Christians who worship on Sunday
base this practice on the belief that Christ arose from the tomb on
Sunday. Jews and Christians who worship on Saturday do so because it is
the seventh day of the week. Both parties base their belief, and thus
their practice, on an assumption. The assumption is that because
the progression of days was not changed at the time the Julian calendar
transitioned to the Gregorian, the modern week is identical to the Biblical week.
Therefore, the “logical conclusion” is that Saturday is indeed the Bible
Sabbath and Sunday is the day on which Christ arose from the grave. The
facts of the Julian calendar itself, however, prove this assumption is
false.
A well-known adage is that those who forget history are doomed to repeat the mistakes of history. Likewise, those who have never learned the facts of calendar history have built an entire belief structure on a faulty foundation: the assumption that weeks have cycled continuously and without interruption ever since Creation. It is of vital importance to all, regardless of their religion, to study the history of the Julian calendar. Assembling the missing puzzle pieces of historical fact reveals when a continuous weekly cycle of seven days became the standard measurement of time – and it was not at Creation.
Julian Calendar Established
The calendar of the Roman Republic was based on lunar phases. Pagan Roman priests, called pontiffs, were responsible for regulating the calendar. Because the pontiffs could also hold political office, it provided opportunity for abuse. Intercalating1an extra month could keep favored politicians in office longer, while not intercalating when necessary could shorten the terms of political opponents.
By the time of Julius Cæsar, months were completely out of alignment with the seasons. Julius Cæsar exercised his right2as pontifex maximus3(high priest) and reformed what had become a cumbersome and inaccurate calendar.4
In the mid-1st century B.C. Julius Cæsar invited Sosigenes, an Alexandrian astronomer, to advise him about the reform of the calendar, and Sosigenes decided that the only practical step was to abandon the lunar calendar altogether. Months must be arranged on a seasonal basis, and a tropical (solar) year was used, as in the Egyptian calendar . . . . 5
Notice that Sosigenes' big innovation was an abandonment of lunar calendation:
The great difficulty facing any [calendar] reformer was that there seemed to be no way of effecting a change that would still allow the months to remain in step with the phases of the Moon and the year with the seasons. It was necessary to make a fundamental break with traditional reckoning to devise an efficient seasonal calendar.6
To bring the new calendar into alignment with the seasons required adding an additional 90 days to the year. This was done in 45 B.C., creating a year of 445 days. "This year of 445 days is commonly called by chronologists the year of confusion; but by Macrobius, more fitly, the last year of confusion."7The first puzzle piece in establishing the truth of the calendar, is to realize that the Julian week of 45 B.C., did not look like the Julian week when Pope Gregory XIII modified it, and thus did not look like the modern Gregorian week of today. This is the first assumption made by both Jews and Christians, regardless of the day on which they worship. 8
The Julian calendar, like the calendar of the Republic before it, originally had an eight-day cycle.
The Roman eight-day week was known as internundinum tempus or "the period between ninth-day affairs." (This term must be understood within the context of the ancient Roman mathematical practice of inclusive counting, whereby the first day of a cycle would also be counted as the last day of the preceding cycle.9)The "ninth-day affair" around which this week revolved was the nundinæ, a periodic market day that was held regularly every eight days. 10
Early Julian calendars were not constructed in grids as are modern calendars, but the dates were listed in columns, with the days of the week designated by the letters A through H.11For example, January started with day "A" and would proceed through the eight days of the week, with the last day of the month being day "E." Unlike the Hebrew calendar, the Roman calendar had a continuous weekly cycle. Because January ended on day "E", February began on day "F". Likewise, February ending on day "A" started March off on day "B":
A k12 Jan F k Feb B k Mar B G C C H D D A E E, etc. B, etc. F, etc.
Following is a reconstruction13of the Fasti Antiates, the only known pre-Julian calendar still in existence14dating from the 60s B.C. found at the site of Nero's villa in Antium.

Fasti Antiates – reconstruction of the only known pre-Julian calendar in existence.
