Book traversal links for Leviticus 23:1-25:23
 Chapter 22 ended with a solemn reminder to Israel of the holiness of Jehovah,
  who had brought them up from the land of Egypt to be their God. Chapter
  23 opens with the fact that He desired to have the people, whom He
  had thus redeemed, assembled before Him. A "convocation" is a "calling
  together," and this was to mark the feasts of the Lord. 
 The weekly sabbath is mentioned first of all. For six days work was to be
  done, but every seventh day was to be a time of complete rest. Other scriptures
  indicate the special character of the sabbath. For instance, Deuteronomy 5:
  15, states that it was to act as a reminder of their deliverance from Egypt.
  Again, Ezekiel 20: 12, shows that it stood as a sign between God and Israel,
  that there was a covenant between them. It signified rest after work accomplished.
  This was the case in creation when, after six days of work which was very good,
  God rested. Under the law Israel was to work for six days, and so earn a rest
  on the seventh. 
 In reading the Gospels, we cannot but be struck with the frequency with which
  our Lord's recorded works of mercy were done on the sabbath, incurring the
  anger of Pharisees and scribes. Israel had wholly broken the covenant, so He
  was setting aside the sign of it, and showing also that there was no rest for
  God in a creation that had been ruined by sin. Hence that great word of His,
  recorded in John 5: 17, "My Father worketh hitherto, and I work." We
  are delivered from the law, and it no longer forms the basis of our relation
  with God. We stand before God in righteousness, accomplished by the work of
  Christ, and therefore we begin with rest on the first day of the week, instead
  of reaching it at the end by works of our own. 
 The sabbath however had a typical significance, foreshadowing the rest of
  God, into which ultimately we shall be introduced, according to Hebrews 4.
  When we read, "There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God" (Heb.
  4: 9), the margin tells us that the word used there for "rest" is
  literally "a keeping of a sabbath"—the only place in Scripture
  where that particular word is used. In our chapter therefore the sabbath is
  prophetic of that rest into which God will ultimately bring the true Israel,
  and the feasts of the Lord, which follow, are prophetic of the steps by which
  that rest is to be reached. 
 Of these feasts the passover stands first, as typifying that which forms
  the basis of all God's work toward that end—the death of Christ. Full
  details of this we had before us in Exodus 12 and so in verse 5 it is mentioned
  without detail; and we may pass on to the consideration of the feast of unleavened
  bread, in verses 6-8. 
 Leaven being a type of sin in its fermenting activity it was to be wholly
  excluded from their bread for seven days. Here we have something that is applied
  to ourselves in 1 Corinthians 5: 6-8. We know that Christ our passover has
  been sacrificed for us, though we are not of Israel, and the seven days of
  unleavened bread picture the complete period in which we now live, when it
  is incumbent on us to have done with the sin for which, and to which, Christ
  has died. We are to "keep the feast . . . with the unleavened bread of
  sincerity and truth." 
 There will be no doubt a special application to Israel in the day to come,
  when they discover how their Messiah has died for them, and learn to abhor
  and forsake their sin. It stands true indeed in every connection, that if a
  soul is released from the penalty of sin, which has been expiated in the death
  of Christ, that soul repudiates the sin for which Christ died. The principle
  of it is clearly stated in Romans 6: 2. 
 Our chapter is divided into paragraphs, beginning respectively with verses
  9, 23, 26 and 33. The first paragraph contains the feasts that have the character
  of "firstfruits," see, verses 10 and 17. As a matter of fact, though
  the words are identical in our version, the words in the original differ. In
  verse 10. the significance of the word is "principal fruits," and
  in verse 17, it is "earliest fruits;" another mark
  this of Divine inspiration, inasmuch as we can now see that here were types
  and predictions of, first, the resurrection of Christ, and second, of saints
  who are His followers. 
 The New Testament antitype of the first we find in such a scripture as, "Now
  is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept" (1
  Cor. 15: 20). The sheaf of the firstfruits, that was to be offered by being
  waved before the Lord, and which would be accepted on behalf of the people,
  was in an absolute sense the beginning of the harvest. Until it was offered
  the produce of the harvest was not in any form to be touched by the people,
  as verse 14 shows. When offered it was to be accompanied only by a burnt offering
  and a meat offering with the corresponding drink offering. 
 How accurately all this foreshadowed the great Antitypical event we can plainly
  see. Christ risen is before us, so no sin offering is suitable here. Nor has
  the peace offering a place, since. the thought of communion does not enter.
  The two offerings that do appear set forth the sweet savour of both His spotless
  life and His sacrificial death. 
