The Feast of LEAVENED Bread
This post is a continuation of The Tower of Babel.
The Feast of WeeksThe longest feast in the Leviticus 23 calendar — seven full weeks of counting from the wave sheaf to the fiftieth day, Pentecost. Beginning with the unleavened first of the firstfruits and culminating in two leavened loaves offered as firstfruits. An alternative name for this feast is demonstrated by its contents: the Feast of Leavened Bread. Synonyms: Pentecost, Shavuot, Feast of Firstfruits, Feast of Harvest. More is the longest feastIn Leviticus 23, a feast is a designated period — not a single day but a span of time with its own structure and sequence. The Feast of Weeks spans seven weeks. The Feast of Tabernacles spans seven days. A feast may contain one or more annual holy days, but the feast itself is the full period, not any single day within it. Synonyms: festival, appointed time, moed. More in the Leviticus 23 calendar — seven full weeks of counting, from the wave sheafThe first of the firstfruits of the harvest — a single unleavened sheaf lifted and waved before God on the day after the Sabbath during the Days of Unleavened Bread. It marks the transition into the counting period of the Feast of Weeks. 1 Corinthians 15:20-23 identifies Christ as the first of the firstfruits of the resurrection — the wave sheaf pointing precisely at him. Synonyms: wave offering, firstfruits offering, omer. See The Feast of LEAVENED Bread More offering to the fiftieth day. Most readers pass through it without noticing that it can be called by what it contains.
Not the Feast of Unleavened Bread (see A Lesson From The Days of Unleavened Bread). That feast has already passed. This one is demonstrated by two leavened loaves offered at its culmination as firstfruits to God. Its name, shown rather than stated: the Feast of LEAVENED Bread.
The name itself tests whether we are reading or assuming.
From the First of the Firstfruits
The count begins at the wave sheaf — unleavened, a single sheaf of the first of the firstfruits of the harvest, lifted and waved before God. It marks the transition out of the Days of Unleavened Bread and into the count. 1 Corinthians 15:20-23 identifies Christ as the first of the firstfruits of the resurrection. The count begins there.
The end: two leavened loaves — baked with leaven (see What is a New Lump?), offered as firstfruits. Leaven, as the symbol-system establishes elsewhere (see A Lesson From The Days of Unleavened Bread), is doctrine, teaching, the system that permeates whatever it enters. Two leavened loaves offered at the culmination of the count — the ekklesia, the called-out onesThe English word "church" does not translate the Greek ekklesia — it derives from kyriakos, a pagan term for a building belonging to a lord. The Greek ekklesia — the called-out ones — was used by NT writers to describe both the NT body and Israel in the wilderness (Acts 7:38), connecting directly to the Hebrew qahal, the assembled congregation, which the Septuagint most commonly renders as ekklesia. A spiritual organism, not a building or institution. Synonyms: ekklesia, firstfruits, ecclesia, called-out ones, assembly, congregation, kyriakos, qahal, edah. See The Called-Out Ones More, permeated with new understanding: truth assembled into cohesive knowledge, stoneA natural material whose substance remains what it is regardless of how it is shaped or how fine it is ground. In the biblical symbol-system, stone represents truth as it is found in reality — unmanufactured, carrying its own integrity. The altar of uncut stone, the tablets of the commandments, Christ as the foundation stone — the same substance at different scales and purposes. Petros — a moveable stone or pebble. Petra — bedrock, the immoveable foundation. Same substance, different scale. Synonyms: rock, petra, petros, foundation, sand, pebble, boulder, gravel. More connected with mortarProduced through tremendous heat — limestone burned, transformed, then mixed. Unlike tar, which is found naturally and holds things together superficially, mortar becomes structurally integral to what it binds. In the symbol-system, mortar represents the costly work of assembling truth into cohesive understanding. Stone connected with mortar is truth assembled into knowledge that holds. Synonyms: cement, binding. See The Tower of Babel More, offered to God as firstfruits.
The Feast of Weeks is the process between, and including, those two offerings. From Christ as the first of the firstfruits to the ekklesia as firstfruits. A count that cannot be skipped, a process that must be walked through one day at a time.
