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chag sameach ! happy "challah day!"

City on the hill

A Spirit filled Messianic -Jewish Chavura

 

Jewish Holidays . Moadim . Biblical feasts . Israel . Holocaust

"'These are the designated times of ADONAI, the holy convocations you are to proclaim at their designated times.." Leviticus 23:4

Celebrating and commemorating the Holy Days of Judaism is enriching for Messianic Jews and has many vibrant historical truths that Gentile followers of Yeshua can benefit from understanding. God intentionally commanded the Jewish people to remember and celebrate certain days so that we can see His hand throughout all of history and His marvelous faithfulness to Israel. As we see reflections of Yeshua in these holidays, we stand in awe of our sovereign God who has carefully foretold through the ages His plan for our redemption. These feasts and holidays on the Jewish calendar strengthen and encourage our faith today, reminding us that the God who rescued and preserved the Jewish people of ancient days is the same God who has called us to follow His Son, Yeshua, day by day with ever increasing trust.

shabbat

Shabbat is the most highly regarded of the Jewish holidays because it is celebrated each week. Shabbat means “rest” and occurs on the Sabbath, the seventh day of the week, or Saturday. Messianic congregations hold services on the Sabbath, either Friday evening or Saturday morning. The Sabbath is one of the seven ordained feasts outlined in Leviticus 23 and other places.Shabbat is a weekly day of rest for physical and spiritual renewal after a week of work. Today, with our five-day work week, a day of rest may not seem to have as much significance as it did in ancient, agricultural times. A day of rest was unheard of in those cultures as there was always more to do. However, in today’s modern societies, whether it’s work for an employer or work at our homes, few people truly take a day off from any kind of work. Yet God knew we needed this day of rest, and the Sabbath is the first special day He commanded and the only day included in the Ten Commandments.

“Shabbat shalom!” is a typical Jewish greeting used by Messianic Jews to wish people Sabbath peace.

There are also yearly holidays that Messianic Jews celebrate. First, it’s helpful to note that the Jewish calendar differs from the Gregorian calendar used by most of the world. In the Jewish year, the first holiday is, naturally, the New Year. This, however, falls sometime in September or October on the Gregorian calendar. For those on the Gregorian calendar, the first Jewish holiday of the year is Purim, which occurs in February or March.

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rosh chodesh

First day of each month of the Hebrew calendar

“Every month on Rosh-Chodesh and every week on Shabbat, everyone living will come to worship in My presence,” says Adonai. Isaiah 66:23

Much of the world celebrates a new start as December 31st turns into January 1st, whereas Jewish people now celebrate their new year at the Feast of Trumpets. But according to the Bible, the new year starts on “The first day of the first month”. The ‘first month’ is the month in which we celebrate Passover in the Spring, and the new moon signifies the beginning of each new month.

“The Lord said to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, “This month shall be for you the beginning of months. It shall be the first month of the year for you.”

But our God is a God of multiple new beginnings, new seasons, and fresh starts!

Instead of celebrating once a year, God asks that the beginning of every month, each new moon, is celebrated – that’s twelve new beginnings instead of one! This is called “Rosh Chodesh”, or “head of the month”. It’s interesting that the word for month, “chodesh”, is from the root word for new: “chadash”.

Throughout the Bible these New Moon festivals were often forgotten and fell by the wayside, at other times they were joyously reinstated, and other times they were performed in a dry and empty way that grieved God. But it is interesting that God wanted his people to note the opening of each month, isn’t it? The moon was at its very thinnest, all fresh and new, starting a new cycle, and a new month.

Excerpt from Rosh Chodesh – Celebrating The New Moon, By ONE FOR ISRAEL (Messianic Jews In Israel)

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tu b'shevat

January 25, 2024

The Jewish New Year for the trees comes when the earliest-blooming trees in Israel emerge from their winter sleep and begin a new fruit-bearing cycle. ... Tu B'Shevat is celebrated by planting saplings and participating in a meal or seder with fruits, nuts, and wine (or grape juice).

