Sunday, February 1, 2026

SACRAMENTS AND SACRED RITES PART 4 - JEWISH ROOTS OF THE CHRISTIAN CALENDAR

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Sacramental theology demands the vitality of ritual. Whether believers acknowledge it or not, ritual is key to the Christian experience. As such, the Christian calendar presents one of the most significant tools in the faith: the church calendar. Often seemingly viewed as meaningless, antiquated, and irrelevant, liturgical actions aid in producing the reality of formation.

In discussions of the Christian calendar’s benefits, the vivacity of its Jewish roots should not be missed.

Despite centuries of the celebration of the Lord’s Supper and Baptism in Christianity, the problem faced is that the origins of these rites are generally unknown, or at best, it is believed to be a new function in Christian worship that began with Jesus. For this reason, this study focuses on discovering the origins of the Lord’s Supper and Baptism in their original Jewish context as acts of worship.[1]

Sacramental theology assuredly includes a commitment to ancient practice and correct understanding. Nonetheless, the church calendar is but a tool, which allows God’s people to live in the realities set forth by the Lord himself.

The Christian calendar is a tool for Christians to worship rightly, but it is also a tool founded upon deep tradition and tested-and-tried scrutiny. “Religious rituals are corporate symbolic actions in which people engage when they worship. The theological principle underlying ritual worship is that our principal access to the spiritual is through the outward and visible.”[2]

Christian corporate worship grew out of Jewish liturgical practice. Understanding the unique spirituality of Jewish worship can suggest both how the first Christians approached their own worship and how Christians today can more fully integrate their own spiritual pilgrimage with corporate worship.[3]

Understanding Christian worship along with sacred actions demands a comprehension of Jewish roots. A relevant and crucial tool in doing so, therefore, is the Christian calendar with all of its rituals, observances, and actions (e.g., prayers, readings, holy days, etc.).

Here the Jewish roots of the church year and liturgical practices in Christian worship will be examined, the parallels between Christian worship and Jewish tradition will be understood, and the importance of repletion will be contended and reiterated. The parallels between Jewish feasts and Christian holy days should be understood by believers, for the church has been included in a body of people, which once required certain genetic distinctions and now does not consider such distinctions. God’s people are now redeemed irrespective of genetic realities. Thus, Christians should experience such a reality with humility and grace while living in the realities set forth in the Christian calendar.

Parallels Between Jewish Feasts and Christian Holy Days

The chief parallels between Jewish feasts and Christian holy days revolve around Messianic prophecies regarding the coming of Christ.[4]

A feast is a sign of the divine in history. Israel celebrated three kinds of feasts: pilgrimage feasts, solemn or repentance feasts, and lesser feasts not mandated by the Torah. All of these commemorated God’s action in the life and history of the community.[5]

The three major Jewish feasts are associated with three annual harvests; historically each involved the return of a portion of the harvest to the Lord. These offerings symbolized the reasons for the feast itself: God is the source of the fruits of the earth; God's gifts of produce are for the sustenance and comfort of the people; and because God gives freely, the worshipers must do the same, sharing their benefits with the needy.[6]

During the cycle of life (spring commemorations), the Christian calendar affords God’s people the opportunity to live within the reality of Christ’s atoning work upon the cross and through his death, burial, and resurrection. Jewish feasts memorialize God’s great works of old in the lives of his people through Israel (e.g., the blood-bought people redeemed with the mark of a lamb in Egypt and God’s provision for his people through the harvests of their labor).

During the cycle of light (fall commemorations), subsequently, the Christian calendar allows the church to celebrate believers’ salvation from eternal judgment and the hope that they possess in Jesus Christ, which parallels God’s guidance and faithfulness to his people in Israel. As a cloud by day and a fire by night, the Lord led his people with an unrivaled protection and provision through miracles that only God himself may provide, and his people are called now to remember such deliverances and celebrate his continued faithfulness to his promises.

Spring Feasts (Fulfilled in Christ’s First Coming)

Four principal Jewish feasts subsist, which parallel Christian holy days: Passover, Unleavened Bread, First Fruits, and Shavuot. Their parallels are celebrated by God’s global church to this day. The following Jewish feasts and their Christian parallels offer a glimpse into the spiritual reality that currently exists among the global church and has for centuries of Christian worship.