 And further, the sheaf of firstfruits was not to be waved before the Lord
  on the sabbath, but on the day after the sabbath, that is, on the first day
  of the week. True to this type, Christ lay in the tomb all the sabbath, and
  on the first day of the week He rose from the dead. The sheaf was waved "to
  be accepted for you," as verse 11 says, and in keeping with this Jesus
  our Lord, who was delivered for our offences, "was raised again for our
  justification" (Rom. 4: 25). The believer today stands before God in the
  acceptance of the risen Christ; and indeed for any saint at any time no other
  acceptance is possible. 
 The succeeding feast had its date fixed in reference to this one. Fifty days
  had to be counted, which according to Jewish reckoning, brought them to the
  morrow after the seventh sabbath—the feast of Pentecost. The offering
  on this occasion of two wave loaves is spoken of as "a new meat offering." This
  it was indeed, inasmuch as from every other meat offering leaven had to be
  rigidly excluded, and here it had to be introduced. Yet though introduced its
  fermenting action was to be ended by the action of fire, since the loaves were
  to be baken. 
 Here then we see foreshadowed that which first took place on that day of
  Pentecost, recorded in Acts 2. On that great occasion, fifty days after the
  resurrection of our Lord, three thousand Jews, gathered out of many nations,
  were converted, and offered as "earliest fruits" to God. Not until
  Acts 10 is reached do we get Gentiles offered as " earliest fruits." But
  they were so offered, for later we find the Apostle Paul speaking
  of himself as "ministering the Gospel of God, that the offering up of
  the Gentiles might be acceptable, being sanctified by the Holy Ghost" (Rom.
  15: 16). 
 In our type there were two loaves, setting forth the two classes, and both,
  the sin that was in them being judged and thus set aside, were equally accepted,
  when presented to God. What is not typified here is the fact that in the Church
  both are made one before God. But that fact is a part of "the mystery" which
  has now been revealed and which, we are expressly told, was not made known
  in earlier ages. What is foreshadowed is the fact that the saints today are
  not the complete harvest that is to be reaped as the result of the death and
  resurrection of Christ but rather, "a kind of firstfruits of His creatures" (Jas.
  1: 18). 
 In keeping with all this, the accompanying offerings were to include both
  sin and peace offerings as well as burnt offerings. The two loaves themselves
  were the meat offering but representing as they did redeemed sinners, they
  could not be presented save on the basis of a sin offering, the leaven that
  was in them having been typically judged by the fire. Again, we meet with the
  words, "Ye shall do no servile work therein." We had them in connection
  with the feast of unleavened bread, but they were absent in connection with
  the sheaf of firstfruits. If saints are to be presented to God, all human effort
  is totally excluded. 
 Verse 22 is really a parenthesis, brought in to show that God, while ordaining
  these feasts in which He was to be honoured and exalted, had a heart full of
  compassion for the needy among His people, and even for the stranger. In the
  Book of Ruth we are permitted to see how a God-fearing Israelite, Boaz, observed
  this command; and his observance of it was over-ruled of God to bring Ruth's
  name into the genealogy, not only of David but also of Christ Himself, as mentioned
  in Matthew 1: 5. 
 The feasts of the Lord were not equally distributed throughout the year.
  After Pentecost came a pause until the seventh month, and then in quick succession
  came three feasts, which closed the series. On the first day of the seventh
  month the feast of trumpets was to be observed, which in its prophetic bearing
  still awaits fulfilment. It foretells the gathering together of the elect Israel
  at the second Advent, according to the Lord's words, recorded in Matthew 24:
  31. 
 Verse 24 of our chapter speaks of this feast as "an holy convocation," and
  an holy gathering together that day will indeed prove to be. It will be accomplished
  on the ground of sacrifice, as the next verse indicates, and all "servile
  work" is eliminated, for this predicted gathering together of Israel will
  not be achieved by works of law, but wholly based on the mercy of God, as declared
  in Romans 11: 26-32. 
 On the tenth day of the seventh month came the day of atonement, details
  of which we had before us when considering chapter 16. Here we have emphasized
  the elimination of all work on that day, and even more strongly the affliction
  of heart and soul that was to characterize the people. Viewing it therefore
  in its setting amongst the other feasts, it is predictive of that great spiritual
  awakening in Israel, which will produce repentance of unusual depth and reality,
  as is predicted in Zechariah 12: 10-14. By this inward work of grace there
  will be created a nation morally fit to enter upon millennial blessedness. 
 Just five days later came the feast of tabernacles which lasted for seven
  days. It was a time of thanksgiving and rejoicing when all the fruits of the
  year had been gathered in, and that doubtless was all that it conveyed to the
  people at that time. Now that we have the light of New Testament prophecy we
  see how it foretold the millennial blessedness, which is the purpose of God
  for Israel. Had the people known its ultimate meaning they might not have been
  so careless as to its observance, as is noted for us in Nehemiah 8: 17. And
  a similar carelessness seems to have marked them as to other feasts. 
