The Case for the Biblical Day Starting at Sunrise instead of Traditional Sunset

in #christianity10 months ago (edited)

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Most people who are familiar with Christianity or Judaism hold the belief that the “calendar day” starts at sunset. It is through this lens that they interpret the scriptures and attempt to reconstruct history. If this understanding is completely wrong, then it would have a profound impact that ripples through our understanding of what year Yeshua died and when He will return. Furthermore, it would expose the corruptness of the modern Rabbinic Judaism which descended from the Pharisees of Yeshua’s day.

I have a passion for the truth and hate logical contradictions. I previously abandoned my faith in our Creator because of the apparent abundance contradictions, only to find even more contradictions in the faith of “official” science. I am now seeking to resolve the apparent contradictions in the Bible rather than dismiss it.

In this article I will compare the arguments put forth by both sides of the debate on sunrise vs sunset to that you can see which one is more reasonable and whether or not we have inherited falsehoods from our fathers in which there is no profit. If you have a better argument for sunset then I would like to see it so that it can be addressed.

Exodus 12 - Passover Instructions

YHVH said to Moses... "Take care of the lambs until the fourteenth day of the same month, when all the members of the community of Israel must slaughter them between noon and sunset... that same night they are to eat the meat... do not leave any of it until morning. ... on that same night I will pass through Egypt and strike down every firstborn". -- Exodus 12

Sunrise Interpretation

YHVH, in a direct quote, clearly considers the night after slaughtering the Passover lamb to be the same day as the fourteenth day of the month. There is actually a Hebrew word in the original text that corresponds to the word same and that same word was used in the passage to mean the 14th day of the same month as the 10th day previously referenced.

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Sunset Interpretation

YHVH is using imprecise "common vernacular" that contradicts the "technical" definition of the day because people commonly associate the night with the day before. The technical definition of a day is derived from other passages and evidence from tradition.

Leviticus 23:26 - The Day of Atonement Instructions

YHVH said to Moses, "The tenth day of this seventh month is the Day of Atonement. Hold a sacred assembly and deny yourselves, and present a food offering to YHVH... It is a day of sabbath rest for you, and you must deny yourselves from the evening of the ninth day of the month until the following evening you are to observe your sabbath" -- Leviticus 23:26-32

Sunrise Interpretation

YHVH, in a direct quote, references the evening of the 9th day to signal the start of a 24 hour fast that ends on the following evening (10th day). There is no ambiguity over what calendar day the evening falls on. These instructions were given this way because the Day of Atonement is a fast and normal Sabbaths start at sunrise and end at sunset. Eating breakfast before sunrise would have defeated the spirit of the fast.

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Sunset Interpretation

While the evening is associated with the start of the day, there can be some ambiguity on which calendar day a sunset is associated with. This is similar to modern ambiguity of which calendar day midnight falls on. YHVH mentioned the evening of the 9th day because the technically incorrect common vernacular associated an evening with the daylight before it.

Imagine this text read "the day of atonement will be on the 10th day of the month, from midnight on the 9th day until the following midnight." Even though, technically, 12:00AM (aka midnight) on the 9th day is 24 hours before the start of the 10th day, the word choice by YHVH was inline with common misunderstandings of the day.

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Yeshua and Sign of Jonah

Just as Jonah was in the stomach of the sea creature for three days and three nights, so the Son of Man will be in the heart of the earth for three days and three nights. - Matthew 12:40

We know Yeshua died on the 14th day and rose before sunrise on the 1st day of the week. The association of days and nights with the calendar has profound consequences on how we understanding the timing of Yeshua's resurrection and is return.

Sunrise Interpretation

Yeshua died (D) on the 6th day of the week (currently thought of as Friday) and rose (R) just before sunrise on the 1st day of the week. This allowed Joseph (J) to ask Pilot for the body and get it in the tomb before the Sabbath and gave the women time to buy spices (BS) during the daylight hours on the 1st day after the Sabbath. This gives us three days and three nights using inclusive reckoning that was utilized at the time. Yeshua must have died in 27 AD or 30 AD and the calendar month started with the first sighting of the crescent moon or a Lunar Sabbath calendar may have been in use if evidence shows he died in a different year.