This calendar was painted on plaster with the letter A painted red to indicate the start of the week. The months are arranged in 13 columns. January, on the left, begins on day "A" and ends on day "E". At the bottom of each column are large Roman numerals showing the number of days in that month. The far right hand column is the 13th, intercalary month. Additional letters appear beside the week-day letters. These indicated what sort of business could or could not be conducted on that day.
All examples of Julian fasti, or calendars, date from the time of Augustus 15 (63 B.C. – 14 A.D.) to Tiberius (42 B.C. – 37 A.D.) If the assumption is correct that Saturday is the Bible Sabbath because the weekly cycle was not interrupted at the calendar change from Julian to Gregorian, than this should be easily proven from the early Julian calendars still in existence. An example of a Julian fasti is preserved on these stone fragments and provides the second, confirming piece of the puzzle in establishing the truth of calendar history. The eight-day week is clearly discernible on them verifying that the eight-day week was still in use by the Romans during and immediately following the life of Christ.

It is important to remember that the Biblical week as an individual unit of time defined in Genesis 1, consisted of only seven days: six working days followed by a Sabbath rest on the last day of the week. The eight-day cycle of the Julian calendar was in use at the time of Christ. However, the Israelites would not have kept the seventh-day Sabbath on the eight-day weekly cycle of the Julian calendar. This would have been idolatry to them. Even when the Julian week shortened to seven days, it still did not conform to the weekly cycle of the Biblical week nor did it resemble the modern week in use today.
Seven-day Planetary week
The decline of the eight-day Roman week was caused by two factors: A) the expansion of the Roman Empire16which exposed the Romans to other religions and led, in turn, to B) the rise of the cult of Mithras.17The role Mithraism played in restructuring the Julian week is significant for it was a strong competitor of early Christianity.18
It seems as if some spiritual genius having control over the pagan world had so ordered things that the heathen planetary week should be introduced just at the right time for the most popular Sun cult of all ages to come along and exalt the day of the Sun as a day above and more sacred than all the rest. Surely this was not accidental.19
Under these two factors, the Julian week began a centuries-long evolutionary process that ended in the week as it is known today. The original seven-day planetary week is the third and final piece of the puzzle proving that Saturday is not the Bible Sabbath, nor Sunday the first day of the Biblical week. This transformation took several hundred years. Franz Cumont, widely considered to be a great authority on Mithraism, links the acceptance of the seven-day week by Europeans to the popularity of Mithraism in pagan Rome:
It is not to be doubted that the diffusion of the Iranian [Persian] mysteries has had a considerable part in the general adoption, by the pagans, of the week with the Sunday as a holy day. The names which we employ, unawares, for the other six days, came into use at the same time that Mithraism won its followers in the provinces in the West, and one is not rash in establishing a relation of coincidence between its triumph and that concomitant phenomenon.20
In Astrology and Religion Among the Greeks and Romans, Cumont further emphasizes the pagan origins and recent adoption of a seven-day week with its holy day being Sunday:
"The pre-eminence assigned to the dies Solis [day of the Sun] also certainly contributed to the general recognition of Sunday as a holiday. This is connected with a more important fact, namely, the adoption of the week by all the European nations.21
The immense significance of this for Christians is found in the fact that Sunday cannot be the day on which Christ arose from the dead, because Sunday did not exist in the Julian calendar of Christ's day. Nor can Saturday be the Biblical seventh-day Sabbath because the pagan planetary week originally began on Saturday.
The following drawing of a stick calendar found at the Baths of Titus (constructed A.D. 79 – 81) provides further proof that neither the Biblical Sabbath nor the day of Christ's resurrection can ever be found using the Julian calendar. The center circle contains the 12 signs of the zodiac, corresponding to the 12 months of the year. The Roman numerals in the left and right columns indicate the days of the month. Across the top of the stick calendar appear the seven planetary gods of the pagan Romans.
