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The Jewish Calendar PDF Print E-mail
Written by Rey   
Monday, 19 January 2004

Recently, a friend asked me when the 7 Feasts occured in the Jewish Calendar. The question came up because we were taking a look at the Day of Pentecost and how long Christ was on Earth. We've both been in enough meetings where we knew that 50 days after the Passover was the Day of Pentacost....but what did that mean? It meant we had assimilated information without verifying the facts.

Thus began the hunt and of course we sought the Bible:

Exo 23:15 You shall keep the Feast of Unleavened Bread. You shall eat unleavened bread seven days, as I commanded you, in the time appointed of the month Abib, for in it you came out of Egypt. And no one shall appear before Me empty.

 

Lev 23:5-8 In the fourteenth day of the first month, between the evenings, is Jehovah's Passover, and on the fifteenth day of the same month is the Feast of Unleavened Bread to Jehovah. You must eat unleavened bread seven days. On the first day you shall have a holy convocation. You shall do no work of labor, but you shall offer a fire offering to Jehovah seven days. In the seventh day is a holy convocation. You shall do no work of labor.

From there we gain the understanding that The Month of Abib is the first month of the Jewish year and this was the month where the passover was to be taken. What immediately caught our attention was the amount of Jews saying "Happy New Year" sometime in September which as far as we knew (based on Easter) the new year actually started in Mar/April.

We looked up some information on the Passover and this certain book stated it was celebrated in the Month of Nissan. Immediately we wondered, "Where's Abib?" We jumped back into the word:

Exo 34:22 And you shall observe the Feast of Weeks, of the first-fruits of wheat harvest, and the Feast of Ingathering at the year's end.

Since we know nothing about farming, we were seriously confused. In this passage it refers to the Feast of Weeks (Pentecost) as the feast of the first-fruits of the wheat harvest. In Leviticus it refers to this as the day when the sickle first touches the ground, the following Sabbath, then the day after is declared the Feast of Weeks! When is wheat and barley grain gathered?

About Wheat from http://www.indiancommodity.com/grain/wheat.htm

The stages of life of the wheat plant vary somewhat depending upon the variety being grown:

Planting: Planting of winter wheat usually occurs in September or early October when the soil has sufficient moisture to germinate the seed. The germinated seed lies dormant during the winter. Spring wheat is planted as early in the spring as temperatures allow.

Growing: The winter wheat plant resumes its growth in the spring. The head of the wheat plant, which contains the kernels, develops at the tip of the stem. The stem grows rapidly, pushing the head up and out of the top leaf sheath. After the head emerges, flowering occurs and the kernels begin to develop. After the kernels have developed fully and filled, the leaves and stem lose their green color and the kernels quickly dry.

Harvest: Combines harvest the crop once the kernels have dried to 15 percent moisture or less. Harvesting of winter wheat starts in May and usually is completed by late July. Harvesting of spring wheat begins in late July and is completed by late August.

About Barley from http://www.indiancommodity.com/grain/barley.htm

Barley is planted either as a winter or summer crop.

Planting: In the northern states, where winters are severe, barley is planted in April or May as a summer crop. In the warmer regions, barley is planted between mid-September and November.

Dormancy: Fall-planted barley lies dormant during the winter months.

Harvesting: Spring-planted barley is harvested in the fall. Fall-planted barley is harvested in June. A combine is used to harvest the crop.

So we find that we're left with a time frame of first laying down the sickle on wheat or barley to be sometime in the spring months (around May)

Then why do Jews call Yom Kippur the new year when the Bible explicitly states it as the First month being Abib? After finding a Jewish Calendar I was puzzled to see no month of Abi and also two ways of numbering. Another site compared it to how we in America have a New Year and a School Year that starts in September.

