Decision Days Ahead?
by John P. Pratt
Each of us needs to choose,
as in the times of Moses and Elijah, whether we will serve false gods or
the one true God.
With every passing day, we are being more pressured
to choose whether or not we will serve the true and living God. The days
of fence-sitting seem to be swiftly drawing to a close. The U.S. Senate
just voted on whether the people of the United States of America believe
in supporting the God-given institution of marriage. When the Twin Towers
were destroyed on 11 Sep 2001, many people suddenly remembered God and news
programs even encouraged public prayer rather than reminding us that such
had been ruled unconstitutional.
We often try to serve two masters. We love
to live in Babylon, enjoying excessive sensual pleasures and worshipping
the god of comfort, often forgetting that sacrifice and service are the
Lord's path. We know that the city of Zion in Jackson County, Missouri,
can only be built on the law of consecration (D&C 105:5) and yet we
have rejected every attempt by our prophets to prepare us for that lifestyle,
including business co-ops, the united order, and even buying locally produced
goods in stores which close on the sabbath.
But the Lord makes it clear that he will not
allow us to attempt to serve two masters forever. The scriptures speak of
coming days in which everyone will be required to choose whether or not
we personally will serve God. One step in that direction is that the Bible
is now being classified as "hate literature" because it teaches not to sin,
which view is no longer "politically correct." We have been convinced to
stop praying in public. Will we also agree to stop reading scriptures? How
far can we be pushed before we take a stand?
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The seven-headed Beast from Revelation
The Book of Revelation speaks of a time when a
powerful Satanic kingdom will have an outspoken leader for three and a half
years who will blaspheme the name of God and require everyone to worship him
(Rev. 13:1-8). Those who refuse to worship the image of the beast will be
executed. Everyone will need to have the mark of the beast implanted in the
hand or forehead in order to buy or sell (Rev. 13:15-17).
How about you? What would you do if faced with
the decision of worshipping the image of the beast and receiving his mark,
or refusing and being executed? In case you haven't decided yet, here are
two more pieces of information to help you choose. First, those who opt
to follow Satan and receive the mark shall "drink of the wine of the wrath
of God" and be "tormented with fire and brimstone" (Rev. 14:10). Secondly,
everyone is going to die anyway. The purpose of life is not to avoid death,
but rather to serve God even at the peril of death.
There have been many times in history that
decisive events occurred when professed followers of God had been sinning
by worshipping false gods, when they were finally forced to decide one way
or the other. For example, when the Israelites were worshipping the golden
calf, Moses required of them, "Who is on the Lord's side?" (Ex. 32:26).
Years later, when the people again were slipping into sin, Joshua demanded,
"Choose ye this day whom ye will serve" (Josh. 24:15). And Elijah asked,
"How long halt ye between two opinions? If the Lord be God, follow him:
but if Baal, then follow him" (1 Kings 18:21). He then set up an amazing
contest between God and Baal to help them decide. Let us review these and
other events in detail, and the dates on which they occurred, to see if
there is a pattern which has been provided for us to understand.
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Moses and the Golden Calf.
The Golden Calf
After the children of Israel had made a covenant
to serve God, they immediately forgot after Moses was out of sight for forty
days. Moses' very own brother Aaron allowed a golden calf, one of the gods
of Egypt, to be made to be worshipped. He declared the day to be a special
feast day and then they stripped naked and began to party. When Moses found
out about it and returned, he was furious. He shattered the stone tablets
he had brought from the mountain and demanded that those who were on the Lord's
side would step over to stand by him. Those who did then immediately began
executing those who did not, until some three thousand golden calf advocates
were slain (Ex. 32:28). Presumably during that brief period of slaughter,
many others decided to return to the Lord's side, and soon the bloodshedding
ceased. Perhaps we all could use a day of decision to go one way or the other.
That was not a day for fence-sitters.
On what day did the Golden Calf event occur?
The day accepted in Hebrew tradition is 17 Tammuz which is a day of repentant
fasting in the summer. That is near the time that it happened, but a careful
reading of Exodus shows that it could not have been the actual day. In an
earlier paper, I proposed an exact day for the Golden Calf incident, which
turns out to be the Hebrew day 24 Tammuz.[1]
That was not a special holy day at the time, nor is it a holy day now on
the traditional Hebrew calendar. But on my proposed Perpetual Hebrew calendar,
it is indeed a minor holy day, being one of a set of "Decision Days," for
reasons which will be presented below.
