|
Biblical Dates for Messiah's
Conception and Birth
I. The Conception of
Yochanan (John the Baptist) - Luke 1:5-25
When the angel, Gavri-El (Gabriel), appeared
to Zachar'yah (Zacharias) as he was ministering
in the Temple, it was during the ministration of
Abiyah (Abia). This order of priests ministered
in the Temple the eighth week of the Hebrew year
according to the ordinance of 1 Chronicles 24:10
(and according to the Talmud). The eighth week
transverses the last week of the second Hebrew
month of Iyar and the first week of the third
Hebrew month of Sivan, which culminates at
Shavuot (Pentecost). This is the anchor point
for discovering the exact time of Messiah
Yeshua's birth.
The angel promised Zachar'yah that his prayer
had been answered, and when he went home to his
wife Elisheva (Elizabeth) she conceived, it
seems almost immediately.
This puts the conception of Yochanan (John
the Baptist) very near the time of Shavuot, the
Feast of Pentecost, in the second week of the
month of Sivan, the third Hebrew month.
II. The Conception of Yeshua
(Jesus) - Luke 1:26-55
Then, at the close of the sixth month of
Elisheva' s pregnancy the angel Gavri-El
appeared to Mara (Mary). Gavri-El told Mara
about Elisheva, saying "she who was called
barren is six months pregnant," This would be
the last of the ninth Hebrew month called Kislev
at the time of Chanukah. There are 27 weeks
weeks between the end of discourse of Abiyah and
the start of Chanukah (Dedication), which is
celebrated eight days, from Kislev 25 to Tevet
2.
Mara accepts the word of the angel concerning
the conception of Messiah in her, and she
immediately rushes from Natseret (Nazareth) to
the home of Elisheva and Zachar'yah in the
Judean mountains close to Yerushalayim, about a
three days journey from Natseret. Mara was
probably going there to celebrate Chanukah and
to help Elisheva with her pregnancy, as well as
to talk to Elisheva about the angel's
visitation.
Upon Mara's greeting to Elisheva, Elisheva
responds to Mara, calling her "the mother of my
LORD". This demonstrates that Mara was already
pregnant with Yeshua.
Thus, Yeshua was conceived at Chanukah, the
Festival of Lights, for He is the Light of the
World.
Sometimes the time of Chanukah falls close to
Christmas. The apostate Roman church of medieval
times combined the pagan winter solstice in late
December with the 25th of Kislev (Chanukah) to
create Christmas (Christ's Mass) on December 25.
Supposedly, this was to celebrate Christ's
birth.
Yeshua is shown celebrating Chanukah in John
10:22,23. It is at this celebration that He
declares "I and My Father are One" [John 10:30],
which testifies to His Divine origin in His
conception. It also reinforces Chanukah as the
time of His conception.
Historically, then, it is more accurate to
celebrate Yeshua entering the world through
conception at Chanukah rather than to celebrate
His birth at Christmas.
As we shall show, Christmas is not the
birthday of Christ. (In fact, Christmas is an
invention resulting from religious compromise
with pagan tradition. Christmas only has harmony
with the truth, in that it falls approximately
at the time of year when Yeshua was conceived by
the Holy Spirit.)
IlI.The Birth of Yochanan (John
the Baptist) - Luke 1:56-80
Mara stayed with Elisheva for three months,
which was until the birth of Yochanan. Since a
full pregnancy term is 41 weeks, and 27 weeks
makes up the first six months (two trimesters),
which is exactly the time from the discourse of
Abiyah to Chanukah, that leaves 14 weeks to
accomplish the last trimester and bring the
pregnancy to full term.
There are exactly 14 weeks from Chanukah to
Passover (Nisan 14-22). Therefore, John the
Baptist was born at Passover. He was circumcised
on the eighth day, which would be the last day
of Passover/Feast of Unleavened Bread. Gavri-EI
had said that John would "go forth" in the
strength and power of Elijah [Luke 1:17]. Jewish
teaching was that Elijah would come again at
Passover (this is still a tradition of Judaism
today).
