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Should Gentile Christians Celebrate the Feasts of the Lord?

Discover a balanced approach to Jewish holidays for Christians.

By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)

Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.

For Gentile Christians, the question of observing the biblical feasts of Israel (or more precisely, the Feasts of the Lord, Leviticus 23) sits at a complex intersection of biblical theology, Christian freedom, and personal conviction. To find a balanced perspective, we must examine several aspects, including their original purpose and prophetic design, their fulfillment in Jewish Christ (how they point to Jesus), and the New Testament’s teaching on Gentile Christians’ freedom. These investigations must also consider the prophetic visions of a future where all nations worship God, specifically in the context of these feasts.

The Foundation: Feasts as Divine Appointments

YHVH instituted for Israel the feasts as sacred “appointed times” (Lev 23:2, 4). They were more than cultural holidays; they were theological signposts designed to teach and/or remind Israel about God’s nature, provision, and His full commitment to Israel’s redemption.

The biblical calendar is built upon seven annual feasts, or “Appointed Times” (מוֹעֲדִים), commanded in the Torah (Leviticus 23, Numbers 28-29). Just as each biblical week is built on a cycle of seven days.

The four Spring Feasts—Passover, the Feast of Unleavened Bread, the Feast of Firstfruits, and the Feast of Weeks/Pentecost—are linked to the barley and wheat harvests and symbolize redemption, holiness, and renewal of life.

The three Fall Feasts—the Feast of Trumpets, the Day of Atonement, and the Feast of Tabernacles—happen in the seventh month and are related to the last harvest, ideas of repentance, national forgiveness, and God’s presence among people.

Critically, these feasts also carried a forward-looking, prophetic dimension. For example, the Passover lamb was a clear sign of Jesus’ final sacrifice, “the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29). The Feast of Firstfruits, celebrating the first sheaf of the harvest, finds its perfect fulfillment in the resurrection of Christ, whom Paul calls “the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep” (1 Cor 15:20). Pentecost, occurring fifty days after Firstfruits, marked the giving of the Torah at Sinai and was fulfilled in the New Testament by the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, forming the Church as a new kind of covenant community (Acts 2). The Feast of Trumpets (Rosh HaShanah) foreshadows the Messiah’s return and the final gathering of God’s people with its blasts calling to solemn assembly (1 Thess 4:16-17). The Day of Atonement points to the final judgment, the cleansing of both people and the earth, and the full application of Christ’s atoning work through his high priest’s unique entrance into the Holy of Holies (Heb 9:24-28). Finally, the Feast of Tabernacles, a joyous harvest celebration of God’s provision and dwelling (literally “tabernacling”) with Israel, prophetically anticipates the great ingathering of nations and the eternal, joyful reign of Israel’s God in the new creation (Rev 21:3).

Thus, the biblical calendar is far more than a historical record of agricultural cycles and national commemorations; it is a divinely orchestrated typological framework, outlining God’s entire redemptive program from the Exodus to the final consummation described in the Book of Revelation.

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The Prophetic Vision: A Future Inclusion of the Nations

One of the most compelling threads in this discussion comes from the Old Testament prophets, who envisioned a future where Gentile nations would join Israel in worshipping the one true God. Isaiah’s grand vision of the mountain of the Lord’s house includes “all nations” streaming to it:

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“Now it will come about that
In the last days
The mountain of the house of the Lord
Will be established as the chief of the mountains,
And will be raised above the hills;
And all the nations will stream to it.
And many peoples will come and say,
“Come, let’s go up to the mountain of the Lord,
To the house of the God of Jacob;
So that He may teach us about His ways,
And that we may walk in His paths.”
For the law will go out from Zion
And the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.” (Isa 2:2–3)

While not naming a specific feast, the context is one of pilgrimage and instruction in God’s ways—the very essence of the pilgrimage feasts (Passover, Pentecost, and Tabernacles).

Micah 4:1–2 echoes this. Perhaps the most sweeping vision comes from Isaiah 56:6–7, where God promises to bring foreigners who love Him to His holy mountain, and declares,

“Their burnt offerings and their sacrifices will be accepted on my altar, for my house shall be called a house of prayer for all peoples.”

