Jubilee Calendar
Testifies of Christ
by John P. Pratt
The Jubilee Calendar is proposed as a restoration of an ancient inspired version, with evidence that it is used by the Lord for many sacred events.
Many sacred calendars have been described in earlier articles in this column of Meridian Magazine. One of those was the Enoch Calendar,[1] which divides the year into twelve parts, called months, very similar to our modern Gregorian calendar. The Lord not only divides time into twelve parts, he also divides it into seven parts. Examples are the seven-day week, the Hebrew week of seven years, and the division of the history of Adam's descendants into seven millennia of about 1,000 years each. So the question arises, is there a yearly calendar which divides the year into seven parts? The answer is yes, several ancient calendars did so. This article introduces the Jubilee Calendar, which is an attempt to restore what might have been the lost original inspired version. Several examples of its apparent use throughout history are given to show that it is indeed a good candidate to be a sacred calendar actually used by the Lord.

The Enoch Calendar divides the year into twelfths
Those who have researched the calendars of ancient Israel have found that anciently the Israelites used a calendar which divided the year into seven parts. Let us consider the main features of the principal example which has survived, to see if we can deduce what an inspired original version might have been.
The calendar is described as dividing the year into seven seasons of 50 days each (350 days) with two extra weeks inserted at the middle and end of the year. Most scholars have dismissed this early calendar as a primitive attempt to track the year, which was replaced by the more sophisticated Hebrew calendar of today. But to me it was intriguing that it appeared to be an excellent candidate to be a bona fide sacred calendar that the Lord might employ. The following table summarizes the names of the seasons and activities prescribed. The nominal value of 50 days for each season was sometimes adjusted in order to start on the Festivals indicated.
| Beginning Day | Length (days) |
Julian | Activity prescribed |
| Easter | 50 | harvest lentils and vetches | |
| Pentecost | 50 | harvest barley and wheat | |
| Festival of Elijah | 50 | 20 Jul | harvest grapes |
| Festival of the Cross | 50 | 14 Sep | harvest olives |
| Tabernacles Week | 8 | ||
| Festival of St. George | 50 | 3 Nov | plowing, sowing |
| Christmas | 50 | 25 Dec | winter rain |
| Lent | 50 | ||
| Passover Week | 7 | ||
| TOTAL | 365 |
The one common element between the Jubilee Calendar and the Hebrew calendar is the feast of Pentecost, and it illustrates the point. The Sadducee sect of the Jews at the time of Christ held the ceremony of offering the firstfruits of barley on the Sunday after Passover. That is the equivalent of our modern Easter and indeed usually occurs on our Easter Sunday. Counting that day as day number one, they then counted fifty days, and celebrated the Firstfruits of the wheat harvest on the Sunday that was seven weeks later.[4] The "Pente" in "Pentecost" refers to fifty. The festival was also called the "Festival of Weeks" because it was held seven weeks (49 days) after the first. So even in ancient times it was thought of as both 49 and 50. In our modern way of thinking, we would say the festival is seven weeks or 49 days later. The important point here is that the year in the Lord's calendar would be divided into seven seasons of 49 days each, with the first day of each season also considered to be the 50th or last of the previous season. Similar, jubilees are really 49 years long, but the first year is counted as the 50th, or jubilee year, of the preceding group. If this concept is confusing, then simply think of it the modern way that there are 49 days in a season, and 49 years in a jubilee. It is easy to see how the calendar could be corrupted to have 50-day seasons rather than 49.
If there are only 49 days in a season, then the year must have three extra weeks added to make 364 days total, because 7x49 + 3x7 = 364. The week-long festivals of Passover and Tabernacles on the Hebrew calendar provide a precedent to add two extra weeks to the year. But what about the third week? Here the Temple Scroll from the Dead Sea Scrolls provides an answer, and it also provides us the names of some of the seasons.

The Temple Scroll.