"Long before the beginning of the environmental movement, Torah Judaism recognized our moral and ethical obligation to protect the Earth. On Tu b’Shevat, the New Year of the Trees, let’s look at some of the Jewish teachings related to the environment. 

The most basic understanding of this obligation comes from the fact that G-d created the universe. Hashem is the one who created all the flora and fauna that we use for our existence. In Bereshit chapter 2 verse 15, it states, "G-d took the man and placed him in the Garden of Eden to work it and watch it." This is our first clue that the land is not ours. The Torah uses the word shamra from the root of shomer to watch or to guard. We are merely leasing this land from G-d. The specific type of lease we have on the Earth is that of a sho'el, a borrower.

According to the Shulkhan Aruch, borrowers may use any part of what they borrow -- but they must ensure that, at the end of the term of the lease, and at any given moment during the lease, the property is at least as valuable as it was at the beginning (See, e.g. Shulkhan Arukh, Hoshen Mishpat 291, 292). The modern day sustainability criterion used in natural resource management and economics follows very closely with the idea first put forth by the Rabbis. The modern criterion requires that resource use by any generation should not exceed a level that would prevent future generations from achieving a level of well-being at least as great. Environmental protection is required so as not to destroy Gd's Earth.  "

Excerpt from The Jewish “Earth Day” By Candace Nachman

purim

March 24, 2024

Purim commemorates God saving the Jews from annihilation in the fifth century when, by the sovereignty of God, the Jewish maiden Esther was chosen as Queen of Persia. From that position, she beseeched the king on behalf of her people who were targeted for destruction through a legal injunction rewarding anyone who killed a Jewish person on the decreed date. Though God is not mentioned in the book of Esther, He is seen at every turn and clearly elevated Esther to the role of queen “for such a time as this.”

Purim is the most festive of Jewish holidays. The story of Esther, called the Megillah, is read in Messianic congregations and synagogues throughout the world. Jewish observers dress in costume, give food gifts, and take part in plays reenacting the story of Esther. Whenever evil Haman’s name is mentioned, audiences stomp their feet and rattle noisemakers called groggers in order to blot out the name of him who sought to destroy the Jewish people.

Messianic Jews are reminded of God’s ultimate provision of salvation, rescuing us to eternal life through Yeshua’s (Jesus’) sacrifice for us.

passover and feast of unleavened bread

April 23-30, 2024

(Also known as: Pesach, Feast of Unleavened Bread) (Pesach means “to pass over, to exempt or spare.”)

Passover is considered the most important of the Jewish holidays because it called the people of Israel out of Egypt to become their own nation. It commemorates when God delivered the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt. On that first Passover night when the Jewish people followed God’s instructions and placed the blood of a sacrificed lamb on their doorposts, the angel of death saw the blood and passed over them. In this way, they were spared the death of their firstborn, the tenth and final plague visited upon Egypt by God.

Passover occurs on the evening of the 14th of the month of Nissan and is followed by the seven-day Feast of Unleavened Bread in which Messianic Jews eat unleavened bread as God instructed in Leviticus 23. Usually, the entire holiday is collectively referred to as “Passover.” This holiday is celebrated in remembrance of the first Passover when God told the people of Israel not to wait for their bread to rise, but to eat their meal in haste so they would be ready for His deliverance at a moment’s notice.

Messianic Jews celebrate the mighty acts God did to rescue the Jewish people from slavery to Egypt. Over and over again, God commanded the Jewish people to remember what He brought them out of. Messianic Jews also recognize, as the apostle Paul pointed out in 1 Corinthians 5:7 that Yeshua became our Passover lamb. He sacrificed His life for us, and we are saved from eternal, spiritual death through His death and resurrection. Messianic Jews and Gentile Believers in Yeshua see God’s hand in powerful symbolism within the traditional elements of the Passover Seder ritual meal.

