Moed
Genesis
1:14-18, "And God said, Let there be
lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide
the day from the night; and let them be for
signs, and for and for days, and years . . . .
And God made two great lights; the greater light
for the rule of the day and the lesser light for
the rule of the night; He made the stars also."
The Hebrew word
for seasons "moed" is used in
Leviticus 23 in describing the seasons
of festivals of the Lord. Sun is defined as the
ruler for the day and the moon as the ruler for
the night. The moon is the "lesser
light," being in itself not luminous, but
reflect the light of the sun.
God is the "Sun of
Righteousness," (Malachi 4:2).
Men created in the image of God is like the
moon, reflecting His glory. The first of God's
material creation was light (Genesis 1:3
) and Sun itself was created later out of the
primeval light material. The purpose of creating
the Sun and the moon were to produce seasons and
days in cyclic fashion. This defines countable
time. Time cannot be measured without repeating
cycles. What vary are the cultural values and
goals that dictate which cycles are significant.
Time is the qualitative aspect of matter in
motion. Change is what gives the feeling and
concept of time. If nothing change, time cease
to exist. A linear change however gives us the
notion of time with its changes, but it will
give no means of measuring time. Our
grandmothers quoted time in terms of what
happenned at some point in time. "I got married
when the wheat turned brown". Many historians
marked the time in terms of eclipses. But they
are only markers and cannot measure time. All
measurement of time requires repeating cyclic
changes. Bible says that the motion of sun and
the moon were made for this specific purpose.
They were indeed the basis of all calendars.
Einstein said,
"Space and time are modes by which we think, not
conditions under which we live." Time--the time
that we know through clocks and calendars--were
invented as an extension of the cyclic motion.
This is because we can count time only when we
have a cycle which becomes the unit of time.
Genesis
7:11 states, "In the six hundredth year
of Noah's life, in the second month, the
seventeenth day of the month, the same day were
all the fountains of the great deep broken up,
and the windows of heaven were opened."
This is the first
time the Bible mentions a Calendar. Evidently
Noah was familiar with the calendar. So Noah
knew of day as defined by the setting and rising
of the sun. He knew of the month in terms of the
waxing and vaning of lunar phases. The seasons
provided the measure of years. This gave Noah
the measure of time and he started his year from
his birth which formed the marker origin. The
flood then became the next marker. He could
measure the cycles that passed in years, months
and days between the two events.
Calendars of all
cultures have their basis on the basic solar and
lunar orbital motions. The day is based on the
rotation of the Earth on its axis, the year is
based on the revolution of the Earth around the
Sun, and the month is based on the revolution of
the Moon around the Earth. The problem however
is that all these three cyclic movements are
independent of each other and are not correlated
to form an integral whole.
The tropical
year is defined as the mean interval
between vernal equinoxes; it corresponds to the
cycle of the seasons However, the interval from
a particular vernal equinox to the next may vary
from this mean by several minutes.
The synodic
month, the mean interval between
conjunctions of the Moon and Sun, corresponds to
the cycle of lunar phases Any particular phase
cycle may vary from the mean by up to seven
hours. A calendar year do not form an integral
number of months or of days to synchronize with
the tropical year. The Solar year is 365.242199
days and the lunar month is 29.53059 days. Here
was the basic problem. It would have made life
easier if the number of days in a month was an
exact integer and the number of months in an
year was an exact integer. But unfortunately it
is not so. So we get the complications of
calendar. This therefore required experts to
keep calendars. By traditions it was the priests
in all cultures who maintained this calendar
science.
The Gregorian
Calendar with which we are familiar with is a
solar calendar. To do so, days are intercalated
(with leap years) to increase the average length
of the calendar year. Islamic calendar is a
lunar calendar, and follows the lunar phase
cycle without regard for the tropical year. This
is essentially desert calendar where solar
seasonal variations are not reflected
accurately. The Hebrew calendar on the other
hand is a lunisolar calendar, has a
sequence of months based on the lunar phase
cycle; but every few years a whole month is
intercalated to bring the calendar back in phase
with the solar year. This reflects the
agricultural and nomadic animal husbandry
cultures in coexistence.
