The World has lain in the REALM of the Evil One for thousands of years. Over time, humans have become so comfortable with their slavery they cannot even perceive it. Humans have been MECHANIZED by the DEVIL’s DEVICES since the beginning.
At this point in history, TIME has become more paramount than ever before. Time to the world has become unfathomable. Most people today are not even sure if it is real or relevant. But, considering Scripture, we would be wise to be clear in our own minds how we perceive time. If you are a believer, the Word of God makes it very clear where time originated, how it is to be counted and that there is a limit, an ending determined. I am convinced that we are very close to encountering that END.
As with all things in this world, TIME has been distorted, veiled, perverted, manipulated and mechanized. The enemy of your soul knows how important it is for you to KNOW the TRUTH about TIME. Especially at this moment.
Today we are going to take a deep look at all things related to TIME to help you get a clearer image of, and firm conviction about TIME.
QUESTION: Who Rules Time? – I entered that question into the search bar, and this is what I got. Hilarious!
space This first video is time sensitive, please don’t miss it. I love the way that Dr Awe studies the bible and he always makes terrific charts to help the viewer to visualize what he is sharing. Whether you agree with him or not about the Rapture or any date he focuses on, the bible study stands on its own and is highly informative. spacer
In Scripture, the sun, moon, and stars are not just physical objects but signs and symbols of God’s creation, sovereignty, and plan for humanity. They serve as reminders of His power, wisdom, and presence, and are often linked to prophetic events and the unfolding of His purposes.
Creation and Worship God created the sun, moon, and stars to separate day from night, mark sacred times, and reflect His glory. Psalm 19:1 says, “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of His hands”biblestudyforyou.com. These celestial bodies invite us to worship and recognize His handiwork, as seen in Psalm 8:3, which marvels at the moon and stars set in place biblerepository.com.
Symbolism in Scripture
Sun – Often represents God’s presence, guidance, and blessings; a source of light and life biblicalpathway.com.
Moon – Symbolizes cycles of time, change, and the connection between heaven and earth biblicalpathway.com.
Stars – Can represent divine order, prophecy, and even individual destinies (e.g., Joseph’s dream in Genesis 37:9-11) biblereflection.org.
Prophecy and Eschatology The Bible records that “signs in the sun, moon, and stars” will appear before the return of Christ(Matthew 24:29; Luke 21:25) Bible Hub. These are not random events but cosmic disturbances signaling God’s intervention. In the Old Testament, such signs often precede judgment (e.g., Isaiah 13:9-11) or divine action(e.g., Joshua 10:12-13). They point to the ultimate triumph of God and the establishment of a new heaven and new earth biblereflection.org.
God’s Plan for Us Living according to the signs in the heavens means aligning our lives with God’s will, recognizing His sovereignty over all creation,and preparing for His return. The Catholic Church teaches that these signs are part of God’s plan to guide and prepare His people, not to terrify, but to unite the faithful with Him in glory biblereflection.org. By living a Christ-centered life, we respond to these signs with hope and readiness.
Practical Application
Worship and reflection – Spend time in prayer and contemplation of the sky, recognizing God’s glory.
Faithfulness – Live according to His teachings, knowing that His plan includes both judgment and salvation.
Preparation – Be spiritually ready for Christ’s return, as the signs in the heavens are a call to unity with Him biblereflection.org.
In short, God’s plan is for us to see the sun, moon, and stars as witnesses to His creation and as signals of His purposes. By living in harmony with His will, we honor His plan and prepare for the fulfillment of His promises.
c. 1300, devis, “intent, desire; an expressed intent or desire; a plan or design; a literary composition,” from Old French devis“division, separation; disposition, wish, desire; coat of arms, emblem; a bequest in a will, act of bequeathing,” from deviser“arrange, plan, contrive,” literally “dispose in portions,” from Vulgar Latin *divisare, frequentative of Latin dividere “to divide”(see divide (v.)).The basic sense is “method by which something is divided,” which arose in Old French and led to the range of modern meanings via the notion of “something invented or fitted to a particular use or purpose,” hence “an invention; a constructed tool; inventiveness; a contriving, a plan or scheme.“In English from c. 1400 as “artistic design, work of art; ornament,” hence especially “a representation of some object or scene, accompanied by a motto or legend, used as an expression of the bearer’s aspirations or principles.” Also from c. 1400 as “mechanical contrivance,” such as a large crossbow fitted with a crank. From mid-15c. as “a bequest in a will.” Since c. 1996 the word has come to be used especially for “hand-held or mobile computing or electronic instrument.”
We live in a kind of world and in an age of the world where devices of all sorts are growing in complexity, where, therefore, the necessity for alertness and self-mastery in the control of device is ever more urgent. If we are democrats we know that especial perils beset us, both because of the confusion of our aims and because it is easier for the mob than for the individual to mistake appetite for reason, and advantage for right. [Hartley Burr Alexander, “‘Liberty and Democracy,’ and Other Essays in War-Time,” 1918]
The son of a woman of the daughters of Dan, and his father was a man of Tyre, skilful to work in gold, and in silver, in brass, in iron, in stone, and in timber, in purple, in blue, and in fine linen, and in crimson; also to grave any manner of graving, and to find out every device which shall be put to him, with thy cunning men, and with the cunning men of my lord David thy father.
And Esther spake yet again before the king, and fell down at his feet, and besought him with tears to put away the mischief of Haman the Agagite, and his device that he had devised against the Jews.
But when Esther came before the king, he commanded by letters that his wicked device, which he devised against the Jews, should return upon his own head, and that he and his sons should be hanged on the gallows.
Rest in the Lord, and wait patiently for him: fret not thyself because of him who prospereth in his way, because of the man who bringeth wicked devices to pass.
Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest.
But I was like a lamb or an ox that is brought to the slaughter; and I knew not that they had devised devices against me, saying, Let us destroy the tree with the fruit thereof, and let us cut him off from the land of the living, that his name may be no more remembered.
Now therefore go to, speak to the men of Judah, and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, saying, Thus saith the Lord; Behold, I frame evil against you, and devise a device against you: return ye now every one from his evil way, and make your ways and your doings good.
Then said they, Come and let us devise devicesagainst Jeremiah; for the law shall not perish from the priest, nor counsel from the wise, nor the word from the prophet. Come, and let us smite him with the tongue, and let us not give heed to any of his words.
Make bright the arrows; gather the shields: the Lord hath raised up the spirit of the kings of the Medes: for his device is against Babylon, to destroy it; because it is the vengeance of the Lord, the vengeance of his temple.
He shall enter peaceably even upon the fattest places of the province; and he shall do that which his fathers have not done, nor his fathers’ fathers; he shall scatter among them the prey, and spoil, and riches: yea, and he shall forecast his devices against the strong holds, even for a time.
And he shall stir up his power and his courage against the king of the south with a great army; and the king of the south shall be stirred up to battle with a very great and mighty army; but he shall not stand: for they shall forecast devices against him.
Forasmuch then as we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art and man’s device.
Before mechanical clocks, time keeping was based on natural cycles and simple devices.
1. Celestial observation – God ordained that the sun, moon and stars would provide our knowledge of time: days, weeks, months, years and seasons. He also ordained that there would be signs in the sky that would warn us of coming events, if we were watching as we should. The oldest timekeeping was tied to the sun, moon, and stars. Ancient Egyptians, Babylonians, Greeks, and Chinese used the positions of celestial bodies to mark days, seasons, and important events. For example, the Egyptians linked the reappearance of Sirius to the Nile’s annual floods History. This was the beginning of our mechanization. Just as magicians/scientists today “experiment and collecct data, to map what they want to control, these ancients were studying the elements that determine time and implementing their devices to change the way we see visualize and count time.
2. Calendars and lunar cycles Early calendars divided the year into months and days.The Babylonians and Egyptians introduced the concept of dividing daylight into twelve equal “temporal hours,” later adopted by the Romans TimeAndDate. Bone carvings like the Ishango Bone (c. 20,000 BCE) may have tracked lunar cycles or served as early calculatorsHistory. Introducing new devices to control our time and how we relate to it, carved in stone no less.
3. Sundials By around 1200 BCE, Egyptians used stone sundials with gnomons (shadow casters) to indicate time by the sun’s positionTimeAndDate. Similar devices appeared in Babylon, Greece, and Persia, though they were useless at night Clemson University Open Textbooks.
from Latin mons (plural montes) “mountain” (from PIE root *men- (2) “to project”); used in English in various anatomical senses, especially mons
Veneris ” mountains of Love,” fleshy eminence atop the vaginal opening, 1690s; often mons for short.
“vertical shaft that tells time by the shadow it casts” (especially the triangular plate on a sundial), (so it is a symbol for mountin casting a shadow on God’s Time) 1540s, from Latin gnomon, from Greek gnōmōn“indicator (of a sundial), carpenter’s rule,” also, in plural, “the teeth that mark the age of a horse or mule,” literally “one that discerns or examines, interpreter, expert,”from gignōskein“to come to know,” from PIE root*gno- “to know.”In geometry from 1560s, from a use in Greek. In early use in English sometimes folk-etymologized as knowman. Related: Gnomonic. So, the Sundial was a multi edged sword. I the image cut through the atmosphere like a blade. 2. It cast a shadow on the Day created by God. 3. It took our eyes off of the sky where we were supposed to base our time. 4. It moved us from God’s time to Satan’s. 5. It was the next step into our MECHANIZATION! The introduction a device, that people brought into their homes by which the dark side was able to manipulate our minds.
gnome Etymology The word gnome derives from the Greek word γνῶσις gnōsis. A mythical creature/supernatural being associated with the earth and underworld, often depicted as a small, bearded man. Gnomes were typically portrayed as mischievous and helpful creatures who were associated with mining, metallurgy, and hidden treasures. They were often said to guard underground wealth and sometimes interacted with humans, offering advice or guidance.
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4. Water clocks Water clocks, or clepsydras, measured time by the regulated flow of water. Basins with small holes or tubes allowed water to drip or flow at a steady rate, marking hours on scales Clemson University Open Textbooks. These were used in Egypt, China, and Persia, often in warm, sunny climates where sundials and water clocks could function Clemson University Open Textbooks.
5. Incense and candle clocks In China during the Song dynasty, incense clocks measured time by the burn rate of specially prepared sticks, with mechanisms to chime at set intervalsTimeAndDate. Candle clocks were also used in some cultures. Incense and candle burning are rituals to their gods/goddesses/spirits/demons. This is witchcraft.
6. Monuments and natural phenomena Some prehistoric sites, like Newgrange in Ireland, were aligned so that sunlight at the winter solstice illuminated a chamber, acting as a slow, seasonal “clock”History.
7. Other devices Bones, tally sticks, and even the Earth’s rotation were used symbolically or practically to mark timeHistory.
These early methods were less precise than modern clocks but were essential for organizing agriculture, trade, religious rituals, and navigation.They laid the foundation for the development of mechanical clocks in the medieval period Wikipedia+1.
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The Mechanization of Humanity: From Ancient Labor to Social Hierarchy
The idea of labor versus gentility— the division of people into those who work and those who do not — is deeply rooted in ancient history, emerging alongside the mechanization of human activity.
Early subsistence and the Neolithic Revolution For most of human history, people “labored” simply to survive — hunting, gathering, and later farming.Around 12,000 years ago (earth is no more than 6,000 years old), the Neolithic Revolution saw the shift from nomadic lifestyles to agriculture,enabling permanent settlements and population growth historyrise.com.This change freed some individuals from food production, allowing them to take on specialized roles such as artisans, priests, or administratorsOpen Educational Resources Collective.
neolithic(adj.)
“pertaining to the later Stone Age,belonging to the period of highly finished and polished stone implements,” 1865, coined by John
Lubbock, later Baron Avebury, (1834-1913)fromneo-“new” + -lith“stone” + -ic.
The Neolithic Period, or New Stone Age, generally spans from around 10,000 BCE to 2,000 BCE, with regional variations in its onset and conclusion.
The true meaning of civilizationencompasses various aspects, includingthe development of a writing system, government, and urbanization.However, the relationship between machinizationand civilization is complex.
The Neolithic Age is supposedly the last of three periods of what it taught to be the stone age. However, since the fallen Angels taught mankind all manner of forbidden knowledge, including the working of metals and forging weapons and tools, shields and armor, it is not possible that humans ever lived in what we are taught to be the primitive stoneage.
