Sunday, May 17, 2026

From Yarden to Gulgoleth: The Elijah Pattern, the Galgal Wheel, and the Journey of Yahusha

Preface 

This study emerged from tracing repeated patterns hidden within the scriptures — patterns woven through geography, chronology, covenant history, wilderness movements, prophetic transitions, and the language of the Hebrew text itself. Certain journeys, locations, time periods, and prophetic witnesses appear again and again across the Torah, the Prophets, the Basharah accounts, and Revelation, forming a unified structure that stretches from the earliest foundations of YasharEL to the closing moments of mankind’s appointed era.

What initially appear to be isolated events begin to reveal themselves as interconnected witnesses: rivers and wildernesses become thresholds of transition; wheels and whirlwinds become signs of movement, sifting, and divine judgment; prophetic ministries echo one another across generations; and specific paths through the land carry meanings far deeper than simple geography. The scriptures consistently speak in patterns, shadows, reversals, cycles, and covenantal structures that point beyond a single historical moment.

This work does not attempt to force symbolism onto the text, but rather follows the recurring scriptural motifs as they naturally unfold from Genesis through Revelation. The focus is not merely on historical events themselves, but on how those events interlock as part of a greater prophetic design governed by appointed times, covenant order, and the movement of the Kavod of Yahuah among His people.

At the center of this exploration stands the wilderness path — the journey through descent, testing, separation, witness, and ultimate fulfillment. The prophets, the patriarchs, the crossing places, the mountains, the rivers, and the sacred boundaries all testify together in a unified voice. When viewed collectively, these witnesses form a remarkable tapestry revealing the precision, continuity, and harmony of the scriptural narrative.

The purpose of this study is therefore not merely informational, but observational: to carefully examine the scriptural patterns, geographical movements, linguistic structures, prophetic timelines, and covenant themes that repeatedly converge across the Word. By following these interconnected paths, the reader is invited to consider the possibility that the scriptures operate as one continuous prophetic testimony — layered, ordered, and intentionally woven together from beginning to end.

 The ministry of Elijah is not merely a sequence of isolated miracles, but a prophetic micro-pattern revealing the structure of the entire appointed timeline of mankind. His life becomes a living blueprint that unlocks the relationship between Daniel’s seventy weeks, the seven days of creation, the Jubilee structure, the final Shemitah, the wilderness flight, the atmospheric whirlwind, and the closing of the 7,000-year era.

The pattern begins in the days of Ahab when Elijah announces the shutting of the heavens:

“As יהוה Elohim of YasharEL lives, before whom I stand, there shall not be dew nor rain these years, but according to my word.”

1 Kings 17:1

The duration of this drought is later revealed with exact precision:

“Elijah was a man subject to like passions as we are, and he prayed earnestly that it might not rain: and it rained not on the earth by the space of three years and six months.”

James 5:17

Three and a half years. One half of a complete seven-year Shemitah.

This becomes the master prophetic unit repeated throughout scripture.

Elijah’s ministry during this split Shemitah unfolds in two distinct wilderness phases. First he is hidden and fed supernaturally:

“Get thee hence, and turn thee eastward, and hide thyself by the brook Cherith, that is before Jordan.”

— 1 Kings 17:3

He is sustained outside the corrupted kingdom system while the heavens remain shut.

Then comes the second phase.

After Mount Carmel and the exposure of Baal worship, instead of national repentance there comes intensified persecution. Jezebel seeks his life:

“Then Jezebel sent a messenger unto Elijah, saying... tomorrow about this time I will make thy life as the life of one of them.”

1 Kings 19:2

Elijah flees deeper into the wilderness.

This exact split pattern later appears again in Revelation through the Two Witnesses and the Woman in the wilderness.

The Two Witnesses operate explicitly in the authority of Elijah:

“These have power to shut heaven, that it rain not in the days of their prophecy.”

Revelation 11:6

Their ministry lasts:

“a thousand two hundred and threescore days.”

Revelation 11:3

Again: 3.5 years.

Simultaneously the Woman representing Covenant YasharEL enters the wilderness:

“And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of Elohim, that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days.”

Revelation 12:6

The pattern mirrors Elijah at Cherith.

Then the persecution intensifies:

“And to the woman were given two wings of a great eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness... for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent.”

Revelation 12:14

The second wilderness phase mirrors Elijah fleeing from Jezebel.

Thus Elijah’s literal historical ministry becomes the prophetic skeleton of the final Shemitah.

But Elijah’s final journey in 2 Kings 2 unlocks an even deeper mystery.

The route itself is reversed.

YasharEL originally entered the land by crossing the Jordan under Joshua, overthrowing Jericho, establishing camp at Gilgal, and moving toward the sanctuary.

Elijah walks this route backward.

“And Elijah went with Elisha from Gilgal.”

2 Kings 2:1

Then:

“they went down to Bethel.”

2 Kings 2:2

Then:

“they came to Jericho.”

— 2 Kings 2:4

Then they crossed the Jordan back out of the land:

“they two went over on dry ground.”

— 2 Kings 2:8

Only after exiting beyond the Jordan does the whirlwind appear.

This reverse geography is deliberate.

