Since
1986, the calendar has been a recurring
source of doctrinal controversy in the
Church of God. Many articles and papers
have proposed different methods of
calculating the dates of the annual
festivals, and at least a half-dozen
different calendars and calculation
methods have been offered.
This has troubled many sincere brethren
who want to do what pleases God. With
all the controversy, they are unsure.
But does God really expect each
individual Church member to become an
expert on calendar matters?
We can understand the “calendar issue”
by asking three simple questions, and
then answering them from the Bible. Do
the rules of the current Hebrew calendar
conform to Biblical principles and
guidelines? Does God expect each
Christian to determine the calendar for
himself, or did He entrust some
authority to make calendar decisions?
And can we really know what calendar
Jesus Christ and His Apostles used?
Is the Hebrew Calendar
Based Upon the Bible?
Does the Bible give guidelines regarding
the calendar we should use in observing
God’s festivals? If so, what are those
guidelines and where do we find them?
First, let us ask whether the calendar
should be based on physical sighting of
the new moon, or whether it should be
based on calculation. Some argue that
the only valid way to begin a new month
is to actually see the faint crescent of
the new moon. Does the Bible resolve
this argument? Absolutely!
The Hebrew word chodesh is translated
“month” in most English-language Bibles.
Its root meaning involves “making new”
or “repairing.” The moon orbits the
earth, going through phases as its
position changes in relation to the sun
and the earth. Approximately every
29-and-a-half days, the moon comes into
exact conjunction between the earth and
the sun, and the three orbs are in a
straight line with one another (though
not necessarily on the same plane). In
conjunction, the moon is totally dark,
reflecting none of the sun’s light. As
it moves westward, away from
conjunction, it again begins to reflect
light. Depending on the observer’s
location and the earth’s position at
conjunction, the new moon will generally
not be visible until one or two days
after the conjunction.
Note that basing the new month upon
physical sighting of the new moon would
require keeping the Feast of Trumpets
for two days! An observer cannot know,
in advance, on which day he might see
the new moon. Depending upon the exact
time of conjunction, he might see the
crescent on either the 30th or 31st day
after the last new crescent. Since days
begin at sunset, observers would have to
keep the 30th day after the new crescent
of Elul (6th month) as holy time, as
they might see the new crescent that
evening, though they would more commonly
see it on the following evening.
For this reason, even in the land of
Israel, Jews who follow the Pharisees’
traditions observe the Feast of Trumpets
for two days back-to-back. Without
making it a two-day celebration to
ensure that the right day is observed,
it is impossible to base the celebration
of the Feast of Trumpets, the first day
of the seventh month, on physical
sighting of the new moon. Yet upon
examining Leviticus 23 and Numbers 29,
it is clear that the Feast of Trumpets
must be observed for one day rather than
two. This alone mandates a calculated
calendar, in which the new moon day is
determined in advance.
Another even more significant issue—the
intercalary year—also requires a
calendar calculated in advance.
Intercalary years are those in which a
13th month is added. Twelve lunar months
are equal to just over 354 days. A solar
year is equal to just over 365 days.
Using a calendar based only on 12 lunar
months, this 11-day difference would
cause the festivals to occur about a
month earlier every three years in
relation to the solar year and the
seasons. Yet Leviticus 23:10–11 mandates
that the priests should offer an omer of
barley as a wave offering to God on the
Sunday during the Days of Unleavened
Bread, beginning the 50-day count to
Pentecost. Clearly, this required that
the first month, Abib or Nisan, could
not be allowed to fall so early that no
ripe grain would be available for the
offering. This required the addition of
a 13th month about every three years.
But how was this addition determined?
Those who argue for direct physical
sighting assert that the priests
examined the grain crop each year before
the end of the 12th month, and if they
saw that it would not be ripe soon
enough they added a 13th month to
postpone the first month for about 30
days. The only alternative would be a
regular cycle, calculated by the
priests, to determine which years had 12
and which had 13 months. Is there
biblical evidence as to the priests’
practice? There certainly is!
Acts 2, for instance, reminds us that
Jews came to Jerusalem from all over the
known world. If the decision regarding
the 13th month were made a few weeks
before Passover, how would Jews all over
the world have known when to come to
Jerusalem—or, for that matter, when to
celebrate Passover in their own area?
Significant numbers would either have
been a month early or a month late!