The Pentecontad calendar has been all but forgotten as a useless curiosity, but now the Dead Sea Scrolls have been discovered, which shed much new light on this entire subject. In particular, it was found that the community residing at Qumran near the Dead Sea had gone there to practice their own ordinances and rituals according to their own calendar. That calendar was their interpretation of the Enoch Calendar, now referred to as the Qumran Calendar. The Enoch calendar begins the 364-day year near the spring equinox, and divides into quarters and also twelve months of 30 days each.
One document which was particularly enlightening concerning the rituals was the Temple Scroll. When it was translated, it was expected to find how that sect used their calendar to determine the usual Hebrew holy days. Remember that the usual holy days include only one pair which is separated by 49 days, namely from the offering of the barley (the Sunday after Passover, but not considered a holy day) to Pentecost or Firstfruits, a major holy day, also always on Sunday. The translator was "astonished" to find no less than four Firstfruits Festivals, all of which occurred on Sundays, all separated by exactly seven weeks.[5] The first was that the offering of the barley had been promoted to a full-fledged holy day of the Firstfruits of Barley. The usual Firstfruits was called the Firstfruits of Wheat, followed by the Firstfruits of Wine, and finally the Firstfruits of (Olive) Oil. Had he been familiar with the Pentecontad calendar, he would not have been shocked, because here we see many similarities. The law of Moses explicitly commands to officially present to the priest the firstfruits of grain, wine and oil (Deut. 18:3-4). The scripture definitely refers to waving the sheaf of the firstfruits (of barley) on the morning after the sabbath of Passover (Lev. 23:11), which no doubt was the basis of the Qumran addition of this title for the holy day.
Another major contribution of this scroll is to describe a third one-week ritual, which is exactly what is needed to complete a 364-day year of seven 49-day seasons and three one week festivals. It was called the Wood Offering, and it describes in detail how new wood would be brought on each day of that week by two different tribes,[6] to be used for the burnt offerings throughout the year.
We now have enough information to propose the Jubilee calendar, which combines the division of the entire year into sevens from the Pentecontad calendar, with the season names and lengths from the Qumran Calendar, along with their beginning on Sundays.

The Jubilee Calendar divides the year into sevenths.
Putting together all of the information into one single proposed model results in the following. The year has seven seasons of 49 days plus three extra weeks, for a total of 364 days. All are named for the agricultural cycle. Every season begins on a Sunday. Because the true seasonal year has 365.24 days, an extra week is added to the End-Year Festival every few years according to a set pattern so that the average year length stays aligned with the seasons.
The agricultural cycle in Jerusalem was based on winter wheat, with the Planting season in the fall, beginning in late September, so we will put the beginning of the Jubilee year in the fall. Winter is the rainy season (Watering), and the wheat harvest is in the spring, in May. The wine harvest comes in the summer, and the olive oil harvest in early fall. The following table summarizes the Jubilee year and its approximate relationship to our year. It also gives a one-letter abbreviation for each season, which will be useful in indicating days. Note that the Wood Offering has been renamed the Burning, because that fits better with the agricultural theme of burning of the tares of the fields after the grain has been harvested. Also, it has been moved to occur before the Olive Harvest because when these names are applied to the seven millennia of history, it is clear from the scriptures that the burning of the fields occurs just before the Second Coming of Christ, which commences the last millennium of the Olive Harvest (Mat. 13:37-40; 2 Peter 3:10-12; Mal. 4:1; Daniel 7:11-14; Rev. 17:16, 18:8, Isa. 64:1-2, Nahum 1:5). Olive oil was used to represent spirituality, very fitting for the righteousness of that coming era. It is the Festival of Ingathering (Tabernacles) which occurs at the very end of the year (Ex. 23:16, 34:22), and it is renamed the End-Year Festival for the Jubilee calendar. Similarly the week corresponding to Passover Week in spring has been renamed the Mid-Year Festival, because the year begins in the autumn. Moreover, that name helps remind us of the Meridian of Time, when the First Coming of the Savior occurred. The names of the first four seasons were taken both from the Pentecontad Calendar, the Qumran calendar, and from scripture. Deut. 11:14 mentions that the first rain and latter rain would be given to grow grain, wine and oil. I believe the "first rain" refers to the second season, and the "latter rain" refers to the fourth season. I renamed those seasons Watering (to be more general) and Tending/Transplanting because that seems to be the activity of the scattering of the tribes of Israel during that millennium. Nourishing is also a name I invented to summarize the gardening activity done at that time, and it seemed to fit was Moses was doing during the third millennium. The name Wine was changed to Vine to give a distinct one letter abbreviation, and Oil to Olives to avoid confusion with petroleum. The following table summarizes the proposed Jubilee calendar model.
