The Bride and the Feasts!
The Bride and the Feasts shows us how the Biblical feasts all give us hidden prophetic shadow pictures of how we are to refine ourselves as Yeshua’s Proverbs 31 bride (if we know how to look).
The Bride and the Feasts shows us how the Biblical feasts all give us hidden prophetic shadow pictures of how we are to refine ourselves as Yeshua’s Proverbs 31 bride (if we know how to look).
The Bride and the Feasts shows us how the Biblical feasts all give us hidden prophetic shadow pictures of how we are to refine ourselves as Yeshua’s Proverbs 31 bride (if we know how to look).
Chag HaMatzot explains what we are to do during the Feast of Unleavened Bread, and why.
“Chag HaMatzot: How to Celebrate the Day of Unleavened Bread” explains what we are to do during the Feast of Unleavened Bread, and why.
In Melchizedekian Pesach we show how we are to observe the Pesach (Passover) today, under Yeshua’s renewed Melchizedekian Order.
In this study, we explain the difference between the Passover Seder and the Last Supper, and how the Melchizekian Pesach is different from each of these.
In this study we show how we are to observe the Pesach (Passover) today, under Yeshua’s renewed Melchizedekian Order.
The Levitical Pesach shows us how we are to hold the Pesach under a cleansed Levitical Order (and especially in the land of Israel). It also lays some important groundwork for when we talk about how to keep Pesach under the Melchizedekian order.
In The Last Supper, we explain the difference between the Passover Seder and the Last Supper, and how the Melchizekian Pesach is different from either of those two events.
The Levitical Pesach shows us how we are to hold the Pesach under a cleansed Levitical Order (and especially in the land of Israel). It also lays some important groundwork for when we talk about how to keep Pesach under the Melchizedekian order.
The No-Priesthood Pesach looks at the first Passover in Exodus 12, to see which elements apply to Yeshua’s faithful now, in the Dispersion, under the Melchizedekian order.
The No-Priesthood Pesach looks at the first Passover in Exodus 12, to see which elements apply to Yeshua’s faithful now, in the Dispersion, under the Melchizedekian order.
This study explains the mistranslation error of Colossians 2:16-17 and how this misunderstanding of the original texts leads many believers to think that it is no longer important to keep the original feasts of Yahweh.
Colossians 2:16-17 and Prophecy explains the mistranslation error of Colossians 2:16-17 and how this misunderstanding of the original texts leads many believers to think that it is no longer important to keep the original feasts of Yahweh.
In “First Fruits? Or False Fruits?” we explain why Yahweh wants us to bring Him the very first full sheaf of barley that comes ripe in the land of Israel. We also explain why Yahweh does NOT want us to bring Him just a random sheaf of barley from the middle of the barley harvest. Highly recommended for anyone who wants to be sure to keep the feasts at the right time.
In The Torah Calendar we talk about how to establish the New Moon Day (called Rosh Chodesh, or the Head of the Month). We also saw that the first new moon day of the year is called Rosh HaShanah (or the Head of the Year)…
On 19 March 2021, some 16 days before the Karaite Wave Sheaf Offering date, sister Becca Biderman inspected a barley field near Migdala, Israel. Much of the barley was already shattered and on the ground. Much was too brittle to harvest. Other barley was still immature.
There is no possibility that this barley can wait for the Karaite Wave Sheaf Offering on 04 April 2021 (as the first flush is already lost). However, had the Wave Sheaf been offered on the Nazarene date of February 28th, 2021, the barley could have been harvested as it came ripe.
A collection of Matzah (Unleavened Bread) Recipes
In The Torah Calendar we talk about how to establish the New Moon Day (called Rosh Chodesh, or the Head of the Month). We also saw that the first new moon day of the year is called Rosh HaShanah (or the Head of the Year). The Head of the Year is a very special day, […]
In the previous chapters we saw how Yahweh wanted the first Passover held, and we also saw how Israel held the Passover in the land. In other studies we also saw how Yahweh broke Avraham’s seed up into three distinct groups (Ephraim, Judah, and Ishmael), so as to leaven the whole lump called earth. Mattityahu […]
In the last chapter we saw how the original Passover helped prepare the children of Israel to leave Egypt (i.e., the world), and go to the land of Israel. We also saw how Shaul tells us the festivals are still prophetic shadow pictures of coming events. Because of these things, we still see the Passover […]
When Israel was in Egypt, Yahweh told Israel to keep the Passover by taking a lamb on the tenth of the month, and then offering it up on the afternoon of the fourteenth. Our forefathers were to sacrifice their lambs in the mid-afternoon, and apply the blood to their doorposts. Then they were to eat […]
At the time of this writing, Nazarene Israel is in the dispersion. Since neither the Tanach (“Old” Covenant) nor the Brit Chadasha (Renewed Covenant) address what to do in the dispersion, it can be difficult to know what to do. Matters are made worse by the rabbinical traditions, most of which directly contradict Yahweh’s words. […]
The first of Israel’s seven annual feasts is a one-day feast, the Passover. It is followed immediately by the second of Israel’s feasts, the Feast of Unleavened Bread. Since the Feast of Unleavened Bread begins the very next day, these two feasts are often thought of as one long eight-day feast (and even Yahweh refers […]