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   GOSPEL DOCTRINE   
New Testament Supplements
by Daniel Rona



Lesson Number 28 - "We Are Witnesses"


The profound gift of the Holy Ghost was given so that a witness could be given of the completion of the Savior’s atonement process. Being "set at liberty from our bruises" and happy to share our new found freedom, we need the gift of the Holy Ghost to be witnesses. Fifty days after the Passover when Jesus was crucified and resurrected there was a "Day of Pentecost." To this day it is a holy day for the Jews, called Shavuot. The most significant thing celebrated is the receiving of the Torah, the Law of Moses.

"Shavuot (Hebrew for "Weeks"), the name of the festival which celebrates the end of the spring barley harvest and the beginning of the summer wheat and fruit harvests. According to rabbinic tradition, Shavuot is also the day on which the Torah was revealed to the Jewish people on Mount Sinai."

"Shavuot is the only holiday for which the Torah does not give a specific date. The biblical text (Leviticus 23:4) states that Passover should be celebrated on the fifteenth of the first month (Nisan). It then says "From the day after the Sabbath . . . you shall keep count [until] seven full weeks have elapsed . . . you shall count fifty days . . . then you shall bring an offering of new grain to the Lord." What is the meaning of "the day after the Sabbath?" Does the word "Sabbath" mean "Saturday" or does it mean "the day of rest" which can also apply to the festival? The rabbis of the Talmud understood it in the latter sense and so Shavuot always falls 50 days after the second day of Passover. These 50 days represent the period of the counting of the Omer. In English, the festival is often known as Pentecost, from the Greek word which means "the fiftieth day."

"The Bible refers to Shavuot as Hag Shavuot ("The Festival of Weeks," Exodus 34:22; Deuteronomy 16:10), and Hag ha-Kazir ("The Harvest Festival," Exodus 23:16). Shavuot is also called Yom ha-Bikkurim ("The Day of the First Fruits," Numbers 28:26) and is, therefore the festival which marks the beginning of the summer fruit harvest as well as the beginning of the wheat harvest. According to the Book of Leviticus (23:17 ff) two loaves of bread, baked from the first wheat crop, were brought to the sanctuary as part of the festival offering. According to the Book of Deuteronomy (16:9ff), Shavuot is a holiday on which the entire community is to rejoice "at the place where the Lord your God will choose to establish. His name (Jerusalem). The observance of Shavuot also included a "freewill" offering in proportion to one's ability to contribute."

"Seven weeks after the Exodus from Egypt a horde of slaves stood before Mount Sinai and freely accepted the spiritual and moral teachings which gave meaning and depth to their new-found freedom." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)

The imagery of receiving the Torah from above on Shavuot (Jewish Pentecost), leads to understanding the "New Testament" day of Pentecost, when the Holy Ghost came down. The Holy Ghost came down so that the Savior could go up. Likewise, we must have the Holy Ghost come down on us so that we can go up to our Savior, who will bring us to his and our Father in Heaven.

The Savior’s healing power was given to his Apostles as they learned to work in his name. Healing was part of the person becoming whole, physically, emotionally and spiritually.

The great Jewish Rabbi, Maimonides, felt that healing had to be holistic. He was a physician as well as a doctor.

"He abhorred the thought of using Torah learning as a means of support. This was a serious point of contention between him and the geonim of the religious establishment, and he turned to the profession of medicine. Jews and Muslims were among his patients. His ideas on medicine were advanced and sympathetic: he rejected the use of magic and charms in healing, and added that the doctor must know the whole patient in order to diagnose properly." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)

There is another image that may help us understand the Savior’s power, entrusted to his Apostles through the priesthood and gift of the Holy Ghost. It is the comparison of Aaron to Moses.

"Aaron was clearly given a lesser role than Moses. Aaron experienced revelations from God and, being an eloquent speaker, acted as prophet and miracle- worker before Pharaoh in the matter of the Plagues of Egypt. However, it is significant that even where he plays an active role in performing the miracles, it is not a result of his own ability or initiative, but solely by divine command given through Moses." (Encyclopedia Judaica Jr.)

In that sense, concentration on the highest power, that of the Lord, helps us consecrate everything to and for him. Healings, blessings, repeated guidances through the gift of the Holy Ghost are manifestations witnesses of the Lord’s great gift of atonement. We are witnesses!



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