IV.The Birth of Yeshua (Jesus
Christ) - Luke 2
Nisan, when Yochanan was born, is the first
month of the Hebrew year. As we have shown, Mara
conceived six months after Elisheva conceived,
which means Yeshua's birth would have to come
six months after John's birth, during the
seventh Hebrew month of Tishri.
Since we know that John was born at
Passover/Feast of Unleavened Bread, we learn the
time of Yeshua's birth by counting six Hebrew
months from Passover. The Feast of Unleavened
Bread begins on Nisan 15 and six months later
Tabernacles begins on Tishri 15.
Therefore, Yeshua was born on the first day
of Sukkot (Feast of Tabernacles).
The first day of Tabernacles is a Sabbath
rest, so it fits that Yosef and Mara planned
their journey to Beit-Lechem (Bethlehem) so they
would finish their journey before the festival
Sabbath. They found lodging just in time.
Concerning the Feast of Tabernacles, the LORD
commanded that Israel should observe it eight
days. They were to build temporary dwellings
called a sukkah and dwell in them [Leviticus
23:34-43]. These sukkahs were erected to house
families with some bare comforts and food for
the eight days. Food was placed in a stall or a
crib for storage in the tabernacle. The King
James Bible calls this food crib a manger.
Yeshua was not born in a barn, but rather in
a temporary tabernacle which had been built for
the celebration. He was placed in a "manger",
demonstrating in a type that He is the Bread of
Life from heaven.
The eighth day, Yeshua was circumcised
according to the scriptural command [Luke 2:21].
For a male, this is what accomplishes a full
Hebrew birth. The Feast of Tabernacles is for
exactly eight days. The first and last days are
both holy Sabbaths. Yeshua was born on the first
day, a holy Sabbath, and circumcised on the
eighth day, a holy Sabbath.
Evidently, GOD intended this entire Feast of
Tabernacles to be set aside in order to
accomplish and celebrate Yeshua's birth into the
world.
Note that GOD provided two holy feasts that
lasted eight days, Passover/Unleavened Bread and
the Feast of Tabernacles. John the Baptist, the
forerunner of Messiah, was born and circumcised
in the eight days of the first, then six month
later Yeshua, the Messiah, was born and
circumcised the eight days of the second. John
came in the first month of the year and Yeshua
came in the seventh month. In ministry, John
introduced the way through Messiah and then
Yeshua perfected it, even as the first and
seventh months signify.
V. Conclusion
In my opinion, this chronology provides us
with the exact day of Yeshua's birth, Tishri 15,
according to the Hebrew calendar. The Hebrew
calendar is kept updated to this modern day, and
every year the Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot) is
absolutely set from Tishri 15 to Tishri 22.
Because the Hebrew calendar is based on the
course of the Moon (Lunar) and the modern
calendar is based on the course of the Sun
(Solar), the two move in relation to each other.
This means the Feast of Tabernacles will always
occur somewhere between mid-September and
mid-October, but not on the exact same Gregorian
dates every year. For instance, in 1995 the
Feast of Tabernacles was October 9-October 17,
but in 1996 the Feast of Tabernacles was
September 28-October 5. While this is initially
confusing to the unlearned mind, a combination
Gregorian/Hebraic calendar will easily clarify
how the dates relate. Many local funeral homes
provide free Hebrew calendars each year showing
the modern dates for the holy Feast Days (ask
for a Jewish calendar).
It may help you to understand the seeming
movement of Yeshua's birthday by looking at your
own birthday. Even though your birthday might
keep the same number year after year, the day of
the week it falls on changes. In like manner,
Yeshua's birthday is on the same Hebraic
calendar number each year, Tishri 15, but in
relation to the Gregorian calendar it changes.
However, you can plan for His birthday to always
occur sometime between the latter part of
September and the early part of October.
The Feast of Tabernacles is a most important
comemoration. Zechariah 14:16,17 tells us that
one day all nations will be required by law to
honor this feast. For what greater reason, than
it is the birthday of the King of Kings! Why
should we delay?
Our hope and prayer is that the Ekklesia will
return to the roots of her faith and learn to
restore the fallen foundations. May we all work
to overcome the influence of pagan customs in
our celebrations and become separate from this
world as a holy people before our holy G0D.
Copyright © 1994 - 2007 by David M. Hargis
and MBI. All rights reserved

|