The nation under Ahab and Jezebel had spiritually undone the conquest under Joshua. Elijah retraces Israel’s covenant history backward, showing the kingdom has returned to a wilderness condition.

The locations themselves carry prophetic meaning.

Gilgal is linked to rolling and wheels. The root connects directly to Galgal — the whirling wheel of Ezekiel’s vision:

“As for the wheels, it was cried unto them in my hearing, O Galgal.”

Ezekiel 10:13

Gilgal was where the reproach of Egypt was “rolled away”:

“This day have I rolled away the reproach of Egypt from off you.”

— Joshua 5:9

The journey begins at the wheel.

Bethel (“House of El”) recalls Jacob’s ladder reaching into shamayim:

“And he dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven.”

— Genesis 28:12

Jericho was the first pagan stronghold overthrown by YasharEL after crossing the Jordan.

The overthrow itself mirrored the motion of a wheel.

For six days YasharEL circled the city once daily.

On the seventh day they circled seven times:

“And seven priests shall bear before the ark seven trumpets... and the seventh day ye shall compass the city seven times.”

— Joshua 6:4

The city was encircled like a Galgal.

When the final cycle completed, the walls collapsed.

Jericho became a terrestrial manifestation of the heavenly wheel of judgment.

Elijah reverses this entire process.

He unwinds the wheel.

He walks backward through YasharEL’s covenant history until he reaches the Jordan — the river of descent.

The name Jordan (Yarden) comes from yarad:

“To descend.”

This becomes critical in Ezekiel’s vision:

“And I looked, and, behold, a whirlwind came out of the north...”

— Ezekiel 1:4

The whirlwind is the Hebrew se’arah, from the root sa’ar:

To toss.

To shake.

To sift.

To storm violently.

This same word appears when Elijah is taken:

“Elijah went up by a whirlwind (searah) into heaven.”

— 2 Kings 2:11

The whirlwind is not describing departure beyond creation. It is an atmospheric storm within shamayim — the visible heavens.

Scripture itself confirms Elijah remained within the earthly realm because years later a letter arrives from him to King Jehoram:

“And there came a writing to him from Elijah the prophet...”

— 2 Chronicles 21:12

Thus Elijah’s whirlwind was not annihilation nor removal from existence. It was a transition in public status and ministry through the atmospheric sa’ar.

The whirlwind acts like a threshing mechanism.

Scripture repeatedly uses sifting imagery this way:

“I will sift the house of YasharEL among all nations, like as corn is sifted in a sieve.”

— Amos 9:9

And to Kepha Yahusha said:

“Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat.”

— Luke 22:31

The whirlwind becomes the visible manifestation of this heavenly sifting process.

Ezekiel sees the Kabod arriving inside the storm.

“A whirlwind came out of the north, a great cloud, and a fire infolding itself.”

— Ezekiel 1:4

The fiery chariot and the Galgal move within the atmospheric tempest.

The Kabod later departs the sanctuary:

“Then the glory of יהוה departed from off the threshold of the house.”

— Ezekiel 10:18

And finally stands east of the city:

“And the glory of יהוה went up from the midst of the city, and stood upon the mountain which is on the east side of the city.”

— Ezekiel 11:23

The Mount of Olives.

This exact movement later appears again in Yahusha’s ministry.

He departs the temple system after pronouncing judgment upon it. He crosses the Kidron. He ascends the Mount of Olives. He goes outside the city to Gulgoleth.

The linguistic structure itself matters.

Galgal — wheel.

Gilgal — rolling place.

Gulgoleth — skull.

All carry the rolling, circular, whirling structure.

At Gulgoleth the atmosphere itself convulses:

“And from the sixth hour there was darkness over all the land unto the ninth hour.”

— Matthew 27:45

The earth shakes:

“And the earth did quake, and the rocks rent.”

— Matthew 27:51

The veil tears.

The Kabod moves outside the institutional sanctuary.

This aligns perfectly with the greater 7,000-year structure.

The seven days of creation prophetically mirror the seven-thousand-year era of mankind:

“One day is with יהוה as a thousand years.”

— 2 Peter 3:8

According to the longer chronology preserved in the Septuagint tradition, Yahusha manifests at the 5,000-year threshold — the Jubilee of Jubilees.

Fifty jubilees.

Fifty times fifty.

At this cosmic Jubilee, He begins a 3.5-year ministry and fulfills Daniel’s midpoint division:

“And in the midst of the week he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease.”

— Daniel 9:27

Again the timeline splits.

Again the Shemitah is divided.

Again the Elijah pattern appears.

The final era from Year 5,000 to Year 7,000 becomes the closing block of mankind’s history.

Within this period the final Shemitah emerges.

The first 1,260 days mirror Elijah at Cherith: hidden provision, shut heavens, wilderness preservation.

The second 1,260 days mirror Elijah fleeing Jezebel: intensified persecution, deeper wilderness flight, atmospheric sifting.

The Two Witnesses themselves become Elijah-pattern prophets:

“These have power to shut heaven.”

— Revelation 11:6

After their testimony they are slain in Jerusalem:

“their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great city.”

— Revelation 11:8

Then after 3.5 days:

“they ascended up to heaven in a cloud; and their enemies beheld them.”

