Introduction
Throughout Scripture, one truth quietly weaves its way from Genesis to Revelation, yet it is seldom recognized as a single, unified pattern.
The field.
It first appears before there was a farmer. It becomes the place of worship, provision, covenant, judgment, harvest, and ultimately the gathering of the nations. From Eden to the patriarchs, from the Torah to the prophets, and from the teachings of Yahusha Mashiyach to the final harvest of Revelation, the field continually bears witness to Yahuah's covenant purposes.
At the heart of this study is what I call the Open Field Shemitah.
This study proposes that the Shemitah was never merely an agricultural ordinance confined to the Land of YasharEL. Rather, the legislation given through Mosheh preserved and regulated a far older covenant reality that reaches back to creation itself. Long before Sinai, long before the Levitical priesthood, and long before the seventh-year legislation, Yahuah was already revealing an economy founded upon His own provision rather than human self-dependence.
Our journey therefore begins, not at Mount Sinai, but in Eden.
We will examine the earliest appearances of the field, follow its development through the patriarchs, the Torah, the prophets, and the writings of the emissaries, and observe how this single covenant pattern culminates in Yahusha Mashiyach and the final harvest of the age.
If the Open Field truly represents an eternal covenant principle, then the Torah did not originate it. The Torah bore witness to it. The prophets proclaimed it. Yahusha fulfilled it. And Revelation unveils its ultimate consummation.
Our investigation begins where Scripture itself begins—before there was a farmer, there was a field.
1. Before There Was a Farmer, There Was a Field
Genesis 2:5–6
"...every shrub of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb of the field before it grew; for Yahuah Elohim had not caused it to rain upon the earth, and there was not a man to till the ground. But there went up a mist from the earth, and watered the whole face of the ground."
The first occurrence of "the field" is not accidental.
Moses deliberately introduces the field before the farmer.
Notice the sequence.
There was:
- no farmer,
- no plough,
- no cultivation,
- no sowing,
- no harvesting.
Yet life was already being sustained.
Why?
Because Yahuah Himself watered the earth.
The field was productive before human labour entered the picture.
This immediately establishes the first principle of the Open Field.
Provision preceded cultivation.
Before man ever worked the ground, Yahuah had already prepared the means of sustaining life.
The source of abundance was never man's labour.
It was always Yahuah.
This is precisely the truth later illustrated through the Open Field Shemitah. During the seventh year, YasharEL was commanded to cease cultivating the land and trust Yahuah to provide. Thus, the Shemitah does not introduce a new principle—it calls the covenant people back to the original order established in Eden.
The Open Field therefore existed before Sinai.
2. The Curse Introduces Human Toil
Genesis 3:17–19
"...Cursed is the ground for your sake; in sorrow shall you eat of it all the days of your life... In the sweat of your face shall you eat bread..."
Notice carefully what changed.
The field did not disappear.
Rain did not cease.
Seeds did not vanish.
Instead, man's relationship with the ground changed.
Before sin:
Yahuah supplied.
After sin:
Man must labour.
The curse did not abolish divine provision.
It introduced sweat.
The Open Field economy therefore existed before the curse.
Human agriculture belongs to the post-fall order.
This observation becomes extremely important when we later examine the Shemitah.
Every seventh year YasharEL was commanded to stop relying upon sweat and return—however briefly—to dependence upon Yahuah.
The Shemitah was therefore a covenant reminder of Eden.
It called the nation back to the Creator's original economy.
3. Cain and Abel — Two Fields, Two Economies
Genesis 4:2
"And Abel was a keeper of sheep, but Cain was a tiller of the ground."
Again, Moses deliberately contrasts two occupations.
Cain is identified with the ground.
Abel is identified with the flock.
This distinction prepares the reader for their offerings.
Genesis 4:3–5
"And in process of time it came to pass, that Cain brought of the fruit of the ground an offering unto Yahuah. And Abel, he also brought of the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof. And Yahuah had respect unto Abel and to his offering: But unto Cain and to his offering he had not respect."
The text never condemns grain itself.
Later Torah commands grain offerings (minchah), proving that produce is acceptable when offered according to Yahuah's will.
The deeper question is this:
Why does Moses emphasize that Abel was a keeper of sheep?
His occupation was not farming.
Yet worship in Scripture regularly includes minchah, a tribute or gift that later encompasses grain offerings.
This raises an intriguing question within the framework of the Open Field.
If Abel was not primarily cultivating the cursed ground, from where did the increase associated with worship come?
Genesis does not explicitly answer that question, but it leaves the reader with an important contrast. Cain is explicitly connected with labouring the cursed ground. Abel is explicitly connected with receiving increase through his flock, whose very life depended upon the grass and vegetation that Yahuah caused to grow.
Whether in pasture or produce, the ultimate source of increase was not Abel's ingenuity but Yahuah's provision.
This distinction foreshadows the Open Field principle already seen in Eden. The accepted worshipper approaches Yahuah acknowledging that increase comes from Him.
1. Abel brought the firstborn and their fat
Genesis 4:4 "And Abel also brought of the firstlings of his flock and of the fat thereof."
This observation is firmly grounded in the text.
The emphasis is not merely that Abel brought a sheep.
He brought:
- the firstborn (bekhorot)
- the fat portions (chalab)
Throughout the Torah, the fat belongs to Yahuah (e.g., Leviticus 3:16), symbolizing the choicest and richest portion. Abel's offering therefore reflects that he gave the best, not the leftovers.
The text also says:
"Yahuah had regard unto Abel and to his offering."
The acceptance begins with Abel, then extends to his offering, indicating that the heart and the offering belong together.
Heb 11:4 By belief, Heḇel offered to Elohim a greater slaughter offering than Qayin, through which he obtained witness that he was righteous, Elohim witnessing of his gifts. And through it, having died, he still speaks.
2. The fat reflects abundance
Healthy fat animals indicate flourishing pasture and abundant grazing.
The fat can symbolize that Abel's flock prospered from Yahuah's provision. Abel returns the richest portion to Yahuah, acknowledging that the increase belongs to Him.
That fits the recurring biblical principle: Yahuah gives the increase, and the righteous return the first and best to Him.
His flock fed from the provision of the land that Yahuah freely supplied.