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| Roman Stick Calendar |
Saturday, (or dies Saturni – the day of Saturn) was the very first day of the week, not the seventh. As the god of agriculture, he can be seen in this preëminent position of importance, holding his symbol, a sickle. Next, on the second day of the pagan planetary week, is seen the sun god with rays of light emanating from his head. Sunday was originally the second day of the planetary week and was known as dies Solis. The third day of the week was dies Lunæ (day of the Moon – Monday). The moon
goddess is shown wearing the horned crescent moon as a diadem on her head. The rest of the gods follow in order: dies Martis (day of Mars); dies Mercurii (day of Mercury); dies Jovis (day of Jupiter); and dies Veneris (day of Venus), the seventh day of the week.22
When the use of the Julian calendar with its recently adopted pagan planetary week spread into northern Europe, the names of the days dies Martis through dies Veneris were replaced by Teutonic gods.23Mars' Day became Tiw's Day (Tuesday); Mercury's Day became Woden's Day (Wednesday); Jupiter's Day became Thor's Day (Thursday); and Venus' Day became Friga's Day (Friday.)24The influence of the pagan astrological day-names is still seen today. Latin-based languages, such as Spanish, retain astrological names for Monday through Friday, with the Christian influence being seen in their words for Sunday (Domingo, or Lord's day) and Saturday (Sabado, or Sabbath.)
According to Rabanus Maurus (A.D. 776-856), archbishop of Mainz, Germany, Pope Sylvester I attempted to rename the days of the planetary week to correspond with the names of the Biblical week: First Day (first feria), Second Day (second feria), etc25. Bede, the "Venerable", (A.D. 672-735), renowned English monk and scholar, also reported Sylvester's attempts to change the pagan names of the days of the week. In De Temporibus, he stated: "But the holy Sylvester ordered them to be called feriæ, calling the first day the ‘Lord's [day]'; imitating the Hebrews,
who named [them] the first of the week, the second of the week, and so on the others."26The astrological names, however, were too deeply ingrained. While the official terminology of the Roman Catholic Church remains Lord's Day, Second Day, Third Day, etc., most countries clung in whole or in part to planetary names for the days.
The astrological influence is obviously even more pronounced around the fringes of the Roman Empire, where Christianity arrived only much later. English, Dutch, Breton, Welsh, and Cornish, which are the only European languages to have preserved to this day the original planetary names of all the seven days of the week, are all spoken in areas that were free of any Christian influence during the first centuries of our era, when the astrological week was spreading throughout the Empire.27
"The ecclesiastical style of naming the week days was adopted by no nation except the Portuguese who alone use the terms Segunda Feria etc."28
The fact that both the Julian calendar and the pagan planetary week have been accepted for use by Christians reveals an amalgamation of Christianity with paganism of which the apostle Paul warned when he wrote:
For the mystery of iniquity doth already work: only he who now letteth 29will let, until he be taken out of the way. And then shall that Wicked be revealed, whom the Lord shall consume with the spirit of his mouth, and shall destroy with the brightness of his coming: Even him, whose coming is after the working of Satan with all power and signs and lying wonders, And with all deceivableness of unrighteousness in them that perish; because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie; That they all might be damned 30who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.31
The pagan planetary week, like the Julian calendar that adopted it, is irreparably pagan. Historical facts reveal that neither the Biblical Sabbath nor the Biblical First Day can be
found using the modern calendar. If it is important to worship on a specific day, than it is also important to know which calendar to use and when the change in calendation occurred. It must always be remembered that when one worships reveals whom one worships: the God of Creation, or the god of this world that is the leader of rebellion against the Creator. Each God/god has His/his own calendar by which to be worshipped. Both Saturday and Sunday (as well as Friday) are pagan worship days.
Which calendar will you use to establish your worship day?
1Intercalation: inserting extra days or months to align the shorter lunar year to the longer solar year. Because intercalation was thought to be "unlucky", during the Second Punic War (218-201 B.C.) the priests hesitated to make changes, thus throwing the calendar slightly off the seasons
2Julius Cæsar had been elected pontifex maximus in 63 B.C. (James Evans, "Calendars and Time Reckoning", The History and Practice of Ancient Astronomy, Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 165.)
3"Pontifex Maximus" is now a title reserved exclusively for the pope. This is very appropriate as the Gregorian calendar now in use is both pagan and papal, being founded upon the pagan Julian calendar and modified by, and named after, a pope.
