Joshua 5:10-12 Now the children of Israel camped in Gilgal, and kept the Passover on the fourteenth day of the month at twilight on the plains of Jericho. 11 And they ate of the produce of the land on the day after the Passover, unleavened bread and parched grain, on the very same day. 12 Then the manna ceased on the day after they had eaten the produce of the land; and the children of Israel no longer had manna, but they ate the food of the land of Canaan that year.
After crossing the Jordan and being consecrated at Gilgal, Israel did not immediately march into battle. Before Jericho, before strategy, before conquest, God brought them back to worship — they kept the Passover. In the very land of promise, they paused to remember the blood. This reveals the order of God: before you fight for what He has promised, you remember what He has already done. Before inheritance is possessed, redemption is honored. The same God who brought them out of Egypt by the blood of the lamb was now bringing them into the land by His faithfulness, and worship anchored this transition.
They were no longer wanderers sustained by miracles in the wilderness; they were now a people stepping into promise. Yet God would not allow them to move forward without first grounding them in gratitude. The Passover reminded them that everything ahead was built on what He had already accomplished. Then something remarkable happened — the manna stopped. For forty years, heaven had fed them daily. Every morning, provision appeared on the ground– supernatural, consistent, and sustaining. But the moment they ate from the produce of the land, the manna ceased. Wilderness provision ended because promise provision had begun.
God was shifting how they lived. The same God who had provided miraculously in the wilderness was now providing through the land itself. The season had changed, and what once sustained them was no longer needed because something greater had been given. When the promise begins, wilderness provision ends. This is a critical truth for people entering revival. We must not cling to old forms of provision when God is leading us into new dimensions of fulfillment. The manna was never the destination — it was the means to reach it. Holding onto yesterday’s provision can keep us from fully embracing today’s promise.
God was not removing provision — He was upgrading it. The land required participation, stewardship, and maturity. It was no longer about gathering what fell; it was about possessing what had been given. The same God was providing, but in a different way, aligned with their new season. Revival carries this same transition. There are moments when God shifts His people from survival into stewardship, from daily rescue into sustained inheritance, and that transition must be anchored in worship and gratitude, or we will misunderstand what He is doing.
Beloved, do not rush past the place of remembrance. Before you step into greater promise, return to the Lamb and honor what God has already done. Let gratitude anchor your heart as God shifts you into new seasons of provision. If something familiar begins to cease, do not fear — it may be the sign that promise has begun. Revival will be carried by those who recognize the season they are in, release what was for the wilderness, and embrace what God is now providing. The God who sustained you before is now leading you into fullness — step into it with worship, and you will walk in everything He has prepared.
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The Lord (YHVH) commanded the grain offering on Shavuot, (known as Pentecost among Christians), to be made of the finest flour, baked with yeast, that is, leaven. Leaven, in the Bible, is almost universally, a symbol for “sin”, and in the OT is strictly forbidden on the altar of YHVH., yet here, in the Feast of Weeks it is commanded as part of the offering. Just six weeks prior to this festival, Israel had spent a week eating unleavened bread, a clear picture of the connection between the Passover Lamb and the removal of sin from our lives. Now the grain offering for Shavuot contains yeast; two loaves with it. Why? A common interpretation of this for NT believers is that the loaves represent Jews and Gentiles, the two types of redeemed people, who, of course, still contain sin in our lives.
We've just returned to Israel and the region seems to be nothing but a boiling cauldron ready to erupt. In just a few days, we will celebrate the Feast of Weeks, or Shavuot, in Hebrew. Most Christians recognize this holiday as the Feast of Pentecost -- the time when the Holy Spirit descended and empowered His saints to accomplish the mission of global witness to Yeshua (Jesus).
Three thousand years ago, when Solomon dedicated the Temple to God, the priests offered up thousands of sacrifices. After the sacrifices were offered up — then the glory of God fell! The glory of God was so thick and heavy that the priests could no longer minister! Do you see the connection? First the offerings — THEN the glory fell!
In the beginning of Psalm 2, David points out that the kings of the earth are against the Lord and his "anointed" [Mashiach "Messiah" in Hebrew]. David recognized the true authority of God and advises the kings and rulers of the world, as well as their subjects, to "kiss the Son, lest he be angry." The act of "kissing the Son" would be one of homage to a king, and would indicate submission to the kingship of the Son. Those who are wise will do so before the Son, the Messiah, comes to judge the world!
When the twelve spies were sent into Canaan to spy out the land, ten returned with a bad report. Their assessment was that it was impossible to conquer the land that God had promised them. Forgetting how God had led them with a pillar of fire by night, and fed them manna from heaven during the day, brought forth water out of a rock, and parted the Red Sea, they saw the situation with only their natural eyes, failed to walk by faith, and succumbed to fear.
When we moved into this place five months ago, the bushes in front looked terrible. The yard hadn't been cared for in so long that the bushes had grown into the trees, pulling down the branches, creating a thick wall of dry, dusty and intertwined shrubbery and blocking out the sunlight. Almost everything in the front yard was dead from lack of sun and sometimes even rain.
Since we returned to our home in the Negev Desert in Israel, we've noticed that the usual "desert scene" we are so accustomed to, has completely blossomed with grass and flowers -- what an amazing difference! It suddenly occured to me, as we were delighting in the beauty of it all, that the seed was already there! No one planted it. All the hills, now rolling endlessly with green -- they are not owned by anyone. Miles and miles of grass and wild flowers suddenly shoot forth where there was nothing but brown before! It was just waiting for someone to water it! And God brought the rains.