Genesis 5:7
"And Seth lived after he begat Enos eight hundred
and seven years, and begat sons and daughters:"
The secondary 807-year age of Seth prescribes
an 800-year Generation Cycles as partial segment device within the whole
period. The 800-year Generation Cycle
repeats to hold place value in the secondary 807-year age case of Seth. The third and fourth 400-year-Baktun-cycles
in the Antediluvian lineage combine in the second 800-year Generation Cycle.
The secondary 807-year age of Seth includes the second 800-year Generation Cycle, plus another 7-Tzolken-sacred-year component. To account for the last 5-year adjustment of either 360-days or 365-days, the ancients chose the 260-day-sacred-year unit. Another 7- Tzolken-sacred-year component adds with 800-years to describe the entire secondary 807-year age of Seth. Remaining time following each 800-year Generation Cycle always adds to the Patriarch’s secondary age. Through the ancestry and the character of Jared, reversing conversions between 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years and 360-day-Tun-years took place.
Seth, the first generation after Adam, completes a 365-day-solar-year and 365-year-solar-cycle. The primary 105-year age of Seth adds with a 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle to make one 365-year-solar-cycle. A 360-day midpoint length of year leaves 5-days per year unaccounted for at the end of 365-years. Two viewpoints are possible with the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle steadfast. The first case is a 365-year-solar-cycle period in conjunction with a 360-Tun-year. A 5-year difference exists between the 365-year-solar-cycle and 360-Tun-year-cycle.
The 360-year-Tun-cycle was fundamental to lunar/solar calendar operations. A difference of 100-years from the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle compares with the primary 105-year age of Seth. Seth's primary 105-year age is actually a composite that includes two distinct sub-periods. The first 100-years are between the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle and the 360-Tun-year-cycle. The last 5-years compute 7-Tzolken-sacred-years in the secondary age category. Three methods estimate 7-Tzolken-sacred-years in equations 1-7.
Equation 1 multiplies for 1,800-days using a 365-year-solar-cycle that has 360-day-Tun-years. The alternate method in equation 2 likewise multiplies for the same 1,800-days using a 360-day-Tun-year and a 5-day feast period remaining between one 360-day-Tun-year and the 365-day-solar-year. The secondary 800-year Generation Cycle of Seth repeats Adam's secondary 800-year Generation Cycle with 1,800-days or more leftover.
Equation 3 finds the total 1820-days for the identified 7-Tzolken-sacred-year portion of Seth’s secondary 807-year age. Seth’s 7-Tzolken-sacred-year supplemental time multiplies by the 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year for 1820-days. Seth's primary 105-year age had been the solar-side result after the third 400-year-Baktun-cycle.
Substituting the more familiar 365-day-solar-year and the 365-year-solar-cycle into the calculations shows the incredible accuracy of the ancient calendar. A 365-year-solar-cycle substitutes in place of the 360-year-Tun-cycle. Comparable substitution uses a 365-day-solar-year in place of 360-days to result in 1,825-days (Eqn. 4). The last 5-years in Seth’s 105-year primary age amounts some 1,800-days to 1,825-days. Time beyond the 800-year Generation Cycle approximates to 7-Tzolken-sacred-years, which add in the secondary 807-sacred-year age of Seth.
Where the equations are redundant, either case divides by a 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year to find two values approximating 7-Tzolken-sacred-years. For 1,800-days, dividing by 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years equals 6.92-Tzolken-sacred-years (Eqn. 5). In the case of 1,825-days, dividing by 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years results in 7.02-Tzolken-sacred-years (Eqn. 6). The last analysis closely approximates 7-Tzolken-sacred-years as supplemental time in the secondary 807-year age of Seth.
The Enochian 364-day calendar suits cascaded time layers for Seth. A 100-days and years single term continues with the last 5-years in the primary age category. A calendar year of 364-days provides 105-days in 105-years. The last 5-years of Seth’s primary 105-year age multiply by 364-days in Eqn. 7. Exactly 1,820-days divide by the 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year to secure the last 7-Tzolken-sacred-years in the secondary age category (Eqn. 8). Both the primary age 5-years and the secondary age 7-Tzolken-sacred-years are congruent to 1,820-days.
