M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E
A Native American Easter:
How the Ancient American Calendar
Testifies of Christ
by John
P. Pratt
God commanded Moses to celebrate certain holy days on the Hebrew Calendar, and when Christ came, key events in his life occurred on those holy days. Similarly, Native American traditions claim that God created a calendar with symbolic days called the Sacred Round. The same dates in the Savior's life also coincided with appropriate days on that calendar, so the calendars of two nations witness to his divinity. Moreover, the planets Mercury and Venus add their witness to each of these dates. In a rare calendrical alignment, this coming Easter Sunday is not only the day Venus resurrects, it is also the Savior's birthday on the Sacred Round.
A Venus calendar was discussed in last month's article, which tracks the evening and morning star cycles of that planet. The reader is encouraged to read that article prior to this one to understand the symbolism involved.[1] Native American traditions were reviewed which suggest that the rising and setting of Venus as the evening star symbolize the birth and death of Jesus Christ, and that its rising as the morning star represents his resurrection. The Venus Calendar specifies precise days on which Venus is created, is born, dies, and resurrects. The day indicated by the New Testament for the resurrection of Christ, Easter Sunday, 3 April A.D. 33, was also the very day of the resurrection of Venus on that calendar. It was noted that this coming Easter Sunday, April 15, 2001, will be a rare coincidence of Easter again falling on the day of the resurrection of Venus as a morning star. It can be witnessed nearly due east about an hour before sunrise on Easter from nearly any location with a clear and low eastern horizon.
Last month's article has raised some questions. One concern is that all this planetary alignment talk might sound like astrology. It cannot be overemphasized that all I'm talking about is calendars which keep time, not stars controlling our destiny. The Lord told Moses that one purpose for the sun, moon, planets and stars is to be "for signs and for seasons" (Gen. 1:14). They keep time, and indeed nearly every calendar is based on their motion. Calendars also indicate appropriate activities for certain times, such as the feasts that Moses was commanded to hold on specific days. But I do not believe these calendars influence anyone to do anything any more than your wristwatch influences you to speed up if you know you are late for an appointment. It is, however, my contention that if the Lord created the sun, moon, and planets to keep time, then we should not be surprised if he uses them for that purpose. The dates of the Savior's birth and resurrection are two of the most important dates in all history. If the Lord has revealed calendars to his followers, should we be surprised to discover that those dates are red-letter days on his calendars?
Another question concerns the complicated method for determining just which Sunday is Easter. Should we attach any significance at all to the actual date of Easter? Easter is the Sunday following the full moon on or after the spring equinox (March 21), which means that it is nearly always the Sunday after the Hebrew Passover. That was chosen because Christ resurrected on the Sunday after the Passover at which he was crucified, and the Sunday symbolism is so important that the weekly sabbath had been changed from Saturday to Sunday to celebrate the Resurrection. It was also chosen to ensure that the Christian Easter never coincided with the Jewish Passover in order to totally disassociate the two religions. Ironically, the formula selected to calculate the date of Easter yields the very Hebrew day symbolizing the Resurrection, according to one interpretation of the law of Moses. Passover symbolized the Savior's birth and death, but the Resurrection was represented by the ceremony of the waving a sheaf of grain on the following Sunday, being the firstfruits of the ground (1 Cor 15:20).[2] Thus it does indeed appear that our annual Easter date has real significance on the Lord's calendar given to Moses.
Another such question leads us directly to the topic of this article: "Isn't the calendar in ancient times so muddled that we can't really know any dates for certain? Aren't you giving a false sense of certainty with such precise dates in a misguided attempt to make the resurrection seem more real?" Good question. How do we know on exactly what day the Judeans would have considered the moon to be full, in order to celebrate passover? What about the confusion introduced when the old Julian calendar was upgraded to our current Gregorian calendar? And how can we know the exact day of the "resurrection" of Venus, when it appears at a different time on each cycle?
