idea of, "All right, is it a Jewish thing that I don't have to worry about, or is there more to it?" Is there a sense that Christ fulfilled the law that He literally gave it its true meaning, or in other words, showed the spiritual impact of God's way, showed the spiritual significance of His law, showed the spiritual significance of the days that we are to worship. Is that possible?

Well, Romans 2:28, I think points this out so clearly. Notice what it says, "For he is not a Jew who is one outwardly, nor is circumcision that which is outward in the flesh, but he is a Jew who is one inwardly, and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit, not in the letter, whose praise is not from men, but from God." So what's he trying to say here? All right, there's a difference just from the outward appearance of things. He begins to point back to what Christ was talking about, fulfilling the spiritual significance of God's way and His law. That there's more to it than just observing a day or recognizing a harvest, there're some spiritual meaning behind this. If you want to be a true worshipper, he says it's like you're a spiritual Jew. You're a spiritual Jew. In fact, Galatians 3:28, you can just write this down. Galatians 3:28 points to the same concept where Paul says, "There's neither Jew nor Greek. We're all one in Christ Jesus, and if we are Christs, we are Abraham's seed and heirs according to the promise."

So we begin to see these days are not just for the Jews. There's a spiritual aspect. We are to be spiritual Jews, and as we look at the example that the Apostle Paul showed very clearly, even if were to say, "Well, those Holy Days, those festival days, they're just for the Jews." Well, what should that tell us? Well, Romans 2:28 says, "We're spiritual Jews." So should we keep them as spiritual Jews? If we are a Jew inwardly in the spirit, as Paul says there in Romans 2, then we still have to keep them as spiritual Jews. And we recognize the spiritual intent behind them, and that's one of the things we'll get more into in future studies as well. The spiritual intent behind God's days, and so as we see that, it becomes that much clearer.

That even as spiritual Jews, we keep them. They're not just for the physical Jews. That's not it at all. There's much more to the story than that. In fact, oftentimes people will point to the fact that, well, yeah, the Jews kept these days, and even some of the people in the early church kept them, but that's just because they were Jews. Have you ever heard that argument before? Well, when you begin to think about that, there is an interesting passage over in 1 Thessalonians 2:14. And I think it becomes a little bit clearer even here that this was not something just for the Jewish race, wasn't just for those people at all. Because here in 1 Thessalonians 2, the Apostle Paul makes an interesting comment. One maybe often will just read right over it, and say, "It didn't really mean too much," but when you think about the significance behind this passage, it brings this whole aspect I think to a clearer view.

1 Thessalonians 2:14, here is the Apostle Paul writing to the Christians in Thessalonica, and he says, "For you, brethren, became imitators of the Churches of God, which are in Judea in Christ Jesus." Now, it's a simple little sentence that doesn't seem like it means very much, but what is he saying? What he's saying to Christians, those that are converted in Thessalonica, were like or they were imitating the churches, where? In Judea. That would be converted Jews that lived there were being imitated by the Christians in Thessalonica. And he says, "That's a good thing." That's a good thing. Now you might say well that's only because those Thessalonians, they were Jews too, and that's why they were imitating those in Judea. But wait a second. If you look back at verse 9, he tells them that he is pleased that they had turned away from idols. They had turned away from idols.

Well, the Jews weren't idol worshipers, were they? Certainly not at the time of Christ at all. Certainly they misunderstood God's plan, but they weren't idol worshipers. Who were idol worshipers? Well, the Gentiles, the Pagans, those that were non-Israelites. Those were the ones that worshipped idols. So Paul is obviously pointing to those in Thessalonica that were Gentiles saying this is a good thing that they imitated the Churches of God in Judea. And that points to the fact that it wasn't just a Jewish thing that hung on in to the New Testament Church. No, that this was a good thing that they were observing the festivals. And so here Paul is commending them for that observance, commending them for imitating the churches that were in Judea. That's not a bad thing at all. So I think that's an important aspect when you think about these days not being just Jewish days. In fact, maybe we can build on this for just a moment as well.

Let's take a look at the New Testament Church for just a moment. When we think about the example of Christ and the example then of the New Testament Church, the example of that New Testament Church, like we just read in the churches in Judea, they kept God's way, and Paul said, "Good for you for following their example." Well, look at the example of the New Testament Church. When did the New Testament Church begin? It began on one of those holy days, didn't it? It began on the Feast of Pentecost. Acts 2 labels it so very clearly, and it points out the fact, I think, that God did not intend these days just to fade off into history, that it was just supposed to be this Old Testament thing that just goes away at the crucifixion. God does something huge, and miraculous, and big on that beginning of the New Testament Church, and it began on a holy day.

The New Testament Church began, the birth of the Church you might say, was on the Day of Pentecost. So God established His Church, poured out his Holy Spirit on one of those days, and that begins to point us to the meaning behind it as well. That there's spiritual significance behind these things. After the crucifixion, the New Testament Church kept these days, but now kept them with a deeper understanding. There was a greater meaning behind these days that they began to understand as God revealed the spiritual significance behind those. Wow, what better example than right off the bat, as the Church began? And so over and over again, throughout the New Testament, we find examples of these days being kept. There are several times that days are just mentioned as an aside in scripture. The Apostle Paul mentions the days several times. Just mentions a fast or mentions the Feast of Unleavened Bread. Why bother mentioning those things? Well, there must have been something more behind…or was it just the time marker, some would say, well is it just a time marker, or was it something that was important?

Well, if we look to the Book of Acts, we can see just a couple of examples. Look at Acts 18, and we might as well jump right into it, verse 21. Here Paul is on his third journey, we're at the time of probably 20, 25 years after the crucifixion. So we've had plenty of time for the Church to come to an understanding that these days maybe aren't that important. They're not important by now. A quarter of a century later, it should become pretty evident, wouldn't you think? That we don't need to do these things, and yet, look what Paul says in Acts 18:21. He says, "I must, by all means, keep this coming feast in Jerusalem," and there isn't going to be anything that's going to stop me from keeping this feast. And then he tells us where he's trying to head to.

He's trying to go to Jerusalem to keep the feast. And so Paul says, "This is important." This is important, it's significant because remember as well, who was Paul the Apostle 2? What was the main trust of his ministry? Was he preaching and teaching to the Jews of the day, or was he given a commission to preach and teach those non-Jews, to the gentiles? You see, the Apostle Paul was given that commission, to preach to those that were not Jewish, and here he is saying, "I've got to keep the feast." If it's not significant, why bother mentioning it? In fact, just a couple of verses later, look down to verse 20. I'm sorry, not verse 20, chapter 20:6. In Chapter 20:6, he gives one of those markers, kind of an aside here. He says, "We sailed away from Philippi after the Days of Unleavened Bread." So you might say, "Well, okay. That's not very significant." But wait a second. Is it significant?

