Starting after Sukkot 2024, Hallel Fellowship switched to a three-year cycle of Torah and parallel Bible readings (2024–2027), outlined by TorahResource. While there’s ancient evidence for a triennial cycle, a major benefit is to provide more time to mine more of Scripture for lessons.
Readings
- Genesis 35:9–36:43
- Isaiah 43:1–7
- Matthew 11:25–30
Corresponding reading in the 1-year cycle
Insights from the readings
Genesis 35:9–36:43; Isaiah 43:1–7; and Matthew 11:25–30 are connected through themes of identity, covenant, divine calling and rest in God’s presence.
- Covenantal identity & calling
- In Genesis 35, God reaffirms Jacob’s name as Israel and renews His covenant promise to make a nation from him.
- In Isaiah 43, God says, “I have called you by name, you are Mine,” echoing Jacob’s renaming and showing that Israel’s identity is rooted in God’s purpose.
- In Matthew 11, Yeshua affirms the Father’s sovereign revelation and extends a personal invitation to find identity and rest in Him, the promised Messiah of Israel.
- Divine presence & restoration
- God appears to Jacob and calls him to dwell in Bethel (“House of God”), signifying divine presence and worship.
- Isaiah assures Israel that God will be with them through fire and flood — a promise of preservation and restoration.
- Yeshua offers rest, not just physical but spiritual—restoration of soul, echoing prophetic hope for peace through the Messiah.
- Comfort in suffering
- Jacob faces loss and transition in Genesis.
- Isaiah speaks to exiles facing trials but promises redemption.
- Yeshua’s words in Matthew speak directly to the weary and burdened, offering comfort.
Key Hebrew & Greek terms
שֵׁם shem — name
- Genesis 35:10: “Your name is Jacob; no longer shall your name be called Jacob, but Israel shall be your name.”
- Theological insight: Naming signifies identity, purpose, and covenant destiny.
- Messianic insight: Just as Jacob is renamed Israel, Messiah redefines identity — Jew and Gentile — within the Kingdom of God (Gal. 3:28).
יִשְׂרָאֵל Yisra’el — Israel
- Derived from sarah (to strive) and El (God).
- Genesis 35:10: Israel means “one who struggles with God.”
- Messianic insight: Israel embodies the struggle and destiny of the Jewish people, through whom the Messiah would come. Yeshua is the ultimate Israelite, faithful where others faltered (Isa. 49:3–6).
גָּאַל ga’al — redeem
- Isaiah 43:1: “I have redeemed you; I have called you by name, you are Mine.”
- Used in Exodus and Ruth for deliverance and kinship.
- Messianic insight: Yeshua is our Goel (kinsman-redeemer), fulfilling Isaiah’s vision of redemption (Luke 24:21; Titus 2:14).
ἀναπαύω anapauō — rest
- Matthew 11:28: “I will give you rest.”
- Reflects Sabbath peace (Shabbat shalom) and eternal spiritual rest.
- Messianic insight: Yeshua offers the true Sabbath rest promised in the Torah (Hebrews 4:9–10), fulfilling both physical and spiritual rest in the Messiah.
עִמָּנוּ אֵל Immanu El — God with us
- Echoed in Isaiah 7:14 and Matthew 1:23.
- Relevance: Isaiah 43 and Genesis 35 show God’s presence with His people.
- Messianic insight: This is fulfilled in Yeshua, literally Immanu El (John 1:14).
Lessons
God’s covenant is unbreakable
Even amid human failure (Jacob, exile), God remains faithful.
The Messiah is the guarantor of this new and everlasting covenant (Jer. 31:31–34; Luke 22:20). Yeshua doesn’t replace Israel but fulfills God’s promises to her.
God redeems with intimacy
“I have called you by name” shows God’s personal relationship with His people.
Yeshua mirrors this in Matthew 11, knowing the Father and inviting others into that intimacy.
Identity transformed through encounter
Jacob’s name change symbolizes inner transformation.
Messianic believers experience renewed identity (Romans 8:15–17) through Yeshua.
Messiah brings true rest
Not just physical or political relief, but soul-level peace (Isaiah 53:5; Matthew 11:29).
This aligns with the Jewish expectation of the Messianic Age bringing shalom.
Exile and shuv (to return)
Isaiah’s promise of regathering prefigures both the physical return to the land and spiritual return through Messiah — a dual fulfillment still unfolding today.
Personal calling and teshuvah (a returning, repentance)
The calling “by name” in Isaiah mirrors Jacob’s return to Bethel. Messianic Jews see this as a call for Jewish people to return both to God and to Messiah.
Yeshua as the Living Torah
His invitation in Matthew 11 is seen as the heart of Torah — offering rest, mercy and a “yoke” (discipleship) that teaches us how to walk in God’s ways (Matthew 5:17–20).
Studies
Transformed by struggle: God’s refining process (Genesis 32; James 1; Obadiah)
Price of passivity: Jacob, David & the consequences of inaction (Genesis 34)
Torah reading Vayishlach (וישלח): Genesis 32:3–36:43
Why the Way to the Kingdom of God is both open-armed and divisive (Genesis 32–33; Romans 8)
Reconcile by your actions, not just words (Genesis 32–33; Obadiah; Matthew 5)
Genesis 32–33; Hosea 11–12: Sick of the false allure of the temporary?
Genesis 32:3–36:43: How to wrestle with and wait on God together joyfully
Genesis 32:3–36:43: Peace on Earth depends on a transformed you
Genesis 32:4–36:43: Face up to your past, so Mashiakh can purge it
Genesis 32:3-36:43: God has sent us, but are we going?
Names of the descendants of Esau and Edom reveal Israel’s past, present, future (Genesis 36)
Ya’acov returns to Beit ’El; messianic last words of Rachel (Genesis 35)
The Tragedy and Injustice of Dinah and Shechem (Genesis 33-34)
God converts Ya’akov the supplanter into Yisra’el the ruler (Genesis 32)
Yaakov goes to Bethel; Rachel weeps in Raamah; sons of Esau (Genesis 35–36)
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