Figure 4.1 spring Jewish feasts and Christian parallels

Fall Feasts (Foretelling Christ's Second Coming)

Christian holy days and remembrances are derived primarily from three primary Jewish feasts: the Feast of Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, and the Feast of Tabernacles, which are all three Jewish feasts that occur in the autumn time of year. Such feasts are intended to remember God’s faithfulness to his chosen people and require themes of judgment and sacrifice, for mercy and grace may not exist without the possibility and even surety of wrath. Figure 4.2 presents the Christian thematic parallels to the aforesaid Jewish feasts.


Figure 4.2 autumn Jewish feasts and Christian parallels

 

Key Christian Parallels

The Jewish feasts recognized during the spring are perhaps most strongly connected to Christian holy days, particularly those surrounding the atoning work of Christ on the cross, his resurrection, his ascension, and his eventual return. The seasons and observations of Lent, Easter, and Pentecost seemingly comprise the linchpin of the Christian liturgical year. Nevertheless, such adherences are not only repletely biblical but, moreover, hold deep and historic Jewish roots.

Lent (leading to Maundy Thursday just before Good Friday, the first day of the Easter Triduum) survives as a historic forty-day (not including Sundays) season leading to resurrection weekend in which Christians fast and prepare for Easter, echoing themes of self-examination (often with sacrifices) found in Jewish feasts like Rosh Hashanah. Easter is directly linked to the Jewish Feast of First Fruits, as it celebrates Jesus’ eternal victory over death (i.e., for the believer, although humanity is assured death, in Christ, the people of God are converted to eternal life through a fleshly death. Pentecost marks the church’s birth directly following the celebration of Shavuot, which celebrates the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai and marks the end of the seven-week Counting of the Omer after Passover.

The parallels between Jewish feasts and Christian holy days recognize a multilayered relationship between God’s chosen people in Israel and those grafted into his family through Christ. The historic feasts of Judaism, thus, are not empty; nor, are they meaningless (for believers), for the people of God have built upon the worship of ancient Israel. “Israel’s whole history is a life of coexistence with God, a partnership in a historical drama. The emphasis is on Yahweh as the initiator, but Israel responds.”[7] God is the same yesterday, today, and forever (Heb 13:8); therefore, God’s plan has not changed, and he has not redeemed a people other than those whom he has intentionally and originally sought from before time (Rev 13:8). Christianity is not a secondary plan for God or his people but rather the foundational plan. Christians, therefore, should hold fast to the historic and biblical roots of worship practice, for the church’s sacred actions are predicated on a deeply planted and entrusted faith in an eternal God.

 

Connection Between Israel and Those Grafted

The Christian calendar profoundly allows the church to experience a mysterious connection with Israel, as those who are grafted into the body of God are not only chosen but hold all rights and privileges designed for ancient Israel.[8] Christians may share with Israel with a sense of waiting and expectation, for as Israel awaited the first coming of the Messiah (although such an event was missed), Christians await the second coming. Scripture is replete with metaphors of Christians’ connection with Israel. No longer, however, are God’s people separated by genetic differences (Gal 3:28) but hold a distinctive position as people of God. While Christians are truly redeemed and are part of the fulfillment of Messianic prophecy, a correlation to ancient Israel subsists.

The biblical olive tree metaphor offers a unique perspective on how Gentiles have not only become a part of the redeemed people of God but also how such a position has been God’s fundamental purpose from before time. Moreover, Christians’ connection with Israel exists in a shared identity, a spiritual inheritance, and a Messianic unity. Key takeaways for Christians, therefore, should foster humility for undeserved grace, hope for Israel, and praise for God’s faithfulness.

The Christian calendar bestows upon God’s people the opportunity to sacramentally live in the reality of God’s favor toward his chosen people, of which the church is now a part. Such a position may only be shared between Israel and the global church, for no other parties receive such an unmerited right.

 

The Olive Tree Metaphor

The Apostle Paul gives an acute metaphor for how God has redeemed Gentiles as chosen people, and it is a metaphor that satisfies the clarity any explanation could possibly contain.