Couple of verses later, down in verse 16, says, "Paul had decided to sail past Ephesus so that he would not have to spend time in Asia, for he was hurrying to be at Jerusalem, if possible, on the Day of Pentecost." So once again, we have one of the Festivals mentioned as Paul keeping that feast. Not just recognizing it as a time marker, the Days of Unleavened Bread and then the Day of Pentecost. No, he wanted to keep the Day of Pentecost. He wanted to observe the day. Look it up in various translations. Some of them say, "Celebrate the day." Celebrate, in fact, if you read the Expositor's Bible dictionary Commentary on this section of scripture, it even says that the Apostle Paul remained at Philippi to celebrate the weeklong Festival of Unleavened Bread. Yeah, they got it right. That's exactly what he was doing.

Now, why do that a quarter of a century after the crucifixion if it wasn't important? Why set that example to Gentiles if it wasn't important for them? Why do that if only some Jews might have been keeping those feast days? Why would that be significant? Why do that at all? Well, his example was very clear. His writings were very clear. He set the example. In fact, he even said, "Follow me or imitate me as I imitate Christ." Well, Paul imitated Christ. In fact, if you look to the letter to the Corinthians, in his first letter, 1 Corinthians 5:8. "After a long discussion of how they should be celebrating the Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread," won't take time to read through the whole thing. But notice the conclusion that he comes to. Does he come to the conclusion that we don't have to do these things because they're just some ancient harvest Festivals that don't have any meaning for us today, or is there more to it than just that? Well he says, "There's a lot to it. There's so much to it."

1 Corinthians 5:8 he says, "Because of all these things, therefore, in other words, let us keep the feast." Then he says, "How to keep that." He says, "We should keep it in the spirit, not with malice and wickedness," but he says, "With sincerity and truth." There's deep spiritual meaning behind the observation of these days, and it's shown really clearly when you look at other translations as well. Yeah, they often say, "Let us keep the feast." Oftentimes they say, "Let us celebrate the feast," or, "Let us observe the festival." They recognize the fact these are days that are still supposed to be kept. And so he told the Corinthian Church, a very Gentile congregation. A congregation that had many that were non-Jews in that congregation. He told them they're to keep, they're to observe, they're to celebrate that festival. In fact, he mentions the same thing when it comes to the Passover.

Couple of chapters later in 1 Corinthians. I Corinthians 11, he says, "We should keep the Passover." In fact, maybe we should look there real quickly. Chapter 11:23, notice the way he says it. Love the way that he words this here because it's important in how he tells them what they need to be doing, and in this instance, he points to the Passover itself. But I think there's more to the story than that. Look at 1 Corinthians 11:23, he says, "I receive from the Lord that which I also delivered to you." And then, he starts talking about the Passover and how to keep the Passover, mainly because the Corinthians hadn't been keeping it properly. But he makes this point. He learned from Christ, and he passed on that truth to the New Testament Church, and he did it exactly. What he received from Christ, he passed on. He gave to the church. He showed them why it was significant.

And so whether it was Unleavened Bread or whether it was the Passover as we read about. Whether it was the Feast of Tabernacles or the Day of Pentecost. All of those things, I think, tie in to what he received form Christ, and then he delivered that, and continued to pass it on to the New Testament Church. And so I think you put these different passages together, and there's many more we don't have time for all of them here in New Testament, but it points very clearly that the New Testament Church certainly observed these days. And it wasn't just the Jews that were converted that kept them. Paul taught them. They needed to celebrate these days, that there was a deep spiritual meaning behind them. So they needed to keep and observe these days.

It's also interesting, the story doesn't stop here. We also find that there is a future aspect to the keeping of the Holy Days or the festival days. There's a future significance as well that point to these days continuing to be kept during this whole age. Zachariah 14:16. Zachariah 14:16, points to a time after Jesus Christ returns to this earth, his second coming. At that time, we find a significant thing happening. And why in the world would this be included in scripture if it wasn't important? If it didn't have some meaning behind it? Let's recognize what it says here. Zachariah 14:16 says, "It shall come to pass. Everyone who has left from all the nations that came up against Jerusalem." That's talking about those that were going to fight against Christ. He says, "They'll come to Jerusalem." It says, "Go up year to year to worship the king," when? It says, "And to keep the Feast of Tabernacles." So it gives the example of one of the Festivals, the Feast of Tabernacles.

And so after the return of Christ, the Feast of Tabernacles is going to be kept. In fact, it points to how serious it is if you don't keep these days. Says verse 17, "Whichever the families of the earth that don't come up to Jerusalem to worship the king, the Lord of Hosts, on them there will be no rain. The family of Egypt will not come, they'll have no rain. They'll receive the plague, which the Lord strikes the nations who do not come up to keep the Feast of Tabernacles." Verse 19, "This shall be the punishment of Egypt and the punishment of all the nations that do not come up to keep the Feast of Tabernacles." Now a question that comes to mind is if the Festivals are going to be instituted when Christ returns, and Zachariah 14, clearly says this is going to happen. This is going to be something that is commanded that must be observed.

So we found as we began, the Old Testament says, "Keep these days." The future after Christ returns says, "Keep these days." Why wouldn't we keep these days now? If they did it then, they're going to do it in the future, why wouldn't we keep these days now? Well, I think we see from Jesus' example, from the New Testament Church, recognizing the fact that they're not just for Jews. It does constantly point to the fact that we do need to keep these days. There's so much criticism against these because some people just don't want to do them. They don't want to follow what God says. I was reading an article the other day that said a couple of interesting things about these particular days, and they were saying they're not necessary. There was a couple of interesting things that were in this particular article that pointed to some interesting facts.

One of the things that his particular article said, I won't tell you the name of the article, but it was an interesting one. One of the things that they wrote was, "The festivals were commanded forever, but so were some of the sacrifices, and so was circumcision. None of these are requirements for Christians today." Is that true? Think about the spiritual significance of what God is doing. Physically we don't have to sacrifice, physically we don't have to worry about circumcision, but spiritually speaking, our entire life is to be a sacrifice. Aren't we called to be a living sacrifice, doesn't Romans 12 tell us that? We are called to be a living sacrifice. Christ came to show the spiritual significance of these things. What about circumcision? You don't have to be circumcised physically, but we read in Romans, there's a spiritual sense to that whole thing.

So the Festivals were commanded because they show the spiritual significance of what God is doing. We can never forget that. So while that might sound, uh-oh, yeah, we don't sacrifice today. Yes we do. We're not circumcised today. Yeah. Yes, we are. Yes we are, but there's the whole spiritual aspect behind it. Of course the other big aspect of this that people fight against is a statement like this. "The festivals were commanded within the old covenant and only within the old covenant." Was that true? No, that's not true either. It sounds like it could be convincing, but like we read back in Exodus before these things, these days were in existence. And so just to say a blanket statement like that could sound kind of scary. Could say, "Oh, that's a good point," but wait a second, it's not true. In fact, in future studies, I'm hoping to go through the covenants themselves.

What exactly is the Old Covenant? What is the New Covenant? What are the components of those covenants, and why would it be important to know the difference? Is the Old covenant done away with or not? So keep some of that in the back of your mind, we'll come back to that in future studies as well. This was an interesting statement, and I think you'll find...it almost made me laugh when I read this because it was within this article that was trying to defend the fact that we don't have to do these things. Imagine this sentence. "Christians should be careful about using Jesus' example." What? Then it went on to say, "because of the cultural time-bound circumstances."