3. "Sin lies at the door"
Genesis 4:7 "Sin lies at the door..."
The text itself does not identify the "door" as a storehouse or stacked harvest, its derevative by His Ruach in understanding that the Shemitah was not just agricultural but a heart conndition. The first blush meaning portrays sin as something crouching, like a predator, ready to master Cain if he does not do what is right.
But when we connect the "door" to an enclosed harvest behind it ( a closed legal self dependancy) it fits the broader theme that enclosure reflects a heart turned inward.
The first mention of a door in Scripture immediately follows an offering that was not accepted.
The doorway marks the threshold between two conditions of the heart.
One heart remains open before Yahuah.
The other begins to close upon itself.
Sin waits at that threshold, seeking entrance and mastery.
Throughout Scripture, enclosure repeatedly becomes the outward manifestation of inward self-dependence.
The rich man in the parable encloses his harvest within greater barns.
The rich man encloses his table against Elazar.
The Open Field Shemitah continually opens what the sinful heart continually seeks to enclose.
The warning given to Cain therefore reaches far beyond agriculture.
It exposes the condition of the heart.
The heart that no longer trusts Yahuah begins to secure its own provision, while the heart that trusts Yahuah acknowledges that every increase belongs to Him.
Abel revealed that heart through the firstlings and the fat.
Cain revealed the opposite condition through the offering he brought and the path that followed.
4. Cain brought "of the fruit of the ground"
Genesis deliberately contrasts the two offerings.
Cain brought: "of the fruit of the ground."
Abel brought: "the firstlings... and their fat."
The text explicitly highlights the quality and priority of Abel's offering from the Shemitah increase, while Cain's offering is described without those qualifiers.
That literary contrast itself supports the theme that the issue is not merely what was offered, but how Yahuah was regarded in the offering.
5. Abel acknowledged Yahuah's increase
This is a strong conclusion.
Abel's offering demonstrates that increase was never viewed as personal possession.
The firstborn belonged to Yahuah.
The fat belonged to Yahuah.
The increase belonged to Yahuah.
Abel therefore acknowledged that he was a steward rather than an owner.
Cain's account, by contrast, moves progressively toward self, anger, murder, city-building, and self-exaltation.
The First Blood Shed in the Field
After Yahuah accepted Abel's offering and rejected Cain's, the narrative takes a tragic turn.
Genesis 4:8
"And Cain talked with Abel his brother: and it came to pass, when they were in the field, that Cain rose up against Abel his brother, and slew him."
Moses did not need to tell us where the murder occurred.
He could simply have written that Cain killed his brother.
Instead, the Ruach specifically records:
"...they were in the field."
Why?
Throughout this study we have seen that Scripture rarely wastes geographical details.
The field first appeared in Eden as the place sustained directly by Yahuah before human cultivation.
Now the field appears again.
But this time it becomes the place where the first righteous man is murdered.
The same field that testified to Yahuah's provision now bears witness to man's rebellion.
The field receives innocent blood.
The Ground Becomes a Witness
Yahuah then confronts Cain.
Genesis 4:9–10
"Where is Abel your brother?... What have you done? The voice of your brother's blood cries unto Me from the ground."
Notice the progression.
Earlier the ground produced food.
Now the ground receives blood.
Earlier the field sustained life.
Now the field bears witness to death.
Creation itself becomes a witness before Yahuah.
The ground is not silent.
It testifies.
This introduces another principle.
The field is more than soil.
The field is covenant testimony.
Cain Receives Another Curse
Yahuah continues.
Genesis 4:11–12
"And now you are cursed from the earth, which has opened her mouth to receive your brother's blood from your hand; when you till the ground, it shall not henceforth yield unto you her strength..."
This is remarkable.
In Genesis 3 the ground was cursed because of Adam.
Now Cain himself is cursed from the ground.
The very ground he depended upon for life now becomes his witness.
The tiller of the ground loses the strength of the ground.
The one who trusted in cultivation discovers that the earth cannot save him.
This becomes another warning against trusting human labour apart from Yahuah.
Abel's Blood and Yahusha's Blood
Centuries later, the writer to the Hebrews returns to this very event.
Hebrews 12:24
"...and to Yahusha the mediator of the renewed covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaks better things than that of Abel."
Abel's blood cried from the ground.
Yahusha's blood speaks from the renewed covenant.
Abel's blood cried for justice.
Yahusha's blood proclaims redemption.
Abel died in the field because of his brother's jealousy.
Yahusha was led outside the city and crucified because of His brethren's rejection.
The first righteous shepherd died in the field.
The Great Shepherd laid down His life to redeem the world.
A New Insight: The Field Becomes Both Provision and Witness
From this point onward, every significant field in Scripture carries this double testimony.
It is a place of provision.
It is also a place of witness.
Later we will see:
- Abraham on Moriah.
- Boaz's field providing bread for Ruth.
- Yitsḥaq sowing in famine.
- The Rich Fool's field producing abundantly.
- The labourers in the field.
- The wheat and tares.
- Two men in the field.
- Judas purchasing the Field of Blood.
- The final harvest of Revelation.
The field is never merely agricultural.
It is covenant ground.
It reveals either dependence upon Yahuah or rebellion against Him.
The first field witnessed the blood of Abel.
The final field will witness the harvest of the earth.
The Way of Cain — Rejecting the Open Field Shemitah
The murder of Abel did not end in Genesis.
The New Testament reveals that Cain established a spiritual path that continues throughout history.
Jude warns believers:
Jude 11
"Woe unto them! for they have gone in the way of Cain..."
Notice the expression.
Not merely the sin of Cain.
The Way of Cain.
Scripture presents Cain as establishing a pattern that others would later follow.
But what is that pattern?
Most explanations stop at jealousy or murder.
While these are certainly true, the Open Field Shemitah reveals something even deeper.
Cain rejected the economy of dependence upon Yahuah.
He approached Yahuah through the fruit of his own labour, and when Yahuah accepted the righteous who trusted Him, Cain responded by shedding innocent blood.
Thus, the Way of Cain is more than murder.
It is hostility toward the righteous who live by the principles of the Open Field Shemitah.
Unable to produce the favour of Yahuah through his own works, Cain attempted to destroy the one who had received that favour by faith.