Choose Ye This Day
When Joshua was nearing the end of his life, the
Israelites were again forgetting their God. Shortly before his death, Joshua
challenged the people to rededicate themselves to the Lord. After giving a
wonderful review of all that God had done for them, he required of them, "Choose
ye this day whom ye will serve," the false gods of the Amorites or the Lord.
They again vowed to serve the Lord, and to be a witness of that covenant,
Joshua had a large stone erected.
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Joshua had a large stone erected to record
Israel's covenant.
When did this happen? The Book of Jasher, which
is an excellent source for dates,[2]
tells us that it occurred two years before Joshua's death, and agrees with
the Bible that he died at age 110 (Josh. 24:29, Jash. 90:32, 47). It also
provides another clue, which is that Joshua was 82 years old when he passed
over the Jordan River (Jash. 88:9). That is just barely enough information
for me to sometimes propose precise dates for those events. As has been shown
in my past work, great prophets are sometimes born on holy days on sacred
calendars, and if so, then there is usually a synchronism between their birth
and death date on at least one calendar. Moreover, as another witness, there
is usually a synchronism with a key event in their life.
Joshua's Birth and Death Dates
With that in mind, it is here proposed that Joshua
was probably born on Mon 16 Sep 1504 BC, which was 1 Flint (Sacred Round),
1 Birth (Venus), 1 Creation (Mercury) and 15 Tishri (Feast of Tabernacles
on Perpetual Hebrew, or PHC). Both 1 Birth and 15 Tishri are the symbolic
days of birth on those calendars. The proposed day for his death is Fri 14
Mar 1395 BC pm*, being 1 Wind (SR), 1 Creation (V), 1 Creation (M) and 10
Nisan (PHC).[3]
This has the supporting evidence of having his birth and death on the same
day of the Mercury calendar, and the death on the same day both of Crossing
the Red Sea (1 Wind) and also of Crossing Jordan (10 Nisan).
| Event |
Gregorian BC |
Hebrew |
Sacred Round |
Venus |
Mercury |
| Birth |
Mon 16 Sep 1504 |
15 Tishri |
1 Flint |
1 Birth |
1 Creation |
| Cross Red Sea |
Tue 14 Apr 1462 pm* |
21 Nisan |
1 Wind |
1 Birth |
1 Creation |
| Enter Canaan |
Sat 3 Apr 1422 |
1 Nisan |
1 Light |
1 Birth |
1 Creation |
| Cross Jordan |
Mon 12 Apr 1422 |
10 Nisan |
— |
— |
— |
| Death |
Fri 14 Mar 1395 pm* |
10 Nisan |
1 Wind |
1 Creation |
1 Creation |
Table 1. Proposed Key Dates in the Life of
Joshua.
Looking two years before the death of Joshua
for the "Choose Ye This Day" event leads us to the date of Tue, 24 Jul 1397
BC, being 2 Ab (PHC), 1 Dragon (SR), 1 Lord (V), 1 Res (M), and 1 Midsummer
(Enoch). The day 2 Ab always falls exactly one week after 24 Tammuz on the
Hebrew calendar, but it is not recognized as a holy day. Nevertheless for
reasons described below, it is proposed that it is one of four minor holy
days, being "Decision Days" in the summer.
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Moses is taken out of the water.
Moses' Birth and Translation Dates
While discussing these dates at the time of Moses
and Joshua, it might be good to include also proposed dates of birth and translation
for Moses. In an earlier paper a date of birth was proposed for Moses, but
his translation date has eluded me.[4]
Since that time, the workings of the Venus and PHC calendars have become more
clear, and I wish now to correct his proposed birth date by one day on our
calendar and to propose the date of his death, or rather, of his translation.
It was clear, and still is, that Moses was born on 15 Shebat, but it turns
out that occurred one day earlier than I had thought. Thus, it is proposed
that he was born on Tue 21 Jan 1542 BC pm* which was 1 Flower (SR), 1 Lord
(V) and the very day on the Hebrew calendar of the incredibly close conjunction
of Venus and Saturn. The two planets appeared to be one, being so close that
in a telescope, Venus appeared closer to Saturn than some of its own moons.
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Venus and Saturn (with moons) as they would
appear in a telescope on Wed 22 Jan 1542 BC.