In 1967, the
definition of a second was officially divorced
from the Earth's rotation, motion of the moon
and of the sun and of the position of the stars.
That year, the 13th General Conference of
Weights and Measures redefined the second as
"9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation
corresponding to the transition between the two
hyperfine levels of the ground state of the
cesium-133 atom when free from all external
fields." It is now defined in terms of the basic
nature of light as a wave motion. However
scientists had to identifiy the particular light
in objective terms tied to matter (Isolated
Cesium 133 atom)
Hebrew Calendar
The Hebrew
calendar as we know today was codified into a
cogent system and given to all men by Rabi
Hillel II in AD 359 The science of calendar
calculations were a secret science and were
known only to the priestly class. This
publication was forced upon the Jewish
authorities because of historic reasons.
|
"Up to
the middle of the 4th century C.E.,
the Palestinian patriarchate
retained the prerogative of
determining the calendar, and
guarded the secrets of its
calculation against the attempts of
the rapidly advancing communities in
Babylonia to have a voice in its
determination. It was not until
after [false] Christianity had
become dominant in the Roman Empire
[under Constantine], and the
Christian rulers forbade the Jewish
religious leadership to proclaim
leap years or to communicate with
the Jews outside the empire, that it
was determined to abandon the method
of official proclamation of months
and years and to fix the calendar in
permanent form. The patriarch Hillel
II, in 359, decided to publish the
rules for the calculation of the
calendar, so that all Jews
everywhere might be able to
determine for themselves and to
observe the festivals on the same
day. From that time on the Jewish
calendar has been stabilized."
Universal Jewish
Encyclopedia |
In most cultures
(as in Egypt and India) this was used as a tool
of asserting the superiority of Priestly class
over laymen. This practice must have been a
carry over from the Egyptian tradition for the
Hebrews. Egyptian agricultural calendar based on
the Nile's annual flooding and consequential
delta agriculture evidently influenced Hebrew
calendar. During the nomadic period when animal
husbandry was the method of livelihood, the
cycle of mating and breeding were important and
these also influenced the Hebrew calendar.
Levitical calendar of the festivals therefore
included all these. Later during the Babylonian
exile, Israel came in contact with sophisticated
Calendars and Astronomical Clocks (sixth century
B.C) which again influenced the Hebrew calendar
as is known today. .
During the
pre-exilic period the Temple Sanhedrin was in
charge of the declaration of months and
intercalations. The sightings of lunar crescent
was the beginning of the month in the same style
as it is practiced in the Islamic world .
Molad (plural, moladot): "birth" of the
Moon, is the birth of the month. Decisions on
intercalation were influenced, if not determined
entirely, by the state of vegetation and animal
life which in turn are determined by the sun's
motion. Dehiyyah( plural, dehiyyot) is the
"postponement" rule by which the beginning of
year is delayed until after the molad when
required. Initally the month started strictly on
sighting of the new moon. However as the science
progressed some amount of interpolations by
calculations were inevitable.
Based on the lunar
sightings an ordinary (non-leap) year may
contain 353, 354, or 355 days. A leap year with
an additonal month may contain 383, 384, or 385
days. The three lengths of the years are termed,
"deficient", "regular", and "complete",
respectively. Deficient month (haser)
has 29 days. Full (male) month has 30
days. If the sightings on new moon were not
hindered by clouds then the defient and full
months alternated in order.
An ordinary year
has 12 months, but a leap year has 13 months. A
year is a leap year if the number year mod
19 is (i.e if the year is divided by 19
gives a remainder of ) one of the following: 0,
3, 6, 8, 11, 14, 17
In a regular year
the numbers 30 and 29 alternate; a complete year
is created by adding a day to Heshvan, whereas a
deficient year is created by removing a day from
Kislev. The alteration of 30 and 29 ensures that
when the year starts with a new moon, so does
each month. Every month starts (approximately
based on the sighting conditions) on the day of
a new moon. The Sanheran alone had the sole
authority of maitaining the calendar and
autority to declare new month and year.