Well, is Jesus' example limited to just the culture that He lived in? Was His example...did he say, "Follow me, but only to those of you that are in my time-bound circumstances, only those of you who are in my cultural circumference"? He didn't say those kinds of things. It's ridiculous to write things like, "The early Church observed the festivals, since the first Christians were Jewish." Well, the very first Christians were probably Jewish, but by the time we get to the Apostle Paul, there were many that were Gentile, many non-Jews that were converted, and we read that passage that he wrote, that, wow, they were even imitating the Jewish Christian Churches, which was a very good thing. And so don't be taken in by these broad statements that, wow, it almost seems like they might have something behind them.

When you really begin to dig into scripture, there's really very little. It's a lot of hot air I think, when you begin to really see what God says, because I think it all comes down to the spiritual significance. And that's where we're going to go with our future studies. When you look at the spiritual significance, which really points to right where we began tonight. It points to the plan of God. What is God doing? What is his plan and his purpose for mankind? These Holy Days show us the deep meaning behind the gospel that Jesus Christ himself was preaching. It's a step by step outline, not only of what God's going to do in the future, but what he's doing right now. And so when we observe the Passover, we begin to understand there is a solution to sin that Jesus Christ sacrificed his life so that we could have forgiveness. And we recognize the Days of Unleavened Bread so that we can come out of sin. That we can put it out just like a piece of unleavened bread we eat that we're to be unleavened. We're to be spiritually unleavened.

We can be sin free because of Christ, and of course, Pentecost shows that with God's spirit, we can accomplish these things. That God's spirit is what makes it possible for us to obey. And of course, as you get to the fall days with trumpets, pointing to the return of Christ, further expounding the plan of God, that there's going to be a tremendous blessing at the return of Christ. There's going to be a resurrection, and He's going to establish his government on this earth, and the Feast of Atonement reminds us that Satan's going to be put away. And that he is to be blamed for much of the sin, and there's a time of repentance and reconciliation. And of course, the tabernacles, the whole world is going to begin to understand God's plan, and Jesus Christ is going to reign and rule on earth, and so that plan of salvation becomes that much clearer. And of course, the Eighth Day points to the fact that all mankind is going to have an opportunity, that everyone who ever lived will have an opportunity to understand God's plan.

And so we see some amazing significance behind God's feast days, and they all point back in one way or another to Jesus Christ. They focus on Him because we worship Him. We rejoice in the fact that He gave His life for us to make it possible to be one with God, the Father, and be one with Jesus Christ. And so these days highlight the hope that we all have, and so there's tremendous significance. So we observe those Old Testament days with new meaning, with spiritual meaning because Jesus Christ gave it the meaning. And so it points to the fact that we do have hope, and we share in that hope with each other and with what Jesus Christ did for us.

So I think we end up with a nice little outline here of reasons why we keep these days, and I think it points to the fact that the Holy Days outline the plan. They outline not only what God has done, but they outline what God is doing today, and they point to the future showing what God will do. And so let's never forget the importance of these Holy Days because they illustrate that God does have a plan, a plan for good and not for evil, and it points to his promises. His promise of eternal life by God's grace through faith in Jesus Christ. Well, that will do it for our first study of our series. We hope you'll join us in just two weeks from tonight. February 4th, we're going to continue our series of "Let Us Keep the Feasts." Mr. Darris McNeely is going to be up next, and his Bible study is titled, "Why the Exodus matters." Why the Exodus matters is our next Bible study. Thanks for joining us, and we look forward to seeing you next time.

Course Content

Celebrating the Feast of Tabernacles in Today’s World

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Course Content

This seven-day biblical festival gives you a preview of the coming wonderful age beyond today.

Have you ever heard of the Feast of Tabernacles? Did you know that Jesus Christ celebrated it in the first century? Did you know that, even today, thousands of Christians follow His example by observing it every year?

There is great significance to the Feast of Tabernacles for Christians today. We’ll take a look at what this festival means and why it’s so important to God that you observe it too.

God tells us that we have a special appointment with Him at the Feast of Tabernacles—a unique invitation to a personal meeting with Him!

We’ll examine why thousands of Christians the world over take time off of work and away from school to gather together, staying in temporary dwellings, to worship God and Jesus Christ. We’ll see how this biblical festival holds incredible meaning for all of mankind!

A vision of God’s Kingdom

Three of Jesus’ disciples were part of a life-changing event that’s recorded in the Gospels. You might be familiar with what happened, but most people don’t realize that it actually has everything to do with the Feast of Tabernacles.

Let’s notice the details of the event commonly called the Transfiguration. One day Jesus was talking to His disciples and said something incredible: “Assuredly, I say to you that there are some standing here who will not taste death till they see the kingdom of God present with power” (Mark 9:1).

No doubt they didn’t know how soon Jesus’ words would come true! “Now after six days Jesus took Peter, James, and John, and led them up on a high mountain . . . and He was transfigured before them. His clothes became shining, exceedingly white . . . And Elijah appeared to them with Moses, and they were talking with Jesus. Then Peter answered and said to Jesus, ‘Rabbi, it is good for us to be here; and let us make three tabernacles’” (Mark 9:1-5, emphasis added throughout).

What an amazing event! In a vision, these disciples were suddenly whisked into the future to see Jesus Christ in His glory in His Kingdom!

Don’t miss Peter’s reaction. What did Peter associate with this vision? He said that they should make tabernacles.

What does that have to do with anything? Peter clearly related the Feast of Tabernacles to the idea of a tabernacle or a temporary dwelling. Why does this matter to Christians today? To answer that question, let’s look at a bit of background information.

A commanded celebration

In giving His laws to Moses, God said: “Speak to the children of Israel, saying: ‘The fifteenth day of this seventh month shall be the Feast of Tabernacles for seven days to the Lord. On the first day there shall be a holy convocation . . .’” (Leviticus 23:34-35).

You may be thinking that this is just an Old Testament thing for the Jews. It’s not. It’s a Christian thing! Do you realize that your Savior, Jesus Christ, set the example of observing this feast?

The book of John records this about Jesus and His brothers going to Jerusalem for the Feast of Tabernacles: “But when His brothers had gone up, then He also went up to the feast, not openly, but as it were in secret. Then the Jews sought Him at the feast, and said, ‘Where is He?’ . . . Now about the middle of the feast Jesus went up into the temple and taught” (John 7:10-11; John 7:14).

Did you notice that everyone expected Jesus to be at the Feast of Tabernacles? Why? Because it was His lifelong practice to celebrate God’s festivals as required in God’s laws. Even when His life was threatened, He went to celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles!

You see, Christ knew that this was a commanded yearly celebration, and it wasn’t intended just for the Jews. Leviticus 23 rightly calls the occasions listed here “the feasts of the Lord” (Leviticus 23:2). They weren’t just feasts for Israel or celebrations just for the Jews. Jesus set the example by showing they were for everyone and that they continue to be God’s festivals.

The early Church continued in Jesus’ example of celebrating the feasts. He celebrated the Feast of Tabernacles every year and taught about its great significance. Scripture instructs us that, as His followers, we are to walk as He walked—to live as He lived (Isaiah 25:6-7).

