Is
Passover Celebrated on Wrong Night? Sanhedrin’s New Moon Witness Could Fix That By Adam Eliyahu Berkowitz March 29, 2017, 12:30 pm
I am posting this article to show that the nation of Israel is considering realigning the sighting of the new moon which begins each Biblical month. At present the calendar is not in coordination with the phase of the moon. I believe that the Biblical calendar will be restored at the end of this present age prior to the return of Yeshua and the establishment of the Millennial Kingdom. This article is proof that the Biblical calendar will be in full operation at Yeshua's second coming. This has great prophetic implications.
“Blow the horn at the
new moon, at the full moon for our feast-day. For it is a statute for Yisrael,
an ordinance of the God of Yaakov.” Psalms 81:4-5 (The Israel Bible™)
On Wednesday evening, one of the most
important Torah commandments is not going to take place, and as a
result, in two weeks, the world’s Jews will celebrate Passover on the wrong
night. The nascent Sanhedrin is attempting to begin fixing this problem. The Sanhedrin will meet on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem on Wednesday as the sun
sets to observe the new moon. This event is meant as a small first step towards
reinstating the important mitzvah (Torah commandment) of establishing
the calendar via witnesses reporting to a Sanhedrin.
“The beginning of our redemption from Egypt began with
this,” Rabbi Hillel Weiss, spokesman for the Sanhedrin, told Breaking Israel
News. “Reinstating the new month and witnesses appearing before the Sanhedrin
will be the true beginning of this redemption. The new moon is God sending us a
sign of new beginnings, and for us to establish Pesach (Passover) in its time.” In Temple times, the
new month was a festival, marked by the blowing of the shofar and special
sacrifices. Messengers were sent out and a series of mountaintop pyres lit to
spread the word to outlying communities.
The Temple festivities were part of the
observance, but declaring the new month had practical implications for setting
the calendar. The Jewish calendar is based on the lunar cycle and by setting it
according to eyewitness observance of the new moon, the Biblical Sanhedrin
ensured that Jews observed the holidays in their proper time.
Today’s problem, Rabbi Weiss explained,
is that the true date of the appearance of the moon no longer synchronizes with
the beginning of the month as it appears on the calendar. He pointed to the current month of Nisan as an example. According to the Jewish
calendar, the month began on Monday evening. But the first sliver of the new
moon which should appear on Rosh Chodesh (the first day of the new month) will
not actually be visible until Wednesday evening.
“It is a national imperative to
re-establish this mitzvah,” Rabbi Weiss said. “All of the mitzvot
pertaining to the holidays emanate from this one act.”
The discrepancy occurs regularly
because the destruction of the Second Temple in 70 CE led to the dissolution of
the Sanhedrin. Without the Sanhedrin to hear testimonies, it was no longer
possible to determine the new month by witnessing.
The modern Jewish calendar was set according to a 19-year cycle
with an additional month added seven times during that cycle. Even with this
correction, the Hebrew calendar falls behind the actual lunar cycle at the rate
of one day every 216 years. As a result, the established calendar is now out of
sync with the lunar cycles. Witnessing the new month is an important mitzvah
and establishing correct times for the holidays is of utmost importance. But it
is especially auspicious to witness the month now, as the Bible counts Nisan as
the first month.
This month shall be
unto you the beginning of months; it shall be the first month of the year to
you. Exodus 12:2
“Israel is a nation, and this mitzvah
is what made us a nation,” Rabbi Weiss told Breaking Israel News, noting
that the word ‘you’ in the verse is plural. “Today, every Jew looks at the
calendar on his wall and his entire framework of time is a personal issue.
Time, the calendar, is the most important element that brings us together as
the Jewish nation.”
“The Nation of Israel needs to
re-establish this mitzvah in its completeness,” the rabbi asserted. “But this
can only happen when the people acknowledge a Sanhedrin to accept the
witnesses’ account of the new moon. When this happens, when there is a
Sanhedrin sitting in Jerusalem, the impact will be perceived by an global
increase in serving God.”
The rabbi quoted the Prophet Isaiah as
an explanation.
And many peoples
shall go and say: ‘Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of Hashem, to the
house of the God of Yaakov; and He will teach us of His ways, and
we will walk in His paths.’ For out of Tzion shall go forth the law, and the word
of Hashem from Yerushalayim. Isaiah 2:3
However, Rabbi Weiss made one important
disclaimer. “Even though the calendar needs to be adjusted, unity is of the
utmost importance,” the rabbi said. “Jews are required to adhere to the
calendar accepted by the entire nation. “Until a formal Sanhedrin is accepted
by the nation, Jews must use the established calendar and observe the holidays
on the days mandated by rabbinic authorities,” he concluded.
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