The first persecution recorded in Scripture therefore occurred in the field.
The Open Field Shemitah became the scene where the righteous suffered at the hands of those trusting in their own works.
4. The Way of Cain Continues Throughout Scripture
This pattern repeats throughout biblical history.
Whenever Yahuah raises up a righteous witness who depends upon Him rather than human systems, the Way of Cain seeks to silence that witness.
Abel was slain in the field.
The prophets were persecuted.
The righteous suffered.
Finally, Yahusha Himself was rejected by those who trusted in their own righteousness.
Yahusha declared to the religious leaders:
Matthew 23:35
"That upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the earth, from the blood of righteous Abel..."
Notice where Yahusha begins.
Not with Moses.
Not with Sinai.
He begins with righteous Abel.
Why?
Because Abel is the first righteous witness whose blood was shed.
The bloodline of persecution begins in Genesis and reaches its climax in the Mashiyach.
The Way of Cain is therefore the continual opposition to the righteous seed.
The Open Field Shemitah and the Righteous
This is why the Open Field Shemitah is never merely about agriculture.
It is about covenant allegiance.
The one who lives by the Open Field Shemitah acknowledges that life, increase, acceptance, and provision come from Yahuah.
The one who walks in the Way of Cain seeks life through his own labour, his own system, and his own righteousness.
When those two ways collide, the Way of Cain persecutes the righteous.
This happened to Abel.
It happened to the prophets.
It happened to Yahusha.
And it continues until the end.
5. Noah — The Open Field Shemitah Preserved Through Judgment
Having seen the Way of Cain oppose the righteous who walked according to the principles of the Open Field Shemitah, Scripture now records that wickedness spread throughout the earth.
Genesis 6:5
"And Yahuah saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually."
The corruption was no longer limited to Cain.
His way had spread throughout humanity.
Violence filled the earth.
Genesis 6:11–12
"The earth also was corrupt before Elohim, and the earth was filled with violence. And Elohim looked upon the earth, and, behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted his way upon the earth."
Notice the language.
The earth had become filled with the Way of Cain.
Violence.
Corruption.
The rejection of Yahuah's ways.
The persecution of righteousness.
Everything that began with Abel had now spread across the entire world.
The question therefore becomes:
Would the Open Field Shemitah disappear with the Flood?
Would Yahuah abandon His original covenant economy?
Scripture answers with a resounding No.
Noah Found Grace
Genesis 6:8–9
"But Noah found grace in the eyes of Yahuah... Noah was a righteous man and perfect in his generations, and Noah walked with Elohim."
Notice the contrast.
Just as Abel stood in contrast to Cain...
Now Noah stands in contrast to the corrupt world.
The Open Field Shemitah has always been preserved through a righteous remnant.
The world may reject Yahuah's provision.
The righteous continue to walk by faith.
This becomes another recurring pattern throughout Scripture.
The Open Field Shemitah is never maintained by the majority.
It is preserved through the faithful remnant.
Worship Comes Before Agriculture
After the Flood, Noah leaves the ark.
What is the first thing he does?
Does he build a city?
Does he plant crops?
Does he establish commerce?
No.
Genesis 8:20
"And Noah built an altar unto Yahuah; and took of every clean beast, and of every clean fowl, and offered burnt offerings on the altar."
Again, the order is important.
Worship comes before work.
Communion comes before cultivation.
The righteous acknowledge Yahuah before seeking provision.
This is the very heart of the Open Field Shemitah.
The Open Field Shemitah begins not with food...
but with faith.
Seedtime and Harvest Continue
Yahuah then makes one of the most important declarations in Scripture.
Genesis 8:21–22
Gen 8:21 And יהוה smelled a soothing fragrance, and יהוה said in His heart, “Never again shall I curse the ground because of man, although the inclination of man’s heart is evil from his youth, and never again strike all living creatures, as I have done,
Gen 8:22 as long as the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.”
Many readers simply see this as a promise about the weather.
But it is far greater than that.
Yahuah is preserving His economy of provision.
The Flood did not abolish the Open Field Shemitah.
It preserved it.
The Creator Himself guarantees that the earth will continue producing according to His appointed order.
Long before Sinai...
Long before Leviticus 25...
Long before the legal Shemitah...
Yahuah had already guaranteed seedtime and harvest.
The Torah therefore does not create the Open Field Shemitah.
It regulates one aspect of a much older covenant reality.
The Covenant Is With the Earth
The covenant continues.
Genesis 9:12–13
Gen 9:12 And Elohim said, “This is the sign of the covenant which I make between Me and you, and every living being that is with you, for all generations to come:
Gen 9:13 “I shall set My rainbow in the cloud, and it shall be for the sign of the covenant between Me and the earth.
Notice something easily overlooked.
The covenant is not merely with Noah.
It includes:
- every living creature,
- the birds,
- the cattle,
- every beast,
- and the earth itself.
The Open Field Shemitah is therefore larger than national YasharEL.
It embraces creation.
The field belongs to Yahuah because the earth belongs to Yahuah.
This prepares us for Leviticus 25, where Yahuah later declares,
Leviticus 25:23
"The land shall not be sold for ever: for the land is Mine..."
Sinai did not introduce ownership.
It acknowledged ownership that had existed since creation.
One of the first signs of the preservation of the Open Field Shemitah after the Flood is the rainbow.
Genesis 9:13
"I do set My bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a covenant between Me and the earth."
The rainbow is not merely a reminder that the Flood will never again destroy the earth.
It is the visible sign that Yahuah has committed Himself to preserve the earth, its seasons, its seedtime, its harvest, and His covenant with creation. The Open Field Shemitah continues because Yahuah Himself guarantees it.
Remarkably, the rainbow does not disappear after Genesis.
When Yochanan is taken into heaven, he sees the throne itself.
Rev 4:2 And immediately I came to be in the Ruach and saw a throne set in the heaven, and One sat on the throne.
Rev 4:3 And He who sat there was like a jasper and a ruby stone in appearance. And there was a rainbow around the throne, like an emerald in appearance.
This is profound.
The rainbow is no longer seen merely in the clouds over the earth.
It surrounds the throne of Yahuah.
