The Moedim – Sukkot – Festival of Tabernacles

If the Day of Atonement speaks of ‘the sufferings of Christ’, Tabernacles speaks of ‘the glory that should follow’ (1 Pet. 1:11). It is the greatest season of rejoicing in the Jewish calendar following the sombre Days of Awe. The Scriptures confirm the duty to rejoice in the blessings that the Lord had bestowed on the nation (Deut. 16:14-15).

But it was also a time of remembrance – that the nation had lived in ‘booths’ or temporary structures (sukkah, pl. sukkot) for 40 years in the wilderness after the Lord had brought them out of Egypt (Lev. 23:43).

Prophetically, it points forward to the Millennial reign of Messiah (Isa. 4:5-6; Amos 9:11). But these are choppy waters! In the 16th century an Anathema was pronounced by CofE Articles on those ‘peddling Jewish myths’ of an earthly Kingdom, in which Israel would be the head of the nations, ruled by Messiah.

Reminder – What are the Moedim?

MoedProphetic significanceFulfilled?
Passover/PesachChrist our Passover is sacrificed for usY
Unleavened BreadTo dedicate a holy people to the LordY
FirstfruitsChrist is raised the firstfruits of them that sleptY
Pentecost/ShavuotThe coming of the Law/Holy SpiritY
Trumpets/Yom TeruahThe regathering of IsraelN
Yom KippurThe conversion of the nation of IsraelN
Tabernacles/SuccotThe Messianic EraN

When are they?

Jewish MonthApproximate  Date Festivals of Lev. 23  Farming season
Nisan/AbibMarch–AprilPesach / Unleavened Bread / FirstfruitsLatter rains; Barley harvest
IyarApril–May(Counting the Omer 50 days)Hot desert winds; first figs
SivanMay–JuneShavuot (Latter Firstfruits)Wheat harvest
TammuzJune–July  
Menachem AvJuly–August 
ElulAugust–September Date harvest; summer figs
TishreiSeptember–OctoberRosh Hashanah
Yom Kippur
Sukkot
Start of civil year
Early rains;
Fruit and Olive harvests
HeshvanOctober–November Ploughing/sowing
KislevNovember–December(Chanukah) 

What’s it all about?

The third pilgrim festival

  • Thanksgiving and rejoicing on completion of the harvest
  • Associated with the early rain (Deut. 11:13; Joel 2:23-24), which speaks to us of the Holy Spirit (Joel 2:28; John 7:37; Acts 2:1-8; 14-21)
  • To remind them of the nation’s wanderings in the wilderness
  • To point to the coming reign of Messiah at the end of the age (Rev. 21:6; 22:1-4, 17)

Lev. 23:33-36 – the timing

SUKKOT AND THE EIGHTH DAY
TISHREI 15TISHREI 16TISHREI 17TISHREI 18TISHREI 19TISHREI 20TISHREI 21TISHREI 22
Sukkot 1Sukkot 2Sukkot 3Sukkot 4Sukkot 5Sukkot 6Sukkot 7 Hoshana RabbahEighth Day Shemini Atzeret
Yom Tov      Yom Tov

Lev. 23:39-43 – the arrangements – dwell in booths, only Israelites, to remember

Num. 29:12-38 – the offerings – for the 7 days, 70 bulls, 14 rams, 98 lambs, 7 goats, then 1 bull, 1 ram, 7 lambs and 1 goat on the eighth day. All plus the daily offering or 2 lambs (4 on Shabbat)

Deut. 16:13-15 – the rejoicing, an order!

Numbers!

Seventh and last of the set festivals – although the calendar is lunar, there are 364 days from Sukkot to Yom Kippur (timing varies in leap year, but it still works). In that period there are:

52 Sabbaths, 7 Set feasts and 11 New Moons – 70 celebrations in total

Seventy:

  • 70 bulls
  • 70 people in Jacob and his family (Gen. 46:27)
  • 70 nations in Gen. 10 (Deut. 32:8)

During the week of Sukkot (Tabernacles), 70 bullocks were offered on the altar.

When Jacob and his family went to Egypt, there were 70 people who went, and it was there that they became a nation. The nations of the world are associated with Sukkot in 1 Kings 8:41-43 when Solomon dedicated the temple during Sukkot. For this reason, the festival is also called the Feast of the Nations.

The connection of the 70 bulls to the 70 nations is taken from Deuteronomy 32:8; Genesis 46:27; and Exodus 1:1-5. Once again, the association of the nations of the world to Sukkot (Tabernacles) is found in Zechariah 14:16-19. [see also Rev. 21:24]

Eddie Chumney – The Seven Festivals of Messiah

Seven:

  • Seventh month
  • Seven days (third ‘seven’ of the seventh month)

Another fascinating thing about the sacrifices during Sukkot (Tabernacles) is that when the offerings are grouped or counted, their number always remains divisible by seven. During the week, there are 182 burnt offerings (70 bullocks, 14 rams, and 98 lambs; 7 divides into 182 exactly 26 times – the numerical ‘signature’ of J-H-V-H in Hebrew). Add to this the meal offerings, 336 tenths of ephahs of flour (48 x 7) (Numbers 29:12-40). It is no coincidence that this seven-day holiday, which takes place at the height of the seventh month, had the perfect number, seven, imprinted on its sacrifices.