The Telchines, who emerged from the primordial sea and were the children of the gods whom pagans believe formed the earth and everything in it, would have had to have been some of the first entities on earth and according to mythology and legends they were highly skilled at creating stone statues and in fact were said to be the first to create the statues of gods and goddesses and build their Temples. They also were fabulous metal workers creating jewelry, weapons, tools etc and teaching humans how to forge metal. They also taught magic, magic, strology and divination. So, again, there could not have been one stoneage let alone three periods of it. spacer
Fallen angels, or the Watchers, taught humans forbidden knowledge including weapon-making, sorcery, astrology, cosmetics, and other arts that led to corruption and chaos.
Forbidden Knowledge and Skills
According to the Book of Enoch and related texts, the fallen angels descended to Earth and imparted knowledge that was not meant for humans. Their teachings included:
Since the Giants/the progeny of the Fallen angels were cannibals who consumed human flesh and devoured most of the fruits of the earth, it makes sense that the “NOBILITY” the current ruling elite, who claim to be descendants of the “gods” Fallen Angels are cannibals. They are cold blooded entities who have no compassion for humans. They hate humanity. They are cruel and sadistic and get power and pleasure from torturing, killing and consuming humans.Especially infants and children.
If you choose to hide your eyes and not recognize this truth, it is to your own detriment and that of your children and grandchildren.
RESTORED 11/7/23 This series will address some very critical topics related to your very near future. In order to find our way through the future,
we will be taking a trip all the way back to the beginning – GENESIS to discover the source, the origin of the Spiritual Battle/Warfare that has been
raging throughout … Click Here to Read More
Telchineswere direct descendants of the original primal gods and some of the earliest beings depicted in Greek mythology. The Telchines were known not only for their skills in metallurgy but also for stone sculpting.They were the first to create marble statues of the gods,and the ancient Greeks highly regarded their masterpieces. According to the historian Diodorus Siculus, the Telchines were responsible for crafting statues of Apollo and Heraon the island of Rhodes in Lindus and Camirus, respectively. They were skilled metalworkers and crafted sophisticated tools of bronze and iron, such as sickles and other
tools. Thy were the first to construct statues to honor the gods and talented metallurgists who created many of the gods’ weapons.hese daimons often used their powers over the natural world to cause mayhem. As magicians, the Telchines were able to use the forces of nature as the gods could. They are recorded as being able to “produce earthquakes, lightnings, and storms, and, like Proteus, change their shapes at will.”The Telchines of Crete were masters of magic, and part of this art is the skill of concealment and word play which they had perfected. Hence, the magical Telchnines would be known throughout history over the last three thousand years by a multitude of various names such as the Curetes (Kouretes), Cappadocians, Corbanytes, Phoenicians, Syrians or White Syrians, Sea Peoples, Philistines (or Palestinians) and the Minoans; just to name some. Sources: Who Were the Telchines? The Malevolent Wizards of Greek Mythology | TheCollector / Telchines: Sorcerers and Sea Demons of Greek Mythology | History Cooperative / No Rest for the Wicked
Throughout history the ruling class/elites hae been trying very hard to return us to life as it was in Ancient History. You know, before Christ came
and ruined all their fun. Why do they so desperately want to return to those days? Because the ruling class are descendants of the Fallen and their
progeny. THEY … Click Here to Read More
The skills taught to humans by the fallen in whatever form, were devised to take humanity away from God and His plan and cause humans to look to themselves to provide what they wanted. They were also devised to cause humans to depend on the “system” that forced them into slavery for their very survival. They were also devised to regulate and profitize their labor. Forcing humans to become slaves to time devices, turning them from God’s time to the Fallen’s.
Mechanization in ancient times Mechanization, in its broadest sense, refers to replacing manual or animal labor with machineryWikipedia. Ancient examples include water wheels for grinding grain and lifting water, water-powered bellows in Chinese blast furnaces by 31 AD, and trip hammers for pounding flax or ore Wikipedia. These early machines adapted human or animal power to perform tasks more efficiently, marking the first steps toward mechanized labor.
Social hierarchy and the labor–gentility divide As societies became more complex, roles became more specialized, and social hierarchies emerged. In ancient Egypt, for example, social status determined which labor one could perform and the lifestyle one could aspire toOpen Educational Resources Collective. The ruling elite often controlled resources and labor, while the working class — including slaves — performed the bulk of productive work. This created a cultural and economic divide between those who “labor” (produce goods and services) and those who “gentility” (control resources and decision-making).
Mechanization and conquest Mechanization also supported conquest and empire-building. Conquerors like Alexander the Great, Caesar Augustus, and Genghis Khan used mechanized transport, mining, and labor systems to control vast territories, often enslaving populations to supply their needs Open Educational Resources Collective. This reinforced the labor–gentility divide, as the enslaved or lower classes were seen as expendable labor,while the elite maintained their status through control of production and resources.
Legacy The mechanization of humanity began in ancient times with simple tools and water-powered devices, but it was intertwined with social stratification. The idea that some people’s labor is “lesser” than others became a justification for systems like slavery, which in turn fueled further mechanization and industrialization. This historical pattern — where technology and social hierarchy reinforce each other — continues to shape modern debates about work, automation, and human value Open Educational Resources Collective+1.
From mystical transformation to material engineering
Although “alchemy” is usually associated with later Hellenistic and Islamic traditions, it is useful metaphorically for much earlier, largely empirical transformations that fused natural forces with human intention. In both irrigation and metallurgy, people learned to work with complex hydrological and chemical processes they did not fully understand in theoretical terms, but could master practically through experimentation, ritualized practice, and institutional continuity.[3][1][^2]
In this sense, early “alchemy” was an evolutionary mechanism because it altered selective pressures on human groups. Communities that could stabilize yields through water control, or equip warriors and farmers with superior metals, gained demographic and political advantages over those who could not. These technologies fed back into social evolution by rewarding coordination, record-keeping, and specialized knowledge.[4][6][^1]
Two axes of transformation: earth–water and stone–metal
The two case studies here,irrigation and metallurgy, acted on different elements but produced parallel outcomes.
Irrigation transformed the seasonal rhythms of water and sediment into predictable agricultural productivity.
Metallurgy transformed heterogeneous ores into standardized metal objects with specific mechanical properties.
Both required infrastructure (canals and dikes; mines and smelting sites), specialized labor (canal overseers and scribes; smelters and smiths), and supra-household coordination, often under temple or royal authority.[6][1][^3]
Southern Mesopotamia, in what is now southern Iraq, lies on the alluvial plain of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. The region receives little rainfall, so dry farming was not viable for large-scale agriculture; at the same time, snowmelt from Anatolia caused irregular, sometimes destructive floods laden with silt that shifted channels and deposited sediments unpredictably.[1][3]
As a result, early communities along rivers such as the Euphrates and Tigris faced four interlocking problems: flood risk, drought risk, siltation, and soil salinization.Left unmanaged, the rivers could destroy fields, abandon former channels, or leave hard, cracked clay soils that were difficult to cultivate.[7][8][^3]
Canal networks and irrigation regimes
By the late fourth and third millennia BCE, Sumerian and later Mesopotamian societies had developed extensive canal systems that diverted water from the main rivers onto surrounding fields and then back to drainage channels. These networks evolved from relatively simple field ditches to regionally integrated systems serving multiple city-statessuch as Uruk, Ur, Lagash, Umma, and Kish.[3][1]
Key features included:
Main feeder canals that ran roughly parallel to the river, tapping higher-elevation reaches where gravity flow was possible.
Branch canals and field ditches distributing water across agricultural zones.
Levees and embankments to protect settlements and regulate overbank flooding.
Weirs and simple gates to modulate flow and reduce erosive force.
Archaeological landscape studies indicate that settlements often clustered on natural levees and “turtle back” mounds, with irrigated fields fanning out into the lower-lying floodplain. The pattern of canals and abandoned channels visible today in satellite imagery reflects this long-term coevolution of hydrological engineering and settlement.[^1]
Irrigation as urbanization engine
The ability to move and time water transformed the Mesopotamian plain from marginal steppe into an intensively cultivated breadbasket, supporting some of the earliest cities and complex states. Surplus grain, especially barley, which was well suited to local conditions, could be stored, redistributed as rations, and traded, enabling large non-farming populations including administrators, craft specialists, and soldiers.[3][1]
Recent syntheses emphasize that water management and urbanism evolved together: as communities built more canals and managed a wider hydrosocial territory,they required more elaborate institutions to allocate water, maintain infrastructure, and resolve disputes, reinforcing central authority. Written records from later periods describe canal inspections, corvée labor obligations, and legal penalties for neglecting canal maintenance or causing floods, suggesting that irrigation was deeply embedded in governance and law.[1][3]
Ecological costs: salinization and decline
The Mesopotamian irrigation “alchemy”had environmental side effects. Long-term irrigation in hot, poorly drained alluvium can raise the water table; as groundwater approaches the surface and evaporates, dissolved salts accumulate in the root zone.Over centuries, this process can reduce yields, particularly of salt-sensitive crops such as wheat.[8][7]
Historical and archaeological studies, starting with mid‑twentieth‑century work by Thorkild Jacobsen and Robert Adams and refined by later modelling, argue that salinization likely contributed to shifts in crop regimes and settlement patterns.Textual evidence suggests a trend from wheat-dominated fields to greater reliance on barley, which tolerates higher salinity, alongside references to “bitter” or salt-affected lands.[9][7][^8]
However, more recent computational models and regional studies suggest that ancient farmers had some capacity to mitigate salinization through practices such as fallowing, flushing salts with excess water during high flows, and adjusting planting schedules. Rather than a single environmental “collapse,” irrigation appears to have been a dynamic social–ecological system whose vulnerabilities interacted with political fragmentation, warfare, and shifting trade networks.[8][3]
In evolutionary terms,Mesopotamian irrigation demonstrates both the power and the path dependence of early environmental alchemy: the same canal systems that sustained cities for centuries also created long-term ecological challenges that required constant social innovation.[8][3][^1]
Egyptian basin irrigation: synchronizing with a predictable flood
The Nile’s rhythm and fertility
In contrast to the more volatile Tigris–Euphrates system, the Nile’s annual flood was comparatively regular and predictable. Fed mainly by monsoon rains in the Ethiopian highlands, the river rose in Egypt in early July, peaked in August–September, and receded by late November, covering the floodplain to depths of around 1.5 meters in many areas.[10][4]
As the waters spread and slowed, they deposited nutrient-rich silt, renewing soil fertility and enabling continuous cultivation of wheat, barley, flax, and other crops. This natural cycle allowed Egyptian agriculture to sustain dense populations and long-lived state structures for millennia, with the Nile’s inundation deeply woven into religious symbolism, calendar systems, and royal ideology.[10][4]
Basin irrigation as controlled inundation
Rather than relying solely on free flooding, Egyptians perfected a technique known as basin irrigation, which effectively partitioned the floodplain into a mosaic of controllable micro-environments.[11][4]
Earthen banks built parallel and perpendicular to the river created basins of various sizes.
Sluice openings allowed floodwater to enter each basin, where it was temporarily impounded for several weeks.
After the soil was thoroughly saturated and sediments settled, excess water was drained into lower basins or canals, and farmers planted crops on the moist, newly enriched ground.
Historical reconstructions describe how this system allowed farmers to time the exposure and planting of fields to match crop needs while maximizing silt deposition and minimizing waterlogging. Additional canals, small reservoirs, and simple gates extended water to plots beyond the immediate reach of the flood and provided some buffering against years of lower inundation.[11][4]
Sustainability and limits
Several scholars have argued that the Nile’s natural regime and Egyptian basin irrigation together created one of the most sustainable premodern agricultural systems, with relatively stable productivity over thousands of years. The annual flood not only provided water but also leached salts and replenished nutrients, reducing some of the salinization risks seen in Mesopotamia.[12][4]
Nonetheless, land use and irrigation still had environmental costs. Studies of environmental sustainability in ancient Egypt note that even relatively low-impact farming altered habitats and required constant labor to maintain dikes and channels. In later periods, particularly with the shift to perennial irrigation and massive hydraulic works in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, problems such as waterlogging, salinization, and shoreline erosion intensified, highlighting the delicate balance between harnessing and over‑controlling the river.[12][4]
From an evolutionary perspective, Egyptian water management represents a form of “soft alchemy”that worked with a predictable natural cycle, amplifying its benefits rather than radically restructuring it. This may explain in part the extraordinary longevity of Nile-based agriculture compared with more fragile irrigation regimes elsewhere.[4][10]
Irrigation, surplus, and social complexity
Surplus as transformative power
In both Mesopotamia and Egypt, irrigation transformed the value of land by making yields less dependent on rainfall variability and by expanding cultivable area.The resulting surplus cereals could be stored against lean years, mobilized to support state projects, exchanged for luxury goods, and used to feed specialized labor forces.[4][3][^1]
This surplus power had several evolutionary consequences:
Demographic growth, as more reliable food supply reduced vulnerability to local droughts.