— Revelation 11:12

This mirrors Elijah’s whirlwind ascension exactly — an atmospheric elevation concluding their public witness.

The entire age becomes one vast sa’ar.

A cosmic whirlwind.

A global sifting.

As the 7,000th year approaches, the wheel accelerates like the final circuits around Jericho.

The systems of human empire stand like walls awaiting collapse.

The final trumpet pattern completes.

The final revolution of the Galgal arrives.

Then the kingdoms of men fall flat like Jericho before the presence of Yahuah.

The entire structure — Elijah, Ezekiel, Gilgal, Jericho, Jordan, Daniel’s week, the wilderness woman, the Two Witnesses, the atmospheric whirlwind, and the Jubilee of Jubilees — forms one continuous prophetic design revealing the ordered redemptive calendar established from the foundation of the world.

Among all the prophets of YasharEL, Elijah stands uniquely as the prophet of transition, wilderness separation, covenant confrontation, and atmospheric judgment. His ministry becomes the living prophetic pattern through which later witnesses are understood. He is not merely remembered for miracles, but for embodying the Ruach-driven function of restoring covenant order before divine visitation and judgment.

This is why Elijah appears centuries later alongside Moses in the vision upon the mountain when Yahusha is transfigured before chosen witnesses:

“And, behold, there appeared unto them Moses and Elijah talking with him.”

— Matthew 17:3

Moses represented the Torah and covenant foundation. Elijah represented the prophetic restoration and the calling back of a corrupted people to Yahuah before judgment falls. Together they stood as the two great witnesses of covenant history bearing testimony concerning Yahusha.

The appearance of Elijah there is deeply connected to the prophetic expectation spoken through Malachi:

“Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of יהוה.”

— Malachi 4:5

This prophecy does not require Elijah to return as the identical physical individual repeating his former life. Scripture itself explains that the “Elijah” to come would function in the same Ruach, authority, and wilderness calling.

This is why the messenger sent before Yahusha was John the Baptist.

The angel announced concerning John:

“And he shall go before him in the spirit and power of Elijah.”

— Luke 1:17

John did not claim to be literally Elijah reincarnated or physically returned:

“And they asked him, What then? Art thou Elijah? And he saith, I am not.”

— John 1:21

Yet Yahusha openly testified concerning him:

“For this is he, of whom it is written, Behold, I send my messenger before thy face.”

— Matthew 11:10

And again:

“If ye will receive it, this is Elijah, which was for to come.”

— Matthew 11:14

Thus the “coming Elijah” was fulfilled through prophetic function, Ruach-pattern, and covenant role.

The parallels between Elijah and John are astonishingly deliberate and cannot reasonably be dismissed as coincidence.

Elijah is described as:

“an hairy man, and girt with a girdle of leather about his loins.”

— 2 Kings 1:8

John appears clothed identically:

“And the same John had his raiment of camel's hair, and a leathern girdle about his loins.”

— Matthew 3:4

John was intentionally dressed as Elijah.

His clothing itself was prophetic testimony.

He stood visibly as the wilderness prophet confronting an apostate generation exactly as Elijah confronted Ahab and Jezebel.

Even his food reflects the wilderness pattern:

“and his meat was locusts and wild honey.”

— Matthew 3:4

Wild honey is wilderness provision.

Elijah was fed supernaturally outside the corrupted kingdom system — first by ravens (arabs and not the unclean bird as oreb is the same word arab which means dark or evening , it also refers to dark skinned nomads living in the wilderness) , at Cherith, later through miraculous provision at a widows house, John likewise lives separated from urban religious structures and survives on wilderness sustenance. Both prophets stand outside institutional corruption while calling the nation to repentance.

The geographical parallels become even more profound.

Elijah’s final public act occurs after retracing YasharEL’s covenant history backward — from Gilgal to Bethel to Jericho and finally across the Jordan:

“And Elijah took his mantle, and wrapped it together, and smote the waters, and they were divided hither and thither, so that they two went over on dry ground.”

— 2 Kings 2:8

Then beyond the Jordan:

“there appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire... and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven.”

— 2 Kings 2:11

The Jordan becomes the threshold of transition, descent, separation, and heavenly movement.

Centuries later John begins his ministry in this exact same region:

“John did baptize in the wilderness.”

— Mark 1:4

And specifically:

“in Jordan.”

— Matthew 3:6

This is not accidental geography.

The Jordan (Yarden) comes from yarad — “to descend.”

It is the river of descent and transition.

YasharEL descended into covenant inheritance through the Jordan under Joshua. Elijah crossed back over it in reverse before the whirlwind. John stands again at this boundary calling YasharEL to descend into repentance before the coming visitation of Yahuah.

His immersion ministry at the Jordan symbolized the nation needing to start over.

They had to re-enter covenant.

They had to return to the wilderness threshold.

This is why John preached:

“Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.”

— Matthew 3:2

His message echoed Elijah’s confrontation at Carmel where the prophet cried:

“How long halt ye between two opinions? if יהוה be Elohim, follow him.”

— 1 Kings 18:21

Both ministries demanded covenant decision.

Both confronted corrupt leadership.

Both stood against adulterated worship.

Both operated outside the accepted religious structures.

