The Feast of Revelation (Yearly Sabbath) is one
of the Holy Days that God commanded to be kept
forever in Leviticus chapter 23 in the
Bible. Its
significance and how to calculate its yearly date
can be found in
THOTH,
Essays 1, Tablet 14,
"Feasts
and Holy Days of the Lord" (Note: The point
before the Feast of Revelation, the end of the Feast
of Unleavened Bread, is also quoted below in order
to understand the time frame of reference):
6 - On the seventh day (twenty-first of the first
month) is a
holy convocation with
no servile work.
7 - After this holy
convocation, the next day will be the
offering of the "firstfruits" (as explained in
Leviticus 23:10, which no longer is necessary;
Christ was the firstfruit!). After this
day, count fifty days (seven weeks, which will
include seven Sabbaths); another yearly
Sabbath, a
holy convocation, with no servile work.
Each week of these seven weeks symbolizes one
seal of the seven seals in the Eternal
Divine Path. After the seventh
seal, the last Revelation of God will (has)
come. Therefore, this yearly Sabbath from
now on will be called the Feast of Revelation.
This year's Feast of Revelation will be on
Shakti 13, or June 1 (6 PM May 31 to 6 PM
June 1). Keep it as you would the weekly
Sabbath, with no servile work (if possible),
fasting, rest, spiritual practice, focus and
contemplation on God, etc. It is also a good
time to review and meditate on the Eternal
Divine Path and its seven Revelations and
Truths that were revealed over the last 12,000 years
of history, especially the seventh Revelation
brought by Maitreya which is now on
earth.
The reason it is called the Feast of Revelation
is that: In the Jewish tradition, it is believed
that the Torah was
revealed 50 days after the Passover. So this
Yearly Sabbath was the Feast of Revelation.
However, with the Revelation of the Eternal
Divine Path, we now understand what God
meant by counting "seven" Sabbaths and so seven
weeks. Each was meant to symbolize one Seal,
and the Feast of Revelation symbolizes the opening
of the Seventh Seal. Now it can be known as
the day of Revelation of the last and the most
complete Revelation of God!
Always remember that the
spirit and ideation behind celebrating God's Holy
Days is much more important than the specific
rituals, dates, etc. We must not become rigid
and dogmatic as other religions have. However,
best is to have both the spirit behind the Day, and
the correct date!