A Lot Can Happen In A Week

  During the process of gathering and assembling all the pertinent information for the Spring feast posts; the reality of the facts and the multiple events surrounding our central focus became clearer than ever before. At best we are prone to forget, at worst we ignore all the activity and miracles taking place on and around the same time as we remembered the Passover.

Even though the week has physically passed, it is still highly relevant as the halfway point, (25th day) to Pentecost is called the 2nd Passover. A 2nd chance to prepare our hearts. For these are His Divine appointments. 

This particular year, everything changed. What had been in the planning and on hold stage, prophetically rehearsed for millennia, was now taking place and unfolding in real-time.

Although many of these events are recorded in all four Gospels, those here are primarily followed in Matthew  chapters 20-28 and John 12.

Prior to the start of passover week,

Jesus/Yeshua raises Lazarus from the dead no doubt one of the last events

that made the chief priests decide to do something about Him, but they did not want to do it right on the festival of Passover. 

In Luke 12:20–21 the Greeks asked Philip to take them to Jesus. In verse 24, He taught on the seed falling to the ground, prophetically declaring what was about to occur in His own life. 

John 12: 28 God’s voice came from heaven, “and I did glorify and I shall glorify again” the crowd heard thunder.

In verse 29, an angel spoke to Him and 

He begins by prophesying that He will be betrayed and the chief priests and scribes will condemn him to death.

 James and John were arguing who would sit on his right or left hand. 

Verse 30 Jesus heals two blind men. He touched their eyes and

immediately they received their sight and followed him.

Then He tells the disciples to go to Bethphage, near the Mount of Olives and to bring the donkeys colt, fulfilling Zechariah 9:9

Then the triumphal entry as recorded in

John 12:12, the next day he entered Jerusalem on the donkey.

Jesus weeps over Jerusalem because they miss their appointed time of visitation.

In John 16:23; His teaching to ask the Father in His Name.

John 17. The whole chapter Jesus prays for all believers.

 verse 12, Jesus went into the temple but before-hand, He purposefully and thoughtfully made a whip

and then turned over the tables in the temple courtyard where the merchants were trading animals and birds for the temple sacrifices and drove them out.

vs. 14 The blind and lame came to Him and He healed them.

This displeased the chief priests and scribes and was the final straw to them trying to get rid of Him.

 He went to Bethany and stayed there

John 12:16 also tells us that days before Passover, Jesus came to Bethany.

John 12:19 was the withering of the fig tree,

then John records in 12:12-9, the crowd saw it and then the high priests wanted to kill Lazarus after Jesus raised him.

John 12:23 He was teaching daily in the temple and the chief priests and elders came and challenged Him.

Vrs 31- 41 He warned them and then verse 45-46 they realized was He meant.

Chapters 22 and 23 He continued teaching and called them hypocrites,

verse 24, He left the temple and went and sat on the Mount of olives,

here He tells them of the events that are going to take place in future.

chapter 25 teaches the parables of 5 wise

and 5 foolish virgins.

Also the

and the separating of the sheep and goat nations.

 Chp. 26:2 He tells the disciples that after two days is the feast of the Passover and the Son of Man will be betrayed to be crucified.

Chapter 26:3-5, the chief priests, scribes and elders talked to Caiaphas and consulted how they might take Jesus and kill him.

Matthew 26:6 Jesus was in Bethany in the house of Simon the leper.

Matthew 7-13, 19 is the record of the woman who washed His feet with her tears and emptied her alabaster box of precious ointment over Him which Jesus stated prophetically, was in preparation for His death.

Jesus tells Simon He knows what he is thinking and declares that the one who is forgiven much, loves much.

14-16 Judas Iscariot went to the chief priests and they gave him 30 pieces of silver.

17- Jesus tells His disciples to go and make ready for the seder meal and the Passover

23 24 Jesus tells that one of them there will betray Him

26 He takes the bread and the cup and institutes communion as we know it.

John chapter 13:4-7 if after supper He took a towel poured water into a basin and washed the disciples feet.

John 36: Jesus prays in Gethsemane – Gat Sh’monim, which means olive press. This was an enclosed grove with its oil press.

And olive grove was not a garden, we know it better as Gethsemane.

Vs.40 Peter, James and John could not stay awake one hour, three times He goes to the disciples and they were sleeping each time.

Jesus sweats blood with the stress of the burden of the world’s sin that he is taking upon Himself. Luke 22:44 and Mark 14:33, 34 tells us that He almost died at this point.

There is some scientific data confirming that under extreme stress, blood will be forced through capillaries to the skin surface, appearing as if blood is being sweated.

Verse 43 He saw an angel. 

47-49 Judas arrives with the chief priests and elders of the people and betrays Jesus with a kiss.

John chapter 18:5–7 Jesus spoke ‘I am that I am’, ‘Anochi’, with such a powerful authority and anointing they all fell backward to the ground.

and the rest to follow…….

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Counting Our Blessings With Omer

ספירת העומר
   Sefirat HaOmer


Counting the Omer

So who is Omer?

Not a ‘who’ but a ‘what’.

It’s a time in between.

      God commanded the people to bring a sheaf of the harvest (Leviticus [Vayikra] 23:10).

The Hebrew word for ‘sheaf’ is omer. An omer is defined as ‘a measure of dry things, containing a tenth part of an ephah.’

The definition of an omer being a tenth part of an ephah is found in Exodus (Shemot) 16:36. An ephah contains 10 omers of grain.

It is usually translated as ‘sheaf’,  a bundle of stalks of grain.

An omer is a dry measure of ancient Israel, one tenth of an ephah.

The value of an Omer.

An Ephah is an ancient Hebrew unit of dry volume measure, equal to a bath or to one-tenth of a homer. It is approximately equal to 22 litres, supposed to be equal to two pecks and five quarts. (Ten ephahs make one homer.)

