Worthy Brief - May 27, 2026

 Worthy Brief - May 27, 2026


Understand what the feasts were always revealing!


Colossians 2:16-17 So let no one judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or sabbaths, which are a shadow of things to come, but the substance is of Christ.


You cannot fully understand the message of the Kingdom apart from the calendar of the King. God did not scatter His promises randomly across history. He embedded them in appointed times — fixed, recurring, prophetic markers that He Himself established and that He Himself intends to fulfill. The Hebrew word is moedim (מוֹעֲדִים), and it does not merely mean "holidays" or "festivals." It means "appointed times" — divine appointments set by God before creation, given to Israel, and fulfilled in Yeshua (Jesus). They are not faded remains of Israel's calendar. They are markers in God’s prophetic calendar of the Kingdom, and each one reveals something about where He is taking creation through Yeshua.


Passover told you a Lamb was coming. Unleavened Bread told you that sin would be purged. Firstfruits told you that death would be swallowed in resurrection. Shavuot (Pentecost) told you the Spirit would be poured out and the commandments written on the heart. These are not metaphors. They were fulfilled — to the day, to the detail, to the hour. But the fall feasts remain. Yom Teruah (Trumpets), Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement), Sukkot (Tabernacles) — and then, hidden in plain sight at the far edge of the calendar, an appointed time that most believers have never studied, never preached, and rarely even named.


Shemini Atzeret — the Eighth Day of Assembly. [Lev 23:36; Numbers 29:35; Nehemiah 8:18; 2 Chronicles 7:8-10]


After the seven days of Sukkot — seven days of dwelling in booths, remembering the wilderness journey, celebrating a bountiful harvest, when the feast appears complete, the Lord calls for another day. Not a repetition. Not an afterthought. A holy pause. The word shemini (שְׁמִינִי) means "eighth." But the word atzeret (עֲצֶרֶת) is where the weight falls. It comes from the Hebrew root atzar (עָצַר), meaning "to stop," "to hold back," "to restrain," or "to tarry." This is not just another gathering on the calendar. It is God placing His hand upon time itself and saying: Do not rush away from My presence.


Here the feast reveals something that should stop every student of the Kingdom in his tracks. During Sukkot, seventy bulls were offered, pointing to the nations — Israel standing before the Lord as a priestly people, interceding for the world. But on the eighth day, there was one bull. One offering. The scope narrows from the nations to the beloved, from public celebration to intimate communion. After Sukkot reaches its fullness, the King’s heart is revealed not merely in the feast itself, but in the invitation to remain. The feast that held the nations opens into the eighth day and becomes a doorway into intimacy.


This is the appointed time most believers have never fully understood. It sits at the very end of God's prophetic calendar — not by accident, but by design. Because the Kingdom message was always moving toward this: not just restoration, not just reign, not just the healing of the nations — but the moment all of history has been pressing toward — when God dwells in unbroken fellowship with His people. That is the heart of the Kingdom message. Presence. Nearness. The Father and His people, together, with nothing standing between.


God never meant for you to understand His purposes through fragments, guesses, and borrowed assumptions. He gave appointed times — holy signposts woven with prophetic meaning — to show where redemption has been and where it is going. The Lamb has been slain. Sin has been purged. Resurrection has broken the ground. The Spirit has been poured out. Yet at the far edge of the calendar, after the fullness of the feast, there remains a holy pause — the Eighth Day — whispering that God’s story does not end in activity, structure, or even restoration alone. It ends in intimacy. The King who gave the feast is the King who calls His beloved to remain, to linger, to know Him beyond the symbols and beyond the schedule. So begin today — not by striving to understand everything, not by rushing to perform another sacred duty, but by simply drawing near to Him, for this is the heart of the message of the Kingdom.


Your family in the Lord with much agape love,


George (Maryland) & Baht Rivka (Arad, Israel)

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