4In order to declare an intercalation, the pontifex maximus had to be in Rome in February. Because Julius Cæsar was involved in various wars, there had been only one intercalation declared since he took office. In a letter to Atticus, dated February 13, 50 B.C., Cicero complained that he still did not know whether there was to be an intercalation later in the month.
5"The Julian Calendar," Encyclopædia Britannica.
6Ibid., emphasis supplied.
7A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, William Smith LL.D., William Wayte, M.A., George E. Marindin, M.A., eds., London, William Clowes and Sons, Ltd., 1890, Vol. I, p. 344. Digitized by Google.
8This assumption is not shared by scholars. Jews admit that the rabbinical calendar now used is not the calendar of Moses, and Christian scholars acknowledge that the Biblical calendar operated differently. Some also admit that when the seventh-day Sabbath is calculated on the Biblical calendar it will not coincide with Saturday.
9J. P. V. D. Balsdon, Life and Leisure in Ancient Rome, (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1969) p. 59; P. Huvelin, Essai Historique sur le Droit des Marcheés et des Foires (Paris: Aruthur Rousseau, 1897), p. 87; Ovid, Fasti (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1951), p. 6; Alan E. Samuel, Greek and Roman Chronology (Munich: C. H. Beck'sche Verlagbuchhandlung, 1972), p. 154.
10Eviatar Zerubavel, The Seven Day Circle: The History and Meaning of the Week, (University of Chicago Press, 1985), p. 45.
11Zerubavel, op.cit.,158; Balsdon, op.cit., p. 60; Francis H. Colson, The Week, (Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1926), p. 4; W. Warde Fowler, The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (Port Washington, New York: Kennikat Press, 1969), p. 8; P. Huvelin, op.cit., p. 88; Alan E. Samuel, op.cit., pp. 153-154; Ovid, op.cit.; Hutton Webster, Rest Days, (New York: MacMillan) p. 123; W. E. van Wijk, Le Nombre d'Or (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1935), pp. 24-25.
12Kalendæ: the first day of the month.
13Palazzo Massimo Alle Terme, ed. Adriano La Regina, 1998.
14For additional information, see The Calendar of the Roman Republic by A. K. Michels (Princeton, 1957).
15Augustus Cæsar, first Roman Emperor, is mentioned in the Bible. His levy of a tax led Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem just in time for the birth of Christ. (See Luke 2:1.) Because of the Roman method of counting inclusively, leap years were intercalated every three years initially. To reconcile the additional time, Augustus decreed that no years were to be intercalated from 8 B.C. to 8 A.D. The eighth month was renamed August in his honor.
16Zerubavel, op.cit., p. 46; Huvelin, op.cit., pp. 97-98.
17R. L. Odom, Sunday in Roman Paganism, (TEACH Services, Inc., 2003; original copyright: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 1944), p. 157.
18Many of the most important elements of Christianity have a counterpart in Mithraism. Christianity has been called a plagiarized version of Mithraism. Those seeking to discredit Christianity often point to the similarities between the two religions.
19Odom, op.cit.
20Franz Cumont, Textes et Monumnets Figures Relatifs aux Mysteres de Mithra, Vol. I, p. 112, as quoted in ibid, p. 156.
21Page 163
22"Astrology, paganized astronomy, assigned each of the 24 hours of the day to a planetary god after the order of their supposed positions above the earth . . . Hence, if Saturn should have the lordship of the first hour of the day, it would be called the day of Saturn . . . Because the last hour of Saturn's day is assigned to Mars, the first hour of the following day would belong to the Sun, the next planetary god in the order. This makes the Sun the lord of that day, so that it is called ‘the day of the Sun' (Sunday)" R. L. Odom, How Did Sunday Get Its Name? (Nashville, Tennessee: Southern Publishing Assoc., 1972), p. 10 & 11. Ibid., p. 5.
23Ibid., p. 5.
24J. Bosworth and T. N. Toller, "Frig-dæg", An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, 1898, p. 337, made available by the Germanic Lexicon Project; Odom, How Did Sunday Get Its Name? op.cit. See also "Friday" in Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary, 2nd edition, 1983.