Most calendars track the motion of some celestial body. Our calendar tracks the sun, keeping the spring equinox (when the sun rises most nearly due east in spring) on March 20-21. The Hebrew calendar tracks both the sun and the moon, with each new month beginning at a new moon. So how are ambiguities handled? That is, if a new moon is right on the edge between two days, how does one know which is the correct new moon day? The best calendars employ two methods to resolve such issues. First, they include a continuous count of days which never has any extra days inserted into it. Second, they include a fixed pattern which resolves ambiguities.[3]
The classic example of the fixed day count is our 7-day week. It is a continuous cycle of 7 days which has not been interrupted for as long as we have records. When the Julian calendar was revised, the week was not touched.[4] It is the constancy of the week which allows us to know the exact day of the Resurrection, because all four gospels testify that the empty tomb was discovered on the first day of the week, which we now call Sunday. When that fact is combined with the day having been after Passover and in a known Roman year (Luke 3:1), then an unambiguous date can be determined: Sunday, 3 April A.D. 33 (Gregorian). This indicated date is disputed, but only because of conflicting extraneous arguments, such as the date of Herod's death.
The Hebrew Calendar is tightly integrated with the 7-day week. The first day of the Hebrew year is not allowed to fall on just any day of the week, but only on 4 of the 7 possible days. This simple rule goes a long way toward choosing which is the correct new moon day because one of the two choices is generally disallowed. The other calendrical feature used for resolution is a pattern. For example, our calendar has a leap year every four years, to realign it with the sun. To know what year is a leap year, we don't have to go out and observe the sun. If the year is exactly divisible by four then it is nearly always a leap year.[5] The simplicity of that pattern takes precedence over whether the sun is on the border line or not. With the Lord's calendars, the trick is to discover the pattern he uses (D. & C. 52:14). One pattern that he has given is that of the Hebrew calendar as it was revealed to Moses. We don't have all the details of that pattern, but a reconstruction has been proposed from the different variations which have persisted.[6]
The Sacred RoundAnother serious candidate for a calendrical pattern provided by the Lord is the so-called "Sacred Round." It is a fundamental part of the calendar used by many Native American tribes throughout the Americas. It is generally associated with the Aztec or the Mayan calendar, but its use was much more widespread.[7] In last month's article, we briefly reviewed how the great first century teacher of the Native Americans, the Feathered Serpent, was most likely the resurrected Jesus Christ. He not only taught love and service, agriculture, metallurgy, astronomy, medicine and government, but "it was held as true that he made the calendar."[8] In fact, it was held that the calendar was so important that the calendar was created first, and the sun, moon and planets were created afterwards.[9] Upon reflection, that claim is not as outrageous as it might first appear. We know that there was a great plan devised during the creation which included the Savior coming in the meridian of time to redeem a fallen world. It would make sense to have that plan include the precise time when he would come, and then to arrange the solar system as a big clock in the sky to keep time. In fact, the Book of Genesis supports this idea of the calendar predating the creation because it is clear that the pattern of the 7-day week existed before the seven days of creation.
While there is some evidence that the early Native Americans kept track of the seven-day week, the Sacred Round was by far more important to them. During the last two decades, I've made an extensive study of the Sacred Round and believe I've discovered that key religious dates throughout history have occurred on meaningful dates both on the (corrected) Hebrew calendar and also on the Sacred Round. Those results have not yet been published, but the calendrical coincidence on this coming Easter Sunday seems important enough to share at least this introduction to the results so that the significance of that date might be appreciated by those who do not demand complete proof. The results which will now be presented are not intended to be a scientifically convincing argument. That must await the publication of a statistical analysis of a large number of dates. Rather, it is presented as my first published introduction of the importance of the Sacred Round.
The Sacred Round consists of two uninterrupted day-count cycles: one of 13 days called the trecena and one of 20 days called the veintena.[10] The trecena consists of days numbered from 1 to 13 in an unending cycle. The first day of each trecena was sacred to Native Americans and was a day of fasting. My reseach indicates that the last day should also be considered sacred, as the culmination of the cycle. It is very similar to the week, where both the first day (Sunday) and the last (Saturday) have been considered sacred.