As for his translation date, the Bible actually
gives it to the very day. In Deut. 31:2 Moses declares that on that very day
he was 120 years old. Then he spoke to them and wrote a song on that "same
day" (Deut. 31:22), and then he finished writing the book of the law. Then
he gathered the elders and spoke to them and quoted another song. Then the
Lord spoke to Moses on "that selfsame day" and called him up to the mountain
(Deut. 31:48). He went up into the mountain and did not return to them. Hebrew
tradition is that his death occurred early in the month of Adar, but I propose
that these words of Deuteronomy be taken literally, and that Moses was translated
on his 120th birthday. That would have been Fri 15 Jan 1422 BC pm*, being
15 Shebat (PHC), 1 Temple (SR), 1 Creation (V), 1 Birth (M). The Book of Deuteronomy
was begun to be revealed on 1 Shebat (Deut. 1:3), which was Sat 2 Jan 1422
BC, being 1 Dog (SR), 1 Lord (V), End Watering (Jubilee), 14 Winter (Enoch)
and 1 Mijamin (Priest). Thus, from his birth to the giving of Deuteronomy
complete an exact number of cycles on the Venus calendar (1 Lord to 1 Lord)
and Mercury calendar, whereas his translation date completed exactly 120 years
on the Perpetual Hebrew calendar.
| Event |
Gregorian BC |
Hebrew |
Sacred Round |
Venus |
Mercury |
| Birth |
Tue 21 Jan 1542 pm* |
15 Shebat |
1 Flower |
1 Lord |
14 Quick |
| Deuteronomy |
Sat 2 Jan 1422 |
1 Shebat |
1 Dog |
1 Lord |
14 Quick |
| Translation |
Fri 15 Jan 1422 pm* |
15 Shebat |
1 Temple |
1 Creation |
1 Birth |
Table 2. Three Proposed Key Dates in the
Life of Moses.
Elijah: God vs. Baal
Another classic "Decision Day" occurred when Elijah
set up a contest between the God of Israel and Baal, the god of the 450 wicked
priests in the days of Ahab, King of Israel. It was designed to help the people
decide to serve just one god, and in particular, the One True God. Elijah
challenged the people, "How long halt ye between two opinions? If the Lord
be God, follow him: but if Baal, then follow him!" (1 Kings 18:21). Two bulls
were then sacrificed to see which god would send fire to consume the sacrifice.
The 450 priests of Baal first called upon their god for hours to send down
fire to consume their offering, but nothing happened. They apparently were
surprised at their failure and they began to cut themselves, drawing blood
to encourage Baal to come through for them.
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Elijah calls upon God.
When they had clearly failed in the eyes of all,
Elijah repaired the altar of the Lord and put twelve stones around it. He
placed the offering thereon and had several barrels of water poured on it,
and a trench around the altar was also filled with water. When he called upon
God, fire immediately came down and consumed the offering, the wood, and even
the stones and water in the trench. "And when all the people saw it, they
fell on their faces: and they said, The Lord, he is the God; The Lord, he
is the God." (1 Kings 18:39). The 450 priests of Baal were then executed.
The event was a climax to a long drought which
had begun with the word of Elijah some three and a half years earlier (1 Kings
17:1; Luke 4:25). Shortly after the execution, when the first little cloud
was seen, he had his servant tell Ahab to get started home before the rains
prevented him from doing so (1 Kings 18:44). Thus, the arm of the Lord was
made bare before the people with both fire and with a downpour, all happening
on the same day.
So just when was that day? This date has eluded
me for decades because the year in the reign of Ahab is not given, and even
the year of the beginning of his reign is not known with certainty. If I
do not have a least a year to begin searching for a day, it is usually too
hard to pinpoint. As stated above, it is best when there are two or three
witnesses.
In preparing this article, it occurred to me
to check historical records from neighboring countries, for surely the drought
was widespread and mentioned elsewhere. Sure enough, it is mentioned in
the Assyrian records. Those records are precisely correlated to our calendar
because they mention a total eclipse of the sun, which occurred on Mon 7
Jun 763 BC. The outstanding event for the year 882 BC is that the king brought
his people home after the end of the great drought. E.W. Faulstich, the
researcher whose work pointed that out to me, placed the ending of the drought
in the previous year.[5]
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Elijah prays for the drought to end.
