Biblical
vs. Jewish Calendar
The Bible’s Holy Days
are central to True Worship. But determining when to observe them creates an
unending controversy - one that has been ongoing for 2,000 years. The question
is, can we trust the Jewish, or Hebrew, calendar as some do?
Is it the calendar Yahweh commanded for man? Or has its many changes down
through history rendered it most unreliable? Here are the facts regarding the
Jewish calendar, as well as the true Scriptural calendar given by our Creator.
______________________________________________________
Some
of the most visible personalities in history are those who make predictions
about the future. From Nostradamus to modern “prophets” like Jean Dixon, human
beings have always had a fascination with what is to come. The year 2012 is
especially intriguing to many with an interest in the end times.
But the greatest prophetic treasure
virtually ignored in churchianity—and the key to true and accurate prophecy - lies
in the days Yahweh commanded to be observed from the beginning. The Bible tells
us that the holy days, Sabbaths, and the new moons “are a shadow of things to come,” Colossians
These days are prophetic, presaging
events that will soon be reality. The fact is, the
truly momentous events of Yahweh involving His people happened at these special
times.
Because of their significance not only
for prophecy but also for right worship, it behooves every believer in truth to
understand the seven annual Feast days and their importance for today. Central
to this understanding is knowing the proper times
these days occur.
Passover and Pentecost (Feast of Weeks,
or Shavuoth) have been fulfilled twice, once in the Old Testament and again in
the New. The four autumn festivals await fulfillment. They are: Trumpets,
Atonement (although partially fulfilled in Yahshua’s death), Tabernacles, and
the last Great Day. All the commanded Feasts of Leviticus 23 will continue to
be observed by Yahshua and His subjects in the coming Kingdom.
Getting the Dates Right Is Important
We
recognize that the annual Sabbaths should be observed throughout the year, and
must be observed at the proper time. Had the Israelites been keeping Passover a
day late, the destroying angel would rightfully have destroyed both Israelite
and Egyptian firstborn. Other important events are tied to Yahweh’s Feasts as
well.
The correct date of the annual Sabbath
could be especially important for us in the future. Knowledgeable Bible
scholars believe that the Messiah could well come on the day of Trumpets, for
He shall “descend from the heavens with a
shout, a voice of the archangel and the sound of a Trumpet,” 1Thessalonians
If we are obediently keeping the days
that Yahweh has reserved for the worship of Himself,
then we will be in tune with the Messiah’s Second Coming and be ready as the
Savior commanded in Matthew 24:44. See also Colossians 2:16-17.
Just as important is to understand that
the seven annual Feasts reveal the plan of salvation. By observing them we not
only comply with the heavenly command, but we also get “in sync” with Yahweh’s
ways.
Modern Calendar Completely Out of Touch
Observing
the important scriptural Feast days upon the correct day and month is most difficult
if we lack a reliable calendar.
Our present Gregorian worldly calendar
with 12 months of 30, or 31 days each, is not the calendar of the Bible. The
Gregorian calendar, adopted by all Catholic countries in 1582, is a sun-based
calendar. It pays no attention to the new moons as marking the beginning of the
months, although the word month is based on the word moon (from Old Saxon
manoth, meaning of the moon), i.e., the phases of the moon. The Hebrew word khodesh, or chodesh (No. 2320 in Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance), is
translated either “month” or “new moon.” Chodesh is from No. 2318, chadash, a prime
root meaning to be new; cause to build, and is translated renew or repair. The
sense or meaning of chodesh must be
determined from its usage in the sentence in the Bible (not to be confused with
the Hebrew word, Qodesh, #6942, which
means “holy,” “consecrated,” or “set-apart”).
The
new moon appears every 29½ days, which means the new moon month is either 29 or
30 days in length. The Gregorian calendar divides the year into 12 months of 30
days each, and adds a day to every other month to make the year of 365 ¼ days,
with a day added every four years (leap year) for the accumulated extra ¼ days.
The actual new moons thus do not begin
the new month in our secular calendar, but are ignored and fall anywhere within
the month. Some months in our Gregorian calendar have two new moons!
The Biblical calendar is based on the
recurring new moons, with a lunar year of 354 days. Yahweh established the
“lights” in the sky to be man’s calendar. Notice: “And Elohim said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to
divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and
for days, and years” Gen. 1:14.
A difference of 11 days exists between
our world’s solar calendar of 365 days and the Bible’s new moon or lunar
calendar of 354 days. Because it totally disregards the new moons, the
Gregorian solar calendar is unacceptable in determining Yahweh’s holy days.
Anciently, and even during the time of
the Messiah, the months and annual holy days were governed by the new moons.
Yahweh’s Assembly in Yahshua publishes an
annual calendar listing those special dates alerting us to the evenings when we
should seek the visible new moons after sunset. Proper sighting of a new moon
takes a little practice and occasionally is not always possible because of sky
conditions. (Just how one observes the new moons is given later.)
Is the Jewish (Hebrew) Calendar valid?
Many
are firmly convinced that we should be guided by the present calculated Jewish
calendar in the worship of our Heavenly Father Yahweh. The Jewish calendar does
list the weekly Sabbaths as well as the Festival Days. This calendar has been
used for hundreds of years and is widely available.
Some have gone so far as to make the
erroneous claim that the present Hebrew or Jewish calendar was the one used at
the time of the Messiah, and therefore we should be keeping the same days
observed by the Jews today. Some of the over-zealous contend that the Hebrew
calendar was given to Moses at Sinai. But the Jews themselves scoff at this
allegation.
If the calendar used by Judaism today is
that which was in vogue during the time of the Messiah when He faithfully kept
all His Father’s Commandments 2,000 years ago, then we should by all means rely
upon the same calendar.
History, however, shows beyond a shadow
of doubt that the present Hebrew calendar is a relatively new addition. Some
glaring deficiencies arise if we attempt to reconcile the present-day Hebrew
calendar with the historical record and the Bible. In the following dates of
the present Jewish calendar we would be doing violence to the Scriptures, for
this calendar violates its own rules more than half the time - a fact we will
demonstrate.
Jewish Calendar Roiled in Confusion
Today’s
Jewish authorities readily admit that the calendar they use now is of recent
vintage. This calendar appeared long after the
Repression of the Jews followed swiftly
once the Romans devastated
Church leaders concluded that they could
no longer look to the Jews to establish the celebration of their Easter. For
centuries the governing religious body known as the Sanhedrin had announced the new year and sanctified the beginning of each month
from
The
council of Nicea in 325 C.E., presided over by
Schaff’s History of the Christian Church
sums up the decision of the council of Nicea by stating, “The leading motive
for this regulation was opposition to Judaism…we would have nothing in common
with that most hostile people, the Jews; for we have received from the Redeemer
another way of honoring [Yahweh] (the order of the days of the week), and
harmoniously adopting this method, we would withdraw ourselves from the evil
fellowship of the Jews. For what they pompously assert, is really utterly
absurd; that we cannot keep this feast at all without their instruction…” Vol.