Many Messianic Jews do not celebrate Easter, preferring instead to commemorate Yeshua’s death and resurrection on our behalf at Passover, the time of year when He was crucified and rose from the dead.

counting the omer

April 23-June 11, 2024

“From the day after the Sabbath, the day you brought the sheaf [omer] of the wave offering, count off seven full weeks [Sabbaths].”  (Leviticus 23:15)

Therefore, the counting of the Omer for seven weeks of seven days (49 days) represents the expectation of completion, the age of a universal “rest,” which is the coming of Messiah, and the Messianic age. This counting links Passover, which commemorates the Exodus, with Shavuot, which commemorates the giving of the Law. Counting the Omer today reminds the Jewish People that their redemption from slavery in Egypt was not complete until they received the Torah. Similarly, we are to be counting the days in blessed anticipation until Yeshua returns and establishes His Kingdom of righteousness, peace, and justice on this earth.

Today, these 49 days are counted aloud every evening after sundown.  Before counting, a special blessing is recited:

“Blessed are You, L-rd our G-d, Ruler of the Universe, who has sanctified us with His commandments, and commanded us concerning counting the Omer.”

“Today is __ days, which is __ week(s) and __ days of the Omer.”

https://free.messianicbible.com/holiday/counting-the-omer-and-yeshuas-soon-return/

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shavuot

June 12, 2024

Also known as: Feast of Weeks, Feast of First Fruits, Shavuot means “weeks.”

Shavuot is also called the Feast of Weeks because it occurs seven weeks after the first Passover Sabbath. Jewish people believe that God gave the Torah (the Law) to His people at Mount Sinai on the date of Shavuot. Therefore, the feast is a time of celebrating the gift of the Torah. Many Jewish people today stay up all night reading the Torah together, and when Shavuot dawn breaks, they pray together and read the Ten Commandments.

Because it also relates to the harvest and the offering of the first fruits of the standing wheat harvest, Shavuot is also called the Feast of First Fruits.

Shavuot is one of three pilgrimage feasts in the Jewish year for which God required every Jewish man to travel to Jerusalem. The first Shavuot after Yeshua’s death marked the pouring out of the Holy Spirit as tongues of fire in the Upper Room in Jerusalem. Jewish men living abroad in many nations returned to Jerusalem for Shavuot, and it was then that God gave the Holy Spirit. Men heard the Gospel of Yeshua in their own languages, and 3,000 came to faith that day.

For Messianic Jewish Believers, Shavuot is a time to recommit ourselves to God’s Word, offer our first fruits to Him, and celebrate the gift of His presence in each of us through His Holy Spirit. It is a time to rejoice in fulfilled prophecy and to hold dear the rich Jewish roots of New Covenant faith in Yeshua.

article recognition : Jewish Voice/Biblical Holidays Messianic

tisha b'av

August 13, 2024

Tisha B’Av means “Ninth of Av.”

Tisha B’Av is Hebrew for the Ninth of Av, meaning the ninth day of the Jewish month of Av. Though not a biblically mandated commemoration, many Messianic Jews join other Jewish people the world over in this special day of mourning.

•On the ninth day of Av in 586 BC, the First Temple was destroyed by the Babylonians.

•The Romans destroyed the Second Temple in 70 AD, also on the ninth of Av.

•On the ninth day of Av in 133 AD, Jewish rebels were brutally butchered in the final battle at Betar.

•One year after their conquest of Betar, the Romans plowed over the Temple Mount, our nation's holiest site.

•The Jews were expelled from England in 1290 AD.

•On the 9th of Av 1492, the Jews were expelled from Spain.

•On the 9th of Av 1914 -The First World War began. The insubstantial peace that concluded this war was a direct cause of the Second World War in which the six million perished.

•The 9th of Av 1942 - The first killings started at Treblinka: "The first transport of 'deportees' left Malkinia on July 23, 1942, in the morning hours. It was loaded with Jews from the Warsaw ghetto. The train was made up of sixty closed cars, crowded with people. The car doors were locked from the outside, and the air apertures barred with barbed wire."

