Sunday, August 2, 2020

When Was the Real Messiah Born & Why Does it Matter?

By Maria Merola אריאל
© Copyright Double Portion Inheritance, September 2002

In the autumn of 2002, I had become extremely interested in finding out when our Messiah, Yahuwshuwa was born. I began to understand that if I could know the timing of his birth and death, then I would be able to use those dates as a reference point for charting “Daniel’s Seventy Week” found in Daniel 9:24-27. I had begun to dig even deeper than ever before into end-time prophecy, and I knew that everything in prophecy revolves around the birth, death and resurrection of the true Messiah. 

When trying to understand eschatology (the study of the end-times), it is essential to learn the meaning of the prophetic Feasts of YaHuWaH (outlined in Leviticus 23). The Feasts of YaHuWaH point to important events pertaining to the true Messiah, and the renewal of his covenant with his bride. Revelation 19:10 speaks about “The Testimony of Yahuwshuwa,for it is the total sum of his earthly life, where we begin to understand “The spirit of prophecy.” 

Since 2002, I embarked on this study that would ultimately take ten years to fully develop and “fine-tune.” It is now finalized and compiled into a readable format so that you, the reader can see how I came to the undeniable conclusion that our Messiah was born on September 11th in 3 B.C,  on the Feast of Trumpets, and he was conceived on December 14th in 4 B.C, on Chanukkah.

I marvel at how many Christians seem to have no interest in finding out when he was born, nor can they see why this is a matter of extreme importance. I can’t even begin to count how many times I have heard this rationale being expressed as many would declare: “It doesn’t matter when our Messiah was born---what matters is that he was born.” 

However, what if the birthday of the true Messiah of Yisra’el was a key identifier in being able to separate him from all the impostors

What if his date of birth is one of the many prophetic markers, distinguishing him from the pagan deities in the Pantheon? 

What if the “sign” that was shown to the wise men is the very same one spoken of in Isaiah 7:14 & Revelation 12:1? Has our Creator given us clues, so that we can make a distinction between the true Messiah, and all the others? Our Messiah spoke of these imposters who came before him, calling them “thieves and robbers.”

Yahuwchanon (John) 10:8 All that ever came before me are thieves and robbers: but the sheep did not hear them.

1st Yahuwchanon (John) 2:18 Little children, it is the last time: and as you have heard that Anti-Messiah shall come, even now are there many Anti-Messiahs; whereby we know that it is the last time.

Before our Messiah Yahuwshuwa was born, there had already been “many Anti-Messiahs” who had come and gone. What does the word “anti” mean in Greek?

#473. anti an-tee’ a primary particle; opposite, i.e. instead or because of (rarely in addition to):--for, in the room of. Often used in composition to denote contrast, requital, substitution, correspondence, etc.

If there have already been many impostors to the real Messiah, then how can we be certain that we have the correct one? Well, one of the ways that we can tell, is that he would fulfill all of the Towrah (Law) & Prophets:

Luqas (Luke) 24:44 And he said unto them, These are the words which I spoke unto you, while I was yet with you, that all things must be fulfilled, which were written in the Towrah (law) of Mosheh (Moses), and in the prophets, and in the psalms, concerning me.

You will notice that there are “two or three witnesses” that testify of the true Messiah: Towrah, Prophets, & Psalms.

In Genesis 1:14, there are also “three witnesses” in the sky that tell us what time it is. These three witnesses are “the sun, the moon and the stars, and they were all testifying of his authenticity on the night when he was born. You see the heavenly luminaries are what divide the daytime from the nighttime, hence the truth from the lies:

Bereshiyth (Genesis) 1:14 And Elohiym 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:

Luqas (Luke) 21:25 And there shall be signs in the sunand in the moonand in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring;

Yahuwceph (Joseph) was a prophetic “type” of Messiah and he was given a dream wherein the “sun, moon and stars” were all bowing down to him:

Bereshiyth (Genesis) 37:9 And he dreamed yet another dream, and told it his brethren, and said, Behold, I have dreamed a dream more; and, behold, the sun and the moon and the eleven stars made obeisance to me.

