T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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723.1 | Whitsunday | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri May 05 1995 15:15 | 5 |
| Pentecost is June 4th.
Counting begins with Easter as day 1 and ends with Pentecost as day 50.
/john
|
723.2 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Fri May 05 1995 15:18 | 9 |
|
Welcome, Annette!
Jim
|
723.3 | Thank You | MAIL1::KILCREASE | | Fri May 05 1995 16:08 | 7 |
| Thanks for your quick response. I needed that answer for Sunday. We
will be discussing The Pentacost in our Sunday School adult class on
this Sunday. I want to make sure I'm on the right track.
I appreciate the welcome note also.
Thanks
|
723.4 | more on Shavuot | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Fri May 05 1995 17:16 | 8 |
| My Hebrew calendar says it's June 4th and 5th. The 3rd is Erev
Shavuot. A good way to remember is by Counting the Omer. It's 50 days
from the Feast of First Fruits to Shavuot.
btw - it's also the anniversary of the giving of the Torah on Mt. Sinai
as well as the day Enoch was raptured.
Mike
|
723.5 | ANY MORE INFO ON THE PENTWACOST? | MAIL1::KILCREASE | | Fri May 05 1995 17:29 | 7 |
| This is very interesting. I would like any information that anyone have
concerning The Pentacost to please share it with me.
It seems that there is more to be learned that what I'm already aware
of. For instance the day Enoch was raptured. I never knew that.
Thanks.
|
723.6 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Fri May 05 1995 17:38 | 4 |
|
PenEcost ;-)
|
723.8 | always 50 days from Feast of First Fruits | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Fri May 05 1995 19:26 | 5 |
| >Christian observance of Pentecost is based on the date the Christian Church
>observes the anniversary of the Resurrection, not the date of Passover.
Well let them be wrong then. Thousands of years of Hebrew tradition
says otherwise.
|
723.9 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri May 05 1995 19:29 | 81 |
| From the Travels of Egeria, Abbess, and Pilgrim to Jerusalem [late 4th cent.]
On the feast of Pentecost, which falls on Sunday, everything is done exactly
according to custom from the first cockcrow. The vigil is held in the
Anastasis, so that the bishop may read the passage from the Gospel which
is always read on Sundays, that of the Resurrection of the Lord. Afterwards,
the customary ritual is carried out in the Anastasis, just as it is throughout
the year. As soon as it is morning, all the people assemble for the liturgy
in the major church, in the Martyrium, where everything customarily done is
accomplished. The priests preach and afterwards the bishop. All the
prescribed rites are accomplished, that is, the sacrifice is offered in the
manner in which it is customarily done on Sunday. On this one day, however,
the dismissal is moved up in the Martyrium, so that it is given before the
third hour.
As soon as the dismissal has been given in the Martyrium, all the people
without exception, singing hymns, lead the bishop to Sion, but in such a
manner that they are in Sion at precisely the third hour. when they arrive,
there is read from the Acts of the Apostles that passage in which the Holy
Spirit came down so that all tongues might be heard and all might understand
what was being said. Afterwards the divine service is celebrated in the
prescribed manner. Now the priests read there from the Acts of the Apostles
that passage which is read because this is the place on Sion -- the church
now is something elese -- where at an earlier time, after the Passion of the
Lord, the multitude was gathered with the apostles, and where that which we
mentioned above was done. Afterwards, the divine service is celebrated in
the prescribed manner, and the sacrifice is offered. Then, just before the
people are dismissed, the archdeacon raises his voice to say: "Today,
immediately after the sixth hour, let us all be ready at the Imbomon on the
Eleona." All the people then return home, each one to rest.