The Mortar Work
Something begins during that count that is not yet Pentecost. After the resurrection, before the outpouring:
Then he opened their minds so they could understand the Scriptures. Luke 24:45
Dianoigo — opened thoroughly, opened wide. The same word used for the opening of a womb, the opening of blind eyes. Not explanation. Not instructionFrom the Hebrew Torah — instruction, direction — rooted in yarah, to aim as an archer toward a target. Never primarily legislative. The stone tablets were hidden inside the ark, inside the most holy place, mediated by a priest. The promise was always to move that instruction from stone to flesh — from concealment behind a veil to working from within the person. Synonyms: Torah, nomos, instruction, teaching, commandment, mitzvah. More in the ordinary sense. A capacity being unlocked — the mind becoming able to receive what was always in the text but not yet visible.
This happens during the counting period. The process is already underway. The opening of the mind to understand Scripture — to see the symbol-system, to perceive the connections — is the mortar work beginning. Costly. Requiring investment. Not a shortcut. Transformation is what emerges from it, not what you bring to it.
The New Leaven
Where the Days of Unleavened Bread pictures the purging of the old system entirely — the old doctrine, the old leaven, the fabricated framework — the Feast of Weeks pictures the introduction of new leaven (see What is a New Lump?). The new understanding hidden in the meal, working from within, leaveningIn the biblical symbol-system, leaven is amoral — neither good nor evil in itself. It represents doctrine, teaching, knowledge, influence: the system that permeates whatever it enters and transforms it from within. The type of leaven matters; "the leaven of the Pharisees" is their doctrine, not leaven as a category. Synonyms: yeast, leavening. See A Lesson From The Days of Unleavened Bread More the whole.
The kingdom of heavenNot a future political territory but a present reality. Jesus located it precisely: entos hymon — within you (Luke 17:21). The alternate translation "among you" reflects a theological preference more than the Greek; Jesus was addressing Pharisees, making "among you" an unlikely reading. The kingdom is not coming to be observed from outside — it is already within. Synonyms: kingdom of heaven, kingdom of Christ, basileia. More is like leaven, which a woman took and hid in three measures of meal till it was all leavened. Matthew 13:33
The new leaven hidden inside, invisible in its operation, working from within. The direction reversed from Babel — not reaching outward toward an external heaven, but the kingdom of heaven already within, beginning to permeate.
The kingdom of God is within you. Luke 17:21
Pentecost — The Pure Language
When the fifty days are complete, Acts 2 describes something that reads, on the surface, as a language miracle. Before the crowds gather, a detail worth holding:
When the day of Pentecost came, they were all together in ONE ACCORD. Acts 2:1
Then:
Now there were staying in Jerusalem God-fearing Jews from every nation… each one heard their own language being spoken. Acts 2:5-6
Every nation. The scattered peoples of Babel, represented. Each hearing in their own language. The fracture of Babel visibly reversing.
But the reversal runs deeper than the surface miracle. Babel was not restored — it was superseded. Not one human language returned to replace the many, but something operating beneath and through all of them simultaneously. The Spirit as the pure language — not a language of words but a language of direct understanding, available now to scattered peoples of every nation at once.
Zephaniah had pointed at this:
For then I will restore to the peoples a pure language, that they all may call on the name of the Lord, to serve Him with ONE ACCORD. Zephaniah 3:9
The one accord of Acts 2:1 and the one accord of Zephaniah 3:9 are the same reality — one described as it arrived, one pointed at centuries in advance. Pure — not refined from existing material, not a better version of what Babel corruptedFrom the Latin corruptus — broken, destroyed, altered from its original state. In Scripture, describes something changed or turned from what it was meant to be — a neutral description of a process, not primarily a moral label. The word itself has undergone the very process it describes. More. A different order of communication entirely. Notice what Zephaniah says this pure language is for: to call on the NAME of the Lord. Babel began with the aim of making a name for themselves. The reversal is precise — the fabricated name replaced by the name that was always the actual aim.
The symbol-system operates as a bridge language — physical referents that carry meaning across every human language because bread is bread, blood is blood, fire is fire regardless of what word any tongue uses for them. These physical referents point consistently toward the same reality across the entire scatter of Babel. They are not the pure language — but they are intelligible within it, and they point toward what the pure language actually is. Pentecost is where the bridge connects to the other side.
And the other side is where the next post begins. See From Fifty Days to Eternity.
See also: The Hub and the Spokes