But if some of the branches were broken off, and you, although a wild olive shoot, were grafted in among the others and now share in the nourishing root of the olive tree, do not be arrogant toward the branches. If you are, remember it is not you who support the root, but the root that supports you. Then you will say, “Branches were broken off so that I might be grafted in.” That is true. They were broken off because of their unbelief, but you stand fast through faith. So do not become proud, but fear. For if God did not spare the natural branches, neither will he spare you (Rom 11:17-21).

Paul’s illustration points to a fundamental principal—namely the source of life among God’s people, which is Christ himself. Christ elsewhere teaches that he is indeed the vine and his people the branches (John 15:5). It is then a mystery that only Christians may receive and experience.

In Paul’s metaphor, four characters emerge, all of which have certain distinctions.

1)      The tree

2)      Natural branches

3)      Broken branches

4)      Wild branches

First, the tree represents God's covenant people, with Israel as the original cultivated olive tree, rooted in Abraham's promises.[9] What this means for Christians is that although God’s promise to Abraham is framed around the patriarch’s descendants, in Christ, all the redeemed are children of Abraham and, therefore, children of God. Second, natural branches represent ethnic Israel, initially connected by birth.[10] Third, the image of broken branches infers that some (not all) natural branches (Israelites) were broken off due to unbelief in the Messiah. Last, wild branches symbolize Gentiles, who were not part of Israel by birth, were “grafted in” through faith in Jesus.

The olive tree imagery Paul presents is a unique way to illuminate the spiritual reality of Christians who have been fixed to the vine that is Jesus Christ in the New Covenant. Where the Old Covenant was temporary, the New Covenant is permanent; where the Old Covenant required particular DNA to be a part of the promise, the New Covenant transcends external factors; and where the Old Covenant required periodic animal sacrifices, the New Covenant holds to the hope in a one-time sacrificial Lamb whose name is Jesus Christ.

The Christian calendar allows believers to live in the reality of God’s promises by experiencing a connection with Israel. In a sacramental way, therefore, Christians hold a deeply-rooted link to what God promised Abraham through his descendants but without external boundaries.

 

The Connection

The mystical connection between the church and Israel is comprised of a threefold mystery.

1)      Spiritual inheritance

2)      Unity in Messiah

3)      Shared identity

God’s people consist of not only biblical figures of the past but those in the church age who are chosen equally as God’s people. Thus, Christians hold a spiritual inheritance just as ancient Israel (i.e., there is no distinction for believers from God’s chosen people who are descended from Abraham). Gentiles have-been grafted and included in the spiritual blessings from God. As such, people of the way have become partakers of the root and fatness (nourishment, blessings, and covenants) of the olive tree to which Paul alludes in Romans 11.

Additionally, Christians are connected to Israel through Messianic unity. Jesus is the true Messiah and the one for whom Israel has awaited. Jesus is the means by which this spiritual grafting occurs, uniting both believing Jews and Gentiles into one spiritual body.[11] The Messianic unity is a mystical experience which both Christians and believing Jews share. Although Gentiles do not share the genetic heritage and traditions of Jewish people, the person of Jesus is clear—he is the one who takes away the sin of the world and makes void the temporal sacrificial systems of old.

A third connection between Christians and Jews is a shared identity. Believers share in the same divine promises and kingdom, though they maintain their identity as either Jew or Gentile, with no distinction in Christ regarding status. Such a truth is, in part, what makes the New Covenant better than the Old. Salvation is no longer offered to only Israel but to anyone who would believe on the name of Jesus Christ and serve him as Lord.

Sacraments and sacred actions of worship recognize the rich history and foundations that Judaism offers Christianity. Christian worship stands upon the foundation of Jewish faithfulness to God. “The great kings of Israel extolled God’s transcendent timeless eternality, his unmatched greatness, and his boundless power.”[12] The difference, however, is that Christians claim a personal relationship with the one true Messiah. While Israel awaited the Messiah, those who are people of Christ have seen his position as the Savior of the world. The sacred actions of worship point to and center around the person of Christ as the Messiah and sacrificial Lamb of God. A mystical connection, therefore, exists between the church and Jewish people who identify the Messiah in Jesus Christ, for no longer are God’s people separated by external factors but are rather united in Jesus Christ.