| Jubilee Season | Ab. | Length | Gregorian |
| Planting | p | 49 | Sep - Oct |
| Watering | w | 49 | Nov-Dec |
| Nourishing | n | 49 | Jan-Feb |
| Tending/Transplanting | t | 49 | Feb-Mar |
| Mid-Year Festival | m | 7 | Mar-Apr |
| Grain Harvest | g | 49 | Mar-Apr |
| Vine (Wine) Harvest | v | 49 | May-Jun |
| Burning the Fields | b | 7 | July-Aug |
| Olive (Oil) Harvest | o | 49 | Aug-Sep |
| End-Year Festival | e | 7 | Sep-Oct |
| TOTAL | 364 |
The same pattern can be repeated for larger time units. For example, the years are counted by sevens, the same as in the Hebrew calendar, and those weeks are counted by sevens to form the 49-years of the jubilee. Thus a year can be indicated by using capital letters, so that PP refers to the first year of the jubilee, and OO refers to the last. The process can even be continued so that each millennium is also numbered. Thus Adam lived in the Planting millennium, Noah and the Flood in the millennium of Watering, Moses nourished the tender plants, Jeremiah worked on tending and transplanting, the Savior's first coming occurred during the Mid-Year Festival at the Meridian of Time, then the early Christian Church thrust in their sickles to harvest the wheat, the next millennium of Christians are workers in the vineyard, then comes the burning of the wicked and the Second Coming, followed by the Millennium of harvesting the Olive Oil. The great and final victory over evil after the Millennium is represented by the End-Year Festival. Thus, every day in history can be accounted for uniquely in this system of repeating the same simple pattern.
How should the Fixed Jubilee and Fixed Enoch calendars be correlated? One calendar divides the year into quarters and the other into sevenths, so there will not be many holy days which match each other. There are, however, two holy days which are always on Sundays not only on the Enoch and Jubilee calendars, but also on the Hebrew calendar. They are Easter and Pentecost. Moreover, the Hebrew and Enoch calendars specify that Pentecost occurs exactly 49 days after Easter, which is clearly designed to match at least two of the holy days on the Jubilee calendar. Thus, it is proposed to correlate Easter on the Enoch calendar with the beginning of Grain Harvest, and Pentecost with the beginning of Vine Harvest.
Now let us looks at examples
of how the Jubilee Calendar has apparently been used throughout history by the
Lord to time certain religious events. These examples will show that the calendar
is rarely used in the timing of births or deaths of his prophets. Instead, it
seems to be used for more secular events which correspond to planting, watering,
transplanting, burning, etc.
One of the
clearest examples of the use of the Jubilee calendar is in the timing of the
Great Deluge. That should not be too surprising because the Flood itself is
a principal event of the entire millennium which is named for Watering. The
history of the Flood given by the Lord in the Book of Genesis includes a very
detailed account of the exact days on which the rain began to fall, the day
on which the ark rested, and the day on which the land dried. One unusual feature
is that several of the days do not correspond to holy days on any of the sacred
calendars reviewed so far by this author. In an earlier paper, we established
the year of the Deluge and the day on which the rain began to fall beyond any
doubt, because the date tied directly to the Baptism of Jesus Christ and also
to the vital dates of Jared, the prophet who symbolized both the Baptism of
the Earth and of Christ.[9]
The subject which was beyond
the scope of that article was the meaning of the dates that the rain began to
fall (17 Heshvan), that the ark rested (17 Nisan), and that they left the ark
(27 Heshvan). All three dates are explicitly given in the account (Gen. 7:11,
8:4, 8:14-15), but none of those dates is considered a holy day by modern Hebrews.