Both were associated with wilderness isolation, atmospheric judgment, and preparation before divine visitation.

Even the reactions against them mirror one another.

Elijah was hunted by Jezebel.

John was imprisoned and executed under a corrupt ruling system manipulated through an unlawful woman figure reminiscent of Jezebel’s pattern.

Both ministries ended under persecution after confronting unlawful unions and covenant corruption.

Yahusha Himself directly linked John to Elijah while simultaneously elevating him above all prior prophetic witnesses:

“Among them that are born of women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist.”

— Matthew 11:11

Why?

Because John stood at the greatest prophetic threshold in history

Elijah announced judgment and covenant crisis before temporal drought.

John announced the arrival of the Lamb and the turning point of the ages.

Elijah shut the heavens.

John opened the way.

Elijah stood at the Jordan before being taken in the whirlwind.

John stood at the Jordan before the manifestation of Messiah.

Elijah prepared the way for judgment against Baal worship.

John prepared the way for Yahusha at the Jubilee threshold of the ages.

The continuity becomes even deeper when Yahusha Himself comes down into the Jordan:

“Then cometh Yahusha from Galilee to Jordan unto John, to be baptized of him.”

— Matthew 3:13

The Messiah deliberately enters the exact prophetic geography tied to Elijah’s departure.

The Jordan becomes the transition point between eras.

Just as Elijah crossed the Jordan before the whirlwind, Yahusha descends into the Jordan before beginning His 3.5-year ministry.

Immediately afterward:

“Then was Yahusha led up of the Spirit into the wilderness.”

— Matthew 4:1

Again the Elijah pattern appears.

Wilderness.

Testing.

Separation.

Sifting.

The same sa’ar pattern later seen in Revelation emerges again.

John therefore becomes the living bridge between Elijah and the final wilderness assembly.

He stands at the Jordan in the spirit and power of Elijah announcing that the kingdom is near. His clothing, diet, location, authority, message, and opposition all testify that the Elijah pattern had returned to prepare the way of Yahuah.

And just as Elijah’s ministry became the prophetic template for the Two Witnesses and the wilderness remnant of Revelation, John’s ministry also becomes a foreshadowing of the final call before the close of the age — a call out of corrupted systems, back into the wilderness, back to covenant, back to repentance, before the great day of Yahuah overtakes the earth like the final whirlwind of the Galgal.

The ministry of Yahusha is framed within the exact prophetic geography already established through Joshua, Elijah, and John the Baptist. His entire earthly mission moves along the covenant path from Yarden to Gulgoleth, carrying within Himself the complete journey of YasharEL, the prophetic wheel of Galgal, and the final restoration of mankind.

He begins at Yarden.

“Then cometh Yahusha from Galilee to Jordan unto John, to be baptized of him.”

— Matthew 3:13

This is not random geography.

The Jordan (Yarden) is the river of descent, from the Hebrew root yarad — “to go down,” “to descend.” It was the boundary Israel crossed to enter inheritance under Joshua. It was the river Elijah crossed in reverse before the whirlwind. It was the wilderness threshold where covenant transition occurred.

When Yahusha enters the Jordan, He intentionally steps into the full prophetic history of YasharEL.

He descends into the waters representing death, exile, wilderness, and covenant renewal.

The pattern is identical to YasharEL itself.

YasharEL descended into the Jordan under Joshua.

Elijah descended back across it before the whirlwind.

John called the nation back into it for repentance.

Now Yahusha enters it personally.

But unlike the nation, He carries the entire journey within Himself.

Immediately after immersion:

“And Yahusha, when he was baptized, went up straightway out of the water.”

— Matthew 3:16

Then:

“Then was Yahusha led up of the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted.”

— Matthew 4:1

Again the Elijah pattern appears.

Wilderness.

Testing.

Isolation.

Sifting.

Just as Elijah was sustained outside the corrupted kingdom system, Yahusha is driven into the wilderness after crossing Yarden.

The number forty appears again, echoing YasharEL’s forty years and Elijah’s forty-day journey:

“And when he had fasted forty days and forty nights.”

— Matthew 4:2

He relives the entire history of the nation, but without failure.

Where YasharEL murmured, He obeyed.

Where Adam fell, He overcame.

Where the wilderness generation failed, He triumphed.

From Yarden onward, His ministry becomes a living movement toward Gulgoleth.

The path itself mirrors Elijah’s reverse journey.

Elijah moved from Gilgal to Bethel to Jericho to Yarden before the whirlwind. Yahusha now retraces the entire covenant story in His own body and ministry.

This is why the language surrounding His death carries the rolling-wheel structure:

Gilgal — the rolling away.

Galgal — the wheel.

Gulgoleth — the skull.

The same circular, rolling, whirling sound structure runs through them all.

At Gilgal the reproach of Egypt was rolled away:

“This day have I rolled away the reproach of Egypt from off you.”

— Joshua 5:9

At Jericho the people circled like a wheel until the walls collapsed.

At Ezekiel’s vision the Galgal wheels carried the fiery Kabod 

At Gulgoleth Yahusha Himself becomes the place where reproach is removed, judgment falls, and the Kabod departs the earthly sanctuary.

His ministry therefore moves prophetically from the descending waters of Yarden to the skull-place of Gulgoleth.