3, page 170.
The decision referred to here said, “The
exact determination of Easter Sunday is made from the first full moon after the
vernal equinox…” Ibid.
However, the history of the Roman
Church’s decision to determine its own date of Easter is most interesting.
There was a conflict with the churches in
The truth is, the Jews themselves could not agree just when the Passover was to be
celebrated! Those who followed the Jewish Passover of the 14th of
Nisan became known as “Quartodecimans” (meaning fourteenth). But the Jewish
calendar had been changed after the resurrection of the Messiah and was no longer
reliable.
McClintock and Strong’s Cyclopedia of
Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature (CBTEL) has the following
to say on the subject of the Paschal Controversy, “It is a question of
astronomy; for the Jewish calendar ceased to be any trustworthy guide after the
destruction of Jerusalem…The ancient Jews could only have celebrated the
Passover after the vernal equinox,” p. 722. Notice the two things in the above
quotation:
·
The Jewish
calendar ceased to be trustworthy after the destruction of the
·
The ancient Jews
(before the new calendar was published by Hillel II) could only have celebrated
the Passover AFTER the vernal equinox supposedly on March 21.
McClintock and Strong continue: “The Asiatics still followed the Jewish
computation, as harmonizing with the Savior’s practice, and cared nothing for
the equinox, which their Easter occasionally anticipated…”
In other words, the Asiatic Christians
followed the Jewish Passover in setting their festivals because that was the
way the Savior kept the Passover. However, because the Jews were now following
a new and different Jewish calendar, they occasionally had their Passover
BEFORE the vernal Equinox. The ancient Jews could only have celebrated the
season AFTER the equinox. Following the destruction of the
Jewish Calendar Undergoes Change
The
years 132-135 C.E. mark the revolt of Bar-Kochba and his followers. It took the
most able Roman general Julius Severus to put down the rebellion, with dreadful
slaughter on both sides. Hadrian vowed to raze
Jews were not allowed in the city, and
It was this confusion that provided the
impetus that led Christianity to set its own guidelines in dating Easter. The
Epistle of Constantine summarized the conclusions for the Christians at the Nicene
Council; “From henceforth the vernal
equinox and not the Jewish calendar should determine the incidence of Easter. That when the equinoctial full moon fell on a Sunday, Easter should
be celebrated on the Sunday following; both for the reason already given, and
because the Jewish festival would have been celebrated and over. Also,
by making Easter, by necessity, subsequent to the vernal equinox, there was no
longer a danger of double observance in the same year” (“Paschal
Controversy,” CBTEL, p. 723).
Under Easter in this same reference we
find, “Many of the church fathers are of
the opinion that according to the original calculation of the Jews up to the
time of the destruction of Jerusalem, the 14th of Nisan had always
been AFTER the spring equinox, and that it was only in consequence of a
miscalculation of the later Jews that the 14th Nisan occasionally
fell BEFORE the equinox. As the Christians could now no longer rely on the
Jewish calendar, they had to make their own calculations of the time of Easter.” (vol. 3, p. 13).
Here is another candid admission that
during the time of the Messiah and BEFORE the destruction of
As Yahweh set His calendar to begin in
the spring (Ex. 12:1-2) the vernal equinox is regarded as the beginning of the
year. The days then begin to grow longer, the earth stirs to new life and the new year begins. However, today’s Jewish calendar begins the
year in the fall, with the day of Trumpets.
The Age of the Father by William Bright
(vol. 1 p. 100) substantiates the problems of the Roman Church in determining
the correct date.
Their motto was “No Judaizing as to
Easter”…but a new difficulty had arisen out of a difference among the Jews
themselves, for some of them, contrary to their old tradition, had taken to
keeping Passover BEFORE the vernal equinox.
“This produced a confusion; for whereas the equinox belonged to the
solar year, the Passover-day being the 14th of the month, was
governed by the lunar; and thus if in a particular year Nisan 14 was reckoned
as falling before the equinox, and therefore Passover was kept before a new
solar year had begun, there would be two Passovers in one solar year, one after
the vernal Equinox, and the other just before the next…Epiphanius said that
‘the Jews did not care to be exact at this point’…But a certain number of
Christians followed the prevailing Jewish custom, although, says Socrates, they
admitted it was not accurate.”
Decision-Makers Ineffective
Good
historians agree that the period following the destruction of
Some
of the greatest tales of heroism among the Jews are told to this day concerning
the valor of the Jews at
The Sanhedrin, Pharisees, Sadducees, and
other leaders were scattered. The biggest loss to the Jews was the designated
time of the annual Holy Days to worship Yahweh. Their calendar was now in
complete disarray because the decision-making body was dispersed. It was during
this time that the Jews living in areas east of
History of
Two
very good sources give us the history and background of the rivalry between
Jews dispersed in
The latter is a more abridged version of
the account of Hananiah, who established a Sanhedrin in Babylon, and the
Patriarch Simon II who determined to assert the superiority of the Patriarchate
of Tiberias in Judae of Palestine (recently moved from Usha and Jamnia-Jabne)
over rival Babylon.
The open schism concerned the calculation
of the day for the Paschal celebration. The following is an excerpt from pp.
478-481 of Milman’s second volume, which he dates as being 240-300 of our
Common Era—some 200 years after the death and resurrection of the Messiah, “The schools of
“The two legates were furnished with three letters. They delivered the
first to Hananiah, which bore the inscription, ‘To your Holiness.’ Delighted
with their recognition of a title considered of high importance, Hananiah
courteously inquired the reason of their coming, ‘to learn your system of
instruction.’ Still more flattered, Hananiah received the ambassadors with
utmost cordiality, and commended them to the people, as worthy of every honor,
both as descendants of the High Priest (for the Patriarch of Tiberias claimed
his lineage from Aaron) and for their own personal merit.
“When the treacherous legates has secured their
ground in the good opinion of the people, they began to controvert the
judgements of Hananiah, to animadvert on his opinions, and to lessen him by
every means in the public estimation. Hananiah, enraged at this abuse of his
kindness, summoned a second assembly of the people, and denounced the legates
as traitors and ignorant men.