The Ethiopian Book of Enoch (I) advises the perfect calendar year has 364-days. A 364-day Jubilee calendar year quite possibly demonstrates the oldest mention of cascaded time. Affiliations with initial Egyptian Calendar practices clarify 4-days assigned to solar-side and 6-days assigned to the lunar-side of the calendar. The final summit day of the 365-day calendar year and four controlling days, one for each quarter of the year, were the principal rulers of time.
4. “And the harmony of the world becomes complete every three hundred and sixty-fourth state of it. For the signs,”
5. “The seasons,”
6. “The years,”
CHAP. LXXIX; Verses 4-6:
The Book of Enoch (I), The Prophet
Equation 41. a-b.
1.
a. Uses a
365-Year-Solar-Cycle with 360-Days per Year
5 Years
x
360-Day Midpoint Length of Year
= 1,800 Days Extra in 5 Years of
360 Days per Year
2.
Uses a 360-Year Midpoint Cycle with 365-Day-Solar-Year
5 Days per Year
x
360-Year Midpoint Length of Cycle
= 1,800 Days Extra in 360-Year
Midpoint Cycle of 365-Day-Solar-Years
3.
7-sacred-years
x 260 Days
= 1820 days
4.
Uses a 365-Year-Solar-Cycle with
365-Day-Solar-Year
5 Years
x 365
Day-Solar-Year
= 1,825 Days Extra in 5-Years of
365-Day-Solar-Years
5.
1800 Days
¸ 260
Day-Sacred-Years
= 6.92 Sacred Years Approximate:
7-Sacred-Years
6.
1,825 Days
¸ 260
Day-Sacred-Years
= 7.02 Sacred Years Approximate:
7-Sacred-Years
7.
Uses a 365 Year-Solar-Cycle with 364 Day Calendar Year
of Enoch
5 Years
x 365
Day-Solar-Year
= 1,820 Days Extra in 5-Years of
364 Days
8.
1,820 Days
¸ 260
Day-Sacred-Years
= 7-Sacred-Years
Our tools enable current Bible students to explore the most remote thought processes ever. A final revelation point examines the Leap Day inclusion. Most people today are familiar with the Leap Day inclusion every four years. The single Leap Day addition every four years in our modern calendar was once a vital element for the ancient Egyptian Calendar. The Egyptian Calendar summed the quarter-day fraction every year. The last year of 365-days adds the summit to make the entire Sothic Cycle 1,461-years long. Leap Day had a very important role in remote calendars. Enoch, seventh Antediluvian Patriarch from Adam links with the Egyptian Calendar. The Enochian Sect applied a curious 364-day calendar year with the parallel theme of numerical matching. Leap Days exist rooted in the 400-year-Baktun-cycle. A 400-year repeating Leap Day cycle appears in our present calendar.
The present Gregorian calendar labels the current 2005 calendar year. Our calendar embraces fine-tuning. Leap Day is normally included every fourth year on February 29. The Leap Day adjustment is required to keep the star positions on track over successive years. A 400-year cycle exists by restricting Leap Days to century years not evenly divisible by 400-years. Pope Gregory XIII modified the Julian calendar and associated Leap Day correction rules in 1582 to maintain proper Easter calculations. Easter was slipping farther into summer. The namesake calendar reform dropped the 10-days between October 5 and October 15 in 1582. The rule implemented excluded Leap Days in centennial years not evenly divisible by 400-years. Thus, the years 1700, 1800 and 1900 excluded Leap Day. The years 1600 and 2000 added Leap Day in the usual manner. Solar year stability needs only 97 Leap Day insertions in a 400-year period.