Remember, they could not call ahead on
the telephone or check someone’s Web
site! There was either an established
pattern followed, or there would have
been confusion among Jews throughout the
Diaspora.
How could a calculated calendar have
been figured anciently? In antiquity,
man had only two ways of knowing the
time of the new moon. One was by
physical sighting of the crescent; the
other was by calculation based upon the
average time between conjunctions.
Some today wish to offer a substitute
calendar based not on averages or
observation, but on figures they have
obtained from the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA) or the
U. S. Naval Observatory. These figures
are derived from satellite observation
and are supposed to be more exact than
the averages from which the traditional
Hebrew calendar was calculated.
Please understand, if there is one
calendar that we can absolutely prove
that Christ and the Apostolic Church DID
NOT use, it is one based on satellite
observation! The only calculated
calendar that could possibly be used
until after about 1968 was one based
upon the average length of time between
conjunctions.
How were these averages obtained?
Conjunctions of the sun, moon and earth
are invisible except during a solar
eclipse. Solar eclipses can occur only
at the time of the new moon. Because the
moon’s orbit is normally a few degrees
above or below the plane of the
earth-sun orbit, it is usually invisible
when it is lined up in a direct line
with the earth and sun—the time of
conjunction. However, when the moon is
on the exact plane of the earth-sun
orbit, it will block the sun as it moves
across, thereby making an eclipse of the
sun.
A lunar eclipse, which can be seen on
earth far more frequently than a solar
eclipse, is the exact opposite of a
solar eclipse. It can occur only at the
time of the full moon, exactly halfway
between conjunctions, when the moon is
on the opposite side of the earth from
the sun. By carefully recording the time
of such eclipses and calculating the
amount of time between them, the
ancients were able to arrive at the
average length of time between
conjunctions. We speak of an “average”
because the actual length can vary from
month to month by a few hours, primarily
because of the earth’s elliptical orbit
around the sun and the resulting
variation in the sun’s gravitational
pull on the moon. While satellites may
enable us to record conjunctions that
are invisible from earth, ancient
man could only calculate based upon
averages.
Using eclipses, the average length of
time between conjunctions of the sun,
moon and earth can be calculated. This
figure can then be used to calculate the
new moon for years—and centuries—in
advance. While the exact conjunction
(invisible from earth anyway, except
during a solar eclipse) may vary from
the calculated molad (a Hebrew term
referring to the “birth” of the moon) by
up to a few hours, the calculations
average out over time. And they are
always very close; not accumulating lost
or gained time even over many centuries.
How could a calculated calendar have
been figured anciently? In antiquity,
man had only two ways of knowing the
time of the new moon. One was by
physical sighting of the crescent; the
other was by calculation based upon the
average time between conjunctions. The
Hebrew calendar uses 29 days, 12 hours
and 793 parts (an hour contains 1,080
parts) as the duration of the average
lunar month. This works out to 29.53059
days in decimal form. According to the
15th edition of Encyclopedia Britannica,
modern astronomers using satellites and
computers
have come up with the figure
29.530589—one one-millionth of a day
difference!
How did the Hebrew calendar come to use
such an accurate figure for the average
length of the month? Some contend that
they adopted their number from
Babylonian or Greek astronomers. There
is a problem with that theory, however.
The figure used by the Greeks,
Babylonians and Egyptians was not as
accurate as that used by the Jews! If we
grant that Israel of old borrowed the
number from one of their ancient
neighbors, then why did they modify it?
How did they know to modify it just the
right amount, making it more exact than
the one used by anyone else? Remember,
the figure used anciently to calculate
the Hebrew calendar, 29.53059 days per
month, was the same one used by NASA up
through 1968 when satellite and computer
technology allowed them to take the
number out one more decimal place. How
could an ancient Israelite mathematician
have arrived at a more exact figure than
his contemporaries? Exodus 31:1–11 shows
that God’s Spirit empowered two men,
Bezalel and Aholiab, to have special
understanding and knowledge in being
able to craft the items needed for the
tabernacle. Did God’s Spirit also lead
someone to have special ability for
making astronomical calculations to fix
the calendar? Clearly, someone did make
a calculation that remained unsurpassed
until the decade when the United States
put a man on the moon!
Does the Bible support using eclipses to
calculate the length of time from one
new moon to another? It certainly does!