Strongs #6016 AHLB#2554 (g) 1358 (a) Nm­

Here is a picture of an ephah container

Three times a year God commanded the people to come to Jerusalem (Yerushalayim) to celebrate the festivals of Passover (Pesach), Pentecost (Shavuot), and Tabernacles (Sukkot).

All three of these festivals are agricultural harvest festivals. Passover (Pesach) is the barley harvest. Pentecost (Shavuot) is the wheat harvest. Both of these festivals are first fruits harvests before the final harvest that was to come at the end of the year during the festival of Tabernacles (Sukkot), which is the fruit harvest.

The OMER LINKS PASSOVER TO SHAVUOT

Leviticus/Vayikra 23:15  And ye shall count unto you from the morrow after the Shabbat, from the day that ye brought the omer of the wave offering; seven Shabbatot shall be complete:

Counting The Omer refers to the forty-nine day period between the second night of Passover, (Pesach) and the holiday of Pentecost, (Shavuot). This period marks the beginning of the barley harvest when, in ancient times, the Israelites would bring the first sheaves to the Temple as a means of thanking God for the harvest. The word, ‘omer’, literally means ‘sheaf’ and refers to these early offerings.

While Passover/Pesach celebrates the initial liberation of the Israelites from slavery in Egypt, Pentecost/Shavuot marks the culmination of the process of liberation, when the Israelites became an autonomous community with their own laws and standards.

Counting up to Shavuot/ Pentecost, which is also the date of receiving of the 10 commandments at Sinai and the infilling of the Holy Spirit, reminds us of this process of moving from a slave mentality to a more liberated one.

Make each day count..

Teach us to number our days that we might gain a heart of wisdom.

Every day counts, if we count every day! The seven weeks between Passover and Shavuot provide for us an ideal time for introspection and spiritual progress. An opportunity to reflect upon our own souls and burnish our divine image, a time of inner transformation.

The great illumination of ‘instant’ freedom that was experienced on the Passover/Seder night so often seems to pass us by. Slaves yesterday, free men today, we simply haven’t the vessels to be able to absorb the great chesed – loving kindness – and enlightenment that God had blessed us with. For this we have Sefirat HaOmer – the counting of the days of the Omer, that prepares us gradually for the great re-illumination of God’s light – receiving Torah on Mount Sinai.

Forty-nine days that can change your world: The forty-nine days between Passover and Shavuot,
 (between leaving Egypt and receiving Torah at Sinai), are days laden with challenging spiritual potential.
 The opportunity for growth and transformation is ours for the taking. We must count our days and make our days count!

The Waving of the Omer

Likewise, the Scriptures also reveal that the offering of the Firstfruits: ‘the Waving of the Omer’ is a picture of the resurrection of the Messiah, as well as our own future resurrection. (1Cor 15:20-23; Rom 8:23; James1:18).

During the feast of unleavened bread, barley was the crop that was being harvested, so that is what would have been brought. What was significant was that this was the very first of the crop and expresses commitment to God and thanksgiving to Him for His provision.

As they waved the omer before the Lord and began counting the days between this firstfruit offering and the next firstfruit of the 2nd harvest at Pentecost/Shavuot It became known as counting the omer.

The One Redeemed by the Passover Lamb is maturing and counting the days until her betrothal to Messiah.

A OMER IS A TENTH OF AN EPHAH Exodus 16:36 Now an omer is the tenth part of an ephah.

A SHEAF REPRESENTS a person or a group of people – Genesis 37:5; Genesis 37:7

The journey from leaving Egypt (a type of the world) consists of a time of preparation to meet with the Elohim of Israel at Mount Sinai.

COUNTING THE OMER REPRESENTS GROWING IN SPIRITUAL MATURITY – to as believers Ephesians 4:14; Ephesians 4:15

The spiritual journey consists of:

THE OMER WAS THRESHED (BEATEN) REPRESENTS HUMILITY Isaiah 41:14; Isaiah 41:15

MOUNT SINAI REPRESENTS HUMILITY

THE HUMBLE WILL BE EXALTED

Isaiah 57:15; Matthew 18:4, Matthew 23:12; Philippians 2:8; James 4:10; 1 Peter 5:6

Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of Elohim, that he may exalt you in due time:

THE OMER WAS PARCHED IN FIRE –

FIRE REPRESENTS JUDGMENT – Genesis 19:24; Exodus 9:23 Jeremiah 52:13, Revelation 20:10

FIRE REPRESENTS REFINEMENT AND PURIFICATION Psalm 12:6; Zechariah 13:9, Malachi 3:3

FIRE REPRESENTS THE TRIALS OF OUR FAITH – 1 Peter 1:7, James 1:2 James 1:3, James 1:12

THE OMER WAS TOSSED IN THE WIND – OMER TOSSED TO THE WIND REPRESENTS EVERY KIND OF DOCTRINE – Ephesians 4:8; Ephesians 4:11; Ephesians 4:13; Ephesians 4:14

THE OMER WAS GROUND INTO FINE FLOUR: REPRESENTS REFINEMENT, PURIFICATION AND BEING MADE WHITE (RIGHTEOUS)- Isaiah 48:10; Daniel 12:10; Revelation 3:5

John 13:16-17  ‘And I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Comforter (Counselor, Helper, Intercessor, Advocate, Strengthener, and Standby), that He may remain with you forever. The Spirit of Truth, Whom the world cannot receive (welcome, take to its heart), because it does not see Him or know and recognize Him. But you know and recognize Him, for He lives with you [constantly] and will be in you.’

After the Children of Israel left Egypt, 49 days passed before they received the Ten Commandments at Mount Sinai. Tradition teaches that each of these days was necessary for the Children of Israel to refine themselves and be worthy of this gift. On each day they examined and corrected another of their inner traits and qualities. There were 49 in all.

These forty nine traits were comprised of seven basic attributes. Each of the seven contained all of the other seven, thus comprising forty nine.

