Showing posts with label Rosh Hashana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rosh Hashana. Show all posts

Monday, September 19, 2016

Meeting the Messiah at the Wailing Wall! - ONE FOR ISRAEL



Dr Erez Soref President of  ONE FOR ISRAEL 
Shalom!

And a huge thank you to all the wonderful people of Dallas, San Antonio and Houston who welcomed us so warmly! We have really enjoyed being with you, and look forward to the next stops on our travels to meet others who are also ONE FOR ISRAEL with us! 


JEWISH MAN MEETS HIS MESSIAH AT THE WAILING WALL!

Dr Perry Goldberg found peace and welcome on many levels when he came to Israel and stood at the wall to pray. Hear his story of how he met Yeshua, the Messiah!


 


THE SYMBOLISM OF FIGS IN THE BIBLE

God says in Deuteronomy 8:8,
"The Lord your God is bringing you into a good land... a land with wheat and barley, vines and fig trees, pomegranates, olive oil and honey"
There is so much richness in what God has created and placed in this land for his people - not just in their good taste and nutrition, but in their meaning too. And the fig is a fruit which crops up again and again in the scriptures, because God does nothing without purpose. Continue reading...


POMEGRANATES IN ISRAEL AND THE BIBLE

Pomegranates are in abundance during the time of the Fall feasts in Israel; a symbol of Rosh HaShana(Jewish new year) and the holiday season. They are on greeting cards, ceramic ornaments, beautiful materials - everywhere! They are also dangling plentifully from trees in the fields. They are ripe and ready, bursting to tell a story. A story that God wrote. Continue reading...

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Sunday, September 13, 2015

Rosh Hashanna in New York 100+ Years Ago.

Israel's History - a Picture a Day - 

Rosh Hashanna in New York 100+ Years Ago


Posted: 12 Sep 2015

The George Bain Collection in the Library of Congress contains several dozen pictures of New York's Jewish community. Our previous posting showed the community commemorating the Jewish New Year. 

"Celebrating the Jewish New Year on the East Side" (circa 1910, Bain Collection, Library of Congress)
But during a period of about 10 years at the beginning of the 20th century, the Bain photographers focused on a group of very busy men on the eve of Rosh Hashanna -- not the rabbis or the cantors -- but the "boot blacks," the shoe shiners on the street corners.  Note the women customers, perhaps the reason for the Bain photographers' interest.

"Bootblack stand, busy on Jewish New Year, Sept. 1905" (Bain Collection, Library of Congress)

"Jewish New Year - boot blacks" (circa 1910-1915, Bain Collection, Library of Congress)
 
"Jewish New Year - boot blacks" (circa 1910-1915, Bain Collection, Library of Congress)  "
 
"Jew[ish] New Year - boot black"  (September 1912, Bain Collection, Library of Congress)

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Jonathan Cahn: I Believe a Shaking Is Coming That Strikes the Financial Realm, Economic Realm and Even ...

The blowing of the Shofar

The blowing of the Shofar. The Bible refers to Rosh Hashana as Yom Teruah -- the day of sounding the shofar. It's a day of shofar blasts, a day of judgment, a day of coronating God as our King. (Flickr/Creative Commons)


Jonathan Cahn: I Believe a Shaking Is Coming That Strikes the Financial Realm, Economic Realm and Even ...


Join us on our podcast each weekday for an interesting story, well told, from Charisma News. Listen at charismapodcastnetwork.com.