"The first appearance of the new
moon determines the beginning of
the month . . . . It may,
therefore happen that in
different places the
reappearance of the moon is
noticed on different days. In
order to prevent possible
confusion, to the central
religious authority, the chief
of the Sanhedrin, in conjunction
with at least two colleagues,
was entrusted with the
determination of new moon day
for the whole nation. "
Jewish Encyclopedia
|
"The authority over the
observation of the new crescent
(and the subsequent proclamation
of New Moon Day) was given not
to everyone -- as is the case
with the Sabbath day . . . which
everyone counts 6 days and rests
on the seventh day -- but only
to the court [the Sanhedrin].
The day sanctified and
proclaimed by the court as the
beginning of the month was New
Moon Day. For it is said:
This month shall be unto
you (Exodus 12:2),
that is to say, accepting or
rejecting evidence concerning
this matter is put into your
hands." :
"
. . . the Jewish court, too,
used to study and investigate
and perform mathematical
operations, in order to find out
whether or not it would be
possible for the new crescent to
be visible in its 'proper time,'
which is the night of the 30th
day. If the members of the court
found that the new moon might be
visible, they were obliged to be
in attendance at the court house
for the whole 30th day and be on
the watch for the arrival of
witnesses. If witnesses did
arrive, they were duly examined
and tested, and if their
testimony appeared trustworthy,
this day was sanctified as New
Moon Day. If the new crescent
did not appear and no witnesses
arrived, this day was counted as
the 30th day of the old month .
. . . If, however, the members
of the court found by
calculation that the new moon
could not possibly be seen, they
were not obliged to be in
attendance on the 30th day or to
wait for the arrival of
witnesses. If witnesses
nonetheless did appear and
testified that they had seen the
new crescent, it was certain
that they were false witnesses,
or that a phenomenon resembling
the new moon had been seen by
them through the clouds, while
in reality it was not the new
crescent at all."
Chapter 1, Paragraph 5-6
The Code of Maimonides,
Book Three Treatise Eight,
"Sanctification of the New
Moon," translated by Solomon
Gandz. Edited by J. Obermann and
O. Neugebauer. Yale Judaica
Series. New Haven, Yale
University Press, 1956
Maimonides, wrote this treatise
from 1173-1178 A.D., drawing
from an Arabic authority, al-Battani.
|
The structure of
the months reduces to these:
|
Name |
Deficient year
(haser) is an year in
which the months of Heshvan
and Kislev both contain 29
days |
Regular year
(kesidrah) is an year
in which Heshvan has 29
days and Kislev has 30 days |
Complete year
(shelemah) is an year
in which the months of Heshvan
and Kislev both contain 30
days |
|
1.
Tishri |
30 |
30 |
30 |
|
2.
Heshvan |
29 |
29 |
30 |
|
3.
Kislev |
29 |
30 |
30 |
|
4.
Tevet |
29 |
29 |
29 |
|
5.
Shevat |
30 |
30 |
30 |
|
(Adar
I
Only on Leap year |
30 |
30 |
30) |
|
6.
Adar |
29 |
29 |
29 |
|
7.
Nisan |
30 |
30 |
30 |
|
8.
Iyar |
29 |
29 |
29 |
|
9.
Sivan |
30 |
30 |
30 |
|
10.
Tammuz |
29 |
29 |
29 |
|
11. Av |
30 |
30 |
30 |
|
12.