Interestingly, the prophet Zechariah had this vision around one such Feast of the Lord/Israel. He foresaw a Messianic age where even Gentile nations will observe the Feast of Tabernacles:

“Then everyone who survives of all the nations that have come against Jerusalem shall go up year after year to worship the King, the LORD of hosts, and to keep the Feast of Booths/Tabernacles” (Zech 14:16).

This suggests, although it is possible that we should not be understanding this prophecy literally, that in God’s ultimate kingdom, these appointed times will have a role in universal worship.

The New Testament Shift: Fulfillment and Freedom

The New Testament consistently presents Jesus as the fulfillment of the Law and its festivals. Writing to Gentile Christians Apostle Paul offers a pivotal directive: “Therefore, let no one pass judgment on you in questions of food and drink, or with regard to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath. These are a shadow of the things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ.” (Col 2:16–17)  Here, the feasts are described as “shadows” cast by the coming reality of Christ. The substance—the full light and form—is found in Him. Observing the shadow once the substance has arrived is a matter of personal liberty, not obligation. Notice, it is not forbidden, but nor is it required. The strong advice “let no one pass judgement on you” protects you from potential accusers who might question your observance as a Gentile Christian or claim you are unable to observe if you wish.

This principle of freedom is central to the New Covenant. The Jerusalem Council in Acts 15 decided (or better put, affirmed) that non-Jewish followers of the Jewish Christ did not have to follow the Law of Moses like new converts do, but instead, they should follow all basic principles from the Torah as guests among the Israelites (see laws for sojourners with Israel in Leviticus 17:8–18:26).  Although Acts 15 does not explicitly reference Leviticus 17-18, the connection is rather clear once the lists are compared. When Galatian Gentile Christians were taught by some that they also needed to become part of Israel through proselyte conversion, Paul warned the Galatians against returning to the observance of “days and months and seasons and years,” seeing it as a potential step back (Gal 4:9–11). (It would be helpful to also read my article The Allegory of Sarah and Hagar in light of the Antioch Incident, since it is closely related to this topic).

Apostle Paul, himself an observant Jew, believed Gentiles and Israel should unite as a single coalition in worship of YHVH, while maintaining their distinct identities. This conviction stemmed from his core belief that YHVH is not merely Israel’s tribal deity but the God of the whole world (Rom 3:29–30). Paul envisioned something greater than Gentiles simply becoming Jews. If that happened, he reasoned, God would remain only Israel’s God. Instead, Paul believed YHVH would receive far greater glory if both Israel and the Nations—together yet distinct—worshipped Him as the one true God.

A Balanced Conclusion: Liberty, Wisdom, and Focus

Let the rhythms of God’s ancient calendar awaken your spirit to the fullness of the Jewish Christ! These feasts are not chains of obligation but radiant signposts illuminating the entire arc of redemption—from the Lamb of Passover to the harvest of Tabernacles. In Jesus, their promise is fulfilled; in you, their story lives on.

You stand in the glorious freedom of grace. You may walk through these appointed times not to earn favor, but to explore the breathtaking depths of the favor you already possess. Taste the bread, hear the trumpet, dwell in the booth—let each act deepen your wonder at God’s perfect plan.

And fix your eyes on the prophetic horizon: a vision of all nations united in worship. Your place in this story is secure. So live in liberty, rooted in Christ, the Substance of every shadow. Let your life be a joyful echo of heaven’s eternal feast to come.