So what is the significance of those dates? If they have no significance, then
why did the Lord include them in the sacred history? The proposed answer is that
all three of those dates are holy days on the Jubilee calendar. We have mentioned
above that the last day of one season corresponds to the first day of the next,
so the Watering Season can be thought of as days numbered from 0 to 49 for a
total of 50 days. The day 17 Heshvan was the last day of planting, and also
the zeroth day of watering. In other words, the day the rain began fell exactly
on the day to begin watering on the Jubilee Calendar. Moreover, the day on which
the ark rested was on the last day of Tending and Transplanting, where the latter
seems especially appropriate for the travelers who had arrived at their new
residence. And the day on which they left the ark was again on the last day
of planting, which completed exactly one 364-day year from the beginning of
the Flood. Thus, the Jubilee calendar explains all three of those mysterious
dates. The other dates are explained by the other sacred calendars. Note that
both of the "40-day" periods mentioned correspond to the Sacred Round, on which
40 days corresponds to a unit called the "step."[10].
The following table summarizes all of the dates given in the account, starting
in the year 2343 BC. Note that every single date is a holy day on one of the
sacred calendars. Insignificant days are indicated by no entry, holy days are
in bold. The Julian Day (J.D.) is a continuous number of days used by astronomers,
which is included to show that when the account says 40 days, or 150 days, that
exactly that number of days is meant.
There are several items
that seem worthy of note in this table. First, note that there are more holy
days listed for the Jubilee calendar than for any other calendar. Second, all
three of the mysterious Hebrew days of 17 Heshvan, 17 Nisan, and 27 Heshvan
are explained as being holy days on the Jubilee Calendar. The one entry to the table
for which a day is not mentioned in Genesis is listed as "End Watering," perhaps
being when the fountains of the deep were stopped (Gen. 8:2). The interesting
thing about this day is that the Aztec Calendar stone has in the center glyph
five huge dates, which represent five destructions of the world, four of which
are past. The destruction by water, presumably the Great Flood, is represented
by the date "4 Water," which has never been taken very seriously, much less
actually explained. As I prepared this article on Sat 13 Nov 2004 (the Jubilee
day poo, as shown on my Sacred Wall Calendar),
I discovered that the last day of watering during the Flood fell exactly on
4 Water. That may just be a chance coincidence because it is the only world
destruction for which I have exact dates. I mention it here mostly as a curiosity,
in case the other destructions provide further witnesses that it was not just
chance. Usually my articles only claim an alignment is meaningful when it is
one of a set of at least three, as in the table above. As for how the above dates
were derived, the entire table is anchored to the date the ark was loaded which
is known with certainty. One date somewhat ambiguous in Genesis is that the
water abated after 150 days (Gen. 7:24, 8:3), but after what event? The traditional
Jewish interpretation is counted from when the rain stopped.[11]
Following that lead we see that it just happens to end on a triple holy day,
which would have been totally unknown to the Hebrew Bible interpreters. It is
a strong witness that they were correct, especially because one of those holy
days is "1 Water." A similar problem is that the raven was released after forty
days (Gen. 8:6), but forty days after what? The Jewish interpretation was to
reckon the 40 days from the water abating on 1 Sivan, indicating the day 10
Tammuz. Here the Sacred Round bears witness that they again were exactly right,
because 40 days on the Sacred Round is one "short step," and the start date
was very meaningful on the Sacred Round. This is indicated in the table by the
water abating on the day "1 Water" and the raven being released on "2 Water."
Again, that corroborates their interpretation because the Sacred Round was clearly
not involved in their interpretation. Because of their success record, I also
followed the traditional Jewish interpretation that the dove was released one
week after the raven, even though that detail is not explicitly stated in Genesis.