Elul |
29 |
29 |
29 |
|
Total: |
353 or
383 |
354 or
384 |
355 or
385 |
The month Adar I
is only present in leap years. In non-leap years
Adar II is simply called "Adar". Talmudic
sources tell us that the calendar committee did
not rely solely on calculation but on
observation as well. They added a 13th month
"when the barley in the field had not yet
ripened, when the fruit on the trees had not
grown properly, when the winter rains had not
stopped, when the roads for Passover pilgrims
had not dried up and when the young pigeons had
not become fledged" (Arthur Spier, The
Comprehensive Hebrew Calendar, p. 1).
. Irrespective of
the length of the day and night due to
variations in seasons, a day is divided into 12
hours and the night is divided into 12 hours.
Thus an hour is not defined objectively. An
Hour is divided into 1080 Halakim(singular,
helek) parts. One helek is
about 3 1/3 seconds. For calendar calculations,
the day begins at our 6 P.M., which is
designated 0 hours. Jerusalem is 2 hours 21
minutes ahead of Greenwich.
|
 |
Determining Tishri 1
|
The calendar year
begins with the first day of Rosh Hashanah
(Tishri 1). This is determined by the day of the
Tishri molad and the four rules of
postponements (dehiyyot). The
dehiyyot can postpone Tishri 1 until one or
two days following the molad.
(a) If the Tishri
molad falls on day 1, 4, or 6, then
Tishri 1 is postponed one day.
(b) If the Tishri molad occurs at or
after 18 hours (i.e., noon), then Tishri 1 is
postponed one day. If this causes Tishri 1 to
fall on day 1, 4, or 6, then Tishri 1 is
postponed an additional day to satisfy
dehiyyah (a).
(c) If the Tishri molad of an ordinary
year (i.e., of twelve months) falls on day 3 at
or after 9 hours, 204 halakim, then
Tishri 1 is postponed two days to day 5, thereby
satisfying dehiyyah (a).
(d) If the first molad following a leap
year falls on day 2 at or after 15 hours, 589
halakim, then Tishri 1 is postponed one
day to day 3.
|
 |
Reasons for the Dehiyyot delay
are:
|
Dehiyyah
(a) prevents Hoshana Rabba (Tishri 21) from
occurring on the Sabbath and prevents Yom Kippur
(Tishri 10) from occurring on the day before or
after the Sabbath.
Dehiyyah
(b) is an artifact of the ancient practice of
beginning each month with the sighting of the
lunar crescent. It is assumed that if the
molad (i.e., the mean conjunction) occurs
after noon, the lunar crescent cannot be sighted
until after 6 P.M., which will then be on the
following day.
Dehiyyah
(c) prevents an ordinary year from exceeding 355
days. If the Tishri molad of an
ordinary year occurs on Tuesday at or after
3:11:20 A.M., the next Tishri molad
will occur at or after noon on Saturday.
According to dehiyyah (b), Tishri 1 of
the next year must be postponed to Sunday, which
by dehiyyah (a) occasions a further
postponement to Monday. This results in an
ordinary year of 356 days. Postponing Tishri 1
from Tuesday to Thursday produces a year of 354
days.
Dehiyyah
(d) prevents a leap year from falling short of
383 days. If the Tishri molad following
a leap year is on Monday, at or after 9:32:43
1/3 A.M., the previous Tishri molad
(thirteen months earlier) occurred on Tuesday at
or after noon. Therefore, by dehiyyot
(b) and (a), Tishri 1 beginning the leap year
was postponed to Thursday. To prevent a leap
year of 382 days, dehiyyah (d)
postpones by one day the beginning of the
ordinary year.
We have seen that
Hebrew calendar tries to fits in several
cultural factors. There are four possible years
permitted. The new year begins on:
-
1 Tishri:
-
Rosh
HaShanah. This day is a celebration of
the creation of the world This is the
creation year, the beginning of creation of
the man.
-
15 Shevat:
-
Tu
B'shevat : The New year for the
Agriculturists.. This is the harvest
season for trees bearing fruits.
-
1 Nisan:
-
New Year
for Kings. This is the political year
and celebrates the beginning of the freedom
struggle under Moses.
-
1 Elul:
-
New Year
for those in Animal breeding - shepherds and
cowherds.