The veintena consists of twenty glyphs, pictures, or names which also repeat in an unending cycle. The two cycles run concurrently so that each day advances on both cycles. For example, the first three days of the veintena are Light, Wind, and Temple. The day 1 Light is followed by 2 Wind, then 3 Temple. It takes 260 days for the two cycles to again begin on the day 1 Light, the first day of both cycles. This 260-day complete cycle is called the Sacred Round. It is composed of 20 trecenas, that is, 20 sets of the 13-day cycles, as shown in Table 1.[11] Each trecena is named for its first day, which is shown in bold. The trecena of 1 Light is followed by that of 1 Jaguar (the first day in the second row). Thus, the Sacred Round is a perpetual day-count which repeats without interruption, making it suited for the basis of a calendar to track sun, moon and planets. The day on the Sacred Round begins at dawn or 6 a.m.
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| Table 1. The Sacred
Round. This 260-day perpetual calendar numbers days in sequence across rows of trecenas of 13-days each. Each day is named first for the day number at the column head followed by the day name in the row. For example, the first day is 1 Light, followed by 2 Wind. |
The cycle of twenty day names should really be thought of as a unending circle,
or one eternal round. That is how it is depicted on the famous Aztec Calendar
stone, the center of which is shown here. The twenty glyphs are shown in the
outer circle, beginning at the top and proceeding counterclockwise. One reason
that the circular form is important is that it is often important which figures
are opposite each other because the often form opposing pairs. For example,
the serpent is opposite from the eagle.
Different Native American tribes used different names for the 20 days of the vientena, but generally most tribes agreed on much of the symbolism. Studies have been made comparing the names from over 50 tribes.[12] Those listed in the table were chosen from among those used, guided by the following principle.
Mayan priests have explained that the twenty names are not just random emblems, but rather that they represent 20 steps taken in the journey of life. Each day represents one day in life on which an important milestone event occurs. That again is consistent with the Sacred Round being a divine calendar because life is the work and glory of God. Some of the symbols have very clear meanings as given by the priests but others are cloaked in mystery and probably refer to sacred ordinances. Only a few are necessary to understand for our purposes here.
| Light |
![]() |
| Wind |
| Temple |
| Dragon |
The Sacred round provides an ideal framework on which to build Venus and Mercury calendars. The cycle of Venus requires about 584 days to complete, and Mercury requires 116 days. Both of those values are one day short of being a multiple of 13: 585 = 45 x 13 and 117 = 9 x 13. Thus, the 13-day trecena is an excellent unit of time to track both of these planets. In fact, the period of Venus is about five times that of Mercury and 585 equals exactly five time 117. Moreover, the 263-day period that Venus spends as morning and evening stars nearly equals one Sacred Round of 260 days. Because of these coincidences, the Venus and Mercury calendars I have designed are aligned with the Sacred Round. That is, the day of creation, birth, prime, death, and resurrection of both Venus and Mercury always occur on a day "1" of the 13-day trecena. On the proposed Venus calendar, there are always exactly 260 days, or one Sacred Round, between the days of birth and death, which agrees with Native American traditions.[15] The calendar is corrected to match the true orbit by having the planet occasionally "translated", that is, it sometimes skips the 13-day period between death and resurrection. A similar pattern works for Mercury.[16]
The Savior's Birth: 1 Reed
![]() |
| Serpent |
In order to know what day any given date is on the Sacred Round, it is only necessary to correlate one Sacred Round date to our Gregorian calendar. All other dates in history can then be determined by simply counting around the fixed pattern of the Sacred Round.
![]() |
| Skull |
![]() |
| Deer |
| Rabbit |
![]() |
| Water |
![]() |
| Dog |
The Savior's Baptism: 13 Water
![]() |
| Monkey |
On the Sacred Round, the day was 13 Water. The number 1 signifies beginning, and would be especially appropriate for birth. The number 13 is the last day of the trecena and would signify completion or fulfillment. Native American tradition affirms that the number 13 was associated both with Venus and with the Feathered Serpent. The day "Water" clearly seems appropriate for baptism also, so the baptism date appears to have been chosen to be symbolic on the Sacred Round.