Urban concentration, with cities emerging as administrative and religious hubscoordinating irrigation and storage.
Institutional complexity, including bureaucracy, legal codes, and accounting systemstied to allocations of grain and water.
Archaeological and textual evidence from both regions consistently link irrigation landscapes with the emergence of city-states, royal dynasties, and imperial projects, indicating that water control was not simply a technical adaptation but a core driver of early state formation.[4][3][^1]
Knowledge systems and ritualization
Because irrigation required coordinated timing and collective labor, it fostered specialized knowledge systems.Priests, scribes, and engineers were tasked with predicting floods, measuring fields, scheduling water releases, and recording obligations.[1][4]
Over time, these practical skills became intertwined with cosmology and ritual. The rising of specific stars signaled the coming Nile flood;deities were associated with rivers and fertility; kingship was legitimated by the ability to “order” the waters and ensure prosperity. This blending of technical and symbolic (spiritual) authority helped stabilize the social commitments necessary for maintaining large-scale hydraulic works across generations.[^10]
Early copper metallurgy: fire as a transformative element
The earliest use of native copper
Copper was among the first metals used by humans because its ores are relatively common, its smelting temperature is attainable in simple furnaces, and native metallic copper sometimes occurs as lumps that can be cold-hammered into tools or ornaments. Evidence of early copper use appears in Southwest Asia from the ninth to seventh millennia BCE, but systematic smelting and metallurgy intensified during the fourth and third millennia BCE.[2][6]
In regions such as the southern Levant, Anatolia, and Iran, communities exploited green copper carbonates such as malachite and azurite, initially likely using them as pigments and only gradually learning that intense heating in a reducing atmosphere could yield metallic copper. This discovery represents a pivotal “fire alchemy”: the harnessing of high-temperature chemical reactions to produce new materials with properties unlike any natural stone.[5][2]
Smelting, slag, and the chaîne opératoire
Archaeometallurgical studies at copper districts such as Faynan (Jordan) and Timna (southern Israel) have reconstructed key stages in early copper production.[13][14][^5]
The typical sequence included:
Mining of ore-bearing rock, often malachite-rich sandstones or carbonates.
Crushing and beneficiation of ore using stone tools.
Charging of furnaces or smelting pits with alternating layers of ore and charcoal.
Forced draft via bellows or tuyères to raise temperatures.
Separation of molten copper from lighter, glassy slag.
Analyses of slags, prills, and furnace remains show that early smelters gradually refined furnace design, charge composition, and air supply to improve yields. Lead and copper isotope studies further reveal distinct ore sources and trade patterns, indicating that metallurgical knowledge and materials circulated widely across regions.[14][13][^5]
In evolutionary terms, this metallurgical chaîne opératoire created a new technological niche: specialized communities of miners and smelters embedded in broader exchange networks, whose skills were valued by agrarian states dependent on metal tools and weapons.[13][5][^2]
Arsenical copper and the emergence of bronze
Alloy innovation and mechanical properties
Pure copper is relatively soft and can suffer from work-hardening and brittleness under some conditions. Early metallurgists discovered, perhaps accidentally, by smelting ores containing arsenic or other elements, that copper alloys could be harder, more durable, and sometimes easier to cast.[6][2]
Arsenical copper became widespread in several regions, including Mesopotamia and the Levant, representing a major metallurgical advance before the systematic adoption of tin bronze.Arsenic lowers the effective melting point and can improve casting properties; however, its volatility and toxicity posed health risks to smelters.[2][6]
Tin bronze, an alloy of copper and tin, emerged by the late fourth to early third millennium BCE in Mesopotamiaand surrounding regions. Even small additions of tin significantly change the alloy’s behavior:[6][2]
The melting point drops from about 1084°C for pure copper to around 950°C for typical bronze compositions, easing smelting and casting.[^6]
The alloy becomes harder and more wear-resistant, producing superior blades, chisels, and armour.
Bronze is more forgiving in casting complex shapes and can be remelted and recycled efficiently.
Analyses of copper-alloy artifacts from Levantine cemeteries spanning Early Bronze IV to Middle Bronze II show a clear diachronic shift: tin concentrations rise while arsenic content declines, reflecting an increasing preference for tin bronze despite the logistical challenges of acquiring tin. One study quantifies this trend as a more than doubling of tin importation and roughly halving of arsenic content over these periods.[^15]
Trade networks and resource geography
Unlike copper, which was available from multiple ore deposits in the Near East, tin was rare and often located far from early urban centers, possibly in regions such as Anatolia, Iran, or even Central Asia. Cuneiform texts and later historical sources indicate that securing reliable tin supplies became a strategic concern, tying metallurgy to long-distance trade and diplomacy.[^2]
The need to import tin while managing local copper sources encouraged complex interregional networksand may have contributed to the emergence of merchant classes and caravan routes. The spread of standardized bronze alloys across large areas also suggests shared metallurgical knowledge and perhaps itinerant specialists who transmitted techniques.[15][2][^6]
In evolutionary terms, bronze metallurgy exemplifies how a single material innovation can reconfigure economic geography, linking distant regions and embedding technical know-how in wide-ranging social systems.
Metal tools, weapons, and social power
Agricultural intensification and craft specialization
Copper and bronze tools, axes, adzes, plough fittings, and sickles, enabled more efficient land clearance, construction, and harvesting. In irrigation societies where expanding and maintaining canals, levees, and storage facilities was labor-intensive, metal tools offered significant mechanical advantages over stone or bone implements.[2][6]
This feedback between metalworking and water management intensified agricultural productivity and supported further population growth. Surpluses, in turn, supported metallurgical specialists who did not farm but relied on rations or market exchange, deepening occupational differentiation.[1][2]
Weaponry, warfare, and hierarchy
Bronze also transformed military capabilities.Swords, spearheads, socketed axes, and metal-tipped arrows offered greater durability and penetration than their lithic counterparts, giving well-armed groups advantages in conflict.Control of copper mines, smelting centers, and trade routes for tin became strategic objectives for states and chiefs.[15][2]
Archaeological assemblages from the Levant and Mesopotamia often show metal weapons concentrated in elite burials and hoards, indicating that access to bronze was both a symbol and instrument of power. These patterns suggest that the “alchemy” of metallurgy helped crystallize class distinctions, warrior elites, and centralized authority capable of mobilizing resources for large-scale projects and warfare.[15][6]
Ideology and material symbolism
Metal artifacts carried symbolic weight beyond their practical utility. The lustrous appearance of polished copper and bronze, their resistance to decay relative to organic materials, and the dramatic fiery processes required to produce them all lent themselves to ritual and mythic associations.[^2]
In many cultures, smiths and smelters occupied liminal positions, both revered and feared, reflecting the perception that they mediated between elemental forces, fire, earth, air, and human needs.This ideological framing reinforced the social value of metallurgical expertise and may have helped preserve and transmit complex technical traditions across generations.[5][2]
Environmental metallurgy: costs and constraints
Mining landscapes and fuel demands
Metal production reshaped landscapes just as irrigation did. Mining operations in districts like Faynan and Timna left extensive slag heaps, cut faces, and altered topography, marking long-term extraction cycles from the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age through later periods.[13][5]
Smelting required large quantities of charcoal, implying significant demand for timber in often semi-arid environments. One study on Levantine alloys links the shift from arsenical copper to tin bronze partly to fuel efficiency: bronze may have required less fuel per unit of usable metal, a non-trivial advantage in regions facing timber shortages.[5][15]
Pollution and health impacts
Although systematic evidence is limited, experimental and historical data suggest that early metallurgy emitted substantial metal-laden fumes and particulates, including toxic arsenic vapors in arsenical copper production. These emissions would have affected workers most directly but may also have had localized environmental impacts around smelting sites.[^2]
From an evolutionary lens, these costs represent trade-offs: communities gained new forms of power at the price of environmental degradation and health risks, which they could not fully perceive in modern scientific terms but did have to manage socially and spatially, often by situating smelting away from main settlements.[13][5] Can you recognize that Technology always comes with bitter costs to human health as well as the environment? And the Ancients were dealing with the same types of problems as we have today. As the Bible says “There is nothing new under the sun.”
Converging alchemies: irrigation and metallurgy together
Coevolution of hydraulic and metallurgical systems
Irrigation and metallurgy were not isolated developments.In many early states, the same institutions that organized canal construction and maintenance also oversaw mining expeditions, smelting operations, and distribution of metal goods.Bureaucratic record-keeping, corvée labor systems, and temple or palace economies provided organizational templates that could be applied to both water and metal.[1][2]
Metal tools improved the efficiency of hydraulic construction, while hydraulic agriculture provided the surplus to support full-time metalworkers and to finance long-distance trade for tin and high-quality copper ores.Together, these technologies created a mutually reinforcing complex that underwrote the rise of large territorial states and empires in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the broader Near East.[6][1][^2]
Evolutionary implications
Seen as evolutionary mechanisms, the environmental alchemy of irrigation and the elemental alchemy of metallurgy both:
Expanded the range of environments in which dense human populations could thrive.
Altered selective pressures by rewarding cooperative institutions and specialized knowledge.
Created new axes of inequality and contestation,as control of water and metal became central to political power.
They also highlight a pattern that recurs throughout history: transformative technologies initially appear as localized innovations but, when coupled with appropriate social structures, can restructure entire ecologies and geopolitical orders.
Conclusion
The story of early Mesopotamian and Egyptian irrigation, and of the copper–bronze revolution in the ancient Near East, can be read as a double alchemy of earth and fire.Through canals and basins, communities turned unpredictable rivers and marginal lands into stable sources of grain, enabling cities, bureaucracy, and written law. Through smelting and alloying, they turned opaque rocks into shining tools, weapons, and symbols that traveled across vast trade networks and anchored new hierarchies.[3][4][6][1][^2]
Both transformations were empirical, cumulative, and deeply embedded in religious and political imaginaries. Both came with ecological and social costs that demanded ongoing adaptation. Taken together, they illustrate how early civilizations did not merely adapt to given environments but actively remade them, performing an alchemy of elements that set humanity on a new evolutionary trajectory.
Have you ever wondered, what is the connection between Technology and the fascination with things spooky and supernatural? ALL the “Arts and Sciences” stem from the interchange between humans and the fallen Angels. The wisdom given in exchange for access to the females of the day. Everything in this life stems from a spiritual root! … Click Here to Read More
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The Industry That Drives Mechanization
The Industrial Revolutionis the historical period and process that most directly drove the invention of devices to mechanize human labor. Beginning in Great Britain in the late 18th century and spreading to Europe, North America, and eventually the world, it marked a shift from hand production methods to large-scale, mechanized manufacturing Britannica+1.
How Industry Led to Mechanization
During the Industrial Revolution, industries—especially textiles, iron production, and transportation—sought to increase efficiency, reduce costs, and meet growing demand. This led to:
New machinery: Inventions like the spinning jenny, power loom, and steam engine replaced manual labor in textile production Britannica+1.
Consistent power sources: Steam power, later supplemented by electricity, provided reliable energy for factories, unlike wind or waterHistory Skills.
Factory systems: Centralized production allowed for mass manufacturing and standardized goods Britannica.
Key Inventions and Their Impact
Important mechanization-driven inventions included:
Steam engine – powered locomotives, steamboats, and factory machinery Britannica+1.
Electric generators and motors – enabled new industries like lighting and mass production Britannica.
Internal-combustion engine and automobile – transformed transportation and manufacturing Britannica.
Telegraph and telephone – mechanized communication Britannica.
