Top videos

Yahusha's Call ~ THE SABBATH OF SCRIPTURE
Yahusha's Call ~ THE SABBATH OF SCRIPTURE Myra Waiters 55 Views • 4 years ago

Genesis 2:1-3, Exodus 16:28-29, Exodus 20:8-11, Exodus 31:13-14, 16, Leviticus 23:3, Leviticus 25:1-16, Leviticus 27 :24, Deuteronomy 5:15, 2Chronicles 36:21, Nehemiah 10:18-31, Nehemiah 13:17-22, Isaiah 56: 1-8,
Isaiah 58:13, Jeremiah 17:24-27, Ezekiel 20:12-13, Matth e 11:28:30, Matthew 12:1-8, Mark 3:1-6, Luke 4:14-21, Luke 13:10-14, John 7:21-24, Romans 14:5-14, 1 Corinthians 16:1-2, 2 Corinthians 9:10-11, Hebrews 4:1-13, Hebrews 13:2, Revelation 22:1-6.

The Sabbath from a Jewish Perspective:
The Jewish Sabbath (from Hebrew shavat, “to rest”) is observed throughout the year on the seventh day of the week—Saturday. According to biblical tradition, it commemorates the original seventh day on which God rested after completing the creation.
Scholars have not succeeded in tracing the origin of the seven-day week, nor can they account for the origin of the Sabbath. A seven-day week does not accord well with either a solar or a lunar calendar. Some scholars, pointing to the Akkadian term shapattu, suggest a Babylonian origin for the seven-day week and the Sabbath. But shapattu, which refers to the day of the full moon and is nowhere described as a day of rest, has little in common with the Jewish Sabbath. It appears that the notion of the Sabbath as a holy day of rest, linking God to his people and recurring every seventh day, was unique to ancient Israel.

Importance
The central significance of the Sabbath for Judaism is reflected in the traditional commentative, and interpretative literature called Talmud and Midrash (e.g., “if you wish to destroy the Jewish people, abolish their Sabbath first”) and in numerous legends and adages from more-recent literature (e.g., “more than Israel kept the Sabbath, the Sabbath kept Israel”). Some of the basic teachings of Judaism affirmed by the Sabbath are God’s acts of creation, God’s role in history, and God’s covenant with Israel. Moreover, the Sabbath is the only Jewish holiday the observance of which is enjoined by the Ten Commandments. Jews are obligated to sanctify the Sabbath at home and in the synagogue by observing the Sabbath laws and engaging in worship and study. The leisure hours afforded by the ban against work on the Sabbath were put to good use by the rabbis, who used them to promote intellectual activity and spiritual regeneration among Jews. Other days of rest, such as the Christian Sunday and the Islamic Friday, owe their origins to the Jewish Sabbath.

Observances
The biblical ban against work on the Sabbath, while never clearly defined, includes activities such as baking and cooking, travelling, kindling fire, gathering wood, buying and selling, and bearing burdens from one domain into another. The Talmudic rabbis listed 39 major categories of prohibited work, including agricultural activity (e.g., plowing and reaping), work entailed in the manufacture of cloth (e.g., spinning and weaving), work entailed in preparing documents (e.g., writing), and other forms of constructive work.
At home the Sabbath begins Friday evening some 20 minutes before sunset, with the lighting of the Sabbath candles by the wife or, in her absence, by the husband. In the synagogue the Sabbath is ushered in at sunset with the recital of selected psalms and the Lekha Dodi, a 16th-century Kabbalistic (mystical) poem. The refrain of the latter is “Come, my beloved, to meet the bride,” the “bride” being the Sabbath. After the evening service, each Jewish household begins the first of three festive Sabbath meals by reciting the Kiddush (“sanctification” of the Sabbath) over a cup of wine. This is followed by a ritual washing of the hands and the breaking of bread, two loaves of bread (commemorating the double portions of manna described in Exodus) being placed before the breaker of bread at each Sabbath meal. After the festive meal the remainder of the evening is devoted to study or relaxation. The distinctive features of the Sabbath morning synagogue service include the public reading of the Torah, or Five Books of Moses (the portion read varies from week to week), and, generally, the sermon, both of which serve to educate the listeners. Following the service, the second Sabbath meal begins, again preceded by Kiddush (of lesser significance), conforming for the most part to the first Sabbath meal. The afternoon synagogue service is followed by the third festive meal (without Kiddush). After the evening service the Sabbath comes to a close with the havdala (“distinction”) ceremony, which consists of a benediction noting the distinction between Sabbath and weekday, usually recited over a cup of wine accompanied by a spice box and candle.

COFFEE IS FOOD NOT A DRUG. FOOD IS MEDICINE! How to Make Home Roast Healing Coffee & Take It
COFFEE IS FOOD NOT A DRUG. FOOD IS MEDICINE! How to Make Home Roast Healing Coffee & Take It Into All Truth Live Light Well 82 Views • 5 years ago

Coffee IS Good For You - It's All In How You Make It & Take It!
How to Home Roast Heathy Healing Coffee

1/2 Cup Fair Trade Green Organic Arabica Beans
Popcorn Popper
Roast for 3 minutes. Wait for the first crack and the loud second crack
Let sit to cool and process for 11 hours.
Grind.

LINKS:
http://www.livelightwell.com/l....ive-light-well-produ
https://cafemam.com

Eat Well - Eat Life
​Livelightwel is the fruit of my ongoing healing journey. Taste & See Good! Learn with me as I work with it to inspire healing with food as medicine. Juicing, Gerson therapy, plant based recipes help me explore natural healing through God's pharmacy.

Explore self healing with me via detoxing, clearing the lymph, plant foods, coffee enemas, herbs & natural remedies. Explore questions around diet theories as I learn. Look at the root of disease: heavy metals, toxins, molds, parasites and keeping our internal bio-toxin levels low.

Sustainable beauty includes home-made, fare-trade, or locally sourced clothing, cosmetics & organic food sources.

Enjoy exercise, and enter into the natural cathedral of praise to regenerate. Support eco-builders, alternative energy, sustainable life.

Want to to help keep this going? Please support me at https://www.patreon.com/Livelightwell.
​The divine order is a well spring.​
Draw life from the Source. Eat Well. Eat life.

Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
https://www.facebook.com/livelightwell/
https://twitter.com/Livelightwell
https://www.instagram.com/livelightwell/
https://www.patreon.com/Livelightwell

Music: Lightning Across A Blue Sky By Twin Musicom

Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com

Disclaimer

Livelightwell does offer items for sale via Amazon that they earn 4% commission on. The average price of an item is $20.00. That’s 80 Cents an item, quite negligible, but it helps you to find the super foods and aids you need for enemas, smoothies, juicing, spiralizing, etc.

This video is for informational purposes only and does not claim to cure anything or provide medical advice. The creator/s are neither doctors, nor medical practitioners and are not practicing medicine nor offering cures. Nothing on this site should be construed as or considered to be medical advice It is a mere collection health educational information.


Eat Well - Eat Life

Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
https://www.facebook.com/livelightwell/
https://twitter.com/Livelightwell
https://www.instagram.com/livelightwell/
https://www.patreon.com/Livelightwell

Music: Lightning Across A Blue Sky By Twin Musicom

Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com
Livelightwell.com
http://www.livelightwell.com

Showing 269 out of 345