Topical Bible Verses
Leviticus 25:1-55And the LORD spoke to Moses in mount Sinai, saying,
Topicalbible.orgLeviticus 27:17-24
If he sanctify his field from the year of jubilee, according to your estimation it shall stand.
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Numbers 36:4
And when the jubilee of the children of Israel shall be, then shall their inheritance be put to the inheritance of the tribe whereunto they are received: so shall their inheritance be taken away from the inheritance of the tribe of our fathers.
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Psalm 16:11
You will show me the path of life: in your presence is fullness of joy; at your right hand there are pleasures for ever more.
Topicalbible.org
Romans 6:1-23
What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound?
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Mark 16:18
They shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.
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Luke 4:18
The Spirit of the Lord is on me, because he has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; he has sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised,
Topicalbible.org
Matthew 16:18
And I say also to you, That you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
Topicalbible.org
ATS Bible Dictionary
JubileeA Hebrew festival, celebrated in every fiftieth year, which of course occurred after seven weeks of years, or seven times seven years, Le 25:10. Its name Jubilee, sounding or flowing, was significant of the joyful trumpet-peals that announced its arrival. During this year no one sowed or reaped; but all were satisfied with what the earth and the trees produced spontaneously. Each resumed possession of his inheritance, whether it were sold, mortgaged, or otherwise alienated; and Hebrew servants of every description were set free, with their wives an children, Le 25:1-55. The first nine days were spent in festivities, during which no one worked, and every one wore a crown on his head. On the tenth day, which was the day of solemn expiation, the Sanhedrin ordered the trumpets to sound, and instantly the slaves were declared free, and the lands returned to their hereditary owners. This law was mercifully designed to prevent the rich from oppressing the poor, and getting possession of all the lands by purchase, mortgage, or usurpation; to cause that debts should not be multiplied too much, and that slaves should not continue, with their wives and children, in perpetual bondage. It served to maintain a degree of equality among the Hebrew families; to perpetuate the division of lands and households according to the original tribes, and secure a careful registry of the genealogy of every family. They were also thus reminded that Jehovah was the great Proprietor and Disposer of all things, and they but his tenants. "The land is mine; for ye are strangers and sojourners with me," Le 25:23. And this memento met them constantly and pointedly; for every transfer of land was valuable in proportion to the number of years remaining before the jubilee. Isaiah clearly refers to this peculiar and important festival, as foreshadowing the glorious dispensation of gospel grace, Isaiah 61:1,2 Luke 4:17-21.
See also the notice of a similar institution under SABBATICAL YEAR.
Easton's Bible Dictionary
A joyful shout or clangour of trumpets, the name of the great semi-centennial festival of the Hebrews. It lasted for a year. During this year the land was to be fallow, and the Israelites were only permitted to gather the spontaneous produce of the fields (
Leviticus 25:11, 12). All landed property during that year reverted to its original owner (13-34;
27:16-24), and all who were slaves were set free (
25:39-54), and all debts were remitted.
The return of the jubilee year was proclaimed by a blast of trumpets which sounded throughout the land. There is no record in Scripture of the actual observance of this festival, but there are numerous allusions (Isaiah 5:7, 8, 9, 10; 61:1, 2; Ezek. 7:12, 13; Nehemiah 5:1-19; 2 Chronicles 36:21) which place it beyond a doubt that it was observed.
The advantages of this institution were manifold. "1. It would prevent the accumulation of land on the part of a few to the detriment of the community at large. 2. It would render it impossible for any one to be born to absolute poverty, since every one had his hereditary land. 3. It would preclude those inequalities which are produced by extremes of riches and poverty, and which make one man domineer over another. 4. It would utterly do away with slavery. 5. It would afford a fresh opportunity to those who were reduced by adverse circumstances to begin again their career of industry in the patrimony which they had temporarily forfeited. 6. It would periodically rectify the disorders which crept into the state in the course of time, preclude the division of the people into nobles and plebeians, and preserve the theocracy inviolate."
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary
1. (
n.) Every fiftieth year, being the year following the completion of each seventh Sabbath of years, at which time all the slaves of Hebrew blood were liberated, and all lands which had been alienated during the whole period reverted to their former owners.
2. (n.) The joyful commemoration held on the fiftieth anniversary of any event; as, the jubilee of Queen Victoria's reign; the jubilee of the American Board of Missions.