Broader Effects
Mechanization from industrialization:
Increased productivity and wealth, expanding the middle class Britannica.
Created new industries (e.g., automobiles, chemicals) and altered global trade patterns EBSCO.
In short, industry—through the demands of large-scale production—was the driving force behind the mechanization of human labor, reshaping economies, societies, and daily life forever.
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Time Management and the Invention of Early Timekeeping Devices
The idea that time management was the driving force behind the invention of the first timekeeping devicesis supported by historical evidence. Early civilizations needed to organize daily life, coordinate labor, and plan agricultural and religious activities, which required a way to measure and track time more preciselythan relying solely on natural cues like the sun or moon. (The Sun and the Moon were placed in the sky and their courses are ordered of GOD. He told us they were there for us to rule the day and night and the weeks, months, years and seasons. When we turn to other things to keep time for us, we are turning our backs on God and His perfect order. We are making man/ourselves god in His place.)
Ancient origins The earliest timekeeping methods—such as sundials in Egypt around 1200–1500 BCEand water clocks in Mesopotamiaand Egypt—were developed to help societies structure their daysWikipedia+1. Sundials used shadows cast by a gnomonto mark hours,
“vertical shaft that tells time by the shadow it casts” (So, it is a divining tool that uses shadows)(especially the triangular plate on a sundial), 1540s, from Latin gnomon, from Greek gnōmōn “indicator (of a sundial), carpenter’s rule,” also, in plural, “the teeth that mark the age of a horse or mule,”literally “one that discerns or examines, interpreter, expert,” (preist, shaman, guru, diviner, witch, Magi, channeler)from gignōskein “to come to know,” from PIE root *gno- “to know.” gnōmōn “one who knows”In geometry from 1560s, from a use in Greek. In early use in English sometimes folk-etymologized as knowman. Related: Gnomonic.
*gno-
*gnō-, Proto-Indo-European root meaning “to know.”
spacer while water clocks measured time by the regulated flow of liquid. These devices allowed communities to schedule work, religious ceremonies, and trade, effectively managing time for productivity and social orderClemson University Open Textbooks.
Agricultural and trade needs In ancient Egypt, for example, precise timekeeping was essentialfor planting and harvesting crops in alignment with seasonal cycles TimeAndDate. Similarly, Babylonian and later Egyptian calendars divided the day into temporal hours, enabling more efficient labor organizationTimeAndDate. This need to match human activity with natural cycles was a direct application of time management.
Monastic and mechanical clocks By the medieval period, monasteriesused mechanical clocksto regulate prayer times and daily routines, improving punctuality and productivity Clemson University Open Textbooks. The first weight-driven mechanical clocks, like the one installed in England in 1283, were designed to keep time reliably for communal and administrative purposes TimeAndDate.
Why time management drove innovation The push to measure time consistently—independent of weather or daylight—was rooted in the practical demands of managing human activity. This included:
Agriculture: aligning labor with seasons.
Trade and commerce: coordinating shipments and markets.
Religion and governance: scheduling ritualsand public events.
Navigation and exploration: later, for determining longitude at seaWikipedia+1.
In short, the invention of early timekeeping devices was not just a scientific curiosity—it was a practical response to the need for structured, measurable time to manage human life more efficiently.This “time management” imperative shaped the evolution from sundials and water clocks to the highly accurate mechanical and astronomical clocks that followed.
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Old Astrological Town Clocks and the Biblical Calendar
Old astrological town clocks—such as the Prague Astronomical Clock and the Münster Clock—were medieval marvelsthat combined astronomical observation with civic timekeeping. They tracked the sun, moon, zodiac, and sometimes planetary positions, and often displayed a calendar panel showing the date, feast days, and seasonal markers Happy To Visit+1. These clocks reflected the medieval belief that the heavens governed time, seasons, and human affairs, a view
rooted in Ptolemy’s Tetrabiblos and Christian cosmology fun.chryzode.org.
1540s, “pertaining to a city or citizenship,”originally in civic crown (Latin corona civica), a chaplet of oak leaves awarded to one who saved the
life of a fellow citizen in battle, from Latincivicus“of a citizen,”adjectival derivative of civis“townsman” (see city). Sense of “having to do with citizens” is from 1790.
late 14c., “relating to civil law or life;pertaining to the internal affairs of a state,” from Old French civil“civil, relating to civil law”(13c.) and directly from Latin civilis“relating to a society, pertaining to public life, relating to the civic order, befitting a citizen,” hence by extension “popular, affable, courteous;” alternative adjectival derivative of civis “townsman” (see city). Meaning “not barbarous, civilized” is from 1550s. Specifically “relating to the commonwealth as secularly organized“(as opposed to military or ecclesiastical) by 1610s. Meaning “relating to the citizen in his relation to the commonwealth or to fellow citizens” also is from 1610s. As
opposed to criminal, it means all law not criminal. As opposed to ecclesiastical, it means all law not ecclesiastical: as opposed to military, it means
all law not military, and so on. [John Austin, “Lectures on Jurisprudence,” 1873] The sense of “polite” was in classical Latin, but English did not pick up this nuance of the word until late 16c., and it has tended to descend in meaning to “meeting minimum standards of courtesy.”“Courteous is thus more commonly said of superiors,civil of inferiors, since it implies or suggests the possibility of incivility or rudeness” [OED].
Social orderis the organized system of relationships, norms, institutions, and practices that maintain stability and cohesion within a society.
In summary, social order is the framework that organizes society, balances individual and collective interests, and ensures stability through norms, institutions, and shared values. It is central to understanding how societies function, adapt, and manage conflict.
3 Sources
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The farther humanity got from Creation, the more evil persisted. Humans who had no connection to the creator, looked to other sources for peace, safety, healing, provision and guidance. They worshiped the demons/gods who had dominion over the areas where they lived. Those demons/gods are even more evil than fallen humanity. People began to live in groups for defense from evil humans and demons. These groups developed their own systems for keeping order. These systems were naturally pagan/created without the Creator. Social Order, Civilization, Governments and Laws without GOD are doomed. This is GOD’s World. He created it and He is the only one Authorized and Worthy of making the rules. There will never be peace in a world that is under the Authority of Satan and his minions. Each man doing as he sees fit and worshiping the entity or entities of his choice is rebellion against GOD. God set up His government from the beginning. He established His laws. Anyone who falls short of his standards is doomed.
Personally, I choose to live in the KINGDOM OF GOD. He is a loving, compassionate, merciful GOD who loves us so much that HE, HE HIMSELF pay the price for our redemption. He is the ONLY ONE who can rescue us from slavery to sin and DEATH which is the consequence of sin. He gives the gift of SALVATION/REDEMPTION and RESTORATION freely to all who choose HIM.
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How They Worked
Astronomical dials indicated the sun’s position, moon phases, and zodiac signs.
Calendar panels often included movable feast days, saints’ days, and seasonal markers.
Some clocks used three time systems: Central European, Old Bohemian (starting at sunset), and sidereal time for astronomy Happy To Visit.
They were built by skilled craftsmen—monks, locksmiths, and astronomers—often with astronomical calculations by friars or scholarsfun.chryzode.org.
Connection to the Biblical Calendar
The biblical calendar (as described in Genesis 1:14–15 and Leviticus 23) is based on lunar monthsbeginning with the first visible crescent moon,with the year tied to the solar cycleand the vernal equinox Structure Bible Menorah+1. It has 12 months (354 days) and includes fixed annual feasts:Passover, Unleavened Bread, First Fruits, Feast of Weeks, Feast of Trumpets, the Day of Atonement and the Feast of Tabernacles, Structure Bible Menorah.
In medieval Europe, many towns displayed their biblical feast days on their astrological clocks. This meant:
The calendar panel could be set to show the biblical year’s feasts, aligning with the lunar months.
The astronomical dialscould be used to determine the correct date for these feasts, ensuring they fell on the right day in the biblical cycle.
This dual function reflected the medieval worldview:heavenly bodies (sun, moon, stars) were both navigational tools and divine signs for God’s appointed timesStructure Bible Menorah+1.
Why It Mattered
For medieval communities, the biblical calendar was not just a religious schedule—it was a sacred framework for worship, agriculture, and community life. The astrological clock’s ability to display both astronomical time and biblical feast days made it a central civic and spiritual instrument. It ensured that sacred observances were timed correctly according to God’s design, not just local convenience.
In short:Old astrological town clocks were more than timepieces—they were cosmic calendars, blending astronomy with the biblical year to keep the community aligned with both the heavens and God’s appointed timesHappy To Visit+2.
As long as mankind obtained their sustenance through hunting and gathering, they KNEW the SUPPLIER/PROVIDER was GOD! Even farmers and herders KNEW their Provision and increase came from GOD. Even Pagans KNEW that they had to placate their gods to obtain their needs. The more mechanized humans became and the more technology was introduced the further humanity got from the SOURCE. Humans began to see themselves as “self-reliant” while truly they were becoming more and more dependent on the system. A system that is without heart or soul. A system without life. More and more we are beginning to see that it a system hell-bent on our demise.
Industrialization has destroyed the family which was the foundational structure for true spiritual and emotional growth. Industrialization has wiped out nearly all opportunity for mankind to find honest labor, which is the bedrock for our confidence, productivity and peace of mind. God ordained our labor. We are being replaced by Machines!
These Astronomical Clocks Were a Wonder of the Medieval World Vincze Miklós 12/16/13 6:53pm Filed to: DESIGN Astronomical clocks are over 1,000 years old — some say the first was the mysterious Antikythera Mechanism. They predict the movements of the stars, sun, moon, and planets. They are also among the most beautifully-designed timepieces in the world. … Click Here to Read More
God’s Time is written in the Sun, Moon and Stars! I got started on this topic while working on another. I just recently learned that the BA’AL Arch was erected once again. This time in Bern, Switzerland. I am still working on that research. That is a very heavy topic and will take me some … Click Here to Read More
THE BIBLICAL CALENDAR
In biblical days, the calendar used was a lunar-solar calendar, primarily based on the cycles of the moon and the agricultural seasons.
In the Bible, barley symbolizes sustenance, God’s provision, humility, and redemption, reflecting its importance in agricultural practices and spiritual teachings.
Cultural and Agricultural Significance
Barley was a staple food for the Israelites and played a crucial role in their diet and economy. It was commonly used for making bread and porridge and served as animal feed. Due to its ability to grow in diverse conditions, barley was associated with abundance and prosperity. Its early harvest, typically around the time of Passover, marked the beginning of the agricultural yearand was significant in various religious ceremonies christianfaithguide.com+1.
Symbolic Meanings
Sustenance and Provision: Barley is often linked to God’s provision for His people. In the story of Ruth, Ruth gleans barley in the fields of Boaz, symbolizing God’s care and provision during times of need bibleparadise.org+1. The barley harvest is also associated with the Feast of Unleavened Bread, emphasizing gratitude for God’s blessingsBible Hub.
Humility and Simplicity: Unlike wheat, which was considered a more luxurious grain, barley was seen as a humble food. This association serves as a reminder of the importance of modesty and contentment in lifebibleparadise.org.
Redemption and Transformation: Barley is connected to themes of redemption, particularly in the context of the Passover and the story of Ruth. The barley harvest signifies new beginnings and God’s faithfulness in providing for His peopledigitalbible.ca+1.
First Fruits: Barley was one of the first grains harvested, and the Israelites were instructed to offer the first sheaves of their barley harvest to the Lord as a gesture of thanksgiving.This act symbolizes recognizing God’s ownership and acknowledging His provision Bible Hub+1.
Biblical References
Barley appears in several key biblical narratives, including:
The Feeding of the 5000: In the New Testament, a boy offers Jesus five barley loaves, which He multiplies to feed a multitude, highlighting Jesus’s compassion and ability to providechristianfaithguide.com+1.
The Plagues in Egypt: During the seventh plague, the barley was destroyed,indicating its significance in the agricultural cycle and the timing of events in the Exodus storybiblicalpathway.com.
In summary,barley serves as a rich symbol in the Bible, representing sustenance, humility, and God’s abundant provision,while also playing a significant role in the spiritual and agricultural life of the Israelites.Its recurring presence in biblical narratives underscores deeper spiritual truths and God’s interaction with humanity.
The biblical calendar was a sophisticated system that reflected the agricultural lifestyle of ancient Israel, relying on lunar cycles while also incorporating solar elements to maintain seasonal alignment.Understanding this calendar is essential for interpreting many biblical events and their significancein the context of ancient Israelite culture.