When God says we are to celebrate the feasts, He uses a Hebrew word that means “appointed times” or “appointments.” Do you realize that God has set up a number of appointments with you to keep? These are also called “holy convocations” or “sacred assemblies.” Jesus knew that we can learn valuable lessons by meeting, fellowshipping and observing the Feast together.

God tells us that we have a special appointment with Him at the Feast of Tabernacles. Now imagine that! God has given us all a unique invitation to a personal meeting with Him!

Why a celebration of tabernacles?

In order to celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles, God told the Israelites to do something that may seem strange to us. They were to observe the Feast with “tabernacles.” What does that mean?

A “tabernacle,” or “booth,” as it is also called, is a temporary sheltering structure, such as a tent or similar temporary dwelling. So the Feast was to be observed by leaving home and staying in such a dwelling.

Why is this part of celebrating the festival?

God said that it’s “so that generations to come may learn how I made the people of Israel live in booths when I brought them out of Egypt” (Leviticus 23:42-43).

Today, Christians observe the Feast by staying in modern temporary dwellings and assembling together to worship God and to hear the Bible being preached and taught.

Temporary dwellings remind us of part of the spiritual significance of the festival—that life is fleeting. We are strangers and pilgrims on this earth. That’s powerful symbolism! It points out that this world isn’t our real home—that we’re really citizens of God’s Kingdom.

Peter used this analogy when he thought back to that glimpse of Jesus Christ in his spiritual glory in the Kingdom of God at the transfiguration: “I consider it my duty, as long as I live in the temporary dwelling of this body, to stimulate you by these reminders” (2 Peter 1:12, J.B. Phillips New Testament).

Peter made the connection between the Kingdom of God and temporary dwellings! The Feast of Tabernacles reminds us of the temporary nature of our physical life, and it helps us to focus on what’s permanent—our goal for eternal life in God’s Kingdom.

A celebration of God’s care for us

Another lesson of the Feast is “that your generations may know that I made the children of Israel dwell in booths when I brought them out of the land of Egypt” (Leviticus 23:43).

This hearkens back to Israel wandering in the barren desert—coming out of the present world to sojourn with God under His protection. In those harsh conditions, Israel had to totally depend on God. So what did God do? He was faithful to provide all of their needs. He quenched their thirst with clean water, He fed them with manna from heaven, and He even gave them quail to eat. It all showed His love and concern for His people when they needed Him most.

God’s great care for Israel should remind us of the great care God gives to us. We have the Creator and Sustainer of the universe providing for our daily needs. He takes specific interest in our lives. Beyond that, He provides what we needed most—a Savior who can give us eternal life. Christians should absolutely celebrate and honor our faithful God, who provides everything that we need.

The Feast itself is another thing God gives us as He provides for us spiritually. God says we shall gather to worship Him—and anything that God commands us is for our own benefit. He assures us that all the celebrations He’s instituted are important to Him. Again, He says they are “the feasts of the Lord, which you shall proclaim to be holy convocations, these are My feasts” (Leviticus 23:2).

God’s festivals are part of how God cares for us by giving us special time to spend with Him. Jesus knew that we can learn valuable lessons by meeting, fellowshipping and observing these feasts together. It’s more than just a nice idea, more than an option, more than just good advice. God actually commands us to observe His Feast for our own good!

Isn’t it a blessing for God to give us a wonderful spiritual celebration that pleases and honors Him?

Celebrating a better world to come

We’ve covered some of the physical and spiritual concepts that observing the Feast of Tabernacles teaches us, like focusing on our real home in God’s Kingdom and God’s care for us in this life. But there’s one more lesson we can learn from this festival—and it’s the most important of all.

For the Israelites, the Feast of Tabernacles was a celebration of the large late summer and autumn harvest in the land of Israel. God blessed them with abundant crops. Behind the celebration of the harvest is an incredible spiritual lesson that foreshadows a large spiritual harvest. God has given us physical lessons to teach us spiritual truth.

This lesson points to why the feasts of the Lord are for all mankind, not just the Jews. The Feast of Tabernacles is a joyous time that pictures an ultimate joyous time after the return of Jesus Christ. Don’t you look forward to rejoicing when the current world, with all of its problems and tragedies, will be replaced by the prophesied Kingdom of God?

Jesus taught extensively about His Kingdom during his earthly ministry. When He returns, there will be a time of great spiritual harvest from every corner of the world as He brings the nations and peoples of the earth into the Kingdom of God to live under His righteous rule. The Feast of Tabernacles symbolizes that time when Jesus returns to directly rule the world for 1,000 years. It will be a time of unparalleled peace and harmony. It’s truly a wonderful reason to celebrate!

Bible prophecy tells us that “it shall come to pass that everyone who is left of all the nations which came against Jerusalem shall go up from year to year to worship the King, the Lord of hosts, and to keep the Feast of Tabernacles” (Zechariah 14:16).

Imagine that: God tells us that the time is coming when the whole world will celebrate the Feast together!

At Christ’s return, the foundation will be in place for the restoration of all things to peace and harmony with God. The Feast of Tabernacles foreshadows a changed world when people will say: “Come, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the God of Jacob; He will teach us His ways, and we shall walk in his paths . . . They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore” (Isaiah 2:3-4).

At that time everyone in all nations will join in this yearly festival gathering. All people will learn God’s way of love. Through receiving God’s Holy Spirit, they will then be able to internalize God’s perfect way. Humanity will at last be restored to a right relationship with the Creator.

Celebrate the Feast!

The Feast of Tabernacles pictures an incredible time. The symbolism in this unique Christian festival is astounding, and the lessons will change the way you think about God’s plan for your life. Celebrating the Feast gives us a glimpse of the world beyond today—an incredible preview of the age to come. Take time to learn more about it. Don’t miss out on this wonderful spiritual opportunity. I hope you’ll make celebrating the Feast of Tabernacles a powerful statement of your faith.

Don’t underrate the significance of this festival in your life. You can begin to live God’s purpose for you today. Take this opportunity to be empowered by the Word of God and the special time set aside at the Feast of Tabernacles. It’s an important step in living a life in harmony with God’s way as you prepare for eternal life.

Jamie Schreiber works in the Media Department at the Home Office in Cincinnati. He studied Digital Video and Media Production in Minneapolis, MN.

 

Christmas

Does It Really Matter?

This message examines the origin and history of Christmas and asks, "Does it really matter if we keep Christmas?" Can we Christianize pagan things? What does God say in the Bible?

