Written for Viewzone by http://world-calendar.info
It's not on the Gregorian Calendar
According to the Bible, neither Saturday nor Sunday is the Sabbath!
The original calendar described in the Torah and used by Moses was
based upon the phases of the Moon, not a continuous weekly cycle. This
Lunar Calendar was used for all the feast days, including the weekly
Sabbath.
Since the Biblical calendar is based on the moon, it does not correspond
to the days of the modern Gregorian Calendar. For example, the Sabbath
is not always on Saturday but could be on Wednesday one month, and
Thursday the next.
This can have serious economic impacts, as people desiring to
follow the Sabbath today according to the Biblical Lunar calendar will
find themselves having to ask for days off during the standard
Monday-to-Friday work week. This would be not just once or twice a year,
but every week. Obviously, such a schedule will not be looked upon
favorably by most employers and fellow employees.
The format of the Biblical Month.
The Biblical month starts with New Moon Day. It looks like this:
(NM = New Moon, W = Work day, S = Sabbath)
Note: Moon phases are approximate, and are shown for the Northern Hemisphere; If you're south of the Equator, they are reversed.
On this calendar, the Sabbaths are always in the same place: The 8th,
15th, 22nd, and 29th of the month. Of course they are 7 days apart, but
the count starts every Lunar month.
Notice:
- The first day of the month is New Moon Day.
- Then the seven day week begins, and the 8th day of the month is the Sabbath
- The 15th day (the next Sabbath) is the full moon.
- The 22nd is another Sabbath.
- The last Sabbath of the month is on the 29th.
- The next month begins with the next new moon, and the count of days begins again.
The knowledge of the calendar has resurfaced after being ignored for
over 1500 years. Careful reading of the Scriptures, together with
detailed study of history reveal that the the calendar used over 2000
years ago is not the same as today. The historical research reveals that
Rome was responsible for enforcing the change.
All Roads Lead to (and from) Rome
Since many people regard Rome to be the prophetic "Beast" of the Book of
Revelation, and since the Sabbath is an issue both of worship and
economics (regulating days of work and rest), this calendar change is a
candidate for the ominous warning:
"And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and
bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads: And
that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of
the beast, or the number of his name."
--Revelation 13:16-17
Coming Soon: A New World Calendar
Furthermore, there is a proposed change which will render even
traditional Saturday observance incompatible with the business calendar.
A new world calendar is proposed for the end of 2012.
http://www.theworldcalendar.org This calendar is the obvious choice to
promote a world economy by fixing many nuisances caused by the present
calendar. Some features of the new calendar are:
- It will stabilize business and school schedules, because all years will be the same.
- Holidays will always be on the same day.
- Each year will begin on a Sunday, and end on a Saturday.
- Each quarter will contain exactly 91 days, instead of 89-92 as the present calendar.
- Printed schedules and calendars will not expire after one year like they do today.
Of course, 365.25 days is not evenly divisible by 7. But 364 is. So the
world calendar will have a business year of 364 days, and the extra day,
at the end of the year, will be a world holiday. It will not have a
name other than "World Day". That is, it will not be a Saturday, or
Sunday, or Monday; it will just be a special "World Day".
The only problem is that the seven day cycle would be broken. At the end
of the first year, the day called "Sunday", for example, is really
"Monday", according to the seven-day cycle. It gets off by one day per
year, except on leap years, which gets off by two days. Therefore,
neither a Lunar Calendar Sabbath or a continuous seven-day Saturday
Sabbath will conveniently fit into the new calendar.
The Biblical Evidence
In the Bible, the only times a Sabbath is identified with a numerical
date, it is only on the 8th, 15th, 22nd, or 29th. Likewise, when one of
those dates is mentioned, it is always a Sabbath.