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God’s True Calendar Bible Based on New Moons
The idea of a “true Bible” based on new moons comes from a literal-interpretation view of Scripture, particularly from the Old Testament’s lunar calendar system. In this view, the New Moon is the first visible crescent of the moon, marking the start of a new month in the biblical calendar Bible Hub. This system was used in ancient Israel and is still followed by some groups today.
Biblical Basis
Genesis 1:14–18describes the moon as a “sign” to mark seasons, days, and years, and as a light to give light on the earth Bible Hub+1.
Numbers 28:11commands burnt offerings on the first day of each month, and Numbers 10:10 says trumpets are blown over these offerings Bible Hub.
Leviticus 23lists God’s “appointed times” (moedim),which include the New Moons as part of His holy daysBible Tools.
Isaiah 1:13–14 criticizes empty ritual, but Isaiah 66:23prophesies all nations bowing before the Lord “from one New Moon to another”Bible Hub.
The Metonic cycle(19 years) aligns lunar months with solar years, ensuring the calendar stays in sync with the seasonswww.biblicalcalendarproof.com.
In Israel, the New Moon was sighted by witnesses, announced in Jerusalem with trumpets, and then the month began icejusa.org.
Modern Applications
Some Christian groups, such as the Truth of Yahweh and Biblical Calendar Proof, use this lunar system to determine biblical dates like Passover, First Fruits, and the weekly Sabbath The Truth of Yahweh+1. They argue that God’s calendar is not based on the Gregorian solar system but on the astronomical cycles He established at creation.
Key Points
The New Moon is a sacred marker in God’s design, tied to worship, offerings, and prophetic timing Bible Hub+1.
It is part of God’s appointed times (moedim), which are central to His covenant with Israel Bible Tools.
A “true Bible” based on new moonsmeans aligning Scripture with the literal lunar calendar God gave, rather than the modern solar calendar.
In summary, the “true Bible” in this context is the Bible interpreted through the lens of the biblical lunar calendar, with New Moons as the starting point for each month, ensuring worship and prophetic events are observed in accordance with God’s original design.
This study argues that Yahweh’s true biblical calendar is a simple, observational, agrarian, lunisolar system—anchored in barley firstfruits and visible new moons—given to all Israel. It critiques the later, highly calculated Jewish calendar and equinox-based methods as human innovations that shift feast days off the divinely appointed times.
The Bible’s yearly calendar of feasts is based in agriculture and Israel was an agrarian culture. The Feasts are also agriculture-based. Salvation itself is awarded to those spiritually called firstfruits. They will be resurrected first in a harvest of faithful ones to serve in His coming Kingdom. “These were redeemed from among men, being the firstfruits unto Elohim and to the Lamb,” Revelation 14:4. The importance of firstfruits in the biblical calendar cannot be over-stated.
The series of seven annual Feasts begins with the month Abib, a name describing the first green grains of ripening, firstfruits barley. In the Hebrew Scriptures it is designated “the Abib” (haAbib), a definitive term for a specific stage of barley growth. It was in the new-year month of Abib when Israel kept the Passover just before coming out of Egypt, Deuteronomy 16:1. All the annual feasts are set by the critical first month of Abib, the month of green barley ears, Exodus 12:2. To establish Abib as the first month we must find the ripening firstfruits of barley grain. This beautiful harvest calendar is a lesson for in faithful obedience and reliance on Yahweh’s mercy and blessings and not fixed, calculated dates for personal convenience.
Calendars are as common as wristwatches and you probably see at least one every day.Odds are, the calendar you see is the Gregorian calendar, named for Pope Gregory XIII, who updated the earlier Julian version in 1582 to align it more closely with the spring season. Gregory added rules for leap years, which insert an extra day in February. His rules have kept this calendar synchronized with the solar year to within one day in over 3,300 years.
Other calendars are in use today as well. Two of these are very important to those who observe biblical feast days. The Bible specifies exactly which days of the year the feasts are to be observed – and it does not use the Gregorian calendar. Without a proper calendar keyed to the Bible it is impossible to observe the feast days on the correct days of the year, and the Bible stresses that having the correct days is very important for proper worship.
This study examines the original calendar of the Scriptures (the biblical calendar), and the modified calendar derived from it (the calculated Jewish calendar).We will actually address three calendars: the biblical calendar (based on natural observations), today’s Jewish calendar (based on calculations), and the transition between these two – a calendar that started with observations,began supplementing them with calculations, and after 2,000 years finally metamorphosed into today’s Jewish calendar.
Keeping the Right Day Is Paramount Of all calendars, the true biblical calendar is one of the easiest to understand and the one True Worshipers follow today in observing scriptural days. It is so logical that any rational person can easily comprehend its structure.It requires no complicated calculations or arbitrary rules to keep it aligned with the seasons of the year. It is a lunisolar calendar, which means that both moon and sun play a part in its construction.The rules for that construction come entirely from the Bible and are so simple that after reading them for yourself you should be able to understand and explain them to anyone.
Without an accurate understanding of His biblical calendar, Yahweh’s people would be unable to obey Him. Yahweh told His people they were to assemble at certain times of the year to observe His Feast days, and He did not mention “April” or “October” or any of our other Gregorian calendar months. He used words like “the tenth day of the first month” and “the first day of the seventh month” to pin down Feast day observances (moedim in Hebrew). He says, “But the man that is clean, and is not in a journey, and forbears to keep the Passover, even the same soul shall be cut off from among his people: because he brought not the offering of Yahweh in his appointed time, that man shall bear his sin” (Num. 9:13).
We learn that Yahweh instructs us to observe all His feast days at precise times (Lev. 23:2), not holidays of our making at times we choose. We sin if we don’t observe them at the commanded day and time. If True Worship means keeping Yahweh’s commands, how do we determine when the fifteenth day of the seventh month is (Feast of Tabernacles)?There are varied arguments among various Feast keepers about the correct day for Passover and Pentecost, and it is certainly prudent to prove what is right (as any good Berean would), rather than blindly accept the opinions of others.
Yahweh tells us rather plainly how to deduce the correct days from a “calendar” in the sky. Note Genesis 1:14: “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.”
How Would YOU Create a Calendar? Calendars record the days of the year, laid out in a format that usually spreads them over months and weeks (not all calendars use 7-day weeks, incidentally). A basic calendar relates four time elements: day, week, month, and year.Of these elements the day is foundational. How does Yahweh determine the length of a day? “In the beginning Elohim created the heaven and the earth… And Elohim said, Let there be light: and there was light. And Elohim saw the light, that it was good: and Elohim divided the light from the darkness. And Elohim called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and the morning were the first day” (Gen. 1:1-5. The New International Version reads, “And there was evening, and there was morning – the first day.”)
One evening and one morning equal one day.Why did Yahweh start His day at the “end” of it? We are so accustomed to starting our days at midnight that we think it illogical to start a day at any other time. What could be more illogical than midnight?
If you were living in ancient times and interested in creating your own calendar, at a time unencumbered by our modern society’s need to define and calculate everything exactly, would you not start your days at an easily observable time?What would you use as a starting point for the day? Noon is no good because it is hard to tell when noon is. Midnight is even worse.Sunrise is okay, but most people are asleep then, and even if not, determining just when the sun peeks over the horizon is much harder than determining when it drops below it because you can see it in the process of going down but not coming up. So sunset is a natural time to start, as well as end, the day.
Now isn’t that a coincidence? The Bible tells us exactly that: “The evening and the morning were the first day.” In many places, including the first part of Genesis, Scripture tells us that days begin and end at sunset.Evening is metaphor for night, morning means daylight in Hebrew.
How many of these days do we string together to make a week? Why do we count off seven days,then, and call them a week? The Hebrew word translated “week” is shabua, and it signifies completeness, or perfection. The week was also introduced to us early in Genesis (2:3): “And Elohim blessed the seventh day, and sanctified it: because that in it he had rested from all his work which Elohim created and made.” The word translated “rested” here is from the Hebrew root word shabath, Strong’s Concordance No. 7673 – the Sabbath. That Yahweh uses a seven-day week is clear throughout the Bible(Lev. 23:15).
How many days would you put in a month? Remember, you are an ancient observer and you are observing a couple of heavenly bodies for extended periods.The sun rises and sets and the days go by. The moon is doing something a little different. It also rises and sets but the amount of it you can see varies – sometimes it is not visible at all. But it does follow a cycle.
You notice over time that the moon starts as a very thin crescent on one side, gets fuller and brighter, then recedes to a very thin crescent on the other side. Then it disappears for a little while, only to repeat these phases. You count the number of days from one point to the next identical point and you notice there are about 29½ days for the moon’s cycle to complete itself. But when do you start your moon cycle count?
You conclude that starting with the first crescent sighting makes the most sense and sidesteps unnecessary calculations. You decide to use this moon cycle for your calendar because just marking off solar days one at a time doesn’t seem to be of much practical use.
You also notice something interesting from watching the moon. From the time you can just barely see the new crescent until the moon is at its brightest (full moon) takes 14 days.Each quarter (first, second, third, fourth) marks a seven-day period. You decide this is handy – you can count days in a package of seven by looking closely at the moon. Surprise! That’s the way Yahweh created it!
Does Yahweh include months in His calendar? Again, as with weeks there are many biblical references – but three are sufficient, starting with Deuteronomy 16:1: “Observe the month of Abib, and keep the Passover unto Yahweh Elohim: for in the month of Abib Yahweh Elohim brought thee forth out of Egypt by night.” In Hebrew, the word translated “month” is Strong’s 2320, chodesh, which means “the new moon; by implication, a month.”
Yahweh not only includes months, but He also starts them with the sighting of the new moon. This verse literally says, “Look for the new moon of Abib, and keep the Passover.…” The Passover is to be observed on Abib 14 (Ex. 12:6): “And you shall keep it (the paschal lamb) up until the fourteenth day of the same month: and the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel shall kill it in the evening.”
The second reference to months and their timing is Psalm 104:19: “He appointed the moon for seasons.” The third reference is also in Psalm 81:3: “Blow up the trumpet in the new moon, in the time appointed, on our solemn feast day.” Here the only feast that begins on the first day of a month (Ethanim) is mentioned – Trumpets. Other “chodesh” verses abound in the Bible (over 200 of them), all meaning “new moon.”
As you observe about a dozen moon cycles, you notice that the sun seems to be moving along the horizon at its setting time, going from south to north and back to south.As soon as you realize this, you pick out an object on the horizon near the setting sun, and in a few days you begin to get an idea about how fast it is moving away from your object. Over time you also notice the world around you is getting warmer, then cooler, then warmer again.
You count the days from the sun’s position at your marker object until it returns there, going in the same direction. Your count is 365 days.This number, representing the cycle of the sun, and the number representing the cycle of the moon (29½), are not evenly divisible. A little basic math tells you a solar year will not exactly equal 12 lunar months. The difference between 12 months of 29½ days (354 days) and the length of a solar year (365) will cause the four seasons to move around through the year.
This may be of no importance to you whatsoever – why should you mind if spring comes in the first month or the second month or the third month? But Yahweh minds. Yahweh told Moses in Exodus 12:2, “This month (Abib) shall be unto you the beginning of months: it shall be the first month of the year to you.” Abib is the Hebrew name for this month, and it means “green ears” of grain. It is the month in which green ears of grain appear. But which grain? Turn to Exodus 9, where we read of one of the plagues Yahweh visited upon Pharaoh.
“And Moses stretched forth his rod toward heaven: and Yahweh sent thunder and hail, and the fire ran along upon the ground; and Yahweh rained hail upon the land of Egypt. … And the hail smote throughout all the land of Egypt all that was in the field, both man and beast; and the hail smote every herb of the field, and brake every tree of the field…And the flax and the barley was smitten: for the barley was in the ear, and the flax was bolled. But the wheat and the rie were not smitten: for they were not grown up” (vv. 23, 25, 31-32).
The grain that Abib refers to is barley, the one crop already “in the ear,” and the month in which the first Passover took place is Abib, the green ears of barley month. The month of Abib and the state of barley are tied closely together. If barley is not in the proper stage at that month, that month cannot be Abib.