Hebraic sources tell us that the soul of man includes these seven Basic Attributes: * Love/Kindness (Chessed) * Vigor/Discipline (Gevurah) * Beauty/Harmony/Compassion (Tiferet)* Victory/Endurance/Determination (Netzach) * Humility/Devotion (Hod) * Foundation/Bonding/Connection (Yesod) * Majesty/Dignity (Malchut)

The above are also found in the New Testament/Brit HaDasha, these same virtues were spoken about in 1 Peter and Galatians and 1 Corinthians 13, Galatians 5:22-26 22

The Ruach HaKodesh/The Holy Spirit will only reside in clean holy vessels. This is the time where we need to examine ourselves and prepare ourselves to be filled or refilled by the Ruach HaKodesh. A time to reflect on our relationship with Him and prepare our hearts for The Feast Of Pentecost/Shavuot.

When Yeshua told the disciples/talmidim to wait in Jerusalem for the Holy Spirit/Ruach HaKodesh. The disciples/talmidim, were waiting for the promise of the Father and preparing themselves to receive the Holy Spirit/Ruach HaKodesh, they were also preparing themselves to receive the Torah in their hearts, just as the children of Israel received the Torah at Mt. Sinai.  They were preparing to become vessels for the Holy Spirit/Ruach HaKodesh and to receive the power of Messiah in their lives for the purpose of being witnesses of Messiahs love to the World .

While they were waiting the disciples were not just sitting around doing nothing, they were counting the Omer, as they had done every year, examining their lives in preparation to receiving the gift of the Ruach Ha Kodesh on Shavuot that Yeshua promised them would come. This year would be the literal fulfillment of the Feast.

All of Jesus’s/Yeshua’s post resurrection appearances occurred within the days of the Omer count.

God is looking for FRUIT to abound in our lives. Galatians 5:22.

Our place, like Mary, is to be sitting At The Feet Of Our Master Jesus/Yeshua receiving His teaching.

These 7 virtues are a perfect picture of Jesus/Yeshua our Messiah and it is His desire that we be conformed to His image by the power of Holy Spirit/Ruach HaKodesh.  A blessed time for us to grow more spiritual fruit in our lives and die more and more to the works of the flesh so that He will be glorified in the Life He Has given us.

Week 1 Attribute 1 Love/Ahava Kindess/Chesed abundance/

Week 2 Attribute 2 – Vigor/ (Gevurah) strength/restraint/ Discipline/boundaries

Week 3 /Attribute 3 – Beauty/Harmony/Compassion/balance/heart (Tiferet)

Week 4 /Attribute 4 – Victory/Endurance/Determination (Netzach)

Week 5 /Attribute 5 – Humility/Devotion/refining/ (Hod)

Week 6 /Attribute 6 – Foundation/Bonding/Connection/foundation (Yesod)

Week 7 /Attribute 7 – Majesty/Dignity (Malchut)

Developing some of the attributes of God in our lives, e.g. Loving kindness, Justice, Beauty and Harmony. Constancy, Splendor, Sovereignty, Foundation and Connection.

We are to count 50 days, including the Day of Firstfruits, to the day after the 7th weekly Sabbath, which is Shavuot (Pentecost) (Leviticus 23:15-16).

Notice the scriptures deal mostly with the Holy days of Yom Habikkurim, the ‘counting of the omer,’ and Shavuot.

The counting of the omer can only be understood in the context of the Biblical calendar that is lunar based.

We are given more detail as the scriptures say “begin to count the seven weeks from the time you begin to put the sickle to the grain,” (Deuteronomy 16:9). This further illustrates the theme of the Day of Firstfruits being the day when the firstfruits of barley is reaped from the field using a sickle.

Pentecost is the Greek word for 50. In Hebrew it is Shavuot pronounced Sha-voo-ote. In (Luke 6:2 and John 5:1) it is also called the feast of weeks because of the counting.

Counting the days between them ties the two first fruits harvests together, just as Jesus ties His resurrection, as sentient and the giving of the immersion of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost/ Shavuot /the feast of weeks.

In one respect, the 50th is the uncountable number. The Omer period lasts for 50 days – yet only 49 are to be counted. The counting of 49 automatically leads to the arrival of the 50th. This elevated state was reached at Sinai. It truly surpassed everything that came before it. It was on the 50th day, Shavuot, that the union between Israel and God, like a marriage, (a covenant), was solemnized.

With this act the Israelite nation supernaturally transcended worldly existence to become one with God. Israel achieved this unity when they arrived at Sinai to encamp in a unified state: like a single person with a single heart. The names of the 12 Tribes of Israel, which were engraved upon the Stones worn by the High Priest/Kohen Gadol, have a total of 50 letters, merged as one entity with their Creator. Such amazing grace!

2 other alternative ways to count the Omer are: every day read one of the 49 parables in the gospels: see

https://www.minimannamoments.com/49-parables/

or simply count each day and remember to count our blessings and name them one by one.

Count your blessings, name them one by one,


Count your blessings, see what God has done!


Count your blessings, name them one by one,


And it will surprise you what the Lord has done.

(Full text of song at bottom of page.)

Yet how often do we really do that?

In today society counting blessings is often more related to the things we own, worldly possessions etc., however, Jesus tells us in Luke 12:15 that a man’s success is not measured by such. Our sophisticated society and culture has altered our thinking and reasonings and in doing so has dulled our sensitivity to how to keep a childlike quality in our relationship with our Heavenly Father. Remaining simple in a childlike faith and humble in attitude is a key to total trust in Him and His ability to provide for us, instead of our puffed up declarations of, I did it my way in my own strength.

The devastating weather this spring has brought sadness, loss and suffering to many around the world, while praying for those affected by the storms, it’s comforting to remember that whatever happens, we are in His hands and that our souls/spirits ultimately belong to Him; Ecc 12:7; and that we should not neglect to: Bless the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits:



Psalms 103:2 – and to give thanks unto the LORD; for [He is] good: because His mercy [endureth] for ever. Psalms 118:1-18 for when we go through hardships; Is 43:2 confirms He is with us. As we trust in the Lord with all our heart and lean not to our own natural understanding. Prov 3:5 He will never leave us nor forsake us and He will restore those whose trust is in Him.

