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Journey Through the Hebrew Calendar
00:02:20
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| Dr. Candice, you've been speaking about the importance of the beginning of the new month on the Hebrew calendar. | |
| Nisan, is that what it's called? | |
| Right. | |
| And tell us more about that. | |
| Yes, for 16 years, I've studied the integration of the Hebrew calendar with the Gregorian calendar. | |
| And so very important. | |
| And I actually have a class with charisma. | |
| It's called Journey Through the Hebrew Calendar. | |
| And so I have people over the world that will journey with me through the Hebrew calendar. | |
| Excellent. | |
| People can access that through charismacourses.com or through my website. | |
| And as they journey with me, I normally bring prophetic word because I can understand what God is doing in the earthly realms through understanding his calendar and through the word of God. | |
| It all integrates, okay, together. | |
| So this is like the voice of the prophets, right? | |
| So you're looking at the Hebrew calendar and you're not allowing the Gregorian calendar and our times and seasons to dictate what God is doing. | |
| Instead, you're allowing the Hebrew calendar and the revelation that's coming forth there to bring what the prophetic word is for that time and season. | |
| And so it just so happens that Nisan, which is considered to be the first month on the religious Hebrew calendar. | |
| Now, there's actually four Hebrew calendar new years. | |
| Two of them is what most people know and understand. | |
| One is in the month of Nisan, and that the major appointed time and season during the month of Nisan, of course, is Passover and or our Resurrection Sunday, which we celebrate. | |
| And of course, Resurrection Sunday will come a couple of days after Passover or the Feast of Unleavened Bread. | |
| And then on Resurrection Sunday, it's called the Feast of First Fruits. | |
| It's the day that he rose, right? | |
| And for those of us who believe in him, we are the brothers and sisters who are the results of the first fruit. | |
| So then from there, if you fast forward to the fall time frame, our fall feast, they happen in the month of Tishri. | |
| And that's around the time of Rahash Hashanah, which is happening, I believe it's September 26th this year. | |
| I'm going to be ministering in South Carolina, actually. | |
| They asked me to come and to teach on these particular understanding of what do the fall feasts mean. | |
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Remembering Passover
00:01:42
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| And there's three of those. | |
| There's Rahash Hashanah, the Day of Atonement, and then also the Feast of Tabernacles, which is between September and October. | |
| So this is a very holy time. | |
| So in my book, I talk about there's times and seasons for portals. | |
| So when you come to the Lord during the month of Nisan, and the Lord spoke to Moses himself in Exodus chapter 12 and said that this will be called the first month of my year. | |
| And then he says, okay, on the 14th day of this month, which happens to be Friday, April 15th, that is the day that you would bring forth a sacrificial offering unto me, which is, of course, for us, that's Jesus, our Passover Lamb. | |
| And so Jewish people all over the world, and of course, us who are Christians, we gather together during that time and we remember, okay, Passover. | |
| The Jews remember the Passover that they experienced when they were released from captivity in Egypt. | |
| And they gathered together in the homes, all came together, and they killed the blood of a pure lamb and they put it on the doorpost, right? | |
| Like a cross, right, over the doorpost. | |
| And then the angel of death passed over, all right? | |
| And everyone that was in the home was saved. | |
| Then from there, they took their journey to the promised land, which as we know, the story goes, it took them 40 years to get there, right? | |
| Because they had to get Egypt out of themselves in order to be able to step into the promised land. | |
| For us, it's Good Friday. | |
| And we remember the fact that Jesus, our Passover Lamb, shed his blood for forgiveness of our sins that we might be saved, healed, redeemed, and made whole. | |
| And then we'll gather together at church on Resurrection Sunday, and we will remember that sin, death, and the grave has been overcome because he has risen. | |
| Hallelujah. | |