— Category VIII · The Seven Moedim —
The Seven Moedim
The appointed times Yahuah set into His own creation as the framework for His redemption work — past, present, and yet to come.
Study 1
The Importance of the Moedim
The moedim are not Old Testament holidays or Jewish customs. Yahuah calls them "my feasts" in His own words. They are the dates He has historically used to act, the framework His redemption story is written on, and the pattern hidden in plain sight throughout Scripture.
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Pesach — The Meal Under the Blood
Pesach is the meal of the 14th of Aviv, eaten under the blood while the destroyer passes by outside. Yahushua died at the very hour the Pesach lambs were slaughtered. Why the Last Supper was a preparation meal — not the Pesach — and why the leavened bread on the table proves it.
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Hag HaMatzot — The Seven-Day Cleansing
The seven days of unleavened bread that follow the Pesach meal. Pesach is the door; Hag HaMatzot is the room you walk into. Yahushua's sinless body in the tomb during the very feast that pictures a body without corruption, and the 7½-day pattern echoed in Revelation's silence in heaven.
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Bikkurim — The Feast of Firstfruits
The wave sheaf, the resurrection of the Messiah, and the starting line for the count to Shavuot. The first sheaf cut from the field is the guarantee of the entire harvest still in the ground — the picture Yahushua fulfilled exactly when He rose on the morrow after the Sabbath.
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Shavuot — Torah at Sinai, Spirit in the Upper Room
The three-component count Christianity collapses into a single fifty days. Two giving-of-fire events on the same moed, fifteen hundred years apart — the Torah on stone at Sinai and the same Torah on hearts in the upper room. A 100-day distance from Pesach, exactly where Yahuah placed it.
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Yom Teruah — The Day of Trumpets
The awakening blast on the new moon of the seventh month. The only feast that lands on Day 1, where “no man knoweth the day or the hour” applies precisely. The picture of the resurrection of believers, the trump of Elohim, and the return of Messiah.
Read the Study →Study 7
Yom Kippur — The Day of Atonement
The most solemn day of Yahuah's year. The high priest in white linen entering the Most Holy Place, the blood on the mercy seat, the scapegoat into the wilderness. The Jubilee trumpet of liberty, “the great day of his wrath,” and the picture of the final judgment.
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Sukkot — The Feast of Tabernacles
The seven-day feast of dwelling. The wilderness booth, the Word made flesh, and the tabernacle of the restored creation. Forty Jubilees of the church age echoing forty years in the wilderness — and the only feast specifically named for the restored future kingdom.
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