Notice Genesis 1:14. God set the sun and
the moon for signs and seasons. The
Hebrew word for sign, ’ot, is a term
that often refers to remarkable and
dramatic signs. It is used in Exodus
4:8–9 for instance, to describe the
dramatic wonders that God worked in
ancient Egypt. There are no more
dramatic signs designed into the
interaction of the sun and moon than
solar and lunar eclipses. These signs
provide the basis of a calculated
calendar.
Additionally, the heavenly bodies were
for what the King
James Version calls
“seasons” and the Jewish
Publication Society Version calls
“appointed times.” The Hebrew word is
mo’ed. This is the term used in Psalm
104:19 where we learn that God “has
appointed the moon for seasons [mo’ed].”
In other words, the phases of the moon
determine the progression of the month.
God’s annual festivals are either
connected to the new moon at the
beginning of the month or the full moon
at the middle of the month.
Other biblical guidelines concern the
seasonal timing of the Passover festival
and the Feast of Tabernacles. We are
told that Unleavened Bread is to be
celebrated in the month of Abib, which
means “green ears” (Exodus 23:15). From
Leviticus 23 we also learn that once
Israel entered the Promised Land there
was to be a priestly ceremony involving
the offering of the wave sheaf, the omer,
on the Sunday during the Days of
Unleavened Bread. The grain harvest
could not begin until after that
occasion. These stipulations require
that Passover come in early spring.
Also, Exodus 34:22 refers to the Feast
of Tabernacles as coming at the “end of
the year” (Hebrew, tekufah). This term
literally means a “circuit” or
“revolution” of time—a cycle. In later
Rabbinic Hebrew, tekufah became a
technical term referring to the equinox
and, by extension, to the season
following. However, we must be careful
about ascribing to Moses the technical
usage of medieval rabbis. The term, used
only four times in the Old Testament,
was originally more general in its
meaning. It is the term in 1 Samuel 1:20
that refers to the cycle of time between
Hannah’s conception and the birth of
Samuel. In 2 Chronicles 24:23, tekufah
refers to the time of the year when
Syria attacked Judah. The other place it
is used is in Psalm 19:6 where it refers
to the sun’s daily circuit across the
heavens. Exodus 34:22 thus implies that
the Feast of Tabernacles should occur
when the cycle of the agricultural year
is complete, about the time that summer
gives way to fall. This point is made in
a slightly different manner in Exodus
23:16. Again the King
James Version translates
that the Feast of Tabernacles is to
occur at the “end of the year,” but this
time uses a completely different word,
meaning literally “the going out” of the
year. It is the same term used in Exodus
13:8 to refer to Israel going out of
Egypt. In other words, the Feast of
Tabernacles comes at “the going out” of
the harvest season of the agricultural
year, right after the time when the
harvest would be gathered into barns
(that is why the term “Feast of
Ingathering” is used), to protect it
from the upcoming rainy season. This
festival season of the seventh month was
celebrated when summer was giving way to
fall. To insist that tekufah could not
refer to so much as one day before the
autumnal equinox is to take a definition
from the Talmud—not the Bible—and insist
upon reading it back into scriptures
written more than 16 centuries earlier.
We have seen that the Bible gives
guidelines that require a calculated
calendar, such as Trumpets being
celebrated for one day and not two. It
also shows that the interactions of the
sun, moon and earth were to be factored
in so that the numbering of the days of
the month would be connected with the
phases of the moon. We have also seen
that celebration of the festivals is
tied both to the beginning of the grain
harvest and to the time when crops were
to be gathered into barns at the end of
summer. But are other aspects of the
calendar, such as the so-called
“postponements,” also necessary and
based on biblical guidelines?
We must note that in the Hebrew
calendar, the new moon of the seventh
month (Tishri) is calculated, rather
than the new moon of the first month (Abib).
As this is the only new moon that is
designated as holy time, it is also the
new moon that is most essential to
determine. The other holy days are
figured from it. There is also an
astronomical reason for this practice,
since the time from the vernal equinox
(spring) to the following autumnal
equinox (fall) is about a week longer
than from the autumnal equinox to the
following vernal equinox.
The “postponements” are simply calendar
adjustments that determine which day
should be proclaimed as the first day of
Tishri. While there are generally said
to be four postponement rules, actually
there are two primary ones. The other
two are just logical extensions of the
first two, to ensure that a year does
not have too many or too few days.