25See Rabanus Maurus, De Clericorum Institratione, Book 2, ch. 46, in J. P. Migne, Patrologia Latina.
26See Bede, Patrologia Latina, Vol. 90, op. cit.
27Zerubavel, op.cit., p. 24.
28 "Feria", Catholic Encyclopedia, see Vol. 6 p. 43, or www.newadvent.org.
29"Letteth": #2722 – to hold down, possess or to take possession of; "This word means ‘to hold firmly' . . . of unrighteous men who restrain the spread of truth by their unrighteousness" (The New Strong's Expanded Dictionary, Thomas Nelson Publ. 2001.) This is an appropriate word to communicate what was done by the amalgamation of paganism with Christianity.
30(#2929): To divide or separate; to make a distinction between or pass sentence upon. "To pronounce judgment" (ibid.)
31II Thess. 2:7-11

written by arun kumar, February 27, 2010
written by ERIC OWUSU KWARTENG, February 12, 2010
written by maricel omallao, February 12, 2010
helow May God be with us always so that, we will not be confuse what is right and what is not...
written by EMEKA LEVI, February 11, 2010
written by regine catane, February 11, 2010
but if we just hav to worship GOd, and strengthn our faith with him...
he wl nver live us..!!!
written by Matthias Michel, February 08, 2010
you make dangerous assumptions here and then state that it does not matter what evidence from the Bible is brought forth against your assumptions.
What if your opinion about what Yahuwah established is wrong?
Scripture clearly teaches that the moon was created on the 1st day:
Genesis 1:4-5
"And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness.
And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And the evening and the morning were the first day."
How did God divide the light from the darkness on the 1st day?
Genesis 1:14
"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 seasons, and for days, and years:"
So God created (bara H1254) the sun and moon on the 1st day and made them (hayah H1961) to be in the heavens on the 4th day. God did NOT create (bara H1254) the luminaries on the 4th day.
Scripture also clearly teaches when the new moon is:
"Blow the shofar on the Rosh Chodesh, at the concealed moon, on our solemn feast day" (Psalm 81:3, Restoration Scriptures True Name Edition)
Most translations translate "full moon" because they are biased with the jewish teaching about the new moon being on the day after the sighting of the crescent. The concordance tries to tell you that the word in Psalm 81:3 would be "keseh" (H3677) when in reality it is the hebrew word "kasah" (H3680). You have to look at the hebrew letters to know that this is H3680 and not H3677.
So what does this verse really teach?
It says to blow the shofar when the moon is hidden, concealed or covered. This is what "kasah" (H3680) means. As far as I know, you can see if the moon is hidden or concealed at the end of the month before the sun rises. If you cannot see the moon then this day would be the new moon day. The sighting of the first crescent starts then the first week of the new month. The following day would then be the 2nd day of the month and the first day of the week.
I know that WLC is at this time prefering the jewish teaching instead of what the Bible says when the new moon is. But I am pretty sure that this will change soon.
May Yahuwah bless you,
Matthias
written by Eric Schneggenburger, February 07, 2010
Yahweh states that He called the light, day. It does not matter how much "evidence" from scripture or history or tradition anyone brings to the table trying to prove the day includes the night. It does not do away with what Yahweh established by those written words. Let me state for the record before I go on, this group has stepped out in faith by observing the Sabbath day, during the light. This is huge when the world is doing the opposite. This group is only the second group that I am aware of that follows this truth. It is only because you have yielded to truth that I am attempting to share more truth with you.
And because of understanding this, when the gospel says it was about the 9th hour that he died, you know it is the 9th hour "of the day" even though that is not stated as such.( reference to your point about the 3rd day "of the week" Yahshua rose on)
Back to the moon being on the 4th day of the month, new year and week. Yahweh established by those written words His pattern. It does not matter how much "evidence" from scripture or history or tradition anyone brings to the table trying to prove the month starts with some phase of the moon. It does not do away with what Yahweh established. The moon was not present when He started the month.