If Genesis reveals the covenant sign upon the earth, Revelation reveals its heavenly source.
The covenant does not originate from the earth.
It proceeds from the throne.
Within the framework of the Open Field Shemitah, this is significant.
The Open Field Shemitah is not ultimately sustained by rain, fertile soil, or faithful farmers.
Its true source is the throne of Yahuah.
The rainbow encircling the throne declares that every covenant promise flows from His sovereign rule.
The field is sustained because the throne is faithful.
The harvest continues because the King reigns.
The seasons endure because the covenant proceeds from heaven.
Notice also John's description of the One seated upon the throne.
"...like a jasper and a sardius stone..."
Many students of Scripture have observed that these correspond to the first and last stones of the High Priest's breastpiece described in Exodus 28:17–20 and Exodus 39:10–13
The High Priest bore the tribes of YasharEL over his heart when entering the Presence of Yahuah.
Now John sees the enthroned One surrounded by the rainbow of covenant faithfulness, with imagery recalling the High Priest's breastpiece.
The covenant, the priesthood, and the throne converge.
The Open Field Shemitah is therefore not merely an agricultural ordinance.
It is a heavenly reality proceeding from the throne through the Great High Priest.
This also harmonizes with the river flowing from the throne.
Rev 22:1 And he showed me a river of water of life, clear as crystal, coming from the throne of Elohim and of the Lamb.
Rev 22:2 In the middle of its street, and on either side of the river, was the tree of life, which bore twelve fruits, each tree yielding its fruit every month. And the leaves of the tree were for the healing of the nations.
Life flows from the throne.
The river flows from the throne.
The Tree of Life flourishes because of the throne.
Likewise, within the Open Field Shemitah theme, all true provision flows from the throne.
The field on earth is sustained because heaven governs it.
The Open Field Shemitah is therefore not simply a pattern observed in creation; it is an expression of the covenant faithfulness of Yahuah that proceeds from His throne and is ultimately administered through His eternal High Priest.
Noah Plants a Vineyard
Genesis then records something that many readers overlook.
Genesis 9:20
"And Noah began to be an husbandman, and he planted a vineyard."
Why is this important?
Because agriculture resumes.
But notice the order.
Yahuah first establishes His covenant.
Only afterwards does Noah cultivate the earth.
The Open Field Shemitah always precedes human labour.
Grace comes before work.
Provision comes before cultivation.
The covenant comes before the vineyard.
A New Insight — Noah Did Not Create the Harvest
Noah planted.
But Noah did not create life.
He did not invent seed.
He did not command rain.
He did not establish the seasons.
Everything necessary for the vineyard already belonged to Yahuah.
This is precisely why Sha'ul later writes,
1 Corinthians 3:6–7
1Co 3:6 I planted, Apollos watered, but Elohim was giving growth.
1Co 3:7 So neither he who plants nor he who waters is any at all, but Elohim who gives the increase.
Sha'ul is not introducing a new doctrine.
He is echoing the same principle first revealed in Eden...
preserved through Noah...
and later embodied in the Open Field Shemitah.
Man may plant.
Only Yahuah gives increase.
Deduction
The Flood did not destroy the Open Field Shemitah.
It destroyed a civilization that had embraced the Way of Cain.
Yahuah preserved His covenant economy through one righteous family.
The rainbow became the sign that His provision would continue while the earth remained.
The seasons...
the rain...
the harvest...
and the field itself...
would continue bearing witness that the Creator alone gives increase.
Thus, Noah becomes another powerful witness that the Open Field Shemitah existed centuries before Sinai and was preserved by Yahuah through judgment.
6. Melchitsedeq — The Priest of the Open Field Shemitah
Having seen that the Open Field Shemitah survived the Flood through Noah, Scripture now introduces one of its greatest mysteries.
There is no genealogy.
No beginning recorded.
No Levitical priesthood.
No Temple.
No altar of burnt offerings described.
No Sinai.
No Torah.
Yet there is a priest.
This immediately tells us something profound.
The priesthood of Yahuah did not begin with Levi.
The Open Field Shemitah did not begin with Moses.
Both already existed as heavenly realities before they were later enclosed within the covenant given at Sinai.
Abram Meets Melchitsedeq
Following Abram's victory over the kings, Scripture records an extraordinary encounter.
Genesis 14:18–20
Gen 14:18 And Malkitseḏeq sovereign of Shalěm brought out bread and wine. Now he was the priest of the Most High Ěl.
Gen 14:19 And he blessed him and said, “Blessed be Aḇram of the Most High Ěl, Possessor of the heavens and earth.
Gen 14:20 “And blessed be the Most High Ěl who has delivered your enemies into your hand.” And he gave him a tenth of all.
Every sentence deserves careful attention.
A Priest Without Sinai
The first question is obvious.
How can there be a priest...
before Levi?
Before Aaron?
Before the Tabernacle?
Before sacrifices prescribed by Torah?
Because priesthood did not originate at Sinai.
Sinai merely established the Levitical administration for the nation of YasharEL.
Melchitsedeq belongs to a far older priesthood.
One that comes directly from Yahuah.
The writer to the Hebrews later confirms this.
Hebrews 7:1–3
Heb 7:1 For this Malkitseḏeq, sovereign of Shalěm, priest of the Most High Elohim, who met Aḇraham returning from the slaughter of the sovereigns and blessed him,
Heb 7:2 to whom also Aḇraham gave a tenth part of all, his name being translated, indeed, first, ‘sovereign of righteousness,’ and then also sovereign of Shalěm, that is, ‘sovereign of peace,’
Heb 7:3 without father, without mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of life, but having been made like the Son of Elohim, remains a priest for all time.
The eternal priesthood precedes the Levitical one.
Likewise, the Open Field Shemitah precedes the legal Shemitah.
The heavenly reality always comes before its earthly shadow.
Bread and Wine Before Sinai
The next detail is astonishing.
Genesis 14:18 And Malkitseḏeq sovereign of Shalěm brought out bread and wine. Now he was the priest of the Most High Ěl.
Why bread?
Why wine?
There is no explanation.
Scripture simply presents them.
Later, under Moses, bread and drink offerings become part of YasharEL's worship.
Still later, Yahusha identifies the bread and the cup with Himself.