For Israel and the Jewish people, the High Holy Days this year mark the end of a significant seven-year cycle and a rare fourth blood moon. Some believe that combination could have a huge impact on the world.
That's why many Christians and others believe that this September could be significant in Jewish, American and world history.
The Bible tells the Jewish people to sow the land and reap its produce for six consecutive years. Then, on the seventh year, they're commanded to let the land lie fallow.
"Shemitah means the sabbatical," Rabbi Tuly Weisz told CBN News. "There's a year of rest for the land of Israel and for people all over the world."
Israel keeps the shemitah every seven years. It ends on the 29th of the Hebrew month of Elul, which this year falls on Sunday, September 13.
Weisz says many non-Jews are also paying close attention this year.
"People from all over the world who've never heard of shemitah are all of a sudden looking and trying to explore what is the significance of shemitah because of all the global events that are happening that seem a bit unusual," he said.
Author Jonathan Cahn raised the idea of the shemitah's connection to the global economy in his book, The Mystery of the Shemitah, which warns of trouble ahead for America.
"I believe a great shaking is coming to America and the world but America. I believe a shaking is coming that strikes the financial realm, economic realm and even be a shaking that's greater than that," Cahn said on The 700 Club this week.
He and others believe there's a correlation between financial downturns in the United States and the end of the shemitah year.
"[In] 1980 you have recession and then the stock market collapses; you have '87 stock market collapses and the shemitah of that, and you have 'Black Monday' the worst point percentage crash in history," Cahn explained. "Shemitah of 1994, the bond market collapses, called the bond market massacre—greatest in history; 2001 you have the stock market collapsing, recession. You have the greatest point crash in world history and you have 9/11, which is the shaking. Shemitah also means shaking."
The end of the Hebrew month of Elul ushers in the start of the Jewish High Holy Days, beginning with Rosh Hashanah.
"The Bible refers to Rosh Hashanah as Yom Teruah—the day of sounding the shofar blasts. It's a day of shofar blasts, a day of judgment, a day of coronating God as our King," Weisz said.
And 10 days later comes Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year.
"Yom Kippur in the Bible is the day of judgment, the day of tshuvah, the day of atonement, the day of forgiveness," Weisz continued. "It's a day we spend in synagogue fasting, not eating or drinking for a 25-hour period, and a day that is spent in prayer and in repentance."
But God didn't leave His people without hope. Within a few days, the joyful Festival of Sukkot, the Feast of Tabernacles, begins.
This year, as a result of the lunar eclipse, there's a rare blood moon on the first night of Sukkot. It's the fourth blood moon on a Jewish holiday in two years.
"It happened only four times in the last 500 years," Weisz explained. "The last tetrad to occur on the Jewish festivals before this one was in 1967, the one before was 1948 and the one before was all the way in 1492. And those are major years in Jewish history and in the history of the world."
Those dates include the birth of the modern State of Israel, the reuniting of Jerusalem under Jewish sovereignty and the expulsion of the Jews from Spain hundreds of years ago.
That's led many to say God is judging the world and the Jewish people, but Weisz sees it differently.
"It's our belief that the blood moons are a cause of celebration, where God is giving signs to the world and signs to the Jewish people that He is doing something great for us and for the world. So it's a sign of excitement, it's a sign! The blood moons are a sign of excitement and they're a sign of Messianic advancement," he said.
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Shana Tova! Happy Jewish New Year! - Jews Will Blow the Shofar in Synagogues

Israel's History - a Picture a Day (Beta)



Shana Tova! Happy Jewish New Year! The Shofar Resonates from the Past. Jews Will Blow the Shofar in Synagogues

Posted: 11 Sep 2015

Yemenite Jew blowing the shofar (circa 1935
- all photographs are from the Library of Congress archives)

"Blow the Shofar at the New Moon...Because It Is a Decree for Israel, a Judgment Day for the God of Jacob" - Psalms 81 Jews around the world prepare for Rosh Hashanna, the festive New Year holiday when the shofar -- ram's horn -- is blown in synagogues. 

The American Colony photographers in Jerusalem recorded a dozen pictures of Jewish elders blowing the shofar in Jerusalem some 80 years ago. The horn was also blown in Jerusalem to announce the commencement of the Sabbath. During the month prior to Rosh Hashanna, the shofar was blown at daily morning prayers to encourage piety before the High Holidays.
 



