Seventh-month offerings
God appoints the sacred rhythms of Israel’s seventh month and governs them with precise sacrificial requirements. The calendar binds the people to holiness, rest from ordinary labor, humbling before God, and repeated atonement, while also marking the season with festal joy before the Lord. The entir
Commentary
29:1 “‘On the first day of the seventh month, you are to hold a holy assembly. You must not do your ordinary work, for it is a day of blowing trumpets for you.
29:2 You must offer a burnt offering as a sweet aroma to the Lord: one young bull, one ram, and seven lambs one year old without blemish.
29:3 “‘Their grain offering is to be of finely ground flour mixed with olive oil, three-tenths of an ephah for the bull, two-tenths of an ephah for the ram,
29:4 and one-tenth for each of the seven lambs,
29:5 with one male goat for a purification offering to make an atonement for you;
29:6 this is in addition to the monthly burnt offering and its grain offering, and the daily burnt offering with its grain offering and their drink offerings as prescribed, as a sweet aroma, a sacrifice made by fire to the Lord.
29:7 “‘On the tenth day of this seventh month you are to have a holy assembly. You must humble yourselves; you must not do any work on it.
29:8 But you must offer a burnt offering as a pleasing aroma to the Lord, one young bull, one ram, and seven lambs one year old, all of them without blemish.
29:9 Their grain offering must be of finely ground flour mixed with olive oil, three-tenths of an ephah for the bull, two-tenths for the ram,
29:10 and one-tenth for each of the seven lambs,
29:11 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the purification offering for atonement and the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and their drink offerings.
29:12 “‘On the fifteenth day of the seventh month you are to have a holy assembly; you must do no ordinary work, and you must keep a festival to the Lord for seven days.
29:13 You must offer a burnt offering, an offering made by fire as a pleasing aroma to the Lord: thirteen young bulls, two rams, and fourteen lambs each one year old, all of them without blemish.
29:14 Their grain offering must be of finely ground flour mixed with olive oil, three-tenths of an ephah for each of the thirteen bulls, two-tenths of an ephah for each of the two rams,
29:15 and one-tenth for each of the fourteen lambs,
29:16 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and its drink offering.
29:17 “‘On the second day you must offer twelve young bulls, two rams, fourteen lambs one year old, all without blemish,
29:18 and their grain offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number as prescribed,
29:19 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and their drink offerings.
29:20 “‘On the third day you must offer eleven bulls, two rams, fourteen lambs one year old, all without blemish,
29:21 and their grain offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number as prescribed,
29:22 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and its drink offering.
29:23 “‘On the fourth day you must offer ten bulls, two rams, and fourteen lambs one year old, all without blemish,
29:24 and their grain offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number as prescribed,
29:25 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and its drink offering.
29:26 “‘On the fifth day you must offer nine bulls, two rams, and fourteen lambs one year old, all without blemish,
29:27 and their grain offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number as prescribed,
29:28 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and its drink offering.
29:29 “‘On the sixth day you must offer eight bulls, two rams, and fourteen lambs one year old, all without blemish,
29:30 and their grain offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number as prescribed,
29:31 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and its drink offering.
29:32 “‘On the seventh day you must offer seven bulls, two rams, and fourteen lambs one year old, all without blemish,
29:33 and their grain offering and their drink offerings for the bulls, for the rams, and for the lambs, according to their number as prescribed,
29:34 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and its drink offering.
29:35 “‘On the eighth day you are to have a holy assembly; you must do no ordinary work on it.
29:36 But you must offer a burnt offering, an offering made by fire, as a pleasing aroma to the Lord, one bull, one ram, seven lambs one year old, all of them without blemish,
29:37 and with their grain offering and their drink offerings for the bull, for the ram, and for the lambs, according to their number as prescribed,
29:38 along with one male goat for a purification offering, in addition to the continual burnt offering with its grain offering and its drink offering.