What is the meaning of
all of these dates? To me it seems clear that the Flood was the Baptism of the
earth, because its date was tied to the Baptism of Jesus Christ. If so, it could
symbolize the "rebirth" of the earth. Comparing the events mentioned, shows
a close correspondence to the events at the creation. That is, at first the
earth was covered with water, involving both waters from above and from beneath
(Gen. 1:7), just as in the Flood. Then one day the first mountain peak arose
from the water, which might represent the day on which the earth began to be
born. That would explain why the very day the first mountain peak appeared is
recorded in the Genesis account of the Flood. And the date on which the ground
dried after the Flood might be the day on which the earth breathed the breath
of life and completed the process of its birth. Could the account of the Flood
be telling us also about the dates on which the earth was born? Time will tell. Raising of the Tabernacle.
The date on which the tabernacle was raised in the wilderness is given but it
was only sacred on two calendars published before now. It was on the morning
of Sun 13 Mar 1461 BC, which was New Year's Day on the Hebrew calendar (1 Nisan),
and the first day of the priest representing the resurrection on the Priest
calendar (1 Jachin). It turns out that it was also the day to Begin Transplanting
on the Jubilee Fixed calendar (tpp), which seems appropriate as the group
was now beginning its journey to the promised land. Tabernacle
Cloud. Another example is a day on which the cloud moved from the tabernacle
when the Israelites were being led in the wilderness. That was a day on which
the Lord decided to have them relocate. It is explicitly stated to be 20 Iyar
(Num. 10:11). 20 Iyar is not a sacred day on the Hebrew calendar. Does it have
any significance whatsoever? Or was it just a good day to move? It turns out
that the day (Sun 1 May 1461 BC) was exactly 49 days after the tabernacle was
raised, and it began the Mid-Year Festival (Passover) on the Jubilee Fixed Calendar.
Whether or not that is just a chance coincidence needs to be determined by looking
at several such dates to see if there is a pattern. So far we have only these
two examples, they are mentioned in case more in the series are discovered.
Transfiguration of Moses.
There are several other examples from the time of Moses. The day of the transfiguration
of Moses (Sat 3 Oct 1462 BC) was ewo on the Jubilee Calendar, the last
day of the year, and Great Day of the two-week End-Year Festival (Ex. 34:29-35).
As already published, it was also Tabernacles (Hebrew) and Atonement (Enoch). Brazen Serpent. The
day of the Brazen Serpent was most likely Sat 19 Sep 1423 BC. That day was OOooo
on the Jubilee calendar, the equivalent of the Day of Atonement, in the 49th
year of a jubilee. That was the Jubilee day equivalent to the Hebrew day of
Atonement on which a trumpet was to be sounded announcing the coming 50th year
of the Jubilee. Of course, that year the trumpet was not yet sounded because
the Israelites would only begin counting jubilee years after they entered the
promised land. The day was also 13 Serpent on the Sacred Round, the number perhaps
representing the highest that the Serpent could be raised. It was also the Autumn
Equinox (Enoch), the Feast of Tabernacles (Enoch Fixed), and 0 Birth (Mercury),
so it was a multiple holy day, worthy of such a sacred celebration. Deuteronomy. The
day on which the Book of Deuteronomy began to be revealed was most likely Sat
2 Jan 1422 BC, being 1 Shebat (Deut. 1:3). That day was woo on the Jubilee
calendar, the last day of Watering, but also the beginning day of Nourishing,
which was a principal responsibility of Moses.
Manna and the Jubilee
Year. Finally, the
day on which the manna ceased to fall was Sun 18 Apr 1422 BC, being PPgpp
the FirstFruits of Grain Harvest on the Jubilee calendar (Easter), in the first
year of the jubilee cycle, being the same as the fiftieth, or Jubilee Year.