“The people replied, ‘That which thou has
built, thou canst not pluck up without injury to thyself.’ Hananiah demanded
their objections to his system of instruction. They answered, ‘Thou has dared to fix intercalation’s and new moons, by which
great inconformities have arisen between the brethren in
‘Out of
The
quotation from Milman’s history continues:
“The legates produced their second letter, which ran in these mysterious
words, ‘That which thou leftest a kid, is grown up a
strong-horned goat;’ is meant that the Sanhedrin, which we left without power,
had regained all its authority. Hananiah was struck dumb. R. Isaac, one of the
deputies, saw his time; he mounted the tribute from which the Law was usually
read. ‘These,’ he said, naming them, ‘are the holy days of Hananiah!’ An indistinct
murmur ran through the synagogue. R. Nathan, the second deputy, arose and read
the verse of Isaiah, ‘Out of
“The assembly was in an uproar. ‘Alter not the word of [Yahweh],’ was
the universal cry. The legates followed up their advantage and produced their
third letter, which threatened excommunication against the factious opponents
of their authority. They added these emphatic words, ‘The learned have sent us, and commanded us thus to say, ‘If he will submit, well;
if not, utter at once the interdict. So likewise set the choice before our
brethren in foreign parts. If they will stand by us, well; if not, let them
ascend their high places; let Ahia build them an altar, and Hananiah [he was of Levitical descent] sing at the sacrifice; and let them at once set themselves apart and
say, ‘We have no portion in the
“From all sides an instantaneous cry arose, ‘Heaven preserve us from
heresy! We have still a portion in
The
accounts by Milman and Graetz are both by competent Jewish historians.
Passover Always After the Vernal Equinox
Jewish
chronicles admit that the Jews themselves were not in harmony as to the correct
day of Passover. The Council of Nicea was called to settle several differences
in doctrine, and to set the time for the Paschal, or Easter celebration
independent of the squabbling Jews.
It had become obvious that the church
could not depend upon the Jews who so disagreed among themselves over the
calendar. Passover could vary as much as a month among the Jews, depending on
the intercalary month. The truth is that the present Jewish calendar evolved
and grew into its present form over a period of many years. It is not the same
one followed at the time of the Messiah.
Additional proof of a change in the
Jewish calendar is presented the Paschal Canons of Anatolius, preserved for us
in the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Vol. 1, p. 319. Anatolius, held in high
regard for his eloquence and erudition, wrote about a century after the onset
of the Paschal controversy, “Wherefore we
maintain that those who place the first month (Nisan) in it (the zodiacal sign before the vernal equinox) and
determine by it the 14th day of Passover, commit no slight or common
blunder. And this is not an opinion of our own; but it was known to the Jews of
old, even before [Messiah] and was carefully observed by them.”
Anatolius said that at the time of
Messiah and before, Passover never was allowed to occur BEFORE the vernal
equinox, but did exactly that under the present Hillel calendar, where Passover
was placed two days before the equinox in the 17th year of the
cycle! This NEVER occurred in
Further, Anatolius points out that this
can be learned from “Philo, Josephus, and
Musaeus and not only them, but also by those yet more ancient, the two Agathobuli,
surnamed ‘Master,’ and the famous Aristobulus, who was chosen among the seventy
interpreters of the sacred and holy Hebrew Scriptures by Ptolemy Philadelphus
and his father who also dedicated his exegetical books on the law of Moses to
the same kings.
“These writers, explaining questions in regard to the Exodus, say that
all alike should sacrifice the Passover offerings after the vernal equinox. I
know that many other things have been said by them, some of them probable, and
some approaching absolute demonstration, by which they endeavor to prove that
it is altogether necessary to keep the Passover and the Feast of Unleavened
Bread after the equinox.”
In appealing to the more ancient writers,
including Aristobulus (2nd Century B.C.E.), one of the seventy who
translated the Septuagint Old Testament, it is evident that these writers agree
that Passover had to occur AFTER the vernal equinox. By reckoning the vernal
equinox as the beginning of the year, it would be possible to have two
Passovers within one year if Passover were kept before the equinox.
Being well learned in the calendar,
Anatolius was showing the Jews and those who followed their “new” calendar that
they were completely wrong in their cycle change. When the 17th year
of the 19-year Metonic cycle came around, Passover was two days ahead of the
vernal equinox, according to the new calendar adopted by the Jews. This 17th-year
Passover occurs the earliest of all years, and it stayed ahead of the equinox
for the next 400 years.
However, the Jewish calendar no longer
allows Passover to occur before the vernal equinox because of the basic error
wherein the present calendar adopted in the 2nd Century is longer
than the solar year by six minutes, thirty-nine seconds. This means the entire
calendar moves ahead of solar time one day in about 216 years. Since this
steady creeping ahead of the solar calendar, the 17th year in the
cycle no longer has Passover before the equinox. Eventually, however, Passover
will be held more toward summer than spring.
Jewish Encyclopedia Admits Error
This
aberration is corroborated by Jewish authorities in their prestigious Jewish
Encyclopedia under the article, Calendar, p. 500: “That there is a slight error in the Jewish calendar—due to the
inaccuracies in the length of both the lunar and solar years upon which it is based—has been asserted by a number of writers. According to
Isadore Loeb the Jewish cycle in 19 years exceeds the Gregorian by 2 hours, 8
minutes, and 15.3 seconds. This makes a difference in a hundred cycles (1900
years) of 8 days, 21 hours, 45 minutes, and 5 seconds.”
Interestingly, some proponents of the
Jewish calendar would have us believe that this calendar was given directly
from Yahweh and is infallible. The Jewish Encyclopedia admits, “Insignificant as these differences may
appear, they will cause a considerable divergence in the relations between
Nisan, and spring as time goes on, and may require a Pan-Judaic Synod to adjust,” ibid.
Had Yahweh indeed inspired this Jewish
calendar, we who believe and rely upon His Word know there would be no reason
to adjust or change anything He had made, for He makes everything perfect.
Therefore, the present Hillel II Jewish calendar cannot be inspired of Yahweh.
It is a masterpiece of man, but being of man, is fallible and indeed contains
error.