 

Key Takeaways for Christians

Christians should consider the connection with Israel as the unwarranted blessing it is. Being a part of the family of God should not spawn pride but rather humility. Further, Christians should receive such good news as hope for Israel instead of dire and eternal damnation. Christians also experience God’s faithfulness equivalently as ancient Israel (and those Jews redeemed by the blood of the Lamb).[13]

The Christian church’s connection to Israel should foster humility rather than pride, as pride contradicts the heart of one called and changed by God (Jas 4:6, 1 Pet 5:5). Gentile believers should not be arrogant or feel superior to the natural branches (Israel), as their inclusion is by grace, not merit. Without the mercy of God in Jesus Christ, no one would stand before the throne with confidence; God’s people may do so, however, because of the mediation and sacrificial offering of Jesus.

Based upon the same sacrificial offering, hope for Israel is still present and possible (i.e., the natural branches can be grafted back if they return to faith in Jesus, just as wild branches were grafted). The prophet Isaiah refers to a remnant (Isa 10:20-22, 11:11-16). This remnant generally references a small, faithful group preserved by God amidst a larger population facing judgment or disaster—a key biblical concept symbolizing hope, renewal, and God’s enduring faithfulness, appearing in themes from Noah to Elijah and the early church.

Christians are, moreover, part of a unique experience: namely God’s faithfulness. The process highlights God's enduring faithfulness to his covenants with Israel and his mercy extended to all who believe.

While Abraham was given a promise, of which millions of his descendants experienced a realization, the church of Jesus Christ also experiences such blessing and are equally partakers in the covenant blessings bestowed upon the chosen people of God, for Christians are literally members of the New Covenant. The key takeaways for believers then are rooted in humility and assurance of hope. Christians should not consider themselves better than Israel but should rather thank God for the blessing of being a part of her blessings and pray for the salvation of those who are spiritually blinded to the salvation of Messiah. The actions of liturgy recognize the mystical connection the church shares with the Jewish people, and the Christian calendar allows God’s people to share and live within the realities of God’s blessings bestowed upon those who are chosen by God, redeemed by Christ, and empowered by the Holy Spirit.

 

The Christian Calendar Is Designed to Live in the Reality of Redemption

The Christian calendar is designed not for inconsequential ritual but for worship—namely to live in the reality of redemption as God’s chosen people. While observance of the liturgical year may seem stiff and dogmatic, its intent is pointed to remembrance and imitation of Jesus Christ. Historic liturgy has been time-tested, proved, scrutinized, measured, and still held dear to the church for centuries. Where mere human words have failed, the liturgy has convicted, and where spontaneity has offered mistaken teachings, liturgy has given theological precision. Affording God’s people the opportunity to live within the context and reality of redemption, the Christian calendar contributes through three realizations.

1.      The reality of covenant

2.      The reality of grace

3.      The reality of Christ’s life

Christianity is a faith predicated on covenant. In the Exodus narrative, God’s people had spent centuries in the bondage of slavery under the rule of cruel Pharaohs. Perhaps, to the Hebrew people, the covenant had become invalid or hallow. One might consider how such a sentiment could be. The Abrahamic Covenant was surely known among the people of God but perhaps more prominently considered and discussed centuries before the time of Moses. After hundreds of years in bondage, however, how could anyone hold any hope in a covenant about which they only knew stories?

Then the narrative shifts with three verses. “During those many days the king of Egypt died, and the people of Israel groaned because of their slavery and cried out for help. Their cry for rescue from slavery came up to God. And God heard their groaning, and God remembered his covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob. God saw the people of Israel—and God knew” (Exod 2:23-25). A seemingly abrupt turn, God responds to the people of Israel:

1.      God heard;

2.      God remembered;

3.      God saw;

4.      God knew.

God’s response was not to mere prayers and cries. The response was to God’s own covenant he initiated and made with his chosen people (v. 24). All actions beyond God’s remembering[14] are subsequent to his covenant. The foundation of God’s acts in Christian worship, therefore, should be understood as covenant.

