๐ŸŒพ LIVING THE SHABUWA — WALKING WITH YESHUA HAMASHIACH --------- How an Ancient Pattern Still Changes Hearts Today

๐ŸŒพ LIVING THE SHABUWA — WALKING WITH YESHUA HAMASHIACH

How an Ancient Pattern Still Changes Hearts Today

You ever notice how everything in creation runs in circles?
The moon, the seasons, the heartbeat, the week.
Seven days — always seven.
That rhythm has never changed since the first sunrise.
It’s almost as if creation itself is whispering, “I’m still His.”


๐Ÿ•Š️ The Language of Heaven

When Christ walked the earth, He didn’t speak English.
He spoke Hebrew and Aramaic — and His very name carried power.

Yeshua Ha Mashiach (ื™ֵืฉׁื•ּืขַ ื”ַืžָּืฉִׁื™ื—ַ)
means “Jesus the Messiah,”
or literally “Salvation — the Anointed One.”

Just saying it slows the breath down.
It brings the heart into stillness.
The same One who healed the leper and calmed the sea
spoke that language of light — and everything He said lined up
with the rhythm of seven — the rhythm of creation.


๐Ÿ”† What Shabuwa Really Means

In Hebrew, Shabuwa (ืฉָׁื‘ื•ּืขַ) means “seven,” but it also means “oath.”
It’s not just about counting days — it’s about keeping promises.

When the Lord rested on the seventh day,
He wasn’t worn out — He was sealing creation with a covenant.
Six days to labor, one day to remember.
Work, then worship.
Labor, then light.

Every Shabuwa is a little rehearsal of eternity —
a way of saying, “Lord, I remember You, and I rest in You.”

That’s why the Sabbath matters from Genesis to Revelation:
it isn’t about rule-keeping; it’s about rhythm.
It’s the heartbeat of Heaven pulsing through our mortal week.


๐Ÿ”ฅ Who Are the Eerkodeshoi?

Now the old Books of Remembrance and the Nemenhah Records
speak of another word: Eerkodeshoi (ืֵื™ืจְืงื•ֹื“ֵืฉׁื•ֹื™) — the Holy Ones.

They’re the family of light — the watchers, angels, and mortals
who live the Shabuwa so fully that Heaven recognizes them as kin.
They’re the ones who build peace instead of pride,
who hear the Lord’s whisper and move when He says move.

I know some of them.
My cousin and his dear wife come to mind.
They start and end each day with prayer.
They put the Lord first in everything — their work, their meals, their home.
No show, no pretense — just covenant living.
When you step into their house you can feel it — the Spirit, the stillness, the love.
That’s what the life of the Eerkodeshoi looks like in real time.


๐ŸŒ„ How Does This Help Us?

It helps because it centers us.
The world is noisy. Religion gets political.
People chase success and forget peace.

But the Shabuwa pulls us back to the source.
It teaches us that holiness isn’t being busy for God;
it’s being still with God.

It rebuilds families, steadies marriages,
teaches children to pause and remember who made them.
It reminds us that Heaven’s language is love,
and love keeps its word.


๐Ÿ“– How It Fits with Scripture

This pattern shows up everywhere once you see it:

  • Bible: Genesis 2 — “God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it.”
    Exodus 31 — “It is a sign between Me and the children of Israel forever.”

  • Book of Mormon: Mosiah 18 — the people entered a covenant to serve one another and remember God always. That’s living the Shabuwa.

  • Joseph Smith’s early teachings: he called the gospel “an everlasting covenant, even the same that was from the beginning.” (History of the Church 3:386).

  • Nemenhah Records: they teach that those who live by the Covenant of Peace become “as the Eerkodeshoi, for light clings unto them and they need not command it.”

All of it fits.
The Bible gave the pattern.
The Book of Mormon restored the doctrine of Christ within that pattern.
Joseph reopened the door.
And the Nemenhah show how a whole people can walk it together.


๐ŸŒฟ What It Looks Like Today

Living the Shabuwa doesn’t mean quitting your job or counting candles.
It means letting the covenant rhythm guide your choices.

Work honestly.
Rest without guilt.
Forgive quickly.
Keep your word.
Feed the poor before feeding your pride.

That’s the work of the Eerkodeshoi — ordinary lives made holy by remembrance.
When even a few families live this way, light starts spreading again.
And Zion — the real one — starts to hum in the distance.


✨ The Name Above All

Every rhythm, every covenant, every holy thing points back to one name:
Yeshua Ha Mashiach — Salvation, the Anointed One.

He is the Lord of the Shabuwa.
He is the Head of the Eerkodeshoi.
He is the rest the seventh day was always pointing toward.

When we remember His name,
when we walk His covenant,
when we let His Spirit order our days —
He calls us His own.

And maybe that’s the whole point —
to stop being strangers
and start being family again.

That’s the covenant.
That’s the call.
That’s the peace of Yeshua Ha Mashiach.


๐ŸŽฅ COME JOIN ME ON YOUTUBE
Friends, if this message spoke to your heart,
I’d love to have you visit my YouTube channel — The True Remnant 
where I share these same thoughts in simple, honest video form.

๐Ÿ‘‰ YouTube Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/@TheTrueRemnant

And if you’d like to explore all my writings in one place,
here’s the complete index of everything I’ve posted:

๐Ÿ‘‰ Full Master Blog Index:
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YouTube will simply let you know whenever a new video is posted —
no pressure at all, just an easy way to follow along.



 

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