Ashkenazi Jew in Jerusalem blowing the shofar to announce the Sabbath


Yemenite Rabbi Avram, donning tfillin for his daily prayers, blowing the shofar


Man blowing the shofar in Mandelkern, NY, 1901

Who Can Hear and Not Listen?

Who Can Hear and Not Listen?

Friday, September 11, 2015 |  David Lazarus   ISRAEL TODAY
For those who have not heard, the sound of the Shofar is not easy to describe. Primal, raw, unsettling can only begin to describe the stirrings in a Jewish soul contemplating its blast.
This year as we listen, the Shofar will not comfort. Its shout from realms beyond will demand our attention, for as in days of old, it is a call to arms, an alarm alerting to imminent danger. In synagogues around the world the Shofar will solemnly declare, “Arise, for there are shakings in the earth. Shall the Shofar be blown in a city and the people not tremble?" (Amos 3:6)
Reserved for sacred assemblies, listening to the Shofar this year will once again stir memories of Sinai where the people trembled and the mountains shook. It will recall the mighty walls of Jericho crumbling into dust at its blast.
“The great Day of the Lord is a day of the Shofar and alarm," warns the prophet (Zephaniah 1:14,16). With its cry the Shofar will stir us to consider the judgments of God now coming on the earth. The prophet Isaiah warns of a great Shofar heralding the Day of the Lord (Isa. 27:13). Listening we are shaken as we lift up our voices and plead, “O Lord, let Grace and Truth be known once again in our land.”
The Shofar is fashioned of the horns of animals fit for sacrifice. For it will call forth the sprinkled Mercy Seat at the conclusion of the Day of Atonement, its animal sound awakening repentance, drawing us back to God.
And when we have passed from this small earth, we shall once more hear the sound of the Shofar at our resurrection (1 Thess. 4:16, 1 Cor. 15:52). This is to say, "Awake from your slumber, you who have fallen asleep in life, and reflect on your deeds. Remember your creator. Be not of those who miss reality in the pursuit of shadows, and waste their lives in seeking after vain things which neither profit nor save. Look well to your souls and improve your character. Forsake each of you his evil ways and return unto the Lord." (Maimonides)
This year the Shofar will be heard at sundown Sunday, September 13, the beginning of the Hebrew New Year 5776. May its cry call forth the beginning of a season of renewal and even rebirth from above for the people of Israel, and may it be a time of reflection and re-commitment to God for all those who love the God of Israel.
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Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Learn Everything about Rosh Hashanah in our eBook! ✡ "To Love the Lord"

To love the Lord, your God, to listen to His voice and to cleave to Him, for He is your life and length of your days.

DEUTERONOMY (30:20)
 

לְאַהֲבָה אֶת יְ-הֹוָה אֱלֹהֶיךָ לִשְׁמֹעַ בְּקֹלוֹ וּלְדָבְקָה בוֹ כִּי הוּא חַיֶּיךָ וְאֹרֶךְ יָמֶיךָ

דברים ל:כ


l'-a-ha-va et a-do-nai e-lo-he-kha lish-mo-a b'-ko-lo u-l'-dav-ka bo ki hu kha-ye-kha v'-o-rekh ya-me-kha

Today's Israel Inspiration

Today's verse offers a prescription for life. Love God, and listen to Him- that is all that is necessary, and it seems so simple! Sometimes, we complicate life ourselves and need to take the time to refocus. The new year is the time to reset our priorities and get back to the business of serving God and directing our lives towards these goals. Learn more about what Rosh Hashana is all about in our inspiring eBook "Hear the Call."
 

Where All Our Prayers Ascend

This phenomenal video shows exactly where all of our prayers ascend to Heaven!

Hear the Call of the Shofar

On the High Holidays it is Jewish belief that all of mankind comes before God for judgement and to be inscribed either in the ‘book of life’ or the ‘book of death’. The Shofar plays a big role in the direction of our year!

