Feast of Dedication
Chanukah

This
is not a biblical feast although it is mentioned in
the New Testament as the Feast of Dedication (John
10:22-23).
I
have included it in this series because it commemorations
the victory of faith in the one true God over Hellenistic
humanistic thought and culture and therefore it is
very important to Christians.
In
the 4th century BC Alexander the Great conquered Israel
(Daniel 8:21-22). He had a dream to unite the known
world and see it embrace the Greek Hellenistic culture.
He did not live to see his dream fulfilled however
and after his death at the age of thirty, his empire
was split amongst his four generals, with Israel coming
under the control of the Seleucids.
In
167 BC Antiochus Epiphanes (God Manifest), a Syrian,
was in control and tried to force the people to embrace
Hellenism. Keeping the Sabbath and circumcision were
outlawed and the worship of Greek gods replaced the
worship of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
Temple
sacrifice was abolished and Antiochus set up a statue
of Zeus and sacrificed a pig in the temple. Gymnasiums
were built where the athletes competed naked and there
was a great emphasis on beauty and strength.
Parents
began to give their children Greek names instead of
Hebrew ones and art and culture came under the influence
of Hellenism. Thus the great struggle between worship
of God and humanism which had begun in the garden
of Eden when Satan countered the concept of "God has
said" with the humanistic reasoning of "Has God said?"
began to shake the very foundation of Jewish belief.
The
struggle came to a head when Antiochus came to the
village of Modin and commanded the people to sacrifice
a pig. Mattathias, an old priest and his five sons
began the revolt against the Syrians which lasted
three years. After Mattathias died, his son Judah
the Maccabee (the Hammer) continued the fight liberating
Jerusalem and setting up the Hasmonean dynasty. The
temple was rededicated and belief in the one true
God was saved from extinction.
Without
the revolt of the Maccabees against the Greek Hellenism,
there would have been no Jewish people to give birth
to the Messiah 160 years later and consequently no
Christianity.
Hanukah
came to be celebrated over eight days as the Maccabees
had been so busy fighting that they hadn't been able
to celebrate Succot that year.
A
tradition also developed which said that there had
only been enough oil to light the temple menorah for
one day, and it lasted for eight until more could
be made. Hanukah is celebrated on the twenty fifth
of Chislev, November/December of our calendar.
It
has come to be called the Feast of Dedication or Lights
- a time to remember that every part of our lives
must be dedicated to the Lord. The Greek concept concerning
the separation of secular and sacred has robbed Christendom
of the understanding that every part of life is sacred
to the Lord.
The
Hebrew word for worship is the same as the word for
work and everything we do ought to be an act of worship
to the Lord.
Hanukah
also reminds us of the importance of keeping the flame
of religious freedom and truth alight.
It
is celebrated in the home and we must make sure our
homes are illuminated with the light of kindness,
wisdom, hospitality, prayer and bible study.
The
Hanukah light also reminds us that we must allow the
light of God's spirit to search our hearts and lives
to reveal to us how we can make our lives more pleasing
to Him.
Events
that have happened at Hannukah
1.
The foundation stone of the Second Temple was laid
in 520bc
2.
Temple sacrifice abolished by Antiochus Epiphanes
in 168bc
3.
Temple recaptured and rededicated in 165 BC
4.
Jerusalem freed from Turkish rule 1917
Bibliography
:
| Eckstein
Y |
What
Christians should know about Jews and Judaism |
| Kasdan,
B |
God's
Appointed Times |
| |
Inside
Israel extension studies, AMI, JCBSR |