The Feasts are the Key to the Hebrew Calendar
The Biblical book of Leviticus, written by Moses, describes all of the
Jewish feasts in Chapter 23. Most people are familiar with Passover, and
the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur). They are also aware that these
feasts do not fall on the same day each year, since they are based upon
the moon. However, few people notice that the weekly Sabbath is listed
among the other Feasts:
"[1] And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying, [2] Speak unto the children
of Israel, and say unto them, Concerning the feasts of the LORD, which
ye shall proclaim to be holy convocations, even these are my feasts. [3]
Six days shall work be done: but the seventh day is the sabbath of
rest, an holy convocation; ye shall do no work therein: it is the
sabbath of the LORD in all your dwellings. [4] These are the feasts of
the LORD, even holy convocations, which ye shall proclaim in their
seasons. [5] In the fourteenth day of the first month at even is the
LORD's passover. [6] And on the fifteenth day of the same month is the
feast of unleavened bread unto the LORD: seven days ye must eat
unleavened bread. [7] In the first day ye shall have an holy
convocation: ye shall do no servile work therein. [8] But ye shall offer
an offering made by fire unto the LORD seven days: in the seventh day
is an holy convocation: ye shall do no servile work therein. ...
[continues with the other feasts up to verse 44]"
--Leviticus 23:1-8
There is no indication that a different calendar is used for the Sabbath
as compared to the other feast days which are all grouped together in
Leviticus 23. Notice that there is no provision in the scriptures for a
situation when a feast day would "clash" with a weekly Sabbath, as
happens today.
Because they are now using the mixed calendar, the Rabbis have developed
"Rules of Postponement" to avoid a clash. For example, they don't want
the Day of Atonement to be adjacent to a Sabbath. However, if a Lunar
Sabbath is used, then the Day of Atonement is always five days from the
Sabbath, and there is never a problem.
Even though the Bible has many details about the feasts, it is silent on
"postponements". Why? Because Moses and the Prophets didn't use a mixed
calendar, and so they didn't need them.
It can be seen that, by calculating the seventh day Sabbath in the same
way as the feast days (from the beginning of the lunar month), there are
no "clashes", nor is there a need to add an extra day. The very fact
that these Rabbinical "Rules of Postponement" exist is the "smoking gun" that indicates that the Rabbis are not using the Scriptural Calendar for the seventh day Sabbath!
The Feast of Tabernacles is a seven-day feast, as stated six times in
Leviticus 23:34-42. The feast begins on the 15th day of the month which
is a Sabbath, lasts for seven days, and then the eighth day, the 22nd of
the month is a Sabbath. Here's just two of the verses from Leviticus
23:
"[34] The fifteenth day of this seventh month shall be the feast of
tabernacles for seven days unto the LORD. .... [39] Also in the
fifteenth day of the seventh month, when ye have gathered in the fruit
of the land, ye shall keep a feast unto the LORD seven days: on the
first day shall be a sabbath, and on the eighth day shall be a sabbath."
--Leviticus 23:34-39
When most Jews celebrate this Feast today, two problems occur:
The Saturday "Sabbath" will fall at some random day between the
15th and 22nd of the Lunar month. This will give two Sabbaths in the
seven day feast.
In order to fulfill Lev. 23:39, they have to make the feast
eight days long (instead of seven), and make the eighth day a Sabbath.
(It actually already is the lunar Sabbath, but they don't know it.)
This is because they are using two incompatible calendars!
Two Versions in the Ten Commandments
Exodus chapter 20 lists the "Ten Commandments". But when Moses repeats
the commandments in Deuteronomy chapter 5, there is something unusual.
"Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy. ... For in six days the LORD
made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the
seventh day: wherefore the LORD blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed
it."
--Exodus 20:8,11
"[12] Keep the sabbath day to sanctify it, as the
LORD thy God hath commanded thee. [13] Six days thou shalt labour, and
do all thy work: [14] But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy
God: in it thou shalt not do any work,...[15] And remember that thou
wast a servant in the land of Egypt, and that the LORD thy God brought
thee out thence through a mighty hand and by a stretched out arm:
therefore the LORD thy God commanded thee to keep the sabbath day."