Given that year, and the above pattern that the
event was very similar in nature to the Golden Calf episode, the first date
I checked in 883 BC was 24 Tammuz. It was such a perfect bull's-eye, that
it seems worthy of proposing even without other corroborating dates. The proposed
date is Tue 9 Jul 883 BC, being 24 Tammuz (PHC), 13 Temple (SR), 0 Prime (V)
and 0 Resurrection (M). Moreover, it was a jubilee year, completing 11 jubilees
of 49 years each since entering the Promised Land in 1422 BC. Those are sufficient
alignments to make the date jump out as significant. Thus, we have another
vote here for 24 Tammuz as being a "Decision Day."
Noah's Decision Days
Now let us turn to the unifying event which suggests
that an entire set of four days all be classed as "Decision Days," those days
being 17 Tammuz, 24 Tammuz, 2 Ab and 9 Ab.
First, let's review the traditional Hebrew
interpretation of those days. There are two fast days in the summer which
are somber occasions for remember disastrous past occasions, namely the
fall of Jerusalem (17 Tammuz) and the destruction of the temple (9 Ab).
Those dates refer to both the time of Nebuchadnezzar (587 BC) and also of
Titus (AD 70).[6].
The two dates are separated by exactly three weeks. They are sometimes referred
to simply as "The Three Weeks."[7]
The entire period is a time of soberness where weddings and festivities
are avoided. But as far as I know in Jewish tradition, it is only the first
and last days of that period which are considered minor holy days. The Lord
himself refers to the fasts of the fourth and fifth months (Tammuz and Ab)
(Zech. 8:19).
This article proposes that two other minor
holy days should be added to the list, namely 24 Tammuz and 2 Ab, which
are the week-markers between the first and last holy days of the Three Weeks.
Moreover, at least the first three of those days appear to be "Decision
Days," whereas the last day (9 Ab) may symbolize the result of a poor decision
made on the earlier days.
My reason for proposing that the first three
are "Decision Days" comes directly from the revealed history of Noah and
the Great Deluge in Genesis. The dates of the various events have been discussed
in detail in an earlier paper, but there were four events which were skipped
over quickly because their meaning was not clear.
Noah released a raven on a day which was 40
days after 150 days after 40 days after the rain began (Gen. 7:17; 8:3,
6, 7). Hebrew tradition places that day on 10 Tammuz, which appears to be
correct. One needs only to count the days from 17 Heshvan, when the rain
was said to begin to fall.[8].
The raven went "to and fro in the earth" and did not return. Now, why was
that detail included?
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Dove returns with Olive Leaf on 24 Tammuz.
As was suggested in an earlier paper about the
Jubilee calendar, the Deluge was apparently the baptism of the earth, and
symbolized a "rebirth." Thus, the various events noted, such as the mountains
first appearing, apparently are reminiscent of the birth of the earth, when
the land first broke out of the water and began to breath the breath of life
of the atmosphere.[9]
So what does a raven have to do with the birth of the earth?
Fall of Satan
Can you think of any other scripture that mentions
"going to and fro in the earth"? That's right, in the Book of Job, when Satan
is asked whence he comes, he replies "From going to and fro in the earth"
(Job 1:7). Let me here suggest that there was a day when Satan was cast down
to the earth with his angels (Rev. 12:9), and that he has been going "to and
fro" in the earth ever since, tempting mankind to disobey God. Let me further
suggest that the day on which he was cast down was 10 Tammuz, symbolized by
the raven having been released by Noah, and never returning.[10]
Dove Days
According to Jewish tradition, exactly one week
later Noah released a dove to discover whether any part of the earth were
dry.[11]
The dove returned to him that day, which would have been 17 Tammuz (Gen. 8:8-9).
One week later he released it again (on 24 Tammuz), and this time it returned
with an Olive Leaf in its beak (Gen. 8:10-11). One week later he again released
the dove (on 2 Ab) and this time, like the raven, it did not return.
Now, what is this dove episode all about? In
the former article on the Jubilee calendar, while I listed all of these
precise dates in a table, it was not clear what the purpose of these doves
dates were. I merely noted them in passing, but none of them were significant
on the other sacred calendars. The dove often symbolizes the Holy Ghost,
but if that is the intended symbolism this time, then it is not at all clear
to me what the meaning is.
Before going further, it was this episode which
helped me pick the name "Decision Days" as a name for this group. Clearly,
Noah was making a decision on each of the three dove days. Also, it would
explain the days of Moses, Joshua, and Elijah above, when the people were
all challenged to make the decision of whether or not to follow God. But
there must be something deeper. Let us now turn to the history of Adam and
Eve for a possible symbolism of the dove days.
