ANOTHER 50 DAYS

There are two great occasions in the Bible when fifty days elapse between very special and significant events. In each case, the fifty days separates a sacrifice from the appearance of fire with the Word of God and the Power of God.
The first occurred when the Israelites, in slavery in Egypt, followed God’s command to sacrifice a lamb and mark the doorposts of their houses with its blood (Exod.12.1-3,5-7). As a result, the angel of the Lord would pass over and only the first-born of the Egyptians would be slain (Exod.12.12-13). Because of this, Pharaoh allowed the Children of Israel to leave Egypt. Following this Passover and their exodus from Egypt, the Israelites journeyed to Mount Sinai and, on the fiftieth day, God descended in fire upon the mountain and met with Moses, giving him the Ten Commandments (Exod.20.1-17).
To commemorate this event, an annual celebration of the giving of the Law was instituted. It was called the Feast of Weeks (for it was seven full weeks after Passover) or the Feast of the Fiftieth Day (Pentecost). It was also called by other names, including the Feast of Harvest or of First-Fruits, as it became a celebration of the wheat harvest as well.
It was one of these celebrations, more than 1,000 years later, which became the second great occasion. Fifty days after the Resurrection, the Holy Spirit descended, in the outward appearance of fire and the sound of wind, on the disciples assembled in the upper room. The promise made by Jesus that He would send a Helper who would stay with them and reveal the truth about God (John 14.15-17) had been fulfilled.
The original Passover, signified by the sacrifice of a lamb in each household, freed the Jews physically from the bondage of slavery in Egypt. In the same way, the crucifixion of Jesus, the sacrifice of the Lamb of God at Passover time, ‘sacrificed for the people’ according to Caiaphas the High Priest (John 11.49-50), has redeemed us from the slavery to sin. As the giving of the Law on Mount Sinai directed the Israelites to the way by which they could live which was pleasing to God, so the coming of the Holy Spirit in the upper room (Acts 2.1-4) has provided the power by which Christians can live the Christian life.
The redemption of Israel was transformed, through the Cross and the Resurrection, into the redemption for all mankind. The Law given to the Israelites as an external pointer to the right way of living became, in the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, the inner means for truly living the redeemed life in Jesus Christ. This is now celebrated by the Christian Church,
We could do with another of those fifty day occasions today.








