i would be interested to get the details on how you keep the Sabbath.
please be as detailed as you can.
it's helpful, since we have so many claiming they do, yet they really don't.
Our family start the Sabbath Friday at sundown. I don't do any work for profit or gain either at my job or around the house. We have special times of prayer and reading over my kids. We go to church Saturday morning which pretty much is an all-day thing (At least 6 hours or so). So we have extra times of worship, study, prayer and fellowship that we don't get during the rest of the week. The Sabbath is a time to rest from my work, my desires, my plans and the things that have weighed heavily on my heart and mind. And instead, I focus on serving others all day physically and spiritually.
how do you keep the feast days?
for example:
Exodus 23
The Three Annual Festivals
14“Three times a year you are to celebrate a festival to me.
15“Celebrate the Festival of Unleavened Bread; for seven days eat bread made without yeast, as I commanded you. Do this at the appointed time in the month of Aviv, for in that month you came out of Egypt.
“No one is to appear before me empty-handed.
We do a Passover Seder and dinner, which isn't Biblical, but traditional. We go 7 days without anything with yeast or leaven in it, and make a point to eat some kind of unleavened bread every day. I take the sabbath days of rest off for the 1st and last days, and we meet as a church on those days in fellowship.
16“Celebrate the Festival of Harvest with the firstfruits of the crops you sow in your field.
This is also called Shavuot, or Pentecost, or the Feast of Firstfruits. We meet together as a church and share the fruit of our lives physically and spiritually, either through testimonies, songs, skits or anything else people feel lead to contribute.
“Celebrate the Festival of Ingathering at the end of the year, when you gather in your crops from the field.
This is my favorite one: Sukkot, Feast of Tabernacles, or the Feast of Booths. This is an 8-day Feast where we camp out in some way either in tents or campers or just sleeping bags. We all camp out on our church property all over the place. We usually hold 1-2 services every day with community meals and lots of activities and events. I've been blessed to take the whole 8 days off.
do you actually grow your own crops?
No, I wish I did. But several people who do grow them bring them.
aren't those feasts to be "kept' in Jerusalem, at the temple, the house of the Lord your God?
do you visit Jerusalem 3 times a year?
there is no temple there, so what do you do instead?
Yes, the instruction is to keep them in Jerusalem, in the Temple, the house of the Lord. Where is God's Temple today? Where is His House?
uh....how do you know your food is kosher?
this is an important question i have pondered.
thanks for answering this one in particular.
As you probably know, there are different standards of Kosher. I don't really care about Rabbinical Kosher and having my food blessed by a Rabbi. I don't consider the dairy/meat regulations as important or valid.
But I don't eat pork or shellfish at all. I make sure that any meat we do eat has had its blood let out as much as possible.
A few other Torah-based commandments I follow:
Tzit-Tzit's
Instructions on personal and marital cleanliness (please don't ask me to get into those. They're a bit akward to talk about in mixed company
)
And honestly, the majority of the physical Torah isn't too applicable to me because of how and where I live today. But I've found there is a profound spiritual application in every single one of Torah commandments. And those ones I am diligent to keep as God shows them to me.
I think that's the beauty of the Old Testament that many people miss out on, and that I certainly didn't see for a long time. Every command by God was meant to point Israel's focus back to God physically and spiritually. There is an amazing amount of life and revelation in each word and in each command.
Thanks for giving me the chance to share!
Matt