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Comments (79)

Danny Brock
Danny Brock US February 8, 2026 at 5:55 AM

Greetings B'Shalom Dr Eli. There's no way I'll be able to respond in 150 words. Through your teachings I've figured out that I'm both a zealot, and a kind of radical in my beliefs. The 7th day from the beginning of creation, was set aside, and made Holy "for ALL mankind and throughout all His generations", not only Israel, and NO man has any right to change the very first Holy Day (not a holiday) that Eloheinu made Kodesh. When you discover the truth of this, and apply it going forward, the Holy Days were never negated in the Bible, but by Konstantin at the second council at Nice in AD 325, where the "Jews'" Holy Days were negated by the Romans. We're grafted Into Israel, not out

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Danny Brock
Danny Brock US March 28, 2026 at 2:30 AM

The way that the Greek was written originally has been altered by People who wanted to superimpose themselves over true Scriptures, to make it say what THEY wanted it to say over the period of the last 1700 years, and added scriptures, hated "The Jews", and sought to denigrate their place as the Chosen People of YHWH and created replacement Theology, are at the very root of all of this. They added "scripture" here and there and very few people are even aware of it today, like when Jerome said that Eusebius had add scripture in John 6:4 to add a whole year with nothing written about until "The Feast of the Jews" came along. They wanted to separate the natural vine followers of "The Way", from the nations' followers of Roman Christianity.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel IL March 29, 2026 at 9:47 AM

Danny, you know I don't buy this. You and I were at this before. :-) Learn Judeo-Greek of Septuagint and the New Testament, and you will see things otherwise.

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Danny Brock
Danny Brock US March 28, 2026 at 2:05 AM

DR Eli, yessir, I do connect the two, because from Creation, He set it aside. Even through everything that followed, from Adam to the Great Flood, my bet is that Yah never lost count of what day it was, even to the actual giving of the Torah. And the day still mattered enough to set it into Stone. Not to the tribe of Yudah- but to ALL of Israel. Are we believers not grafted into Israel? Yeshua made a point of saying to keep the Sabbath Holy and set part from the other 6 days, and that the Torah would never pass away, and those who do and teach it will have the high places in the Kingdom of Heaven, and those that don't, won't. Paul isn't the boss. Yeshua is. I'll follow his Word, and but trust in His New Covenant of Forgiveness

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel IL March 29, 2026 at 9:47 AM

Thank you for your comment.

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Neville Newman
Neville Newman US February 13, 2026 at 5:16 PM

"It is very possible that you are making a mistake connecting Sabbath (creation ordinance) to the Feasts of the Lord given to Israel. This connection is a necessity but a possibility."

If using "feasts" as a synonym for "appointed times", as you do throughout this article, then how is Danny's connection a mistake? In Leviticus 23:2 et seq., the connection is explicit. By referring to "holy days" (set-apart days), then Danny seems to be making exactly the connection that Leviticus 23 is making. What are we missing?

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sarah galan
sarah galan ES February 8, 2026 at 5:59 PM

It seems that Dr Eli still sees a division between Jew and Gentile. Both need to be born again and walk in Torah.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 9, 2026 at 11:35 AM

Well, Sarah, do you still see a division between male and female? If you do (and I hope you do), I do the same with Jews and Gentiles. In Christ, there is NO preference between Jews and Gentiles, males and females, BUT there is CLEARLY STILL a distinction. Otherwise, Sara, Mara, Eli, and Jonny can get married. :-)

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 8, 2026 at 12:35 PM

It is very possible that you are making a mistake connecting Sabbath (creation ordinance) to the Feasts of the Lord given to Israel. This connection is a necessity but a possibility.

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Robert
Robert US February 8, 2026 at 4:02 AM

This is a great commentary and analysis. It reminds me of an early story in Boccaccio's Decameron in which a father with a tremendously valuable stone and ring wants to give it to one of three sons but not give them reason to attach each other to own it. Solution; Have two more made so nearly perfectly identical that no one can tell the difference. It seems a wonderful allegory; we squabble over which "ring of the Book" is the real one, but we all try to follow the central precepts of love, hope, and charity.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 8, 2026 at 12:36 PM

Interesting. Thank you, Robert.

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Gerrrye
Gerrrye US February 8, 2026 at 2:26 AM

My Lutheran heritage celebrates several of those Feasts !!!

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 8, 2026 at 12:36 PM

Indeed.

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Ray Joseph Cormier
Ray Joseph Cormier CA February 8, 2026 at 12:41 AM

Another enjoyable and Credible read, my Dear Brother Eli in Christ.

