Fellowship Church of Winter Springs

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By Fellowship Church

Celebrate Passover 2023

Family Passover SederWEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 2023 AT SUNDOWN

The celebration of the LORD’S Festival of Passover (Pesach) will be observed this year beginning at sundown on Wednesday, April 5, 2023.  We encourage as many families as possible to celebrate this festival [Read more…]

Tagged With: Home Celebration, Passover, Pesach, Seder

By Fellowship Church

2023 Community Passover Seder

2023 Community Passover Sede

THURS., MARCH 30, 2023 AT 6:30 – 9:30 PM*

 This year we will once again sponsor our Community Passover Seder as a ministry to friends in the Christian community who desire to understand the Biblical festivals.  Join us as we commemorate*

[Read more…]

Tagged With: Biblical Festivals, Community Seder, Passover, Pesach, Seder Reservations

By Fellowship Church

Comfort & Shalom – “A Walk in Faith”

Comfort & Shalom - "A Walk in Faith" - DocumentaryAVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD

Putting our love for God’s people into action…

For the past 13 years, the members of Fellowship Church have worked alongside the [Read more…]

Tagged With: Comfort & Shalom, Documentary, Israel and the Church, Kedumim Project

By Fellowship Church

Monthly Prayer Meeting – April

Monthly Prayer MeetingSUNDAY, APRIL 2, 2023 AT 7:30 – 9:00 AM

We’ll meet together for breakfast at 7:30 AM, have a time of discussion and then separate into two groups for prayer. Everyone is encouraged to join us in this important time of prayer and build unity [Read more…]

Tagged With: Biblical New Year, Prayer

By Ken Garrison, B.S., M.S., Th.M.

Bible Study-06 (Genesis 25-28)

Book of Genesis

God Elects Israel

In this section of the Bible the subject shifts from the revealing of the “special son” to the establishment of the covenant line. There is a brief description of Isaac’s encounter with God and then a rapid refocus on Jacob. God would develop the account of the covenant line through Jacob.

We have seen that God began laying down the prophetic picture of the “special son” through Abraham, Sarah and Isaac. The account includes prophecies of the unique conception of the “special son”, of his being offered as a special sacrifice on Mt. Moriah, and, if we can receive it, his resurrection. In Isaac’s case, he was spared from death and raised up at the last moment and a ram was substituted for him on the altar. Finally, we see the prophecy of the calling of a “special bride” for the “special son” which we maintain is a picture of the Holy Spirit calling the church to be joined to the resurrected Jesus.

God appeared to Isaac and established His covenant with him. The covenant was the same as God had cut with Abraham. The provisions included the promise of blessing, of a unique ministry to all of mankind and of stewardship of the land of Israel. Much later (almost 600 years) God would reveal Himself to Moses at Mt. Sinai as the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob. The covenant was being established in the “mouth of three witnesses”.

Another interesting fact concerning Isaac was that he never experienced a name change. Abram’s name was changed to Abraham, Jacob’s name would be changed to Israel, but Isaac never had his name changed. This is most likely due to the prophetic significance of the relationship of Abraham to Isaac relative to the relationship of the Holy One and Messiah Jesus.

After 20 years of marriage, Isaac and Rebecca finally were blessed with children. Twins, Esau and Jacob, were born to them. Esau was born first so according to tradition, he would receive the special tribal blessing and authority. Esau and Jacob were diametrically opposite to one another. Esau was a hunter while Jacob was a shepherd. Jacob was chosen by God before their birth. Later Paul would quote Malachi saying,

“Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated” (Romans 9:13b).

So by God’s sovereign choice, Jacob was chosen to continue the line of promise which had previously been stated to Abraham and to Isaac. This was revealed to Rebekah before the twins were born. Jacob evidently dreamed of functioning in this capacity. Esau, on the other hand, did not embrace the vision of the Kingdom of God. He was only interested in temporal things. In a weak moment, Jacob purchased the birthright for a simple meal. Later, Jacob conspired with his mother to receive the blessing which Isaac would have given to Esau.

Jacob did not understand God’s election. He didn’t have to struggle for God’s calling. It had been given to him before his birth. However, he didn’t understand this principle. Much later David was anointed King of Israel while Saul still stood in that post. David “waited on the Lord” to establish his calling rather than attempting to establish it by his own devices. Jacob should have trusted God in this matter. Jacob was 97 years old before he simply trusted God to establish His purpose through him. His name was then changed to Israel.

We should ask ourselves the question, “How would this story be different if Jacob had simply trusted the Lord to establish his election from the beginning”? Even though Isaac was intent on giving the blessing to Esau, would God not have intervened to insure that Jacob received the anointing?

