Moon as the Earliest Calendar give readers of the Holy Bible information recorded in ancient times. Lunar/solar calendars were common throughout the ancient world. Three calendar systems that help our study of Bible times are the Jewish, Mesoamerican and the Egyptian calendars. Changes in the appearance of the moon at night provide the seven-day week. Time steps in the lunar/solar calendar accumulate for longer time cycles.
Moon as the Earliest Calendar
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URL: http://www.timeemits.com/AoA_Articles/Moon_as_the_Earliest_Calendar.htm
Moon as the Earliest Calendar
I AM speaks to people through His Word, the Holy Bible. Historical, inspirational and supernatural,
the Bible has been with us since
calendar recording began. Readers of the
Holy Bible can understand the
records of ancient times. We discern
what the numbered ages in the Old
Testament actually mean by using three oldest calendars. Three calendar systems that help our study of
Bible times are the Jewish,
Mesoamerican and the Egyptian calendars.
These three calendars allow us to trace back into remote prehistory. The word prehistory includes the “before
time”, and the compound of “His” and “story.”
Scientists who have worked with these very early cultures can provide
the basic calendar methods that were once used to measure time. We need to review the Lord's units of main time keeping to see the way ancient humanity
dealt with time observation.
Early parts of the Old Testament mention days and years together. Time and the Biblical Creation include major fundamental concepts known to the ancient Jewish people. The Old Testament provides our first realistic ideas about time reckoning and recording. The Lord defines the day and night in the book of Genesis. The very first calendar of one day had begun. Description of the seven-day Creative Week further defines basic operation of the calendar. The sacred seven-day week is a fundamental religious idea. Four phases of the moon marked four weekly intervals during the month. Approximate lunar phases are attached to the origins of the calendar Sabbath week. Seven-day weeks and lunar months create the lunar-side of the lunar/solar calendars.
We are discovering ancient days
when timekeepers watched the sun, moon and stars. The Jewish Calendar
is simple when you understand the numbers used.
The Jewish Calendar is based on the sun and
moon together and measures chronology in numbered years from the Creation year
1. Modern recorded dates denote this era
as B.C.E. for “Before Common Era”.
Christianity dates according to the birth of Christ. The same B.C.E.
initials mean “Before Christian Era” or
simply B.C. for “Before Christ.” Time
reckoning after Christ applies the
A.D. marking of Anno Domini,
which stems from the Latin meaning: “After Divinity” in the year of our Lord.
Calendar systems map world
chronology according to different beginnings.
Some follow Jewish tradition and put the Creation date at 5,767 years
ago or about 3,761 years B.C.E. Others
credit Archbishop Ussher with calculating in 1,701
A.D. that Creation took place in 4,004 B.C.
The Egyptian Calendar begins between 4,236 B.C.E. and 4,241 B.C.E.,
along with Egyptian mythology explaining the world's creation. Starting dates depend on star observation in
Ages of Adam will aid you through better understanding of the Old Testament and significant calendar
information. The work at timeemits.com
stresses time reckoning and recording.
We return to the origins of day and night that lead up to the sacred
seven-day week to explore this affinity between God above and calendar times.
Genesis 1:4
"And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the
light from the darkness."
God was "between" the light, and the darkness in the
literal Hebrew definition. This basic
interlinear Bible definition
establishes a slightly different thought of God being between or separating, daylight on the one hand, and
darkness on the other. This meaning sets
the precedence for identifying day and night.
Genesis 1:5
"And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called
Night. And the evening and the morning
were the first day."
The Lord put two great lights in heaven, one to rule the day and one to rule the night. The light of the sun measured the day and the light of the moon measured time greater than a day. The greater light is, of course, the sun. Everything we call solar deals with the sun. The lesser light, or luminary, is the moon. The word lunar relates to the moon or the month. The sun and moon identify as luminaries.
This work of God, of dividing, separating or coming between daylight and
darkness to measure time is the basic premise of the original Jewish
calendar. Calendars, time, and the
sacred seven-day week have inspired the purest of time references to the Holy Bible. We must examine formative religions and ideas
about time. In chapter 5 of Genesis, a correlation exists between
the “begat” genealogy following Adam and numerical ties to ancient
calendars. Adam and his descendants
through Noah are the Antediluvian Patriarchs.