 Reviewing the teaching of the chapter, we find that it points to great landmarks
  in Israel's history—the death of Christ; His resurrection; the coming
  of the Spirit; the gathering out of an elect people; their profound repentance;
  millennial joy and blessing. The first three have found fulfilment: the last
  three await it. The portion of the church is not found here, but in the New
  Testament only. We may rest assured that, whether for Israel or for the church,
  not one predicted thing will fail when its season arrives. 
 The last words of the chapter repeat the opening words of verse 2—"the
    feasts of the Lord." It is sadly instructive to note how John
    speaks of them in his Gospel. A sample is, "After this there was a
    feast of the Jews" (5: 1), and so it is all through. They were
    being more observant of them than their fathers, but only in a ritualistic
    way. They had lost the kernel while retaining the shell. Consequently their
    feasts were disowned. Herein is a warning for us. Let us not fail to take
    to heart the principle involved in it, and the danger disclosed. 
 Leviticus 24 divides into two parts. In the first we have instructions as
  to the maintenance of the lamps in the holy place and of the cakes upon the
  golden table, so that all was to be in order before God. In the latter part
  we discover that there was bad disorder in the camp, when it was a question
  of the actual state of the people. To view things ideally according to God's
  mind is one thing: to view them practically according to the state of the people
  is quite another. And thus it is of course in connection with ourselves today. 
 It is worthy of note how often the word "pure" occurs in verses
  1-9. The pure candlestick had seven lamps to be fed with the pure oil beaten
  out of olives. The pure table had on it the twelve cakes of fine flour, covered
  in pure frankincense, renewed sabbath by sabbath before the Lord. Here we see
  what will yet be realized in the coming age, when the light of the Spirit of
  God will not only be "before the throne," but also, "sent forth
  into all the earth" (Rev. 4: 5; Rev. 5: 6). In that age too the twelve
  tribes will at last be maintained before God in a fragrance which they derive
  altogether from Christ. 
 The holiness of all this is emphasized in verse 9. The weekly cakes were
  to be eaten only by the priests, and in the holy place. They were not to be
  carried forth into the outside world. Yet even this regulation had to give
  way in the presence of the pressing need of David, who was the Lord's anointed,
  as recorded in 1 Samuel 21: 6; and this action of Ahimelech was approved by
  our Lord in Matthew 12: 3, 4. The true Lord's Anointed is "greater than
  the temple," important though that temple and its arrangements were. David
  moreover was in rejection when the incident took place; and our Lord was the
  rejected One when He spoke in Matthew 12. Under these circumstances the needs
  of the Lord's Anointed took precedence of legal regulations. 
 The sin of the man who cursed the name of the Lord is brought in here by
  way of contrast. The Lord's mind concerning him was made known and he had to
  die. In verse 17, killing a man is mentioned, and cursing the Lord is as grave
  a sin as that, for death was to be the penalty of both. Here too we have mentioned
  lesser evils, and we get the legislation, "eye for eye, tooth for tooth," mentioned
  also in Exodus and Deuteronomy, and referred to by the Lord in Matthew 5: 38.
  He referred to it to throw into relief the grace that He was beginning to reveal,
  which would entail upon His disciples the showing of grace to others. 
 Leviticus 25 introduces a fresh subject. The previous chapters have dealt
  mainly with matters that specially concerned the priests, and were spoken "out
  of the tabernacle" (chap. 1: 1). We now have a matter that concerned rather
  right government in Israel, when they were come into the land, and so it was
  spoken "in Mount Sinai." In this connection the basic fact they had
  to remember is stated in verse 23,—"the land is Mine." Consequently
  Israel had to deal with the land, when they possessed it, in the way prescribed
  in the earlier verses. 
 Every seventh year was to be a sabbatical year, when the land was to be given
  a rest. And when seven of these sabbatical years had passed the fiftieth year
  was to be a jubilee, when not only no sowing was to be done but every man was
  to return to his inheritance. This law must have been a great test to the people. 
 In verse 20, it is anticipated that they would say, "What shall we eat
  . . .?" In answer to that they had to rely on God's pledged word that
  the sixth year should bring forth enough for three years. This being so there
  would be a sufficiency of supply even when they did not sow on the fiftieth
  year as well as the forty-ninth. The question became simply this—Would
  they take God at His word? It is a rather ominous fact that there is no record
  in the history of the people of the jubilee year being observed, though we
  do have a reference to a kinsman redeeming an inheritance. 
 What is made very plain is that since the land was God's, those to whom He
  gave it might only dispose of it on the leasehold principle, selling it until
  the jubilee came; the value of the lease decreasing as the jubilee drew near.
  Thus each inheritance was not to be permanently alienated from the family that
  originally had it. In this way any accumulation of landed property by men of
  a grasping nature was prevented and, what was even more important, Israel had
  a continual reminder that all they were to possess they held from the Lord,
  and they were dependent upon Him. Do we who are Christians need this reminder
  any less than they? Do we not rather need it more?