The reality of covenant is as much a part of the lives of Christians as it was for God’s chosen people in the Exodus narrative. The Christian calendar holds a deeply-rooted connection to God’s people in the Old Covenant, for the church has been included in the promise of God’s blessings and benefits. Adherence to the church calendar, thus, provides ample opportunity to acknowledge her own reality that believers are redeemed in an unmerited manner. Remembrance of each holy day affords the church the opportunity to not only remember the Lord’s faithfulness during the salvation of his people in the Exodus narrative but to experience the reality that she is equally redeemed in the same covenant which provides the foundation of God’s faithfulness to his people of old.

The church calendar also allows God’s people to live within the reality of grace. God has certainly offered a peerless grace to his chosen people. While initially offered to the Jews, Christians now may undergo a process of sanctification through unwarranted and undeserved grace given by their Lord. Without an understanding of God’s grace and the need for it, the Christian life is impossible, for reception of grace is essential to a changed life.

Moreover, the grace of God should foster changed lives in that God’s people not only receive grace but offer it as Christ has offered it to them. The process of grace then involves a two-way path where Christians receive the grace of God and then present it back to the world in response. By employing the church calendar in Christian worship, a tested-and-tried way subsists in which Christians may fully experience the reality of grace. The Christian calendar, therefore, is not a tool of mere repetition and meaningless ritual. Rather, when holy feast days, daily prayers, and scriptural readings are employed, believers live within the reality of grace through reception and offering.

Finally, the Christian calendar is designed for living in the reality of Christ’s life. Christianity centers around the person and work of Christ (even as a triune faith). Therefore, the church calendar looks to Jesus Christ. Even Old Testament observances look forward to Christ while instances observed in the church age look back to Christ. The theme that unifies both the Old Covenant and the New, however, is Christ.

The narrative of Philip’s encounter with the Ethiopian eunuch reports that he (Philip) began to preach the good news of Jesus (Acts 8:35). The Christian calendar is not irrelevant to the church, for it revolves around the person of Christ. Liturgy does not abandon Jesus, for it preaches Jesus; the church calendar does not offer meaningless ritual, for it offers Jesus; and observances of God’s acts in the days of old should not distract from who Jesus is, for the biblical narrative centers around the person of Christ. The Christian calendar, therefore, is a centuries-old tool designed to live within the reality of Christ’s life.

 

Formation: The Benefit of Repetition

James K.A. Smith contends that formation does not occur without repetition.[15] While the Christian calendar is surely repetitive, its foundational purpose is not mere repetition but formation. While a seemingly common notion is that ritual is insincere, the fact is that ritual is but a foundational tool upon which God’s people may build their own spiritual lives.

The Christian calendar provides a chance for the church to experience her connection with Israel. While God’s people seemingly once held the commonality of genetic distinction, no longer is redemption predicated on external peculiarities (e.g., DNA), for Christ’s work in the New Covenant has afforded anyone who would believe the unearned guarantee of salvation.

Moreover, the church is deeply connected with Israel. Those grafted into the family of God hold no different position than those redeemed Jews who looked to the cross, but redeemed Gentiles now look to the cross as chosen people. God’s covenant of old included only a select few. The Christian calendar, nevertheless, acknowledge inclusion of Christians who are now equally a part of God’s chosen people with no distinction.

Additionally, it is the Christian calendar which grants the redeemed people of God to live in certain realities: namely the reality of covenant, the reality of grace, and the reality of Christ’s life. Living in these realities is crucial to the Christian life, for one who is changed by the Lord not only remembers such realities but also experiences them in daily life.

While Jewish roots are doubtlessly present, the Christian calendar holds deep roots, which transcend external factors. Christians must not see their redemption as anything about which to boast but rather, in humility, to offer the same grace that has been bequeathed to them as a part of God’s chosen people. The Christian calendar is but a tool and a tool that (admittedly) involves much repetition. Repetition, however, is not meaningless but formative. Even to those who would suggest that religion is negative, James teaches that religion is either pure or defiled (Jas 1:27) but not negative. Thus, the Christian calendar should be viewed as a positive tool that aids in the formation of God’s people. While liturgical action might seem ritualistic, it is vital to spiritual formation and beneficial in that its observances ameliorate one’s experience with God and understanding of Christian realities.