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The temptation portrayed by Michelangelo.
Adam and Eve
The breakthrough in understanding the dove days
was when it occurred to me that perhaps Noah represented Adam and the dove
represented Eve. What if the first day when the dove was released represented
the day on which Eve was tempted by the serpent and partook of the fruit of
the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil? What if the day on which the dove
brought Noah an olive leaf represented the day on which Eve brought some of
the fruit to Adam? And what if the day on which the dove was released once
and for all represented the day on which Adam fell, when he also partook of
the forbidden fruit?
That might sound like a rather speculative
interpretation, but let us see where it leads. First of all, it certainly
would fit with the idea of three very important "Decision Days" which affected
all of the rest of us every since. If there ever were archetypal "Decision
Days," those would have been some of the greatest examples with the most
far reaching consequences.
So let us look to see if there were any days
on the sacred calendars which might support this proposal. Searching a few
years before the proposed date for the expulsion from the Garden of Eden
(Sun 9 Apr 4001 BC)[12]
leads to two dates which are so loaded with symbolism that they had to be
included in this article.
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Mars tempts Venus on 17 Tammuz.
Fall of Eve
The day Sat 12 Jul 4004 BC was 17 Tammuz and is
a perfect fit for the Fall of Eve. First, it was 13 Serpent, the highest day
of the serpent. It was the Feast of Tabernacles on the Enoch Fixed calendar,
and 14 Summer (the equivalent of 17 Tammuz) on the Enoch Calendar. It was
also the holy day 0 Prime on the Mercury calendar, so it was a holy day on
5 sacred calendars. But it was also the very day of a meaningful conjunction
in the heavens.
As has been pointed out in earlier papers,
all of the planets are like hands on a great clock in the sky. The twelve
zodiac constellations through which all the planets move are like the 12
numbers on the face of the clock. The slowest hands, like hour hands, are
the planets Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.[13]
It turns out that during the year proposed here for the Fall of Adam and
Eve, all three of these planets are very near the star Regulus at the Heart
of Leo, the Lion. That very star is the "12 o'clock star", so the clock
is set nearly perfectly for the "beginning of time." But what about the
faster moving hands, like Venus and Mars, which are like the minute hands?
It turns out that on the very day proposed here for the Fall of Eve that
Venus and Mars are very near to each other (in conjunction). They were separated
only by 11 arc minutes, which is about a third of the apparent diameter
of the moon. In mythology, Venus is female and Mars is the god of war, so
this conjunction seems fitting symbolism for the day on which Satan tempts
Eve.
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The slowest moving planets all near the "12
o'clock" star Regulus.
Beginning of Time
Just how unusual is it for all three great "hour
hands" of the Celestial Clock to be pointing to the "twelve" at the same time?
The planets Uranus and Neptune only line up with each other every 171 years,
and when they do, each successive conjunction occurs about half a constellation
ahead on the clock face. It takes 25 conjunctions of those two planets for
them to meet back at Regulus.[14]
That happens in A.D. 281, but then Saturn is no where near there. At the next
conjunction, Saturn can barely squeeze into Leo with the planets Uranus and
Neptune in AD 447, but it is only a broad "grouping" because they are spread
all over the constellation. For all practical purposes, the meeting of Saturn,
Uranus and Neptune at Regulus at the proposed time of the Fall is the only
time in history that the three planets are found near Regulus. Thus, the planets
appear to testify that this year, and even this very day, is correct.
Fall of Adam
According to the proposed interpretation, Eve
offered the forbidden fruit to Adam one full week after she partook of it.
That is not how we generally picture it, but it seems very likely that she
might have thought a long time before telling Adam of her choice. If so, then
this day (24 Tammuz) became a Decision Day for Adam, of whether he would strictly
obey the Lord or go with his wife. The day 24 Tammuz that year is holy on
only one other calendar, being 21 Autumn, the last day of Tabernacles on the
Enoch Fixed Calendar. In itself, it is not a particularly impressive date.
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Eve Tempts Adam.