29:39 “‘These things you must present to the Lord at your appointed times, in addition to your vows and your freewill offerings, as your burnt offerings, your grain offerings, your drink offerings, and your peace offerings.’”
29:40 (30:1) So Moses told the Israelites everything, just as the Lord had commanded him.
Scripture quoted by permission. Quotations designated (NET) are from the NET Bible® copyright ©1996, 2019 by Biblical Studies Press, L.L.C. http://netbible.com All rights reserved.
Historical setting and dynamics
The passage reflects the wilderness tabernacle setting under the Mosaic covenant, where Israel’s worship was regulated by divinely appointed times and sacrifices. The seventh month became the climactic liturgical season of the year, beginning with trumpet blowing, including the Day of Atonement, and culminating in the Feast of Booths and its closing assembly. The repeated offerings are not private acts of devotion but national, priestly acts performed in the sanctuary on behalf of the covenant people. The text assumes a functioning sacrificial system, a consecrated priesthood, and a people whose calendar is ordered around holiness, atonement, and rejoicing before the Lord.
Central idea
God appoints the sacred rhythms of Israel’s seventh month and governs them with precise sacrificial requirements. The calendar binds the people to holiness, rest from ordinary labor, humbling before God, and repeated atonement, while also marking the season with festal joy before the Lord. The entire sequence underscores that acceptable worship depends on God’s provision and God’s command, not human improvisation.
Context and flow
This passage closes the detailed sacrificial calendar that began in Numbers 28. It moves from the first day’s trumpet blast, to the tenth day’s self-humbling and atonement, to the seven-day Feast of Booths beginning on the fifteenth day, and then to the eighth-day closing assembly. Verse 39 summarizes the whole unit by reminding Israel that these appointed offerings stand alongside vows, freewill gifts, and the regular sacrificial system. Verse 40 concludes the section with Moses’ faithful transmission of the Lord’s command.
Exegetical analysis
The chapter presents a tightly ordered liturgical schedule rather than a narrative event. Each subsection follows a consistent pattern: the date, the required sacred assembly, the prohibition of ordinary work, the sacrificial sequence, and the repeated reminder that these offerings are added to the regular daily and monthly sacrifices. That repeated “in addition to” language is crucial, because it prevents the festivals from being treated as isolated rites; they intensify, but never replace, the ongoing worship of the tabernacle.
The first day of the seventh month is marked by trumpet blowing and a holy assembly. The text does not explain the trumpet’s full symbolic range here, but it clearly functions as a public summons into sacred time. The tenth day is distinctively penitential: the people must “humble yourselves,” a phrase that in context points to self-denial and submissive repentance in the presence of God, not merely inward feeling. The emphasis on atonement on this day is especially strong, since the purification offering is linked explicitly to making atonement for the people.
The Feast of Booths on the fifteenth day is the longest section and the most elaborate. It lasts seven days, followed by an eighth-day holy assembly. The sacrificial quantities are substantial and carefully numbered, especially the sequence of bulls that decreases from thirteen to seven across the seven days. The text itself does not interpret the reason for that pattern, so it is best to observe it as an intentional liturgical structure rather than speculate beyond the data. What is clear is the abundance and orderliness of the festival: the people are to keep the feast to the Lord with repeated sacrifices of burnt offering, grain offering, drink offering, and purification offering.
Verse 39 functions as a summary and safeguard. It states that these offerings are to be presented at the appointed times, but they are still distinct from vows, freewill offerings, and the people’s other offerings. The final verse closes the section by affirming Moses’ faithful obedience in delivering everything just as the Lord commanded. The whole unit therefore highlights divine authority, priestly order, and the necessity of atoning worship within Israel’s covenant life.