Immediately after lunch, everyone, insofar as is possible, goes up to the
Mount of Olives, that is to the Eleona, with the result that not a single
Christian remains in the city, for they have all gone. As soon as they have
climbed the Mount of Olives, the Eleona, that is, they go first of all to the
Imbomon, that is, to the place from which the Lord ascended into heaven. The
bishop sits down there, and the priests and all the people, too. Passages
from Scripture are read, hymns are interspersed and sung, and also antiphons
proper to the day itself and the place are sung. The prayers which are
interspersed are said in such a manner that they fit both the day and the
place. Then the passage from the Gospel is read which speaks of the
Ascension of the Lord; then there is the reading from the Acts of the Apostles
which speaks of the Ascension of the Lord into Heaven after the Resurrection.
When this has been done, the catechumens are blessed and then the faithful.
Then at the ningth hour everyone comes down from there and goes, singing hymns,
to the church which is also on the Eleona, that is to say, in that grotto
where the Lord sat teaching the apostles. By the time they arrive there it
is already past the tenth hour. Vespters is held there, a prayer is said,
the catechumens and the faithful are blessed.
Then all the people without exception come down from there singing hymns,
everyone together with the bishop singing hymns and antiphons proper to the
day itself. And in this fashion they make their way slowly and easily to
the Martyrium. When they reach the city gate, it is already night, and
around two hundred church candles are brought out for the people. Since
it is quite far from the city gate to the major church or Martyrium, it is
definitely around the second hour of the night when they arrive, because
they move slowly and easily all the way so that the people will not be tired
out from walking. And when the great doors which are on the market street
side are opened, then all the people, singing hymns, enter the Martyrium
with the bishop.
After they have entered the church, hymns are sung, a prayer is said, and
the catechumens and then the faithful are blessed. From there, everyone,
singing hymns, then goes to the Anastasis. When they have arrived at the
Anastasis, in like manner hymns and antiphones are sung, a prayer is said,
and the catechumens and then the faithful are blessed. And the same thing
is done at the Cross.
Then all the Christian people without exception, singing hymns, lead the
bishop to Sion. When they get there, appropriate passages from Scripture
are read, Psalms and antiphons as well are sung, and a prayer is said. The
catechumens are blessed and then the faithful, and the dismissal is given.
Once the dismissal has been given, everyone comes forth to kiss the bishop's
hand. Everone then returns to his own home around midnight.
And so a great deal of toil is borne on this day, for the vigil at the
Anastasis starts with the first cockcrow, and from then on throughout the
whole day there is no stopping. Everything that is celebrated is drawn
out to the point that only at midnight, after dismissal has been given at
Sion, does everyone return home.
|
723.10 | This is the Pentecost topic, not the Shavuot topic | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri May 05 1995 19:33 | 11 |
| > Well let them be wrong then. Thousands of years of Hebrew tradition
> says otherwise.
Thousands of years of Hebrew tradition were swept aside when the Holy Spirit
blew through the room where the multitude was assembled.
Now Pentecost is no longer a festival for the Jews, but the commemoration of
the birth of the Christian Church. It is commemorated fifty days after the
Resurrection.
/john
|
723.11 | Shavuot - First Fruits & Revelation | MTHALE::JOHNSON | A rare blue and gold afternoon | Fri May 05 1995 19:59 | 62 |
| I always find it a wonder, the depth and breadth of meaning in the
Biblical holidays, and how they illustrate God's redemptive plan
for humanity. I stand in awe of the beauty, meaning, and purpose
that the Lord God reveals in the unfolding of history and the Biblical
holidays He has ordained to show experientially to us His ultimate purposes.
Unfortunately, the Christian tradition has lost some of the understanding
of the Biblical holidays. One of the things that I have strongly felt is
to share what I have been learning about all of this so other believers
can again embrace the whole picture of God's Holy Word and mighty works.
It is especially appropriate to talk about this in relationship to Pentecost
(Greek) or Shavuot as the holiday is known in Hebrew because Shavuot is all
about God's revelation to us, and in some ways about completion as well.
Pentecost means 50. The Hebrew, Shavuot, means weeks. You can read about
the institution of this holiday by God through Moses in Leviticus 23:15-21.
