Sunday, June 23, 2019

The Origin Of The Biblical Calendar Hebrew

By Harold Brooks


While most are more familiar with the Gregorian calendars, most Jews would make use of a different formats for their calendars. This is known as the Biblical Calendar Hebrew style. While they are pretty similar, these types of calendars have their own specific differences as compared to the more modern ones.

Now, one of the most crucial things to know about these types of calendars is that they revolve around the feasts that Jews used to have to observe back in the Old Testament days. The thing about feasts is that they are mandated by God to be followed on the exact day which is why Jews are still very observant up until today. The only difference is back then, there was no system and they had to just use their powers of observation.

That said, the modern Jewish calendars are more calculated and have some sort of mathematical basis to them. The old version, on the other hand, was based on pure observation of the sky and the weather. Of course, the Bible did state how exactly the people were able to tell dates based on the instructions of God.

To know how the followers observed dates, it is very important to go back to the very first book of the Bible which is Genesis. According to Genesis one verse fourteen, God said that there will be a light in Heaven that separates the light and darkness in the sky and there will be seasons. That was how God taught the people of Israel at that time how to observe dates wherein they must gather for the Passover.

That alone will show readers that the sky and the weather were the two factors that would determine dates. This statement from the verse further backs up what was stated in Genesis chapter one verses one to five wherein God distinguished night and day. So when both day and night passed, then it would be considered that one day passed.

In order to form a week, seven days would have to pass. According to the Bible, God created the world in seven days which means that it took seven days and nights to pass before reaching the end. That is why the last weekend day, or Sunday, is known as the Sabbath day since it signifies perfection.

For determining the months, God stated in Deutoronomy sixteen that there will be a new moon at the start of a month. This is known in Hebrew as the Chodesh and it signifies that moon will begin a cycle. As the cycle goes on, the moon will become half, then crescent shaped, then full again.

Lastly, the book of Exodus would state that the beginning of a year was during the moon of Abib or the month of green air crop growth. From there, the book gives a detailed description about how the seasons move in a cycle signifying that one year has passed. After one year, the followers will then have to observe again how the moon moves to know when the next feast would be.




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