What is current and seen by the Watchers, are the Signs of the Times since October 7, point to THIS Material World set on the Path to ARMAGEDDON, aka, The Battle of the Great Day of God Almighty between THEOCRATIC Israel vs THEOCRATIC Iran with US Christian Nationalist Religion mixed in.

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Jim Van Damme
Jim Van Damme US February 9, 2026 at 6:07 PM

Deborah, the admonition in Matthew 7:20 says "Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven." The warning is not against using the word "lord", but against hypocrisy. As He said, many of those who claim Jesus as Lord will enter heaven.

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Deborah Corria
Deborah Corria GB February 8, 2026 at 1:18 PM

Shalom,
Why, as a learned man of Hebrew background do you still use the word Lord?
For them that call me Lord Lord I will say to them, Depart from me for I do NOT know you.
If peole are going to "change the way they think" we are to learn the truth and the true names of our creator and the true name of the Messiach.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 8, 2026 at 12:37 PM

Thank you.

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Ramon
Ramon PH February 7, 2026 at 6:12 PM

Hi Dr. Eli. I was surprised and pleased that you wrote this article. I wish we could discuss this over a cup of tea or coffee.

I could be very wrong, but in my humble opinion is the title really the right question to ask? Should the question be more “Should Gentile Christians Celebrate All of the Feasts of the Lord Just Like the Jews?” Gentile Christians have already been celebrating the Spring festivals (which have been fulfilled by Jesus’ sacrifice) in their separate traditions. In my opinion, the Fall festivals can be commemorated however one chooses.

When the millenial reign is established, according to Ezekiel, will not both Jew and Gentile be observing some of the original festivals (Passover, Unleavened Bread, Sukkot) and a brand new one, the Feast of the New Year?

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 7, 2026 at 6:17 PM

Ramon, you are making a valid point.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 6, 2026 at 4:48 PM

I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.

Sylvia Ewerts
Sylvia Ewerts ZA February 7, 2026 at 3:56 PM

I am in awe and in tears!"I envisioned the New Jerusalem where Jews and Gentiles worship YHVH in awe and Reverent wonder. Todah Dr Eli! Blessings 🙌 🙌 🙌

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 7, 2026 at 4:34 PM

Amen and amen!

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Amaury
Amaury ES February 7, 2026 at 1:39 PM

Given that Orthodox, Catholic and Anglican High Church communities have more liturgy items related to Hebrew liturgy (including details as oil, shabbat candles, lamb symbols, ...) would there be a difference addressing them compared to adressing reformed communities?

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 8, 2026 at 12:41 PM

of course. But in this blog I write for everyone as much as I can.

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Amaury
Amaury ES February 7, 2026 at 1:12 PM

Dr Eli, these articles are interesting, and combining them and the reactions (that I read also), I have the impression that reformed people have maybe more questions on liturgy and feasts than Orthodox and Catholic usually have.
Dr Eli, do you see a difference when addressing these topics with reform3d, orthodox and catholics, and if yes, do you think it is because their liturgies includes more items from the Hebrew traditions, even down to some details as oil, shabbat candles, lamb symbols? Or you don't see a difference in your approach when talking to reformed churches, Orthodox and Catholic ones?

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 8, 2026 at 12:42 PM

of course.

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Terrence Herron
Terrence Herron AU February 7, 2026 at 12:58 PM

Wow. This is exactly how I hear the Spirit the Ru'ach. For we shall be joined in unity, yet the diversity of how gentiles and Jews are brought together is what we should strive to achieve. For the law is and has never been abolished. Covenant believers we should be. We love and love for the God of creation. The God of Avraham, Yishach and Yacob.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 7, 2026 at 1:03 PM

Blessings!

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Emily de Bruin
Emily de Bruin NZ February 7, 2026 at 12:45 AM

Hi dr Eli - this was a very good read ( outstanding) and a lot of detail / depth … will have to read again / again so it can sink in - thank you for the article 👌

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin IL February 7, 2026 at 11:17 AM

Blessings!

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 6, 2026 at 4:48 PM

I am so grateful to those of you who have decided to help me grow this ministry! May God bless you and keep you! If you are interested in making a contribution of any size, whether one- time or ongoing, please click here.