~

This post is part of the 4 Spring Festivals of Gods Appointed Seasons and should be read in conjunction with the previous posts all available at https://www.minimannamoments.com/ More Post links at the bottom of page.

When upon life’s billows you are tempest-tossed,


When you are discouraged, thinking all is lost,


Count your many blessings, name them one by one,


And it will surprise you what the Lord has done.

 

Refrain:
Count your blessings, name them one by one,


Count your blessings, see what God has done!


Count your blessings, name them one by one,


*Count your many blessings, see what God has done.


[*And it will surprise you what the Lord has done.]

Are you ever burdened with a load of care?


Does the cross seem heavy you are called to bear?


Count your many blessings, every doubt will fly,


And you will keep singing as the days go by.

When you look at others with their lands and gold,


Think that Christ has promised you His wealth untold;


Count your many blessings—*money cannot buy [*wealth can never buy]


Your reward in heaven, nor your home on high.

So, amid the conflict whether great or small,


Do not be discouraged, God is over all;


Count your many blessings, angels will attend,


Help and comfort give you to your journey’s end.

Johnson Oatman, Jr., pub.1897

Shalom and please don’t leave this site if you are not 100% sure you are saved..you are greatly loved.

https://www.minimannamoments.com/welcome-come-taste-some-bread-of-life-bread-from-heaven/life-changing-information-guaranteed/

First Fruits

First Fruits (Yom Habikkurim).

Continuing the overview of the Spring Festivals, Gods Appointed Times. (Again this is just a basic overview and not designed to be an in depth study.)

If you are new to MMM other posts in connection to this series at:

https://www.minimannamoments.com/not-passing-over-passover-week/

https://www.minimannamoments.com/unleavened-bread-matzot-week/

https://www.minimannamoments.com/midweek-mannabite-secrets-of-the-seder-plate/

The 3rd Feast is called First Fruits. It is the barley harvest (Bikkurim) and is observed during the week of Unleavened Bread (Hag HaMatzah).

It will always be the day following the weekly sabbath, the first day of the week (Yom Rishon), which we call Sunday (Leviticus [Vayikra] 23:9-11). On this day, sheaves of barley were waved before the Lord in a prescribed ceremony.

Biblical/Hebrew Name – Bikkurim  

English Name – First Fruits of Barley Harvest

Time of Observance – The morrow after the sabbath during Hag HaMatzah

The HISTORICAL APPLICATION OF THE FEAST of First Fruits – Crossing the Red Sea (Bikkurim)

Probable MESSIANIC APPLICATION & FULFILLMENT OF THE FEAST First Fruits   – Resurrection of Yeshua (Bikkurim)

SPIRITUAL APPLICATION ( Halacha) of First Fruits – Walking (Halacha) in newness of life (Bikkurim)

Leviticus [Vayikra] 23:9-14

Then the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, “Speak to the sons of Israel and say to them, ‘When you enter the land which I am going to give to you and reap its harvest, then you shall bring in the sheaf of the firstfruits of your harvest to the priest. And he shall wave the sheaf before the Lord for you to be accepted; on the day after the sabbath the priest shall wave it.

Now on the day when you wave the sheaf you shall offer a male lamb one year old without defect for a burnt offering to the Lord. Its grain offering shall then be two tenths of an ephah of fine flour mixed with oil an offering by fire to the Lord for a soothing aroma, with its libation, a fourth of a hin of wine. Until this same day, until you have brought in the offering of your God, you shall eat neither bread nor roasted grain nor new growth. It is to be a perpetual statute throughout your generations in all your dwelling places’ “

First Fruits (Yom Habikkurim). “On the morrow after the Sabbath” following Unleavened Bread, Leviticus 23:11 schedules First Fruits, the feast for acknowledging the fertility of the land He gave the Israelites. They were to bring the early crops of their spring planting and “wave the sheaf before the Lord.”

Understanding the Festival Ceremony

When the standing ripe harvest of barley and wheat was ready to be reaped one sheaf from the standing harvest was brought to the priest. The lone sheaf was called “the sheaf of the first fruits.” The priest was then to take this one sheaf and wave it before the Lord in His house. (Where His Presence was in The Temple in Jerusalem.) This was to be done “the day after the sabbath.” Prescribed offerings were also to be presented along with the sheaf.

The Sheaf of First Fruits in the Bible

God commanded the people to bring a sheaf of the harvest (Leviticus [Vayikra] 23:10). The Hebrew word for “sheaf” is omer.

Just what is the “wave sheaf” offering, anyway? The original Hebrew word translated “sheaf” is omer. This word means “a heap” or “sheaf”, a dry measure. Says Gesenius Hebrew Chaldee Lexicon, it means “a measure of dry things, containing the tenth part of an ephah.” An omer, according to Unger’s Bible Dictionary, held about 5.1 pints.

Though one ephah, or ten omers, of barley was cut down, only one omer of flour, or about 5.1 pints of our measure, was offered in the Temple on the second Paschal, or 16th day of Nisan

This is a WHOLE SHEAF of barley — consisting of 5.1 pints, or a little over two quarts, at least! How many individual “grains” of barley would that be? There are multiple thousands of barley grains in one omer. The “omer” then was not one grain, or the grain from one plant, but many barley plants — many grains!

Three times a year God commanded the people to come to Jerusalem (Yerushalayim) to celebrate the festivals of Passover (Pesach), Pentecost (Shavuot), and Tabernacles (Sukkot).

All three of these festivals are agricultural harvest festivals. Passover (Pesach) is the barley harvest. Pentecost (Shavuot) is the wheat harvest. Both of these festivals are first fruits harvests before the final harvest that was to come at the end of the year during the festival of Tabernacles (Sukkot), which is the fruit harvest.