The first rule we should look at states
that if the calculated conjunction, the
molad of Tishri, occurs after noon on a
given day, the first day of the month is
“postponed” until the following day.
This rule results from the way time is
measured on a round earth, and the
length of time the moon takes to move
out of conjunction and beyond the arc of
the sun. After all, the term for “new
moon” in scripture refers to the
“repairing” of the moon. While a
calculated calendar does not require
that the visible crescent be sighted, it
should at least be theoretically
possible to sight that crescent. And it
takes six hours past the conjunction
before the moon has moved far enough
beyond the sun’s arc to begin reflecting
light once again—the “repairing” of the
moon. Whether or not a reflection is
actually seen is purely incidental, as
the calendar is based upon the
calculated averages. Clearly though,
this postponement rule is not merely
based upon a Pharisaic tradition,
rather, it is mandated by Scripture and
by astronomy.
The other main rule is that if the
calculated molad of Tishri occurs on a
Sunday, Wednesday or Friday, the first
day of the month (which will be the
Feast of Trumpets) is considered to
begin on the following day, i.e.,
Monday, Thursday or Saturday. What is
the scriptural basis for this? In
Leviticus 23, where God first gave Moses
a detailed list of His festivals, He
explained that these days’ levels of
sanctity fell into two categories. For
six of these days— the first and seventh
Day of Unleavened Bread, Pentecost,
Trumpets, the first day of Tabernacles
and the Eighth Day —Moses was to
instruct Israel that “no servile work”
be done. However, the weekly Sabbath and
the Day of Atonement were different. On
these two days, “no work whatsoever” was
to be done. Clearly God placed these two
days in a slightly different category
than the others. Additionally, in
describing Trumpets, the first day of
Tabernacles, and the Last Great Day, the
term shabbaton, translated “Sabbath,”
was used. For the weekly Sabbath and the
Day of Atonement a different descriptive
term—shabbat shabbaton—was used,
translated “a Sabbath of rest.”
Recognizing that God set the weekly
Sabbath and the Day of Atonement apart
in their level of sanctity, the
Levitical priesthood sought to implement
these instructions in proclaiming the
festivals. They realized that the Day of
Atonement, a shabbat shabbaton upon
which “no work whatsoever” was to be
done, should not be the preparation day
for the weekly Sabbath (which would
occur if the first of Tishri came on a
Wednesday). Additionally, they avoided
the weekly Sabbath being the preparation
day for Atonement, which would happen if
Tishri 1 fell on a Friday.
This practice also avoided the weekly
Sabbath, shabbat shabbaton, being the
preparation day for the other three fall
holy days which were only shabbaton,
(this would occur if Tishri 1 came on a
Sunday). Note that according to Exodus
12:16, the first and seventh days of
Unleavened Bread in the spring were in a
different category; God had specifically
approved the preparation of food on
these days. And Pentecost, of course,
always fell on Sunday as a result of
God-ordained calculation.
Two other rules concerning postponements
are really just logical extensions
derived from the first two, regulating
the number of days in a year so that the
first of each month stays connected with
the new moon.
The calendar adjustments regarding
Tishri 1 are based upon instructions God
gave to the Levitical priesthood through
Moses in Leviticus 23. God made clear
that two days—Sabbath and Atonement—had
a special degree of sanctity, and based
upon those instructions the priesthood
sought to conform their celebrations to
His wishes.
Who is Responsible for
the Calendar?
Does God expect individual Christians to
determine His calendar for themselves?
Many self-appointed calendar experts
each claim that their calendar is the
right one. Did God intend the calendar
to be proclaimed by an authoritative
body— or is it “every man for himself?”
Increasingly, we see people simply doing
what is right in their own eyes. Is God
the author of such spiritual anarchy? To
whom did God give responsibility for the
calendar?
God told Moses: “The feasts of the LORD,
which you shall proclaim to be holy
convocations, these are My feasts”
(Leviticus 23:2). But who was to do the
proclaiming, and what does this mean?
The Hebrew term for convocation is miqra,
which refers to an officially called or
designated assembly. In Numbers 10:2,
Moses was told that two silver trumpets
were to be made and one of their major
purposes was “for the calling [Hebrew
miqra] of the congregation.” Who was to
use those trumpets? Verse 8 explains:
“The sons of Aaron, the priests, shall
blow the trumpets; and these shall be to
you as an ordinance forever throughout
your generations.” Verse 10 explains
that “in the day of your gladness, in
your appointed feasts, and at the
beginning of your months…” the priests
were to sound the silver trumpets.