This is the journey from descent to final offering.

From covenant entry to covenant fulfillment.

From wilderness immersion to cosmic atonement.

Even the atmosphere responds along the way.

At Yarden:

“the heavens were opened unto him.”

— Matthew 3:16

At Gulgoleth:

“there was darkness over all the land.”

— Matthew 27:45

The heavens open at the beginning and darken at the completion.

At Yarden the Ruach descends like a dove.

At Gulgoleth the veil tears and the earth shakes.

The same atmospheric framework seen in Elijah and Ezekiel surrounds Yahusha.

The movement is not merely geographical; it is covenantal and cosmic.

He begins where Elijah departed.

He ends where the Kabod breaks out beyond the corrupted sanctuary.

This is why Yahusha repeatedly speaks of being “lifted up”:

“And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up.”

— John 3:14

And:

“And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me.”

— John 12:32

Like Elijah lifted in the whirlwind.

Like the Kabod rising from the temple.

Like the Galgal wheels ascending in Ezekiel.

Yet Yahusha surpasses every prior pattern because He embodies them all simultaneously.

He is the true YasharEL crossing Yarden.

He is the wilderness prophet greater than Elijah.

He is the true Temple from which the Kabod shines.

He is the final sacrifice outside the city.

He is the living meeting place between heaven and earth first seen at Bethel.

He is the One who completes the wheel.

Thus His earthly ministry forms one continuous prophetic arc:

Yarden → Wilderness → Covenant Witness → Mount of Olives → Kidron → Gulgoleth.

The same geography traveled by the prophets now converges in Him.

He descends into Yarden carrying the story of YasharEL within Himself, and He ascends through suffering toward Gulgoleth where the rolling wheel of judgment, covenant, wilderness, glory, and redemption all meet together in one place.

The journey from Yarden to Gulgoleth is therefore the journey of mankind itself — descent, testing, separation, sifting, sacrifice, and ultimate restoration gathered together into the body and ministry of Yahusha HaMashiach.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Philemon and Onesimus

 Philemon and Onesimus

Phm 1:1   Sha’ul, a prisoner of Messiah יהושע, and Timotiyos the brother, to Pileymon our beloved one and fellow worker,

Phm 1:2  and Apphia our sister, and Archippos our fellow soldier, and the assembly at your house:

Which assembly was Philemon from?

Colossians. How can we know this? In Philemon 1:2 Shaul the emissary greets Philemon along with Apphia and Archippos.

In the letter to the Colossians assembly Shaul the emissary asks to give instructions to Archippos.

Col 4:17  And say to Archippos, “See to the service which you have received in the Master, so that you complete it.”

The other verse to know this, is to see from where Onesimus was 

Shaul mentions him in his letter to the Colossians 

Col 4:7 ¶ All my state shall Tychicus declare unto you, who is a beloved brother, and a faithful minister and fellowservant in Yahuah:

 8 Whom I have sent unto you for the same purpose, that he might know your estate, and comfort your hearts;

 9 With Onesimus, a faithful and beloved brother, who is one of you. They shall make known unto you all things which are done here.

We can see the picture of Onesimus from being a servant / slave to a son in the letter Shaul wrote to Philemon.

Philemon in Greek means 'Friend' or 'friendly'. 

Onesimus was Philemon's slave before his conversion and had left Philemon and was in his journey away from Philemon. In his journey he met Shaul when he was in his bonds and had come to know Yahusha through his ministry,  whom Shaul now calls him as a son. Shaul here was writing to Philemon who was  from Colossians,  in whose house the assembly was held, Shaul was pleading for Onesimus to take him back now as a brother in Messiah and not as a servant/slave. 

Phm 1:10 I beseech thee for my son Onesimus, whom I have begotten in my bonds:

Phm 1:16 Not now as a servant, but above a servant, a brother beloved, specially to me, but how much more unto thee, both in the flesh, and in Yahuah?

Shaul was sending Onesimus once a slave and now a son back to the one whose name means Friend ( spiritually standing for Messiah) as his brother.

 Heb 2:11 For both he that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one: for which cause he is not ashamed to call them brethren,

Phm 1:15 For perhaps he therefore departed for a season, that thou shouldest receive him for ever;

We also see the journey from slave to son in the Torah and we know that the Torah is spirtual.

Ex 21:2 If thou buy an Hebrew servant, six years he shall serve: and in the seventh he shall go out free for nothing.

 3 If he came in by himself, he shall go out by himself: if he were married, then his wife shall go out with him.

 Le 25:40 But as an hired servant, and as a sojourner, he shall be with thee, and shall serve thee unto the year (shaneh) of jubile:

Deu 15:12  “When your brother is sold to you, a Hebrew man or a Hebrew woman, and shall serve you six years, then let him go free from you in the seventh year. 

13 And when thou sendest him out free from thee, thou shalt not let him go away empty:

 14 Thou shalt furnish him liberally out of thy flock, and out of thy floor, and out of thy winepress: of that wherewith Yahuah thy Elohim hath blessed thee thou shalt give unto him.

 15 And thou shalt remember that thou wast a bondman in the land of Egypt, and Yahuah thy Elohim redeemed thee: therefore I command thee this thing to day.