The harvest represents all who would put their faith, trust, and confidence (emunah) in the Messiah Yeshua (Matthew [Mattityahu] 13:39; Mark 4:26-29; Luke 10:1-12; Revelation 14:14-16). So, the sheaf is the first of the first fruits. Since a sheaf in the Bible is used to typify a person or persons (Genesis [Bereishit] 37:5-11), a sheaf seems to spiritually represent people who accept the Messiah into their hearts both Israelite and gentile.

The nation of Israel was familiar with the concept of first fruits or the firstborn. The first fruits were always the choicest, the foremost, the first, the best, the preeminent of all that was to follow.

They were holy to the Lord.

The concept of first fruits or firstborn is a major theme in the Bible. This can be seen by the following Scriptures: Exodus (Shemot) 23:16,19: 34:26; Lev. (Vayikra) 2:12,14; 23:20; Numbers (Bamidbar) 18:12-15,26; Deut. (Devarim) 18:1-5; 26:2-4,10; 2 Chronicles 31:5; Nehemiah 10:35-39; Proverbs (Mishlai) 3:9; Jeremiah (Yermiyahu) 2:3; Ezekiel (Yechezekel) 44:30; 48:14; Malachi 3:8-14; Hebrews 6:20; 7:1-8.

The Seventeenth of Nisan — Resurrection and Salvation

The theme of the festival of First Fruits is resurrection and salvation. There are several important events that happened on this day in the Bible.

Noah’s (Noach) ark rests on Mount Ararat (Genesis 8:4).

Israel crosses the Red Sea (Exodus [Shemot] 3:18; 5:3; 14).

Israel eats the first fruits of the Promised Land (Joshua 5:10-12)..

Haman is defeated (Esther 3:1-6

The resurrection of Jesus/Yeshua, the Messiah (John 12:24; 1 Corinthians 15:16-20).

Yeshua celebrated the festival of First Fruits by offering Himself as the first fruits to all future generations (Matthew [Mattityahu] 27:52-53).

Jesus/Yeshua The First Fruits of the Barley Harvest

Jesus/Yeshua is the firstborn of Miryam (Mary) (Matthew 1:23-25).

Jesus/Yeshua is the first-begotten of G-d the Father (Hebrews 1:6).

Jesus/Yeshua is the firstborn of every creature (Colossians 1:15).

Jesus/Yeshua is the first-begotten from the dead (Revelation 1:5)

Jesus/Yeshua is the firstborn of many brethren (Romans 8:29).

Jesus/Yeshua is the first fruits of the resurrected ones (1 Cor.15:20,23)

Jesus/Yeshua is the beginning of the creation of God (Revelation 3:14).

Jesus/Yeshua is the preeminent One (Colossians 1:18).    

Jesus/Yeshua indeed the Most Holy One of God and is sanctified by the Father.

Jesus/Yeshua is the first, the choicest, the preeminent One. He is both the firstborn of God and the first fruits unto God.

Jesus/Yeshua is the sheaf of the first fruits.

First Fruits Is Prophetic
 of the Resurrection of the Messiah

The festival of the sheaf of the first fruits is prophetic of the resurrection of Jesus/Yeshua.

Jesus/Yeshua prophesied that He would rise after He was slain on the tree (Matthew [Mattityahu 12:38-40; 16:21; Luke 24:44-46).

This was foreshadowed to happen in the Tanach (Old Testament) by type and shadow (Genesis [Bereishit] 22:1-6; Exodus [Shemot] 3:18; 5:3; 8:27; Esther 4:15-17; Jonah 1:7; 2:1-2).

Jesus/Yeshua arose from the grave on the seventeenth of Nisan, the day of the festival of First Fruits. This day would be the day after the weekly sabbath during the week of Passover (Mark 16:1-6). In fact, Jesus/Yeshua is called the first fruits of those who rise from the dead.

But now Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who are asleep. For since by a man came death, by a man also came the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all shall be made alive. But each in his own order: Christ the firstfruits, after that those who are Christs’ at His coming (1 Corinthians 15:20-23 NAS).

It was prophesied that Jesus/Yeshua, the Messiah, would be buried in the tomb of the rich (Isaiah [Yeshayahu] 53:9; Matthew [Mattityahu] 27:57; Luke 23:51). Why was Jesus/Yeshua placed in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea? Arimathea was another name for Ramah, where Samuel dwelt. It is five miles north of Jerusalem (Yerushalayim). In fact, this place is still called Ramah today. In ancient times, it was customary for Jews to be buried in Jerusalem (Yerushalayim). In fact, this practice is still done today because it is a traditional belief in Judaism that the resurrection of the dead will take place in Jerusalem

“For Christ, OUR PASSOVER also has been sacrificed. LET US therefore CELEBRATE THE FEAST, not with the old leaven, nor with the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the UNLEAVENED BREAD of sincerity and truth.” (1 Corinthians 5:7-8)

The way the feast days were set up by the Lord, the chief priests would have to offer up the sheaf of the first fruits of the harvest with a torn Veil.

Later they would hear that the Lord Jesus resurrected on the day of first fruits and would have to look at and eat unleavened bread up until the day they crucified him.

At the moment of Jesus death the veil in the temple was torn in two!

It must have made them think.

“On the morrow after the Sabbath” following Unleavened Bread, Leviticus 23:11 schedules First Fruits, the feast for acknowledging the fertility of the land He gave the Israelites.

They were to bring the early crops of their spring planting and “wave the sheaf before the Lord.”

The Spiritual Understanding of First Fruits

Spiritual Application (Halacha). A sheaf in the Bible is used to typify a person or persons (Genesis [Bereishit] 37:5-11). Yeshua will return to earth (Zechariah 14:4) during His second coming as King over all the earth. He also will bring the sheaves (the believers in Yeshua as the Messiah) with Him (Psalm (Tehillim) 126; Jeremiah (Yermiyahu) 31:9-14; Joel 3:11-13; Zechariah 14:3-5; Matthew [Mattityahu] 13:37-39; Mark 4:26-29; Hebrews 12:1; Jude 14; Revelation 1:7).