![]() |
| Grass |
Venus was also at what I consider to be a key point in the its orbit, being the day 0 Prime, representing the prime of life, corresponding to the time Jesus was baptized. This testimony is currently weaker than Mercury's because that orbital point is not as clearly established, but hopefully will be in my future publications.
The Savior's Resurrection: 13 Temple
| Reed |
The New Testament indicates that the resurrection of the Savior occurred before dawn (Mat. 28:1, Mark 16:2, John 20:1). That time of day of Sun 3 Apr 33 was the day 13 Temple on the Sacred Round. Again 13 is the day of completion. Temple is the day representing birth, so perhaps there is a symbolism of a "rebirth" implied. Resurrection certainly is the day on which one reclaims the temple of the body. There may also be a switched symbolism here because the day for completed resurrection might be Reed. If so, then the Savior's life might have reversed the first with the last. That is, he was born on 1 Reed, the day for resurrection and his resurrection occurred on 13 Temple, the day for birth. The two days Temple and Reed are opposite of each other in the 20-day vientena circle.
![]() |
| Jaguar |
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| Eagle |
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| Condor |
Latter-day Witnesses
There were at least three "resurrection" events during the restoration of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: the resurrection of the Book of Mormon after which it could speak like the voice of one from the dust, the resurrection of the body of the church, and the resurrection of the temple, which is also symbolic of the body (John 2:19).
| Quake |
The Book of Mormon publication date fell somewhere during the week after Fri 19 March 1830 when it was announced in the Wayne Sentinel that it would be ready for sale during the coming week. On Fri 26 Mar 1830 that weekly paper announced that it was already on sale.[26] It turns out that one day during that week, namely Thu 25 Mar 1830 was the spring New Year's Day on the Hebrew calendar and also identical to the Savior's resurrection date on both the Mercury and Venus Calendars. Those three witnesses testify not only of the importance of that date, but also that it was a resurrection-like event. That is a very rare occurrence: Venus and Mercury both align that way on one of the ten principal Hebrew holy days about once every 500 years. The fact that it occurred during the week that the Book of Mormon went on sale is strong evidence that Thu 25 Mar 1830 should be considered the official publication date for the Book of Mormon. It may come as no surprise that it was a red-letter day on God's calendars because it had been prophesied by Isaiah (Isa. 29:11-14). Of all the events that the Lord might have planned for this very rare day on the Native American calendars, it is interesting that he chose the Resurrection of the Book of Mormon, which is an entirely Native American book. That may have been intended as another witness that the book is especially intended for them.
![]() |
| Flint |
![]() |
| Storm |
This Easter is 1 Reed
| Flower |
In summary, this Easter Sunday will commemorate the Savior's resurrection on our calendar (Easter), and on the Venus Calendar (1 Resurrection), and will also commemorate his birth on the Native American Sacred Round (1 Reed). Table 2 summarizes the alignments mentioned in this article. This Easter Sunday will be an extremely rare calendrical alignment, and hopefully will be a day for us all to celebrate not only the Savior's resurrection, but also his birth.
| Event | Gregorian | Hebrew | Sacred Round | Venus | Mercury | Merc. Day |
| Birth | Wed 5 Apr 1 B.C. pm* | Passover | 1 Reed | 1 Cre | 1 Cre | 34.8 |
| Baptism | Sat 6 Oct 29 | Atonement | 13 Water | 0 Pri | 0 Cre | 34.2 |
| Spirit World | Sat 2 Apr 33 | Passover | 13 Temple | 0 Res | 0 Cre | 33.5 |
| Resurrection | Sun 3 Apr 33 am* | Sheaf | 13 Temple | 1 Res | 1 Cre | 34.5 |
| Resurrection of Book of Mormon | Thu 25 Mar 1830 | New Year | 1 Eagle | 1 Res | 1 Cre | 35.1 |
| Resurrection of Church & Temple | Sun 3 Apr 1836 | Sheaf | - | - | 5 Cre | 34.5 |
| This Easter | Sun 15 Apr 2001 | Sheaf | 1 Reed | 1 Res | - | - |
Notes
1. Pratt, John P. "Venus Resurrects This Easter Sunday,"
Meridian Magazine (27 Feb 2001), http://www.meridianm
agazine.com/sci_rel/010227easter.html.
