Starting from Torah portion Bo, Patrick Shannon explains the Torah calendar including when to watch for the sighting of the new moon and how the 13th month of the Hebrew year is determined.
After clicking PLAY below, you can follow along with the slides, or watch the entire service here online.
R. Paul Falk lays out one of the most thorough comparisons yet between the plagues in Exodus and parallel events in the Revelation to John, filling in a lot of holes in the predictions of what and how the end times prophecies will be fulfilled.
Chris Shannon draws parallels between Moses and Gideon who were both used mightily by YHVH to do miraculous works, and yet both showed indications of fear, doubt, and pride.
R. Paul Falk reveals an insightful discovery as to why Jacob blessed Ephraim over Manasseh, which also holds the secret to why Israel to bless their children with the same blessing throughout the ages even till today.
Rick Ortiz addresses questions from the weekly Torah portion highlighting Jacob’s choosing of Ephraim to receive the rights of his firstborn son and shows this pattern of replacing the firstborn in other places throughout the scriptures.
R. Paul Falk connects the events of Joseph’s life and certain revelations that led to a change of heart. This story illustrates the fact that the Eternal One orchestrates elaborate, lifelong arrangements to open our eyes to what He wants us to see.
R. Paul Falk shows that Yeshua celebrated the Festival of Lights, or Chanukah, and that he likely used the well-known account of Chanukah from the book of I Maccabees as the outline of his teaching about the end times recorded in Matthew 24.
Patrick Shannon points out that Yah spoke to Pharaoh, and to others throughout the scriptures that were not “His people.” So, where is the line drawn between the people of God, and people who are not? The answer is in the teachings of Yeshua.
R. Paul Falk delivers a penetrating message about the tongue as seen in the scriptures, in showing that what we speak is a fountain of what lies in the heart and connects the letter of James to the Torah story in which Judah is seen to make a drastic change in his life.