The seven feasts of YHWH are not Jewish holidays. They are the prophetic calendar of the Master, given in Leviticus 23, kept by Yeshua, fulfilled by Him at the first coming, and pointing to Him at the second. The Spring feasts have already come. The Fall feasts are still to come. Between them is the age you are living in.
← Back to the AtlasSpoken by YHWH to Moshe at Sinai · Hebrew: mo'adei YHWH (מועדי יהוה)
"Speak unto the children of Israel, and say unto them, Concerning the feasts of YHWH, which ye shall proclaim to be holy convocations, even these are My feasts." The Hebrew word mo'ed means "appointed time" or "set meeting." These are not Jewish customs. They are YHWH's calendar of rendezvous with His people. He named them. He set the dates. He claimed them as His own ("My feasts"). The gentile church traded them for holidays that men invented. Recovering the moedim is recovering the calendar of God.
* Colossians 2:16-17 — the feasts are "a shadow of things to come, but the body is of Messiah." A shadow proves the body. The Apostle's argument affirms the feasts; it does not abolish them.
Before any feast is listed, Leviticus 23 names the Sabbath. Then it sets seven appointed times across the agricultural and prophetic year. Four in the spring. Three in the fall. A long summer gap between them.
The seventh day · Listed first among the appointed times
Before any annual feast is named, the Sabbath is given as the weekly moed. "Six days shall work be done: but the seventh day is the Sabbath of rest, an holy convocation." Every week is a rehearsal of the rest that the seven annual feasts together prophesy. For the full Sabbath case, see The Sabbath Timeline.
Spring (Pesach, Matzot, Bikkurim, Shavuot) · Fall (Teruah, Kippur, Sukkot)
Three of the seven require pilgrimage to Yerushalayim (Exodus 23:14-17, Deuteronomy 16:16): Pesach, Shavuot, and Sukkot. Every Jewish male was commanded to appear three times a year. The four others are observed wherever the people are. Each feast has an agricultural meaning (barley, wheat, grape harvest) AND a prophetic meaning. The agricultural was for the first century. The prophetic is for every century.
The four spring feasts were each fulfilled at specific moments in Yeshua's death, resurrection, and the giving of the Ruach. The dates are not symbolic. They are exact.
The lamb without blemish · Blood on the doorposts · The death of the firstborn passes over
Instituted at the Exodus (Exodus 12). The blood of an unblemished lamb causes the destroyer to pass over the house. The lamb is killed at twilight on the 14th of Nisan. Yeshua is crucified on the 14th of Nisan, at the exact hour the Pesach lambs are being slaughtered in the Temple. "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." (John 1:29) "Messiah our Pesach is sacrificed for us." (1 Corinthians 5:7)
* Fulfillment: AD 30/33 · Golgotha · The exact hour and the exact day
Seven days · No leaven in the house · Yeshua in the tomb
Begins the evening Pesach ends (Nisan 15) and runs seven days. Leaven (chametz) represents sin throughout Scripture. The people remove all leaven from their homes. Yeshua, the bread without sin, is laid in the tomb during the days of unleavened bread. "Christ our passover is sacrificed for us: therefore let us keep the feast, not with old leaven... but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." (1 Corinthians 5:7-8) Sha'ul is still commanding the feast to be kept after the cross.
* Fulfillment: AD 30/33 · The sinless body in the tomb during the days of no leaven
The first sheaf of the barley harvest · Waved before YHWH
On the day after the Sabbath of Pesach week (the morrow after the Sabbath), the priest waves the first sheaf of the barley harvest before YHWH. It is the firstborn of the dead earth, the guarantee of the rest of the harvest. Yeshua rises from the dead on this exact day. "But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept." (1 Corinthians 15:20) He is the wave sheaf. The harvest that follows Him is everyone who belongs to Him at His coming.
* Fulfillment: AD 30/33 · The empty tomb on First Fruits morning
Fifty days after First Fruits · The wheat harvest · The giving of the Torah at Sinai
"Count from the morrow after the Sabbath... seven Sabbaths shall be complete: even unto the morrow after the seventh Sabbath shall ye number fifty days." (Leviticus 23:15-16) Jewish tradition holds that the Torah was given at Sinai on Shavuot. Fifty days after Yeshua rises, the Ruach HaKodesh is poured out on the talmidim — on Shavuot (Acts 2). The Torah written on stone at Sinai. The Torah written on hearts on Shavuot. Three thousand died at Sinai for the golden calf. Three thousand were added to the ekklesia on Shavuot. The reversal is exact.