Turn to Leviticus 23. Here Yahweh explains the concept of firstfruits to the Israelites, and tells us what shape barley must be in during the month of Abib: “And you shall eat neither bread, nor parched corn, nor green ears, until the selfsame day that ye have brought an offering unto your Elohim: it shall be a statute forever throughout your generations in all your dwellings” (Lev. 23:14). The Israelites were not permitted to harvest their crops of barley until the firstfruit sheaf was waved before Yahweh by the priest.
gezer calendar, gezer bib, gezer aviv, aviv calendar, Barley is planted in November and takes about four months to mature. It must be in the green ear stage during the first month,and at least some of it ready for harvest by the time of the wave sheaf offering that occurs during the Feast of Unleavened Bread. We know it occurs during the Feast of Unleavened Bread because these verses explain how to count forward from the wave sheaf to the Feast of Weeks. Yahweh keeps the seasons aligned with the months by having us observe the maturing barley.
An interesting find in Israel called the “Gezer” calendar shows that the Israelites were an agrarian society that based its months from agriculture.
In the March-April 2002 issue of Biblical Archaeology Review on page 45 we read, “A different clock governed everyday life in ancient Israel. The society was agrarian— virtually everyone was a farmer— so people naturally regulated their daily lives by the rising and setting sun.Likewise the yearly calendar was defined by seasonal activities related to farming and herding. This small limestone tablet, found in 1908 at Gezer and called the Gezer Calendar, associates the months of the year with activities like sowing, pruning and harvesting, and gives us a glimpse into a way of life very different from ours— a life strongly tied to the earth and it’s natural rhythms.”
Written in Paleo-Hebrew, the Gezer Calendar dates from the 10th century BC, the time of the construction of Solomon’s Temple. It contains the following text:
“Two months of harvest
Two months of planting
Two months are late planting
One month of pulling flax
One month of barley harvest
One month of harvest and feasting
Two months of pruning vines
One month of summer fruit”
This calendar lays out the fundamental importance of the agricultural cycle in King Solomon’s day, this can be seen in the temple festivals of Shavuot (“Feast of weeks”) or First Fruits in early summer (the “month of summer” fruit in line 8), and the Feast of Ingathering (the harvest) in the fall which culminates to the Feast of Tabernacles.The mention of feasting reflects the pilgrimages festivals which involved feasting.
Yahweh’s Calendar – Easy as 1, 2, 3, 4 We have worked our way through the rules for the biblical calendar and discovered that they are simple and logical:
1. Start and end days at sunset (Genesis 1:5).
2. Start weeks at day one and end on day seven, the Sabbath(Leviticus 23:15-16).
3. Start months with the sighting of the new moon (Deuteronomy 16:1).
4. Start years in the month barley will be harvestable by the middle of that month (Leviticus 23:4-14).
These rules require you to observe Yahweh’s creation– sighting a sunset or a new moon and looking at a barley crop. Psalm 33:8 says, “Let all the earth fear Yahweh: let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him.” Is there a better way than to get outside and look at some of these awesome, timekeeping sights of creation?
The ‘Original’ Jewish Calendar That the biblical calendar given by Yahweh was with us from creation seems logical, but Yahweh’s revelation of it to Moses took place just before the exodus, about 3,500 years ago, as Yahweh explained the Passover, its significance and timing. In the first five books of the Bible, the Torah (all written by Moses), the rules for the “original” biblical calendar were given by Yahweh to the people of Israel by oral and (later) written instructions.
arch of titus, arch of titus jewish, arch of titus temple,Today’s modified Jewish calendar, however, is one of the more difficult to comprehend. It has added and revised rules that move dates without biblical authorization. The original Hebrew calendar was the biblical calendar of the exodus. For over 40 years in their journey from Egypt to the Jordan River crossing the Israelites in the desert determined their years exactly in accord with the four rules declared by Yahwehthrough Moses. What happened from then until now?
To answer that we will need to consult non-biblical sources. Be careful!Unlike the rock-solid Word, there are many sources of “fact” written by men, and where there is man-made “fact” there is man-made counter-fact.
The Talmud is a combination of fact, teachings, traditions, analyses, ideas, opinions, and in some cases outright prejudice– which are considered “facts” by many Jews today.During the Talmudic period, observation of the moon and crops evolved toward calculation. First, the Israelites would have noticed that the new moon appeared either every 29 or 30 days – never shorter, never longer. Simple counting, then, gave them the ability to anticipate the actual observation.
After settling in the Promised Land they would have noticed something about the year, also. The maturation of their crops of barley could be correlated with the position of the setting sun on the horizon. The seasons are very important to agrarian peoples. Knowing proper planting times is crucial to survival, and fixing the beginning of a season, particularly spring, is advantageous.
Yahweh decreed that the year was to begin in the month when barley would be ready for harvest. The Israelites quickly noticed this happened very near or in the spring season, and that the beginning of spring could be determined from the sun’s setting position on the horizon. Over time the observation of the sun’s position replaced the observation of barley.The pagan Egyptians and later the Romans also observed a solar calendar.
Today’s Calculated Jewish Calendar Beginning with their possession of the Promised Land, the Israelites became more scattered and communications with Jerusalem’s priests (who observed moons and waved grains) became increasingly difficult.Later, the Israelites of the Dispersion generally took up the civil calendars of their conquering zodiac in synagogue,jewish calendar countries and were informed by messengers from Jerusalem of coming feasts. Certainly by the end of the Talmudic period, and most probably hundreds of years before, the Jews had accumulated sufficient knowledge to convert a calendar based on observation to one based on calculation alone.
According to the Apostle John, Yahshua’s Passover meal was eaten the night before the Passover meal was eaten by His Jewish accusers – this indicates that two ways of determining dates existed at the time of the impalement. That the new moon of Abib could have appeared on two different days is, of course, impossible.
In any case, the separation of Israel’s peoples made it increasingly difficult for those not residing in the Holy Land to stay in synchronization with their brothers. Indeed, after the failed Bar Kochba revolt in 132-135 CE the Sanhedrin – the post-exile Jewish supreme council – was barred from meeting.Something had to be done to preserve holy day observance, and about 359 CE patriarch Hillel II revealed a method of Jewish calendar calculation that contained many elements obviously learned from places like Babylon. According to Hillel, and to the many Jews and others who believe that the methods of calculating this calendar were divinely presented to the Israelites, this calendar was in place from the very creation.
Here are some facts about the calculated Jewish calendar:
• A month is determined by the calculation of the conjunction of the moon (Hebrew molad, a point in the moon’s orbit exactly between the earth and the sun – and invisible to us), not new moon sighting;hours are added to the molad to determine when the new moon should or should not be visible.
• The first molad occurred 5 hours and 204 chalokim (3 1/3 seconds) after sunset at the beginning of day 2.
• Every molad is calculated from this point by adding 29 days, 12 hours, and 793 chalokim.
• A nineteen-year cycle of months of 29 and 30 days is employed,together with leap months inserted in seven of the years, to keep the seasons in line with the solar year; the cycle consists of regular and leap years as follows: R-R-L-R-R-L-R-R-L-R-L-R-R-L-R-R-L-R-L.
• The cycle is not exactly the length of nineteen solar years– it is a little over 2 hours longer; every 216 years this adds up to a whole day, and there are no corrections in the calculations to prevent spring from moving away from Abib;if the calculated Jewish calendar had existed at the beginning, this error would have already moved the seasons 26 days away from Abib – one entire month.
• The year begins with the seventh month (Ethanim),not Abib; the first day of Ethanim is Rosh Hashanah.
• Postponement rules for Rosh Hashanah are required such that an annual Sabbath is never juxtaposed with a weekly Sabbath (prevents two consecutive non-work days); these rules are not simple – here is one of them: if the molad of a year following a leap year which begins on Tuesday is later than Monday,15 hours and 589 chalokim, Rosh Hashanah of the second year is postponed from Monday to Tuesday.
• The calculated molad can sometimes start a month before the new moon is visible, and the postponements can actually cause a month to begin the day after the new moon is sighted.
• The entire calendar, from the beginning to any point in the future, is fixed by its starting point, the length of a molad, and the postponement rules; no observation is necessary.
No Biblical Basis for Changes in the Calendar All these rules and calculations keep the seasons and the solar year rather closely aligned,without a single observation of a new moon or a series of sunsets. They are very handy for Jews but not a single bulleted item we’ve noted is mentioned in the Bible, and using this calendar means you will be celebrating feast days at times different from those the biblical calendar specifies.
Did the perversion of the biblical calendar start in Talmudic days, or was it later, around Hillel’s time?Yahweh confirmed the importance of the biblical calendar at the beginning of the Exodus (Lev. 23), and that is the time Satan began his work to pervert it.Isn’t it amazing how Satan has twisted everything in the Bible to his advantage? Yahweh gave us laws to live by while Satan tells us they are just for ancient Israelites.
Because His Feast days are important to Yahweh’s plan for mankind, Satan replaces them with those important to his plan. He also derails Yahweh’s inspired calendar by man-made calendars.
If we must have a Messiah to be saved from sin’s death penalty, then the adversary causes churchianity to refute Him by convincing them to celebrate Easter!They take the very first inspired time of the sacred year and celebrate it with sunrise services, egg-laying rabbits, and leavened hot-cross buns. To top it off, Satan puts it on the wrong day.For those who escape this trap, he lays another one. When Numbers 9 says observing Passover on a particular day and at a particular time is very important, Satan confuses time itself.
If the bulleted items on pages 12-13 seem a bit convoluted and confusing compared to the four rules Yahweh originally gave the Israelites, it is because they are. Whenever Satan works, things always get complicated.
Why Not Use the Vernal Equinox to Start the Year? Some ignore barley altogether and set Abib 1 according to the vernal equinox.The vernal equinox is that instant when the sun is directly above the earth’s equator while going from the south to the north (for inhabitants of the northern hemisphere). It is the time that most consider the beginning of spring.
Those who employ the vernal equinox point to Genesis 1:14, claiming that the sun, moon, and stars set the year’s beginning. It is true that the sun divides day from night and inaugurates the seasons by the earth’s tilt, while the new moon sets the beginning of months. Yet, nowhere in the entire Bible can one find that the vernal equinox establishes the first month Abib.Nowhere in the Bible is there even any mention of the vernal equinox.To say that Genesis 1:14 refers to the vernal equinox is reading into Scripture what simply isn’t there.
Passover is related to spring through the growing cycle of crops. First and foremost, it must occur in the month of Abib. And Abib is a condition of grain as much as it is a time of the year.
The King James Version has led some astray in the way it translates moed in Exodus 13:10, Num. 9:2, 3, 7, and 13. The KJV uses “season” in these verses, causing some to believe that the command is specifically for springtime, and therefore must involve the vernal equinox. In reality, the Hebrew moed simply means “set time” or “appointed time.”Yahweh has set Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread by the criteria of ripening crops,not by the vernal equinox.
The vast majority of Jews gradually got away from actively looking for the green ears of barley, going instead by a calculated calendar that involved the vernal equinox. This was done for the sake of convenience. But Yahweh tells us that His growing cycle reveals the proper month for His Feasts. The first month of the year, Abib, means a green ear (of grain), not vernal equinox.
McClintock and Strong’s Cyclopedia of Biblical Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature, Vol. 3, p. 13, under Easter states: “Many of the Church fathers are of 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 of Nisan occasionally fell before the equinox.They therefore insisted that the 14th of Nisan, which for both parties within the church determined the time of Easter, should always be after the equinox.
“As the year of Jews is a lunar year, and the 14th of Nisan always a full-moon day, the Christians who adopted the above astronomical view, whenever the 14th of Nisan fell before the equinox, would celebrate the death of [Messiah] one month later than the Jewish Passover.”
Christianity Sets Its Own Rules Note that the Christian “Church fathers” established their own rulesby relying upon the vernal equinox as did the pagans, instead of the green ears of barley as the Bible requires (Deut. 16:1).
Another authority writes, “That the vernal equinox occurred in Nisan [Abib] is attested by Josephus (Ant. 1. x. 5) and also in cuneiform literature (Muss-Arnolt p. 77) Nisan corresponded to the first zodiacal sign (Aries) in which the vernal equinox fell. The sacred year was determined by the annual festivals and the first of these festivals was henceforth fixed by the Passover moon.” “Equinox and the Calendar,” Dictionary of the Bible, James Hastings, p. 765.