The Torah had transitioned from a physical Shemitah (6 year’s sowing and 7th year release which was one Shemitah cycle) to the release of a slave to send him away in the 7th year if he wishes to, but not empty handed as we read in Deut 15:13 -15. The Deuternomy text were instructions for a Hebrew brother and shouldn’t be mixed with Lev 25:40 which was instruction for a hired servant or sojourner who only was released in 7 x 7 + 1 = 50 which was a jubilee

For Hebrew brother sold as slave we can also refer to Exo 21:2 -3

Phm 1:10 I appeal to you for my child Onesimos, whom I brought forth while in my chains, 

Phm 1:11  who formerly was of no use to you, but now is of good use to you and to me,

Col 4:9  with Onesimos, a true and beloved brother, who is one of you. They shall let you know all the news here. 

It is not clear whether Onesimus was a Hebrew hired servant or a hired servant but his name Onesimus G3682 comes from the Greek word G3685 which means profitable 

This shows us he was from Hebrew origin in dispersion as was Philemon 

The Shemitah had transitioned from the physical to spiritual but the essence of the release in Mashiyach Yahusha presided over mankind in all generations as the physical Torah finds its goal in Him.

Onesimus didn’t live up to his name meaning before his conversion to Mashiyach, when Shaul was in prison and met him, this is why he probably says in Phm 1:11 who formerly was of no use to you, but now of good use to you and to me.

Shaul requesting Philemon to take back Onesimus was to keep the righteous requirement of the Torah in treating every slave now as a brother.

1Ti 6:2  And those who have believing masters, let them not disregard them because they are brothers, but rather serve them because they are believing and beloved ones, those receiving of the good service in return. Teach and urge these matters.

We see Shaul instructing servants in their behaviour towards their masters.

Eph 6:5  Servants, obey your masters according to the flesh, with fear and trembling, in sincerity of heart, as to Messiah; 

Eph 6:6  not with eye-service as men-pleasers, but as servants of Messiah, doing the desire of Elohim from the inner self,

Eph 6:7  rendering service with pleasure, as to the Master, and not to men, 

Eph 6:8  knowing that whatever good anyone does, he shall receive the same from the Master, whether he is slave or free. 

Eph 6:9  And, masters, do the same to them, refrain from threatening, knowing that your own Master also is in the heavens, and there is no partiality with Him.

In the Ephesians and Colossians assembly he gives instructions to both the servants and the masters

Col 3:22  Servants, obey your masters according to the flesh in all respects, not with eye-service, as men-pleasers, but in sincerity of heart, fearing Elohim. 

Col 3:23  And whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Master and not to men, 

Col 3:24  knowing that from the Master you shall receive the reward of the inheritance. It is the Master, Messiah, you serve. 

Col 3:25  But he who does wrong shall be repaid for the wrong which he has done, and there is no partiality.

Col 4:1   Masters, give your servants what is righteous and fair, knowing that you also have a Master in the heavens.

Hence we see the instructions laid out both for the masters and servants was a consummation in the Adon Yahusha ie. Do everything as unto Him and not according to the flesh. For He is the Adon (Master) and as He treated us in love putting on servant hood, we need to imitate Him.

What stands out deeply in the account of Philemon and Onesimos is that Sha’ul never merely solved a social problem between a master and a slave. He revealed a mystery of reconciliation in Messiah. The entire letter breathes the pattern of the Basharah itself.

Onesimos had become separated from his master, just as mankind became separated from Elohim. He was unprofitable, wandering, alienated, and under obligation. Yet in his separation he encounters Sha’ul in bonds, and through a suffering prisoner he is begotten anew. This itself mirrors the pattern of Yahusha, because through the bonds, suffering, and afflictions of Messiah, many sons are brought unto glory.

Sha’ul becomes a mediator figure between Philemon and Onesimos. Notice how he places himself in the middle of the debt:

“if he wronged you or owes you whatever, charge that to me.”

This is the language of substitution. Onesimos cannot restore himself. Sha’ul takes the burden upon himself and intercedes. In this we see a shadow of Messiah standing between the Father and fallen man. Humanity departed from the Father’s house and squandered what belonged to another, becoming “unprofitable,” yet Messiah says, “lay their debt upon Me.”

This is why the transition from servant to son is so powerful in the letter. A slave has no inheritance, no permanence in the house, and no familial standing. But a son abides forever. Yahusha speaks this same mystery:

“If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.”

The freedom in Messiah is not merely release from bondage; it is adoption into household sonship. Onesimos was not merely emancipated. He was elevated.

There is also something beautiful in the fact that Onesimos returns voluntarily. Sha’ul could have retained him:

“whom I wished to keep with me…”

Yet he sends him back. This reflects the spiritual principle that redemption does not abolish righteousness and order; it fulfills it. Messiah does not redeem us into lawlessness but restores us rightly before the Father. Onesimos returns transformed, not compelled outwardly but changed inwardly. Before, he served according to fleshly bondage. Now he returns in love and brotherhood.

This is the same transformation spoken of in Romans. Before Messiah, mankind served sin unwillingly and fearfully. After Messiah, we become “slaves of righteousness,” yet paradoxically this slavery becomes true freedom because love replaces compulsion. The old bondage crushed the man; the new bond-service to Messiah restores the man into what he was created to be.

