HaBikkurim
The Festival of First Fruits
The
fifteenth of Nisan begins Hag HaMatzah (the Feast of Unleavened Bread), which is a high
sabbath, a shabbaton. It is a
seven day feast to the L-rd. The day following the sabbath during Passover is called the
Feast of First Fruits (Leviticus [Vayikra]
23:10-11).
The Feast of First Fruits can be found in Leviticus (Vayikra) 23:9-14, as it is written:
Then the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, "Speak to the sons of Israel and say to them,
'When you enter the land which I am
going to give to you and reap its harvest, then you shall bring in the sheaf of the
firstfruits of your harvest to the priest. And
he shall wave the sheaf before the Lord for you to be accepted; on the day after the
sabbath the priest shall wave it. Now on
the day when you wave the sheaf you shall offer a male lamb one year old without defect
for a burnt offering to the Lord. Its
grain offering shall then be two tenths of an ephah of fine flour mixed with oil an
offering by fire to the Lord for a soothing
aroma, with its libation, a fourth of a hin of wine. Until this same day, until you have
brought in the offering of your God, you
shall eat neither bread nor roasted grain nor new growth. It is to be a perpetual statute
throughout your generations in all
your dwelling places' " (Leviticus [Vayikra] 23:9-14 NAS).
Understanding the Festival
Ceremony
The observance was carried out in this manner, when the standing ripe harvest of barley
and wheat was ready to be reaped. The
celebrant would take one sheaf from the standing harvest and bring it to the priest. The
lone sheaf was called "the sheaf of the first
fruits." The priest was then to take this one sheaf and wave it before the L-rd in
His house. This was to be done "the day after the
sabbath." Prescribed offerings were also to be presented along with the sheaf.
The Sheaf of First Fruits in
the Bible
G-d commanded the people to bring a sheaf of the harvest (Leviticus [Vayikra] 23:10). The
Hebrew word for "sheaf" is omer.
An omer is defined as "a measure of dry things, containing a tenth part of an
ephah." The definition of an omer being a tenth part of
an ephah is found in Exodus (Shemot) 16:36. An ephah contains 10 omers of grain. Remember,
three times a year G-d commanded
the people to come to Jerusalem (Yerushalayim) to celebrate the festivals of Passover
(Pesach), Pentecost (Shavuot), and
Tabernacles (Sukkot). All three of these festivals are agricultural harvest festivals.
Passover (Pesach) is the barley harvest. Pentecost
(Shavuot) is the wheat harvest. Both of these festivals are first fruits harvests before
the final harvest that was to come at the end of
the year during the festival of Tabernacles (Sukkot), which is the fruit harvest.
The harvest represents all who would put their faith, trust, and confidence (emunah) in
the Messiah Yeshua (Matthew
[Mattityahu] 13:39; Mark 4:26-29; Luke 10:1-12; Revelation 14:14-16). So, the sheaf is the
first of the first fruits. Since a sheaf in
the Bible is used to typify a person or persons (Genesis [Bereishit] 37:5-11), a sheaf
spiritually represents people who accept the
Messiah into their hearts.
The nation of Israel was familiar with the concept of first fruits or the firstborn. The
first fruits were always the choicest, the
foremost, the first, the best, the preeminent of all that was to follow. They were holy to
the L-rd. The concept of first fruits or
firstborn is a major theme in the Bible. This can be seen by the following Scriptures:
Exodus (Shemot) 23:16,19: 34:26; Leviticus
(Vayikra) 2:12,14; 23:20; Numbers (Bamidbar) 18:12-15,26; Deuteronomy (Devarim) 18:1-5;
26:2-4,10; 2 Chronicles 31:5;
Nehemiah 10:35-39; Proverbs (Mishlai) 3:9; Jeremiah (Yermiyahu) 2:3; Ezekiel (Yechezekel)
44:30; 48:14; Malachi 3:8-14;
Hebrews 6:20; 7:1-8.
Everything on the earth, both man and beast, was to be presented before the L-rd as first
fruits to Him.
1.The firstborn of both man and beast were sanctified (made holy) and presented to the
L-rd (Exodus [Shemot] 13:2;
22:29).
2.The first fruits of all the earth were presented to the L-rd at His altar in praise and
thanksgiving (Deuteronomy
[Devarim] 26:1-11).