Then Adam thinks it over for an entire week. Then
he chooses also to partake of the forbidden fruit on 2 Ab, being Sat 26 Jul
4004 BC, which is not only a holy day on five other sacred calendars, but
all of the particular holy days seem significant. The day was 1 Storm on the
Sacred Round, appropriate for representing the later consequence of being
driven out from the Garden. It was also 1 Adult on the Venus Calendar, symbolizing
his loss of innocence and youth. It was 1 Death on the Mercury calendar, symbolizing
partaking of the seeds of death. Moreover, it was the first day of the Priest
cycle (1 Jehoiarib), the same as the proposed day of his birth.[15]
Finally, it was the Last Day of the Vine (Grape) Harvest on the Jubilee calendar.
The significance of that comes when one learns the Hebrew tradition that the
grape was the forbidden fruit.[16]
Thus, the fact that the very day indicated by our speculative interpretation
of Noah's decision days just happens to lead to two amazing days for the Fall
of both Adam and Eve, is to me compelling evidence that the interpretation
is correct.
The following table summarizes the proposed "Decision
Dates."
| Event |
Gregorian Date BC |
PHC |
Sacred Round |
Venus |
Mercury |
| Fall of Eve |
Sat 12 Jul 4004 |
17 Tammuz |
13 Serpent |
— |
0 Prime |
| Fall of Adam |
Sat 26 Jul 4004 |
2 Ab |
1 Storm |
1 Adult |
1 Death |
| Golden Calf |
Thu 16 Jul 1462 |
24 Tammuz |
2 Jaguar |
2 Adult |
2 Lord |
| Joshua |
Tue 24 Jul 1397 |
2 Ab |
1 Dragon |
1 Lord |
1 Res |
| Elijah |
Tue 9 Jul 883 |
24 Tammuz |
13 Temple |
0 Prime |
0 Res |
Table 3. Proposed Key Decision Dates in the
Old Testament.
Joseph Smith
Now let us turn to the latter-day prophet, Joseph
Smith. Did he ever have a difficult decision day, where he had to decide if
indeed he was going to follow everything that the Lord told him, or not? There
is only one incident which comes to mind, because after that one initial stumble,
he never wavered again. That incident involved the loss of the first 116 manuscript
pages of his translation of the Book of Mormon. Let us review that event and
then propose a precise date for it.
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The Prophet Joseph Smith.
Martin Harris, who had transcribed the first part
of the Book of Mormon, was anxious to show it to his wife and friends. He
had the Prophet Joseph ask the Lord for permission, but the Lord refused.
At his insistence, Joseph asked again and received the same response. One
final time Joseph asked, whereupon the Lord allowed it. Martin bound himself
with a solemn oath that he would only show certain people. The oath was broken
and he failed to return to Joseph. Finally, Joseph went to his parents' home
in Palmyra and sent for Martin. When Harris arrived, Joseph received the disastrous
news that the 116 pages had been lost. According to the prophet's mother,
Lucy Mack Smith, a blight descended on Martin's wheat field that day, such
that he lost most of his crop, whereas a neighbor had no problem.[17]
The LDS Church has never recovered from this
great loss; we still do not have the translation of the Book of Lehi. The
next day, Joseph received D&C 3, which chastised him for trampling the
counsel of God under foot (D&C 3:15). Clearly it was a time in which
the Prophet had to think deeply about whether or not he would henceforth
obey the counsel of God perfectly.
What was the day when this occurred? In the official
church history, we are told that the 116 pages were completed on Tue 14 Jun
1828.[18]
Apparently Martin left with the manuscript that evening because the prophet's
mother tells us that "shortly after Mr. Harris left, Joseph's wife became
the mother of a son" who lived only a few hours.[19]
That child was born Wed 15 Jun 1828. The evening of 14 Jun, when Martin most
likely left, began the day 1 Tammuz (PHC), the same day the Prophet's son
was born.
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The Egyptian Anubis was like the Dog on the
Sacred Round.
Emma nearly died also and Lucy states that Joseph
cared for her until Harris had been gone nearly three weeks. A few days afterward,
Emma was well enough that Joseph went to Palmyra to find out what had happened
to Martin, which would have been about one week into July. Checking the sacred
calendars at that time leads to a date which matches the symbolism of both
the Golden Calf day and also of Elijah's contest very closely. The day Tue
8 Jul 1828 was 24 Tammuz, the same Decision Day as proposed for both of those
events. Moreover, it was 13 Dog on the Sacred Round, where the Dog represents
the day of greatest suffering for sins.[20]
It was also 0 Death on the Mercury calendar. Thus, because of this excellent
fit, it is proposed that this Decision Day of the Prophet followed the same
pattern set by the ancient prophets.