The Jews used two kinds of calendars: Civil Calendar: official calendar of kings, childbirth, and contracts Sacred Calendar: from which festivals were computed
Names of Months Corresponds with No. of Days Month of Civil Year Month of Sacred Year
Tishri Heshvan Chislev Tebeth Shebat Adar Nisan Iyar Sivan Tammuz Ab * Elul Sept-Oct Oct-Nov Nov-Dec Dec-Jan Jan-Feb Feb-Mar Mar-Apr Apr-May May-June June-July July-Aug Aug-Sept 30 29 or 30 29 or 30 29 30 29 or 30 30 29 30 29 30 29 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th
* Hebrew months were alternately 30 and 29 days long. Their year, shorter than ours, had 354 days. Therefore, about every 3 years (7 times in 19 years) an extra 29-day-month, VEADAR, was added between ADAR and NISAN.
The Jewish Day was from sunset to sunset, in 8 equal parts:
First Watch Second Watch Third Watch Fourth Watch First Watch Second Watch Third Watch Fourth Watch Sunset to 9 P.M. 9 P.M. to Midnight Midnight to 3 A.M. 3 A.M. to Sunrise Sunrise to 9 A.M. 9 A.M. to Noon Noon to 3 P.M. 3 P.M. to Sunset

Looking up the word "Abib" we get this definition: green, that is a young ear of grain; Not only that, we see the word used again in this passage:

Exo 9:31-32 And the flax and the barley was smitten: for the barley was in the ear [Abib], and the flax was bolled. But the wheat and the rye were not smitten: for they were not grown up.

So the month of Abib is actually referring to a phase in the crops when the barley or wheat "is young in the ear of grain". It's a time when the farmers are looking to start farming and indeed put the sickle to the ground. 49 days later is the Feast of Firstfruits where the firstfruits of these farmer's labor was brought in, offerings made to God and much rejoicing. At the end of the farming year would be the Feast of Ingathering!

Check this Link out with an insane amount of information some of which quoted below:

In summation, barley which is in the state of Abib has 3 characteristics:
It is brittle enough to be destroyed by hail and has begun to lighten in color (it is not "dark").
The seeds have produced enough dry material so it can be eaten parched.
It has developed enough so that it will be harvest-ready 2-3 weeks later.

So why the name? Why are the months named the way they are? Apparently it goes back to the Babylonian captivity where the names were assimilated by the Jewish Culture although they kept they're sacred days according to what God had stated..


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...
written by Rachel, August 08, 2007
I have heard a study where the barley and the harvest protocol itself is compared to the rapture. The barley is representative of the overcomers, the ones that really have a fire for God. The second harvest would be wheat, which represents the church or Christians who aren't on fire for God. The last is the grape harvest which represents the non-believers. I'm not sure about this. The harvest of the grains itself included gathering the first fruits or gathering the first areas to ripen, as some stalks will produce heads before others, depending I guess on the moisture and fertilization of the soil. This first to ripen group would be presented to the priest as a tithe and he would then sanctify the rest of the harvest. Then the rest of the field would be gleaned except for the four corners which were left for the widows and orphans and such. So how does this all play out when compared to the rapture. Some will go up first, the ones with fire in their spirit. Then the masses who are back slidden or whatever. Then supposedly the corners represent the Jews who have been scattered to the four winds. The value of the barley is interesting. A homer of barley is worth 50 shekels and 50 seems to be an important number. The 50th day represents Pentecost and the 50th year Jubilee. So in conclusion, if there will be 3 different groups that will be "caught up" into heaven, do these harvests represent these waves? Will the dead in Christ and the living believers go up first? Then the not so sure Christians will go. Then the non-believers will be given a chance? It's all in how you see this I suppose. If anyone could elaborate on this I would appreciate it.
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written by Rohn, August 09, 2007
A note: Passover represents redemption Pentecost represents baptism
Tabernacles or Ingathering represents resurrection
The Passover Feast has the Barley. The firstfruits are the overcomers.
The Pentecost has Wheat that is hard, so it needs a tribullim board to beat the hard shell. Tribullim board = tribulation
Ingathering has the fruit. The seven (7) fruits represent the 7 major continents.
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