Pilgrimage and Festival Observance in Early Judaism

2nd Century BCE–3rd Century CE
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The Torah enumerates three festivals at which all males are required to bring offerings to the sanctuary: Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot (Exodus 23:14–17; 34:18–21; Deuteronomy 16:1–16). In the First and Second Temple periods, these festivals would bring Jews from throughout the land of Israel to Jerusalem. Jewish writers living during the Second Temple period and after the Temple’s destruction in 70 CE described these pilgrimages, explained their function, and elaborated on their laws.

The precise times when the biblical festivals were to be observed became a point of sectarian controversy in the late Second Temple period. The biblical lunar calendar required periodic intercalation of an extra month so that Passover would always fall in the spring. The book of Jubilees instead presents a more symmetrical, solar calendar: a year of 364 days comprised of four quarters of ninety days each (with three thirty-day months), to which are added four days, one at the end of each quarter. With this system, every festival falls on the same day of the week each year. This calendar is also reflected in the Enoch literature (1 Enoch 74:10–12) and many of the texts from the Dead Sea Scrolls found at Qumran, including the Temple Scroll (see “The Temple Scroll”).

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Attendance at Festivals

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Further, he does not consent to those who wish to perform the rites in their houses, but bids them rise up from the ends of the earth and come to this temple. In this way he also applies the severest…

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Three Annual Pilgrimages

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Let those from the far ends of the land that the Hebrews will come to possess assemble together three times each year in the city where the Temple will be, to give thanks to God for His bounty and…

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Physical Requirements of Pilgrimage

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All are obligated to appear [at the Temple] except a deaf person, an imbecile, a minor, a person of unknown sex, a hermaphrodite, women, unfreed slaves, a lame person, a blind person, a sick person…

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The Festivals and the Calendar Controversy

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For this reason it has been ordained and written on the heavenly tablets that they should celebrate the Festival of Weeks during this month…