Antediluvian tells us they were before the great flood of Noah and all
were Patriarchs or fore fathers of humanity.
The Holy Bible provides our
greatest treasure of calendar history and early theology. The Master of the Universe, He who sits upon
the throne of glory and grace, stretches forth His right hand to give us time.
We become one human race when you put man and woman together. There are two literal Hebrew definitions involved here. Adam meant “the man,” in the literal Hebrew sense of the word. Adam, the word, differs from a personal pronoun name like Bob or John. Adam is the human being, the generic man or a breathing creature. Adam in this work refers to the universal, generic meaning for man. The man is a derivative form of the root word that describes reddish clay, soil or dust. Literal word searches furnish meanings that aid our calendar study. A synthesis of faiths and mythology sharpen initial views regarding civilization. People have always marked birth and death by the calendar. Calendars unite with the spiritual afterlife in memorials. Early religions recognized conceptions of the spirit and soul after death by burial and by saying “from dust unto dust.” The lifetime of Adam is given precise lunar/solar years in chapter 5 of Genesis.
Eve is the woman in literal Hebrew. She is the life-giver, mother to the living, or child-bearer. The feminine fertility issue has always been associated with lunar observation. The lunar month forever etches upon humanity the moon -- mother perceptions of ancient times. Cycles of new moons were basic time reckoning ingredients for lunar/solar calendars. Where Eve represented the feminine side of human order according to lunar observation, Adam represented the masculine, solar side, according to solar positioning on the horizon. In other words, Adam's male image also implied meaning toward the rising and setting positions of the sun through all four seasons during the year. Adam and Eve have embedded connections with primitive cosmology.
Clarification of God resting on the seventh day defines a separation between successive time frames. God again divides, separates or is between the light and darkness of the moon. Repeated instances in a theme show a holy relationship is present between specific divisions of calendar times. Transition from one lunar phase ending to commencement of the next lunar phase is the most revered unit of time measurement known. God set aside the Sabbath Day as holy. God consecrated the Jewish Shabbat for all time to come. The sacred Jewish significance of the seven-day week and the number seven elsewhere support religious observance of the moon as an early calendar.
The lunar/solar calendar
begins to emerge with a variety of ultimate connotations. Day unto night, between the weeks as Sabbath,
new moon crescents and finally intercalary days all continue divine providence
upon Earth. Time steps in the
lunar/solar calendar accumulate for longer time cycles. Years and then multiple of years exhibit the
same religious notions to vast proportions.
Changes in the appearance of the moon at night provide the seven-day week. Divisions of seven-days separate the four basic lunar phases noted in figure 1. Starting with a new moon crescent, the moon gradually comes into view on following nights. The first half of the moon is visible in about seven-days. The moon waxes until full moon at the end of two weeks. Lunar light reverses progression in the third week, waning to half visibility. A fourth week completes the month and visibility diminishes toward a new moon. Completion of four lunar phases comprises the month. The true lunar month measures 29.53-days. Ancient calendar makers recorded approximations according to actual observation. Whole lunar months of 29-days or 30-days were the common practice in lunar/solar calendar systems. The average lunar month of 29.5-days repeats upon sighting the new moon crescent. Light and darkness classify lunar phases in the lunar-side of lunar/solar calendars. Original interpretations of lunar time place God between the weeks on Sabbath Days.
Four Phases of the Moon Figure 1

Four Phases of the Moon
New
Moon First Quarter Full Moon
Fourth Quarter
Waxing Moon
Waning Moon
29.5 Days Average Lunar Month
Lunar/solar calendar foundations of
the Jewish calendar extend from the earliest verses of scripture. Natural, uniform motions of the heavenly
spheres are the pivotal markers of time reckoning. The list of ancient characters mentioned in
the Old Testament used this
lunar/solar calendar system of time recording.
Observation of lunar phases coupled with solar positioning graduated the
lifetime ages of Adam and his descendants.