The Israelites are commanded to count 7 weeks of sabbaths starting from the
sabbath after Passover. The day after the count is finished is to be a holy
day, a convocation to the Lord, a sabbath in which they are to bring the
temple the first of their grain harvest and offer it to the Lord in what
was known as a wave offering. This day, then is the fiftieth day, and
that is why its called Penecost in the Greek.
Now if you notice, in Leviticus, because of this counting between Passover
and Shavuot, these two holidays are tied to together. There is also another
significant event noted in there as well which also involves a wave-offering
of a sort of pre-harvest. Going over it more detail, on the 14th of Nisan
there is Passover - a commemoration of the blood of the Lamb painted on
the doorposts protecting those within from the plague of the death of the
firstborn. Jesus (in Hebrew, His name is Yeshua which means salvation) is
our Passover Lamb. His death happened as the Passover Lambs were being
sacrificed in the temple. On the fifteenth, the seven day festival of
unleavened bread begins. This is regarded as a sabbath. On the day after
the sabbath, a grain offering was presented as a wave offering in the temple.
(23:11). This one very special sheaf of grain was cut from the field
just prior to sunset before that sabbath so that it would could be prepared
for offering following the sabbath. I think it is Alfred Eidershiem who
notes that probably at the same time this was being done, Yeshua was cut
down from the execution stake and laid in the tomb of Joseph of Arimethea.
Yeshua was ressurected after the completion of the sabbath so they he could
be presented as the risen Lord, THE FIRST FRUITS of the resurrection, on
the same day this first sheaf of grain was being presented in the temple.
Going back again to the original Passover, Jewish tradition teaches that
on Shavuot God gave the Torah to them through Moses on Mt. Sinai. What
is the Torah - IT IS GOD'S REVEALED WORD TO THEM. At this time, the
Torah was written on tablets of stone, but God promised that He would write
His Word on hearts of flesh. Amazing, is it not, that it is on the Shavuot
following Yeshua's death and resurrection, that God fills Yeshua's followers
with His Ruach haKodesh (Holy Spirit), essentially further revealing in
their hearts, the Living Word who is Yeshua the Messiah!
Yeshua is the First Fruit of the resurrection, when we yield ourselves to
Him, we offer the harvest of our heart before the Lord, and in turn, we
are pledged to eternal life. I think its all quite amazing and wonderful!
There is more that could be said about this holiday, but we'll never have
dinner tonight if I don't go home now, and I missed lunch so I've got to
stop, but I will enter an excerpt I have from a Jewish writing about Shavuot
which may also give you some insight into this wonderful holiday that is a
present installment on the joy still to come in the resurrection when things
will be made even more clear to us.
Leslie
|
723.12 | Excerpt | MTHALE::JOHNSON | A rare blue and gold afternoon | Fri May 05 1995 20:07 | 106 |
| -< Shavuot: Everlasting Weeks (R. Riskin, 1991) >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shabbat Shalom: Shavuot (Bamidbar)
by Shlomo Riskin
Efrat, Israel -- In attempting to understand the deeper sig-
nificance of the festival of Shavuot, let's begin with the name
itself, most unusual because Shavuot --literally 'Weeks'-- is
a term fundamentally different from the descriptive appellations
of the other Biblical Festivals . Passover refers to G-d's
"skipping" over of the Hebrew houses when He smate the Egyp-
tian first-born. Sukkot to the booths in their desert so-
journ, Rosh Hashana the first day of the New Year, Yom Kippur the
Day of forgiveness. Shavuot is in a class by itself, a name which
seems only peripherally connected to a festival that celebrates
both the bringing of the First Fruits (Bikkurim) and the giving
of the Torah (Matan Torah).
"Weeks" as a name reverberates in time suggests an interim
period, and what we must logically conclude is that what is
being stressed is the festival's connection to Passover.
After all, seven weeks before Shavuot a count began, en-
joining us to number, seven weeks - forty nine days, and re-
plete with specific laws on how to count, what to do if one
forgets, the proper blessings, and even a kabbalistic grid
based on the seven Emanations of the Divine in His relation-
ship to world (S'firot).