Bishop of
Peter,
Bishop of Alexandria, around 295 C.E. became highly critical of the changes
made by the Jews in their adoption of certain rules in their calendar. Recorded
for us in Ante-Nicene Fathers Vol. 6, we read the comment (referring to the
Jews) as follows; “But if they knew Him
who sent, and His who was sent, there is no reason to doubt but that they have
been ignorant of the Passover as prescribed by the law, so as not merely to err
in their choice of the place (they were now looking to Tiberias and Usha
instead of Jerusalem) but also in reckoning the beginning of the 14th day of
which, being accurately observed after the equinox, the ancients celebrated the
Passover according to the Holy Command: whereas the men of the present day now
celebrate it before the equinox, and that altogether through ignorance and
error, being ignorant how they celebrate it in its season…”
Note that this Bishop of Alexandria
confirms that the ancient Jews observed the Passover according to Yahweh’s
command and kept it after the equinox. Because of the changes made in reckoning
of the Jewish calendar, their present ciphering is in error. This condemnation
of the error of the Jews in keeping Passover under the new rules of their calendar
was directed, not at the way they were keeping Passover, but at the dates that
were set. Before that time the visible sighting of the new moons was verified
to establish the beginning of the months.
Bishop Peter further criticizes the Jews
by saying up to the time of the destruction of
He is criticizing the Jews because they
no longer went by the visible new moons to establish the holy day calendar.
Instead of observing green ears of barley, they began using calculation alone
and in so doing set Passover before the vernal equinox, or back in winter, and
not in the spring when the new year began, keeping
Passover out of its spring season and observing it too early, in the winter
season.
It must be noted that the new moon of
Abib did not necessarily come before the equinox, for the exact equinox (March
19, 20, 21, or 22) was anciently most difficult to determine with primitive
means. But Passover, which occurs 14 days after the new moon at the time of the
full moon, was highly important.
The Alexandrian Bishop summarizes his
conclusions about the Jews turning to idolatry and spiritual fornication
(paragraphs 4-6) by saying in paragraph 7, “That
therefore up to the period of the [Master’s] passion, and at the time of the
last destruction of Jerusalem, which happened under Vespasian, the Roman
emperor, the people of Israel rightly observing the fourteenth day of the first
lunar month, celebrated it on the Passover of the Law, has been briefly
demonstrated.”
More Who Find Calendar Erroneous
There
is no doubt that the early assembly fathers recognized the error of the Jews in
their calculated calendar. The Passover was kept by first observing the new
moons right up to the destruction of the
The Roman churches then addressed this
problem at the Nicene Council. This is shown in the Catholic Encyclopedia,
under “Calendar,” where we read; “When
the destruction of
Flavius Josephus, the Jewish historian,
himself a priest who lived in Messianic times, tells us that the Passover had to
be held when the sun was in Aries, that is, had passed the vernal equinox. It
was shortly after that time of Josephus that the Jewish calendar was changed to
that every 17th year of the cycle, Passover was placed in the winter
in the previous year, instead of into the spring of the next year! (Josephus Antiquities, Book II, ch. X 5.) As explained,
because of the steady creeping forward of the Jewish calendar, this error no
longer occurs.
Why Intercalating Was Necessary
Schurer
goes on to state some of the reasoning used for intercalating a month before
Nisan or Abib; “If one therefore, toward
the close of the year, noticed that Passover would fall before the vernal
equinox, the intercalation of a month before Nisan would have to be resorted
to.” (p. 371)
A
footnote reads: “For three reasons a year
may be pronounced an intercalary year; because of the ripeness of the grain (if
this has not occurred at the proper season), and on account of the sun (if the
sun at Passover has not yet come into the sign of Aries), and if the rains had
not ceased. And if two of these reasons combine may one conclude for
intercalation, but not for one of these alone.”
It should be interesting to you to know
that the procedure followed by the Jews during the time of the Messiah and
right up to the destruction of
In a footnote on page 372, Schurer says, “…Theodore Reinach has proved in a
convincing manner that in the Kingdom of Arsacidae, that is in Babylon, even in
the first century before (Messiah) and in the first century after (Messiah),
the Greek calendar, calculated according to the nineteen years’ cycle as that
used ‘by the Gentiles and Jews’ it would seem that cycle, even in the third
Christian century, prevailed in Palestine and Syria (so far as the solar year
had not yet been adopted)…the later Jewish calendar was constructed, not by the
Palestinian, but by the Babylonian Jews.”
Nineteen-year Cycle from Babylonian Calendar
It
is clear from all the abundant evidence that the present 19 year cycle of the
Jewish calendar is a recent recension from
A Dictionary of the Bible by James
Hastings, vol. Iv under Time, p. 764, says: “By the Middle of the 2nd cent.
[C.E.] the calculated calendar was on the way to acceptance (Sanhed. 12a), but
it was not fully adopted till the 4th cent. Under
Hillel II. In the intervening period the proclamation of new moon and of
the intercalary months was still dependent on the evidence of eye-witness as to
the reappearance of the moon on the one hand, and the relation of the lunar
months to the solar seasons on the other. But astronomical calculation was
certainly utilized as well…”
Hastings Encyclopedia of Religion and
Ethics (ERE) states (p. 123) that the change from the 8 year cycle to the
Babylonian 19 year cycle took place between 222 and 276 C.E.—after the time of
the Messiah. This is another proof that the present Jewish calendar was not
used in the time of the Messiah. It has been changed!
The ERE goes on to make the following
statement that must be considered by those who mistakenly contend that the
present day Jewish calendar is from the great antiquity, from the time of
Moses. “The supposed calendar is never
referred to in the Talmud, which received its final redaction at the end of the
5th century. Nothing whatever is said there about the length of the
month or the nineteen year cycle, or anything else of the kind. It is
psychologically improbable that the Patriarch Hillel II would of his own
initiative divest himself of his highest privilege, and likewise of his most
powerful means of influence amongst the Jewish communities both in
(Footnote) “Conclusive proof of the view that the
continuos calendar had its origin in Babylon during the post-Talmudic period (5th century C.E.), is furnished at the earliest
by the proceeding of Ben Meir…then elaborated upon by Bornstein…” (emphasis ours).
The ERE has the following footnote: “The earliest known Jewish astronomer,
Mashallah, lived in the reign of the Khalif al-Mansur. Here, therefore we find
a corroboration of our theory that the consultant calendar of modern Judaism is
of relatively late date. The calculation of conjunctions, for instance, cannot
have been finally established even as late as A.D. 776, for according to the
Baraitha of Samuel, the conjunction of Tishri in that year took place at 4d. O
h.; while, according to the modern reckoning it did not occur till 4 d. h.3 h.
363 p.” (p. 122).
Here is another proof that in the year
776 in our Common Era, there is a difference of
Jewish Records and Writings: Jewish Calendar Evolves
The
prestigious and reliable Jewish Encyclopedia clearly explains the development
of the Jewish calendar. “The Jewish
calendar may be divided up into three periods—the Biblical, the Talmudic, and
the post-Talmudic. The first rested purely on the observation of the sun and
moon, the second on observation and reckoning, and the third entirely on
reckoning.”
