June 17, 2025

The Shabbath and Feasts Days

The Shabbath was ordained from creation. Before there was Israel, before there was Torah given on Sinai, YHWH Himself set apart the seventh day and blessed it.

“And Elohim blessed the seventh day and sanctified it, because in it He rested from all His work which Elohim created and made.” Genesis 2 : 3

From the beginning, Shabbath was not man’s idea, it was Elohim’s pattern. It is a rhythm built into creation itself, a weekly covenant between the Creator and His people.

1. The Eternal Covenant of the Shabbath

The Shabbath is not temporary; it is an eternal covenant for Israel to keep throughout all generations.

“It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel forever.” Exodus 31 : 17

Those grafted in through faith in Messiah Yeshua are no longer strangers, but fellow citizens of Israel (Ephesians 2 : 12–19). Therefore, the Shabbath belongs to all who join themselves to YHWH.

“Blessed is the man… who keeps from profaning the Shabbath.” Isaiah 56 : 2–7

2. The Shabbath in the Light of Messiah

The Shabbath must always be viewed through the lens of the Messiah. Yeshua kept the Shabbath perfectly and showed its true intention, mercy, restoration, and holiness.

He said,

“The Shabbath was made for man, and not man for the Shabbath.” Mark 2 : 27

Doing good is righteous; working for profit or gain is not. Yeshua healed, taught, and set people free on the Shabbath, showing that the day was made to bring life, not bondage.

“It is lawful to do good on the Shabbath.” Matthew 12 : 12

Grace is given from the Most High for those new to this truth, allowing them time to align their lives within a Babylonian system that opposes divine order. But the commandment remains eternal, Shabbath is set-apart.

3. The Purpose of Shabbath Rest

The Shabbath is a time of rest and reflection to honor creation, the Creator, and our bodies and minds. It reconnects the believer with rhythm, renewal, and remembrance.

“In returning and rest shall you be saved; in quietness and trust shall be your strength.” Isaiah 30 : 15

Rest is not laziness, it is obedient restoration. Through ceasing from labor, we declare that YHWH is our Provider. This is why the Shabbath is central to the spiritual and physical health of Israel.

4. Rome’s Change and the Apostolic Witness

It was Rome, not Yeshua or the apostles, that changed the day of rest from the seventh day (Shabbath) to the first day (Sunday). This was done under Constantine in the 4th century CE, blending pagan sun worship with the faith of the Scriptures. Yet the Messiah kept Shabbath, the apostles kept Shabbath, and Paul himself continued to teach and reason in the synagogues on the Shabbath.

“And Paul, as his custom was, went in to them, and for three Shabbaths reasoned with them out of the Scriptures.” Acts 17 : 2

No one, not even Paul ever taught against the Shabbath. They understood it as the everlasting sign of belonging to YHWH.

5. The Feasts of YHWH

The Feasts of YHWH are not “Israelite holidays” they are the appointed times (mo’adim) of the Creator.

“These are the Feasts of YHWH, holy convocations which you shall proclaim in their seasons.” Leviticus 23 : 2

They are seasonal rehearsals of redemption, showing the covenant of marriage between YHWH and His people.

Each feast reveals a prophetic stage in the plan of salvation:

Together, these Feasts form the prophetic calendar of redemption the plan of salvation revealed through time.
6. Yeshua and the Feasts

Yeshua Himself commanded us to remember the Passover in His memory

“Do this in remembrance of Me.” Luke 22 : 19

He didn’t abolish the Feasts; He fulfilled their meaning and pointed us to their greater reality in the Kingdom.

Even in the coming age, the nations will keep the Feasts:

“All nations shall go up year by year to worship the King, YHWH of Hosts, and to keep the Feast of Tabernacles.” Zechariah 14 : 16

The Feasts therefore remain relevant for every believer, they connect us to the divine timeline and prepare us for the return of the King.


7. The Spiritual Message

Both the Shabbath and the Feasts reveal YHWH’s desire for relationship, rhythm, and remembrance. They are not burdens but blessings a covenant rhythm of rest, worship, and rejoicing. When we keep these days, we step out of Babylon’s time system and back into the eternal calendar of heaven. We honor the Creator by walking in His time, not man’s.


Conclusion

The Shabbath is a sign of creation, and the Feasts are the signs of redemption. Together, they form the covenant calendar of YHWH. Messiah, the apostles, and the early believers all honored them — not as rituals, but as revelations. In returning to them, we rediscover the heartbeat of the Kingdom and the joy of obedience.May YHWH grant every believer the wisdom to enter His rest and celebrate His appointed times with understanding and joy.