Philo, the Jewish
historian and contemporary of Jesus Christ and
the apostles, writes in his book, The Works of
Philo, On the Life of Moses II, chapter XLI,
Part 222 and 224, "Moses puts down the beginning
of the vernal equinox as the first month of the
year....."
Hebrew Day
A Hebrew-calendar
day begin at sunset which is defined as when
three medium-sized stars are visible to the
naked eye. Sunset marks the start of the 12
night hours, whereas sunrise marks the start of
the 12 day hours. This means that night hours
may be longer or shorter than day hours,
depending on the season.
Using the current
Hebrew Calendar the creation took place AM 1 at
5 hours and 204 parts after sunset i.e. just
before midnight on Julian date
6 October 3761 BC.
|
 |
Today's
Hebrew Date |
Using the current
Hebrew Calendar the creation took place AM 1 at
5 hours and 204 parts after sunset i.e. just
before midnight on Julian date
6 October 3761 BC.
The Six Agricultural Seasons (Genesis 8:22)
|
SEEDTIME |
15
TISHREI to the middle of KISLEV |
|
WINTER |
15
KISLEVto the middle of SHEVAT |
|
COLD |
15
SHEVAT to the middle of NISSAN |
|
HARVEST |
15
NISSAN to the middle of SIVAN |
|
SUMMER |
15
SIVAN to the middle of AV |
|
HEAT |
15
AV to the middle of TISHREI
|
|
 |
Approximate Hebrew Month in terms of our
Civil Calendar |
|
HEBREW MONTH |
HEBREW NAME OF CONSTELLATION |
GREGORIAN DATE |
|
NISSAN |
T'LEH |
3/21 - 4/19 |
|
IYAR |
SHOR |
4/20 - 5/20 |
|
SIVAN |
TEUMIN |
5/21 - 6/20 |
|
TAMUZ |
SARTAN |
6/21 - 7/22 |
|
AV |
ARI |
7/23 - 8/22 |
|
ELUL |
BETHULAH |
8/23 - 9/22 |
|
TISHREI |
MAZNAYIM |
9/23 - 10/22 |
|
CHESHVAN |
AKRAV |
10/23 - 11/21 |
|
KISLEV |
KESHETH |
11/22 - 12/21 |
|
TEVETH |
GEDI |
12/22 - 1/19 |
|
SHEVAT |
DELI |
1/20 - 2/18 |
|
ADAR |
DAGIM |
2/19 - 3/20 |
The science of
astrology and signs of zodiac came into Hebrew
culture from other cultures. They do not form
part of the Calendar as given from God.
Historical
Record
The following is a
listing of Biblical events according to their
dates on God's calendar collected from Judaic
sources.
First
Month
1 New Moon, New
Year.
1 Hezekiah opens
doors of Temple and begins to repair it, II
Chronicles 29:3, 17. Finished the work on the
16th.
1 Prophecy given
to Ezekiel that Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon,
would be given the land of Egypt, Ezekiel
29:17-20. Reaffirmed at a different time of the
7th day, Ezekiel 30:20-26.
1 God ordains a
bullock to be sacrificed and the Temple to be
cleansed, Ezekiel 45:18-19. Also to be done on
the first day of the seventh month, verse 20.
1 Ezra decides to
leave Babylon for Jerusalem with the intent of
seeking God's law, doing it, and teaching God's
statutes and judgments to Israel, Ezra 7:6-10.
Departs on 12th day, Ezra 8:31.
1 Waters dried up
from the Flood almost a year after rains began,
Genesis 8:13.
10 Passover lamb
kept up until the 14th day, Exodus 12:3-6.
13 Haman's death
sentence against the Jews was posted in the
kingdom of Persia, Esther 3:12-13.
14 Passover
observed beginning of 14th (evening), Exodus 12,
Leviticus 23:5.
15 Feast of
Unleavened Bread, first day Holy day, Leviticus
23:6-8.