The Jewish Encyclopedia states that the
months were based upon visual (empirical) sighting of the thin crescent. This
was used in addition to a projected sighting of the new moon every 29 or 30
days. It was only later that a calculated calendar determined the holy days.
In the Mishnah (Teaching) we find the
Jewish oral law containing decisions and traditions from the first Century
B.C.E. to the third Century C.E. and is the basis of
the Gemara (Interpretation). It is from the Mishnah that we learn that a Holy
Day could occur on any day of the month (Dansby’s translation) such as is given
on p. 125, #6: “On a Festival-day next to
the Sabbath, whether before it or after it, a man may prepare two Erubs…”
Still with the Mishnah, on p. 146 #10 we
learn that the 16th Abib may fall on a Sabbath; pp. 197, 201, 213
show that the old calendar is not in harmony with the present-day Jewish
calendar. In fact p. 509 #7 shows that the Day of Atonement could fall on a
Friday, the day before the weekly Sabbath. This is in direct opposition to the
modern Jewish calendar which has postponements designed to forestall
Atonement’s being either before or after the weekly Sabbath.
Not only does the Jews’ own Mishnah
disproves the antiquity of the present-day Jewish calendar, but the Talmud also
refutes the contention that is an ancient institution of the Jews. In the
footnote, p. 117, the ERE states, “It is related in the Talmud (Sanhedrin, 12a)
that Akiba (first half of 2nd Century A.D.) reckoned three years as
intercalary—a fact which proves the non-existence of any intercalary cycle at
that time.
Three successive intercalations is unheard of in the modern Jewish calendar which has the
additional month intercalated seven times in a 19-year cycle, viz. In the 3rd, 6th, 8th, 11th,
14th, 17th, and 19th years. This is
clearly stated in The Comprehensive Hebrew Calendar by Arthur Spier, Number 10
under C. The Common and Leap Years.
More Evidence of Unauthorized Changes
From
the translation of J.D. Michaelis’ book De Mensibus Hebraeorum, we read the
following, “As the Jews still retain the
names Nisan, etc., it may appear at first sight needless to do more than refer
the reader to a modern almanac and this would have been the case if it were not
evident that the modern Nisan does not correspond with the ancient one.”
Here again we have proof that the present
Nisan has been changed along with other Jewish months from the older, more
ancient calendars based upon a visible new moon and observation of the seasons.
Michaelis pointed this out upon discovering the true state of this case after
the rabbinical writers had so universally established an erroneous opinion that
the calendar was from antiquity. This Rabbinical error has not even yet
entirely disappeared from our popular books.
Hasting’s
ERE (already quoted) relates the following incident by a rash defender of
Jewish calculated calendar; “Against all
these sectaries and heretics a stand was made by Gaon Saady b. Joseph al-Fayfimi
(892-942). In order to safeguard the existing system of the calendar, he
broached the remarkable theory that it was of immemorial antiquity, and that
months and festivals had always been determined by calculation.
“He maintained that observation of the moon
was introduced only in the time of Antigonus of Socho (3rd Cent.
B.C.E.), as heretics has arisen who questioned the accuracy of the
calculations, and that this step was taken to simply
to show that calculation and observation were in perfect accord. It was an easy
matter for the Karaites to quash this theory by means of data from the
Talmud…and the majority of Rabbinical authorities had
likewise to admit that Saady’s contentions were absurd.”
Not only do we learn that the zealousness
of those defending the antiquity of the present Jewish calendar forces them to
make rash statements, but in the above we learn that observation of the new
moons was carried out BEFORE the 3rd Century B.C.E. The truth is,
the present Jewish calendar is not very old, dating from the time AFTER the
Messiah, introduced to the world in the fourth century.
Jewish writers and misled zealots
continue their attempt to present the Jewish calendar as very ancient, implying
that its accuracy is unchallenged, which history shows simply cannot be true.
Down through the years to our present day
there are those who contend the present Jewish calendar came directly from
Yahweh, given to Moses at the time of the giving of the Law. This absurdity of
trying to place the Jewish calendar before the Messiah was promulgated in the
10th Century.
The Extra Month: A Later Revision
The
Jewish calendar of today inserts an intercalary month in the spring, which is
known as “Ve-Adar,” the second Adar month. Insertion of an extra month is
necessary so that Passover always falls in the spring when the barley crop
ripens. If this were not done, the Jewish calendar would be like the Mohammedan
which has their holy days rotating through all seasons of the year before
returning to their original position every 34 years.
However, it was not always the custom to
intercalate a month in the spring as presently done with the Jewish calendar.
In his The Crux of Chronology, Frank Meyer shows that not only did the early
Jewish almanac intercalate a month on the 5th (instead of the
present 6th) and the 16th (in lieu of the present 17th)
year of the 19 year Metonic cycle, but that the month was intercalated in the
fall and not in the spring as at present.
On page 253 we read, “That the chronological site of the intercalation has, in different
ages and in different stages of the world’s experience, been located in
different parts of the fiscal year, is a matter of fact recorded in history.
The men of Judae preferred, in unison with all the other nations under the
influence of the Selucidae, to insert their embolismic month in the late summer
or early autumn, calling this extra lunation ‘the second Elul.’”
Again, page 253, ibid, “Consequently, as early as the 6th Century B.C.E. the insertion of an extra lunation after Elul, in late summer or
early autumn, was recognized as legal and practiced as calendrically correct.”
Frank H. Meyer’s work shows us then, that
the modern Jewish calendar was not governing the times about 564 B.C.E. Today
the Jewish calendar inserts a month before the spring month of Abib (or Nisan).
This proves that the rules of the modern Jewish calendar were then not used to
determine months, and therefore the refining of the present calendar took place
during the time after Messiah! The present Jewish calendar is of recent
origin, and many authorities do not date it only since the reputed release year
359 C.E., but even several hundred years later.
New Moons Used in Yahshua’s Time
To
further prove that the Jews at the time of the Messiah did not have a fixed
calendar as they have today, Emil Schurer in his book, The Jewish People in
the Time of Jesus Christ, wrote on page 366: “But unless all indications are deceitful, they (Jews) did not in the
time of [Yahshua Messiah] possess as yet any fixed calendar, but on the basis
of purely empirical observation, on each occasion they begin a new month with
the appearing of the new moon, and likewise on the basis of each repeated
observation intercalated a month in the spring of every third and second year,
in accordance with the rule that Passover under all circumstances must fall
after the vernal equinox.”