The noun miqra is
derived from the verb qara,
the verb rendered “proclaim” in
Leviticus 23:2 and 23:4. What exactly
does it mean? It is the same word used
in Genesis 1 where God “called” the
light Day and “called” the darkness
Night (Genesis 1:5); where He “called”
the firmament Heaven (1:8), “called” the
dry land Earth and “called” the gathered
waters the Seas (1:10).
Later, we learn that God brought before
Adam the animals He had created to see
what he would call them. “And whatever
Adam called [qara] each living
creature, that was its name” (Genesis
2:19). So we see that qara means
“to call”—to name or to designate. In
Genesis 1 it was God, and in Genesis 2
it was Adam, who did the naming or
designating.
How does this relate to the holy days?
In Leviticus 23, we learned that a
certain group, (“you,” plural) was
responsible for naming or designating
the days on which the congregation was
to assemble before God. Numbers 10
explains that this refers to the
priesthood, and shows the means God gave
them to announce the designation of new
moons and festival days. It was not an
individual matter for each Israelite to
arrive at by himself; rather it was a
collective matter to be proclaimed by an
authoritative body.
But there is more! Most read right over
the implications of who was to name, or
designate, the days that would be
considered God’s appointed festivals.
The priesthood was given the right to
name, or designate, those days—in the
same way that God gave Adam the
authority to name, or designate, the
animals He had created. God gave the
priesthood guidelines and principles by
which they were designate those days,
but He did not spell out every single
detail. He gave them the principles with
which they had to make judgments!
It is important to notice the difference
between the weekly Sabbath that God gave
to mankind, and the annual festivals
that He gave to the Church. God did not
tell the priesthood that they were
responsible to name or designate the
weekly Sabbath. God Himself had
proclaimed the weekly Sabbath at the end
of creation week. Mankind was simply
told to “remember” and keep holy the
time that God Himself had previously
designated. The annual festivals were
different, as Leviticus 23:2 and 23:4
show. While each individual could simply
remember to observe as holy the seventh
day of every week, this was not possible
with the annual festivals. Their exact
timing would vary somewhat from year to
year, regulated by the principles that
God gave Moses in Leviticus 23 and
elsewhere. So we see that while the
weekly Sabbath is to be remembered by
each of us as individuals, the annual
festivals are to be named or designated
on the calendar each year by an
authoritative body. They were never
intended to be an individual matter!
If each of us seeks to determine our own
calendar, we will end up celebrating the
festivals on a variety of days. Yet God
is not the author of confusion (1
Corinthians 14:33) nor is He the source
of the spiritual anarchy that many so
effectively promote today. Paul told the
brethren in Colosse that they were not
to let any man judge them in matters
pertaining to holy days, new moons, or
Sabbaths, but rather “the body of
Christ”—the Church (Colossians 2:16–17).
The Church has again and again concluded
that the current Hebrew calendar,
preserved in the Jewish community, is
authoritative for Christians today.
Which Calendar Did Christ
Use?
We know from the New Testament that
Jesus Christ observed the holy days and
festivals commanded in Leviticus 23. Did
He do so based upon a calculated
calendar such as we use today—one that
included the socalled “postponement”
rules—or did He use a calendar based
solely upon physical sighting of the new
crescent? One thing is for sure: Jesus
Christ did it correctly! If we know what
He did, then all we have
to do is to follow His example. But is
it possible to know what He did?
Absolutely!
The place to go to find the kind of
calendar which was authoritatively
proclaimed during Jesus’ human lifetime
is not the Talmud and later rabbinical
writings. These documents were written
well after the fact, and record history
with a Pharisaic bias. Since the
Pharisees dominated the Jewish community
after the fall of the temple, their
traditions came to be considered
normative Judaism. The rabbis who
compiled the Talmud were their
successors, and often sought to read
later traditions back into earlier
history.