Moreover, the prophet tells us that "a few days"
later, after he had made his decision, that the angel restored the Urim and
Thummim to him, and he received D&C 10 and was back in good standing before
the Lord. When did that occur? If it fit this same pattern, then the likely
date would have been Tue 22 Jul 1828, 9 Ab, which was also 1 Dragon (SR) and
1 Resurrection (M), and 1 Midsummer (Enoch). If so, then it would tend to
confirm the proposal that 9 Ab is not necessarily a bad day, but rather the
day on which the consequences are received for the former decisions. In this
case it was a wonderful day, for the Prophet had been reinstated to his position.
The symbolism on the Mercury calendar of 1 Death for the error and 1 Resurrection
for the correction seems especially fitting.
Conclusion
After having considered the dates of the great
questions posed by Moses, Joshua, and Elijah to the Israelites to choose whether
or not they would serve God, it is proposed that the "Three Weeks" of fasting
and grieving on the Hebrew calendar might be more precisely interpreted as
"Decision Dates," being a time for evaluating the tragedy that sin brings
and resolving to serve God. It is also proposed, by using the dove symbolism
from the Great Deluge, that the Fall of both Eve and Adam also followed this
same pattern. Even the decision of the latter-day Prophet Joseph Smith seems
to follow the same calendrical pattern. Prophecy seems to imply that we all
may have some difficult Decision Days ahead, when we too will be given a clear
choice about whether to serve God or mammon. It will be interesting to see
whether or not our own Decision Days will follow the same pattern.
Notes
- Pratt, John P., "Exodus
Date Testifies of Christ" Meridian Magazine (7 Oct 2003), Section
3.2.2. In that article, I don't even mention that it was 24 Tammuz, but
it is listed in my "Religious Chronology
Summary. " Because 24 Tammuz, rather than 17 Tammuz is a key point
in the current article, a brief review seems in order. On 1 Sivan the
Israelites arrived at Mt. Sinai (Ex. 19:1). Shortly thereafter the Lord
told them to prepare for two days and on the third day he would appear
to Moses. That third day was the Feast of Firstfruits (Pentecost) on which
there was an earthquake in the morning, with a long trumpet blast, the
mountain was enveloped in smoke, and then Moses ascended it and received
the Ten Commandments (Ex. 19:10-20). The traditional (Pharisee) day for
Pentecost is 6 Sivan, but my understanding is that it was really the Sunday
on or after that day, in this case, 8 Sivan. To me, the three days symbolized
the Friday to Sunday in the Savior's life from his death to his Resurrection
Sunday morning. Both the trump and earthquake are associated with the
resurrection. The record then tells us that the smoke remained on the
mountain for six days (Ex. 24:16) and on the seventh he called to Moses
again to ascend the mount. Thus, he ascended on Sat 14 Sivan. He stayed
there for 40 days, which brings the date to 24 Tammuz, Golden Calf Day,
when he descended. If the Ten Commandments were given on Pentecost then
the Golden Calf was not on 17 Tammuz.
- Pratt, John P., "How
Did the Book of Jasher Know?" Meridian Magazine (7 Jan 2002).
- All dates are given according
to our modern Gregorian calendar. The notation am* means before 6 a.m.,
and pm* means after 6 p.m. (when the *s are shining). The various sacred
calendars mentioned are discussed in my earlier papers concerning the
Sacred
Round, the Venus
and Mercury calendars, the Enoch
calendars, and the Jubilee
calendars.
- Pratt, John P., "Exodus
Date Testifies of Christ" Meridian Magazine (7 Oct 2003) Section
4.1 lists the date of Moses' birth. One problem at that time was that
the proposed date was one day after the big conjunction, and also one
day off from a holy day on the SR and Venus calendar. But because I did
not know his translation date, it did not appear that those calendars
were involved.
- Faulstich, E.W., History,
Harmony and the Hebrew Kings (Spencer, Iowa:Chronology Books 1986).
Faulstich produced a detailed chronology for the entire Old Testament
period, based on computer calculations of cycles of time. I owe him a
great debt of gratitude because his work has often saved me the trouble
of doing much original research. His chronology and mine both agree that
King Solomon died in 945 BC (p. 240) and they are usually with a year
or so of each other throughout the Old Testament period. Thus, while I
have not yet attempted to deduce the exact regnal years of the kings of
Judah and Israel, I turned to his work to see if he attempted to date
the years of the drought. Indeed he did, basing his estimate on the Assyrian
eponym year of 882 BC, which he places in the year after the drought ended
(p. 86). So again, I must thank him for the huge amount of research which
he published. He mentions the total eclipse date on p. 87.