21 Last Holy Day
of Feast of Unleavened Bread
24 Daniel had been
fasting for three weeks, is given understanding
by an angel, Daniel 10:2-4.
X Israel came into
desert of Zin, abode in Kadesh; Miriam died
there, Numbers 20:1.
X Nehemiah asks
Artaxerxes to allow him to rebuild Jerusalem,
Nehemiah 2:1.
Second
Month
1 Eternal spoke to
Moses in wilderness of Sinai on second year
after they were come out of Egypt, Numbers 1:1.
All Israel from twenty years old assembled
together, verse 18.
2 Solomon begins
to build the Temple in the fourth year of his
reign, II Chronicles 3:2.
14 Second
Passover, Numbers 9:9-14; II Chronicles 30:1-5,
15.
15 Feast of
Unleavened Bread kept in second month by
Hezekiah, II Chronicles 30:13, 21-23.
21 Last day of
Feast of Unleavened Bread of Hezekiah in the
Second Month.
17 Fountains of
deep broken up, 40 days of rain begin the
Noachian Flood, Genesis 7:11.
20 Cloud taken up,
Israel begins journeying from Sinai in the
second year of the Exodus, Numbers 10:11.
27 God told Noah
to go forth out of the ark, Genesis 8:14.
X Construction of
Solomon's temple began, I Kings 6:1, 37.
X Foundations of
the temple laid by Zerubbabel, Joshua and others
returned from captivity, Ezra 3:8-13.
Third
Month
1 Again, God gives
Ezekiel a prophecy as to Egypt's fall, but that
their conquerors the Assyrians will fall
likewise, Ezekiel 31:1-18.
23 Haman, enemy of
the Jews, hanged. King of Persia's letter went
out allowing Jews to defend themselves against
their enemies on Adar 13. Mordecai advanced,
Esther 8:1-17.
X Pentecost, a
Holy Day, always falls on second day of the
week, can be on 7th, 9th, 11th, or 13th of third
month.
X Asa and other
faithful of Israel enter into a covenant with
God, II Chronicles 15:10, 12.
Fourth
Month
5 God begins to
work through Ezekiel, gives him visions and
prophecies, Ezekiel 1:1-2.
9 Besieged by King
Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, there was sore famine
in Jerusalem, and the city was broken up about
586 B.C., Jeremiah 39:2; 52:6-7; II Kings 25:3.
Jews remembered this horrifying event by
commemorating it with a fast, Zechariah 8:19.
Fifth
Month
1 Ezra arrives in
Jerusalem from Babylon, Ezra 7:6-10.
1 Aaron died on
Mount Hor in the fortieth year of Israel's
wandering, Numbers 33:38. Israel mourned for
thirty days, Numbers 20:28-29.
7 Babylonian army
burns the Jerusalem temple, King's palace, and
all the houses of Jerusalem, takes most of the
rest of Judah captive, Jeremiah 1:3; 52:12-16;
and II Kings 25:8-12. Jews commemorated this sad
event with a fast, Zechariah 8:19 on tenth day.
God was wrathful with their corrupted manner of
fasting, Zechariah 7:1-13.
10 Certain elders
of Israel come to inquire of the Eternal before
Ezekiel. He is given a message from God that the
reason they are in captivity is that they have
polluted God's Sabbaths, Ezekiel 20:1-49.
Sixth
Month
1 God begins to
work through Haggai the prophet, Haggai 1:1.
5 Ezekiel is given
a vision from God, sees several abominations
being committed by God's people, Ezekiel 8.
24 The Eternal
stirs up the spirit of Zerubbabel, Joshua and
the remnant of the people to do the work of the
building of God's House, Haggai 1:14-15.
-
Rebuilt wall
of Jerusalem finished, Nehemiah 6:15-16.
-
Seventh Month
1 Day of
Trumpets, a New Moon and a Holy Day.
9 At the end
of this day, Atonement fast begins,
Leviticus 23:32.