Nano Bible Gentle Star of David Necklace

In the incredible Nano Bible, the spirit and technology of Israel have come together to produce the world’s smallest bible, printed onto a single 5mm x 5mm surface, and set into a beautiful piece of silver jewelry so that you can take the Bible with you wherever you go.

Today's Israel Photo

Pomegranates in the Land of Israel by Zvi Moss, our incredible 13 year old photographer. A Jewish custom on Rosh Hashanah is to eat from a pomegranate and recite a prayer, "may our merits be as abundant as the seeds of the pomegranate."
 

Yesterday's Photo Trivia

You got it! Yesterday's photo showed the Tower of David, which despite its name, actually has no connection to King David! Located near the Old City’s Jaffa Gate, the citadel is a medieval fortress with archaeological artifacts from nearly every period of the Holy City’s rich history.
 

Thank You

Please help us continue to spread the beauty and significance of the Land of Israel!
 

“I Am Always Inspired By You”

It’s great to hear from so many of you - stay in touch and let us know where in the world you are enjoying Israel365!
 
I live in St. Louis, Missouri, USA  and I look forward to your inspirational e-mails every day. The stories and Scriptures you share have touched my heart in many ways... Shalom, Alice Geer

Thank you for every news you sent from far east to me in Zambia in Africa. I am always inspired by you and always pray for the nation of Israel. Blessings, Aaron Mulenga
Shalom,
Rabbi Tuly Weisz
RabbiTuly@Israel365.com
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Saturday, September 5, 2015

Roast Chicken With Plums Gets a Touch of Spice for Rosh Hashana - Melissa Clark


It’s one thing to wish your family and friends a sweet new year. But at Rosh Hashana, Jews bring the sentiment to the table throughout the meal.

You’ll get honey drizzled on apples, sugar in the gefilte fish, orange juice in the tsimmes (a dish of carrots and prunes), and possibly all three in brisket. And that’s not even mentioning the honey cake for dessert. A sweet new year’s meal is one of the finer aspects of Jewish tradition.

The only problem: When things veer from pleasing to cloying. The job of the cook is to play up the sour as well as the sweet, and let them temper each other into a happy balance.

Usually this means a splash of vinegar or squeeze of lemon or lime. But sumac, a spice crushed from a tart red berry that thrives all over the Middle East, accomplishes the same goal, adding a mild earthy fragrance along the way.

I started cooking with sumac after a trip to Turkey several years ago, where it’s sprinkled over all manner of salads, grilled meats and olive-oil-rich dips. The coarse, ruddy powder is celebrated in the region for its brightness in both color and taste.


Roasting two birds at once is no harder than roasting one. Credit Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times


In this recipe for roast chicken, I use sumac as part of a garlicky spice rub to season the birds (there are two), along with allspice, cinnamon and black pepper.


Photo Credit: Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times

It’s also in the honeyed plum chutney that cooks simultaneously underneath the birds. As the chickens roast, their sumac-imbued drippings season the plums, adding just the right sour and complex note. Then the plums become the a sweet-tart sauce for serving. Perfect for Rosh Hashana, or any other festive gathering where a touch of sweetness is desired.

Continue reading the main story
NYT FoodRosh Hashanah RecipesSee On


I made this recipe with two chickens because it is meant to feed a crowd, and roasting two birds at once is no harder than roasting one. You just need a bigger pan. A large roasting pan with a rack, the kind you’d use at Thanksgiving for the turkey, is ideal, and it’s nice to put it to use before November rolls around. Continue reading the main story

As with many dinner-party-friendly recipes, you can and should do most of the prep work for this in advance, up to a day ahead. Then pop the pan into the oven as your guests arrive. Other than carving, your work is done.
Which will give you plenty of time for dipping apples into honey, and other sweet pursuits.
Recipes: Roast Chicken With Plums |More Rosh Hashana Dishes


Rosh Hashanah 2015 begins in the evening of Sept.13.
Sunday, September 13
and ends in the evening of
Tuesday, September 15