Besides the matter of counting each passing day between Passover
and Shavuot, there is also a textual connection which binds
the two festivals. On the night of the Seder, a central pas-
sage in the Haggadah recounts the beginnings of the Jewish
people by quoting a passage from the twenty-sixth chapter of
Deuteronomy: "An Aramean sought to destroy my father; and he went
down to Egypt and he dwelled there, a handful, few in number.
There he became a nation, great, mighty and numerous." The fa-
ther referred to is Jacob, and it is this experience, Jacob's
first exile from Israel, foreshadowing his eventual descent to
Egypt, which is as far back as the Haggadah reaches in depicting
the history of Hebrew enslavement and freedom.
Speculating why the Haggadah goes back to this point in time
choosing to site a passage from Deuteronomy rather then the ini-
tial story of Egypt in the Book of Exodus is a homiletic
goldmine, but for us this passage illuminates the Passover-
Shavuot connection. The quote about the Aramean destroying
bringing his Bikkurim, the First Fruits to the temple in
Jerusalem. The Torah commands that "...you must place it in a
basket, and go to the site that G-d will choose...The priest
shall then take the basket from your hand and place it before
the altar of G-d your Lord. You shall then make the follow-
ing declaration:... My ancestor was a homeless Aramean. He went
to Egypt with a small number of men and lived there as an
immigrant, but it was there that he became a great, powerful and
populous nation...'" [Deut. 26:5-10].
Thus the words recited upon bringing the First Fruits --an
essential part of Shavuot-- is already present in the actual text
of the Haggadah. This means it is impossible to go through
the Seder without first tasting on one's lips what will unfold 50
days hence. Not only is Shavuot intimately bound with Pass-
over, but linking the two tells me that without Shavuot, Passover
is incomplete. And indeed, Passover was only the tentative
first steps of Jewish freedom, both from a physical and spiritual
perspective! Yes, Passover signals Jewish freedom from Egyp-
tian servitude, Israeli exodus. But in reality the just-freed
Israelites must confront the emptiness of a frightening
desert. The generation that left Egypt with Moses never made it
to the promised land, dying in a landscape which the ancient
world believed imbued with the spirit of pre-civilization, stark
and dangerous. An end to slavery is only a beginning; but
what lies ahead for the Israelites, what shall they discover in
this new terrain? For many, the desert experience must have
seemed like "out of the frying pan, into the fire."
And even from a spiritual vantage point, Passover is when G-d
wrought great miracles for the Jewish people, demonstrating His
love and concern. But even though we could apprehend G-d's
nearness as never before, we still did not know what G-d wanted
from us. How may we serve Him, what are His expectations, and to
what religious aspiration ought we dedicate our lives? The
responses to these understandable questions have not yet been re-
vealed to the wandering Hebrew by the advent of Passover.
Enter Shavuot. Its two dimensions, First Fruits and Torah,
speak directly to completing the redemptive process be-
gun on Passover.
The first fruits, the Bikkurim, express the physical in a
profound way. Here we are, in our own land, farming our own
earth, proudly presenting the crops produced with our own sweat
and toil, being brought to our Holy Temple. But in addition to
providing an experience of true home-coming in a total en-
vironment of material and physical sanctity, this day also un-
veils the essence of spirituality: it is on Shavuot that we
learn what G-d wants from us as a people when He reveals the
Torah through Moses, a gift that enables us to begin to fathom
the mystery between G-d and His universe, and to traverse the
chasm between heaven and earth.
