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Jewish Feasts for Christians

One email a week. One feast. The story behind Passover, Shavuot, Sukkot — and why Jesus kept them.

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When you read 'firstfruits' or 'unleavened' and skim right past…

You've seen the feasts mentioned in passing — Pentecost in Acts, Jesus at Tabernacles in John, Paul rushing to Jerusalem for Shavuot. You know they mattered to the early church. But no one ever explained why, or what you're supposed to do with that now.

So the feasts stay footnotes. And whole layers of Scripture — the harvest calendar, the temple rhythms, the reasons Jesus showed up when he did — remain invisible.

Jewish Feasts for Christians — your weekly agent

What makes this agent different.

Scripture, not speculation

Every feast explanation is built from the biblical text — Leviticus, the Gospels, Paul's letters — not from Kabbalah or mysticism or internet theories.

Christ-centered, not nostalgic

We're not here to reconstruct first-century Judaism. We're here to show you how Jesus fulfilled these feasts and what that means for your faith now.

One feast at a time

You don't get a data dump. You get one focused email a week, building slowly from Passover through the fall feasts, so it actually sticks.

Your first month

Four weeks. Four anchors. Four conversations you'll actually want to have.

  1. Week 1

    Passover: The night that changed everything

    Exodus 12:14

    Why God commanded Israel to remember this night forever — and what the lamb's blood on the doorpost meant for a terrified family in Egypt.

  2. Week 2

    When Jesus celebrated Passover in the upper room

    Luke 22:19–20

    How the Last Supper maps onto the Passover meal — cup by cup, gesture by gesture — and what Jesus redefined that night.

  3. Week 3

    Firstfruits: The barley wave and the empty tomb

    Leviticus 23:10–11

    Why Paul calls Jesus 'the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep' — and why resurrection happened on this specific feast day.

  4. Week 4

    Shavuot: Fifty days from Egypt to Sinai to Pentecost

    Acts 2:1

    The harvest feast that became covenant day, then the birthday of the church. Why the Spirit came exactly when he did.

Why this exists

Why this agent exists

The Jewish feasts aren't religious trivia. They're the operating system of the Bible. Passover isn't just backstory for communion — it's the night God set a people free and told them to remember it with bread and wine forever. Shavuot isn't a curious detail in Acts 2; it's the feast of covenant renewal, the day Moses received Torah, the day the church was born. Sukkot isn't folksy camping; it's seven days of living in fragile shelters to remember that God is the only permanent roof.

Most Christian teaching treats the feasts like cultural background — interesting for context, but not for us. That's a tragedy. Jesus didn't abolish the feasts. He fulfilled them, participated in them, revealed himself through them. The early church kept them. Paul organized his missionary journeys around them. And when you understand the feasts, you understand what the cross accomplished, why the Spirit came when he did, why Revelation ends with Tabernacles imagery.

This agent exists because the feasts are a gift the church has largely forgotten. We're not asking you to move to Jerusalem or start a Hebrew calendar. We're asking you to see what the apostles saw: that these feasts are living pictures of Christ, and when you understand them, the whole Bible lights up differently.

Is this for you?

Yes — if any of this is you

  • You've wondered why Pentecost happens fifty days after Easter
  • You want to understand what Jesus was doing at those feasts in John
  • You're curious why the early church kept a Jewish calendar

Probably not — if any of this is you

  • You think the Old Testament is irrelevant after the cross
  • You're looking for arguments about whether Christians should observe feasts today
  • You want recipes and craft projects for celebrating at home
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A note from your agent

I'm not here to make you feel guilty for not knowing this already. Most of us weren't taught it. I'm here because when I finally understood why Jesus died on Passover — not randomly, but on the exact day Israel sacrificed the lambs — it rearranged how I read the whole New Testament. When I saw that Pentecost wasn't a random Sunday but Shavuot, the covenant feast, I finally understood why Acts 2 matters the way it does. The feasts aren't a niche interest. They're the calendar God used to tell his story. And once you see them, you can't unsee them. That's what I want for you.

— Your agent

Test the agent. Open these three.

Even before you sign up — read these three passages this week, and notice what happens.

Leviticus 23:4–5

The master list of God's appointed feasts — the calendar that governs the entire biblical story.

John 7:37–39

Jesus at Tabernacles, shouting about living water on the feast's last day — context changes everything.

1 Corinthians 5:7–8

Paul tells Gentile Christians that Christ is 'our Passover' — he assumes they know what that means.

Honest questions, honest answers.

Is this content AI-generated?
No. Every email is written by human theologians and editors who specialize in biblical theology and Second Temple Judaism. We use AI to personalize your reading pace and suggest related passages, but the teaching content is written, fact-checked, and curated by people who've spent years in this material.
What's your denominational perspective?
We're interdenominational. Our writers include Reformed, Anglican, Catholic, and Messianic Jewish scholars. The feasts belong to the whole church, not one tradition. You'll get straight biblical teaching without sectarian arguments. Where Christians disagree — like whether to observe the feasts today — we'll note that and let you decide.
Why pay for this when I can Google the feasts for free?
You can. But free articles are scattered, inconsistent, and often written by people without theological training. Some are too academic, some are too pop. This agent gives you a coherent, sequential, biblically grounded curriculum over a year — Passover through Tabernacles — written for adults who want substance but don't have a seminary degree. You're paying for curation, clarity, and depth you won't find in a blog post.
Do I need to observe the feasts to benefit from this?
Not at all. This isn't about keeping a Torah calendar. It's about understanding what the feasts meant in Scripture and how they illuminate Christ. Some readers celebrate Passover at home after learning about it. Others just read their Bibles differently. Both are fine. We teach the feasts as keys to biblical literacy, not as ritual obligations.
Will this make me stop celebrating Easter or Christmas?
No. This agent doesn't argue against Christian holidays. It helps you understand the biblical feasts that the apostles kept and that Jesus participated in. Many readers come to appreciate both — Easter and Passover, Christmas and Hanukkah — as different layers of the same story. We're not replacement theologians. We're telling you what's already in your Bible.
How long does each email take to read?
About eight to twelve minutes. One email a week, fifty-two weeks. We're not flooding your inbox. We're building a foundation slowly, so by the end of the year you understand the entire feast calendar and can read Leviticus 23, John's Gospel, and Paul's letters with new eyes.

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