It should here be mentioned that it was this year, in which the Israelites entered
the promised land, that the Lord apparently designated to begin counting the
50 years of the jubilee (Lev. 25:2-10). This is how the year of the Jubilee
was determined in this proposed model. Modern Jewish scholars have a traditional
reckoning of the 7-year cycle of years, but they do not know when the jubilee
year should be celebrated. The proposal in this article agrees with the traditional
Jewish interpretation of the 7-year cycle, namely that 1423 BC was the seventh
year of the cycle. But now we go one step further and propose that the next
year, 1422 BC was a jubilee year (beginning the previous autumn). Another curious calendrical
tidbit is included in the description of the dedication of Solomon's Temple.
It is stated that the Feast of Tabernacles was held for two weeks (1 Kings 8:65;
2 Chron. 8:9). That is never done on the Hebrew calendar, and hence is a puzzling
statement. It turns out to make perfect sense, however, if one is following
the jubilee calendar, because the End-Year Feast is celebrated for two weeks
in those years in which the leap-week is added. Hence the date of the dedication
of the temple Sat 19 Sep 973 BC was not only Tabernacles (Hebrew) and the Autumn
Equinox (Enoch) as already published, it was also ooo (Atonement) on
the Jubilee calendar. Similarly, the last day of the
two-week dedication celebration (Sat 3 Oct 972 BC) was ewo (Great Day)
on the Jubilee calendar, ending a two week End-Year Festival. Examples of the Jubilee
Calendar in the life of Christ have been saved for this article's finale. First,
it should be noted that the Jubilee Calendar is less important that the Hebrew
Calendar, and is apparently only used for certain types of events. Those events
do not appear to include births and deaths as a rule, but rather dates of other
sacred events such as those associated with caring for a garden. Let us look
at a few dates, the details of which are mostly included, with references, in
my "Religious Chronology Summary" on my web site.[15]
Moreover, it is likely that
1 BC was THE Jubilee year, and what Jubilee is really all about. The
symbolism of jubilee was that all debts would be forgiven, slaves would be freed,
and all land would revert back to the original inheriting family. It was truly
a time of celebration, a time to "proclaim liberty throughout all the land"
as is emblazoned on the Liberty Bell (Lev. 25:10-17). Those acts all seem symbolic
of the mission of the atonement of the Savior. That birth date for John
the Baptist is exactly on the day on which the trumpet was to sound (Atonement),
announcing the Jubilee year on the Hebrew calendar. So it appears that he who
would announce the coming of the Savior was born on the very day that the good
news of the arrival of the jubilee year, the acceptable year of the Lord, should
be trumpeted for all to know. Thus, the birth of John the Baptist was most likely
according to the Hebrew calendar and Sacred Round, as is the case with nearly
every birth of a prophet discussed in my articles. What about the Jubilee Fixed
calendar? Is there also an equivalent jubilee year on that calendar? Yes, on
the Jubilee Fixed calendar the jubilee began on Sun 24 Oct 2 BC. It may turn
out when the overall plan of seven millennia is better understood, that it was
important that on both Jubilee calendars, the Savior's life occurred entirely
within one jubilee period. That is, perhaps that jubilee represented the Mid-Year
Jubilee of all of history in which the promised Messiah would come. Those details
still need to be worked out. Concepts from the Pentecontad
and Qumran calendar were combined to propose a new Jubilee calendar, which appears
to have been used by the Lord in timing certain sacred events. Those events
do not include birth and death dates of prophets, but rather ordinances such
as baptism, transfiguration and resurrection. The particular evidence supporting
the Jubilee calendar concerns dates specifically mentioned in scripture which
were not known to be holy on any other known calendar. Examples include four
days mentioned in the account of the Great Flood. Moreover, both of the burnings
of the temple in Jerusalem are reported to have occurred on a day which corresponds
to the Burning on the proposed Jubilee calendar. Finally, it is seen that the
template for the Jubilee year doubles as a template for the history of the children
of Adam, with many of the principal events of earth history occurring at the
proper time, such as the Flood occurring during the millennium for Watering.
Most notable of these events was the life of Jesus Christ, which occurred during
the jubilee at the Meridian of Time. Thus, it is concluded that the proposed
Jubilee calendar is another sacred calendar employed by the Lord in timing sacred
events, adding yet another witness of our Creator, Jesus Christ.