The calendar math from the
three oldest major calendars: the early Jewish Calendar,
the Egyptian Calendar, and the Mesoamerican Calendars shared phenomenal
accuracy that resembles our modern Gregorian calendar. Leap Day adjustments were fundamental to the
religious eschatology of ancient
The translated "generation" alludes to Abraham's first-born son after 400-years. Gen. 15:16 implies knowledge of a 400-year period. Strands referenced from sacred literature testify that given 400-year-Baktun-cycles weave into our modern view of Biblical chronology. A multiple of two 400-year-Baktun-cycles specify the 800-year Generation Cycle. The 400-year-Baktun-cycle is the final bridge to Mesoamerican history.
The calendar detailing Adam's lineage exhibits numerical matching. In a single term, 365-day-solar-years and 365-year-solar-cycles occur throughout the text. Conceptions of days and years having the same numerical value elaborate the meaning for "and all the days of …. were …. years." Calendar study secures the components of 105-days and 105-years as a single term. The agricultural 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-year and the matched 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle describe single terms also.
The complete genealogy of Adam to Noah expands in the Holy of Holies. Applying lunar/solar calendar math from the three oldest sources: the Jewish Calendar, Egyptian Calendar and Mesoamerican Calendars discovers definite agreements for the ages of Adam. Progressing through the genealogy following are the lunar/solar calendar records that extend from the oldest sources of Genesis scriptures. Each Antediluvian Patriarch character in the lineage to Enoch reports time reckoning common to ancient civilizations. A primary age category and a secondary category define elements of the lengthening calendar. Birth until the next named son is the primary age category. The secondary age category is the time measured from fatherhood to death. The primary ages of Adam and his son Seth, begin to recount vast spans of time.
The lunar/solar calendar order of the Patriarchs continues to unfold in the same manner. Components from other calendar systems assemble to employ advanced tools. The named characters from Adam to Jared list a primary age category time that associates with the 260-year-Tzolken-sacred-cycle. The secondary age category includes the 800-year Generation Cycle. Two multiples of a 400-year-Baktun-cycle are combined for all six repeating 800-year Generation Cycles. Additional time adds to the secondary age 800-year Generation Cycles and calculates in 260-day-Tzolken-sacred-years.
The Antediluvian Patriarchs incorporate a spiritual hierarchy. Birth, life and death events mark strategic
points to illustrate lunar/solar calendar reckoning. Natural and explicit, the recognized eras are
numerical remnants left to us by a skilled society. Kings, deities and the nature of gods all
played a role in ancient cosmology.
References to supernatural beings and visions are most noteworthy in the
writings of Enoch.
The lifetime age of Enoch, the seventh patriarch from Adam, was 365-years. More precisely, a 365-day-solar-year and the 365-year-solar-cycle appear as a 365-days-and-years single term. The solar calendar of Enoch was rooted in both Egyptian mythology and Jewish lore. From the three books of Enoch, a curious 364-day length of calendar year lends new insight by reserving the last day of the solar year. A final day and year single term serves again, numerical matching of days versus years. Enoch blends with parts of many prophetic scriptures, such as "... one day with the Lord is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day" (II Peter 3:8). Ideas of an angelic, heavenly host compare with other sacred Jewish writings that regard supernatural entities. The Talmud, Dead Sea Scrolls, and the Book of Jubilees are such examples. Calendar information is serious business.
Are you a pastor, educator or a student of the Holy Bible? Timeemits.com seeks anointed people to review and contribute to the Ages of Adam ministry. Ancient lunar/solar calendars like the Jewish and Mayan calendars provide the background to understanding early time. Ancient calendars of the Holy Bible use differences between the moon and sun, numerical matching and a 364-day calendar year to describe X-number of days that match with X-number of years. Ages of Adam is a free read at http://www.timeemits.com.
Clark Nelson is webmaster for www.timeemits.com and author of Ages of Adam and sequel, Holy of Holies.
Contact article@timeemits.com for more information.
© Copyright 2006 Clark Nelson and timeemits.com All Rights Reserved.