Under the mediation of Moses, God's covenant people Israel were instructed to count fifty days from the Passover and to keep a feast. It was, and is, called The Feast of Weeks, or Pentecost. The feast was intended to coincide with the first of the year's harvest and was commemorated with a sacrifice of first-fruits as well as freewill offerings of thanksgiving. It was one of the three main feasts, and all adult males were to appear at Jerusalem for the feast. (Exodus 23:17) It was intended to be a time of great joy for all the inhabitants, both bond and free, and even the strangers in Israel were invited. (Deuteronomy 16:9-12) But as with all of the ceremonies of the Law, the ultimate meaning is fulfilled in Christ and finally revealed in the New Testament. It was during the Pentecost feast immediately after the death and resurrection of the Lord that a great ingathering of first-fruits occurred: not of the produce of the field, but of sinful mankind.
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