Bible Commentary

Numbers 28:11

The Pulpit Commentary on Numbers 28:11

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

In the beginnings of your months. The new-moon offering also is here enjoined for the first time, the festival itself having only been incidentally mentioned in . There can be no doubt that this (unlike the sabbath) was a nature-festival, observed more or less by all nations.

As such it did not require to be instituted, but only to be regulated and sanctified in order that it might not lend itself to idolatry, as it did among the heathen (cf. ; , ; ; ).

The new-moon feast, depending upon no calendar but that of the sky, and more clearly marked in that than any other recurring period, was certain to fix itself deeply in the social and religious habits of a simple pastoral or agricultural people.

Accordingly we find it incidentally mentioned as a day of social gathering (), and as a day for religious instruction (). From the latter passage, and from such passages as ; ; , it is evident that the feast of the new moon became to the month exactly what the sabbath was to the week—a day of rest and of worship (see also Judith 8:6).

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