The Seventeenth of Nisan -- Resurrection and Salvation
The theme of the festival of First Fruits is resurrection and salvation. There are several
important events that happened on this
day in the Bible.
1.Noah's (Noach) ark rests on Mount Ararat (Genesis 8:4).
2.Israel crosses the Red Sea (Exodus [Shemot] 3:18; 5:3; 14).
3.Israel eats the first fruits of the Promised Land (Joshua 5:10-12). The manna that G-d
gave from Heaven during the
days in the wilderness ceased the sixteenth day of Nisan after the people ate of the old
corn of the land. The day following
was the seventeenth of Nisan, the day when the children of Israel ate the first fruits of
the Promised Land.
4.Haman is defeated (Esther 3:1-6). In the Book of Esther, Haman plotted to kill all the
Jews in Persia and Media. Haman
had ten sons (Esther 9:12). By this, we can see that Haman is a type of the false Messiah
(antichrist). A decree was sent out
on the thirteenth of Nisan that all the Jews would be killed (Esther 3:12). Upon hearing
this news, Esther proclaims a
three-day fast, which would be Nisan 14-16 (Esther 4:16). On the sixteenth of Nisan,
Esther risked her life when she came to
King Ahasuerus. The king asked her, in effect, "Tell me, what do you want?"
Esther said, "If it please the king, may the king
and Haman come this day to the banquet that I have prepared for him" (Esther 5:4
NAS). This was the sixteenth day of
Nisan. At the banquet, the king again asked Esther what she wanted, and she asked the king
to come to another banquet to
be held the next day, the seventeenth of Nisan. On this day, Haman (a type of the false
Messiah or antichrist, as well as of
satan [Ha satan]) is hanged.
5.The resurrection of Yeshua, the Messiah (John 12:24; 1 Corinthians 15:16-20). Yeshua
celebrated the festival of First
Fruits by offering Himself as the first fruits to all future generations (Matthew
[Mattityahu] 27:52-53).
Yeshua Is the First Fruits of
the Barley Harvest
1.Yeshua is the firstborn of Miryam (Mary) (Matthew 1:23-25).
2.Yeshua is the first-begotten of G-d the Father (Hebrews 1:6).
3.Yeshua is the firstborn of every creature (Colossians 1:15).
4.Yeshua is the first-begotten from the dead (Revelation 1:5).
5.Yeshua is the firstborn of many brethren (Romans 8:29).
6.Yeshua is the first fruits of the resurrected ones (1 Corinthians 15:20,23).
7.Yeshua is the beginning of the creation of G-d (Revelation 3:14).
8.Yeshua is the preeminent One (Colossians 1:18).
Yeshua is indeed the Most Holy One of G-d and is sanctified by the Father. Yeshua is the
first, the choicest, the preeminent
One. He is both the firstborn of G-d and the first fruits unto G-d. Yeshua is the sheaf of
the first fruits.
First Fruits Is Prophetic of
the Resurrection of the Messiah
The festival of the sheaf of the first fruits is prophetic of the resurrection of Yeshua.
Yeshua prophesied that He would rise three
days and nights after He was slain on the tree (Matthew [Mattityahu 12:38-40; 16:21; Luke
24:44-46). This was foreshadowed to
happen in the Tanach (Old Testament) by type and shadow (Genesis [Bereishit] 22:1-6;
Exodus [Shemot] 3:18; 5:3; 8:27; Esther
4:15-17; Jonah 1:7; 2:1-2).
Since Yeshua was slain on the tree on the day of Passover (Pesach), the fourteenth of
Nisan, and He arose from the grave
three days and nights after He was slain, Yeshua arose from the grave on the seventeenth
of Nisan, the day of the festival of First
Fruits. This day would be the day after the weekly sabbath during the week of Passover
(Mark 16:1-6). In fact, Yeshua is called the
first fruits of those who rise from the dead.
But now Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who are asleep.
For since by a man came death, by a
man also came the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all
shall be made alive. But each in his
own order: Christ the firstfruits, after that those who are Christs' at His coming (1
Corinthians 15:20-23 NAS).
It was prophesied that Yeshua, the Messiah, would be buried in the tomb of the rich
(Isaiah [Yeshayahu] 53:9; Matthew
[Mattityahu] 27:57; Luke 23:51). Why was Yeshua placed in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea?
