In all of the feast times it was said that it was a remembrance of God bringing them (Israel) out of Egypt.but wasn't each feast marking a specific happening or certain meaning (significance)?
In all of the feast times it was said that it was a remembrance of God bringing them (Israel) out of Egypt.but wasn't each feast marking a specific happening or certain meaning (significance)?
In all of the feast times it was said that it was a remembrance of God bringing them (Israel) out of Egypt.
I get that there are prophetic implications and different levels.:nono:
These feasts are all prophetic and their fulfillment is threefold. Think about it. When did Jesus die? When did the holy spirit descend? The key to understanding this lay in Ecclesiastes. The point was so important that Solomon repeated it.
Ecc 1:9 The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done is that which shall be done: and there is no new thing under the sun.
Ecc 3:15 That which hath been is now; and that which is to be hath already been; and God requireth that which is past.
Biblical history is prophecy. Even the Levitical ordinances are prophetic.
I thought a lot of folks already knew.Where does it say all the feasts?
In all of the feast times it was said that it was a remembrance of God bringing them (Israel) out of Egypt.
I thought a lot of folks already knew.
I'll try to find several of the verses tonight, or tomorrow.
I get that there are prophetic implications and different levels.
But what I am asking about is the literal event they were told to remember --- them coming out of Egypt. There was no other event the feast times were said to be a memorial of.
I thought a lot of folks already knew.
I'll try to find several of the verses tonight, or tomorrow.
Not really, although that might tie into it.
What I'm trying to get my mind around is that if the 7 feasts were celebrated as a remembrance of what already happened, then each yearly sacrifice of the Passover lamb's blood was not used for the purpose it was in the actual Passover when the death angel passed over the firstborn with the blood of the Passover lamb. That only happened the one time. It was not repeated each year (using the blood of the Passover lamb on doorposts) so that their firstborn would continue to be saved from the death angel. It was a done deal the first time.
If we look at it that way, then their Atonement already happened too.
For the fall feasts (which includes the Day of Atonement) are also a memorial of what already happened when God took Israel out of Egypt.
See what I'm getting at?
It appears dueteronomy is the last scripture to relate all the feasts to Egypt.
Deuteronomy 16:12 "And you shall remember that you were a slave in Egypt, and you shall be careful to observe these statutes.
The word "you" means the people of Jacob.
Jacob being Israel.
I thought a lot of folks already knew.
I'll try to find several of the verses tonight, or tomorrow.