During the Feast of Tabernacles the
children of Israel went camping. Personally, I prefer hammock camping, but they
had some regulations and had to use a tent (also called tabernacles, or booths)
constructed from trees. In West Virginia, wilderness camping means go to Dolly
Sods and camping amongst the bears in the wild. But for the children of Israel,
wilderness camping meant something else. Leaving Egypt and wandering in the
wilderness before entering the promised land for 40 years was wilderness
camping for Israel.
God established an annual, weeklong
camping trip/feast, where they gathered together and lived in tents like their
forefathers did when they left Egypt (Leviticus 23:42-44). Every year, away
from home, they and remembered the old days and how God delivered their
ancestors from Pharaoh and brought them into the good land, flowing with milk
and honey. They also recalled, though God kept His promise, it was because of
the disobedience and hard hearts of their forefathers, they spent 40 years in
booths, rather than a couple weeks. "I know you want to go back home
Johnny, but imagine living like this for 40 years!"
The Feast of Tabernacles wasn't just
a family reunion, it was a solemn feast, a religious festival. They rejoiced in
God's goodness, in faith and thanksgiving (Deuteronomy 16:13-15). A weeklong Thanksgiving (sounds good to me!) praising the Lord for the blessing in
harvest and the hope God will bless in the future. They took a week after the
hard work of harvest was over, and praised God for his goodness, mercy, and
provision – He is the covenant keeping God.
The feast of tabernacles was also a
bloody week because there where a whole lot of sacrifices – 191 meat offerings,
191 drink offerings and 199 animal sacrifices. So much bloodshed and offering,
just in this one week, but it never appeased God’s wrath. Hebrews
10:4 For it is not possible that the blood of bulls and of goats should
take away sins. The sin was never taken away. Day after day, month after
month, year after year the priests offered sacrifice because the blood of bulls and goats was not
sufficient to take away sins. But this man [Jesus Christ], after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever, sat down on the
right hand of God; From henceforth expecting till his enemies be made his
footstool. For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are
sanctified (Hebrews 10:12-14). Old testament
animal sacrifices picture the true substitutionary atonement and blood
sacrifice for the forgiveness of sin. We
see in the unmarred, spotless animal sacrifice the picture of the pure and
sinless life, body and blood of the Lord Christ Jesus. Most strikingly, we see
the inability to appease God’s wrath with blood of bulls and goats. Rivers of
blood flowed in the Old Testament sacrifices, but God’s wrath was never
satisfied. Only in Christ’s substitutionary death on the cross was it said that
God was satisfied (Isaiah 53:11).
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