3. (n.) A church solemnity or ceremony celebrated at Rome, at stated intervals, originally of one hundred years, but latterly of twenty-five; a plenary and extraordinary indulgence grated by the sovereign pontiff to the universal church. One invariable condition of granting this indulgence is the confession of sins and receiving of the Eucharist.
4. (n.) A season of general joy.
5. (n.) A state of joy or exultation.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
JUBILEE YEAR(shenath ha-yobhel; etos tes apheseos; annus jubilaeus, "year of jubilee" (Leviticus 25:13), or simply ha-yobhel, "the jubilee" (Leviticus 25:28; compare Numbers 36:4), the King James Version and the English Revised Version Jubile): The Hebrew word yobhel stands for qeren ha-yobhel, meaning the horn of a ram. Now, such a horn can be made into a trumpet, and thus the word yobhel came to be used as a synonym of trumpet. According to Leviticus 25:9 a loud trumpet should proclaim liberty throughout the country on the 10th day of the 7th month (the Day of Atonement), after the lapse of 7 sabbaths of years = 49 years. In this manner, every 50th year was to be announced as a jubilee year. All real property should automatically revert to its original owner (Leviticus 25:10; compare 25:13), and those who, compelled by poverty, had sold themselves as slaves to their brothers, should regain their liberty (Leviticus 25:10; compare 25:39).
In addition to this, the Jubilee Year was to be observed after the manner of the sabbatic year, i.e. there should be neither sowing nor reaping nor pruning of vines, and everybody was expected to live on what the fields and the vineyards produced "of themselves," and no attempt should be made at storing up the products of the land (Leviticus 25:11 f). Thus there are three distinct factors constituting the essential features of the Jubilee Year: personal liberty, restitution of property, and what we might call the simple life.
1. Personal Liberty:
The 50th year was to be a time in which liberty should be proclaimed to all the inhabitants of the country. We should, indeed, diminish the import of this institution if we should apply it only to those who were to be freed from the bonds of physical servitude. Undoubtedly, they must have been the foremost in realizing its beneficial effects. But the law was intended to benefit all, the masters as well as the servants. They should never lose sight of their being brothers and citizens of theocratic kingdom. They owed their life to God and were subject to His sovereign will. Only through loyalty to Him were they free and could ever hope to be free and independent of all other masters.
2. Restitution of Property:
The institution of the Jubilee Year should become the means of fixing the price of real property (Leviticus 25:15; compare 25:25-28); moreover, it should exclude the possibility of selling any piece of land permanently (Leviticus 25:23), the next verse furnishing the motive: "The land is mine: for ye are strangers and sojourners with me." The same rule was to be applied to dwelling-houses outside of the walled cities (Leviticus 25:31), and also to the houses owned by Levites, although they were built within walled cities (Leviticus 25:32).
In the same manner the price of Hebrew slaves was to vary according to the proximity of the Jubilee Year (Leviticus 25:47-54). This passage deals with the enslaving of a Hebrew by a foreigner living among the Jews; it goes without saying that the same rule would hold good in the case of a Hebrew selling himself to one of his own people. In Leviticus 27:17-25 we find a similar arrangement respecting such lands that were "sanctified unto Yahweh." In all these cases the original owner was at liberty to redeem his property at any time, or have it redeemed by some of his nearest relatives (25:25-27, 29, 48;; 27:19).
The crowning feature, though, was the full restitution of all real property in the Jubilee Year. The primary object of this regulation was, of course, the reversion of all hereditary property to the family which originally possessed it, and the reestablishment of the original arrangement regarding the division of the land. But that was not all; for this legal disposition and regulation of external matters was closely connected with the high calling of the Jewish people. It was a part of the Divine plan looking forward to the salvation of mankind. "The deepest meaning of it (the Jubilee Year) is to be found in the apokatastasis tes basileias tou theou, i.e. in the restoring of all that which in the course of time was perverted by man's sin, in the removing of all slavery of sin, in the establishing of the true liberty of the children of God, and in the delivering of the creation from the bondage of corruption to which it was subjected on account of man's depravity" (Romans 8:19) (compare Keil, Manual of Biblical Archaeology). In the Year of Jubilee a great future era of Yahweh's favor is foreshadowed, that period which, according to Isaiah 61:1-3, shall be ushered in to all those that labor and are heavy laden, by Him who was anointed by the spirit of the Lord Yahweh.