Passover may be the beginning of redemption, and Shavuot may
complete it, but what we see from the name "Weeks" is how criti-
cal are the days in between, the essense of the Jewish
experience.
|
723.13 | Psalm 33 - God's Plans are Eternal | MTHALE::JOHNSON | A rare blue and gold afternoon | Fri May 05 1995 20:26 | 17 |
|
Oh, and perhaps needless to say, I don't agree with John. I see
the whole of God's dealing with humanity as a continuum. God is
faithful, steadfast, changeless, and sure. He had a plan in the
begining that is unfolding all the way from pre-Genesis to today and
beyond in a way that fits together and will make sense when we
too can finally see the whole thing. His promises to Adam and
Chava (Eve), to Noah, to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, to Moses &
the nation of Israel, the Jewish people, are not undone or changed,
yet we too are heirs according to the promise. None of it is
wiped away, swept away, or done away with. God is awesome, loving,
and eternal. Layer upon layer build upon each other, adding depth,
meaning, and understanding.
'Night all.
Leslie
|
723.14 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri May 05 1995 20:53 | 10 |
| While I don't think you are conciously being what St. Paul called a
Judaizer, you do seem to be stuck in the Old Testament paradigms which
the Epistle to the Hebrews tells us have passed away and been replaced
by that which was instituted by Christ.
You are correct that God's promises are timeless and unchanging. But
the way in which he calls us to respond to those promises do change and
did change radically when Our Lord and Saviour rose from the dead.
/john
|
723.15 | | BBQ::WOODWARDC | between the Glory and the Flame | Sat May 06 1995 03:12 | 11 |
| Hi guys,
whilst essentially being a 'chicken', and not really wishing to
wade in where I am *really* out of my depth - may I suggest that we
accept that we have the freedom in Christ/Messiah to observe, or
not, as we feel led by God, the various traditions - be they less
than 2000 years old, or greater than 3000 or so?
I Love each of you as my Brother and my Sister,
Harry
|
723.16 | what Harry said! and furthermore... | CUJO::SAMPSON | | Sat May 06 1995 13:45 | 14 |
| John, the Jewish feasts haven't been swept aside, *especially* for
the Jewish people. They have each been *fulfilled* in Christ. Today, their
institution under the Old Covenant, and their fulfillment under the New
Covenant, both stand side by side as two witnesses establishing the truth
and power of God's redemptive plan.
They are beautifully intertwined and related. They cannot be
separated and forced into separate, antagonistic traditions. Passover
*became* the Crucifixion, etc.
The New Covenant does supersede the Old Covenant, within the hearts
of those who put their trust in Jesus (Yeshua) as their personal Christ
(Messiah). This is not supposed to be a battle between competing traditions,
for heaven's sake!
|
723.17 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sat May 06 1995 15:15 | 9 |
| I am not trying to create antagonism; it is Mark Heiser who challenged
the Christian Church's setting of the date of Pentecost based on the
date of Easter. It was Mark Heiser who said the Christian Church was wrong.
We are not talking about what's right for Jews. We are talking about the
Christian celebration of the anniversary of the founding of the Church,
about the Christian celebration of Pentecost. See .0.
/john
|
723.18 | | BBQ::WOODWARDC | between the Glory and the Flame | Sat May 06 1995 23:57 | 32 |
| John,
there _is_ the possibility (all be it slight in many minds) that for
1800 years or so, the church *has* got it wrong?
I don't really think whether 'we' celebrate Jesus of Nazareth's death
on 'The Day of Preparation [for Passover]' or whether we celebrate it
on Good (God's) Friday; whether we celebrate His Resurrection on the
'Festival of First-Fruits' or whether we chose 'Easter Sunday'
shouldn't *really* matter either. Let's face it, the Orthodox celebrate
'Easter' at a different time from the 'Roman' tradition - should we
'rip into them' as well?
This horse has been thrashed to a bloodied pulp previously, with many
postings and cross-postings and counter-postings about should the
church have retained the Jewish Holy-Days, or should it have adopted
the holy-days of the pagans? The past is, let's face it, the past.
We *have* the FREEDOM in Christ, our Risen and ascended Lord and
Saviour, to celebrate these times _as_we_see_fit_as_we_stand_before_God_.
"I am of Paul!" "I am of Apollos!" "I am of Peter!" "I am of [insert
name here]!"