The 144,000 Jewish witnesses who witness of Yeshua during the Chevlai shel Mashiach, the birthpangs of the Messiah (also known as the tribulation/Jacobs trouble) are first fruits to God during the tribulation (Revelation 14:1-4).

Because of the blood covenant God made with Abraham when God asked if he was willing to sacrifice his only son so then reciprocally God was able to offer His only Son for everyone who will believe.

The modern church has come to call this feast “Easter,” named after Ishtar, the pagan goddess of fertility. In searching the Scriptures there is no reference to Easter as their name in the text, only to Passover Seder. Luke 22:1–24.

So here is a Brief explanation and meaning: In the fourth century 196A.D. the church leaders for various reasons brought about the changes by introducing Easter which was the celebration of the fertility goddess Ishtar in Syria and Babylon. (Todays Iraq.)

The name Ishtar was written in Greek as Istar because there is no’sh’ sound in the Greek language. Also the Greek and Latin letters for the letter I are pronounced EE, Istar became Easter when spelt with English letters. The celebration of Ishtar brought with it symbols of reproduction example eggs and rabbits. This was done to separate from Jewish groups and to make it easier for heathens to become ‘Christians’, by letting them retain the pagan customs.

The First Fruits celebration was to be over God’s replanting of the earth in the spring. It quickly became traditional and could be seen as something to be thought about in light of Jesus’s comment in Mark 7:13

‘Thus you are nullifying and making void and of no effect [the authority of] the Word of God through your tradition, which you [in turn] hand on. And many things of this kind you are doing.’

Rabbits and eggs are not bad in themselves but we know only the sacrifice of Jesus will bring salvation, indeed Jesus became our Passover Lamb and was raised from the dead on First Fruits.

And today these spring feasts celebrate that which actually occurred and also eventually, the resurrection of the entire Body of Jesus our Messiah when He returns as King! For He is neither in a crib nor on the cross or in a grave for..

 

Midweek Mannabite – Secrets Of The Seder Plate

This is an extra post continuing the focus on the week of Passover as part of the Spring Feasts Series.

https://www.minimannamoments.com/palm-sunday-nisan-the-appointed-time-of-the-lamb/

https://www.minimannamoments.com/unleavened-bread-matzot-week/)

https://www.minimannamoments.com/not-passing-over-passover-week/

As there is so much information to be found on this season, the following merely scratches the surface and is in no way all encompassing. Its purpose is to whet your appetite for more of God. 

Lest we forget as we hurry forward after the Holy days of Passover week, (holidays) it was a little over 2000 years ago, that 12 men celebrating the Passover Seder in Jerusalem were told by their Rabbi/Teacher and Master, Yeshua (Jesus), that this would be their last Seder together.  He also explained that it had prophetic significance.

Pesach is Hebrew for Passover and has been celebrated faithfully for the last 3,300 years. The name of Passover derives from the fact that during the final plague,( the slaying of the firstborn) God passed over the Jewish homes.

The first night of Passover is celebrated with a Seder meal, meaning order. Because there are so many details to remember (there are 15 steps which will be listed later on their own page for easy reference.) The ‘order’, ‘Seder’, is set by a book called the Haggadah (The Telling).

Haggadah

huh-gah-duh ;

Sephardic Hebrew hah-gah-dah;

Ashkenazic Hebrew hah-gaw-duh

It refers to a book containing the order of service of the traditional Passover meal. It contains the narrative of the Exodus from Egypt that constitutes the main part of that service.

God’s deliverance of the Hebrew children of Israel from slavery under the Egyptians (Ex 5:12:42) is a very important Jewish festival and marks the establishment of Israel as a nation. God commanded His people to celebrate the Passover each year with the sacrifice of a lamb and the eating of only unleavened bread for eight days.

The present form of the celebration includes many symbols and traditions designed to help each generation of Israel’s children remember and understand this important part of their history.

Through narration and participation in the Seder, which is meant to be celebrated by each family in their own home as a participatory remembrance of the event, this helps them to understand the long term meaning of the exodus.

Modern table laid out  below

Passover feast included three symbolic elements:

lamb,

unleavened bread,

and

bitter herbs.

These elements were the essence of the Lord’s prescription for recalling the deliverance with the Lamb He had provided.  The means by which He may consider a household worthy of relationship with Him.

The Unleavened Bread symbolized the way in which His people should live their lives – “quickly following” His voice as they immediately left “without waiting for the bread to rise”, and “without sin”, since yeast (leaven) is a symbol for sin throughout the Scriptures.

Bitter herbs provided a reminder of the bitter life of slavery to anyone other than the Lord Himself, therefore causing them not to “look back” from whence they had come.

It seems that on the night before He died, as Messiah partook in the Last Supper, it was most likely a Passover Seder. In the middle of the meal He began to speak of His death, ‘one of you will betray Me’ He said. Then He gave them a sign, ‘He who dips his hand with Me in the dish will betray Me.’

The sign also revealed that it would be Messiah who freely gave Himself over to suffering and death and why the use of the word dipping was significant. The word in Greek is linked to the word baptism, which means to submerge or to overwhelm. This signified that Messiah’s life would be submerged in suffering, in our suffering, submerged in the cup of our judgment.

In this process He would be overwhelmed, but He willingly and deliberately submerged Himself in the cup of our judgment. The cup of our suffering and bitterness, so that our judgment, our tears and our punishment that should end in hell (eternal separation from the Father), would be taken away.

 

He dipped the matzah into the cup so that we would never have to.

Exodus 12:8  Matthew 26:20–25  Isaiah 53:4

“Do this (Passover meal) in remembrance of Me”

Jesus was adding to the already understood remembrance of God’s deliverance from physical bondage, an appreciation and remembrance of the spiritual deliverance He would soon offer mankind on the cross.         

He had previously explained in John chapter 3 that “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so too must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in Him will have eternal life”.