3. The Simple Life:
The Jubilee Year, being the crowning point of all sabbatical institutions, gave the finishing touch as it were to the whole cycle of sabbatic days, months and years. It is, therefore, quite appropriate that it should be a year of rest for the land like the preceding sabbatic year (Leviticus 25:11 f). It follows, of course, that in this instance there were two years, one after the other, in which there should be no sowing or systematic ingathering. This seems to be clear from Leviticus 25:18-22: "And ye shall sow the eighth year, and eat of the fruits, the old store; until the ninth year, until its fruits come in, ye shall eat the old store." Thus in the 7th and 8th years the people were to live on what the fields had produced in the 6th year and whatever grew spontaneously. This shows the reason why we may say that one of the factors constituting the Jubilee Year was the "simple life." They could not help but live simply for two consecutive years. Nobody can deny that this afforded ample opportunity to develop the habit of living within very limited means. And again we see that this external part of the matter did not fully come up to the intention of the Lawgiver. It was not the simple life as such that He had in view, but rather the laying down of its moral and religious foundations. In this connection we must again refer to Leviticus 25:18-22, "What shall we eat the seventh year?" The answer is very simple and yet of surpassing grandeur: "Then I will command my blessing upon you," etc. Nothing was expected of the people but faith in Yahweh and confidence in His power, which was not to be shaken by any doubtful reflection. And right here we have found the root of the simple life: no life without the true God, and no simplicity of life without true faith in Him. "Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God" (Matthew 4:4; compare Deuteronomy 8:3).
We may well ask: Did the Jewish people ever observe the Jubilee Year? There is no reason why they should not have observed it in pre-exilic times (compare Lotz in The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, X, under the word "Sabbatical Year" and "Year of Jubilee"). Perhaps they signally failed in it, and if so, we should not be surprised at all. Not that the institution in itself was cumbered with any obstacles that could not have been overcome; but what is more common than unbelief and unwillingness to trust absolutely in Yahweh? Or, was it observed in post-exilic times? Here, too, we are in the dark. There is, indeed, a tradition according to which the Jubilee Year has never been observed-neither in the time of Ezra and Nehemiah nor at any later period. The truth of this seems to be corroborated by the silence of Josephus, who, while referring quite frequently to the sabbatic year, never once mentions the Year of Jubilee.
William Baur
JUBILEE, CYCLE OF THE
joo'-bi-le, ju'-bi-le.
See Luni-solar cycle, under ASTRONOMY, sec. I, 5.
Strong's Hebrew
3104. yobel -- a ram, ram's horn (a wind instrument)... yobel or yobel. 3105 . a ram, ram's horn (a wind instrument). Transliteration:
yobel or yobel Phonetic Spelling: (yo-bale') Short Definition:
jubilee.
... /hebrew/3104.htm - 6k 8643. teruah -- a shout or blast of war, alarm, or joy
... cries (2), war cry (1). alarm, blowing of, the trumpets, joy, jubilee, loud noise,
rejoicing, shouting,. From ruwa'; clamor, ie Acclamation ...
/hebrew/8643.htm - 6k
Library
Jubilee.
... THE SOUL. XXXIV. JUBILEE. Dysgwyl 'rwyf ar hyd yr hir nos ... When my fetters fall away.
O come quickly,. Happy day of Jubilee ! Let me still be meekly wakeful,. ...
//christianbookshelf.org/morris/favourite welsh hymns/xxxiv jubilee.htm
To India for the Jubilee
... TO INDIA FOR THE JUBILEE. But to the great surprise of many of her friends,
and notwithstanding the remonstrances of some who feared ...
//christianbookshelf.org/hoskins/clara a swain md/to india for the jubilee.htm
The Royal Jubilee
... THE SECOND BOOK OF SAMUEL THE ROYAL JUBILEE. [Footnote: Preached on the
occasion of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.] '.. He that ...
/.../maclaren/expositions of holy scripture f/the royal jubilee.htm
The Year of Jubilee.
... ORIGINAL HYMNS HYMN CCLXIII. The Year of Jubilee. 6.6.6.6.8.8 James Montgomery.
The Year of Jubilee. Fair shines the morning star; ...
/.../montgomery/sacred poems and hymns/hymn cclxiii the year of.htm
The Jubilee Proclaimed.
... THE GOSPEL, AND ITS INVITATIONS. 261. " The Jubilee Proclaimed. 261. HM
Toplady. The Jubilee Proclaimed. 1 Blow ye the trumpet ...
