Online Encyclopedia

PENTECOST

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 124 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PENTECOST  , a feast of the

Jews, in its
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original meaning a " harvest feast, " as consisting of the first-fruits of human toil (Exod.
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xxiii . 16), extending over the seven weeks which fairly correspond with the duration of the Canaanite harvest . Hence it was the closing feast of the harvest gladness . The agricultural character of this feast clearly reveals its Canaanite origin (see
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HEBREW RELIGION) . It does not, however, rank equal in importance with the other two agricultural festivals of pre-exilian Israel, viz. the Massoth or feast of unleavened cakes (which marked the beginning of the corn-harvest), and the Asiph (" ingathering," later called succoth, " booths ") which marked the close of all the
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year's ingathering of
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vegetable products . This is clear in the ideal scheme of Ezekiel (xlv . 21 seq.) in which according to the original text, Pentecost is omitted (see Cornill's revised text and his note ad loc.) . It is a later hand that has inscribed a reference to the " feast of weeks " which is found in our Massoretic Hebrew text . Nevertheless occasional allusions to this feast, though secondary, are to be found in Hebrew literature, e.g . Isa. ix . 3 (2 Heb.) and Ps . iv . 7 (8 Heb.) .

In both the

early codes, viz. in Exod. xxiii . 16 (E) and in Exod. xxxiv 22 (J, in which the harvest festival is called " feast of weeks ") we have only a
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bare statement that the harvest festival took place some weeks after the opening spring festival called Massoth . It is in Deut. xvi . 9 that we find it explicitly stated that seven weeks elapsed between the beginning of the corn-harvest (" when thou puttest the sickle to the corn ") and the celebration of the harvest festival (Kasir) . We also note the same generous inclusion of the household slaves and of the
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resident alien as well as the fatherless and widow that characterizes the autumnal festival of " Booths." But when we pass to the
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post-exilian legislation (Lev. xxiii . Io—21; cf . Num.
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xxviii . 26 seq.) we enter upon a far more detailed and specific series of ritual instructions . (I) A
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special ceremonial is described as taking place on " the morrow after the
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Sabbath," i.e. in the week of unleavened cakes . The first-fruits of the harvest here take the form of a sheaf which is waved by the priest before Yahweh . (2) There is the offering of a male lamb of the first year without blemish and also a
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meal offering of
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fine
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flour and oil mixed in defined proportions as well as a drink-offering of wine of a certain measure . After this " morrow after the Sabbath " seven weeks are to be reckoned, and when we reach the morrow after the seventh Sabbath fifty days have been enumerated .

Here we must

bear in mind that Hebrew numeration always includes the day which is the
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terminus a quo as well as that which is
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term. ad quem . On this fiftieth day two
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wave-loaves made from the produce of the fields occupied by the worshipper (" your habitations ") are offered together with seven unblemished
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lambs of the first year as well as one young bullock and two rams as a burnt offering . We have further precise details respecting the sin-offering and the peace-offerings which were also presented.' This elaborate ceremonial connected with the wave-offering (
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developed in the post-exile period) took place on the morrow of the seventh Sabbath called ' On the critical questions involved in these ritual details of Lev. xxiii . 18 as compared with Num. xxviii . 27—30 ci . Driver and White in S . B . O . T., note on Lev. xxiii . 18 . a " day of
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holy convocation " on which no servile
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work was to be done . It was called a " fiftieth-day feast." Pentecost or " Fiftieth " day is only a Greek
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equivalent of the last name (ir vrnKOVrii) in the Apocrypha and New Testament .

The orthodox later Jews reckoned the fifty days from the 16th of Nisan, but on this there has been considerable controversy among Jews themselves . The orthodox later Jews assumed that the Sabbath in Lev. xxiii . 11, 15 is the 15th Nisan, or the first day of the feast of Massoth .

Hitzig maintained that in
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Blois, a descendant of this
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family, married
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Jean de Brosse, and the Hebrew
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calendar 14th and 21st Nisan were always Sabbaths, and that 1st Nisan was always a
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Sunday, which was the opening day of the year . " The morrow after the Sabbath " means, according to Hitzig, the day after the weekly Sabbath, viz . 22nd Nisan . Knobel (Comment. on
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Leviticus) and Kurtz agree with Hitzig's premises but differ from his identification of the Sabbath . They identify it with the 14th Nisan . Accordingly the " day after " falls on the 15th . (See Purves's article, " Pentecost," in Hastings's
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Diet. of the Bible, and also Ginsburg's article in Kitto's Cyclopaedia) . Like the other
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great feasts, it came to be celebrated by fixed special sacrifices . The amount of these is differently expressed in the earlier and later priestly law (Lev. xxiii .

18 seq.; Num. xxviii . 26 seq.); the discrepancy was met by adding the two lists . The later Jews also extended the one day of the feast to two . Further, in accordance with the tendency to substitute

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historical for economic explanations of the great feasts, Pentecost came to be regarded as the feast commemorative of the Sinaitic legislation . To the Christian Church Pentecost acquired a new significance through the outpouring of the Spirit (Acts ii.) . (See WHIT-SUNDAY.) It is not easy to find definite
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parallels to this festival in other ancient religious cults . The Akitu festival to Marduk was a spring festival at the beginning of the Babylonian year (Nisan) . It therefore comes near in time to the feast of unleavened cakes rather than to the later harvest festival in the month Sivan called " feast of weeks." Zimmern indeed connects the Akitu festival with that of
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Purim on the 15th Adar (March); see K.A.T 3 p . 514 seq . Also the
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Roman Cerealia of
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April 12th—19th rather correspond to Massoth than to IC¢sir . (0 . C .

End of Article: PENTECOST
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