Interestingly, many who claim to reject
the Hebrew calendar because they
consider it a tradition of the Pharisees
have used the Talmud as their source of
calendar information and
definitions—rather than simply using the
Bible itself! While later rabbis tried
to harmonize the traditions of an
observed calendar (favored by the
Pharisees) with the principles of a
calculated calendar (preserved by the
Sadducee priesthood), the two are not
really compatible. Much of the Talmud’s
tortured logic relating to the calendar
comes from its attempt to reconcile the
irreconcilable. However, we are not
dependent on the record of the Talmud,
or Josephus for that matter, to know
what calendar Christ used. We have the
authoritative record of the New
Testament itself!
From the biblical record, we are able to
match three festivals during Christ’s
ministry with the days of the week on
which they fell. As we will see, these
three festival dates are compatible only
with one calendar model—the
calendar used by Jesus Christ thus
stands revealed by the New Testament!
The year of Christ’s crucifixion, and
therefore of His final Passover, can be
established clearly by correlating the
prophecy in Daniel 9 with the historical
occurrence described in Ezra 7. Daniel
explained that there would be a time
period of 70 prophetic “weeks”—i.e., 490
prophetic “days.” We are told that 69 of
these “weeks” (i.e., 483 years) would
run from the decree to rebuild Jerusalem
until the appearance of the Messiah.
Ezra 7 records the decree of King
Artaxerxes that begins the count of the
prophetic “weeks.”
Secular history makes plain that the
Artaxerxes’ seventh year occurred in
458–457BC. The only question is whether
or not the author of Ezra-Nehemiah (one
book in the Hebrew scriptures) was
figuring the years of Artaxerxes’ reign
by counting from fall to fall or spring
to spring. A careful comparison of
Nehemiah 1:1 and 2:1 shows that a
fall-to-fall reckoning was used.
Nehemiah refers to an event in the month
Kislev (December) of the twentieth year
of Artaxerxes, followed later by an
event in the month Nisan (April) in the
twentieth year of Artaxerxes. The only
way that both of these events could have
occurred in the king’s twentieth year
would be if the author was figuring the
years of the king’s reign from fall to
fall.
(Notice Nehemiah 1:1. Here is described
news that Nehemiah received in the month
Chislev (ninth month, corresponding to
December) during the 20th year of
Artaxerxes. Then in Nehemiah 2:1 we
learn that the king noticed his sad
countenance in the month Nisan (first
month, corresponding to April) during
the 20th year of Artaxerxes. Do you see
the significance of this? In the
following spring, four months after the
news delivered in Nehemiah 1:1, the king
was still in his 20th year! This
conclusively proves that the author of
Ezra-Nehemiah used a fall-to-fall
reckoning! If a spring-to-spring
reckoning were used, then Nisan would
have been counted as the beginning of
the 21st year of the king’s reign. Here
is conclusive proof from the Bible that
457BC is the proper date to begin the
count from the decree of Artaxerxes.
Ogwyn J. The Hebrew Calendar and God's
Church.)
This means that when Ezra 7 says that
Ezra arrived in Jerusalem with the
decree in the late summer (fifth month)
during the seventh year of Artaxerxes,
this must refer to 457BC. If we come
forward 483 years, this brings us to
just before the fall festival season of
27AD. This would be when Jesus was
baptized by John the Baptist and began
His three-and-a-half-year ministry—He
began in the fall of 27AD and was
crucified in the spring of 31AD.
This reference in Ezra gives us a
benchmark. We also know from the
biblical record, apart from these
calendar questions, that Jesus Christ
was crucified on a Wednesday and
resurrected three days and three nights
later, at the end of the weekly Sabbath.
This means that the Passover of 31AD,
the scripturally established time of His
crucifixion, had to occur on a
Wednesday. Additionally, we will see
that the day of the week is made plain
for two other festival dates. One is the
Last Great Day of 30AD, which occurred
on a weekly Sabbath. And Scripture shows
that the second holy day of Unleavened
Bread in 29AD fell on a weekly Sabbath.
Now examine how we date these two
festivals.
John 7–13 recounts the events of the
fall festival period preceding Jesus’
final Passover. A careful reading also
shows that most of the events of John
8–10 happened on the Last Great Day.
Jesus’ words in the temple during the
evening of this day are recorded in John
7:37–39. At verse 53, Jesus and His
disciples went to the Mount of Olives
for the night, returning to the temple
early the next morning—the daylight
portion of the Last Great Day (John
8:1–2).
