The word Sukkot means “booths” or “tabernacles,” so the seven-day holiday is also known as the Feast of Booths and the Feast of Tabernacles.
Sukkot, or the Feast of Tabernacles, includes an intriguing observance. Join Jonathan Bernis and Ezra Benjamin as they discuss the last of the Fall Feasts prescribed by God in Leviticus 23. Discover the meaning behind this Feast and how it can encourage your faith. Jonathan and Ezra share personal memories of celebrating Sukkot and expound on its prophetic element yet to be fulfilled.
On this holiest day of the Jewish year, may God bless you with joy of your salvation in Yeshua.
It’s the holiest day of the Jewish year. Jonathan Bernis and Ezra Benjamin discuss Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. Join them as they share their personal stories of observing this important day and reveal its powerful connection to your New Covenant faith. You’ll learn the significance of the holy day and how this “appointed time of the Lord” is not only a memorial but also points to the prophetic return of the Messiah.
For those curious about the Jewish roots of faith in Jesus, the biblical Feasts of Israel are an excellent place to start. What do we mean by Jewish roots?
Then, there’s Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year that kicks off the Fall Feasts of the Jewish calendar and serves as a season of reflection and repentance.
Discover what the first of the Jewish Fall Feasts – Rosh Hashanah – means to you as a Believer. Rabbi Jonathan and Ezra reveal how the Fall Feasts are not merely Jewish holidays but are also prophetic events relevant to the whole world. Learn how the Feasts of the Old Testament provide a backdrop for Christians and Jewish people alike to understand the full significance of what Yeshua (Jesus) has done for us. See how the Christian and Jewish celebrations together create a divine universal calendar.
As Jonathan Bernis recently wrote, Rosh Hashanah is a wake-up call leading us into the Fall Feasts.
With Rosh Hashanah approaching, and the beginning of the Jewish Fall Feasts, I wanted to write to you.
Tisha B’Av means the ninth of Av, and it is a day of mourning for Israel and Jewish people everywhere.