Post by james on Sept 30, 2017 19:43:30 GMT -6
As I'm writing, it's about 2 hours to dawn on Yom Ri-shon, 1st day of the week in Jerusalem, the Tenth day of the Seventh month.
I mostly just wanted to put together the various ideas bouncing around in my brain, and see if I can get some other thoughts. I've been thinking a lot about the idea of the Day of Atonement Rapture.
To begin with, there is some evidence to suggest that Israel declared the Jubilee year too early. THey declared it on year 5776/5777, celebrating on Tishri as they should. However, the liberation of Jerusalem was on June 7th of 1967, 3 months after Adar/Nisan, the start of the religious year, thus making 5777/5778 the proper Jubilee year to celebrate. That would mean that the New year begins on the Tenth day of the seventh month, instead of the first. Trumpets and Atonement together, the Last Trump.
Second, it looks as if Israel celebrated the Day of Atonement one day early. Going by modern technology and the standard calendar, the New Moon did fall on the 20th (21st, Jewish Calendar). However, that was the full occlusion and was invisible. They celebrated anyway because the modern secular calendar needs to be fixed in order for people to take off work. But that's not God's way. By all reports I could find, the New Moon Crescent was spotted a day later, on the sunset of the 21st. (22nd, Jewish calendar). They celebrated Yom Kippur on the evening of the 29th (30th, Jewish calendar), but that makes it only the 9th day of the Tenth month. Thus the proper day of Atonement began as they blew the Trumpet to mark the end of it. (October 1st, Jewish Calendar.)
Some thoughts related to that: The Tenth Day of the Seventh month, being a Jubilee year is the start of the new year. That means it's also Trumpets. It falls on the first day of the week. When they went tot he tomb at dawn of the first day of the week, they found Jesus risen and the tomb empty. The Fall festival of Trumpets/Atonement is the festival of Gleanings, the final harvest. With the shofar blown a day early, it may be up to God to blow the Trumpet and mark his year of Jubilee himself.
I mostly just wanted to put together the various ideas bouncing around in my brain, and see if I can get some other thoughts. I've been thinking a lot about the idea of the Day of Atonement Rapture.
To begin with, there is some evidence to suggest that Israel declared the Jubilee year too early. THey declared it on year 5776/5777, celebrating on Tishri as they should. However, the liberation of Jerusalem was on June 7th of 1967, 3 months after Adar/Nisan, the start of the religious year, thus making 5777/5778 the proper Jubilee year to celebrate. That would mean that the New year begins on the Tenth day of the seventh month, instead of the first. Trumpets and Atonement together, the Last Trump.
Second, it looks as if Israel celebrated the Day of Atonement one day early. Going by modern technology and the standard calendar, the New Moon did fall on the 20th (21st, Jewish Calendar). However, that was the full occlusion and was invisible. They celebrated anyway because the modern secular calendar needs to be fixed in order for people to take off work. But that's not God's way. By all reports I could find, the New Moon Crescent was spotted a day later, on the sunset of the 21st. (22nd, Jewish calendar). They celebrated Yom Kippur on the evening of the 29th (30th, Jewish calendar), but that makes it only the 9th day of the Tenth month. Thus the proper day of Atonement began as they blew the Trumpet to mark the end of it. (October 1st, Jewish Calendar.)
Some thoughts related to that: The Tenth Day of the Seventh month, being a Jubilee year is the start of the new year. That means it's also Trumpets. It falls on the first day of the week. When they went tot he tomb at dawn of the first day of the week, they found Jesus risen and the tomb empty. The Fall festival of Trumpets/Atonement is the festival of Gleanings, the final harvest. With the shofar blown a day early, it may be up to God to blow the Trumpet and mark his year of Jubilee himself.