10 Day of
Atonement, a fast, and a High Holy Day.
10 (Implied)
Ezekiel given a vision of the rebuilt
Millennial Temple at Jerusalem, Ezekiel
40:1and following -- implication is that
"the beginning of the year" means the civil
year.
17 Noah's ark
rested on mountains of Ararat, Genesis 8:4.
15 (through
21) Feast of Tabernacles, first day is a
Holy Day.
21 Prophecy of
Haggai, Haggai 2:1-9.
22 Last Great
Day, a Holy Day.
23 Completion
of dedication of Solomon's Temple, II
Chronicles 7:9-10.
24 After
reinstitution of Feast of Tabernacles at the
return from Babylonian captivity, a fast
observed, God's Law read, special services
held, Nehemiah 9:1-3.
X Ishmael of
the royal seed kills Gedaliah, the ruler of
Judah appointed by King Nebuchadnezzar, and
flees to Egypt in fear of the Chaldeans, II
Kings 25:25, Jeremiah 41:1-3.
Eighth
Month
15 King
Jeroboam of Northern Israel institutes
counterfeit "Feast of Tabernacles," I Kings
12:32,33.
X God began to
work through the prophet Zechariah,
Zechariah 1:1.
X Solomon's
temple done, I Kings 6:38.
Ninth
Month
4 Word of
Eternal came to Zechariah, told him that the
fasts of the fifth and seventh months were
not done to God, as the people would not
heed God's prophets, Zechariah 7:1-13.
20 Jews and
Benjamites from captivity, gathered together
at Jerusalem and told by Ezra to separate
from strange wives who were of a different
race and religion, Ezra 10:9-11.
24 Word of
Eternal came twice to Haggai that God's
people were unclean and that God would shake
the heavens and the earth, Haggai 2:10-23.
25 Beginning
of eight day Feast of Dedication, or
Hannukah, John 10:22.
X A fast was
proclaimed in Judah as a result of reading
Jeremiah's prophecy, but King Jehoiakim
burns the scroll, Jeremiah 36:9, 22. The
ninth month is in winter.
X Nehemiah,
the Persian King's Jewish cupbearer, learns
of the lamentable state of Jerusalem and his
fellow Jews, Nehemiah 1:1-3, 11. Chisleu
is an alternate spelling of Kislev,
the ninth month.
Tenth
Month
1 Waters from
Flood had receded until tops of mountains
were seen, Genesis 8:5.
1 Ezra and
elders met to put away strange wives, Ezra
10:16-17.
5 Ezekiel was
struck dumb by God until an escapee from
Jerusalem informed him the city was smitten.
God gave him a message as to why this event
happened: they heard God's words, but did
them not, Ezekiel 33:21-33.
10 King
Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon began siege of
Jerusalem, about 588 B.C., Jeremiah 39:1,
52:4, II Kings 25:1. Remembered by Jews in a
annual fast, Zechariah 8:19. Ezekiel given a
message from God about the sins which caused
this event, Ezekiel 24:1-27.
12 God's
prophecy concerning Egypt was given to
Ezekiel, 29:1-16.
Eleventh Month
1 In the 40th
year, Moses spoke to the children of Israel
the words of the Eternal, Deuteronomy 1:3.
-
God spoke to
Zechariah in a vision, Zechariah 1:7.
Twelfth
Month
1 (15) God told
Ezekiel to lament for the fall of Egypt, Ezekiel
32:1, 17.
3 Rebuilt Temple
finished, Ezra 6:15.
13 Publishing of
Haman's death sentence upon all the Jews in
captivity, Esther 3:10-13.
14 (& 15)
Purim, celebration of Jews' deliverance
from Haman's death decree, Esther 9:1-32.
25 (27) Evil-merodack,
King of Babylon, released former King Jehoiachin
of Judah from prison and gave him a daily
allowance for the rest of his life, II Kings
25:27-30; Jeremiah 52:31-34.
Thirteeth Month
No recorded events
in thirteenth month.