* Fulfillment: AD 30/33 · The upper room · Ruach HaKodesh fills the talmidim on the exact day the Torah was given at Sinai
Between Shavuot in early summer and Yom Teruah in early fall, the biblical calendar is silent. No moed. No pilgrimage feast. Only the slow ripening of the harvest under the summer sun. This is the prophetic picture of the age between the comings.
The grafting of the gentiles · The time of the nations · Romans 11
The long summer between Shavuot and Yom Teruah is the harvest period of the biblical agricultural year. The wheat ripens. The grapes are gathered. The figs are picked. This is the age of the ekklesia — Jewish believers and gentile believers being gathered as one harvest. Sha'ul calls it the time when "the fulness of the Gentiles" comes in (Romans 11:25). When that fulness is complete, "the trumpet shall sound" (1 Corinthians 15:52) — and the fall feasts begin.
The three fall feasts are still future. They will be fulfilled at Yeshua's second coming with the same precision the spring feasts were fulfilled at His first. The dates are already on the calendar.
The shofar sounds · The day no man knows · The awakening blast
The only feast that begins on a new moon. Sighted, not calculated. Because the day depends on the moon's first visible crescent, "no man knows the day or the hour" — the exact phrase Yeshua used about His return (Matthew 24:36). The shofar (ram's horn) is sounded a hundred times. "The Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God." (1 Thessalonians 4:16) "The trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible." (1 Corinthians 15:52) Yeshua's return matches Yom Teruah at every point of imagery.
* Pointing to: The return of Messiah · The resurrection of the saints · The gathering of the elect
The most solemn day of the year · National repentance · The high priest enters the Holy of Holies
Ten days after Yom Teruah. The only day the High Priest enters the Holy of Holies. Two goats are chosen. One is sacrificed for sin. The other (the azazel) carries the sin of the people away into the wilderness. Yeshua fulfills both: He is the sacrifice AND the One who carries our sin away. He has already entered the heavenly Holy of Holies as our great High Priest (Hebrews 9:11-12). But Israel as a nation has not yet looked on Him whom they pierced and mourned (Zechariah 12:10). That national reconciliation is still future. Yom Kippur is when it happens.
* Pointing to: National repentance of Israel · The look on the One pierced · "All Israel shall be saved" (Romans 11:26)
Seven days dwelling in booths · The greatest feast · The ingathering · The kingdom
Five days after Yom Kippur, every Israelite household lives in a temporary booth (sukkah) for seven days, remembering YHWH's provision in the wilderness. Yochanan 1:14 says Yeshua "tabernacled" (Greek eskenosen, literally "pitched His tent") among us — He was likely born during Sukkot (the timing of the priestly courses, the census, and the shepherds in open fields all point to a fall, not winter, birth). When He returns, all nations will keep Sukkot in Yerushalayim every year. Refuse to come up, and there will be no rain (Zechariah 14:16-19). The feast of the kingdom. The wedding feast. The dwelling of God with man.
* Pointing to: The Millennial Kingdom · Revelation 21:3 "the tabernacle of God is with men, and He will dwell with them"
Starting at Nicaea (AD 325) and accelerating through the medieval period, the gentile church systematically replaced or abandoned the moedim. Some were renamed and shifted. Most were simply forgotten. The vacuum was filled with feasts no prophet ever named.
Council of Nicaea severs Pesach from the biblical calendar
Constantine writes to the bishops: "let us have nothing in common with the detestable Jewish crowd." Easter is reset to the Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox — a calculated date that severs the feast from the Hebrew Nisan 14. The spring fertility goddess Eostre lends her name. Eggs and rabbits replace the Pesach lamb. The day Yeshua was crucified vanishes from the calendar of the church that claims His name.
The Greek word "Pentecost" (fiftieth) preserved · The Hebrew counting forgotten
The gentile church kept the Greek name "Pentecost" but uncoupled it from the Hebrew counting of the Omer (Leviticus 23:15-16). It became "the 50th day after Easter Sunday" rather than "the 50th day after Yom HaBikkurim of Nisan." The fulfillment date drifts. The agricultural ground vanishes. The historical anchor — the giving of the Torah at Sinai — is forgotten entirely.
No gentile substitute · Simply abandoned · The fall feasts disappear from the church calendar
The fall feasts are not even renamed. They are simply dropped. The most prophetically loaded moedim — the ones still future — are removed from Christian observance entirely. Two thousand years of believers have grown up never hearing of the day Yeshua will return (Teruah), the day Israel will be reconciled (Kippur), or the day He will tabernacle with all nations (Sukkot). The very feasts that prophesy His return are the ones the church buried.