Believe it or not, we are *ALL* "of Christ". We have a common enemy to
deal with, and that enemy is dangerous, subtle, and ever present.
I know that my Redeemer lives!
In Him who has the Name above *all* Names,
Harry
|
723.19 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sun May 07 1995 00:39 | 9 |
| Western Christian dates for Pentecost for the rest of the millenium:
1995 June 4th
1996 May 26th
1997 May 18th
1998 May 31st
1999 May 23rd
2000 June 11th
|
723.20 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sun May 07 1995 00:50 | 26 |
| Hail thee, festival day! blest day that art hallowed for ever,
Day when the Holy Ghost shone in the world with God's grace.
Lo, in the likeness of fire, on those who await his appearing,
He whom the Lord foretold suddenly swiftly descends:
Hail thee, festival day! blest day that art hallowed for ever,
Day when the Holy Ghost shone in the world with God's grace.
Forth from the Father he comes with seven fold mystical offering,
Pouring on all human souls infinite riches of God:
Hail thee, festival day! blest day that art hallowed for ever,
Day when the Holy Ghost shone in the world with God's grace.
Hark! for in myriad tongues Christ's own, his chosen apostles,
Preach to the ends of the earth Christ and his wonderful works:
Hail thee, festival day! blest day that art hallowed for ever,
Day when the Holy Ghost shone in the world with God's grace.
Praise to the Spirit of Life, all praise to the fount of our being,
Light that dost lighten all, life that in all dost abide:
Hail thee, festival day! blest day that art hallowed for ever,
Day when the Holy Ghost shone in the world with God's grace.
|
723.21 | sorry about the dead horse | CUJO::SAMPSON | | Sun May 07 1995 13:19 | 3 |
| Well, I don't want to thrash a dead horse. I don't think Mike
got anything "wrong" by contributing info on Jewish roots, or tried to
antagonize anyone, or needed to be "corrected" by Church tradition.
|
723.22 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sun May 07 1995 18:52 | 5 |
| re .21
Nor do I. But that's not all he did.
/john
|
723.24 | God is the same yesterday, today, forever | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Mon May 08 1995 13:34 | 15 |
| >While I don't think you are conciously being what St. Paul called a
>Judaizer, you do seem to be stuck in the Old Testament paradigms which
>the Epistle to the Hebrews tells us have passed away and been replaced
>by that which was instituted by Christ.
Hebrews says only the Old Covenant was replaced. The feasts and
holidays prescribed by God and how He says to celebrate them have not
changed.
The Holy Spirit was given to the church on Pentecost, but that doesn't
mean we are to forget our roots. The object lessons within Pentecost,
divinely inspired by God, are still valid today for teaching ourselves
as well as our children.
Mike
|
723.25 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Mon May 08 1995 13:39 | 17 |
| >I am not trying to create antagonism; it is Mark Heiser who challenged
>the Christian Church's setting of the date of Pentecost based on the
>date of Easter. It was Mark Heiser who said the Christian Church was wrong.
Who's Mark Heiser?
*Most* Christian and Catholic churches don't celebrate Pentecost the
way God commanded it to be celebrated. Half of Christianity's roots
come from Judaism. Are we to ignore the roots set forth by God Himself
in His word? Do you cut out the photos of older generations from your
family album?
As Leslie stated so well, God has been working on a continuum. There
isn't anything in the NT that wasn't first introduced in the OT. The
OT is the NT concealed. The NT is the OT revealed.
Mike
|
723.26 | I prefer God's Word | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Mon May 08 1995 13:42 | 4 |
| It pretty much boils down to what you place more faith in: tradition or
God's Word. I choose the latter.
Mike
|
723.27 | Christians observe Pentecost on the 7th Sunday after Easter | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon May 08 1995 15:31 | 13 |
| God's word says that the disciples were gathered in one place on the
Pentecost, that the Holy Spirit came, and that as a result of this,
they were able to go into all the world and teach the gospel.