Appealing to the writings of Julius
Africanus, Schurer says dogmatically (p. 369), “The system of intercalation was not fixed even in the second century
after [Messiah].” On page 370 we read, “…The
intercalation was carried out without reference to any preconceived theory on
the basis of an empirical observation made on each separate occasion. That this
was still the case in the times of the Mishnah is proved from the two following
passages; Megillah I, 4Edujoth vii, 7…There is absolutely no trace of any
previous calculation.” The Mishnah was compiled from 450 B.C.E. to 200 C.E.
and arranged at Tiberius and all this time there is no hint given of a
calculated fixed calendar such as the Jews use today!
Surely if a calculated calendar were in
use at the time of the Messiah, there would be a record of its being included
in the writings of the Mishnah, but there is none! Each new moon was based upon
empirical observation with a calculated calendar of 29 and 30-day months to
corroborate the sanctifying of the month.
Christianity Distrusts Later Jewish Calendar
Many
church fathers are of the opinion that, according to the original calculation
of the Jews up to the time of the destruction of
Thus the Council of Nicaea determined
that Easter would fall upon the first Sunday following the first full moon following
the vernal equinox. It was understood that the full moon would be Abib 15, the
first day of Unleavened Bread.
The New Dictionary by J.D. Douglas reads
on page 160, “In general, the Jewish
calendar in NT times (at least before AD 70) followed the Sadducean reckoning,
since it was by that reckoning that the
“Even more important than the minor
calendrical differences between Sadducees and Pharisees was the cleavage
between the Sadducees and Pharisees, on the one hand, and those, on the other
hand, who followed the ‘sectarian’ calendar known from the book of Jubilees and
now also from the
Other Babylonian Influence on the
Calendar
The
Biblical calendar was originally based on the sighting of the new moon. Only
later did that proper method give way to a man-made, exclusively calculated
one. The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (ISBE) (vol. 1, p. 541)
reads, “The Heb. or Jewish calendar had
three stages of development: the preexilic, or Bib.; the postexilic, or
Talmudic; and the post-Talmudic. The first rested on observation merely, the
second on observation coupled with calculation, and
the third on calculation only. In the first period the priests determined the
beginning of each month by the appearance of the new moon and the recurrence of
the prescribed Feasts from the vernal and autumnal equinoxes. Thus the month
Abib (‘abhibh), the first month of the year according to the Levitical law, in
which the Passover was to be celebrated, was determined by observation (Ex.
12:2; Deut. 16).
“After the exile more accurate methods
of determining the months and seasons came into vogue, and calculation was
employed to supplement and correct observations and the calendar was regulated
according to the Babylonian system, as is evidenced by the names of the months
which are derived from it. In later times the calendar was fixed by
mathematical methods…”
Interestingly,
the ISBE claims the present calendar came later. “More exactly, 4 years out of every 11 were leap years of 13 months
(Jew Enc. Art. “Calendar”), this being derived from the Bab.
Calendar. If, on the 16th of the month Nisan, the sun had not
reached the vernal equinox, that month was declared to be the second ‘Adhar and
the following one Nisan. This method, of course, was not exact and about the 4th cent. of our era the mathematical method [Hillel II
calendar] was adopted. The number was adopted. The number of days in each month
was fixed, seven having 30 days, and the rest 29. When the intercalary month
was added the first ‘Adhar had 30 days and the second 29 days” (p. 542,
“Calendar”).
A supporting comment comes from the
Classic Bible Dictionary: The calendar currently in use for Jewish religions
purposes is thought to have been introduced by the patriarch Hillel II [C.E.
330-365]. Before that time it was necessary for witnesses to report the
appearance of the new moon to the Sanhedrin each month. The various communities
of
“Since the Babylonian exile, the months
have borne Babylonians names…” It is apparent that the present Hebrew calendar
is based on Babylonian astronomy and even the names of the Jewish months are
adapted from Babylonian names.
Only
four months were named before the Babylonian captivity; Nelson’s Illustrated Bible Dictionary
(pp. 200-201) is more precise on this point; “In later history the nation of
“With regard to the year, the Jewish
historian Josephus stated that
“To reconcile the lunar month with the
solar year,
Nelson’s Dictionary flatly states that
The present Jewish calendar follows
closely the Babylonian calendar which emerged with the Hillel II calendar of
359 (365) C.E. Thus the Jewish calendar is relatively recent and is a close
copy of the Babylonian calendar.
Eerdman’s Bible Dictionary states the
following on page 1076; “Before A.D. 70
Jews followed Sadducean reckoning, which regulated the
This observation by Eerdman’s dictionary
states clearly what many scholars have come to conclude, namely, that the
various and unbiblical postponements by the Pharisees of Yahweh’s holy days
were already being followed during the Savior’s time. Yahshua kept the Passover
at the right time with His disciples, as established by the Sadducees, but the
Pharisees observed it a day later - on the 15th - just as some do
today.
"The command to ‘keep the month of Abib’ (Deut. 16:1), made it
necessary to be acquainted with the position of the sun. Moreover, it was
possible to judge by the grain harvest. If the month of Nisan arrived and the
sun was at such a distance from the vernal equinox that it could not reach it
by the 16th of the month, then this month was not called Nisan, but
Adar Sheni [second], ibid.”
The
Jewish calendar observes the days from evening to evening in accordance with
Genesis 1:5, “And there was evening and
there was morning, one day.” This is repeated in Exodus 12:18 and Leviticus
23:32. “Day” is used in a double
sense: (1) as the period of twenty-four hours, and (2) daylight as contrasted
to darkness or night, and must be determined in context.
To quote the Jewish Encyclopedia under
Calendar, “Nightfall, as the border-line
between the two consecutive days is the moment when three stars of second
magnitude become visible. The short time before the actual appearance of the
stars is regarded as a doubtful period, neither day nor night, and is called in
rabbinic literature “bene ramshayah’ (between the evenings).”
During the time of the Messiah, observers
were stationed in various part of the country and were alerted to watch for a
small, faint arc, like a sickle in the western sky shortly after sunset. This
would be the first reflection of the sun from the right side of the moon.
As the moon revolves around the earth
every 29 or 30 days it reaches a point where it is positioned in a straight
line between the sun and the earth, and because of the position of the earth
and sun, no light is reflected from the moon. This is known as the conjunction
(Hebrew – molad). The time elapsed from one molad to another is referred to a
lunation, which takes 29 ½ days.
During the times of the
Often the brightness of the setting sun
obliterates the thin and very faint light of the new crescent moon. It is the
visible sighting of the new moon, which begins the month according to the
Bible, and is the rebuilding phase of the moon.
Deuteronomy 16:1 reads, “Observe the month (moon) of Abib and keep
the Passover unto Yahweh.” Observe is from the Strong’s Concordance No.