Passover, the feasts and other commandments serve to remind us in this life of how God delivers us physically and spiritually. In this  feast, we look back at how obedience to God delivered His people in the past.

He identified Himself as the Lamb (John 1:29).

Not only was the lamb of the Passover the element that provided the blood that caused the angel of death to “pass over” God’s people in Egypt, but Jesus’ blood shed on the cross is the mark that every believer trusts will deliver them from punishment and death in the lake of fire.

 

One of the foods you need for the Passover Seder is called charoset or kharoset. On the night of Passover the Jewish people eat the kharoset with bitter herbs as they commemorate their deliverance from Egypt. He used the bitter herbs as a sign of turning back to sin and the bitterness of such a turn. Judas was the one who “dipped” the bread in bitter herbs and then betrayed the Lord.    In like fashion, the same element was to remind those coming from Egypt of the bitterness of turning back to the life from which they had been delivered.

On Passover the Jewish people dipped a piece of matzah, unleavened bread, into the kharoset. No doubt that it was into a bowl such as this that Messiah and the disciple named Judas Yehuda dipped their bread that night.

It was then that the disciple named Judas Yehuda dipped his hand in the dish.

It is significant because the kharoset and bitter herbs represent bondage and suffering.  The betrayal was the delivering of the Messiah over to bondage and suffering. This sobering sign revealed that it would be Judas who would deliver Him to His suffering and death and yet Messiah also dipped into the cup acknowledging and accepting the prophetic fulfillment of His Fathers will.

Karpas – a Green, Spring vegetable could be a slice of onion celery boiled potato or sprigs of parsley, it symbolizes Springs bounty And a sign of new life. The Karpas is dipped into the salt water at the beginning of the seder representing the salty tears that were cried when they were slaves in Egypt and it also represents rebirth and growth.

Matzah – as the Israelites were fleeing Egypt/Mitzrayim, they did not have enough time to let the bread dough rise. They carried the unfinished dough on their backs and the hot sun baked it into a hard, flat matzah. For the eight days of Passover, no leaven (chametz) of any kind is eaten, in memory of their hasty flight.

Maror – Horseradish root. bitter herbs symbolizing the harsh suffering and bitterness of the hard times of oppression endured as slaves. For believers, it is a reminder of bitterness for being in bondage and in slavery to sin.

Chazeret or Korech the matzah and maror (Romaine Lettuce) this is the second portion of bitter herbs which is eaten during the Seder in a Matzah sandwich together with Maror reminding of atrocities. This reminds us of our Egypt days or worldly experience, first it is fun and exciting and lately we realize the error of our ways and begin to feel the bitterness in the ground without water, (which is without the Word of God) and speaks of spiritual dryness in our lives.

 

Reclining at a meal was symbolic of being free,no longer a slave.

Shulchan Orech (the meal is eaten).

Z’roah – strong arm – a roasted shank bone. The shankbone, or the z’roah זרוע , is one of the three basic requirements as a reminder of the Pesach offering used to bring to the Holy Temple in Jerusalem remembrance of Lamb which was slain symbolizing the sacrifices offered. It was the sacrifice on the last night.

What is the mystery of the Zeroah?

On virtually every Passover Seder plate there is something called the Zeroah . It just sits there on the plate and is never touched or rarely mentioned. What is it?

The Zeroah is the roasted shank bone of a lamb.  

The Zeroah is the full and almighty power of a Holy God.

In Isaiah 53 mystery is revealed. For it is written, “to whom has the Zeroah of the Lord been revealed?” The translation will read ‘Alm’, but the Hebrew is Zeroah, same word as the lambs bone. The Zeroah is Messiah, who is wounded for our sins, scourged and crushed for our punishment, and he goes to his death as a lamb.

By the Zeroah we are saved.

This is the true full power of the Almighty, the loving, gentle, merciful, giving and beautiful one who bore all things to save us. This is the Zeroah, the arm that saved your life. Trust in it, rest in it, reach for it, rejoice in it, and live by it, and nothing will be impossible for you. Today take some time to thank the Lord for the many blessings he has given you commit this day to rejoice in the Zeroah of your life.

Beitzah – A hard-boiled egg symbolizing the cycle of life representing a new life after Egypt and also. a reminder of the festival offering used to bring to the Holy Temple in Jerusalem at Pesach. It is also a reminder of the additional lamb called the haggigah.

( note on haggigah: Yeshua ate the Passover (Luke 22:15). This Scripture passage refers specifically to the Lamb. Frequently, there were two sacrifices during the Feast of Passover. One lamb is the Passover lamb and the other lamb is called the haggigah or peace offering.

These sacrifices are referred to in Deuteronomy (Devarim) 16:2 where G-d required that the sacrifice be from both the flock and the herd. This was interpreted to mean that two sacrifices were needed. The Haggigah (the additional lamb) was offered in addition to the Pesach (the Passover lamb). The Pesach was required, but the Haggigah was not because it was a freewill offering. )

Charoset – a mixture of chopped apple walnuts, and red wine ground up together charoset resembles and therefore symbolizes the bricks and mortar Israelite slaves were forced to use to lay bricks in Egypt.  Of their toil and hard labour and reminds us that if we press on with God during your difficult times you will eventually begin to taste the sweetness of God in your life.

Tzafun (the afikomen that was hidden is found, ransomed, and then eaten).

The Passover element of Unleavened Bread is broken, hidden away, and brought back later, much as Jesus was at His death, burial and resurrection. This is the same bread we use at the communion table.

The Lord in instructing His disciples how to “Do this (Passover meal) in remembrance of Me” was to add to the already understood remembrance of God’s deliverance from physical bondage, an appreciation and remembrance of the spiritual deliverance He would soon offer mankind on the cross.  He had previously explained in John chapter 3 that “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, so too must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in Him will have eternal life”.

In the Passover, our Lord shows us that what was previously true for people’s physical salvation would now be true in Him for their spiritual salvation.

