Thursday, May 05, 2011

The Julian calendar, instituted in 45 B.C.E. by Julius Caesar, is the reckoning of time that is utilized for astronomical calculations and computing events in ancient history.  NASA’s calculated accuracy for the Julian calendar is measurably better than one millionth of a second.  The calculations for the Astronomically and Agriculturally Corrected Biblical Hebrew Calendar for dates before 1582 are all calculated and expressed in the Julian mode.  The Gregorian calendar was instituted in 1582 to rectify the miscalculation of leap years inherent in the Julian system.  Pontifex Maximus Gregory XIII added ten days to the calendar at midnight on Thursday, October 4th, which then became Friday, October 15th.  The seven-day week and the seventh-day Sabbath have continued uninterrupted from both the Julian and Hebrew reckoning – and it is highly probable that it has continued uninterrupted since it was begun by the Almighty during creation week (Genesis 1&2).
It has been astronomically and mathematically verified that the Sabbath Yahshua kept holy is the same day of the week it is now.  The astronomical proofs are precise to one one-millionth of a second, and the mathematical calculations are accurate to within one ten-millionth of a day.  This irrefutable data constitutesprima facie evidence that the recently concocted “lunar sabbath” is pure fiction.  If Yahshua did not find it necessary to “renovate” the Sabbath when he was here, but meticulously guarded its sanctity, it is presumptuous and impertinent to assume that someone would know more about the “correct” Sabbath than Yahshua did.     I am not of the mind to straighten “the Lord of the Sabbath” out concerning this particular issue!  Considering the multiple “fatal errors” in the various lunar-sabbath systems, which attempt to invent a sabbath that coincides with the phases of the moon, this is, by far, the most fatal.  I will stick with Yahshua on the seventh-day Sabbath.  If he was wrong, I will go to the grave in the same error – just to be safe (Matthew 12:1-8).