There is another layer in the phrase:

“receive him as myself.”

This is astonishing language. Sha’ul asks Philemon to see Onesimos through his own standing. This mirrors how believers are received by the Father in Messiah Himself. We are accepted “in the Beloved.” The Father receives the redeemed as identified with His Son.

So Onesimos returns carrying not merely a letter but an identity. Formerly he stood before Philemon as a runaway slave; now he stands clothed in apostolic intercession and brotherhood. Likewise, we come before Elohim clothed not in our former state but in Messiah.

There is a movement throughout Scripture from external release to internal liberation. YasharEL experienced physical redemption from Mitsrayim, but the prophets already pointed toward something deeper — circumcision of heart, cleansing of conscience, release from sin itself.

The Torah’s servant laws were prophetic rehearsals. The seventh-year release foreshadowed release from bondage to sin and death. Jubilee ultimately pointed toward restoration of inheritance. In Adam mankind lost inheritance, sonship, and rest. In Messiah the true Jubilee is proclaimed:

“to proclaim release to the captives.”

So the story of Onesimos is almost a miniature Jubilee narrative. A man separated from his rightful standing is restored permanently through grace and mediation.

And there is something else remarkable. Onesimos likely carried both Colossians and Philemon together back to Colossae. Imagine the assembly hearing Colossians publicly read:

“Onesimos, a faithful and beloved brother, who is one of you.”

The entire assembly now sees him not as property but as brother. The old identity dies publicly. Heaven does this with us also. The adversary remembers the old name, but Elohim publicly declares a new standing.

The contrast between names is also striking spiritually. Philemon means affectionate, friendly, loving. Onesimos means profitable or useful. Sin made mankind unprofitable. Shaul the emissary even uses this wordplay deliberately:

“formerly useless… now useful.”

This echoes humanity itself. Man was created for glory and fruitfulness, yet through sin became vain and corrupted. In Messiah the image is restored so that man once again becomes fruitful unto Elohim.

There is also a subtle echo of Yoseph here. Yoseph himself was a servant/slave who later became a life-giver to his own brethren. Likewise Messiah “took upon Himself the form of a servant.” The path to exaltation came through humiliation. Sha’ul repeatedly calls himself a bondservant because in Messiah the highest freedom is found in willing servitude to Elohim.

The Roman world understood slavery as ownership. Sha’ul transforms this entirely. Believers are “bought with a price,” yet the Master who owns them dies for them. Earthly masters demanded service to enrich themselves; Messiah empties Himself for His servants. Thus the entire master-servant relationship becomes inverted in the Kingdom.

This is why Yahusha washes feet.

The true Master kneels.

And in kneeling He raises slaves into sons.

So the letter to Philemon is not a side personal letter disconnected from doctrine. It is the Basharah enacted in living form: separation, debt, mediation, transformation, reconciliation, brotherhood, and restoration into the household forever.

“For perhaps he departed for a season, that thou shouldest receive him for ever.”

That line reaches beyond Onesimos. It is the story of redeemed humanity itself.


Thursday, May 7, 2026

The Worshiper from the Dispersion Carrying the Wood of Redemption

 The account of שמעון מקירני (Shimon mi-Qyrene) is one of the deepest prophetic moments in the entire Passion narrative because it gathers together the Torah, the dispersion of YasharEL, discipleship, sacrifice, Adam, priesthood, hearing, obedience, and redemption into one living picture.

In Gospel of Mark 15:21 the text says:


“And they compelled one passing by, שמעון איש קירני (Shimon ish Qyrene), coming from the field, the father of אלכסנדרוס (Alexandros) and רופוס (Rufos), to carry His stake.”

This verse is loaded with meaning. Mark does not simply mention “a man.” He gives his name, his origin, his sons, and even preserves the detail that he was “coming from the field.” These details matter because Scripture rarely preserves unnecessary information.

Qyrene itself was a major Yehudi diaspora location. Scripture confirms this repeatedly. In Acts of the Apostles 2:5–10, during Shavuoth, the text says:

“Now there were dwelling in Yerushalayim Yehudim, devout men, from every nation under heaven… Egypt and the parts of Libya adjoining Qyrene…”

Again in Acts 6:9:

“Then there arose some from what is called the Synagogue of the Freedmen, Cyrenians, and Alexandrians…”

And again in Acts 11:19–20:

“Now those who were scattered after the persecution that arose over Stephanos traveled as far as Phoenicia, Cyprus, and Antioch… But some of them were men from Cyprus and Qyrene, who, when they had come to Antioch, spoke to the Hellenists, proclaiming the Adon Yahusha.”

Thus Qyrene was not a pagan city disconnected from covenant life. It was a diaspora center filled with Yehudim attached to Yerushalayim, the Temple, and the appointed feasts of Yahuah.

This explains why Shimon was in Yerushalayim during Pesach. The Torah commanded the males of YasharEL to appear before Yahuah at the pilgrimage feasts. In Book of Deuteronomy 16:16:

“Three times a year all your males shall appear before יהוה אלהיך (Yahuah Eloheikha) in the place which He chooses: at the Feast of Unleavened Bread, at the Feast of Weeks, and at the Feast of Booths.”

