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 41:1–37
- Isaiah 29:1–16
- Revelation 7:1–17
Corresponding reading in 1-year cycle
Insights from the readings
Connections
Genesis 41:1–37, Isaiah 29:1–16, and Revelation 7:1–17 are connected around God’s sovereignty, revelation, redemption, and the restoration of Israel and the nations.
These passages together depict a consistent theme of God revealing Himself, saving a remnant, and extending mercy through Messiah to both Israel and the nations.
- Divine revelation and discernment:
- In Genesis 41, God gives Pharaoh dreams and Yosef the ability to interpret them, revealing divine plans to save nations from famine.
- Isaiah 29 contrasts this clarity with Israel’s spiritual blindness, where prophetic visions are sealed and unreadable.
- In Revelation 7, understanding is restored as God marks His servants with revelation and protection.
- Restoration of Israel:
- Yosef, a type of Messiah, is elevated to save both Egypt and his own people.
- Isaiah calls Israel to repentance and trust in God rather than their own wisdom.
- Revelation 7 speaks of the sealing of 144,000 from the tribes of Israel, indicating a future restoration and redemption.
- Salvation for the nations:
- Yosef’s wisdom brings life to both Egypt and surrounding nations.
- Isaiah prophesies that even amid judgment, God will astound people with wonder, pointing toward Messiah’s redemptive work.
- Revelation culminates in a vast, redeemed multitude from every nation praising God, reflecting the fruit of Yosef’s and ultimately Yeshua’s mission.
- Messianic foreshadowing:
- Yosef prefigures Yeshua: both rejected by their own, yet exalted to bring salvation.
- Isaiah anticipates the rejection of God’s word and His servant, later fulfilled in Messiah.
- Revelation shows the Lamb (Yeshua) as Shepherd, wiping tears and bringing eternal shelter, the fulfillment of Yosef and Isaiah’s themes.
Key Hebrew and Greek terms
| Term | Meaning | Usage | Insight |
|---|---|---|---|
| חֲלוֹם khalóm | Dream, divine message | “Pharaoh had a dream…”(Gen 41:1) | Dreams as prophetic revelation foreshadow Yeshua’s revelatory role (cf. Acts 2:17). |
| רוּחַ אֱלֹהִים ruakh Elohim | Spirit of God | “…in whom is a divine spirit?” (Gen 41:38) | Yosef’s discernment by the Spirit prefigures Yeshua’s Spirit-anointed mission (Luke 4:14). |
| נָבוֹן navón | Discerning, understanding | “A man discerning and wise…” (Gen 41:33) | Messiah ben Yosef is divinely discerning, leading Jew and Gentile (1 Cor 1:24, 30). |
| חָכָם khakham | Wise | “A man discerning and wise…” (Gen 41:33) | Echoes of the wisdom greater than Solomon (Matt 12:42). |
| אֲרִיאֵל ʾAriʾel | “Lion/altar of God” (Jerusalem) | “Woe, O Ariel, Ariel…” (Isa 29:1) | Represents Jerusalem under judgment, but destined for restoration (Zech 12:10). |
| חָזוֹן khazôn | Vision, prophetic insight | “…like a dream, a night vision.” (Isa 29:7) | Messiah restores spiritual vision (Matt 13:16–17). |
| נָבִיא navíʾ | Prophet | “He has shut your eyes, the prophets…” (Isa 29:10) | Critique of blind leaders; Messiah is the true Prophet (Deut 18:15, John 6:14). |
| כָּבוֹד kavód | Glory, divine weight | Implied in Isa 29:13) | True kavód is seen in Messiah’s incarnation (John 1:14). |
| σφραγίζω sphragízō | To seal, mark | “Until we have sealed the bond-servants…” (Rev 7:3) | God’s mark on His faithful remnant—both Israel and nations. |
| δοῦλος doúlos | Bond-servant, slave | “…bond-servants of our God…” (Rev 7:3) | Identity of both Jewish and Gentile believers as servants of Messiah. |
| θλῖψις thlipsis | Tribulation | “…who come out of the great tribulation…” (Rev 7:14) | Testing leads to purification; connects to end-times refining of Israel. |
| ναός naós | Temple (inner sanctuary) | Implied in Rev 7:15 via “tabernacle” | Symbol of God’s presence with His people, fulfilled in Messiah (John 2:21). |
| ποιμαίνω poimaínō | To shepherd | “…the Lamb… will be their shepherd…” (Rev 7:17) | Lamb as Shepherd blends Yosef’s provider role with Yeshua’s pastoral care (John 10:11). |
Studies
Treasures that last: Building a life of eternal value (Genesis 43–44; Matthew 6)
Trials and transcendence: Joseph’s divine evolution beyond envy (Genesis 41–44)
Torah reading Miketz (מקץ): Genesis 41:1–44:17
Why it’s better to be open to what Heaven has planned (Genesis 41–44; Luke 1; Matthew 27)
Joseph & Messiah reveal what true repentance looks like (Genesis 42–44)
Matthew 24 and Chanukah: Why Yeshua warned believers to run to the hills
Chanukah: Dare to be a Daniel, Joseph, Judas Maccabeus
Genesis 37–40: Joseph and Judah’s school of hard knocks
Genesis 41:1-44:17: Yitzkhak’s and Yosef’s extended passion play
Genesis 42:1-22: The Unknown Brother, The Unrecognized Messiah
Genesis 41, part 2: Messianic connection between pharaoh and Yosef
Genesis 41, part 1: Yosef foretells of seven famine years in Mitsraim
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