But centuries before either event, Melchitsedeq brings bread and wine.
Within the framework of the Open Field Shemitah, this is deeply significant.
Bread represents provision.
Wine represents joy, covenant blessing, and fruitfulness.
Neither is introduced through Sinai.
They are revealed before Sinai.
The Open Field Shemitah therefore points beyond mere agricultural abundance.
Its true provision is covenant fellowship flowing from the heavenly priesthood.
"Possessor of Heaven and Earth"
Melchitsedeq blesses Abram saying,
Genesis 14:19
"Blessed be Abram of the Most High Elohim, Possessor of heaven and earth."
This title is not accidental.
The Open Field Shemitah rests upon one foundational truth.
Yahuah owns everything.
The heavens.
The earth.
The fields.
The harvest.
The rain.
The seed.
Nothing belongs ultimately to man.
This prepares the reader for Yahuah's declaration centuries later.
Leviticus 25:23 ‘And the land is not to be sold beyond reclaim, for the land is Mine, for you are sojourners and settlers with Me.
Leviticus is not introducing divine ownership.
It is reminding YasharEL of something already proclaimed by Melchitsedeq.
The land belongs to Yahuah because heaven and earth belong to Yahuah.
The Open Field Shemitah therefore flows from ownership.
The Owner determines how His field is to be used.
Tithes Before the Torah
Abram then responds.
Genesis 14:20 “And blessed be the Most High Ěl who has delivered your enemies into your hand.” And he gave him a tenth of all.
Again we ask...
Why?
No command exists.
No Mosaic legislation requires it.
Yet Abram recognizes the heavenly priesthood.
This is another witness that the principles later written into Torah already existed beforehand.
The tithe acknowledges that increase belongs to Yahuah.
Abram has just won a battle.
Yet he does not attribute the victory to himself.
He returns a tenth of the firstfruits.
He confesses that all increase comes from Yahuah.
This is the very heartbeat of the Open Field Shemitah.
The Open Field Shemitah teaches that increase is never self-generated.
It is always received.
The King of Sodom — A Contrast
Immediately after meeting Melchitsedeq, another king appears.
Genesis 14:21
"And the king of Sodom said unto Abram, Give me the persons, and take the goods to yourself."
Two kings now stand before Abram.
One brings bread and wine.
The other offers wealth.
One blesses in the name of the Most High.
The other tempts with earthly possessions.
Abram must choose which kingdom will define his future.
His answer reveals his heart.
Genesis 14:22–23
Gen 14:22 But Aḇram said to the sovereign of Seḏom, “I have lifted my hand to יהוה, the Most High Ěl, the Possessor of the heavens and earth,
Gen 14:23 not to take a thread or a sandal strap or whatever is yours, lest you should say, ‘I have made Aḇram rich,’
Why?
Lest Sodom should say,
"I have made Abram rich."
Abram refuses to allow man's system to receive the glory for Yahuah's provision.
This is another magnificent picture of the Open Field Shemitah.
The righteous do not look to Sodom as their provider.
They look to Yahuah.
Their increase comes from the throne, not from Babylon.
Deduction
Melchitsedeq reveals that the Open Field Shemitah is inseparably connected with a heavenly priesthood.
Before Sinai there was already:
- a priest,
- a king,
- bread,
- wine,
- blessing,
- tithes,
- divine ownership,
- and covenant fellowship.
All of these existed before the Torah enclosed them within YasharEL's covenant life.
The Levitical priesthood did not create these realities.
It temporarily administered shadows of them.
Melchitsedeq points to the substance.
Thus, the Open Field Shemitah is not merely an agricultural principle.
It is the economy of the heavenly kingdom, flowing from the Most High Elohim, Possessor of heaven and earth, through His eternal priesthood.
7. Abraham — The Open Field Shemitah Walks by Faith
Having seen Melchitsedeq reveal the heavenly priesthood and the heavenly economy of the Open Field Shemitah, the narrative now returns to Abram.
One question immediately confronts us.
How does a man participate in the Open Field Shemitah?
The answer begins with one word.
Faith.
Leave Your Country
Genesis 12:1–3
Gen 12:1 And יהוה said to Aḇram, “Go yourself out of your land, from your relatives and from your father’s house, to a land which I show you.
Gen 12:2 “And I shall make you a great nation, and bless you and make your name great, and you shall be a blessing!
Gen 12:3 “And I shall bless those who bless you, and curse him who curses you. And in you all the clans of the earth shall be blessed.”
Notice what Yahuah does.
He does not first show Abram the land.
He does not first give him the inheritance.
He first asks Abram to leave everything.
Top of Form
His security.
His family.
His possessions.
His familiar world.
The Open Field Shemitah begins with leaving dependence upon man's systems.
Before Abram receives anything...
he must first trust.
Faith always precedes provision.
This same principle appears throughout Scripture.
YasharEL would later have to trust Yahuah during the seventh year.
The disciples would later leave everything to follow Yahusha.
The Open Field Shemitah has never been merely about agriculture.
It has always been about trusting the Provider.
Lift Up Your Eyes
After Lot separates from Abram, Yahuah speaks again.
Genesis 13:14–15
Gen 13:14 And after Lot had separated from him, יהוה said to Aḇram, “Now lift up your eyes and look from the place where you are, northward and southward and eastward and westward,
Gen 13:15 for all the land which you see I shall give to you and your seed forever.
Notice the order.
Abram owns nothing.
Yet Yahuah tells him to look.
The promise precedes possession.
The inheritance precedes ownership.
The Open Field Shemitah teaches the same lesson.
The field belongs to Yahuah before it ever belongs to man.
Man receives.
Yahuah owns.
This truth later becomes explicit.
Leviticus 25:23
"The land shall not be sold for ever: for the land is Mine..."
Leviticus simply declares openly what Abraham had already learned by faith.
Abram Sleeps While Yahuah Works
Genesis 15 contains one of the most astonishing covenant scenes in Scripture.
Abram prepares the covenant sacrifice.
Then something unexpected happens.
Genesis 15:12 And it came to be, when the sun was going down, and a deep sleep fell upon Aḇram, that see, a frightening great darkness fell upon him.
Abram sleeps.