Part of the problem is buying into this Babylonian/Jewish idea of what a "New Moon" is. Scripture makes no such statement or gives any example of observing some phase of the moon as the "New Moon". This is an external idea that is applied or "proof text" onto scripture. But by comparing scripture to scripture we can know what this phrase means. Here is a link to the clearest scriptural explanation of the New Moon.
http://www.bibleinsight.com/newmoon.html
I do not agree with all this man points out, but he gets to the correct understanding of what a New Moon refers to.
written by abhishek soren, February 06, 2010
i really want this book.... bt in hindi language.. plz give me..
written by Matthias Michel, February 05, 2010
please have a close look at the verse you are referring to when you say "the moon was created on the 4th day". When you do that and search the hebrew word which is used there, then you will discover that the Bible does not say that the moon was created on the 4th day but that the luminaries were placed (or "made to be" or "became") in the heavens on the 4th day. If the luminaries would have been created on this 4th day there would be an other hebrew word used.
Please also consider this:
Even if the moon would have been created on the 4th day, remember that the sabbath did not exist on the 4th day. The sabbath was sanctified AFTER our Creator had rested on that day. So as long as you have the moon BEFORE the 7th day sabbath was sanctified the moon can keep track of every single 7th day sabbath without any problems whatsoever (it just had to be created in the right phase).
You remember that there were no humans made on first day to observe the new moon?
Every living thing (with a soul) was created AFTER the 4th day, so again no problem to recognise any sabbath by the moon.
You know that the new moon will also be observed on the new earth when there is no more sin (Isaiah 66:23)?
Yahuwah did exactly know what He was doing in the beginning. He created the first week. The first week did only exist AFTER He had rested on the 7th day and set it apart. Before the first week was completely created did every other thing (including the moon) exist.
Just ask yourself these questions:
Could our Creator have rested on the 9th day? Then there would exist a 9th day week from the 10th day on.
Where does the Bible say that a full moon is good or very good and a waxing, waning or new moon is not good?
Nobody is imposing that our Saviour rose on the 1st day. Scripture teaches that He (and the Saints who rose with Him) are the fulfillment of the firstfruits wave sheaf offering which took place one day after the sabbath, which would be the first day of the week. You know that in the greek there are two sabbaths mentioned at the resurrection (the one ending and the other beginning)?
The first was the 15th (which was also the 7th day weekly sabbath), which was called a high day because they departed out of egypt on this day and the second was the 16th the offering of the wave sheaf offering.
If the 3rd day would always be the 3rd day of the week, why is it then necessary to add "of the week"?
Our Saviour would not fulfill every Scripture about Him, if He would have been raised on the 3rd day of the week.
May Yahuwah bless you,
Matthias
written by Eric Schneggenburger, January 28, 2010
Do you think Yahweh did not know what He was doing when He started the first year and the first month? It had nothing to do with the moon since it was not created until the 4th day. But what was he establishing as He created? The week! The week has the precedence over the moon.
That first day of Creation was not only the start of the week but also the start of the month and the year. It may seem simplistic, as was the definition of the day, but if you ignore this fact you will not get the correct definition of a month or year. There are no uncounted or "new moon' days instructed to us from scripture. There are only a handful of scriptures that mention the crescent, all in bad light. The 4th day of creation He says he saw the moon and it was good, to see it, it must have been full as Adam was perfect in all his ways until iniquity was found in him.
Another big hint about the real Sabbath is Yahshua kept saying he would rise on the 3rd day, Why do we impose on that that it was the 7th or 1st day when is was the 3rd day, He was talking about the day of the week and we just miss this fact because of our bias.
There are many deceptions in our way toward the truth, as it was from the beginning when Adam deceived his wife in the garden.
written by michael ranni, January 25, 2010
written by Heather Kemp, January 23, 2010
written by ERIC OWUSU KWARTENG, January 21, 2010
written by danah ucab, January 20, 2010
halou everybody!!! never mind confusing yourself about the truth..
just look unto Jesus and be comforted..okay?
God bless everybody!
written by vijay chacko, January 18, 2010
What about that?