2. The ritual was to be performed on the "morrow after the sabbath" of Passover (Lev. 23:11). The Sadducees believed that this meant to offer it on the day following the special sabbath day of Passover, whereas the Pharisees argued that it meant to offer it on the Sunday morning following the next Saturday sabbath day. On the morning of the Savior's resurrection, both sects made the offering at the same time, because in that year Passover fell on Saturday, 2 Apr 33. The modern Hebrew calendar follows the tradition of the Sadducees, so the day is always the second day of Passover, which does not always fall on Sunday. Until now, I have had no particular reason to favor either interpretation. After I discovered this coming Easter coincidence, I have reexamined the issue and currently believe that the Pharisees were probably correct. If the Pharisees are vindicated in their interpretation, it would also mean that the feast of Firstfruits, exactly seven weeks after the waving of the sheaf, would also always fall on a Sunday (Lev. 23:15-16). More research is still required to verify that conclusion.
3. Pratt, John P., "Mapping Time", American Mathematical Monthly 107 (Jan 2000), 92-99. This paper proposes five requirements for any top-notch calendar: predictability, long-term accuracy, a simple short-term pattern, an uninterrupted day-count, and nested cycles.
4. When ten days were inserted into the calendar, the week was left unaltered. Thu Oct 4, 1582 (Julian, or "Old Style" calendar) was followed by Fri 15 Oct 1582 (Gregorian, or "New Style").
5. The exception is that years divisible by 100 are not leap years unless they are also exactly divisible by 400. Thus 1900 was not a leap year but 2000 was. This illustrates a simple short term pattern (a leap year every four years) corrected by occasional exceptions to achieve long-term accuracy. The resultant average Gregorian year length of 365.2425 days is excellent to use throughout history, and is used for all dates in this article.
6. My latest proposal for a perpetual Hebrew calendar (PHC) can be found on my web site at http://www.johnpratt.com/items/calendar/calcalc/calcalc.html. Select PHC from the list of available calendars.
7. Recently the Cherokee version has been published by Raven Hail, The Cherokee Sacred Calendar, Rochester, Vermont, Destiny Books, 2000.
8. Juan de Torquemada, Monarquia Indiana (Madrid, 1723), vol. 2, pp. 40-50, quoted in Hunter, op. cit. , p. 31. Torquemada was a Catholic priest in the sixteenth century who preserved many Native American traditions. The Olmecs, who are likely candidates to be the Jaredites of the Book of Mormon, also used the Sacred Round, so it appears to have been in use in the Americas for at least many centuries before Christ.
9. Roys, Ralph, The Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel, Norman, U. of Oklahoma Press, 1933, p. 116.
10. These cycles had different names in different languages. I'm following the usage of Munro Edmonson, The Book of the Year, Salt Lake City, U. of Utah Press, 1988, p. 5.
11. In nearly every modern text on this subject, the Sacred Round is presented as 13 vientenas rather than 20 trecenas, but that contradicts all of the Native American usage of which I'm aware. Vientenas were counted in the Mayan long count in groups of 360 days.
12. The Book of the Year cited in footnote 10 is a detailed comparison of the various versions of the calendar.
13. "Light" was used by the Tequistl, and "Sun" by the Lenca, which are both Olmec tribes. See Edmonson, op. cit., p. 176. The meanings given by Mayan Priests are taken from Irene Nicholson, Mexican and Central American Mythology, London, Paul Hamlyn, 1967, pp. 49-52.
14. Glyphs take from Nuttall, Zelia, The Codex Nuttall, New York, Dover, 1975. This books consists of a Mexican Codex restored to as close to the original as possible. The painting of the Aztec Calendar was done by Roberto Sieck Flandes (1939).