December 25 · Replaces Saturnalia and Sol Invictus · No biblical warrant
With the fall feasts (and the likely Sukkot birth of Yeshua) erased, the gentile church needs a winter celebration. December 25 — the Roman winter solstice festival of Sol Invictus and the climax of Saturnalia — is repurposed as "Christ's mass." The shepherds in Luke 2:8 were in open fields. Bethlehem in late December would have been freezing. Jeremiah 10:2-4 explicitly warns against cutting a tree and decorating it. The day men chose, on grounds no prophet would have approved.
In the last two hundred years a remnant has been recovering the moedim. The witnesses are uneven. The doctrine varies. But the calendar itself is once again being kept by believers in Yeshua.
A note before this section. Each movement below is named for its role in returning the moedim to Christian observance, not as a doctrinal endorsement. Every one carries its own additions or distortions. Receive the calendar witness. Test the rest by Acts 17:11. See The Doctrines of Men for what to watch for.
Recovers the Sabbath as moed · Generally does not observe the annual feasts
The SDA movement restored the weekly Sabbath but did not recover the seven annual moedim. Their theology treats the annual feasts as ceremonial and abolished. A partial restoration, but a real one — the foundational weekly moed is back.
* Sabbath witness only. See the Ekklesia Timeline for the unbroken line outside this denomination.
Herbert W. Armstrong · First major modern Christian movement to observe all seven moedim
Armstrong's radio movement taught Pesach, Unleavened Bread, Shavuot, Yom Teruah, Yom Kippur, and Sukkot to a national American audience. Members traveled to "Feast sites" annually for Sukkot. After Armstrong's death (1986), the denomination abandoned the feasts (1995), but the offshoots (United Church of God, Living Church of God) continue to observe them.
* Calendar witness only. Armstrong's broader teaching is not endorsed. See the Ekklesia Timeline.
Jewish believers in Yeshua restore the moedim with their Hebrew context intact
Messianic congregations celebrate Pesach with seders that culminate in Yeshua, count the Omer between Pesach and Shavuot, blow the shofar at Yom Teruah, fast on Yom Kippur, and build sukkot for Sukkot. The Hebrew calendar comes home to the people God first gave it to — but this time with the Lamb already revealed.
* Calendar witness only. The movement is broad and uneven in doctrine. See the Ekklesia Timeline.
Gentile believers recovering the moedim alongside Sabbath and Torah
A decentralized movement of (predominantly gentile) Yeshua-believers observing the moedim, the Sabbath, and the Hebrew context of the Brit Chadashah. No central authority. No denominational structure. The calendar is being recovered by individuals and small assemblies one feast at a time.
* Calendar witness only. The movement varies widely teacher-to-teacher. See the Ekklesia Timeline.
The original Hebrew calendar method · Recovered alongside Yeshua-faith
The Karaite Jewish tradition keeps the moedim by the original method — sighted new moon from Yerushalayim, and the start of the year set by the maturity of the barley (aviv) in the land of Israel, not by the calculated Hillel II rabbinic calendar (4th century AD). A small but growing number of Yeshua-believers combine this Karaite calendar method with the Brit Chadashah's revelation of Yeshua as the One the moedim were always about. The calendar comes back to its source.
* Calendar witness only. Karaite Jewry as a movement does not affirm Yeshua. See the Ekklesia Timeline.
The institutional church abandoned the moedim. These witnesses did not.
Through every diaspora and every persecution, the Jewish people have kept the moedim. The calendar Yeshua kept is the calendar His own people preserved while the church that bears His name forgot it.
The Eastern assemblies kept Pesach on Nisan 14 per the apostolic tradition handed down from Yochanan, for 300 years, until Rome forced the Sunday Easter at Nicaea. The fight over Pesach is the fight over the moedim in miniature.
The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church has kept multiple Old Testament feasts and observances since at least the 4th century — Sabbath, kosher food laws, and partial moedim observance. Never edited by Rome.
The moedim are not Jewish holidays. They are YHWH's calendar of rendezvous with His people, given in His Torah, kept by His Son, prophesied by His prophets, and observed by His people in the kingdom that is coming. Every spring feast already came true on the exact day. Every fall feast is on the calendar waiting. The church that abandoned them lost its anchor in time.
In the kingdom, the moedim do not disappear. They are kept by all nations:
"And it shall come to pass, that every one that is left of all the nations which came against Yerushalayim shall even go up from year to year to worship the King, the LORD of hosts, and to keep the feast of tabernacles. And it shall be, that whoso will not come up of all the families of the earth unto Yerushalayim to worship the King, the LORD of hosts, even upon them shall be no rain." Zechariah 14:16–17 · The Sukkot of the kingdom