Arimathea was another name for
Ramah, where Samuel dwelt. It is five miles north of Jerusalem (Yerushalayim). In fact,
this place is still called Ramah today. In
ancient times, it was customary for Jews to be buried in Jerusalem (Yerushalayim). In
fact, this practice is still done today because it
is a traditional belief in Judaism that the resurrection of the dead will take place in
Jerusalem (Yerushalayim) first.
In the Book of Genesis (Bereishit), Joseph (Yosef) the son of Jacob (Ya'akov), made the
children of Israel take a vow that
when they went to the Promised Land, they would carry his bones with them (Genesis
[Bereishit] 50:24-26). Ramah was a term
that represented idolatry. Two countries were called the seat of idolatry in the ancient
world: Babylon and Egypt. Joseph (Yosef), the
son of Jacob (Ya'akov), was also known as Joseph of Ramah. Moses (Moshe) took the bones of
Joseph (Yosef) with him when he
and the children of Israel journeyed to Succoth (Exodus [Shemot] 13:19-20). Therefore,
Joseph's (Yosef) tomb in Egypt was empty.
The empty tomb of Joseph (Yosef) of Arimathea (Ramah), which stood for wickedness, was a
fulfillment of Isaiah (Yeshayahu)
53:9.
Joseph (Yosef) was a type of the role of Yeshua during His first coming when He came to
fulfill the role of the suffering Messiah
known as Messiah ben Joseph. The bones of Joseph (Yosef) were carried to Succoth. Succoth
is a type of the Messianic age also
known as the Millennium. This is also a picture of Yeshua being both Messiah ben Joseph
and Messiah ben David -- as Yeshua
who suffered during His first coming to earth will be King during His second coming to
earth.
The Spiritual Understanding
of First Fruits
Spiritual Application (Halacha). A sheaf in the Bible is used to typify a person or
persons (Genesis [Bereishit] 37:5-11).
Yeshua will return to earth (Zechariah 14:4) during His second coming as King over all the
earth. He also will bring the sheaves (the
believers in Yeshua as the Messiah) with Him (Psalm (Tehillim) 126; Jeremiah (Yermiyahu)
31:9-14; Joel 3:11-13; Zechariah
14:3-5; Matthew [Mattityahu] 13:37-39; Mark 4:26-29; Hebrews 12:1; Jude 14; Revelation
1:7).
The 144,000 Jewish witnesses who witness of Yeshua during the Chevlai shel Mashiach, the
birthpangs of the Messiah (also
known as the tribulation) are first fruits to G-d during the tribulation (Revelation
14:1-4).
Let's look at some Scriptures in the Bible concerning first fruits.
1.The natural is before the spiritual (1 Corinthians 15:46).
2.Israel was G-d's firstborn (Exodus [Shemot] 4:22). But, the first will be last and the
last will be first (Mark 10:31).
Therefore, the Gentiles (the goyim) became the first to receive the Messiah (as a
corporate people; there are many non-Jews
who do not) (Isaiah [Yeshayahu] 60:1-3; 62:1-3; Acts 15:14-16). At the end of this present
age, the Jews as a corporate
people will accept Yeshua as Messiah as well.
3.The gospel (basar) was preached to the Jew first and then to the non-Jews (Romans 1:16;
2:9-10; Matthew
[Mattityahu] 10:5-6; 15:21-28; Acts 1:8).
4.We are called to seek first the Kingdom of G-d (Matthew [Mattityahu] 6:33).
5.Yeshua was alive the first day of the week (Mark 16:1-6).
6.Yeshua was the first to rise from the dead (Acts 26:23).
7.The early believers were a kind of first fruits (James [Ya'akov] 1:17-18).
8.Those who arose from the dead with Yeshua during His resurrection became the first
fruits of all those who would
rise from the dead (Matthew [Mattityahu] 27:52-53; Ephesians 4:8; 1 Thessalonians
4:13-18).
9.Yeshua first loved us, and He is to be our first love (1 John [Yochanan] 4:9; Revelation
2:4).
10.Yeshua is the first (Aleph) and the last (Tav) (Revelation 1:8,11,17; 22:13; Isaiah
[Yeshayahu] 41:4; 44:6; 48:12).
This article was excerpted from Ed Chumneys book the seven festivals of the Messiah