Why only eleven and not twelve stars? Yahuwceph (Joseph) was one of the tribes (sons) of Ya’aqob (Jacob) in Genesis 48-49 and eleven of his brothers (represented as stars) were going to bow down to him in the future. This was a prophetic picture of all twelve tribes of Yisra’el (including the tribe of Joseph) who will later on in history; bow down to the true Messiah of Yisra’el in his future millennial reign. On the night when our Messiah Yahuwshuwa was born, a “sign” was seen in the heavens and all three luminaries testified that he was the genuine awaited Messiah.

Let’s begin with a most revealing prophecy in scripture that will lead us to know when the true Messiah was born:

Chazown (Revelation) 12:

1 And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars: 

2 And she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered…

5 And she brought forth a man child, who was to rule all nations with a rod of iron: and her child was caught up unto Elohiym, and to his throne.

This prophecy in Revelation 12 is showing us the Hebrew constellation of Bethuwlah (Virgo the Virgin) and she has the first crescent moon underneath her feet. This took place on “Yom Teruw’ah” or the “Day of Blowing” aka the “Feast of  Trumpets on the 1st day of the 7th Hebrew month of Tishri. You see, the Feast of Trumpets is nick-named “The Day That No Man Knows,” because it is the only feast that is determined by the first sighting of the crescent “new moon” by two witnesses on the walls of Jerusalem. To read more about this feast, see my other article entitled: The Feast of Trumpets: “The Day That No Man Knows!”

The wise men had heard about the “star in the east” that would show them where the “King of the Yahuwdiy”(Jews) would be born, by the appearance of these “signs” in heavens:

Mattithyahuw (Matthew) 2:

1 Now when Yahuwshuwa was born in Bethlehem of Yahuwdah (Judaea) in the days of Herod the king, behold, there came wise men from the east to Yerushalayim (Jerusalem),

2 Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Yahuwdiy (Jews)? For we have seen his star in the east, and are come to worship him.

This “woman” is none other than Miryam (Mary) the mother of our Messiah, who was a virgin when she gave birth to him. But she also represents Sarah, and the city of Jerusalem which is called the “mother of us all” (Galatians 4:26). Jerusalem has a “crown of twelve stars” because she is the capital city of the nation of Yisra’el & Judah. In this prophecy, we see that Miryam (the mother of our Messiah) and also Jerusalem (the holy city) was giving birth to not only a “man-child” who was going to rule all nations in the future, but his offspring (his followers) who would later on become a “corporate man-child” referred to as “one new man” (Ephesians 2:15). 

On one particular night in history, this “sign” was seen in heaven and it was telling us a story and painting a picture of when the true Mashiyach (Messiah), Yahuwshuwa was being born.

In Revelation 12:1, the Apostle Yahuwchanon (John) sees a “great wonder” in heaven. That word in the Greek Strong’s Concordance for “wonder” is as follows:

#4592 – sēmeion: signmarktokenthat by which a person or a thing is distinguished from others and is known; a sign, prodigy, portent, i.e. an unusual occurrence, transcending the common course of nature; of signs portending remarkable events soon to happen; of miracles and wonders by which God authenticates the men sent by him, or by which men prove that the cause they are pleading is God’s.

Where have we seen this “sign” first prophesied about in the Tanakh (Old Testament)?

Yeshayahuw (Isaiah) 7:14 Therefore YHWH himself shall give you a sign; Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.

You see, there is a direct correlation between this prophecy in Isaiah about the “sign” of a virgin bearing a son and the “sign” of the “woman” giving birth to a man-child in Revelation 12! The Hebrew word for “sign” in Isaiah 7:14 is as follows:

#226 – owth: signsignal, a distinguishing mark, banner, remembrance, miraculous sign, omen, warning, token, ensign, standard, miracleproof.

The sign that YaHuWaH promised to give us was this constellation of Bethuwlah (the Virgin) giving birth to a man-child who was to rule all nations!

Now, before I continue to illustrate exactly when our Messiah was born, it is also important to understand that this prophecy in Revelation 12 has a “two-fold” application, as we will soon learn. This was a “sign” in the heavens for when the true Messiah would be born, but it is also a future sign for when the corporate “man-child” will be born of the “woman” which is Yerushalayim (Jerusalem) the capital city of Yisra’el. 

This “man-child” described by the Apostle Sha’uwl (Paul) in Ephesians 2:15 is the body of Messiah (Jewish & Gentile believers) who will be born into “one new man” when they are resurrected at the end of the tribulation.