Transcript

[Richard Kennebeck] Several years ago, Drew Carey, the TV actor, the comedian, the game show host was one of the main presenters at the Correspondents' Association White House event held annually in Washington DC. I don't normally get history or spiritual lessons from comedians, but he did have a couple of interesting things to say. Let me read part of what he said in that speech that evening, and I quote, "I can't watch the news lately. It gets so depressing. I mean, I just get depressed watching the news. You know what I do when I watch the news now? I turn the news off, I get out my Bible, I turn to the book of Revelation and I start checking stuff off. You know, got it, got it, need it, need it. Red dragon, 7 horns, 10 crowns. Yeah, I read the Bible a lot. You know, this is crazy. We celebrate holidays in the United States. I found out just recently, there are so many religious holidays we celebrate here in this country that have nothing to do with the Bible at all. Real famous holidays like Christmas, Christmas is nothing. It's not in the Bible, the birth of Jesus is in the Bible, but not Christmas. Trees are in the Bible, but not the Christmas tree. Nowhere does it say, “’Celebrate My birthday,’ says Jesus.” It's just a pagan holiday that the Romans invented that we just do."

Now his whole routine that night garnered a certain amount of chuckles and laughter and the like, but you know if you watch that YouTube presentation while he's saying this, you don't see any smiles in the crowd. Christmas hits too close to many people's hearts. It's a subject that has many emotional things attached to it. It's this time of the year that we face a lot of challenges that we don't face during the rest of the year. We’re asked questions like, "Do you have your tree up yet? Have you finished your buying for Christmas? Do you have your lights up in front of the house?" You know, one of those really big challenges each year are those Christmas songs.

I mean, how often do you walk into a store, I know if one of those gets started and you just can't get rid of it. It just goes and goes and goes, and don't worry, I'm not going to start singing one. Don't worry about that.

Now Christmas is one of those times when we have to really, very openly shine our light. We don't have the lights out in front of our house. People ask us questions and we have to say, "We don't participate in that event or in that... in the Christmas." So we make a big statement during that time, you know. I grew up in a, what I call a mixed household. My dad was a Lutheran, so we went to Lutheran church twice a year, Easter and Christmas. And we kept Christmas until I was about 10 years old. My mom was in the faith, so we learned very quickly about Christmas and where it came from and whether the Bible said it was in there or not. You know, Christmas was fun as a kid. I enjoyed getting the presents, but I very early on realized there was no Santa Claus and at a certain point in our lives, we had to make a choice. So I'll be happy when this season's over again. I can turn my car radio on and not have to listen to Christmas songs. Though it's at this time of the year, I'm really happy for my playlist on my phone. If it wasn't for that, I'd be in trouble.

So today I'd like to take a quick look at the history of Christmas, and then ask the question, "Does it really matter if we keep Christmas?” Does it really matter if we keep Christmas? So turn with me if you would, to Romans 1 as we delve into the subject. Romans 1, beginning in verse 22.

Romans 1:22-25 we read about the way of man from his beginning. Even though mankind professes wisdom and thinks he knows best, in reality he's a fool. Romans 1 beginning in verse 22, "Professing to be wise, they became fools and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things." You know, for millennia, man has worshiped these idols in the past of various images. "Therefore," continuing in verse 24, "God also gave them up to uncleanliness, in the lusts of their hearts, to dishonor their bodies among themselves, who exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served the creature, or the creation, rather than the Creator, Who is blessed forever. Amen."

You know, this world continues to go astray. It's been going astray from millennia since Adam. We, or the whole world has listened to the lie, the well-crafted lie of how to worship God in many ways, and Christmas is one of those. All those trappings and trimmings of Christmas are based on lies and aren't Christian at all. And it's very easy to figure that out by going to the internet or even back before the internet, you could go to a library, and in a very short period of time, you could find out the beginnings of Christmas.

So let's take a quick few moments, taking a look at the origins of Christmas and where it came from and review it. Most of us know this, but it doesn't hurt to have a review at this time of the year. You know, if you want to watch a very interesting program about the history of Christmas, you can go over to YouTube – after I'm done speaking – and do a search on the History Channel presentation called “Christmas Unwrapped: The Story of Christmas.” “Christmas Unwrapped: The Story of Christmas.” It's about 45 minutes long. It's from the History Channel. It's a very good presentation. I found it quite interesting.

I'd like to read to you from several sources about Christmas and the early Christian history of that, up until about the 1600s. So here are some findings as far as the historical background. So according to the Catholic Encyclopedia, early Catholic church fathers, Irenaeus and Tertullian, who wrote between 170 and 210 AD did not mention Christmas in their list of Christian feast days. In fact, in his writings, Tertullian reports that the early Christians did not join in with the pagans in their holiday customs and refers to trappings of Christmas and New Year's that continue down to this day. He stated, "On this day of gladness," talking about the winter festivities, "we Christians neither cover our door posts with wreaths nor intrude upon a day with lamps," similar to the way we have lights around our houses. "At the call of public festivity, you consider it a proper thing to decorate your house like some new brothel. We are accused of a lower sacrilege because we do not celebrate along with you the holiday." The Encyclopedia Britannica from their article on Christmas says, "The actual observance of the day of Christmas…of Jesus' birth was long in coming. During the first two centuries of Christianity, there was strong opposition to recognizing birthdays of martyrs, or for that matter, of Jesus."

The Columbia Encyclopedia states in their article on Christmas that, quote, "The observance probably does not date earlier than AD 200 and did not become widespread until the 4th century." This is all talking about Christian Christmas. The Catholic Encyclopedia again says about the date of Christmas, "The well-known solar feast, however, of Natalis Invicti, celebrated on 25 December, has a strong claim on the responsibility for our December date." And it writes that Chrysostom, who was the Bishop of Constantinople in the 4th century, he wrote the following, "But our Lord, too, is born in the month of December, the eighth before Kalends of January." That would be the 25th of December, "But they call it the 'birth day of the Unconquered.' Who indeed is so unconquered as Our Lord? Or if they say that it is the birthday of the Sun," S-U-N, "He is the Sun of Justice."

You can see how, over time, it began to become integrated into the Christian religion, how they began to take this date, the 25th of December, and put a Christian spin on it using the word sun, S-U-N, to S-O-N. The World Book Encyclopedia in their article on Christmas states, quote, "The first mention of December 25 as the birth date of Jesus occurred in AD 336 in an early Roman calendar. The celebration of this day as Jesus' birth was probably influenced by pagan festivals held at that time. The ancient Romans held year-end celebrations to honor Saturn, their harvest God, and Mithras, the god of light." Continuing on with some historical background, the Encyclopedia Britannica states in their article on Christmas that, quote, "The New Testament provides no clues in regard to the birth of Jesus Christ." December 25 was first identified as the date of Jesus's birth by Sextus Julius Africanus in 221, and later became the universally accepted date. One widespread explanation of the origin of this date is that December 25 was the christianizing of the day of the birth of the Unconquered Sun, a popular holiday in the Roman empire, and it was moved over to be Jesus's birth.

One last quote concerning this from a book called Religions of Rome: A Sourcebook by Mary Beard and others, says about the ancient Roman festival of Saturnalia. "The renewal of light and the coming of the new year was celebrated in the later Roman Empire at the "Birth Day of the Unconquerable Sun" festival on 23 December. The popularity of Saturnalia continued into the 3rd and 4th centuries AD, and as the Roman Empire came under Christian rule, many of its customs were recast into, or at least influenced, the seasonal celebrations surrounding Christmas and the New Year."