It is equally important to recall that unleavened bread is called the “bread of affliction” (i.e., lechem oni, literally, “bread of humiliation” or “bread of humility”). Partaking of this bread means humbly identifying with the suffering and afflictions that Jesus/Yeshua performed

on our behalf…

Eating unleavened bread — the “bread of affliction” — is really to eat the bread of HIS affliction – and therefore testifies to our own powerlessness to effect righteousness.  It is eaten “in haste” – not the result of human ingenuity or planning. It is a commemoration that salvation is of the LORD – rather than a work of our own.

As the prophet Isaiah wrote about the Messiah, our Suffering Servant:
 Isaiah 53:4-5:

“Surely he has taken up our sicknesses and has carried our sorrowful pains;
yet we regarded him as stricken, beaten by God and afflicted.
But he was pierced for our transgressions; he was crushed for our perversions;
upon him was the correction that brought our peace, and by his blows we are healed

אָכֵן חֳלָיֵנוּ הוּא נָשָׂא וּמַכְאבֵינוּ סְבָלָם
וַאֲנַחְנוּ חֲשַׁבְנֻהוּ נָגוּעַ מֻכֵּה אֱלהִים וּמְעֻנֶּה
וְהוּא מְחלָל מִפְּשָׁעֵנוּ מְדֻכָּא מֵעֲוֹנתֵינוּ
מוּסַר שְׁלוֹמֵנוּ עָלָיו וּבַחֲבֻרָתוֹ נִרְפָּא־לָנוּ

a·khen · cho·la·yei·nu · hu · na·sa · u·makh·o·vei·nu · se·va·lam
va·a·nach·nu · cha·shav·nu·hu · na·gu·a · mu·keh · E·lo·him · u·me·u·neh ve·hu · me·chol·lal · mi·pe·sha·ei·nu · me·du·kah · me·a·vo·no·tei·nu · mu·sar · she·lo·mei·nu · a·lav  · u·va·cha·vu·ra·to · nir·pa · la·nu

Notice that the word translated “blow” (i.e., חַבּוּרָה, “wound” or “stripe”) comes from the same root as the word “friend” (חָבֵר), and therefore we can read this as “in His friendship we are healed.” Yeshua gave up His life for us so that we could become His friends… As He later told us regarding His sacrifice: “Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends”( John 15:13) Indeed of Yeshua it may truly be said, Yesh ohev davek me’ach – “there is a friend who sticks (davek) closer than a brother”(Prov.18:24)

We do not become sanctified, in other words, by afflicting ourselves, but rather by sincerely trusting in the afflictions that our Friend Yeshua endured on our behalf.  Just as we are saved by God’s grace through faith, so are we sanctified. Sanctification is a work of the Holy Spirit in our lives just as miraculous as regeneration itself (1 Cor.6:11). We do not earn merit before the LORD through performing “good deeds” (Titus 3:5-6), but rather by humbling ourselves and trusting in the Messiah for righteousness. (John 6:28-29).

The idea that we can merit our own righteousness before God, that we are self-sufficient and do not need a Savior, is something Jesus/Yeshua regarded as a form of “spiritual leaven.” It is only when the ego is deflated (i.e., “unleavened”) that we are able to discern the truth of our inward condition.

Unleavened bread, then, signifies our identification with the Lord in His humility and afflictions, but it does not mean attempting to effect our own sanctity by means of self-styled affliction. We are sanctified by God’s grace, not by outward shows of religion. Remembering that all the “oughts” (i.e., commands) of the New Covenant are directed to the truth of who you are “in the Messiah,” that is, by virtue of His connection to you, and not to your former life and identity as a slave in Egypt…

During the celebration of Pesach, three cakes of unleavened bread (matzot) are placed one upon another, with a napkin between each cake.

At a certain point in the Seder service, the middle cake, known as the afikomen, or “that which come after,” is broken in two.

One piece is distributed among the people present, and the larger piece is hidden in a napkin. Toward the end of the Passover Seder, the hidden portion is brought to light and eaten by those surrounding the Passover table.

The Messianic understanding is that these three pieces of matzot represent G-d the Father, the Messiah Jesus/Yeshua, and the Holy Spirit (Ruach HaKodesh). The central piece, the afikomen, is broken, a portion is eaten, and the remainder hidden and then brought forth to testify of the death, burial, and resurrection of Yeshua.

The Bread and Cups of the Passover Seder

During the course of the Seder, the four cups of wine that are served and drunk at a specific point to the people present at the Seder are used in the following manner, and are called:

First The Cup of Blessing

(Luke 22:17; 1 Corinthians 10:16).

This cup is called the cup of sanctification, or the Kiddush

The Second is for Maggid,    The Cup of Wrath

(Luke 22:42-44).

This cup is not drunk, but is poured out on the table as the plagues of Egypt are recited. Jesus/Yeshua drank of this cup for us in the Garden of Gethsemane and when He died on the tree.

The Third is for Birkat Hamazon –   The cup of Blessing, Salvation, or Redemption.

(Psalm [Tehillim] 116:13)

This cup is filled to overflowing, symbolizing an overflowing salvation.

And the fourth is for Hallel – The cup of the kingdom

(Luke 22:18,20; Matthew [Mattityahu] 26:28-29).

Jesus/Yeshua spoke of eating and drinking afresh in the Messianic age with His disciples after His resurrection.

In addition to the four cups of wine served to the people, another cup, called the cup of Elijah (Eliyahu), is also a part of the Seder. This cup is poured out at the end of the Seder. Only Elijah (Eliyahu) himself, or one coming in the spirit and power of Elijah, or the Messiah, was allowed to drink of this cup. When Jesus/Yeshua referred to Himself drinking of this cup, He was saying in no uncertain terms that He was the Messiah.

The cup used was more likely to have looked like this one below, rather than an ornate silver goblet we are used to seeing.

The 4 cups represent the four expressions of deliverance promised by God as found in Exodus 6:7

I will bring you out

I will deliver

I will redeem

I will take

and these promises are still true for every believer today.