On the ninth day of Av in 586 BC, the First Temple was destroyed by the Babylonians. The Romans destroyed the Second Temple in 70 AD, also on the ninth of Av. Astonishingly, along with these two tragic events, many other catastrophes and persecutions have occurred in Jewish history on this very same date. Tisha B’Av is mentioned as “the fast of the fifth month” in Zechariah 7:3,5 and 8:19.

Today, Tisha B’Av is a day of fasting and mourning for Jewish people throughout the world. Messianic Jews grieve as well for the terrible events, often adding their cry that other Jewish people the world over could come to know the assurance of the apostle Paul that we who believe in Messiah Yeshua are “the temple of God” (1 Corinthians 3:16).

 

yom teruah/rosh hashannah

October 23-24, 2024

Also known as: Yom Teruah, Feast of Trumpets, Jewish New Year

Rosh Hashanah means “head of the year.”

Yom Teruah means “day of shouting.”

The Bible refers to it this holiday as the Feast of Trumpets and gives very little instruction about it. Leviticus 23:23-25 reveals that the Feast of Trumpets was for all Israel to rest. It was ordained for the first day of the seventh month of Tishri, and the blowing of the trumpet was to announce the day. While the Bible refers to the month of Nissan as the first month to the Jewish people, the Feast of Trumpets on Tishri 1 is believed by Jewish sages to be the day when God created the world. Thus, the Jewish calendar changes years on Tishri 1 at the Feast of Trumpets. Based on this, the Feast of Trumpets also became known as Rosh Hashanah, which means “head of the year.”

For Jewish people and Messianic Jews, Rosh Hashanah is a time of reflection. Much like when December 31st approaches, people the world over reflect on the previous and coming years, so do people of both Judaism and Messianic Judaism at Rosh Hashanah. It’s a time of spiritual reflection.

For Jewish people, it is a time for making amends and seeking forgiveness ahead of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, when tradition believes God seals one’s fate for the coming year. For Messianic Jews, Rosh Hashanah offers the opportunity to reflect on one’s relationship with God, knowing that our good standing with Him is based solely on the redemption Yeshua accomplished for us through His death and resurrection. It is a time for drawing nearer to God and considering how to follow Him more closely in the year ahead.

rosh-hashannah

ten days of awe

September 16-25, 2023

Also known as the 10 Days of Repentence. While it is believed that God makes His decree on Rosh HaShanah, that decree is not sealed in the Book of Life until Yom Kippur.

During these Days of Awe, we repent of our sins of the past year, ever mindful that God is a righteous judge; all His ways are just and true. He will reward the righteous and not allow the wicked to go unpunished.

 

“Surely there is a reward for the righteous; surely there is a God who judges on earth.” (Psalm 58:11)

 

Click here for special prayers for each day.

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yom kippur

September 25, 2023

Also known as: Day of Atonement Yom Kippur means “day to atone.” Yom Kippur is the holiest day in Judaism because the High Priest entered into the Holy of Holies before the presence of the Lord. It is the Day of Atonement when all Israel was commanded to bring offerings. On this day alone each year the High Priest entered the Holy of Holies in the Temple and sprinkled the blood of the sacrifice onto the Mercy Seat. The sins of Israel were then symbolically placed on the head of another animal, and it was led outside the camp. Thus Israel’s sin was removed from them.

Yom Kippur is a yearly atonement for sin. It is a day of fasting and prayer, with no work. Jewish tradition maintains that on Yom Kippur, God seals His judgments of people for the coming year. The Day of Atonement is the final day to seek forgiveness, make amends, and pursue a “good sealing.” Messianic Jews celebrate the Day of Atonement with the understanding that Yeshua’s death was the final sacrifice making atonement once and for all. Messianic Jews rejoice in the permanent sealing of the Holy Spirit given to those who profess Yeshua as Messiah according to New Covenant teaching. The book of Hebrews reveals Yeshua as both the perfect sacrifice and perfect High Priest who offered His own blood on our behalf. We are forgiven and made right with God, not for one year only, but for all time. Yom Kippur enables Messianic Jews the opportunity to reflect on the price Yeshua paid so that we might live in restored relationship to God.

yom-kippur

sukkot

September 30-October 6, 2023

Also known as: Feast of Booths, Feast of Tabernacles Sukkot means “booths.”