That's what God's word says, and focusing on the gift of the Holy
Spirit to the Church is the most important aspect of the Christian
observance of Pentecost.
Examining what Shavuot meant to the Hebrews is all fine and good, but
the gift of the Holy Spirit, promised by Jesus and recorded in God's
word, overshadows anything prior to Our Lord's Death and Resurrection.
/john
|
723.28 | more on Shavuot | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Mon May 08 1995 15:44 | 28 |
| Shavuot - Pentecost (June)
--------------------------
The 50-day counting of the Omer culminates in a celebration - Pentecost, or
Shavuot in Hebrew. Also called Natan Torah, "Giving of the Torah," it was then
God gave the 10 Commandments (Exodus 19). Tradition teaches that the Lord
offered the 10 Commandments to 70 nations in Deuteronomy 32:8. His voice was
divided into those 70 languages amidst thunder, lightning, and a trumpet blast.
The giving of the Torah was surrounded by signs and wonders.
The festival of Shavuot arrived, and the believers gathered together in one
place. Suddenly there came a sound from the sky like the roar of a violent
wind, and it filled the whole house where they were sitting. They they saw what
looked like tongues of fire, which separated and came to rest on each of them.
Each was filled with the Ruach HaKodesh and began to talk in different
languages, as the Spirit enabled them to speak (Acts 2:1-4).
Every Jewish male was required to be in Jerusalem for Shavuot. As a result of
the supernatural intervention of God, this small group of Messianic Jews spoke
in tongues, or languages, of the many pilgrims from out of town.
When the Torah was first given, God inscribed it on tablets of stone. With the
coming of the Spirit, God wrote his Law on human hearts (Jeremiah 31:31-33).
Signs appeared again on the "living stones," the believers (1 Peter 2:5). They
heard the "blast," felt the rushing wind, and spoke, as tradition says God did,
in languages of the nations. The message of Messiah was spread as each Jewish
believer returned home from Shavuot.
Leviticus 23:15-21, Deuteronomy 16:9-10, Acts 2
|
723.29 | God's on a continuum | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Mon May 08 1995 15:46 | 7 |
| >Examining what Shavuot meant to the Hebrews is all fine and good, but
>the gift of the Holy Spirit, promised by Jesus and recorded in God's
>word, overshadows anything prior to Our Lord's Death and Resurrection.
Even the OT prophecy of the event?
Mike
|
723.30 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon May 08 1995 15:51 | 3 |
| Yes. An actual event overshadows its prophecy.
/john
|
723.31 | both are significant in the revelation of God's Word | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Mon May 08 1995 16:05 | 1 |
| Amazing.
|
723.32 | where's the beef? | CUJO::SAMPSON | | Mon May 08 1995 17:04 | 15 |
| Oy vey! John, you have tremendous, wonderful, and extensive
knowledge and understanding of historical Church teaching and tradition,
and all of us always appreciate your sharing it in here. Mike also has
some wonderful things to share with us about Jewish roots, history,
traditions, and teaching, which are marvellously related to our Christian
faith, and I want to encourage him to keep on sharing these.
If anyone has a bone to pick, and it concerns the wider readership,
please be more explicit about what exactly are your objections. If not,
please let's forget it or take it offline.
I don't think Mike would ever advocate allowing current Rabbinical
Jewish theological teaching (which, by the way, varies wildly from Rabbi
to Rabbi!) to replace or infiltrate Christian teaching. So, where's the
beef?
|
723.33 | Should add to our understanding and wonder, not detract from | MTHALE::JOHNSON | A rare blue and gold afternoon | Mon May 08 1995 17:41 | 58 |
| John, please do not react to what we have said on the basis of
us fault-finding the Catholic/Episcapalian tradition, which I
fear some of our more zealous words may have led you to do.