So this is kind of a historical period. When it was changed, many things were brought in that were pagan or associated with pagan worship into Christianity. And you might ask, and this is probably a good time to stop for a second and say, "Do we really believe that these ancient traditions could have been accepted into Christianity or even encouraged in Christianity?" Now that's to say the answer is yes. It's even happening today. When I was in South Africa several years ago, I happened upon a TV show. There was a bishop of a very large denomination down there, Christian denomination, and they were trying to determine how they could bring in, and he was explaining how they could bring in more Zulus into the Christian church, how can we do this? Because the Zulus, many of them, still believe in ancestor worship, still have witch doctors, and his comment and suggestion, the recommendation was that they take many of the things that the Zulus do and apply a Christian name to it, and allow them to continue keeping a lot of their old traditions, but actually make sure that they somehow connect Christ to them. So this actually happens even in our world now. So it isn't far-fetched that these things happened back in the 200s and 300s and 400s AD.

Let's take a little look at more modern time. We will come up to the 1600s and see where Christmas fell within that time period. From the Christmas article in the Encyclopedia Britannica, talking about England in the 1600s, it says, "In Britain, the 25th of December was a festival long before the conversion to Christianity. In 1644 the English Puritans forbade any merriment or religious services by act of parliament on the ground that it was a heathen festival and ordered it to be kept as a fast. In 1640, the act from parliament of Scotland abolished Christmas celebrations. The English translation of that Act says, "This kingdom is now purged of all superstitious observances of days. Therefore, the said estates have discouraged a discharge and simply discharged the foresaid yule vacation and all observance thereof in time coming and rescind and in annul all acts, statutes and warrants and ordinances whatsoever granted at any time, therefore for keeping of the said yule vacation." And then from 1652 to 1659, the English parliament outlawed Christmas because it was not sanctioned by the Bible. In fact, they ordered that churches be closed on that day and that shops remain open on that day. And then here in America, from 1659 to 1680, the Massachusetts Bay Colony prohibited the observance of Christmas. One of their documents says, "Whoever shall be found observing any such day as Christmas or the like, either by forbearing labor, feasting, or any other way, upon such account and as aforesaid, every such person so offending shall pay a fine of 5 shillings." So if you kept Christmas at that time in that colony, you actually paid a fine. Moving up into the 1800s, the New York City, the "Daily Times," 1855, December 26, "The churches of Presbyterians, Baptists and Methodists were not opened on December 25th. They do not accept the day as a holy one, but the Episcopalian, Catholic and German churches were all open. Inside they were decked with evergreens."

So you can see the history of Christmas has not always been a solid observance even within the Christian church. So, knowing this, the history of Christmas, it's very easily found out about, yet most people see no problem with keeping it, even if it is based on something that God did not promote. In fact, they believe very similar to this one church from their website. They say, "We can't let centuries-dead pagans dictate what we can do or can't do. They have no authority over our calendar." So let's ask that question now. Does it really matter? Does it really matter if we keep Christmas? You know, can we keep it in a Christian fashion? Keep it as an observance of Christ? Put Christ into Christmas?

What I’d like to do is read a portion, to start this section out, from a transcript of a well-known preacher, conservative, and conservative TV evangelist and founder of the Christian Broadcasting Network. They have a program, and you can find this interview on the internet if you look at CBN Christmas pagan, CBN Christmas pagan, you can find this interview. This evangelist is being interviewed in this program, a program called Bring it On-Line, because it's an online program. And there's a CBN host who asked questions of this evangelist, ones that were sent in to the program. And one of those questions on this show was from a person who had a question, and I'll summarize this question. His question was, "I have friends that don't keep Christmas. They say it is pagan. How should I answer them? How should I answer them?"

Let me actually read just a little section of that transcript of what his answer is. I'm going to take out little pieces that are superfluous to it, but we'll see what kind of answer he's got and what advice he had. Quote, "Well, in a sense," this is his response to that person, "While in a sense, tell them that they're right." You see the winter solstice, a couple of days later, was the shortest day of the year and the pagans had something called Saturnalia, and it was a time of lawlessness because all the laws were suspended and people would actually wander the streets naked singing. It was a mass thing. Well, when the Catholic church came along and Italy and the Romans and others didn't want to give up their holidays, so they said, ‘Okay, we'll christianize it.’” Well, this is from this evangelist, well-known evangelist. He says, "I mean, what was going on?"

"So all this business about mistletoe…" This is his response, "All this business about mistletoe – pagan, Christmas trees – pagan, giving out gifts – pagan, every bit is pagan. Every single bit of it is pagan. We have christianized it all, and so that's good. And so we have time, we celebrate Jesus, and everyone gets misty-eyed, but the truth of it is, they are all pagan." That was his response. And then the host says, "But the intent is what it's all about." And the evangelist then says, "Well, exactly. So we have christianized all these things. We give gifts in the name of Jesus, we celebrate His birthday, and it's a nice thing."

And that's what this Christian evangelist says. And then he goes on to talk about the best Christmas he'd ever kept. So then other than a few statements in this… if you watch this, other than few statements in this, it actually could have been said by us. You could have actually found it in one of our documents, one of our booklets. Probably wouldn't have been quite as blunt coming from us, but he was very blunt. It's pagan, it's pagan. So, the bottom line is that, it's all pagan. It's christianized pagan. Are we free to christianize a pagan practice? Can we change something that comes from an ungodly practice or worship of idols or other gods into something that's holy? Will God bless that? Well, no, He won't. He won't. He won't.

This is what occurred over those early centuries as Christmas came into the church, that church, a worldly church. The New International Dictionary of Christian Church, page 223 states, and I quote, "December 25 was the date of the Roman pagan festival inaugurated in 274 as the birthday of the Unconquered Sun, which at the winter solstice begins again to show an increase in light. Sometime before 336, the church in Rome, unable to stamp out this pagan festival, spiritualized it as the Feast of the Nativity, of the Sun, S-U-N, of Righteousness."

Turn with me to Isaiah 5, Isaiah 5. So let's look into whether we can actually do this or not. Whether we can christianize pagan things and what God feels about that. Isaiah 5 beginning in verse 20, because can we spiritualize away things and make them Christian or make them godly? Can we christianize something and make it good? Isaiah 5:20-21 says, "Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil; who put darkness for light, and light for darkness; who put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter." Verse 21, "Woe to those who are wise in their own eyes, and prudent in their own sight." So we can see that just because something looks right or acceptable doesn't mean that God approves of it. We can't christianize something. We can't make something holy. God can do that. In Leviticus 23, Leviticus 23, Moses declares the feasts of the Lord, the feasts of the Lord of Israel. And we read about God's Holy Days, those days that God instituted for mankind in Leviticus 23. We see that God made those days holy.