8104, shamar, and means to guard, attend to, protect, and is translated beware,
be circumspect, take heed, mark, look narrowly, observe, preserve, and regard.
The Holladay Concise Hebrew and Aramaic
Lexicon defines it as watching in the sense of
looking. We are to take special note of that new moon in which the green ears
of barley heads develop, and keep the Passover unto Yahweh during that month
(Ex. 9:31).
The Jewish calendar disregards that
admonition and instead anchors the beginning of months to the astronomical
conjunction itself, and not to the visible crescent. It is a principle of the
Jewish calendar that if the conjunction (Hebrew = molad) takes place before
At sunset that day the new moon would be
something less than seven or eight hours old, and if the sunset is before
“There is at least the possibility of
experts discovering the small sickle of the moon six hours after the
conjunction” says the Jewish
Encyclopedia. But this is a farce, for except by using optical lenses, the
unaided eye cannot see the slim sliver of light until the new moon of today is
20 or 22 hours old.
This could make a difference of a day in
setting the time for the Holy Days of Yahweh. We must remember that the Bible
was written for the ancient Israelites, who as shepherds, farmers, dressers of
vineyards and sycamore trees did not have highly refined optical instruments at
their disposal. We go by the same standards, but have the advantage of records
and astronomical predictions of the ephemeris.
The Bible’s admonition applies to us as
well as to the ancients to be aware (alert to) the new moon in which the green
ears appear, that we can properly observe Yahweh’s Passover and remaining
Sacred appointments. Yahweh’s Assembly in Yahshua observes these new moons each
month just as did ancient
Added Rules Not Found in the Bible
There
are still other rules governing the Jewish calendar that are nowhere found in
the Bible and certainly were not followed at the time of the Messiah. There are
rules for the postponement (dehioth) of the days according to Spier’s The
Comprehensive Hebrew Calendar, which are summarized as follows:
a) When the Molad Tishri occurs on a
Sunday, Wednesday, or Friday, Rosh Hashanah is postponed to the following day.
b) When the Molad Tishri occurs at
c) When the Molad Tishri or a common
year falls on Tuesday, 204 parts after
d) When a common year is succeeding a
leap year, the Molad Tishri occurs on a Monday morning 589 parts after
These
rules may sound a bit confusing, but they can be simply stated as follows:
· The Day of Atonement cannot precede or
follow a weekly Sabbath—never on a Friday or Sunday.
· The Last Great Day cannot fall on a
Sabbath.
· Passover can fall only on a Monday,
Wednesday, Friday, or Sabbath.
The reason for the postponements in the
Jewish calendar is so that the day of Trumpets (First of Tishri) will not fall
on the day before or after a weekly Sabbath, which also applies to the Day of
Atonement, to allow a day to prepare either for the weekly Sabbath or the Holy
day. There is absolutely no authority in Scripture for such postponements, and
this was not the rule at the time of Messiah. He never kept Yahweh’s Holy Days
a day or two later, but correctly kept them all on the proper day with no
postponements.
In this treatise you should find abundant
evidence that the Jewish calendar in use today was not used during the time of
Messiah to set the Feast days. In fact, all evidence points to the gradual
development of the present calculations over a period of time, reaching up to
the Middle Ages and not just to the year 359 C.E. as
is claimed. It is true that the Jewish calendar has been a unifying factor in
coordinating the dispersed Jews to worship on the same day around the world.
Sadly, the days it shows to worship are not according to Scripture!
Review of Why Jewish Calendar Is Unacceptable
Perhaps
this has been a bit tedious and difficult to follow, but may sincere Bible
scholars throughout history have seen that the present Jewish calendar has been
changed since the Messiah walked this earth. The following is a summary of the
reasons Yahweh’s Assembly in Yahshua must reject the Jewish calendar and rely
on Biblical commands:
· There
was a change in the Jewish calendar shortly after the death of the Messiah,
undoubtedly brought about by the dispersion of the Sanhedrin following the
destruction of
· All
ancient historians agree the visible sightings of the new moons were originally
used to establish the beginning of months. A form of calculated calendar was
used by the priests to corroborate the empirical observation. Eventually, the
Jews began to rely more on the calculated rather than the observed new moons,
and finally to use exclusively the calculated calendar.
· During
the Post-Nicene Fathers, Passover was at times celebrated before the vernal
equinox, placing it in winter and not spring. This had never occurred before.
· The
Jewish calendar actually creeps forward in time, and is out of synchronization
with true solar time, gaining a day every 216 years.
· The
Mishnah (composed 450 B.C.E.-200 C.E.) shows a completely different calendar,
refuting the basic rules of the dehioth (postponements) of the present Jewish
calendar.
· The
present Jewish calendar is never mentioned in the Talmud.
· It
is impossible to reconcile dates of events in history with the rules of the
present Jewish calendar. They do not mesh, e.g. 506 and 776 C.E.
· Intercalation
early on was with the month Elul (corresponding to our September) instead of
the present Adar (March-April).
· The
8-year cycle was replaced by the more accurate, 19-year (metonic) cycle
borrowed from
· The
intercalation of extra months (or leap year) which occurs 7 times in a 19-year
cycle can be proved to have occurred the 5th instead of the 6th year, and the 16th in stead of the 17th year before the present Jewish calendar was adopted.
· The
present Jewish calendar ignores the Bible command to observe (Heb. Shamar,
watch for) the new moon, but instead anchors its determination of the new month
to the conjunction or molad, a sophisticated procedure that was not readily
available to the average person in ancient times nor even today for those who
are unskilled in astronomy.
· In
the 7th and 8th centuries, probably under Anan b. David,
the Karaites rejected the calculated and fixed calendar as not being in harmony
with the Holy Word and reinstated lunar observation, p.118, Hastings
Encyclopedia.
· The
Jewish calendar begins the new year with Tishri, in
the fall of the year at Trumpets (Hebrew calendar = Rosh Hashanah, “head [or
first] of the year”). Scripture says that the month of “green ears” (Abib)
shall be the beginning of months to His people, Exodus 12:2. Yahweh’s year
begins in the spring when the earth turns green, and life returns, not just
before winter.
· The
earliest known Jewish astronomer, Mashallah, lived in the reign of Khalif
al-Mansur (754-775 C.E.). The present-day Jewish calendar is very precise, and
would require a skilled astronomer to construct. Many historians contend it is
copied from that of
· The
Dehioth (postponements) built into the present-day Jewish calendars are nowhere
sanctioned by the Bible. They are the works of man. Postponing a Holy Day under
the guise of making the Holy Days easier to live with is totally the works of
man and is not scriptural.