15. Friar Toribio Motolinia recorded, "the duration of time from the day when it first appears to when after rising on high it loses itself and disappears amounts to 260 days, which are figured and recorded in said calendar or table." Quoted in Nuttall, Z., "The Periodical Adjustments of the Ancient Mexican Calendar," American Anthropologist n.s. 6, 497-8, quoted by Anthony Aveni, Skywatchers of Ancient Mexico, Austin Texas, U. of Texas Press, 1980, p. 150.
16. Eleven cycles of 585 days followed by one of 572 totals 7,007 days. That gives an average of 583.917 days which is so close to the actual value of 583.92166 days that many such cycles may be repeated before requiring another correction. Actual value taken from William D. Stahlman and Owen Gingerich, Solar and Planetary Longitudes for Years -2500 to +2000 by 10-Day Intervals, Madison Wisconsin, U. of Wisconsin Press, 1963, p. xv.
17. See article referenced in footnote 1 above, including references.
18. A fourth date, the beginning date of Christ's ministry, Sat 6 Apr A.D. 30, also fell on the day 1 Monkey of the Sacred Round, but a discussion of that date is beyond the scope of this article.
19. Sahagun, Bernardino de, A History of Ancient Mexico, Rio Grande Press, New Mexico, 1976, pp. 67-68. Sahagun was a Spanish padre who spent 30 years writing this accumulation of Aztec traditions (1547-1577).
20. See Pratt, John P., "Passover: Was it Symbolic of His Coming," The Ensign 24, 1 (Jan 1994), pp. 38-45 and "Yet Another Eclipse for Herod, " The Planetarian 19, No. 4, (Dec 1990), pp. 8-14.
21. The first of whom I'm aware to discover it was Dennis Clawson, private communication.
22. Most texts ignore the Native American tradition that the day of the Sacred Round begins at dawn, but it is very important for this work.
23. The so-called correlation constant is the Julian Day number of the beginning of the Mayan long count. Goodman proposed Julian Day 584,280; Martinez 584,281; Thompson proposed 584,285. The GMT value is 584,283. I propose 584,282.
24. From my calendar conversion web site (see footnote 6) choose "Mayan" calendar and the select the "Pratt" correlation. The default correlation is the GMT.
25. Consider just the chance of both the Venus and Mercury Calendars aligning. The chance of any day chosen for other reasons (such as the day of atonement in A.D. 29) being at the beginning or end of the Venus cycle or at day 0 or 1 of the corresponding event (such as prime) is only 4 in 584. To likewise coincide with the Mercury calendar decreases the chance by a factor of 2/9. That is because on such days the Mercury calendar will always be at one of nine orbital points, two of which would be considered winners. Multiplying 4/584 x 2/9 yields 1 chance in 657. The precise dates of the birth, baptism and resurrection of Christ were all indicated by other evidence. The chance that all three of these dates would fall on those key places on the Mercury and Venus calendars is only 1/657 x 1/657 x 1/657 = 1/283,000,000. This number is somewhat overstated because I chose the success criteria after having seen the data (a real no-no in statistics), but the point is that there is almost no chance that three such important dates in the Savior's life would all be so meaningful on these other calendars. And this calculation ignores the coincidences of the baptism date falling on "Water" and of the 6 Apr 1 B.C. date also falling both on Passover on the Hebrew calendar and 1 Reed, the traditional birthday of the Feathered Serpent on the Sacred Round, using the GMT correlation.
26. Francis W. Kirkham, A New Witness for Christ in America, Vol.1, p. 267.
27. Pratt, John P., "The Restoration of Priesthood Keys on Easter 1836, Part 2: Symbolism of Passover and of Elijah's Return," The Ensign 15, No. 7 (July 1985), pp. 55-64. Footnote 21 mentions the Mercury realignment.
28. This is the mean number of days from inferior conjunction, given by x = Julian day +8.85; y=115.877538; Merc day = x - y*INT(x/y), based on Stahlman and Gingerich, op. cit.
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