This is a new study (and not perfect/complete), since I no longer observe the Luni-Solar Calendar.

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Abib 14 Evening: Passover meal
- famous "Last Supper" (Luke 22:15,16)
- at midnight: the Israelites were Passed over by the angel of death (Exodus 12:33)
- Judas betrayed the Messiah with a kiss
- after midnight: the Pharaoh drove the Israelites out of Egypt (Exodus 12:33)
- The Messiah in prison, questioned by the Pharisees, mocked
- The sudden exodus of the Israelites is represented by the removing of leaven (Exodus 12:15)
- So that, by the morning of Abib 15, Day 1 of the Unleavened Bread, there is no more leaven.
- Which signifies the first day the Israelites were out of Egypt, and without any leaven with them, as they were rushed to leave, and only brought with them necessities.

Abib 15 Day:
- Day 1 of Unleavened Bread
- A high sabbath (no work)
- Trial of the Messiah in front of Pilate
- The Pharisees successfuly urged the people to choose Barabas.
- 09:00, the Messiah was crucified
- 15:00, the Messiah died
- The wall of the Holy of Holies broke in half.

Abib 15 Evening
- Night 1 of death
Abib 16 Day
- Day 2 of Unleavened Bread
- Day 1 of death
Abib 16 Evening
- Night 2 of deaeth
Abib 17 Day
- Day 3 of Unleavened Bread
- Day 2 of death
Abib 17 Evening
- Night 3 of death
Abib 18 Day
- Day 4 of Unleavened Bread
- Day 3 - resurrection
- On the 3rd day, He rose.
- It was early morning of Weekly Sabbath.
- The Messiah is the Master of the Sabbath!
Abib 19 Day
- Day 5 of Unleavened Bread
- First Day of the Week
Abib 20 Day
- Day 6 of Unleavened Bread
Abib 21 Day
- Day 7 of Unleavened Bread
- A high sabbath (no work)
Abib 21 Evening
- Feast of Unleavened Bread ends

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Conversion to Gregorian calendar
* Abib 14 falls on April 04, 2023
- Passover meal
* Abib 15 falls on April 05, 2023
- Day 1 of Unleavened Bread
- A high sabbath (no work)
- 09:00 crucifixion
- 15:00 death
* Abib 18 falls on April 08, 2023
- Weekly Sabbath
- 3rd day: Resurrection Day
* Abib 21 falls on April 11, 2023
- Day of Unleavened Bread
- A high sabbath (no work)

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The Messiah rose from the dead, the first to do so, in the beginning of the Weekly Sabbath.

He did not rise on the 1st Day of the Week. He rose on the 7th Day of the Week. Which happened to be the 3rd day after he died and was buried.

Bonus: The Messiah did not go to Hell. This was a misunderstanding of the Text. But, this is a topic for another day.

#ZadokCalendar #PriestlyCalendar #QumranCalendar #ScripturalCalendar #EnochCalendar #DSSCalendar #BiblicalCalendar #Torah #TorahCalendar

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If you believe in the Bible, then be like the Bereans. Do not be afraid to change your beliefs. The only dogma is the Scripture, not your personal beliefs, not your church's statements.

As we are all learning and journeying to re-discover the truth, it is without question that our current understanding is incomplete, and thus, updating ourselves is the only way forward.

#Shabbat Shalom!

Qumran Calendars and the Creation: A Study of 4QcryptA Lunisolar Calendar (4Q317): Journal of Ancient Judaism: Vol 4, No 1

Abstract This paper re-examines 4QcryptA Lunisolar Calendar (4Q317), a scroll from Qumran in an esoteric Hebrew script with many emendations that aligns the moon’s daily waxing and waning to a 364-day calendar. It seeks to ascertain whether the calendar may be exegetically related to the Creation and also discusses the text’s arithmetical relationships with the cycles of the priestly courses from Qumran, possible intertextual allusions to other lunar calendars in the Dead Sea Scrolls (4QDaily Prayers [4Q503], 4QAstronomical Enocha–bar [4Q208–4Q209]), biblical passages, and parallels with another Mesopotamian calendar text. The first transcription of the largest fragments using a Cryptic A font is here published with a commentary (in the Appendix), focusing on the text’s unusual scribal features. A reconsideration of the calendar’s structure with a new arrangement of its dates is presented.

Journal of Ancient Judaism
The Development of the Priestly Calendars (I): The Daily Sacrifice and the Sabbath on JSTOR

Alan Cooper, Bernard R. Goldstein, The Development of the Priestly Calendars (I): The Daily Sacrifice and the Sabbath, Hebrew Union College Annual, Vol. 74 (2003), pp. 1-20