Covenantal and redemptive location
This passage stands squarely within the Mosaic covenant administration at Sinai and in the wilderness. It regulates Israel’s sanctuary life as a redeemed people already brought out of Egypt but not yet settled in the land. The seventh-month cycle combines atonement, remembrance, and festal joy, pointing to a covenant people who may dwell with a holy God only through sacrifice and divinely appointed mediation. In the larger biblical storyline, these appointed times anticipate the need for deeper and final atonement, while also fitting the land-oriented rhythms of harvest and ingathering that will become more fully expressed once Israel is settled in Canaan.
Theological significance
The passage teaches that God is holy, time belongs to him, and worship must be ordered by his command. It shows that sin and impurity require atonement, that rest from ordinary work is itself an act of consecration, and that joyful celebration does not cancel the need for cleansing. The repeated sacrificial system also stresses covenant mercy: God provides a way for his people to draw near, but only on the terms he establishes. The month’s structure joins repentance, sacrifice, and rejoicing, showing that biblical holiness includes both solemn self-humbling and thankful festival.
Prophecy, typology, and symbols
No major prophecy, typology, or symbol requires special comment in this unit beyond the broader sacrificial and festival patterns already embedded in the Mosaic law. The trumpet, atonement day, and Booths festival are covenantal institutions, not direct prophetic oracles. Their later canonical significance should be traced carefully and not collapsed into immediate messianic prediction.
Eastern thought, culture, and figures
The passage reflects a covenantal and communal world in which time is sacred and public worship defines national identity. The repeated holy assemblies, cessation from ordinary labor, and prescribed offerings show an honor-and-order logic: the people publicly acknowledge the Lord’s kingship by submitting their calendar and productivity to him. The text also assumes sacrificial fullness and repetition as the normal way of maintaining purified access to God in the sanctuary. No more specialized cultural background is necessary to read the unit responsibly.
Canonical and Christological trajectory
Within the Old Testament, this calendar reinforces themes that later become central to Israel’s hope: atonement, sacred time, and God’s dwelling among his people. The Day of Atonement in particular prepares for the need of decisive and sufficient cleansing, a need ultimately fulfilled in the once-for-all sacrifice of Christ. The Feast of Booths contributes the themes of divine provision, pilgrim dependence, and covenant joy in God’s presence. Care must be taken not to erase Israel’s own covenant setting, but the sacrificial logic of the chapter naturally points forward to the fuller cleansing and access secured in the Messiah.
Practical and doctrinal implications
God’s people should learn that worship is not self-designed but received and obeyed. Holiness includes both repentance and rejoicing, and neither can be detached from atonement. The passage also teaches that sacred priorities can rightly interrupt ordinary labor, and that regular worship rhythms help preserve covenant seriousness. For Christians, the text encourages reverent participation in God-ordered worship while remembering that the old sacrificial calendar itself is not directly binding on the church.
Textual critical note
No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.
Interpretive cruxes
No major interpretive crux requires special comment.
Application boundary note
Do not directly transfer Israel’s seventh-month sacrificial calendar as binding church liturgy. The passage teaches enduring principles about holiness, atonement, order, and corporate worship, but it must be applied within its Mosaic covenant setting and not flattened into a one-to-one model for the church.
Key Hebrew terms
moʿădêkhem
Gloss: appointed seasons, set times
This term frames the chapter as a divinely ordered calendar. The feasts are not human inventions but covenant appointments established by the Lord.
miqraʾ-qodesh
Gloss: a sacred convocation
The gatherings are public and consecrated, emphasizing corporate worship and cessation from ordinary labor.
teruʿah
Gloss: a shout, signal, trumpet blast
The first day is marked by a loud cultic signal, likely summoning the people to sacred remembrance and assembly.
weʿinnitem
Gloss: afflict, humble, bring low
On the Day of Atonement the people are called to self-abasement, fitting the day’s penitential character.
kipper
Gloss: to atone, purge, cover
Atonement is central to the month’s observances, showing that Israel’s worship depends on sacrificial dealing with sin and impurity.
reaḥ nîḥoḥ
Gloss: soothing, pleasing odor
This conventional sacrificial phrase signals acceptance before God, not that God is physically fed by the offering.
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