In Leviticus 23, God ordained the Feast of Booths, known today as Sukkot, so that Israel would remember that He had made them dwell in booths during their 40 years in the wilderness. These booths were temporary tent-like structures that could be dismantled and transported when God’s presence in the pillar of cloud by day and fire by night moved as a sign that Israel should follow. Sukkot is a commemoration of God’s protection, guidance, and provision to the children of Israel during their sojourn to the Promised Land.

Celebrating Sukkot requires Jewish people and Messianic Jews to build a sukkah in their yard or on their patio and to “live in it” for seven days. People often take their meals there and spend the evenings in their sukkot, and some sleep in them. Modern sukkot are temporary structures topped with leafy branches through which one can look up and see the stars – bringing to mind God’s promise to make Abraham’s descendants as numerous as the stars.

Sukkot is a reminder of how God dwelled with the Israelites in the wilderness, comforting them with His presence, guiding and protecting them. Messianic Jews rejoice in the Messiah Yeshua who was called Emmanuel, which means “God with us.” Followers of Yeshua have been given the Holy Spirit as God’s ever-present comfort and as a seal that He will never leave us or forsake us. For Messianic Jews, Sukkot is an opportunity to remember God’s faithfulness to Israel in the past and to celebrate the blessing of His presence in the heart of each Believer.

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simchat torah

October 8, 2023

Simchat Torah means “joy of the Torah.”

Right after Sukkot comes Simchat Torah, celebrating the life-giving joy found in the Torah – the first five books of the Hebrew Scriptures. Week after week throughout the year, Jewish people around the world read the weekly parasha, or portion, of the Torah. Simchat Torah marks the completion of the yearly readings and the beginning again of the reading cycle. Jewish people attend a synagogue service in which the final parasha of the year is read, the scroll is rolled back to the beginning, and the beginning of the Torah is read. In most synagogues, the Torah scroll is carried about the room with much rejoicing, singing, and dancing. Messianic Jews rejoice in the Torah and in the “the Word made flesh,” Yeshua. It is through God’s Word that we know Him better. Simchat Torah is a wonderful day to celebrate His divine communication to us in the Torah and in the whole of Scripture.

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chanukkah

December 7-16, 2023

Also known as: Festival of Light, Feast of Dedication Chanukah means “dedication.”

Chanukah begins on the 25th day of the month of Kislev on the Jewish calendar and is the last Jewish holiday of the Gregorian calendar year, falling in November or December. Chanukah is an eight-day holiday commemorating a miracle of light and the rededication of the Temple after it was desecrated by foreign invaders. Tradition tells us that after the Maccabean army of Jewish men had regained possession of the Temple, there was only enough oil to burn for one day in the Temple lampstand. It would take eight days to make and sanctify more oil. God provided light for the lampstand by making that one day’s oil last eight days.

For Messianic Jews, Chanukah takes on special significance as both a Feast of Dedication (mentioned in John 10) and a Festival of Light. As we see the urgent commitment of the Jewish people of old to rededicate the Temple of God as quickly as possible, it inspires us to fresh dedication to our relationship with God. Also, we celebrate the miracle of light God performed during the time of the Maccabees, and we also celebrate the miracle of Yeshua who is the Light of the World.

Chanukah is celebrated with a number of traditions, including eating fatty foods symbolic of the Temple oil, the lighting of candles on each successive night of the holiday, and giving gifts of increasing value each night.

Many Messianic Jews do not celebrate Christmas, preferring instead to celebrate the gift of Yeshua as the Light of the World at Chanukah.

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