Jesus and the Fulfillment of the Jewish Fall Feasts

“Spiritually we are all Semites.”  Thus spoke Pope Pius XI on the eve of World War II, as Nazi Germany was about to launch its fateful war and Final Solution against the Jewish people.  His words of solidarity are, of course, manifestly true.  Christianity grew directly out of Judaism.  Jesus was an observant Jew.  The scriptures, the beliefs, and the rituals are all intertwined and interconnected between old and new.  It is for this reason that St. Augustine can say, “the New Testament lies hidden in the Old and the Old Testament is unveiled in the New.” (CCC 129)  Christian theologians refer to this biblical prefiguring and foreshadowing as typology.  There is a unity in the divine plan linking the progressive stages of salvation history.  The Old Testament, in its symbols and rituals, point to the Messiah, while the New Testament fulfills all of these in the person of Jesus Christ.  In speaking of the law and the prophets, Jesus Himself said plainly, “I have come not to abolish them but to fulfill them.” (Mt. 5:17)

This typology is evident in the Jewish memorial feast days.  They are generally broken up into two seasons, the spring feasts and the fall feasts.  They anticipated and foreshadowed Christ’s sacrifice on the Cross, the Last Supper, the Eucharist, and the coming of the Holy Spirit.  The feasts prepared Israel for the Incarnation.  God obligated centuries of faithful observance of these feasts to place the seeds of understanding in the minds of Israel to prepare them to accept the Son of God when He finally was born into the world.  While we as Christians no longer celebrate these Jewish feasts, they are still part of our common Judeo-Christian lineage.  Jesus chose these major Jewish feasts to fulfill the central parts of His mission.  As the catechism teaches, “His public ministry itself was patterned by His pilgrimages to Jerusalem for the great Jewish feasts.” (CCC 583)  Jesus was formed by the feasts, and in fact, the central events of His life gave ultimate meaning to the feasts. (CCC 592)

The primary focus of the Jewish feasts was to prefigure the coming of Jesus.  This is true of the fall feasts of Yom Kippur and Sukkot (Oct. 16-23rd this year).  Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, is primarily a prefiguring of Calvary.  One of the most important aspects of Yom Kippur is the idea of the scapegoat.  This is the one and only time of the year when the high priest would go behind the veil in the Holy of Holies in the Temple, dare to utter the name of God, the Tetragrammaton, YHWH, and offer the sacrifice of two goats.  Upon one goat, the high priest placed his hands while confessing all the sins of Israel, symbolically conferring the sin to the goat.  It was then sent off into the wilderness to die.  The other goat was sacrificed, and the high priest sprinkled its blood upon the mercy seat in the Holy Holies.  The high priest then came out and announced, “It is done.”  This has clear similarities with the paschal lamb, and again, a foreshadowing of Christ and His last words from the Cross “It is finished.” (Jn. 19:30)

Calvary, of course, was sacramentalized in the Last Supper.  The Mass became the feast of the new and eternal covenant.  Just as the high priest entered the Temple and offered the sacrifice of goats, so too, does Christ enter the heavenly sanctuary and offer the sacrifice of Himself to the Father on behalf of our sins.  The high priest of Yom Kippur is a ‘type’ of the true and eternal high priest of Christ in heaven.  Christ Himself is both the high priest and the sacrifice.  As the letter to the Hebrews states, “He entered once for all into the sanctuary, not with the blood of goats and calves, but with His own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption.” (Heb. 9:12)  If God accepted Israel’s sacrifice of goats, as mere symbol of Christ’s sacrifice, how much more efficacious is the actual sacrifice of Jesus’ body and blood?  The Day of Atonement finds its ultimate meaning in Calvary, and each Mass is the fulfillment of the Day of Atonement.

In this regard, Jewish tradition documents a miraculous event pertaining to Yom Kippur.  In both the Jerusalem and Babylonian Talmuds, they record that there was a scarlet cloth or strap tied to the scapegoat on Yom Kippur, as part of the sin offering.  A thread from the crimson cloth was later tied to the Temple door.  According to the Talmudic anecdote, every year when the goat was sacrificed, the thread would miraculously turn white, in recognition of God accepting their sin offering.  One is reminded of Isaiah’s scripture “though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.” (Is. 1:18)  Yet, as recorded in both Talmuds, this stopped happening some forty years before the destruction of the Temple in 70 A.D.  This would have been about the time of Jesus’ crucifixion in 30 A.D.  The scapegoat was no longer accepted in atonement for sin, but was superseded now by the sacrifice of Christ.

In contrast to Yom Kippur, the last fall feast is a little bit different.  It is the joyous feast of Tabernacles, also known as the feast of Booths, or simply, Sukkot.  Sukkot is the road map for the Church.  It is ironic to call Sukkot a road map because it commemorates when the Israelites wandered seemingly aimlessly through the desert for forty years!  But, their wanderings are representative of our wanderings as pilgrims on this earth.  Just as the Israelites crossed the waters of the Red Sea and the evil Pharaoh was killed, so too, do we pass into new life through the waters of Baptism and sin is removed.  Yet, the Israelites did not immediately make it to the Promised Land.  Rather, they traveled in the desert wilderness for forty years with God leading them, as “the pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night did not depart from before the people.” (Ex. 13:22)  For forty years, God sustained them in the desert.  Sukkot is a roadmap because it reveals God’s plan to sustain us.