If we simply read on through the next
chapters, we find that the woman taken
in adultery and the healing of the blind
man both occurred on that same day. From
John 7 we already knew that the blind
man was healed on an annual Sabbath;
John 9:14, using the definite article
with its Sabbath reference, states
plainly that it was also a weekly
Sabbath, which is why such an issue was
made of the healing.
John gives us the basis for
reconstructing the chronology of
Christ’s ministry, noting Jesus’ words
and actions on several specific festival
occasions. We have already seen that
John the Baptist baptized Christ in the
fall of 27AD, just when Daniel’s
prophecy showed the Messiah should
appear. Six months later, at the
Passover season of 28AD, He suddenly
came to the temple and began His public
ministry (John 2). When we carefully
read John 6–13, we see that this is a
continuous sequence of the last year in
Jesus’ life, from the Passover of 30AD
to the Passover of 31AD. Therefore, the
only Passover not commented on in John’s
gospel is that of 29AD—and the events of
that year’s festival season are
adequately covered in the other three
Gospel accounts.
Matthew, Mark and Luke all record the
disciples plucking ears of grain to eat
as they walked with Jesus through the
grain fields. The placement of this
incident—in Mark 2:23–28 and Luke
6:1–4—shows that this occurred early in
His ministry, not during the Passover
the year before His crucifixion. This
only leaves the Passover season of 29AD.
How do we know that this incident
occurred at the Passover season? Luke
6:1 makes this clear by describing that
it happened “on the second Sabbath after
the first.” What does that mean? The
Greek phrase used is en sabbato
deuteroproto, which literally means “the
second Sabbath of first rank.” This
expression can only refer to the seventh
day of Unleavened Bread, the second
Sabbath of first rank occurring in the
year.
The rest of the story—contained in the
accounts of Matthew, Mark and Luke—shows
that this was also a weekly Sabbath. All
three writers link the event in the
grain fields with a later incident
described as “another Sabbath” (Luke
6:6) when Jesus healed the man with the
withered hand. This phrase, taken
together with the points made in Mark
2:27–28—that the Sabbath was made for
man and that Jesus is the Lord of the
Sabbath—emphasizes that this was a
weekly Sabbath day. Luke is the only
writer who adds the detail that this
took place on the second holy day of
Unleavened Bread.
Do these facts provide evidence for the
kind of calendar that Jesus recognized
in His lifetime? Using today’s
calculated Hebrew calendar, notice what
the dates of these events in Christ’s
ministry would be. Remember that today,
leap years are years 3, 6, 8, 11, 14, 17
and 19 of a 19 year cycle instead of the
earlier 2, 5, 7, 10, 13, 16 and 18. How
do the dates from the calculated
calendar compare to what would have been
obtained by sightings of the new
crescent moon?
In 29AD, the last day of Unleavened
Bread would have occurred on Sabbath,
April 23 according to our traditionally
calculated Hebrew calendar. This date
results from applying one of the
postponement rules, since the molad (or
new moon) of Tishri that year occurred
after noon and the reckoning of Tishri 1
would therefore have been postponed to
the next day. This is the only way that
the last holy day of Unleavened Bread
could have come on a weekly Sabbath in
29AD. By contrast, using
computer-generated models to determine
the timing based upon the observable new
moon in Judea, physical sighting would
have caused the last holy day of
Unleavened Bread to fall on Sunday,
April 24 in 29AD.
As for the Last Great Day in 30AD,
calculations based on the traditional
Hebrew calendar show that it would have
occurred on Sabbath, October 7. No
postponement rules would have been
involved. But significantly, the Last
Great Day would have occurred on the
weekly Sabbath if and only if the
calendar were based upon the calculated
molad (the mean conjunction), not the
visible sighting of the new crescent.
This is made clear by examining the
computer model for the observable new
moon in 30AD. The first visible crescent
could have been seen from Jerusalem no
earlier than Sunday night, September 17,
thus making Trumpets Monday, September
18 and the Last Great Day Monday,
October 9 by that reckoning.
In 31AD, the calculated date for Nisan
1, according to the traditional Hebrew
calendar, was Thursday, April 12. This
would have occurred only if the
postponement rule had been in effect
that did not allow the Feast of Trumpets
to come on a Friday. The calculated
molad of Tishri came on a Friday in
31AD, and only by having postponed
Tishri 1 to a Sabbath would Passover in
31AD have come on a Wednesday. It is
true that the observable new moon of
Nisan would have also been seen on
Thursday, April 12, thus coinciding 7
with the calculated date for Nisan 1.