Nothing is mentioned here about letting the equinox determine the month of Nisan.The vernal equinox fell within the month of Nisan [Abib] which means the new moon of Nisan came BEFORE the equinox. That is, the new moon came establishing the month of Nisan (Abib),then came the equinox, then the Passover.Therefore, those who insist upon keeping the Feasts a month later are out of harmony with Yahweh’s calendar.
Fausset’s Bible Encyclopedia, under “Year [Hebrew year] reads, “They began it with the new moon nearest to the equinox, yet late enough to allow of the firstfruits of barley harvest being offered about the middle of the first month. So Josephus (Ant. iii. 10,5) states that the Passover was celebrated when the sun was in Aries” (p. 727).
Vernal Equinox and Historic Paganism When the Roman church deliberately acted to separate Easter from Passover,it ruled in 325 CE in the Council of Nicaeathat Easter would fall on the first Sunday after the first full moon following the vernal equinox.This setting of an observance was entirely man-made, and it is appropriate that it applied to a man-made holiday called Easter.The Roman church on its own volition, therefore, bestowed a legitimacy on the vernal equinox as a calendar markerwhere it had none before – at least not in any kind of biblical context.
That does not mean, however, that the vernal equinox had no significance among historic pagans and their calendars. Note the following:
Equinox, pagan, Persian, calendar,• “Easter, too, celebrates the victory of a god of light (J-sus) over darkness (death), so it makes sense to place it at this season. Ironically, the name ‘Easter’ was taken from the name of a Teutonic lunar goddess Eostre (from whence we also get the name of the female hormone, estrogen).Her chief symbols were the bunny (both for fertility and because her worshipers saw a hare in the full moon) and the egg (symbolic of the cosmic egg of creation), images which Christians have been hard pressed to explain. Her holiday, the Eostara, was held on the Vernal Equinox Full Moon. Needless to say, the old and accepted folk name for the Vernal Equinox is ‘Lady Day.’ Christians sometimes insist that the title is in honor of Mary and her Annunciation, but Pagans will smile knowingly.” – Lady Day: The Vernal Equinox, by Mike Nichols.
• “The vernal equinox has long been a significant event in the lives of agricultural peoples as it symbolizes nature’s regeneration, fertility, growth and bounty. The word equinox comes from Latin and means ‘equal night’ (Tag- und Nachtgleiche). On this day, night and day each last twelve hours.The Vernal Equinox used to be considered the beginning of the Pagan New Year.It was a time of joy called forth by the resurrection of the ‘Light of the World’ (sun god) from the underworld of the winter, from where he arose to join his goddess Eostre.” – by Ruth Reichmann, Max Kade German-American Center, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis.
• “Babylonians and Assyrians placed greater importance on the Equinoxes than the solstices. The most important festival in Babylonia was the New Year,which occurred at the Spring equinox. This was the akitu, a twelve-day ceremony in which the King, as the son and representative of the divinity, regenerated and synchronized the rhythms of nature, cosmos, and human society.” – Tales of the Vernal Equinox, by Robin DuMolin
• “Modern Pagans also celebrate the universal principle of Resurrection at the Equinox – which is named for Eostre, a Pagan goddess.She is the goddess of Spring to whom the offerings of cake and colored eggs were made at the Vernal Equinox. Rabbits, especially white ones, were sacred to her, and she was believed to take the form of a rabbit. She is also said to be the goddess of the East, that being the direction of rebirth.Since the sun rises in the East, she is linked with the sunrise. Traditional Easter services stem from this association,” Ibid. “Easter is supposed to be derived from Anglo Saxon Eostre, the name of the Norse goddess whose festival is celebrated by the pagans at the vernal equinox.” – A Book About the Bible, George Stimpson, p. 180.
• “Ostara, also known as The Spring or Vernal Equinox, the Festival of Trees, Alban Eilir, Ostara, the Rites of Spring, and the Rites of Eostre, occurs between March 19 and 21 and marks the first day of true Spring. Day and night are equal on this day, hence the name Equinox. It is observed by Pagans throughout the world.” – from The Witches’ Web
sphinx equinox. pagan equinox calendar,• “Pagans revere the G-d and G-ddess through rituals or ceremonies of various kinds. Pagans of the western traditions celebrate eight festivals or Sabbats each year.They comprise the four solar quarters i.e. the two solstices (longest and shortest days) and the two equinoxes (day and night are the same length)plus four Celtic seasonal festivals. All these mark important events in the cycle of life. They are:Ostara (Easter), the spring equinox, 21st March: Return of the sun from the south, springtime proper. Some celebrate a holy union between G-d and G-ddess.” – from What Do Pagans Do?
Vernal Equinox as the ‘Tequphah’? The argument has been attempted that the vernal equinox corresponds to the Hebrew word “tequphah,” which is found several times in the Bible. The definition of tequphah (Strong’s Concordance No. 8622) is: “A revolution, i.e. of the sun course (of time) lapse: circuit, come about, end.”From the definition, we find it next to impossible to attach any firm connection of tequphah to a spring equinox. The evidence, in fact, points to the end of the year, not the beginning.
The following passages contain the Hebrew word tequphah as well as its meaning, as indicated by the quotation marks:
• Exodus 34:22 (Feast of ingathering at the “year’s end”)
• 2Chron. 24:23 (Syria attacked Judah at the “end of the year”)
• 2Chronicles. 24:23; 36:10 (“end of the year/year was expired”)
Brown, Driver, Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon defines the tequphah (Strong’s No. 8622) as: “coming round, circuit;–Ex. 34:22, adv., at the circuit (completion) of the year, so 2Chron. 24:23= pl. cstr. 1Sam. 1:20; sig. Sf. Of finished circuit of sun.” p. 880. This source says about the root of tequphah: No. 5362 naqaph: 1. An intransitive verb meaning to surround something… (Isa. 29:1, let feasts go around, i.e. run the round (of the year). 2. make the round, i.e. complete the circuit. Job 1:5 when the days of feasting had completed their circuit.
The closest we have in the Hebrew to spring as a season is 6779, tsamach, a primitive root meaning to sprout, bear, bring forth, bud, grow, cause to spring (forth, up). Yahweh again reveals that the time for His Feasts is based on the growing of crops, not to the vernal equinox.
Ancient Israelites were farmers and herders, not astronomers. It stands to reason that Yahweh would zero in on their crops as a starting point for their annual Feast calendar. The calculated calendar does not work with the command to give Yahweh the firstfruits.
Yahweh’s Calendar v. Jewish Calendar Let’s sum up the differences between what Yahweh said about keeping time and what the Jews of today do with the calculated Jewish calendar.
• Yahweh said begin the year with Abib when crops are green and growing. Jews begin with Ethanim in the autumn.
• Yahweh said begin Abib by checking the barley crop.Jews check the date of the vernal equinox and add hours.
• Yahweh said begin months by sighting the crescent moon. Jews calculate from a molad (invisible conjunction).
• Yahweh said nothing about not putting two Sabbaths back-to-back. Jews create postponement rules.
• The rules laid down by Yahweh automatically adjust for what’s going on in the solar system.
The Jews’ calculations have built-in errors that must sooner or later be corrected.Yahweh never said that months should be 29 days long or 30 days long or any exact number of days.He said new moon to new moon was a month, Isaiah 66:23. Yahweh never said how many months were in a year, either– just that they started with new moons, Ezekiel 45:17-18. The words for “molad” or “equinox” or even spring, when used as a season, do not appear in the Bible.
The critical difference between the biblical calendar and the calculated Jewish calendar is that they produce different days for observing the feasts. One is correct, the other is wrong. One obeys Yahweh, the other does not.
Keeping this in mind, let’s look at the major reasons offered by some for using the calculated Jewish calendarto determine feast days and times, and their counter-arguments.
• Yahweh committed the oracles to the Jews and we should follow their lead.
This argument comes from the Apostle Paul’s writings to the Romans. “What advantage then hath the Jew? or what profit is there of circumcision? Much every way: chiefly, because that unto them were committed the oracles of Yahweh” (Romans 3:1-2). What were the “oracles”? The proponents of the calculated Jewish calendar include the rules for calendar-making in these oracles – but that logic could include anything they added, including the Talmud. In Acts 7:38 the same Greek word for “oracles” is used – (No. 3051), where it says, “This is he (Moses), that was in the church in the wilderness with the angel which spake to him in the mount Sina, and with our fathers: who received the lively oracles to give unto us.” Here oracles refers to the law given Moses on Mt. Sinai. The oracles or laws were all given to all of Israel as is recorded in Deuteronomy, not just to the Levites or to any one tribe.
• The scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses seat, so we must obey them.
This argument comes from Yahshua’s words in Matthew 23:1-3: “Then spake Yahshua to the multitude, and to his disciples, Saying, 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.” According to Yahshua, this metaphor means they read the law to the people on the Sabbaths, just as Moses transmitted the law.Reading the law and doing what it says are two different things, as Yahshua pointed out, but this argument usually omits the part about “do not after their works: for they say, and do not.”Someone who says one thing and does another is a hypocrite. Did Yahshua follow the Pharisees’ interpretation of when the Passover should be observed (remember, they kept the Passover on the 15th)? Clearly He did not.
• The Jewish calendar is a complicated calendar, and although the rules for its construction are not given in the Bible, the Levites were given these rules in order for them to relay correct dates to the people.
That the calculated Jewish calendar is complicated is true.Its rules are not in the Bible, and it should not be logically concluded from this that they were given orally to the Levites. If the Levites were given the correct rules for calculating the Jewish calendar, then why do their calculation tables today use a solar year that is 365.25 days long? That figure is about eleven minutes longer than the solar year really is. Also, the 19-year cycle is longer than 19 solar years by over two hours.
If Yahweh gave the Levites the rules, why did He not also tell them the correct value for the mean length of a solar year, and also give them rules to adjust the cycle to prevent future problems with the months and the seasons, like adding a periodic 13th month?Why would a perfect Creator give us imperfect rules?And why would He have told only the Levites something so important?In just about every instance, when Yahweh spoke to Moses, He started out with a phrase something like, “Say to the house of Jacob,” or “Tell the people of Israel,” or “Speak unto the children of Israel.” If you read the 23rd chapter of Leviticus, where the feast requirements are laid down, this is particularly true. There is no place in the Bible that says that Yahweh told Moses to tell the Levites to in turn tell the people something.
Turn to Deuteronomy 1:3. Here, just before the people were to cross over the Jordan and into the Promised Land, Moses made his farewell speech to the Israelites. “And it came to pass in the fortieth year, in the eleventh month, on the first day of the month, that Moses spake unto the children of Israel, according unto all that Yahweh had given him in commandment unto them.” Notice that he was not talking to the Levites alone, but to all the Israelites. Also notice the word “all” in this verse. It is the Hebrew kole, Strong’s 3605, “from 3634; properly the whole; hence all, any or every (in the singular only, but often in a plural sense):—(in) all (manner, [ye]), altogether, any (manner), enough, every (one, place, thing), howsoever, as many as, [no-] thing, ought, whatsoever, (the) whole, whoso (-ever).” The root word (3634) means, “to complete, make perfect.” The verse does not say Moses withheld words for the Levites’ ears alone.
In chapter 16 verse 1 of this book is the commandment for observing the moon of Abib, to keep the Passover. It is very significant that Moses gathered every tribe together and explained again everything they needed to know before possessing the land. No one tribe or person was to have this knowledge exclusively. They all started out equally in the Promised Land. They would not be able to blame any other person or tribe for their mistakes.
• Not everything Yahweh taught the Levites is recorded in the Bible.
barley, aviv, calendar, harvest,It seems logical that Yahweh could have said and done things not recorded in the Bible.But is it logical that Yahweh would have omitted something so important to His worship, depending only on the instructions of a special group to relay His requirements? He never did that with any of His other instructions and commands.
• Postponements are not condemned in the Bible; the calculated Jewish calendar does not violate one Scripture.
In Deuteronomy Moses was making his wrap-up speech to the Israelites before they parted. Read Deuteronomy 4:2: “You shall not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall you diminish ought from it, that you may keep the commandments of Yahweh Elohim which I command you.”See also Revelation 22:18-19. If we are told not to add anything to the Word, and doing so changes the very day a Feast is observed, and as a result I am cut off from my people, it is clear I have violated something in the Scripture.
