Yom Teruah, the day of trumpets, does involve the trumpet or shofar blast. This may be different from the last trumpet in Christianity, the New Testament, and the Bible. You may want to consider this. I have, and what I was taught as a possibility may or may not be true. I don't see any indicator that says that this is true.In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet blast [shofar hagadol]: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. - 1 Corinthians 15:52
I am both a Jew (a convert) and a Christian. I grew up a (born again) Christian first.
To become a "Jew", you can believe just about anything... except you must denounce Jesus of Nazareth.
All the "feasts" [lit: Divine Appointments] have profound prophetic significance to all believers. The early church clearly understood this.
Yom Teruah (also known as "day that no man knows") is the only 'feast' where no one knows the day or hour it will begin. It starts when the new moon is witnessed by two people.
Jesus may have alluded to this in Matt. 24:36 ""However, no one knows the day or hour when these things will happen, not even the angels in heaven or the Son himself. Only the Father knows."\Also.... Possibly, the two witnesses that come before the feast of trumpets, may be a foreshadowing of the two witnesses who come before the rapture. Rev. 11:3,4
I don't see what you are saying, an acronym, found in the Talmud. I don't know, also, if what the Talmud says (about Jesus) was the perspective of any person or any people. That is, it is my belief that Jesus never sinned. He never did anything wrong.Judaism of today is based mostly upon the Talmud, which is a commentary on the Scriptures and Judaism.
Although there is some very interesting information contained therein, there are many things that are contrary to Scripture. For sure, there are some very derogatory comments concerning Jesus of Nazareth.
According to the Babylonian Talmud (Sanhedrin 43a) the name "Yeshu" is generally believed to be an acronym for י = Yimaḥ ש = Shĕmo ו = Wezikhro = meaning, May his name and memory be stricken out-(ie: forever forgotten).
The final trumpet is a literal sound that will occur before the seventh trumpet plague. The trumpet plagues are not literally trumpets, they are plagues.
The final (last) trumpet will be a single blast from a silver trumpet to call the firstfruits to assemble. This occurs at Pentecost.
I don't understand this to be the case, and I don't know why you say this.
I am also a proponent for Biblical Judaism.
I understand. As a convert I am of Israel. Yes, the Torah is for all Israel. In Judaism, Biblical Judaism, first century Judaism, we find observation of the things of Torah. And this is good. The point is that I have nothing against the Talmud, that it is being challenged though the testimony given about it is apparently untrue, and that I understand that in Judaism prior to the coming of Yeshua Messiah there was the expectation that the Messiah would come. This is Biblical Judaism, including obeying God's commands as Messiah did.There is no such thing as biblical Judaism. The Torah was for all Israel.
I say it because it is scripture.
I don't know what you are talking about.Teruah does not always mean the blowing of trumpets. It can mean a shout, a loud cry, an alarm, or shouts of joy. How it was fulfilled in Christ, when He was born by the shouts of angels in joy [rejoice!], and the shepherds rejoicing and worshiping the Lord Jesus Christ, is definitely worthy of consideration.
I don't know what you are talking about.
There are different reasons to sound the shofar. Also, it is not always the same sound.
In Judaism, Biblical Judaism, first century Judaism, we find observation of the things of Torah.
Do you know what the word Teruah means?Of course you don't. You play the game of being Jewish and depend on outside non-Biblical Rabbinic sources instead of just sticking to the Scriptural text. The feast of Yom Teruah - it does not say there was a blowing of Trumpets in the text. It could have been a shout of joy. There are other trumpets beside the shofar. If a trumpet was sounded on Yom Teruah, it probably was not a shofar. The shofar was commanded to be blown only once [as commanded in the Law of Moses] - at Yom Kippur. That makes what you have posted mostly conjecture.