Just like taking a shower, the water washes away your old skin and you regenerate into a new being every time. Aquarius is DEFINITELY all about the coming wrath. Grab your beer and run for the hills!
Me, I think I'll just go fishing...
You make it sound like the judgment process is some kind of on-and-off switch.
During the First Coming, the following feasts were brought to life through Jesus:
HEBREW NAME | ENGLISH NAME |
1. Pesach | Passover |
2. Hag HaMatzah | Feast of Unleavened Bread |
3. Bikkurim | First Fruits (of the Barley Harvest) |
4. Shavout | Feast of Weeks/Pentecost |
During the Second Coming, these feasts will be brought to life:
HEBREW NAME | ENGLISH NAME |
5. Yom Teruah or Rosh HaShanah | Feast of Trumpets |
6. Yom Kippur | Day of Atonement |
7. Sukkot | Feast of Tabernacles/Booths |
The Second Coming begins with Rosh Hashanah, which is also referred to as the Jewish New Year. It is observed for two days. In Jewish tradition, Rosh Hashanah marks the anniversary of the creation of the world as described in the Torah. It is also the day on which God inscribes the fate of each person in the "Book of Life" or the "Book of Death", determining both if they will have a good or bad year, and whether we will live or die.
Why is this? This is so because the "wrath of God" is not simply something for the so-called 'end of the world'. In the Bible it is also spoken of as something already operative in certain people. For example, George may be as wise as a fox, but he will definitely have to watch his whiskers in this regard.
John 3:36 provides an example of this already operative "wrath of God":
Jesus said, "Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God's wrath remains on him."
If you grab your beer and run for the Appalachian hills, or alternatively for the Australian Outback, you will not save yourself, because you will attempt to flee judgement, and in reality the wrath of God is already on you, and you cannot flee it.
Further proof of this is the Jewish holiday that follows the two days of Rosh Hashanah. Rosh Hashanah marks the beginning of a ten-day period on the Jewish calendar that focuses on repentance or
teshuvah. This is what you need to do:
make amends, not run for the hills with your
.30-06!
The ten-day period known as the "Days of Awe" (
Yamim Nora'im) or the "Ten Days of Repentance" (
Aseret Yamei T'shuvah) in reality begins with Rosh Hashanah (or messianically with the resurrection of the dead/rapture of the believers), and ends with Yom Kippur (or messianically with the day of Christ's Second Coming). So Rosh Hashanah begins with the rebirth of the fellow who was called Yeshua HaNotzri, and the rebirth of even those who pierced him (Revelation 1:7), while Yom Kippur begins with the
parousia, when we shall all realise that Yeshua is in our midst, and even those who pierced him will realise that — lots of foxes will lose their whiskers...
The time between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur is special in the Jewish calendar. Jews are required to focus on repentance and atonement during this period. While God passes judgment on Rosh Hashanah, in reality the books of life and death remain open during the Days of Awe so that Jews have the opportunity to change which book they are in before it is sealed on Yom Kippur. Jews spend these days working to amend their behaviour and in seeking forgiveness for wrongs done during the past year.
Perhaps we could learn a thing or two from Jewish customs. During this "Age of Awe", some of us will actually meet Yeshua without even realising it. However, all of us who still have a chance for redemption, will still have the opportunity to change which book we will find ourselves in (Life or Death) before the books are is sealed, with our permanent fate, on Yom Kippur.
This is what the beginning of the 'Age of Aquarius' is all about:
atonement, not continuation of sin.
Wisdom, not foolishness.
Responsibility, not corporate or governmental irresponsibility. You cannot have a harvest of nutrition and goodness if all you sow are GMOs. No, GMOs are not, or should not be kosher.
All our micronations are like temporary shelters or
Sukkah, almost ready for the Feast of Tabernacles/Booths. But we should all ask ourselves whether we genuinely have the perfect etrog (a kind citron saught during the feast), and a perfect palm branch, and three perfect myrtle twigs, and two perfect willow branches. A poor harvest would not be cause for celebration anymore than rampant evil would provide the perfect ingredients for Salvation.