Feast in Easton's Bible Dictionary
as a mark of hospitality (Gen. 19:3; 2 Sam. 3:20; 2 Kings
6:23);
on occasions of domestic joy (Luke 15:23; Gen.
21:8); on
birthdays (Gen. 40:20; Job 1:4; Matt. 14:6); and on
the occasion
of a marriage (Judg. 14:10; Gen. 29:22).
Feasting was a part of the observances connected
with the
offering up of sacrifices (Deut. 12:6, 7; 1 Sam.
9:19; 16:3, 5),
and with the annual festivals (Deut. 16:11). "It was
one of the
designs of the greater solemnities, which required
the
attendance of the people at the sacred tent, that
the oneness of
the nation might be maintained and cemented
together, by
statedly congregating in one place, and with one
soul taking
part in the same religious services. But that
oneness was
primarily and chiefly a religious and not merely a
political
one; the people were not merely to meet as among
themselves, but
with Jehovah, and to present themselves before him
as one body;
the meeting was in its own nature a binding of
themselves in
fellowship with Jehovah; so that it was not politics
and
commerce that had here to do, but the soul of the
Mosaic
dispensation, the foundation of the religious and
political
existence of Israel, the covenant with Jehovah. To
keep the
people's consciousness alive to this, to revive,
strengthen, and
perpetuate it, nothing could be so well adapated as
these annual
feasts." (See FESTIVALS -T0001325.)
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