Then Scripture says,
Genesis 15:17 And it came to be, when the sun went down and it was dark, that see, a smoking oven and a burning torch passing between those pieces.
Normally both covenant partners would walk between the pieces.
Yet here...
only Yahuah passes through.
Abram contributes nothing.
Everything depends upon Yahuah.
This perfectly illustrates the Open Field Shemitah.
The covenant rests upon divine faithfulness.
Not human labour.
Not human ability.
Not human achievement.
Yahuah Himself guarantees the promise.
Just as the seventh-year blessing ultimately depended upon Yahuah...
so also Abraham's covenant depended entirely upon Him.
8. Yahuah Yireh — The Open Field Shemitah Provides
We now arrive at one of the greatest revelations before Sinai.
Genesis 22:1–2
Gen 22:1 And it came to be after these events that Elohim tried Aḇraham, and said to him, “Aḇraham!” And he said, “Here I am.”
Gen 22:2 And He said, “Take your son, now, your only son Yitsḥaq, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriyah, and offer him there as an ascending offering on one of the mountains which I command you.”
Everything appears impossible.
The promised seed...
the covenant...
the future...
all seem about to end.
Yet Abraham obeys.
When Isaac asks,
Genesis 22:7 And Yitsḥaq spoke to Aḇraham his father and said, “My father!” And he said, “Here I am, my son.” And he said, “See, the fire and the wood! But where is the lamb for an ascending offering?”
Abraham gives one of Scripture's greatest answers.
Genesis 22:8 And Aḇraham said, “My son, Elohim does provide for Himself the lamb for an ascending offering.” And the two of them went together.
This is the Open Field Shemitah.
Provision comes from Yahuah.
Not from Abraham.
Not from Isaac.
Not from human preparation.
The Provider is Yahuah.
The Ram Already Provided
At the decisive moment,
Genesis 22:13 And Aḇraham lifted his eyes and looked and saw behind him a ram caught in a bush by its horns, and Aḇraham went and took the ram and offered it up for an ascending offering instead of his son.
Notice carefully.
Abraham did not produce the ram.
He discovered it.
Yahuah had already provided it.
The Open Field Shemitah is not about creating provision.
It is about discovering the provision Yahuah has already prepared.
Just as YasharEL would later gather what Yahuah caused to grow...
Abraham receives what Yahuah had already supplied.
Yahuah Yireh
Then Scripture says,
Genesis 22:14 And Aḇraham called the name of the place, ‘יהוה Yireh,’ as it is said to this day, “On the mountain יהוה provides.”
Usually translated,
"Yahuah will provide."
But notice something deeper.
Provision becomes attached to a place.
The mountain becomes known for divine provision.
Throughout Scripture Yahuah continually appoints places where His provision is revealed.
Eden.
The field.
Boaz's field.
The wilderness.
The mountain.
Ultimately...
the execution stake.
Every place points to the same reality.
The Open Field Shemitah is not ultimately about land.
It is about the presence of Yahuah.
Where Yahuah is...there is provision.
Deduction
Abraham teaches us that the Open Field Shemitah is entered through faith.
It begins with leaving human security.
It continues by trusting promises not yet seen.
It rests upon Yahuah's covenant faithfulness.
And it culminates in divine provision already prepared by Yahuah Himself.
The field belongs to Yahuah.
The sacrifice belongs to Yahuah.
The inheritance belongs to Yahuah.
Even the lamb belongs to Yahuah.
Everything comes from Him.
9. Isaac — The Open Field Shemitah During Famine
After Abraham revealed that Yahuah Himself provides the sacrifice, the Scriptures immediately present another remarkable test.
Not on a mountain...
But in a famine.
Throughout Scripture, famine is often associated with judgment, scarcity, and human fear. It is the natural circumstance that tempts people to abandon dependence upon Yahuah and seek provision elsewhere.
The question therefore becomes:
Can the Open Field Shemitah still operate when the field itself appears barren?
The life of Isaac answers that question.
A Famine in the Land
Genesis 26:1 And there was a scarcity of food in the land, besides the first scarcity of food which was in the days of Aḇraham. And Yitsḥaq went to Aḇimeleḵ, sovereign of the Philistines, in Gerar.
Notice that Scripture immediately reminds us this was another famine.
Abraham had also experienced famine.
Now Isaac faces the same test.
The covenant family is not exempt from hardship.
The Open Field Shemitah is not the absence of famine.
It is learning to trust Yahuah in the midst of famine.
The question is never whether the circumstances are favourable.
The question is whether Yahuah remains faithful.
Do Not Go Down to Egypt
Isaac naturally thinks of Egypt.
Egypt was known for the Nile.
Its irrigation often made it less dependent on local rainfall than Canaan.
To human reasoning, Egypt looked like the safest place to survive famine.
Yet Yahuah intervenes.
Gen 26:2 And יהוה appeared to him and said, “Do not go down to Mitsrayim, live in the land which I command you.
Gen 26:3 “Sojourn in this land. And I shall be with you and bless you, for I give all these lands to you and your seed. And I shall establish the oath which I swore to Aḇraham your father
This command is extraordinary.
Human wisdom says:
"Go where there is food."
Yahuah says:
"Stay where I have placed you."
The Open Field Shemitah always confronts this choice.
Will we trust visible resources?
Or will we trust the One who owns the field?
Isaac is called to remain where provision appears least likely because Yahuah Himself is the source of provision.
The blessing does not come from geography.
It comes from the presence of Yahuah.
The Covenant Is Remembered
Yahuah continues:
Gen 26:4 “And I shall increase your seed like the stars of the heavens, and I shall give all these lands to your seed. And in your seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed,
Gen 26:5 because Aḇraham obeyed My voice and guarded My Charge: My commands, My laws, and My Torot.
Notice that the blessing during famine is not isolated from the covenant.
Yahuah ties Isaac's present circumstances to His promises made long before.
The Open Field Shemitah is covenant provision.
It flows from Yahuah's faithfulness, not from favourable conditions.
Isaac Sowed During Famine
Now comes one of the most astonishing verses in the patriarchal narratives.
Genesis 26:12 And Yitsḥaq sowed in that land, and reaped in the same year a hundredfold, and יהוה blessed him.
