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Lesson 48
Jerusalem Desolated Seventy Years "You shall have the fiftieth
year as a jubilee .. . it shall be holy to you." The Jewish nation was to keep a Sabbath every seven years when they would let the land rest for a full year (Leviticus 25:1-5). Every fiftieth year was a jubilee year. During this jubilee year these rules were to be followed: 1. Slaves were set freeliberty was proclaimed for all the Israelites who were in bondage to any of their countrymen. 2. All debts were canceledthe land and other possessions were to be returned to those who had been compelled to sell them because of poverty. 3. The land was to lay fallow (inactive)no sowing, no reaping, no pruning of vineyards. Spontaneous (natural) growth was not to be reaped but left for the poor and the traveler (Leviticus 25:8-16). The Israelites, like many people, were selfish. They did not want to lose money on land they had acquired during the forty-nine years. So they only kept the jubilees halfheartedly, and eventually they did not keep them at all. When Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, took King Zedekiah and his people captive to Babylon, this conquering monarch destroyed Jerusalem and its temple with fire. The city lay desolate for seventy years. The citys desolation was Gods punishment upon the Israelites for not properly keeping their jubilee years. The Israelites did not understand how important it was to keep the jubilees, that it was a picture of a grander time to come in Gods plan. The number seven is always closely connected with all of Gods works and plans. It typifies perfectionand God will eventually have all things to be perfect. This will be after the times of restitution, which is a time when all mankind will come back in the resurrection and learn to live in accordance with Gods laws in the Millennial Age (Isaiah 35). How wonderful to think of a perfect earth filled with perfect people! This was Gods plan from the beginning. |