It is in this intermediary period that we find ourselves today, as travelers in the desert wilderness of life.  Sukkot reveals that we must stay close to God, and be fed with the supernatural manna from heaven, and the water of the rock.  The Israelites ate manna from heaven each day.  As Moses said of the manna on the morning dew, “It is the bread which the Lord has given you to eat.” (Ex. 16:15)  This immediately reminds us of Jesus’ discourse on the Bread of Life.  The Pharisees demanded a sign from Jesus, citing the miraculous manna from heaven story, but He answered them saying, “I am the bread of life; he who comes to Me shall not hunger, and he who believes in Me shall never thirst.” (Jn. 6:35) Jesus reveals that He is the new manna from heaven, the Eucharist, which sustains us until we reach the eternal Promised Land.

God also quenched the thirst of the Israelites with the water from the rock.  Sukkot commemorates Moses striking the rock in the desert and water coming out for the Israelites to drink.  St. Paul tells us this rock and water was Christ.  He says, “For they drank from the supernatural Rock which followed them, and the Rock was Christ.” (1 Cor. 10:4)  In the time of the Temple, the priests would make a procession to the Pool of Siloam and draw water out with a golden pitcher.  The high priest would then pour the water out on the altar in the Temple while reciting the verse from Isaiah, “With joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation.” (Is. 12:3)  This was to celebrate the days of the Messiah when the Holy Spirit would be poured out on all of Israel.

It was at the climax of the feast of Booths, on the eighth day, Shemini Atzeret, that scripture declares, “On the last day of the feast, the great day, Jesus stood up and proclaimed, “If any one thirst, let him come to Me and drink.  He who believes in Me, as the scripture has said, ‘Out of his heart shall flow rivers of living water.’” (Jn. 7:37-38)  Jesus is telling them that He is the living water that is symbolized in this Temple ceremony.  The living water is the Holy Spirit, and the sanctifying grace in faith and the sacraments, particularly the waters of Baptism.  This is also reminiscent of Jesus’ discussion with the Samaritan woman at the well.  He tells her, “the water that I shall give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.” (Jn. 4:14)  The Holy Spirit and the sacraments are the fulfillment of the water ceremony in the feast of Booths.  This is the sanctifying water and Spirit in the Church age, from Christ’s first coming to His second coming.

Sukkot also has a deeper eschatological meaning to it.  During the exodus, the Israelites had no permanent abodes.  So, during Sukkot, the Jews commemorated this by building temporary “booths” or “huts” outside their house, and covering them with leafy branches or palms.  The roofs were not supposed to be perfect but have openings, so they could view the stars at night.  This again is allegory to us.  Our lives are also imperfect, but in much the same way, we can look up to heaven and yearn for our permanent home with God.  Scripture reminds us that we are “strangers and exiles on the earth… seeking a homeland.” (Heb. 11:13-14)  It is perhaps fitting, then, that Jesus likely chose the feast of Booths to reveal His glory to the Apostles in His Transfiguration. (see Mt. 17:4) The Transfiguration gives us a glimpse and hope of the glory of God to come.

Thus, the Jewish feasts were a foreshadowing of Christ, and Christ fulfilled them with His life.  They point to eternal truths of God and the Incarnation.  The signs and symbols of the feasts were fulfilled in reality with the coming of Jesus the Messiah and the foundation of His Church.  We no longer anticipate the coming of the final sacrifice in the paschal lamb or the scapegoat or the pouring out of water in the Temple.  The Temple itself is no longer necessary, because we ourselves have become the temple of God.  The Jewish feasts have been superseded by the sacramental reality.  However, the feasts are metaphorical roadmaps.  We are to survive on the food God provides in the Eucharist and the water God provides with the Holy Spirit and the sacraments.  We continue to learn the faith now through the celebration of the Catholic liturgical calendar, with its sets of feasts, and festivals and fasts.  The primordial feast remains the Sabbath, or to Christians, the Lord’s Day, Sunday.  It is the day set aside each week for rest and worship offered to God.  The Mass is the foundational liturgical celebration of the Church.  It anticipates the eternal wedding feast of the Lamb.  This is our manna from heaven and our life giving water.  Indeed, if but we believe, the sacramental life of the Church will sustain us, through our temporary wandering in this desert wilderness, to eternal life.

image: Vadim Petrakov / Shutterstock.com

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Brian Kranick's latest book is Burning Bush, Burning Hearts—Exodus as a Paradigm of the Gospel. Brian is a freelance writer focusing on all things Catholic. He has a master's degree in Systematic Theology from Christendom College. He has spent years working as an analyst in the Intelligence Community, and currently resides with his wife and three children in the Pacific Northwest.  He is the author of the blog: sacramentallife.com.

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