My intention in sharing the wonder of how God has been consistently
faithful in revealing Himself to us is not to nullify the value
of what happened on the Shavuot after Yeshua's resurrection, but
rather to share the ever deepening picture of how God interacts
with us. You are absolutely right that the event of the Ruach
haKodesh coming as a mighty wind and tongues of fire upon Yeshua's
followers is an outstanding one that deserves a response of awe,
wonder, joy, praise from us. But I do not understand how an appreciation
of the full realm of Shavuot's history and meaning detracts from this
event. It seems to me that it should add to our wonder and awe to
know that just as God chose Shavuot to reveal His written Torah and
complete the journey of the Israelites from a slave people to His people,
so He chose Shavuot to reveal His Word on the disciples hearts and to
complete their growth from followers to ambassadors and witnesses of
Yeshua.
What I did disagree with is your statement that everything in the past
was been swept away; I don't see it as swept away, but as added to. And it
was while I was writing my first two notes that you put in that note
about it all being swept away. My third note was in response to that.
Also, regarding your implication that I am a sub-concious Judaizer, and
stuck in an "O.T. paradigm": I hope you said that because you have a
different understanding from me as to what it means to be a Judaizer.
My definition can be found in the topic about Galations, and I hope that
nothing I have ever written would support the idea that our salvation
is by anything other than the death and resurrection of the Yeshua,
Almighty God, Son of the Father!
However, I do think that the Roman church and those that came out of
that tradition have lost much in their haste to toss away anything with
connection to Judaism because Judaism is the rootstock from which we've
come, and for centuries it was the Jewish people alone who carried the
treasure of God's revelation for the rest of the world. I think God has a
continuing interest in the Jewish people, and that the rest of the world
has much to regret and seek their forgiveness for. John Cogley, religious
editor for the N.Y. Times has written that shortly before his death Pope
John XXIII wrote this prayer:
"We are conscious today that many centuries of blindness have
cloaked our eyes so that we can no longer see the beauty of thy
chosen people [the Jews] nor recognize in their faces the features
of our privileged brethren. We realize the mark of Cain stands
upon our foreheads. Across the centuries our brother Abel [the Jews]
has lain in blood we drew, or the tears we caused by forgetting
thy love. Forgive us for the curse we falsely attached to their
names as Jews. Forgive us for crucifying thee a second time in
their flesh. For we knew not what we did." 1
Leslie
1 Return of the Remnant, Dr. Michael Schiffman, p. 88
---------------------
|
723.34 | wish I could be that gentle | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Mon May 08 1995 17:47 | 1 |
| Thank you, Leslie!
|
723.35 | Holy Spirit _Always_ Present In Converted Persons Hearts | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Tue May 09 1995 12:46 | 27 |
| Hi,
I just want to suggest that I think the fact that the Holy
Spirit was 'given' to the church at Pentecost can suggest
something that I do not believe is true.
The church already had the Spirit; they were already Christians.
Its impossible to be a Christian and to lack any presence of
Jesus Christ in the heart.
Pentecost was a time when they received a substantial amount of
the Holy Spirit and what prepared the Christians for this reception
was Christ teaching them for forty days following the cross and
the Christians praying and repenting (by God's grace of course)
like they had never done before. They happened to KNOW Christ hung
for them in a way they had never known it before and their hearts
were thus so usable by God and so He could just pour His presence
in without too much resistance (unbelief).
Again, anyone who is converted already has the Spirit in him.
Pentecost was an event wherein the Spirit was in the believers
in a substantial way.
The Holy Spirit was also in any converted person pre-cross as in
Psalm 51, "Take not Thy Holy Spirit from me."
Tony
|
723.36 | | OUTSRC::HEISER | the dumbing down of America | Tue May 09 1995 13:24 | 4 |
| I agree in a sense, Tony. Filling/Empowerment per Acts 1:8 is
different from the sealing you get when first saved.
Mike
|
723.37 | Ugh | NETCAD::PICKETT | David - This all seems oddly familiar... | Wed May 10 1995 09:21 | 6 |
| re .all
Arguing over a matter of adiaphora, in this case the date and mode of
celebration of Pentecost, is bad stewardship of one's time and talent.
dp
|