--Deuteronomy 5:12-15
So the Fourth commandment in Deuteronomy does not mention Creation at
all as a reason for the Sabbath. Instead, it talks about the exodus from
Egypt. When did the Almighty bring them out from Egypt with a mighty
hand?
"And they departed from Rameses in the first month,
on the fifteenth day of the first month; on the morrow after the
passover the children of Israel went out with an high hand in the sight
of all the Egyptians."
--Numbers 33:3
"Observe the month of Abib, and keep the passover unto the LORD thy God:
for in the month of Abib the LORD thy God brought thee forth out of
Egypt by night."
--Deuteronomy 16:1
It is well known that they left Egypt on the Sabbath of Unleavened
Bread, at night. People today teach that the Sabbath of Unleavened Bread
is different from the seventh day Sabbath. But here they seem to be
related, or even the same. They are linked by the Fourth Commandment as
recorded in two different renderings.
- The Fourth Commandment in Exodus 20 clearly references the seventh day Sabbath based on Creation.
- The Fourth Commandment in Deuteronomy 5 clearly references the
seventh day Sabbath based on the deliverance from Egypt, which occurred
on the evening of the Sabbath of Unleavened Bread.
The Israelites left Egypt on the day after Passover (the Sabbath of
Unleavened Bread) and it was the "fifteenth day of the first month".
(Passover is the fourteenth of the first month of the year.) When does
the first month begin? It is the first new moon in the Spring. (All of
the months in the Hebrew calendar start at the new moon.)
The Battle of Jericho
In the famous Battle of Jericho, the Israelites marched around Jericho
for seven days, in offensive battle readiness, and attacked the city on
the seventh day. Which of those seven days was the Sabbath? None of
them! They started on the New Moon day, had a seven day march, and then
rested on the eighth day of the month, which was the Sabbath. The "Book
of Jasher", which is not in the Bible but is historically useful, even
says the march started on the New Moon.
The Manna and the Quail
Exactly one lunar month after they left Egypt, the people congregated
together on the fifteenth day of the month, and they took that
opportunity to complain to Moses about the lack of food. The story is in
Exodus 16.
It specifically said that the quails would come "at even", and that the
bread would come the next "morning". The simplest explanation for this
is that the day, the fifteenth of the month, was the Sabbath, and that
the people were to wait until after sunset before gathering food.
The quail was given in the evening after the Sabbath had past. The manna
was given on the mornings of all the workdays, and twice as much on the
Preparation day (the day before the Sabbath).
- 1st month - Unleavened bread Sabbath was the 15th.
- 2nd month - Sabbath when they complained was the 15th.
- 3rd month - When was the Sabbath?
On the third month the whole congregation assembled before the Almighty.
When did this assembly occur? On the 15th day of the third month! They
left Egypt on the 15th day of the first month, and they came to Sinai on
the 15th day of the third month.
"In the third month, when the children of Israel were gone forth out of
the land of Egypt, the same day came they into the wilderness of Sinai."
--Exodus 19:1
Jesus kept the Lunar Sabbath
Yeshua healed a blind man on the Sabbath, the 22nd day of the seventh
month. John 7:2 says that it was the Feast of Tabernacles, and John 7:37
says that on the last great day of the seven day feast, Yeshua
announced that he was the source of living water. Then in John 7:53 we
read that everyone went home (for the night) and the next verse, John
8:1, says that Yeshua went to the Mount of Olives.
The next verse says that in the morning they all went to the temple. The
actual healing and the reaction of the Pharisees is the subject of John
chapter 9. Some people try to use this scripture to say that the
Sabbath was on the 23rd. But this argument requires that the Feast of
Tabernacles be eight days long, not seven days, as specified in
Leviticus.
The Historical Evidence
The Julian Calendar
The modern calendar began in 46/45 BC, when Julius Caesar, in
consultation with the astronomer Sosigenes of Alexandria, developed the
Julian Calendar of 365.25 days. The big innovation was to separate the
week from the lunar cycle and to make it a continuous cycle. It used an
eight-day market week, with the days simply named "A,B,C,D,E,F,G,H".