· The
Feast of Weeks (Pentecost) according to all good Bible scholars must fall on
the day following the weekly Sabbath. It is to be on the fiftieth day from the
weekly Sabbath that falls within the Days of Unleavened Bread. The present Jewish
calendar always has it falling on Sivan 6. Why would Yahweh put us to the
trouble of counting the 50 days if Pentecost always falls on Sivan 6?
· Because
of the postponements, 60 percent of the time the month does not begin on the
day of the new moon but is postponed. Therefore, the exceptions to the rule are
most important than the rule, as they govern the beginnings of the months. This
is totally unscriptural. Nowhere does Yahweh say we can transfer the day of
worship to another time. Daniel
· Because
the Jewish calendar is based upon the astronomical conjunction, any time the
Molad (conjunction) occurs even a minute before noon, that day at sunset starts
the new moon day, even when the moon is less than six hours old and not yet
visible.
· In
the year 2000, the Jewish calendar placed the new moon of the seventh month
AFTER the visible new moon!
Answering Objections: ‘Moses’ Seat’
Despite
a wealth of evidence showing the error of the Jewish calendar compared to the
calendar of the Bible, there are those who say we should follow the Jews
because of what Yahshua said in Matthew 23:2-3; “The scribes and the Pharisees
sit in Moses’ seat: All therefore whatsoever they bid you observe, that observe
and do; but do not after their works: for they say, and do not.”
We might agree that when it comes to
teaching the Torah, the Jewish teachers sit in Moses' seat, a Hebraism for
teaching the law. We are to observe all of Yahweh’s laws, including the Sabbath
and Feast Days. We agree that we are obliged to do so. But we are not to follow
their works - as when they observe the wrong day - because they follow the
erroneous Jewish calendar with all its man-devised postponements. The
postponements are contrary to the Bible.
At the time of the Messiah’s sojourn,
books and writings were extremely expensive and generally not available. The
Torah was available to the scribes and Pharisees, but beyond the reach of the
average worshiper except by hearing it read in the synagogue. The people were
to obey what they heard from the Bible, but not follow those traditions of the
elders. By their works or traditions they had made the commandments of Yahweh
of none effect, Matthew 15:6.
The rest of Matthew 23 contains the
condemnation of the Scribes and Pharisees for their hypocritical habit of
saying one thing and doing another. We are not to do after their works, neither
what they do nor the way they do things. We are to keep the High Sabbaths, but
keeping them on the wrong day as is often the case with the Jewish calendar, is
the same as disobeying them!
Another verse used by some proponents who
contend that the Jewish calendar is from antiquity is John
A Biblical reason to follow the Jewish
calendar is assumed by some by quoting Romans 3:1-2: “What advantage then has the Jew? Or what profit [is there] of
circumcision? Much every way: chiefly, because that unto them were committed
the oracles of Yahweh.” They deduce that the “oracles” include the Jewish
calendar.
“Oracles” is Strong’s No. 3051 (Greek, logion).
Logion occurs four times in the New Testament, which Kittel says means “sacred
pronouncements.” Acts
It was the Jews who kept a copy of the
Old Testament to hand down to us today. However, the calendar is nowhere
included in these “oracles” from the Bible. There is no reference to a definite
calculated calendar in the Old Testament. By their own admission and by
history, we know they have a different calendar today.
The present Jewish calendar is not from
Moses, but as you have seen clearly demonstrated by reliable scholarship, their
calculated calendar is of recent origin, probably much later than the year 360
C.E. when Hillel II purportedly revealed the Jewish calendar to the world of
Judaism.
There is overwhelming evidence that the
method of establishing the first day of the month in the time of the Messiah
was by visible sightings of the visible crescent as Yahweh’s Assembly in
Yahshua does today. We use a calculated calendar only as a guide to determine
approximately when the new moon should be spotted. From that information, then,
we must verify by a visible sighting. This is the only proper, Scriptural
method of confirming Feast days.
Tips on Locating the New Moon
The
almanac usually pictures a black circle to indicate the date of the new moon.
The new moon day is hardly ever a guide to see the new crescent, as the moon
must be 20 hours old or more at sunset. Our yearly calendar shows the evening
of each month when the crescent should be visible within an hour after sunset
in the western sky.
On the night sighting is scheduled, one
should seek a high prominence away from city lights, and look to the setting
sun. From the overhead zenith, look on either side of an imaginary line toward
the setting sun.
On the first night the scimitar-shaped
sliver of light will be fairly close to the horizon, bulging out to the right,
with the horns pointing up or to the left. The moon may be visible for only a
short time the first night. By the time three stars are visible, it is often
too late.
The sightings must be confirmed by two or
three witnesses so that we can be assured of these days. This was the practice
at the time of the Messiah. Those spotting the new moons call us at
This is a major step in restoring pure
worship in anticipation of Yahshua’s return and setting up His Millennial
reign. We know the new moons will be observed in the Kingdom. Again they will
set the dates worldwide for the observation of Yahweh’s Feast days. Everyone
will be observing the new moons on the first of every month, just as
“And it shall come to pass, [that] from
one new moon to another, and from one Sabbath to another, shall all flesh come
to worship before me, saith Yahweh.” Isa.
66:23.
“This is the beginning of months to
you.” Ex. 12:2.
Don’t YOU Be in Error!
If
you are following the Jewish calendar, which admittedly keeps the wrong days 60
percent of the time, you are not following the calendar used by the Messiah.
If you observe Passover “closest to the
vernal equinox,” you may at times be keeping the Passover too early, BEFORE the
vernal equinox. Keeping the Passover before the vernal equinox is in effect
keeping it in the winter, in the old year. By doing so you may be skipping an
entire year where no Passover will be kept, or you could be keeping two
Passovers in one year.
While some think that the first moon of
the year should be after the vernal equinox, history shows this may not be the
case. Primitive astronomy was often unable to determine exactly when the vernal
equinox occurred. This time of equal day and night is determined
astronomically, as the precession of the equinox can be a problem in fixing the
exact day. At times the vernal equinox has been on the 18, 19, 20, 21 day of
March. A new moon on any of these days could pose a very difficult call, for
the vernal (spring) equinox is the exact time the sun crosses the equator on
its journey northward.
In the time of the Messiah the new moon
that occurred when the barley was in the green ear stage was declared to be the
month of Nisan or Abib (meaning “green ears”), the beginning of the new year.
May you come to see the importance of the
Feast days commanded forever (Lev.
© 2007, 2010 Yahweh’s Assembly in Yahshua
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