Sukkot is a picture of the Messianic Kingdom (thousand-year reign of the Messiah) as the joy, and the number seven was connected to the sabbath, which was also seen as a picture of the Messianic Kingdom. The sabbath (shabbat) falls on the seventh day of the week.

Eddie Chumney – The Seven Festivals of Messiah

Historical celebrations

Dedication of the Temple 2 Chron. 7:8-10 (see 5:3 for 7th month) – called the Feast of Dedication

Rebuilding of the Temple Ezra 3:4

Rebuilding of the walls of Jerusalem Neh. 7:73; 8:1-18

Jesus at the Feast John 7, 8 and 9 – water and light feature in ch. 7 & 9

Zech. 14 Feast of the nations

Inference in Rev. 21-22 – final ingathering, tabernacle of God with men, nations coming to Jerusalem, river of life, fruit

Traditional views of Sukkot

From Wikipedia (based on Chumney’s book?) – edited

Sukkot is a seven-day autumn harvest festival where believers are instructed to dwell in temporary dwellings (Lev 23). Although no specific harvest crop is noted in scripture, Jewish tradition associates wine and water with festivals at Temple rituals. The Hebrew word Sukkot is usually translated as “tabernacles,” or “booths” and is the plural form of sukka (sue’-kah)— a Hebrew word meaning tent or (temporary) booth that one lived in–not the Tabernacle (which was used for worship and was the portable sanctuary in the wilderness). The sukkah symbolizes man’s need to depend upon God for food, water, and shelter. Other translations translate the word more closely to its intended meaning of a tent or booth; hence the name “Feast of Booths”.

Meaning: Anciently the feast represented the wandering in the wilderness and the physical harvest. Sukkot has additional manifold spiritual meanings: it speaks of the harvest of souls at the end of the age (Olam Hazeh=”this world”) (Matt13:39; Rev.14:15; Joel 3:13),[20] while the 7 days and the Feast being the 7th appointment also foreshadow the millennial reign of Christ in the 7,000th year. The last day of the feast is known as Hoshana Rabbah.

Shemini Atzeret – the eighth day

The Hebrew word means “Eighth [day of] Assembly” (Lev. 23:36, 39 = see John 7:37) and immediately follows the Feast of Sukkot. Hebrew Roots adherents view this day in a different light than those in the Jewish faith in which the day is “characterized as a day when the Jewish people “tarries” to spend an additional day with God at the end of Sukkot”.

Meaning: There is no direct Scriptural indication for what the day means; however, clues may be determined in the use of the number 8 in scripture. The number 8 is widely accepted as meaning “a new beginning”. It is prophetic of the time after the 7000 year millennium when the White Throne Judgment is held. A new beginning, termed the “World to Come” (Olam Haba in Hebrew) will occur with the establishment of a new Heavens, new Earth, and a new Jerusalem as described in Revelation 22.

End of Wikipedia quote

Fulfilment in Christ to discuss

Birth of Yeshua at Tabernacles?

John 1:18 tabernacled

The Transfiguration

John 7 water drawing associated with the Messianic era Isa 12:3 with joy you shall draw water out of the wells of salvation

Fulfilment in the Future

After the fulfilment of Yom Kippur in Isa. 4:3, “Then the LORD will create over the whole site of Mount Zion and over her assemblies a cloud by day, and smoke and the shining of a flaming fire by night; for over all the glory there will be a canopy. There will be a [sukkah] for shade by day from the heat, and for a refuge and a shelter from the storm and rain.” (Isaiah 4:5-6).

In the Messianic Era, all nations will be required to celebrate Sukkot by sending emissaries to Jerusalem for the festival. The nations “shall go up year after year to worship the King, the LORD of hosts, and to keep the Feast of Booths” (Zechariah 14:16). If the nations do not do so, they will be punished with drought or plague.

The Prophet Amos alluded to the restoration of the kingdom and the monarchy of the Son of David when he said, “In that day I will raise up the [sukkah] of David that is fallen and repair its breaches, and raise up its ruins and rebuild it as in the days of old” (Amos 9:11). This is one of the key texts of Sukkot, often cited in teachings, festive songs, and the Sukkot liturgies. It refers to the restoration of the kingdom of Messiah: “Master, will you at this time restore the kingdom to Israel?” (Acts 1:6). The apostles understood Amos 9:11 to refer to the restoration of David’s kingdom through King Yeshua. They used Amos 9:11 as a prooftext regarding the inclusion of the Gentile disciples in the Messianic Kingdom (Acts 15:15-18), an interpretation that accords with the Sukkot theme of the Festival of Nations.

It points forward to the time when, as in the days of Solomon, “every man under his vine and under his fig tree” (1 Kings 4:25), in the future kingdom, again, “They shall sit every man under his vine and under his fig tree” (Micah 4:4). See also Zech. 3:10