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5In this episode, we explore Leviticus 23, the chapter that lays out Israel’s appointed festivals and holy convocations and shows how God forms His people by ordering time itself. From the weekly Sabbath to Passover, Firstfruits, Pentecost, Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, and the Feast of Booths, this chapter reveals a calendar designed to shape worship, repentance, gratitude, and joy.
This teaching covers:
Why God institutes sacred rhythms rather than sporadic religious acts
How the Sabbath trains trust and resists productivity idolatry
Passover and Unleavened Bread as deliverance paired with purging corruption
Firstfruits and Pentecost as disciplines of gratitude, waiting, and harvest
The Feast of Trumpets as a divine alarm for spiritual readiness
The Day of Atonement as corporate repentance and cleansing, not private concealment
Booths or Tabernacles as a model for pilgrimage, dependence, and God dwelling with His people
The episode also traces the Christological fulfilment of the feasts, showing how Jesus fulfils Passover, Firstfruits, Atonement, and how Pentecost aligns with the outpouring of the Spirit. We then translate Leviticus 23 into practical discipleship, especially for those battling secret sin, lust, and unstructured time.
Using the festival calendar as a framework, this episode presents concrete practices for:
Reordering daily and weekly time
Building accountability through rhythms, alarms, and communal habits
Replacing secrecy with public repentance, celebration, and restoration
Training the will through waiting, counting, and embodied practices
Leviticus 23 shows that holiness is not sustained by willpower alone — it is formed through God-shaped time, shared rituals, and visible obedience.
By Biblical Unlocks™5In this episode, we explore Leviticus 23, the chapter that lays out Israel’s appointed festivals and holy convocations and shows how God forms His people by ordering time itself. From the weekly Sabbath to Passover, Firstfruits, Pentecost, Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, and the Feast of Booths, this chapter reveals a calendar designed to shape worship, repentance, gratitude, and joy.
This teaching covers:
Why God institutes sacred rhythms rather than sporadic religious acts
How the Sabbath trains trust and resists productivity idolatry
Passover and Unleavened Bread as deliverance paired with purging corruption
Firstfruits and Pentecost as disciplines of gratitude, waiting, and harvest
The Feast of Trumpets as a divine alarm for spiritual readiness
The Day of Atonement as corporate repentance and cleansing, not private concealment
Booths or Tabernacles as a model for pilgrimage, dependence, and God dwelling with His people
The episode also traces the Christological fulfilment of the feasts, showing how Jesus fulfils Passover, Firstfruits, Atonement, and how Pentecost aligns with the outpouring of the Spirit. We then translate Leviticus 23 into practical discipleship, especially for those battling secret sin, lust, and unstructured time.
Using the festival calendar as a framework, this episode presents concrete practices for:
Reordering daily and weekly time
Building accountability through rhythms, alarms, and communal habits
Replacing secrecy with public repentance, celebration, and restoration
Training the will through waiting, counting, and embodied practices
Leviticus 23 shows that holiness is not sustained by willpower alone — it is formed through God-shaped time, shared rituals, and visible obedience.