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Sunset Interpretation

Yeshua died (D) on the 5th day (Thursday) and rose (R) just before sunrise on the 1st day (Sunday). The women prepared spices (PS) before the Sabbath, but Joseph (J) had to move the body, wrap it, place it in the tomb, and move the heavy rock over it during the night of the High Sabbath. While this kind of "work" might offend Pharisees of the day, Yeshua would likely classify it as pulling your Ox out of the ditch. After sunset on Saturday, the women bought spices which they brought to the tomb early the next morning. This assumes the markets for spices would open up at sunset and the women would be out after dark. This gives three days and three nights. Yeshua must have died in 27 AD, 30 AD or 34 AD and the Rabbinic Jews must be wrong about the month starting at the first visible crescent. Furthermore, those that hold astrological conjunction as the start of the month are also wrong. The calendar month must start on the first day after the astrological conjunction regardless of whether the moon is visible or not. If evidence shows Yeshua rose in 28, 29, 31, or 32 AD then sunset interpretation is invalid.

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There are many prominent ministries (119 ministries, Rood Awakening) that have adopted an alternative means of counting only the days He was in the tomb. This website does a good job debunking the Wednesday interpretation which has Him rising after the 3rd day instead of on the 3rd day.

Manna and Quail

That evening quail came and covered the camp, and in the morning there was a layer of dew around the camp. When the dew was gone, thin flakes like frost on the ground appeared on the desert floor. ... On the sixth day, they gathered twice as much[manna]—two Omers for each person—and the leaders of the community came and reported this to Moses. He said to them, “This is what the Lord commanded: ‘Tomorrow is to be a day of sabbath rest, a holy sabbath to the Lord. So bake what you want to bake and boil what you want to boil. Save whatever is left and keep it until morning.’” -- Exodus 16:22-23

Sunrise Interpretation

Quail is gathered in the evening, and on the 6th day, after they had gathered twice as much manna, Moses told them to bake/boil it and save it for the next day. The relevant portion is that he also told them to boil quail, implying that quail will be coming that night and that the evening of the 6th day follows the daylight of the 6th day. There was no need to deliver 2x quail on any night because the Sabbath only applies during daylight hours.

Sunset Interpretation

They must have boiled the quail gathered the night before even though they didn't know they needed to gather twice as much. The fact that the Bible doesn't mention 2x quail doesn't mean it didn't happen.

Scripture Verses that Imply Day before Night

All the days of the earth, seed-time and harvest shall never cease, cold and heat, summer and winter, and DAY and NIGHT shall not change their order nor cease forever. Jubilees 6:4-5

While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease. - Genesis 8:22

These verses are fairly clear, but sunrise skeptics will argue that Jubilees isn't scripture and therefore cannot be trusted. When looking at a similar verse in Genesis they will claim that the order of the words is imprecise common vernacular and not technically accurate based upon definitions elsewhere and that there are also verses that refer to "night and day". More on this below.

Miscellaneous Interpretation Comparison

SunriseSunset
Sabbath begins at SunriseSabbath begins at sunset
Sabbath Ends at SunsetSabbath ends at Sunset
Nehemiah closes gates earlier than necessaryNehemiah closes gates just in time
tomorrow (to morning) means next daytomorrow means next daylight
31 references to "day and night"13 references to "night and day"
3 whole/complete and 1 means unity13 is unlucky, evil, wickedness
First Sabbath on 7th day after leaving EgyptFirst Sabbath day after they leave
Unclean until evening is end of temple dayUnclean until evening is end of calendar day
Evening to Evening means 24 hoursEvening to Evening is one Day
Evening to Morning means NightEvening to Morning is one Day

End at the Beginning - The "Technical Definition"

In the beginning Elohim created the heavens and the earth. And the earth was a formless and desolate emptiness, and darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of Elohim was hovering over the surface of the waters. Then Elohim said, “Let there be light”; and there was light. Elohim saw that the light was good; and Elohim separated the light from the darkness. Elohim called the light “day,” and the darkness He called “night.” And there was evening and there was morning, one day. - Genesis 1

Sunset Interpretation

In the beginning there was darkness (Night) and then Elohim said "Let there be light" which created the Day; furthermore, the phrase "and there was evening and there was morning Nth day"   is repeated six times to drive home the point that evening comes before morning and that this comprises a day.

The initial darkness described was presumably an eternity, but Elohim waited for 12 hours after the start of the "technical day" to say "Let there be light."  There could be no darkness during the part of the official daylight on the first day. This would imply that Elohim said "Let there be" 3 seconds before the technical sunrise so that "light" could be spoken exactly on sunrise even though the Earth and Sun wouldn't be created for several more days.

Sunrise Interpretation

The opening verse is an introduction to what will happen, creating the heavens and earth, but the heavens and earth are not created and named until days 3 and 4. The next verse establishes that there was nothing, darkness being the absent of light. However, "In the beginning Elohim" combined with "Elohim is light and in Him there is no darkness" from 1 John 1:5 establishes that Light created the heavens and the earth and that it came before darkness. Furthermore, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with Elohim, and the Word was Elohim." combined with the first spoken words "Let there be light" makes a strong case for Light entering the picture before darkness.