There was famine.
Yet Isaac sowed.
There was scarcity.
Yet Yahuah multiplied.
There was drought.
Yet there was abundance.
The text does not merely say that Isaac harvested.
It explicitly says:
"Yahuah blessed him."
The hundredfold harvest is not explained by agricultural conditions.
It is explained by divine blessing.
This is one of the clearest witnesses to the Open Field Shemitah before Sinai.
The field responded, not merely to climate, but to the covenant faithfulness of Yahuah.
The Open Field Shemitah demonstrates that the Creator is never limited by the apparent condition of the field.
Where Yahuah blesses, the field yields beyond human expectation.
Prosperity Brings Opposition
Scripture continues.
Gen 26:13 And the man grew great and went forward until he became very great.
Gen 26:14 And he came to have possessions of flocks and possessions of herds and a great body of servants, and the Philistines envied him.
This should sound familiar.
Cain envied Abel.
Now the Philistines envy Isaac.
Whenever Yahuah openly blesses the righteous, opposition follows.
The Way of Cain did not end with Cain.
It reappears whenever divine favour rests upon those who trust Yahuah.
The Open Field Shemitah is therefore not merely a testimony of provision.
It also exposes the hearts of those who refuse to trust Yahuah.
The Wells of Abraham
The Philistines then attack in an unexpected way.
Genesis 26:15 And the Philistines had stopped up all the wells which his father’s servants had dug in the days of Aḇraham his father, and filled them with dirt.
Why the wells?
Because wells represent life.
Without water...
there is no flock.
No harvest.
No survival.
Stopping the wells is an attempt to stop Yahuah's provision.
Throughout Scripture, the enemy repeatedly seeks to block what Yahuah has provided.
The Open Field Shemitah therefore includes more than grain.
It includes every channel through which Yahuah sustains His people.
Isaac Reopens the Wells
Isaac does something remarkable.
Genesis 26:18 And Yitsḥaq dug again the wells of water which they had dug in the days of Aḇraham his father, for the Philistines had stopped them up after the death of Aḇraham. And he called them by the names which his father had called them.
He does not invent a new source.
He uncovers what had already been given.
This beautifully illustrates the Open Field Shemitah.
Yahuah's provision is not newly created every generation.
It is rediscovered.
Isaac removes what the enemy had buried.
He restores access to living water.
This prepares the way for Yahusha's words:
John 4:14 "but whoever drinks of the water I give him shall certainly never thirst. And the water that I give him shall become in him a fountain of water springing up into everlasting life.”
The physical wells of Isaac foreshadow the spiritual provision of the Mashiyach.
Deduction
Isaac demonstrates that the Open Field Shemitah is not suspended by famine.
It is not defeated by opposition.
It is not exhausted by blocked wells.
Where Yahuah is present...
there is blessing.
Where Yahuah blesses...
there is increase.
Where Yahuah opens the way...
there is Rehoboth.
Thus, Isaac becomes one of the clearest pre-Torah witnesses that the Open Field Shemitah operates according to the faithfulness of Yahuah rather than the apparent condition of the land.
Matthew 13:3–9 — The Parable of the Sower
Yahusha begins:
"Behold, a sower went forth to sow..."
The seed falls on four kinds of ground:
- The wayside
- Stony places
- Among thorns
- Good ground
The climax is:
Matthew 13:8 "But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit, some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold."
Mark records the same pattern.
Mark 4:8 "And other fell on good ground, and did yield fruit that sprang up and increased; and brought forth, some thirty, and some sixty, and some an hundred."
Luke simplifies it:
Luke 8:8 “And other fell on the good soil, and grew up, and yielded a crop a hundredfold.” Having said this He cried, “He who has ears to hear, let him hear!”
Yahusha Explains the Parable
Later Yahusha explains that the seed is not literal grain.
Matthew 13:19
"When any one hears the word of the kingdom..."
The seed is the Word of the Kingdom.
The soils represent the condition of the human heart.
Thus, the Open Field is no longer merely an agricultural field.
It becomes the heart prepared to receive the Word.
Connecting Isaac's Hundredfold
Now return to Isaac.
Genesis 26:12
"Then Isaac sowed in that land, and received in the same year an hundredfold: and Yahuah blessed him."
Isaac sowed during famine.
Yahusha speaks of sowing into hearts.
Isaac received a hundredfold because Yahuah blessed him.
Yahusha says the good ground produces thirtyfold, sixtyfold, and a hundredfold.
The common thread is that the increase is not presented as merely the product of human skill. In Isaac's case, Genesis explicitly attributes the increase to Yahuah's blessing. In the parable, the fruitful soil receives the seed and bears abundant fruit according to its condition.
Within the Open Field Shemitah framework, this suggests an important progression:
- In the Pre-Torah Age, Yahuah demonstrates that He can bring extraordinary increase even in famine.
- In the Torah Age, He legislates trust through the Shemitah.
- In the Basharah Age, Yahusha moves the focus from the physical field to the heart, where the Word of the Kingdom bears fruit.
The miracle is no longer simply that a field yields a hundredfold.
The greater miracle is that a heart yields the fruit of the Kingdom.
Another Connection Worth Developing
There is another passage that strengthens the theme.
When Kefa asks what the disciples will receive for leaving everything, Yahusha answers:
Matthew 19:29 "And every one that has forsaken houses, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for My Name's sake, shall receive an hundredfold, and shall inherit everlasting life."
Mark expands this:
Mark 10:29–30
"...shall receive an hundredfold now in this time... and in the world to come eternal life."
Notice how the language of hundredfold moves through Scripture:
- Isaac — a hundredfold harvest in a famine (physical provision).
- Yahusha's parable — a hundredfold fruit from the Word in good ground (spiritual fruitfulness).
- The disciples — a hundredfold reward for leaving everything to follow Yahusha (Kingdom inheritance).
The zera (seed) is sown freely by the Sower.
The first seed falls (נפל, naphal) by the way (על־הדרך, al-ha'derekh).
The "way" is where people travel. In your reading, it also symbolizes the Way of Yahuah, the path of covenant faithfulness. The seed never enters the open field where it can take root. Instead, it remains exposed, and the birds immediately devour it.