Certain types of events were allowed on certain days, called fasti.
By the time of the First Century AD, the seven-day week named after
"gods" and "goddesses" of the solar-system was being used in Rome, and
was starting to replace the eight-day week.
But the 7-day solar system week was:
1. Saturn's day (obvious in English)
2. Sun's day (obvious in English)
3. Moon's day (obvious in English)
4. Mars' day (Spanish: Martes, French: Mardi)
5. Mercury's day (Spanish: Miércoles, French: Mercredi)
6. Jupiter's day (Spanish: Jueves, French: Jeudi)
7. Venus' day (Spanish: Viernes, French: Vendredi)
So Saturn's day was the first day of the week. However, the Jews and
Christians were not using that calendar until the time of Constantine.
While it is generally known that Constantine enforced a "Sunday Law", in
AD 321, a big assumption is that he just replaced one day with the day
next to it. Was there more to it? Yes, he changed the entire calendar.
Constantine's Hybrid Calendar
In AD 321, Constantine created a big compromise. He blended the Hebrew
idea of a seven day week with the Julian concept of a continuous weekly
cycle, and added the veneration of the "Sun God" from Mithrasim to
create the Roman calendar used today. He enforced his calendar upon the
entire Roman Empire with military power.
Constantine and the Council of Nicaea in AD 325 replaced Passover with
Easter. On the surface, that may not seem to be much of a change. But
it's not just a matter of replacing one day with another. It's a
completely different system of calendation, since Passover is not
computed using a Julian calendar.
Because of these changes which were being enforced by persecutions
across the Roman Empire, the Jewish Sanhedrin met for the last time
around AD 350, and modified the calendar to the form used by most Jews
today, in which the Sabbath is on Saturday, but the other Feast Days use
a form of Lunar calendar.
The modern Gregorian Calendar
Later in history, Pope Gregory modified Constantine's calendar slightly
in 1582. (This was to fix a problem caused by the fact that the year is
not exactly 365.25 days long, but 11 minutes shorter.) Like Constantine,
the motivating factor was the date of Easter. So the calendation system
used today is Roman (Pagan and Papal), and the question of when the
Sabbath occurs is very important to anyone who desires to follow the
Bible.
Viewzone || Comments? || Body Mind Spirit
COMMENTS:
Great article!
Did you know that Karaite Jews, an almost extinct and controversial
sect, have always used the sighting of the New Moon, not the erroneous
fixed calendar, to determine months and holidays? Despite centuries of
concerted efforts toward eradication by assimilation, Karaim still
practice Jewish tradition according to the Torah, unadulterated by early
social reforms which generalized religious practice. Karaim believe in
scriptural interpretation without distortion of context. Karaite views
regarding the role of spiritual women, shaving, and tattooing also
differ from what has become mainstream Judaism. There is a good
explanation on karaite-korner.org.
Anyone interested in truth versus dogma, cultural preservation of a rich heritage, and all Jewish women should investigate this.
L. Vanilar
This is the best explanation on the Sabbath Day that I have ever seen. I
have tried for decades (using the Gregorian Calendar of course) to
covert the Sabbath, and wrap my mind around a simple understanding of
the days. Now my little inner voice is telling me; "It's the Moon
Stupid!", but I find that reading on about how most everyone else didn't
get it either is somewhat comforting. And doing further research on
this article yielded even
more:
"In Babylonia... the goddess of spring was called Ishtar. She was
identified with the planet Venus, which, because... [it] rises before
the Sun... or sets after it... appears to love the light [this means
Venus loves the sun-god]... In Phoenecia, she became Astarte; in Greece,
Eostre [related to the Greek word Eos: "dawn"], and in Germany, Ostara
[this comes from the German word Ost: "east," which is the direction of
dawn]" (Englehart, p. 4).
It's amazing to see just how evil, and twisted it has all become through
the centuries. And by the very people that we thought were telling us
right, only to find that many of them, in all fairness, just had the
wool pulled over their eyes as well.
Great article ViewZone, Thanks
W L