It was He who made them holy. In fact, in Leviticus 23, the word "holy" is found 12 times, and the phrase "feasts of the Lord" is found 4 times. Let's read a couple of those. Leviticus 23:2, "Speak to the children of Israel, and say to them: 'The feasts of the Lord, which you shall proclaim to be a holy convocation, these are My feasts." Verse 4, "These are the feasts of the Lord, holy convocations which you shall proclaim at their appointed times." Verse 7, "On the first day, you shall have a holy convocation; you shall do no customary work on it." Verse 8, "The seventh day shall be a holy convocation; you shall do no customary work on it." Verse 21, "And you shall proclaim the same day that it is a holy convocation." These are all talking about the different feasts and Sabbaths of God that He made holy. Verse 35, "On the first day there shall be a holy convocation. You shall do no customary work on it." And verse 37, "These are the feasts of the Lord which you shall proclaim to be holy convocations." God gave Israel His Holy Days, His days of worship. He called them holy. He made them holy, and He warned nation Israel against doing as the heathens did, against bringing in heathen practices into the worship, the holy worship that God had.

He warned Israel against "christianizing" heathen things. Turn with me to Deuteronomy 12, Deuteronomy 12, because here God's given Israel advice about their future. And He tells them as they enter into the land of Israel, the land of Canaan, the Promised Land, He tells them how they're supposed to worship. Deuteronomy 12, beginning in verse 1, "These are the statutes and judgments which you shall be careful to observe in the land which the Lord God of your fathers is giving you to possess all the days that you live on the earth. You shall utterly destroy all the places where the nations which you shall dispossess serve their gods, on the high mountains and on the hills and under every green tree." Verse 3,"And you shall destroy their altars, break their sacred pillars and burn their wooden images with fire; you shall cut down the carved images of their gods and destroy their names in that place. You shall not worship the Lord your God with such things." Verse 4 clearly states that we're not supposed to be using these other religious practices to worship God with. We're not supposed to be mixing these things in with godly worship.

We really can't spiritualize or christianize a practice that God does not want us to do. Drop down to verse 29, "When the Lord your God cuts off from before you the nations which you shall go to dispossess, and you displace them and dwell in their land," verse 30, "take heed to yourselves that you are not ensnared to follow them, after they are destroyed from before you, that you do not inquire after their gods saying, 'How did these nations serve their gods? I also will do likewise.' You shall not worship the Lord your God in that way; for every abomination of the Lord which He hates they have done to their gods; for they burn even their sons and daughters in the fire to their gods." Verse 32, "Whatever I command you, be careful to observe it; you shall not add to it nor take away from it." In these four verses, the words "careful" and "take heed" are used in connection with these admonitions. That they were supposed to be careful and take heed that they did not mix in these other practices with God's practices. Just as we're not supposed to mix in worldly practices that aren't right in with our practices and with God's practices.

And we know what happened to Israel in the end. They eventually went into captivity. Let's read about that. 2 Kings 17, 2 Kings 17, they went into captivity because of their sins. 2 Kings 17 talks about the nation of Israel going into captivity by Shalmaneser, King of Assyria. 2 Kings 17, beginning in verse 5. "Now the king of Assyria went throughout all the land, and went up to Samaria and besieged it for three years. In the ninth year of Hoshea, the king of Assyria took Samaria and carried Israel away to Assyria, and placed them in Halah and by the Habor, the River of Gozan, and in the cities of the Medes." Okay, why why were they taken away? What caused them to go into captivity?

Verse 7, "For so it was that the children of Israel had sinned against the Lord their God, who had brought them up out of the land of Egypt, from under the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt; and they had feared other gods, and had walked in the statutes of the nations whom the Lord had cast out from before the children of Israel, and of the kings of Israel, which they had made. Also the children of Israel secretly did against the Lord their God things that were not right, and they built for themselves high places in all their cities, from watchtower to fortified city. They set up for themselves sacred pillars and wooden images on every high hill and under every green tree. There they burned incense on all the high places, like the nations whom the Lord had carried away before them; and they did wicked things to provoke the Lord to anger, for they served idols, of which the Lord had said to them, 'You shall not do this thing.'" Two reasons that God gives for Israel going into captivity, here, are one. Israel walked in the statutes of the pagan nations around them.

If you remember earlier on, God had told them that they were supposed to destroy everything that was idol worshiping, from all these nations that they were supposed to dispossess. And the second reason they went into captivity is Israel took on the religious trappings of other religions and worshiped other gods. Those are the two reasons. It should be a history, that history of Israel should remind us that we need to be careful about not doing that ourselves.

Let's take a look at a couple of times in Israel's history where they tried to merge the worship of God, the true God, with paganism. Turn with me to Exodus 32 for the first example, Exodus 32. Now, this is the point in Exodus where Israel had just recently left Egypt. It's very fresh in their mind, and God had recently given them the Ten Commandments.

And as we begin in Exodus 32, God had called Moses up to Mt. Sinai to give him instructions that he could give to Israel. But to the people, they thought, "Well, what happened to Moses? He hasn't come back. Is he lost? Is he dead? He hasn't come back yet." So let's pick up the story in verse 1. Exodus 32:1, "But when the people saw that Moses delayed coming down from the mountain, the people gathered together to Aaron, and said to him, 'Come, make us gods that shall go before us; for as for this Moses, the man who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we do not know what has become of him.' And Aaron said to them, 'Break off the golden earrings which are in the ears of your wives, your sons, and your daughters, and bring them to me.'" Verse 3, "So all the people broke off the golden earrings which were in their ears, and brought them to Aaron." And verse 4, "And he received the gold from their hand, and he fashioned it with an engraving tool, and made a molded calf. Then he said, 'This is your god, O Israel, that brought you out of the land of Egypt.'"

This wasn't throwing away the true God who brought them out of Egypt. They were just changing Him a little bit so they could better identify with Him. They still called this image the "god who brought you out of the land of Egypt." Verse 5, "So when Aaron saw it, he built an altar before it. And an Aaron made a proclamation and said, 'Tomorrow is a feast to the LORD.'" If you take a look at your Bible, how is that word "Lord" written? It's one of those all capitals. That's the name of the true God. It's the Yahweh, the Jehovah, however you want to pronounce it. He was saying that tomorrow is going to be a feast to the real God. So Israel wasn't doing away with the real, real God, they were just changing how they were going to worship Him.

That calf was supposed to be worshiped as the true God. What did God think about this? Verse 7, "And the Lord said to Moses, 'Go, get down for your people whom you brought out of the land of Egypt have corrupted themselves. They have turned aside quickly out of the way which I commanded them. They have made themselves a molded calf, and worshiped and sacrificed to it and said, 'This is your god, O Israel, that brought you out of the land of Egypt.' And the Lord said to Moses, 'I have seen this people, and indeed it is a stiff-necked people.'" Verse 10, "'Now therefore, let Me alone, that My wrath may burn hot against them and I may consume them. And I will make of you a great nation.'" God is angry at this. He's angry at what's happening. He's angry that Israel has changed the proper worship into a pagan worship, changed and added something that's wrong to the worship of Him. God wants us to worship Him His way. He doesn't want us to invent new things, to mix things in with His worship. He doesn't want us to create our own way of worship.

So we've seen many of the practices from Christmas are actually from other religions, other gods. This calf that Israel put together, that was a calf that they had probably seen in Egypt and brought along. They had been used to possibly worshiping a calf before. It made it easier for them to identify this new God, but you can't christianize a wrong practice.

