I will try to give answer as best i can.This is a attempt only not to be stated as fact.I have never found anywhere in the new testament where it has been fulfilled will say Passover and up to Shavuot has been.The fest of trumpets would mean in some sense to blow the alarm i would think that this feast day is a coming event explained in the book of Revelations is a not hard to see that the feast days are kinda like Yashuah`s way to show us the importance of his appointed times so we might know the end
AnswerSome see prophecies in the Old Testament and believe they were fulfilled in New Testament times. Whether those Old Testament passages were really prophecies is a matter of selective interpretation, and whether they were fulfilled in the New Testament is a matter of faith.
The Old Testament and the New Testament are interconnected through teachings and prophecies. The Old Testament contains prophecies that are fulfilled in the New Testament, showing a continuity in God's plan for humanity. The teachings in both testaments complement each other, emphasizing themes such as redemption, forgiveness, and the coming of the Messiah. Overall, the Old Testament sets the foundation for the teachings and prophecies that are fulfilled in the New Testament.
The title "saint" is usually referred only to personages of the New Testament. Joshua was a patriarch of the Old Testament from the 12th century B.C. He has no feast day in the Church calendar.
Another name for the feast of weeks is the day of Pentecost, and in the New Testament, the Holy Spirit was given on this day to all the disciples as they were gathered together. (Acts 2.1-4)
I assume you are talking about prophecies further explained or fulfilled in the New Testament that were either directly mentioned or alluded to in the Old Testament. I do not think there is any prophecy, indeed subject, in the New Testament that is not mentioned or at least touched on in the Old. The only possible exception could be that of the Church in the New Testament, and even that is a moot point.
The relationship between the Old Testament and the New Testament in the Bible is often seen as concealed in the Old Testament and revealed in the New Testament. The Old Testament contains prophecies and foreshadowing of events and themes that are fulfilled in the New Testament, particularly through the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The New Testament then provides clarity and fulfillment of the promises and teachings found in the Old Testament, showing how they all point towards the coming of Jesus and the establishment of the Christian faith.
Old Testament was pure promise and the New Testament looks back opon the fulfilled promise with universal salvation with personal reconciliation - sign your name on the dotted line.
The prophecy in Isaiah 7:14 foretells the birth of a child who will be called Immanuel, meaning "God with us." In the New Testament, this prophecy is fulfilled with the birth of Jesus Christ, who is believed by Christians to be the fulfillment of this prophecy as the Son of God who came to dwell among humanity.
The Book(s) PLURAL of the Law are The books written by Moses (Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy) and they are part of the Old Testament not the New Testament. The book of Romans and Hebrews does mention the law allot though in explanation to Christians of how Christ fulfilled the law and was higher and better than the law and these books are part of the New Testament.
Jesus fulfilled all of the prophecies in the old testament. In his book "The New Evidence That Demands A Verdict", Josh McDowell says:- The Old Testament contains over three hundred references to the Messiah that were fulfilled in Jesus. (from Section 8, Support of Deity: Old Testament Prophecies Fulfilled in Jesus Christ)
You're probably thinking of the wedding feast at Cana in John 2:1-11. At this feast, Jesus (apparently) changed water into wine, as his first miracle.
Typology in the Bible is a method of interpreting the Old Testament by recognizing patterns, symbols, and events that foreshadow or are fulfilled in the New Testament. It helps us see how certain figures, events, and symbols in the Old Testament are connected to their fulfillment in the New Testament, revealing a deeper meaning and continuity in God's plan throughout history.