Matthew 13:19
"...then comes the wicked one, and catches away that which was sown in his heart."
Yahusha Himself identifies the birds as Satan's activity. The Word is removed before it can bear fruit.
The second seed falls upon rocky ground.
It sprouts quickly but has no depth because of the rock beneath.
Within the Open Field Shemitah framework, one could interpret this as a movement away from the openness of trusting Yahuah toward dependence on what is hard, fixed, and secure in human eyes. The life begins, but it cannot endure because it lacks a deep root in trust.
Yahusha explains: "...he endures for a while... when tribulation or persecution arises because of the word, immediately he falls away."
The third seed falls among thorns.
It grows, but the thorns choke it.
We can connect this to Genesis 3:18:
"Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth..."
The thorns first appear as part of Adam's curse. Cain's life then becomes an example of labor under the cursed ground apart from covenant faithfulness.
Yahusha interprets the thorns as:
- the cares of this world, (be self dependant as Adam was looking at the tree to make him wise)
- the deceitfulness of riches, (wanted to be as Elohim)
- and other desires that choke the Word. (tried to usurp Yahuah's authority)
Within the Open Shemitah framework, the curse continues wherever human anxiety and self-reliance replace trust in Yahuah's provision.
Only the seed that remains in good ground bears fruit:
- thirtyfold,
- sixtyfold,
- and a hundredfold.
Here the Word remains, takes root, and produces increase.
"Within this study, anything that departs from the Way illustrates the tendency to replace trust in Yahuah's providence with reliance upon human effort. In that sense, it reflects what I am calling the 'Legal Shemitah'—an approach that preserves the outward form while losing the faith that the Open Field Shemitah was designed to cultivate."
10. Jacob — The Open Field Shemitah Cannot Be Manipulated
Isaac demonstrated that Yahuah can produce abundance in famine.
Jacob now demonstrates another truth.
The Open Field Shemitah cannot be manipulated by human schemes.
Increase belongs to Yahuah alone.
Bethel — Heaven Opens Before the Land
Jacob leaves his father's house with nothing.
No inheritance.
No possessions.
No field.
No flock.
Only the covenant promise.
As night falls, he lies down in an open place.
Genesis 28:11 And he came upon a place and stopped over for the night, for the sun had set. And he took one of the stones of that place and put it at his head, and he lay down in that place to sleep.
The heir of Abraham sleeps upon bare stones.
Again, the covenant does not begin with abundance.
It begins with dependence.
The Ladder
Genesis 28:12 "And he dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven: and behold the messengers of Elohim ascending and descending on it."
Notice the direction.
The ladder joins heaven and earth.
Provision flows from above.
Earth does not sustain heaven.
Heaven sustains earth.
The Open Field Shemitah has always flowed from heaven toward earth.
The field receives.
Heaven gives.
Yahusha later applies this vision to Himself.
John 1:51
"You shall see heaven open, and the messengers of Elohim ascending and descending upon the Son of Man."
The ladder ultimately points to Mashiyach, through whom heaven's provision reaches the earth.
Bethel
Jacob awakens in fear.
Genesis 28:16–17
Gen 28:16 And Ya‛aqoḇ awoke from his sleep and said, “Truly, יהוה is in this place, and I did not know it.”
Gen 28:17 And he was afraid and said, “How awesome is this place! This is none other than the house of Elohim, and this is the gate of the heavens!”
He names the place Bethel—the House of El.
Notice that Jacob possesses no land, yet he encounters the Owner of the land.
The blessing is not first a possession.
It is the Presence.
This is the heartbeat of the Open Field Shemitah.
The Shepherd
Years later Jacob becomes a shepherd under Laban.
Laban repeatedly changes Jacob's wages.
Genesis 31:7 "Your father has deceived me, and changed my wages ten times; but Elohim did not allow him to hurt me."
Laban represents human manipulation.
He believes increase comes through clever contracts.
Jacob learns a different lesson.
Increase comes from Yahuah.
The Flocks Multiply
Jacob separates the speckled and spotted animals.
Many readers think Jacob's rods produced the increase.
But Scripture itself gives another explanation.
Jacob later recounts the dream.
Genesis 31:9 "Thus Elohim has taken away the livestock of your father, and given them to me."
Again he says,
Genesis 31:11–12
Gen 32:11 “Deliver me, I pray, from the hand of my brother, from the hand of Ěsaw, for I fear him, lest he come and shall strike me and the mother with the children.
Gen 32:12 “For You said, ‘I shall certainly do good to you, and shall make your seed as the sand of the sea, which are too numerous to count.’ ”
The increase did not come from Jacob's technique.
It came because Yahuah saw.
Yahuah judged.
Yahuah transferred the increase.
The dream explains what the rods never could.
The Open Field Shemitah is not activated by human methods.
It is governed by divine justice and divine blessing.
The Elohim Who Shepherds
Near the end of his life Jacob blesses Joseph's sons.
He says,
Genesis 48:15 And he blessed Yosěph, and said, “The Elohim before whom my fathers Aḇraham and Yitsḥaq walked, the Elohim who has fed/רעה (ra'ah) me all my life long to this day,
The Hebrew verb רעה (ra'ah) literally means to shepherd.
Jacob is saying,
"The Elohim who has shepherded me all my life."
Jacob had cared for sheep.
Yet he recognized that he himself had been the sheep.
Yahuah was the true Shepherd.
This is one of the clearest patriarchal testimonies that all provision ultimately comes from Yahuah.
The shepherd himself depends upon the Great Shepherd.
Deduction
Jacob teaches that the Open Field Shemitah cannot be secured through manipulation, contracts, cleverness, or human wisdom.
Laban changed the wages.
Yahuah changed the outcome.
Jacob tended the flock.
Yahuah multiplied the flock.
Jacob possessed no land.
Yet heaven remained open over him.
The Open Field Shemitah is therefore not dependent upon favourable employers, fair wages, or human systems.
It rests upon the Shepherd of YasharEL, who watches, provides, and gives increase according to His covenant.
"If the Open Field Shemitah already operated through creation, the patriarchs, and the covenant before Sinai, then why did Yahuah later legislate the Shemitah in the Torah? Did the Torah create this reality—or did it reveal and enclose what had always been true? That is where we turn next."