Thus Shimon was not merely a random passerby in the ordinary sense. He was a worshiper from the dispersion arriving in covenant obedience during Pesach itself.


The name שמעון (Shimon) comes from the Hebrew root:


שמע


shamaʿ — to hear, to listen, to obey.


This immediately connects with the covenant declaration in Book of Deuteronomy 6:4:


“שמע ישראל יהוה אלהינו יהוה אחד”


Shema YasharEL, Yahuah Eloheinu, Yahuah Echad


“Hear, O YasharEL, Yahuah our Elohim, Yahuah is One.”


In Hebrew thought, hearing is not passive. To hear means to obey. To hear means to follow the voice of Elohim. Thus the hearing one — שמעון (Shimon) — follows behind Yahusha carrying the wood of sacrifice.


This reaches back immediately to Book of Genesis 22:6:

“And Abraham took the wood of the burnt offering and laid it upon Yitschaq his son.”


Yitschaq carries the wood of his own sacrifice up the mountain. Yahusha carries the wood toward Golgotha. Yet now another man is brought into the procession. Humanity itself begins to participate in the path of the Lamb.


This fulfills the words Yahusha had spoken earlier in Gospel of Luke 9:23:

“If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, take up his stake daily, and follow Me.”


Before Golgotha these words were teaching. With Shimon they become visible reality.


Yahusha walks first.
Shimon follows behind carrying the wood.


This is discipleship embodied.


The text also says Shimon was “coming from the field.” This reaches back to Genesis and the curse upon Adam. אדם (Adam) was formed from אדמה (adamah), the ground.


אדם From אדמה


In Book of Genesis 3:17–18 Yahuah says:

“Cursed is the ground because of you… thorns and thistles it shall bring forth for you.”


The field becomes the realm of Adamic toil, labor, sweat, burden, and death. Then in the Passion narrative Yahusha appears crowned with thorns — the visible sign of Adam’s curse — while a man “coming from the field” carries the wood behind Him.

The symbolism is profound.

The man from the cursed ground follows the One bearing the curse.

This also explains why carrying the stake cannot simply be reduced to ordinary labor on a High Day. Yahusha Himself says in Gospel of Matthew 12:5:

“Or have you not read in the Torah that on the Sabbaths the priests in the Temple profane the Sabbath, and are blameless?”

****It was a high day on Yahuah’s calendar as Yahusha had observed the Passover the previous night, whereas for the Yehudim it was still a Preparation Day****

The priests carried wood and performed sacrificial service even on Sabbaths because the work belonged to Yahuah. Thus Shimon carrying the wood is not common labor. It is participation in the sacrificial procession ordained by the Adon of the Sabbath Himself.

The imagery deepens further in the vision of Yechezqel. In Book of Ezekiel 1:19–21, the כרובים (keruvim) move together with the wheels:

“When the living creatures went, the wheels went beside them… for the spirit of the living creatures was in the wheels.”


The wheels are called:


גלגל


galgal — wheels, rolling movement.

The heavenly throne procession moves in perfect obedience to the Spirit of Elohim. Hearing produces movement. Obedience follows the throne.

And now the hearing one — שמעון (Shimon) — follows the Adon toward גלגלתא (Gulgoletha), Golgotha, the Place of the Skull.


גלגלתא


The hearing one follows the enthroned Lamb into the place of sacrifice.

Mark then identifies Shimon specifically as:

“the father of Alexandros and Rufos.”

This detail strongly suggests the assembly already knew this family. Later, in Epistle to the Romans 16:13, Shaul writes:

“Greet Rufos, chosen in the Adon, and his mother and mine.”

Rufos and his mother appear within the assembly at Rome, yet Shimon and Alexandros are absent. Scripture remains silent regarding the reason. Perhaps they had already died. Perhaps they were elsewhere among the dispersed assemblies. The text does not tell us.

No tribe is assigned to Shimon or his household. This absence is itself meaningful. Some emissaries still preserve tribal identity. Shaul says in Epistle to the Philippians 3:5 that he was:

“of the tribe of Binyamin.”

Yet the broader assembly increasingly reflects scattered YasharEL gathered in Mashiach beyond named tribal distinction. Kepha writes in First Epistle of Peter 1:1:

“To the pilgrims of the dispersion…”

And Yaʿaqob writes in Epistle of James 1:1:

“To the twelve tribes in the dispersion, greetings.”

Thus the tribes remain real, yet many individual identities are no longer specified. Shimon and his household become a picture of dispersed covenant YasharEL gathered behind the Lamb without tribal identity being emphasized.

The unnamed tribes follow the Mashiach.

A worshiper from the dispersion arrives in obedience for Pesach. The hearing one comes from the field of Adam’s curse. He is drawn into the sacrificial procession of Yahusha. He carries the wood like Yitschaq. He follows behind the Adon like a disciple. He walks toward גלגלתא (Gulgoletha), the place of death and redemption. And afterward his household appears among the assemblies of the dispersed believers.

The hearing one follows the Lamb.
The worshiper enters the sacrifice.
The scattered tribes are gathered behind the Mashiach.
And the curse-bearing wood moves toward redemption.