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The Pentecost Debate

The Festival of Shabuath (Pentecost) 157

was represented by two loaves of freshly baked bread, each loaf made with two-tenth parts of an ephah of leavened flour.20 Day of the Omer Wave Offering

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Under the Torah, on the first day of the 50 days an rm[ (omer), or “sheaf,” wave offering is required. An rm[ (omer) is a dry measure or gathering of “newly cut grain,”21 as in “a heap.”22 An omer equals about four pints and is calculated as one-tenth of a Hebrew ephah. 23 This wave offering of newly cut grain is a gift to Yahweh of the firstfruits of the land from each year’s harvest. The offering occurs in the spring and is directly connected with the Promised Land. This offering is described in detail by the book of Leviticus. When you come into the land (of Promise) which I am giving to you, and have reaped its harvest, and have brought in this omer, the beginning of your harvest, to the priest, then he shall wave this omer before Yahweh for your acceptance. On the day after the Sabbath the priest shall wave it.24

As we shall see, what is meant by the phrase “on the day after the Sabbath” proves to be a point of serious contention among the various sects of Judaism. Connected with the omer wave offering was also a burnt offering of a perfect lamb as well as a food and drink offering.25 Under the guidance of this statute, no one could harvest or eat any of the new year’s crop until the offering had been made by the high priest at the altar. And you shall not eat bread, and roasted grain, and new grain until the self-same day; this until you have brought the offering of your eloahi. It is an olam statute for your generations in all your dwellings.26

Philo, the first century C.E. Alexandrian Jewish priest who belonged to the Pharisee sect, had a great deal to say about the omer wave offering. To begin with, he uses the Greek term eorthn (heorten; festival) to describe the type of day for this offering. We must keep in mind that the Greek term eorthn (heorten) has a much broader connotation than the Hebrew term khag (festival).27 It

20 Lev., 23:10, 15, 17; Deut., 16:9. Also see below n. 23. 21 CHAL, p. 277, “(newly) cut ears of grain (not sheaves; the stalks were cut off right under the ears.” 22 SEC, Heb. #6014, 6016. 23 That an omer is about four pints, see NBD, p. 1323. One omer equals one-tenth of an ephah (Exod., 16:36). One-tenth portion of flour also equals one-tenth of an ephah (Num., 28:5). Therefore, one-tenth portion of flour equals one-tenth of an ephah. The two-tenths portion of flour in Lev., 23:17, as a result, equals two omer portions. 24 Lev., 23:9–11. 25 Lev., 23:12f. 26 Lev., 23:14. 27 Scriptures deal with three khag periods (Exod., 23:14–17, 34:18–23; Deut., 16:16; 2 Chron., 8:13): First, “the Phasekh shall be to you a khag of seven days” (Ezek., 45:21); the same period is at other times defined as keeping “the Khag of Unleavened Bread seven days”(2 Chron., 30:21; Ezra, 6:22). Second, there is the 50th day called the “Khag of Weeks” (Pentecost) (Deut., 16:9f, cf., 2 Chron., 8:13, and Lev., 23:15–21), though the entire 50-day period is often treated as an observance.