[1] John Edward Ross III, “The Jewish Origins of the Ordinances of Christianity: Worship Within Baptism and the Lord’s Supper.” DWS diss., Liberty University, Lynchburg, VA, 2020, 8.

[2] Robert E. Webber, ed. “Theology of Ritual in Jewish and Early Christian Worship” in The Sacred Actions of Christian Worship, The Complete Library of Christian Worship online, accessed January 14, 2026, https://www.worshiplibrary.com/library/the-sacred-actions-of-christian-worship/history-and-theology-of-sacred-actions-sacraments-and-ordinances/the-significance-of-sacred-actions/theology-of-ritual-in-jewish-and-early-christian-worship/.

[3] Webber, ed. “Worship and Spirituality in the Jewish and Christian Traditions” in The Ministries of Christian Worship, The Complete Library of Christian Worship online, accessed January 14, 2026, https://www.worshiplibrary.com/library/the-ministries-of-christian-worship/worship-and-ministries-within-the-worship-community/worship-and-spiritual-formation-2/worship-and-spirituality-in-the-jewish-and-christian-traditions/.

[4] While the Jewish people missed the certain coming of the true Messiah, Jesus Christ, Christians hold stalwart connections to Jewish expectation and waiting as God’s church awaits the return of Jesus.

[5] Webber, ed. “An Introduction to Jewish Feasts” in The Biblical Foundations of Christian Worship, The Complete Library of Christian Worship online, accessed January 14, 2026, https://www.worshiplibrary.com/library/the-biblical-foundations-of-christian-worship/festivals-in-biblical-worship/the-meaning-of-feasts-in-the-biblical-tradition/an-introduction-to-jewish-feasts/.

[6] Webber, ed. “The Character of Jewish Feasts” in The Biblical Foundations of Christian Worship, The Complete Library of Christian Worship online, accessed January 14, 2026, https://www.worshiplibrary.com/library/the-biblical-foundations-of-christian-worship/festivals-in-biblical-worship/the-meaning-of-feasts-in-the-biblical-tradition/the-character-of-jewish-feasts/.

[7] Webber, ed. “The History of Israelite and Jewish Worship” in The Biblical Foundations of Christian Worship, The Complete Library of Christian Worship online, accessed January 14, 2026, https://www.worshiplibrary.com/library/the-biblical-foundations-of-christian-worship/history-and-institutions-of-biblical-worship/history-of-israelite-and-jewish-worship/.

[8] It should be noted that Israel has never ceased being the chosen people of God, for Israel comprised God’s original plan; rather, perhaps, unbeknownst to Israel, chosen Gentiles have also been transplanted into the mystical body of chosen people. In a sacramental way, thus, Christians hold a unique connection to ancient Israel as those chosen and redeemed by God.

[9] Note that the tree (or vine) is the source of life for the plant (i.e., everything else is a mere extension of the tree).

[10] This symbolism is one of the great mysteries of the Christian faith, for no longer is being chosen of God dependent on bloodline but, in the New (and better) Covenant, on the sovereign call of Christ.

[11] While the point of contention is the person of the Messiah, Israel has awaited the same person in whom Christians believe. Moreover, Messianic Jews hold to a fervent commitment of their own spiritual heritage and have believed in the person of Jesus Christ as the one for whom it has waited.

[12] Charles Tomas Lewis Jr.,“Far and Near: Christian Worship of the Transcendent and Immanent God of Wonders,” PhD diss., The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, KY, 2015, 346.

[13] It must be understood that such a spiritual connection only exists for those who look to Christ for salvation, for truly, only those redeemed by Jesus hold a place among the chosen people of God.

[14] It is not as though God forgot his covenant but rather that he acted within his appointed and sovereign time—even after centuries of bondage and torment upon his own people.

[15] James K.A. Smith, Imagining the Kingdom: How Worship Works, Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Publishing, 2013.