- Lefgren, John C. &
Pratt, John P., "Dead
Sea Scrolls May Solve Mystery", Meridian Magazine (12 Mar 2003),
Section 3. The date of the first fall of Jerusalem is given in Jeremiah
as 9 Tammuz (Jer. 39:2) rather than 17 Tammuz, and some feel that such
was the original day of the fast of the fourth month. My work has suggested
that 17 Tammuz was the date on which the first captives were taken by
Nebuchadnezzar (including Daniel), and that as such it may have been the
original fast date, predating even the fall of the city. In any case,
17 Tammuz appears to be the proper day to fast.
- Strassfeld, Michael, The
Jewish Holy Days: A Guide and Commentary (New York: Harper & Row,
1985). Chapter 4 is entitled "The Three Weeks: The Dark Time."
- Pratt, John P. "Jubilee
Calendar Testifies of Christ" Meridian Magazine (17 Nov 2004),
Section 2.2, Table 3, lists those dates as falling on 1) Rain begins on
Julian Day Count 865,982 (Sat 16 Nov 2343 BC); 2) it stops 40 days later
on JD 866,022 (Thu 26 Dec); 3) Water abates 150 days later on 866,171.4
(Sat 24 May, 1 Sivan); and 4) raven released 40 days later on JD 866,211
(3 Jul, 10 Tammuz).
- Pratt, John P. "Jubilee",
Section 2.2.
- The day 10 Tammuz also
appears to be a minor holy day, but not in the group of Decision Days
discussed in this paper. That day completes the set of four days at quarter
markers for the year, being 10 Nisan, 10 Tishri, and 10 Tebeth. It may
have felt like a victory for Satan to have enraged to mob to slay the
Prophet Joseph Smith on 10 Tammuz, the very day Satan was cast out. See
my "From
Martyrdom to Celebration!" Meridian Magazine (17 Nov 2004),
Section 4.
- The reference for the
dove being first released one week after the dove is in Pratt, John P.
"Jubilee",
Footnote 11.
- Pratt, John P., "Venus
and the Beginning of Mortality" Meridian Magazine (9 Jul 2003),
Section 5.
- Pluto has a longer period,
but it does not appear to be a hand on the big clock. Many astronomers
today do not even count Pluto as a planet because we have since discovered
several other bodies of about the same size, such as Chiron, which are
not called planets. The illustrations of conjuctions for this article
were prepared with the "Starry Night Professional" computer program. It
included Pluto in the illustration, so I decided to leave it there.
- Pratt, John P. "The
Planets Testify of the Creator" Meridian Magazine (14 Apr 2004),
Section 3.1 calculates the interval between conjunctions in detail. A
good approximation throughout history is that a conjunction occurs every
107 x 585 = 62,595 days, beginning on Tue 21 Oct 4178 BC, 1 Reed 1 (SR),
being 1 Res (V) and 1 Lord (M). With that scheme, the U/N conjunction
near the Fall occurred at Wed 8 Mar 4006 BC, which suggests that the presence
of Saturn was indeed required to mark the date.
- Pratt, John P., "Mortality",
Section 4.1.
- In the Apocrypha, Baruch
states that an angel explained to him that the grape is the forbidden
fruit, and notes how much sorrow has come from drinking wine. He then
points out that the sacrament uses wine because of the symbolism that
even as the Fall of man came from the grape, so also does salvation (III
Baruch 4:8,16-17. See Charles, R.H., The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha
of the Old Testament London: Clarendon Press, 1913, vol II, p. 536).
Note that Judah was promised that the Savior would be his descendant,
who would wash his garments in the "blood of grapes" (Gen. 49:11). In
the sacrament, the Savior's blood is represented by the blood of grapes.
I thank Joyce Peabody for pointing out this entire concept to me.
- Smith, Lucy Mack, History
of Joseph Smith, (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1958), p. 132.
- Joseph Smith,History
of the Church I: 20.
- History of Joseph Smith,
p. 125
- The dog is apparently
the new world equivalent of Anubis, the black jackal which in Egyptian
mythology led the deceased through the depths of Hades, when great anguish
was felt for sins. See also link to 20 Day Names.