© 2004 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved. 
Adam and Eve on the Jubilee Passover.
Beginning of Mortality
An entire article was devoted
to the incredibly important date that Adam and Eve were driven from the Garden
of Eden, on the official beginning date for the Mortality of this entire creation.
The proposed date was the morning of Sun 9 Apr 4001 BC, being Passover on the
Hebrew calendar, Easter on the Enoch calendar, 1 Deer on the Sacred Round, and
1 Creation on the Venus Calendar.[8]
Now one more sacred alignment can be added. That day also began the Mid-Year Festival
(Passover) on the Jubilee Calendar (mpp). So it was a day of many great
calendrical alignments.
The Flood

The Great Flood began on the first day of Watering
Event
Gregorian
Heb.
S. R.
Enoch
E. F.
Jub.
J.D.
Load Ark
Sat 9 Nov
13 Reed
14 Aut
Rain starts
Sat 16 Nov
17 Hes
7 Flower
21 Aut
poo
865,982
Rain stops
Thu 26 Dec
8 Flower
1 LAu
866,022
End Watering
Sat 4 Jan
4 Water
woo
866,031
Ark rests
Sat 12 Apr
17 Nis
21 Spr
too
866,129
Water abates
Sat 24 May
1 Siv
1 Water
4 LSp
866,171.4
Mts. appear
Tue 24 Jun
1 Tam
866,202
Raven
Thu 3 Jul
10 Tam
2 Water
866,211
Dove
Thu 10 Jul
17 Tam
866,218
Olive Leaf
Thu 17 Jul
24 Tam
866,225
Dove departs
Thu 24 Jul
2 Ab
866,232
Earth dries
Sat 20 Sep
1 Tis
0 Aut
ooo
866,290
Exit Ark
Sat 15 Nov
27 Hes
poo
866,346

The Ark Rested on the last day of Transplanting
The Aztec Deluge date, 4 Water, is shown in the lower right
hand rectangle. End Watering occurred on 4 Water during the Flood.
Moses
There are several key dates
from the life of Moses which indicate that the Jubilee calendar was being used
by the Lord. Let us review some to see how the Jubilee calendar may well have
been employed by the Lord in the timing of sacred events, based on the anchors
dates for Moses already published.[12]
The Tabernacle was raised
and the Cloud moved on holy days of the Jubilee Fixed Calendar.

The bread from heaven symbolized Christ and was taken back
to heaven on Easter on both the Hebrew and Jubilee calendars. David and Solomon
The Jubilee calendar sheds
light on several dates during the reigns of David and Solomon, many of which have
already been published.[13]
First, the date of David becoming the King of all Israel was not a holy day on
the Hebrew calendar, which surprised me. It was Sat 16 Nov 1019 BC, being 5 Kislev
(Hebrew). The day Sat 16 Nov is the same as the day of the Flood on our Gregorian
calendar, but so far I have seen no indication whatsoever that the Lord ever uses
our calendar. It turns out that on the Jubilee calendar, it is indeed the same
as the day the rain began the Deluge, poo. Note that for these calendars
to align, the date must fall on the same day of the week as well as approximately
the same day of our year.

The Jubilee Calendar explains the two-week dedication of Solomon's
Temple. Temple Burnings
When the temple in Jerusalem
was burned for the second time in AD 70, the historian Josephus made a big point
of the coincidence that it was burned on Sun 10 Ab, the same day as the temple
had been burned over six centuries earlier by Nebuchadnezzar.[14]
That was interesting to me as a calendrical cycle researcher, but I found it curious
that it occurred one day after 9 Ab, which is the traditional Fast Day of the
Jews, commemorating that destruction among other things. With the discovery of
the Jubilee calendar, the one day discrepancy makes much more sense. The dates
of the burning of the first temple (Sun 24 Jul 587 BC, 10 Ab) and of the second
temple (Sun 3 Aug AD 70, 10 Ab) both also coincide with bpp on the Jubilee
calendar, the first day of the week of burning. Moreover, according to the Temple
Scroll cited above, the first day of burning is for the tribes of Levi and Judah,
which seems especially appropriate to be the day to burn to temple of the Levites
in the city of Judah. This to me is a strong vote for the Jubilee calendar, because
the concept of Burning on the Jubilee calendar seems to have overridden the more
obvious alignment with the fast day of 9 Ab just one day earlier. Moreover, it
corroborates the choice of putting the week of Burning before the seventh season
of the year.