• The Bible does not define what a new moon is, so we are not instructed how to watch for the new moon.
This argument is made in support of substituting the astronomical conjunction for the actual sighting of the new moon.
Let’s look again at Deuteronomy 16:1, paraphrased as closely to the Hebrew meanings as Strong’s dictionary allows. “Look narrowly for the new moon of the green ears of grain and keep the Passover.” Once again, Moses was speaking to all of Israel here.He told them to look for the new moon of Abib. He did not tell them to check with the Levites about molads. A molad (conjunction) as we have already learned, is when the moon is exactly between the earth and the sun. This argument substitutes the molad, a moon you cannot see, for the new moon crescent, which you can.
Imagine a desert-dwelling shepherd from the tribe of Dan trying to figure out when the molad of Abib would occur! He definitely would not have “looked narrowly for” a dark moon that he could not possibly see! Saying that we were not instructed in how to look for a new moon is ridiculous.Saying we are to look for a black moon is ludicrous.To equate the words “new moon” to “molad” is even more ridiculous. If I asked you to observe my “new car,” and I pointed to an empty parking space, what would you think? Apply the same logic to the phrase “new moon” and then go out and try to spot the conjunction. It’s impossible.
The biblical calendar can be projected,but it is confirmed only by observation of barley and the new moons. Just as Yahweh planned when He created the “lights” in the sky, Genesis 1:14, we are to establish His appointed times (moed) by the monthly lunar cycle and to start at that particular time of year when the sun causes barley to grow and begin to produce grain in the ear.
When we follow the scriptural calendar, all the complications that calculated calendars try to overcome just disappear.And we rest assured that we are observing the days Yahweh commands – at the proper time He commands them.
Biblical Dates Are Underlined New moons are noted on the day seen after sunset in the continental United States, and are dates of expected sightings; moons are confirmed by actual sightings. (See New Moon Report) Dates of Annual High Days are based on these expected moons. This calendar is based on the Abib moon being the first new moon after the Spring Equinox.
FIRST FRUITS To believers in Messiah, he is our Passover Lamb. For many of us, he is believed to have died on Abib 14 (4th day of the week that year, a Wednesday) and to have risen on Abib 17 (7th day of the week that year, the weekly Sabbath). The first fruits wave sheaf offering that year would have been on the 18th, the day after the weekly Sabbath, in keeping with the commandment of Leviticus 23:11. Many of us also believe that Messiah was the first fruits offering of humanity, presenting himself to Yahweh on that day, the day after that weekly Sabbath.
With the date reference being on a different day of the week each year, the above day / date relationship occurs only once every 7 years, therefore: this calendar reflects that first fruits would always occur on the day after resurrection day. Resurrection day being 3 days after Passover.
*So, even though First Fruits currently may not be the day after the weekly Sabbath, we will use that day to determine the current next weekly Sabbath on which to begin the count of seven Sabbaths.
The Biblical Calendar Proof is a research and teaching effort that claims to mathematically demonstrate that the days of the week have been accurately kept from creation to the present, with Saturday as the Sabbath established by God in Genesis biblicalcalendarproof.com.
Core Claims
Sabbath on Saturday: The proof argues that God rested on the seventh day after six days of creation (Genesis 2:2–3) and set Saturday as the Sabbath for all creation. It claims that astronomical calculations (based on the movement of the sun and moon) show that this day has been preserved without error biblicalcalendarproof.com.
Accurate chronology: The site uses a “Calendar Generator” and timeline to trace events from creation through the Flood, the Exodus, the Babylonian exile, and to the present, aligning each with the biblical text and astronomical cycles biblicalcalendarproof.com.
Key dates: It provides day-of-the-week calculations for major biblical events, such as the Flood, the Exodus, and Christ’s crucifixion, asserting they match the biblical account biblicalcalendarproof.com.
Biblical Calendar Basics
The Biblical Calendar(also called the Hebrew or Jewish calendar) is based on:
Lunar months: Determined by the sighting of the new moon.
Solar year: Adjusted to keep months aligned with seasons.
Week: Seven days, with the Sabbath (Shabbat) on the seventh day icejusa.org+1.
In the Bible, a day is defined as from evening to evening (Genesis 1:5; Leviticus 23:32), not from midnight to midnight as in the modern Gregorian calendar icejusa.org+1.
Historical Context
Biblical period: Ancient Israel used a purely observational calendar based on the sun and moon, without fixed postponement rules searchingthescriptures.org.
Talmudic period: Post-exilic Israel adopted a calculated calendar with fixed rules to align with the lunar cycle searchingthescriptures.org.
Modern Hebrew calendar: Uses mathematical calculations to maintain alignment with both lunar months and the solar year Biblical Calendar Proof.
The Bible describes the earth as firmly established by God, set on foundations so that it cannot be moved, symbolizing both physical stability and divine sovereignty.
Key Biblical Verses
Several passages emphasize the earth’s immovability:
Psalm 104:5 – “He set the earth on its foundations; it shall never be moved” highlights God’s act of establishing the earth securely OpenBible.info.
Psalm 93:1 – “Yes, the world is established; it shall never be moved” reinforces the permanence of God’s creation biblerepository.com.
1 Chronicles 16:30 – “Tremble before him, all the earth! The world is firmly established; it cannot be moved” emphasizes both stability and reverence ourbibleheritage.com.
Isaiah 45:18 – “He formed the earth; he established it; he did not create it empty, but formed it to be inhabited” underscores God’s intentional design biblerepository.com.
Ecclesiastes 1:4 – “A generation goes, and a generation comes, but the earth remains forever” reflects the enduring nature of creation biblerepository.com.
He raiseth up the poor out ofthe dust, and lifteth up the beggar from the dunghill, to set them among princes, and to make them inherit the throne of glory: for thepillarsoftheearth are theLord‘s, and he hath set the world upon them.
While the Biblical Calendar Proof is popular in certain Christian and Jewish circles, it is not universally accepted:
Critics note that the Gregorian calendar (used worldwide) does not align with the Hebrew calendar, and that historical records show variations in how days were counted in ancient timessearchingthescriptures.org.
The claim that “the days of the week have never been lost” is a theological assertion rather than a universally agreed historical fact; astronomical and historical evidence shows that calendar systems have changed over time.
How to Explore It
If you want to see the proof in action:
Visit the Biblical Calendar Proof website for the Calendar Generator, timeline, and articles biblicalcalendarproof.com.
Read the ICEJ USA article on the Biblical Calendar for a broader theological and historical overview icejusa.org.
Study the We Are Hebrew explanation of biblical days, months, and years for a more general understanding We Are Hebrew.
In summary: The Biblical Calendar Proof is a modern apologetic and educational tool that uses astronomy and scripture to argue for the accuracy of the Sabbath and biblical chronology. It is rooted in biblical theology and Jewish calendar tradition, but its claims are part of a specific interpretive framework rather than a settled historical consensus.
Jan 5, 2019 · But today I’m going to explain, the true biblical calendar. This will give you a better perspective on when things are supposed to take place according to …
TAGS: Calendars, Gregorian, Egyptian, Roman, Greek, Mesopotamian, Hebrew, French, God’s Calendar, Calendar Restored, TRUMPETS, TABERNACLES, Yom Kippur, the Rapture, The Second Coming, The Zodiac, Signs in the Heavens, Solarium, Astronomy, Astrology, TIME, Seasons, Appointed Feasts, Jesus Christ, Resurrection, Judgement, Babylon, Israel, New Moon, Elohim, Planetary Systems, Stars, 12 Tribes, God’s Light, God’s Forgiveness, Repentance, Enoch, … Click Here to Read More
Don’t miss the revelations God has for you in this post. Be sure to stay and read it all the way to the end. You will be glad you did! From the beginning, all people on earth followed the signs in the heavens to keep track of the days, seasons AND TIME. They watched for … Click Here to Read More
Thank you so very kind, for really I Will play you this song I wrote this also about 15 years ago Still means a lot to me I know it means a lot to you too
Come gather ’round people Wherever you roam Admit that the waters Around you have grown And accept it that soon You’ll be drenched to the bone
If your time to you Is worth savin’ Then you better start swimmin’ Or you’ll sink like a stone For the times they are a changin’
Come writers and critics Who prophesize with your pen Keep your eyes wide The chance won’t come again And don’t speak too soon For the wheel’s still in spin
And there’s no tellin’ who That it’s namin’ For the loser now Might be later to win For the times they are a changin’
Come Senators, Congressmen Please heed the call Don’t stand in the doorway Don’t block up the hall For he that gets hurt Will be he who has stalled
For the times they are a changin’
Come mothers and fathers Throughout the land And don’t criticize What you can’t understand Your sons and your daughters Are beyond your command
Your old road is Rapidly agin’ Please get out of the new one If you can’t lend your hand For the times they are a changin’
The line it is drawn The curse it is cast The slow one now Will later be fast As the present now Will later be past
The order is Rapidly fadin’ And the first one now Will later be last For times they are a changin’ (Ah-ah-ah-ah-ah)
Thank you Will be here for four more nights Where we’ll see you again (Ah-ah-ah-ah-ah)
Tags: TIME, Clocks, Perception, Space, Magick, Philanthropy, Wealthy, WEF, Bells, Deserts, Mountains, Megalomaniacs, Millennium, End of the Age, Maritime, Ancestors Symbols, Signs and Sigils these are the language of the Elite/Magicians/Illumined. These are employed not only as a means of communicaiton but as instruments of Magick meant to conjure demonic assistance for the completion of … Click Here to Read More
WOW-WOW=WOW, Things are moving so fast and new information is being revealed on the daily. So much, so fast our heads are spinning. There is no way for anyone to stay on top of it all. Very clearly, we are coming to the end. One thing I have noticed is that they have had so … Click Here to Read More
In summary, the concept of God creating time is deeply rooted in scripture, illustrating His eternal nature and the beginning of the universe.The Bible provides a framework for understanding how time relates to God’s character and His interaction with creation.
In the Bible, time is both a creation of God and a framework for His divine plan, emphasizing human responsibility, divine sovereignty, and the contrast between temporal life and eternity.
In summary, biblical time is a divinely created, structured, and purposeful framework. It calls humans to live wisely, trust God’s sovereign timing, and maintain an eternal perspective, recognizing that while earthly life is fleeting, God’s plan and eternity are unchanging. 4 Sources
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God not only created the day and divided it into day and night. He created the stars to display his plan and provide signs for us. God also established the week, as being seven days with the last being His Sabbath of Rest. God only numbered the days. God also established the months to begin with the NEW MOON and last to the Next Full Moon. God Named the Months God also established the SEASONS and the times of planting and harvest. He established his divine appointments through the years as times of Feasting, Celebration, and Solemn Assembly. GOD told us to NUMBER OUR DAYS ARIGHT, and even told us how long we might expect to live if we obey him.
In Job 36:11: “If they obey and serve Him, they will spend the rest of their days in prosperity and their years in contentment”Bible Hub+1. This means that those who listen to and follow God’s guidance will live out their days in blessing, health, and joy, rather than in hardship or sorrow.
Psalm 90:10:The Bible also acknowledges that God determines the number of a person’s days (Job 14:5), but obedience can influence the quality of those days — making them more prosperous, peaceful, and pleasing to God Bible.com.
We are in the ENDTIMES, I hope you are looking up, EXPECTANTING TO HEAR THE CALL! I hope you have your lamps filled with the Oil of the Holy Spirit. I hope that you have prepared yourself and that you are praying for all who are LOST. MAY GOD’s WILL be done in the earth!
We may not know with certainty what day it is… But we have this CONFIDENCE that JESUS/Yahushua is our SABBATH. We are resting in HIS SHALOM! And He is our Jubilee…complete redemption and restoration will soon be ours! We walk in the Righteousness of CHRIST, and not our own which is as filthy rags. Hallelujah!
And at that timeshall Michael stand up, the great prince which standeth for the children of thy people: and there shall be a time of trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time: and at that timethy people shall be delivered, every one that shall be found written in the book.Daniel 12:1
Thus saith the Lord, Keep ye judgment, and do justice:for my salvation is near to come, and my righteousness to be revealed. Isaiah 56:1
The righteous perisheth, and no man layeth it to heart: and merciful men are taken away, none considering that the righteous is taken away from the evil to come. Isaiah 57:1