That said, each of the 6 daylights where creation occurs is followed by an evening and morning. Morning ends at sunrise and evening begins at sunset. So the time period from evening to morning defines a single Night and no part of the daylight. This means that sunset promoters are assigning the definition of the Night to the meaning of Day.

After going through all the possible interpretations of Genesis 1, I came to the conclusion that while I can see more ways to interpret it in favor of sunrise than sunset, I can also see an interpretation for sunset. Given that reasonable men can have different conclusions about the implications of Genesis 1 and that the passage is not entirely incompatible with either sunrise or sunset; I cannot see Genesis 1 as definitively defining a "technical" day.

Conclusion

I think there is incontrovertible evidence straight from the mouth of YHVH that He defines a calendar day as daylight followed by evening through morning and ending at sunrise. The rationalizations and appeal to "Tradition!" of the Pharisees is simply not compelling.

The implications of this conclusion are far reaching and I will explore them in future posts.

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While it may not be palatable, the best understanding potential suggests Torah was created ~700BC by Hezekiah as a means of welding a dozen tribes of desert raiders into a force capable of conquering empires. While it is impossible to well understand the extant metaphysical conception of the world common to those tribes, archaeological finds suggest some degree of Canaanite theology, and Torah incorporates awareness of theological traditions stemming from earlier civilizations, from Sumer to Egypt, at least. Abundant importation of earlier mythos' into Genesis strongly disputes the ascription of any of it to direct utterance of the creator of the universe to some Abrahamic prophet. Substantial later additions, such as the Book of Daniel, the New Testament, and Islam, only further support such rational interpretation.

Perhaps attempting to understand how consciousness arises might better reward your intellectual prowess, by fundamentally supporting understanding of our existence and relationship to the author of that edda. One of the marvelous things about us is our ability to recognize patterns, and the importation of successful sociological foundations into Judaism is not countermanded by the continual Rabbinic amendment in the Talmud, but can be better understood in that context, IMHO.

However, recognizing the sociological value of genetic devices need not be limited to any particular mythos, as Joseph Campbell discussed in 'Transformations of Myth Through Time', and considering matters via the scientific method does not accept any dogma, not even of the materialistic view promulgated as scientism. The reason with which you seek understanding recommends a broader consideration of our state of being, including whether confining consideration to discussions internal to a theology imported from prior mechanisms is superable, as it eventually will lead to deprecating novelty underlying the Islamic worldview, whereby we are required to ignore evidence of our eyes and ears to support dogma instead.

If I could more gently suggest your considerations seem confined to the theological format impressed upon you by the time and place of your birth, excluding by default a wealth of geneses ranging from unknown, presumably animistic traditions suggested by archaeological relics tens of millennia old, to Buddhism, and it's many derivations, to Zoroastrianism, and a variety of traditions eventually overwhelmed militarily in Europe only in the 17th Century after the subjugation of Lithuania, and derided as Polytheism, Pagan, or Heathen in the West today, I would. Such constraint fiercely employed by reason ultimately proceeds as you do in the OP, by finding irrational some dogmatic prescriptions that recommend better interpretation.

Schismatism isn't a new phenomenon and I doubt Abrahamic monotheism lacks the one true understanding properly sorting night and day might provide. We undertake one transit per flesh prison, and if yours is replete by such considerations, then you have attained to great success, though the absence of your discussion of quantum consciousness might impoverish rational consideration potentially bettering our human condition more substantively.

Thanks!

My deduction is that a creator must exist and that He has communicated in some manner. Prophecy and miracles are the evidence of His existence outside of time and space.

I’m writing from the perspective and assumption that the Bible is divinely inspired; but that implies it must be internally logically consistent.

There is a lot of evidence that contradicts your claims. However, people believe what they want regardless of the evidence.

Having myself deduced as you have that a creator would communicate to honest seekers of fact, I have learned that humanity, and not just one tribe exclusive of others, has sought guidance. All creation has that same creator, after all. I have a container garden in my yard from which I draw sustenance. I water all the crops and they all bear fruit, not just one of them.

When I read your careful considerations that seemed to lead to another potential schism, that was the thought I had, to bring to your attention a question that can counter the forces seeking to divide us, in the hope your careful considerations might instead improve our understanding of how we are the same. Surely the creator created all of us, and the same consciousness informed our forebears tens of millennia ago, just as it does all humanity today.