Are you struggling with God’s calling? We all must learn to “wait on the Lord”. At just the right time He will establish His purpose in you and in me.

By Ken Garrison, B.S., M.S., Th.M.

Bible Study-05 (Genesis 23-25)

Abraham Sends for a Wife for Isaac

Rebekah & Isaac (Gen.23:1-25:18)In the previous study, I developed the revelation of the “special son” drawing the parallel between what Abraham did with Isaac and with what God did with Jesus some 2,000 years later. That revelation continues in Genesis 23-25. We get a clue as to the age of Isaac when he was brought to Mt. Moriah to become an “olah” (special consecrated offering) to God. Secondly, the story of how the father obtains a bride for his son is told.

We ask the question, how old was Isaac when he was brought to Mt. Moriah by Abraham? Genesis 22:5 describes Isaac as a “na-ar” (נַעַר).  This term is translated as lad (NAS) which means, simply, “a young man”. Most often, this expression is understood to mean “a teenager” or perhaps an even younger boy. The Biblical use of this term includes young men in their twenties or thirties.  I will cite two references: firstly, Benjamin was referred to as a “naar” at age 32 (Genesis 43:8); secondly, Joshua was referred to as a naar at age 40 at Mt. Sinai (Exodus 33:11). Given these examples, I return to the question of how old was Isaac when he was almost sacrificed at Mt. Moriah. The Bible does not specifically tell us; however, the next event included in the Biblical account was Sarah’s death. She died at the age of 127 which means that Isaac was 37. I believe that the events described in Genesis 22 and 23 are not displaced very much in time. Therefore, I will speculate that Isaac was near 37 when Abraham brought him to Mt. Moriah. How does this correspond to the record concerning Jesus’ crucifixion 2,000 years later? Most scholars believe that His death occurred in 31 AD/CE. Luke stated that He was “about 30” at the beginning of His ministry. According to modern reckoning, Herod the Great died in 4 BC/BCE. Herod attempted to murder Jesus by killing the children in Bethlehem that were two years old or younger. Therefore, we conclude that Jesus was born between 6 and 4 BC/BCE. So Jesus would have been about 37 as the time of His crucifixion, which would correspond to the age of Isaac when He was brought to Mt. Moriah.

A Bride for the Special Son

Three years after Sarah’s death, Abraham sent his most trusted servant back to the homeland of his countrymen to seek a bride for Isaac. The servant looked for three primary qualities in the bride. She should be a virgin (this is understood), she must be a servant and she must be willing to leave everything familiar in her life and embark upon an unknown journey to respond to the call of her groom-to-be. Rebekah demonstrated that she was a servant as she offered water to Abraham’s trusted envoy and, in addition, to water his camels. Due to the nature of camels following a long journey, I assume that this would have been a formidable task. The remaining requirement was fulfilled when Rebecca willingly agreed to travel to the land of Canaan to become the bride of Isaac. When Rebekah arrived in Canaan, Isaac took her into his mother’s tent and the marriage was consummated. Evidently, the wedding was entirely private. We would expect a great wedding feast to have been sponsored by Abraham. He sponsored such a celebration earlier when Isaac was weaned (Genesis 21:8). Yet, the wedding was private without outward ceremony.

The Church and the Marriage Supper

I maintain that God followed the same course in obtaining a bride for His son Jesus. He sent the Holy Spirit into the world to obtain a bride for His Son. Through the blood of His Son, He provided for the purity of those who would be called. Only servants were given invitations. Such servants had to be willing to step out in faith in response to the call and go in an undefined direction that was only known by the Lord. Each was required to forsake everything familiar in their lives.

Ultimately, the wedding will be private. John, in the book of Revelation, speaks of the “marriage supper of the Lamb”, which occurs in heaven (Revelation 19:7- 9).  This will be an event to which attendees will be included “by invitation only”. looking at the events related in Genesis 23-25, I conclude that these prophetic events – the calling of the church “which is the bride of Messiah” and the “marriage supper of the Lamb” – are the very things that God began pointing to through the revelation of the “Special Son” in the first book of the Bible.

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Latest Posts

  • Monthly Prayer Meeting – April
  • Celebrate Passover 2023
  • 2023 Community Passover Seder
  • Bible Study-06 (Genesis 25-28)
  • Bible Study-05 (Genesis 23-25)
  • Bible Study-03 (Genesis 12-17)
  • Bible Study-04 (Genesis 18-22)

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Who We Are

Fellowship Church is a non-denominational congregation of believers in Messiah Jesus who love, worship and serve the Holy One of Israel with all their heart, soul, mind and strength. We are located in Winter Springs, Florida.

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Fellowship Church
5340 Red Bug Lake Road
Winter Springs, Florida 32708
407.699.1011

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