/.../adams/hymns for christian devotion/261 the jubilee proclaimed.htm
On the Jubilee of the Church Missionary Society.
... ORIGINAL HYMNS HYMN CCLXX. On the Jubilee of the Church Missionary Society.
8.8.8.8 James Montgomery. On the Jubilee of the Church Missionary Society. ...
/.../montgomery/sacred poems and hymns/hymn cclxx on the jubilee.htm
For the Jubilee of the Religious Tract Society, 1848
... ORIGINAL HYMNS HYMN CCLXXV. For the Jubilee of the Religious Tract Society, 1848. ...
James Montgomery. For the Jubilee of the Religious Tract Society, 1848. ...
/.../montgomery/sacred poems and hymns/hymn cclxxv for the jubilee.htm
For the Centenary Jubilee of a Christian Church.
... ORIGINAL HYMNS HYMN CCII. For the Centenary Jubilee of a Christian Church.
8.7.8.7.4.7 James Montgomery. For the Centenary Jubilee of a Christian Church. ...
/.../montgomery/sacred poems and hymns/hymn ccii for the centenary.htm
For the Jubilee Celebration of the Religious Tract Society, 1848
... For the Jubilee Celebration of the Religious Tract Society, 1848. 8.6.8.6 James
Montgomery. For the Jubilee Celebration of the Religious Tract Society, 1848. ...
/.../montgomery/sacred poems and hymns/hymn cclxxiv for the jubilee.htm
For the Centenary Jubilee of the Moravian, or United Brethren's ...
... ORIGINAL HYMNS HYMN CCLXXI. For the Centenary Jubilee of the Moravian, or United
Brethren's Church, June 17, 1822. 6.7.6.7.6.6.6.6 James Montgomery. ...
/.../montgomery/sacred poems and hymns/hymn cclxxi for the centenary.htm
Thesaurus
Jubilee (25 Occurrences)... The return of the
jubilee year was proclaimed by a blast of trumpets which sounded
throughout the land.
... Int. Standard Bible Encyclopedia.
JUBILEE YEAR.
.../j/jubilee.htm - 27kLaws (184 Occurrences)
... a-gra'-ri-an loz: 1. The Sabbath Year 2. The Jubilee 3. Its Object 4. The Legal
Rules 5. Ideas and Circumstances of the Legislation 6. Form of the Legislation 7 ...
/l/laws.htm - 47k
Agrarian
... a-gra'-ri-an loz: 1. The Sabbath Year 2. The Jubilee 3. Its Object 4. The Legal
Rules 5. Ideas and Circumstances of the Legislation 6. Form of the Legislation 7 ...
/a/agrarian.htm - 17k
Revert (6 Occurrences)
... 28 But if he isn't able to get it back for himself, then what he has sold shall
remain in the hand of him who has bought it until the Year of Jubilee: and in ...
/r/revert.htm - 8k
Calculate (7 Occurrences)
... Leviticus 25:50 And let the years be numbered from the time when he gave himself
to his owner till the year of Jubilee, and the price given for him will be in ...
/c/calculate.htm - 9k
Released (52 Occurrences)
... 28 But if he isn't able to get it back for himself, then what he has sold shall
remain in the hand of him who has bought it until the Year of Jubilee: and in ...
/r/released.htm - 21k
Reckon (34 Occurrences)
... Leviticus 25:50 He shall reckon with him who bought him from the year that he sold
himself to him to the Year of Jubilee: and the price of his sale shall be ...
/r/reckon.htm - 16k
Purchaser (3 Occurrences)
... not found what sufficeth for him to restore it to him, then that which is sold shall
remain in the hand of the purchaser, until the year of jubilee; and in the ...
/p/purchaser.htm - 7k
Buyer (7 Occurrences)
... And if his hand hath not found sufficiency to give back to him, then hath his sold
thing been in the hand of him who buyeth it till the year of jubilee; and it ...
/b/buyer.htm - 9k
Compute (3 Occurrences)
... Leviticus 25:52 If there remain but a few years to the year of jubilee, then he
shall reckon with him; according to his years of service he shall give back the ...
/c/compute.htm - 7k
Resources
Was 2017 a Jubilee Year? Was Christ supposed to return in 2017? | GotQuestions.orgWhat is the Year of Jubilee? | GotQuestions.orgWhat is the Shemitah? | GotQuestions.orgJubilee: Dictionary and Thesaurus | Clyx.comBible Concordance •
Bible Dictionary •
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Bible Thesuarus