God's Appointed Feasts (pt. 8)
In today's lesson, we explore how the Feast of Trumpets - the first day of the seventh month - became a New Year's celebration - Rosh Hashanah.
In the cultures surrounding ancient Israel, the purging of sins from the king, the city, and the people marked their New Year's celebrations. In Babylon, their New Year's festival - called Akitu - even included a scapegoat ceremony to remove the sins from the king. A New Year's ritual is one of rebirth and the renewal of time so humanity can enter the new period of time free of their sins. Join us today as we explore this ancient ritual and see how closely it resembles our modern New Year's practice. ![]()
References:
"Seasonal Renewal in Ancient Mesopotamia" in Britannica
Lupercalia Festival: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lupercalia
Februus - god of the underworld -
Antagonyms: www-personal.umich.edu/~cellis/antagonym.html
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Teacher Scott Broberg - I have a Masters of Divinity (MDiv) from Bethel Seminary - San Diego - Biblical Studies with and emphasis on the Old Testament. Categories
All
Connect!Favorite Websites:
- Ladder of Jacob
- Our Rabbi Jesus - That the World May Know - Early Jewish Writings - Early Christian Writings - Abarim Publications - Hebrew 4 Christians - Holy Land Photos - Biblical Archaeology Society - Ancient Hebrew Research Center - First Fruits of Zion - Jerusalem Perspective - Rabbi Jonathan Sacks - Flavius Josephus.org - Bible Archaeology Report - Hebrew Streams - Biblical Resources Archives
September 2023
|
AddressP.O. Box 50881
Nashville, TN 37205 |
Email
|
|
|
Fig Tree Ministries is a 501(c)(3) CA nonprofit dedicated to increasing Biblical education within the body of Christ.
Our ongoing operations are funded through donations from our amazing supporters. Consider supporting Fig Tree Ministries today! |
Connect with us! |