Well over ten thousand years ago, proto-historical calendar makers had
developed advanced sciences such as mathematics and astronomy. Intercalary days add to the lunar year of
twelve-moon-months in order to complete our modern solar year of 365-days. Necessary intercalations best describe
lunar/solar separation time by "coming between" lunar and solar times.
There are 12 finished lunar months
during the current 365-day-solar-year.
Since day one, that has never changed.
An average lunar month is about 29.5-days long measured against a starry
nighttime background. There are four quarters
during one-lunar-month. From new moon,
which shows no moonlight, to the first phase of the moon, or half the lighted
moon, about one week has passed.
Moonlight waxes to full-moon stage after two weeks. Reversing the pattern, the third week of the
month wanes visibility to diminish the moon's light back to halfway again. The fourth weekly period continues the waning
retreat of moonlight until again repeating the new moon. Twelve mature lunar months multiply by
29.5-days per lunar month for 354-days to approximate the lunar year (Eqn. 1).
Time differences between lunar and
solar calendar years provide lunar/solar calendar adjustments or
intercalations. Subtraction yields 11
days of lunar/solar separation time between the lunar year of 12-moon-months
and the 365-day-solar-year (Eqn. 2).
Eleven days of difference every year were the staple for lunar/solar
calendars. During 19-years, 11-days of
lunar/solar separation time every year multiply this division between lunar
years and solar years (Eqn. 3).
Lunar/solar separation time measures 209-days of difference after
19-years have passed. Therefore, any
19-year lunar/solar calendar cycle had to incorporate these remaining 209-days
of separation as intercalary days in order to catch up the lunar-side of the
calendar, with the solar-side of the calendar.
Intercalary systems varied between cultures to compensate calendar
recording. The Mayan Calendar escalates
the same intercalations to distribute 210-days over a 20-year lunar/solar
calendar cycle (Eqn. 3).
Throughout this text, 'lunar/solar' denotes calendar terminology that pertains to lunar and solar time. Variations include 'lunar/solar separation time' to indicate time between lunar years and solar years. Occasionally the phrase is abbreviated 'l/s'. Lunar-side specifically addresses time measured according to lunar or moon reckoning. Solar-side time splits address time that depends upon solar or sun reckoning. Lunar/solar calendar time is the most important approach to survey ancient calendars.
Equations
1.
12-Month-Lunar-Year
29.5 day-lunar-month
x 12 lunar-months in lunar-year
= 354 day-lunar-year
2.
11-Days of Lunar/Solar Separation Time
365 day-solar-year
- 354 day-lunar-year
= 11 days of l/s separation time
per l/s calendar year
3. Lunar/Solar Separation Time for 20-year-L/S-Cycle
11-days of Separation per l/s calendar year
x
19-year-l/s-calendar cycle
= 209 days of separation per
19-year-l/s-cycle
Approximates to 210 Days of
Separation per 20-year l/s-cycle
The lunar/solar calendar
begins to emerge with a variety of ultimate connotations. Day unto night, between the weeks as Sabbath,
new moon crescents and finally intercalary days all continue divine providence
upon Earth. Time steps in the
lunar/solar calendar accumulate for longer time cycles. Years and then multiple of years exhibit the
same religious notions to vast proportions.
Lunar/solar calendars were common throughout the
ancient world. Different calendar
systems employed the 19-year cycle with slight variations. Study of the Jewish Calendar
provides the necessary understanding that is fundamental to lunar/solar
calendar cycles. Equally important, the
Jewish Calendar was the mainstay time recording plan
found throughout the Old Testament.
More information regarding Jewish Calendar
festival and holiday celebrations is available from the timeemits.com
website. The scope of this work is
primarily the treatment of l/s intercalations.
Ancient and modern versions of the calendar vary slightly. A true comparison is possible only through
supplementary reading in Judaism.
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.
Nelson, C. K. (2004). Moon as the Earliest
Calendar. In Ages of Adam. Retrieved
http://www.timeemits.com/AoA_Articles/Moon_as_the_Earliest_Calendar.htm
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.
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