However, we have just seen that the
dates of the other holy days mentioned
during Christ’s ministry only coincide
with the proper day of the week when
they are figured based upon a calculated
molad rather than an observable
crescent. As we saw earlier, the
biblical calendar guidelines require
calculation rather than physical
sighting.
There is one additional point regarding
the timing of Passover in 31AD. Passover
would have come on April 25 only if 31AD
were counted as an intercalary year.
Otherwise, the Passover would have
fallen a month earlier—on Monday, March
26! Unless the priests were following a
fixed cycle of intercalary years, there
would have been no reason to observe
Passover in April rather than in March
of that year! The equinox was March 23
at that time, and there would have
certainly been some ripe grain for the
priests to offer on the day of the
Wavesheaf —March 28 by Pharisee
reckoning and Sunday, April 1 by
Sadducee reckoning.
The timing of three festivals during
Christ’s ministry is clearly shown in
the New Testament. The Passover of 31AD
would have occurred on a Wednesday only
if there were a fixed calendar cycle
making 31AD an intercalary year. A
calculated calendar would have required
Tishri 1 to be postponed from Friday to
Saturday for the dating to work out
properly. And the Last Great Day of 30AD
would only have come on a weekly Sabbath
if a calculated calendar were used,
though no postponements within that
calendar would have been necessary that
year. As for the last holy day of
Unleavened Bread in 29AD, it would have
come on a weekly Sabbath only if a
calculated calendar were used and the
noon postponement rule was in effect.
Clearly, the Gospel accounts show that
these holy days occurred in a way that
could only have happened if a calculated
calendar using the postponement rules
had been in effect in the time of Jesus
Christ.
A Calendar for the Church
Today
The rules of the current Hebrew
calendar—the calendar traditionally used
by the Church of God—are based upon
Biblical principles. These rules, as we
have seen, can be deduced directly from
scripture and do not depend on Talmudic
traditions and legends. Furthermore,
Scripture clearly reveals that God
assigned to an authoritative body,
anciently the priesthood, responsibility
to name or to designate the annual
festivals. This was never intended to be
a matter of private interpretation. In
addition, we have the example of Jesus
Christ Himself, as given in the Gospel
accounts. The calendar He used is far
more in accord with the one the Church
uses today than are any of the
alternative models that have been
proposed.
The Church has clearly and consistently
judged that Christians should use the
received Hebrew calendar in observing
God’s festivals. It is interesting that
we have historical witness and testimony
from no less an authority than Roman
emperor Constantine that three centuries
after Christ’s crucifixion, the true
Church was still reckoning its festival
dates by the same calendar used by the
Jewish community. At the Council of
Nicea, held in 325AD, the timing of the
Paschal festival was discussed (the
early Catholics were replacing Passover
with Easter, but were still using the
scriptural name—the Greek term pascha).
Note some excerpts of Constantine’s
decree as preserved by the early Church
historian Eusebius. He wrote that it
seemed, “a most unworthy thing that we
should follow the custom of the Jews in
the celebration of this most holy
solemnity… rejecting the practice of
this people, we should perpetuate to all
future ages the celebration of this
rite, in a more legitimate order… Let us
then have nothing in common with the
most hostile rabble of the Jews… let us
withdraw ourselves, my much honored
brethren, from that most odious
fellowship. It is indeed in the highest
degree preposterous, that they should
superciliously vaunt themselves, that
truly without their instruction, we
cannot properly observe this rite… [they
continue] wandering in the grossest
error, instead of duly reforming their
calculation…” (A Historical View of
the Council of Nicea, Eusebius, pp.
52–53). Constantine, like many
self-styled experts today, considered
himself more knowledgeable about the
calendar than were the Jews, and
asserted that they should reform their
calculations. Constantine’s attack was
aimed, however, not at influencing the
Jews, but rather at those Christians who
followed the Jewish calendar in
determining the time of the Passover.
The true Church was not following its
own calendar model; rather it was using
the same model that Jesus Himself had
followed— the one preserved and used by
the Jews!
Is the Hebrew calendar valid for the
Church today? Absolutely! It adheres to
the revealed guidelines of Scripture,
was proclaimed by authorities accepted
by Jesus Christ Himself and was kept by
the Church of God from the beginning.
For what more could we ask?