Annunciation
The already published date
of the Annunciation of the Birth of Christ is the birth event which was apparently
scheduled on the Jubilee calendar. That morning was Sun, 13 Jun 2 BC, being Firstfruits
on the Hebrew calendar. But now we see it was also the day OOvpp on the
Jubilee Calendar, also being Firstfruits (of Wine) in the last year before the
Jubilee year

The Annunciation on the Jubilee Firstfruits. Christ born in Jubilee
Year
Having fixed the Jubilee year
as above stated in the year of Joshua leading the children of Israel into the
promised land, we now see that the year of the Savior's birth was also a Jubilee
year. That is, the anchor point for the jubilee year is 1422 BC, when the children
of Israel entered the land of Canaan. Each jubilee is 49 years in length, and
29 x 49 = 1,421. That means that the year 1 BC was also a jubilee year.
Birth of John the Baptist
Exactly when did that jubilee
begin? It began on Sun 3 Oct 2 BC, the day PPppp on the Jubilee calendar.
That was about six months before the birth of Jesus Christ at Passover of 1 BC.
One cannot help but remember that John the Baptist was born about six months before
Jesus (Luke 1:26). For years I have been looking for an opportunity to share with
you my proposed date for the birth of John the Baptist. Now is the time: his birth
date was almost certainly on Wed 6 Oct 2 BC, being 10 Tishri (Atonement on Hebrew)
and 1 Monkey (Sacred Round), just three days after the beginning of that all-important
jubilee. One reason I've never published this date is that it is most likely significant
on the Mars calendar, and I haven't yet taken the time to calculate how that calendar
works.

The Baptism of Jesus Christ. Baptism
The Savior's baptism was on
one of the most holy days in all of history, being holy on all seven of the sacred
calendars published so far. With the introduction of these two calendars, that
statistic is changed to eight of the nine. The day Sat 6 Oct AD 29 was the Great
Day of the End-Year Feast (epo)on the Jubilee calendar.
Transfiguration
A date equally holy in the
Savior's life occurred on the day of his transfiguration on Sat 2 Oct AD 32. It
was also holy on all seven sacred calendars published so far. Again, that is now
changed to eight out of nine, because that day was also the Great Day (epo)
on the Jubilee calendar. Note that the transfiguration of Moses occurred on that
same sacred day of the Jubilee calendar, Moses being a type of Christ (Deut. 18:15).
The Transfiguration of Jesus Christ.
Resurrection
The Resurrection of Jesus Christ
was another of the most holy days discovered so far, also being holy on all seven
sacred calendars hitherto published, with five of those seven dates corresponding
to Easter on that calendar. With the advent of these two calendars it changes
to being holy on eight of nine calendars. Sun 3 Apr AD 33 was the Firstfruits
of Wheat on the Jubilee Fixed calendar (gpp), which is Easter, the Sunday
after Passover week. Thus, on six of the nine calendars, it was the very day representing
the Resurrection. This is truly amazing, because the holy days on the Jubilee
calendar divide the year in to seven parts, whereas the holy days of the Hebrew
divide it into four parts, with the exception of Firstfruits. And yet there is
just enough overlap when the one month variation with the moon occurs in the Hebrew
calendar, combined with the one or two week variation with the Enoch and Jubilee
calendars, that these calendars can have so many holy days coincide during such
a short lifetime. It is truly a testimony of the craftsmanship of God in designing
our solar system to be such a wonderful timepiece.
Notes