Greek Key Terms:
Context: Revelation 21-22 consummates the canon. The new Jerusalem descends from heaven (21:2, 10), the tabernacle of God is with man (21:3), and the description of the city (21:10-27) culminates in what the New Moons trajectory has been moving toward from Genesis 1:14: "And the city has no need of sun or moon (ἡλίου οὐδὲ τῆς σελήνης) to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and its lamp is the Lamb" (21:23). Revelation 22:3-5 completes the picture: "No longer will there be anything accursed, but the throne of God and of the Lamb will be in it, and his servants will worship him (λατρεύσουσιν αὐτῷ). They will see his face (ὄψονται τὸ πρόσωπον αὐτοῦ), and his name will be on their foreheads. And night will be no more (νὺξ οὐκ ἔσται ἔτι). They will need no light of lamp or sun, for the Lord God will be their light, and they will reign forever and ever." Three features matter for the New Moons trajectory. First, the lunar marker is dissolved: no moon to measure the month. Second, worship is perpetual: λατρεύσουσιν is durative, unceasing. Third, the beatific vision replaces mediated approach: "they will see his face" — the direct sight that was denied even to Moses (Exod 33:20) is granted to every servant of God in the new creation. The mode of worship that new moons could only rehearse in monthly installments is now actualized in continuous face-to-face adoration of the Lamb.
Connections:
Christological Connection: Revelation 21:23 and 22:3-5 complete the New Moons trajectory by dissolving the lunar marker altogether and consummating the worship the new moon could only rehearse. Four Christological dimensions converge. First, the Lamb is the city's light, replacing both sun and moon. The new-moon trumpet at Num 10:10 announced covenant worship by drawing attention to the lunar cycle YHWH had set in the heavens; in the new creation, the Lamb Himself — the crucified-and-risen Christ — supplies the light the moon used to reflect. The typological trajectory is categorical: created luminaries (Gen 1:14) → calendar-markers (Num 10; 28) → prophetic universalization (Isa 66:23) → shadow-recognition (Col 2:17) → consummation where the Lamb is the luminary (Rev 21:23). Every covenant rhythm the new moon traced finds its ground in the Lamb's person. Second, worship is perpetual (λατρεύσουσιν, durative present). What the new moon scheduled monthly — renewed covenant access, renewed sacrifice, renewed joy before God — is now continuous. The Chronicler's tāmîd (1 Chr 23:31), the apostolic diēnekes (Heb 10:14), and Revelation's λατρεύσουσιν converge: perpetual service is the telos of every calendar-rhythm. Third, the beatific vision fulfills the hope. "They will see his face" (22:4) — the direct, unmediated sight that all OT worship reached toward but was denied even to Moses ("you cannot see my face, for man shall not see me and live," Exod 33:20). The new moon's monthly sin-offering opened access temporarily; Christ's blood opens it perpetually; and the consummation delivers the full vision itself, "face to face" (1 Corinthians 13:12; 1 John 3:2). Fourth, the servants reign forever and ever. The new moon's monthly re-consecration anticipated a kingdom renewed; Revelation delivers a reign that requires no re-consecration because it is eternal, uninterrupted, unfading. The priestly zikkārôn (Num 10:10) is fulfilled in the priestly-royal reign (Rev 22:5) of the saints who serve the Lamb and bear His name on their foreheads. The trajectory's final logic is not that the new moon is simply abolished but that its purpose is perfected apart from its mechanism. The lunar cycle was God's appointed rhythm for an old-covenant people living in a created order that still groaned under decay. In the new creation, the groan is ended, the decay is undone, and God Himself becomes the light that the moon only reflected. Isaiah 66:23's "from new moon to new moon" is consummated not by perpetual lunar cycles but by the perpetual presence of the one to whom every moon was a finger pointing. The monthly trumpet yields to the eternal song of the Lamb, and what Numbers 10:10 petitioned — that God remember His people — is delivered forever: they see His face, they serve His throne, they bear His name, they reign with Him eternally.
Connection Method(s): Typology (Forward-Looking, Consummation) — The dissolution of sun and moon (Rev 21:23) completes the shadow-substance trajectory: the created luminaries that Genesis 1:14 established for signs and seasons, the new moons that Numbers 10:10 and 28:11-15 consecrated, the eschatological new-moon-to-new-moon worship that Isaiah 66:23 promised, and the shadow-list that Colossians 2:16-17 named — all converge and consummate in the Lamb as the city's light and perpetual worship at His throne. Also Promise-Fulfillment — Isaiah 60:19-20 and 66:23's promises of God-as-everlasting-light and universal worship reach their final fulfillment. Also Longitudinal Theme (Rest/Worship cycle) — the canonical covenant-calendar motif consummates in the eternal Sabbath-worship of the new creation.
Trajectory Table: 110 - New Moons (Renewal and Rest)
Related Trajectory Tables: TT 134 — Sabbath; TT 135 — Sabbatical Year; TT 174 — Year of Jubilee