We actually find another example of a calf showing up in similar like in another place. 1 Kings 12, 1 Kings 12. We see another golden calf showing up in the history of Israel. And this time, it's actually connected very closely with holy days. 1 Kings 12, if you remember, this is the time when Solomon was dead and Rehoboam is made the new leader of Israel. And people come to Rehoboam and they say…and Jeroboam is one of the men who comes and say, "You know, your taxes are so much. Are you going to lighten our load?" And after counseling with his counselors, Rehoboam comes back and says, "Well, my taxes are going to be worse than Solomon’s ever were." And at that time, Jeroboam quickly goes up and goes, “Everybody to their camps,” and they start this new nation of Israel and separate themselves from Judah.

And it's a time when Jeroboam has a time he can create this nation that follows God. He's got a chance to do that, but what does he do? He doesn't do that. He sets up a blended religion again. 1 Kings 12, we read about this time. 1 Kings 12 beginning in verse 26, "And Jeroboam said in his heart, 'Now the kingdom may return to the house of David." He's afraid they're going to go down south, become part of Judah. "'If these people go up to offer sacrifices in the house of the Lord at Jerusalem, then the heart of this people will turn back to their lord, Rehoboam king of Judah, and they will kill me and go back to Rehoboam king of Judah.'" So Jeroboam's worried, "What's going to happen to me if these people go down to Judah, worship the true God? They're going to want to go back to Judah. They're going to want to go back. How do I keep this from happening?"

Verse 28, "Therefore the king asked advice, made two calves of gold, and said to the people, 'It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem. Here are your gods, O Israel, that brought you up from the land of Egypt.' And he set up one in Bethel, and the other he put in Dan. Now this thing became a sin, for the people went to worship before the one as far as Dan." Verse 31, "And he made shrines on the high places, and made priests of every class of people, who were not of the sons of Levi." Again, Israel goes back to golden calves, hearkening back to that time in Sinai, when they had just recently come out of Egypt. But if you notice what Jeroboam said, what did he call them? These gods where the “gods that brought them out from the land of Egypt.” He is mixing the true God with his own religion.

He doesn't tell Israel, "Hey, let's go ahead and worship some totally different God." He brings back the true God. Let's look at verse 32, "Jeroboam ordained a feast on the fifteenth day of the eighth month, like the Feast that was in Judah, and offered sacrifices on the altar. So he did at Bethel, sacrificing to the calves that he had made. And at Bethel he installed the priests of the high places which he had made." Verse 33, "So he made offerings on the altar which he had made at Bethel on the fifteenth day of the eighth month, in the month which he had devised in his own heart. And he ordained a feast for the children of Israel, and offered sacrifices on the altar and burned incense." Feast in the 15th day of the 8th month. The Feast of Tabernacles is the 15th day of the 7th month, just one month different. He was modifying and changing even the Holy Days and giving new meaning to them.

The Bible Commentary from the UCG.org website says this about Jeroboam. "Jeroboam was a practitioner of syncretism, the blending of traditions, beliefs, and elements from different religions with God's true religion, which God strictly forbids in Deuteronomy 12:29-31," which we already read. "Some elements such as priests, worship centers, and religious festivals, to some degree imitated the worship system God had established. Yet Jeroboam added his own twists for his own ends and purposes. He palmed off his plans under the guise of making worship easier for Israel. Why have all Israel go to Jerusalem in the far south?" And then continuing on further down in the article, it says, "Jeroboam's new religion, it should be pointed out, was not really all that new. He still worshiped God in name, but with his own changes. Idolatry was sanctioned, acceptable places for worship were changed and a new priesthood was inaugurated. Jeroboam did not rush wholesale into apostasy, the worship of a foreign god. Instead, he merely ‘made things a little easier’ for Israel to worship the God of Abraham. Such gradual change is typically the pattern of apostasy-and we must always be on guard against it."

If you remember those comments I made towards the beginning of this message about that bishop in South Africa? That's what they're trying to do. Make it easier for those Zulus to become Christians. That's not what God wants. You know, what was God's reaction to mixing these, the idolatry with the true religion? If we move over a couple of chapters, chapter 14, we see the punishment that God gave to Israel.

1 Kings 14 beginning in verse 14, "'Moreover the Lord will raise up for Himself a king over Israel who shall cut off the house of Jeroboam," this king who had put this into place. This is the day. What? “Even now. For the Lord shall strike Israel, as a reed is shaken in the water. He will uproot Israel from this good land which He gave to their fathers, and will scatter them beyond the River, because they have made their wooden images, provoking the Lord to anger. And He will give Israel up because of the sins of Jeroboam, who sinned and who made Israel sin." Again, just like the first time of the golden calf, God was not happy. And we already read earlier on where the king of Assyria came down and took Israel captive because of their sins. God clearly does not want us to mix true religion with unrighteous practices. We can't christianize something that isn't Christian. You know, someone in the Home Office once told my wife that worshiping God by celebrating Christmas is like marrying somebody who was married before, and they wanted you to do all the things that they had done with their previous spouse. It would be like them asking you to go out to the old restaurants they had gone with the other spouse, watching all those old movies they had enjoyed together or TV shows. Even asking them to maybe wear the perfume of the person that you are no longer married to and they really liked, asked you to start wearing your hair like that other spouse, maybe the clothes like the other spouse, maybe even grabbed out of the closet some clothes that they had worn and said, "Here, please wear them."

You start thinking that maybe that person really didn't love you, but they were still in love with the other person who is no longer their spouse. Can you imagine what God feels like when people bring in practices that aren't part of His true worship and say, "I want to worship you with these practices"? I think He would feel a lot the same." We cannot christianize pagan beliefs. Like that evangelist at the beginning of the sermon said.

You know, going back to that evangelist, there's a little bit more that he had in his little transcript. I'd like to read just a couple more comments from it. The evangelist says, "I hope I didn't shock you or was irreverent, but it is the way it is." Then the host asked, "Well, when are you putting up your Christmas tree?" and chuckles. And the evangelist then talks about the tree he had bought and had put up in his house and then the evangelist says at the end, "I like all the decorations, very pretty, but, pagan," and he chuckles, "christianized pagan."

Should we keep Christmas? To most people on the streets, this would seem like a crazy question. What's the difference? But we can see clearly that does make a difference to God. It does make a difference to God, and the answer is "No." We cannot keep Christmas. It makes a difference. It does really matter. If we know it's wrong, it becomes sin and there's no way you can put Christ back in Christmas. There's no way you can christianize it. Instead of Christmas and those other holidays, God has given us a set of feasts by which we're supposed to worship Him. We keep the Passover, keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread, keep Pentecost, the Feast of Tabernacles, and the other Holy Days that God gave to Israel. God gave to us, to mankind to worship Him on and to keep. He gave those to ancient Israel and they're still valid for us today, and these are the days that He calls holy. They're still relevant to us today. They're not abandoned by God or His true saints. They haven't been replaced by Christmas or other days. The days that God has given to us, these holy days, teach the world and teach us the plan of salvation to mankind.

But that's another story for a whole new set of sermons.

 

Jamie Schreiber works in the Media Department at the Home Office in Cincinnati. He studied Digital Video and Media Production in Minneapolis, MN.

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