The first time that this prophecy was fulfilled was with the literal “woman,” the virgin, Miryam (Mary) as she was giving birth to a literal man-child, the Messiah of Yisra’el. You see, this prophecy will be repeated on a corporate scale in the end of days, and so it is extremely important that we understand it’s significance. The Apostle Sha’uwl (Paul) explained that “born-again” believers are going to follow in the same pattern as their Savior in the way that they are “born” into immortality:

Romiym (Romans) 6:

4 Therefore we are buried with him by immersion (baptism) into death: that like as Mashiyach (Messiah) was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.

For if we have been planted together in the likeness of his deathwe shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection:

This means that our Messiah was resurrected (born-again) in the very same way that we shall be resurrected and born into our incorruptible bodies! The bride will be resurrected also on the Feast of Trumpets at the “last trump!” (1st Corinthians 15:51-53).

Seven Annual Feasts

Before progressing in this study, it is necessary to give a brief over-view of the seven annual feasts that all born-again believers are commanded to keep “forever” as part of our eternal covenant with our Creator. All seven of these feasts are outlined in Leviticus 23 as follows:

1.) Passover (Pesach) Leviticus 23:5
2.) Unleavened Bread (Chag Matzah) Leviticus 23:6
3.) First-Fruits (ha’Bikkuwriym) Leviticus 23:10
4.) Pentecost (Shabuwoth) Leviticus 23:15-16
5.) Trumpets (Yom Teruw’ah) Leviticus 23:24
6.) Atonement (Yom Kippur) Leviticus 23:27
7.) Tabernacles (Sukkoth) Leviticus 23:34

The three Spring Feasts mentioned above is the season of our Messiah’s death, burial, & resurrection. He was sacrificed for us on Passover, and then the next day, he was buried on the Feast of Unleavened Bread, and three days later, he resurrected on First-Fruits (not on Easter Sunday). The three Fall Feasts mentioned above is the season of the nativity of our Messiah. They are: The Feast of Trumpets, The Day of Atonement & The Feast of Tabernacles. These three feasts commemorate the time of year when our Messiah came into the world as the Savior. 

Ushering In the King with the Tekiah

The Feast of Trumpets is called “a memorial of blowing trumpets” in scripture:

Wayyiqra (Leviticus) 23:24 Speak unto the children of Yisra’el, saying, In the seventh month, in the first day of the month, shall you have a sabbath, a memorial of blowing trumpets, an holy convocation.

The word “convocation” in this passage is the Hebrew word “miqra” which means “a rehearsal.” What are we commanded to rehearse for? Our future resurrection---our rebirth!

It should also be noteworthy to understand that all of the Kings of Yahuwdah (Judah) were ushered into their office and coroneted on this particular feast day called “The Feast of Trumpets” or “Yom Teruw’ah.”

On the Feast of Trumpets, there are four trumpet blasts that are traditionally sounded. They are as follows:

1.) Tekiah
2.) Shebariym
3.) Teruw’ah
4.) Tekiah Gedolah.

The first trumpet sound called the Tekiah, is a pure unbroken sound that calls man to search his heart, forsake his wrong ways, and seek forgiveness through repentance. This is the sound that is used to usher in the king” when he is about to be crowned as king. This was the announcement from the Heavenly Father as he was introducing his Son into the world. 

The next sound called the Shebariym is a broken staccato trembling sound which is supposed to typify a man crying in repentance. This would have been when Miryam cried, travailing in birthand pained to be delivered” according to Revelation 12:2. The next trumpet sound is called the Teruw’ah and it is a wave-like sound of alarm calling upon man to stand by the banner of Elohiym.

The Teruw’ah is a sign, a signal, or a banner!

And what exactly is this “banner?” We just discovered that the Hebrew word for “sign” (owth) which also means “a banner!” That banner is the “scarlet thread” that was placed on the hand of Tamar’s twin when he stuck his hand out of the womb in Genesis 38:29-30. This twin is named “Zarach” which is Hebrew Concordance #2226,  and he is a prophetic “type” of Messiah whose name means “rising of light.” 

On Yom Teruw’ah, the first sliver of the crescent moon is rising until it reaches it’s full light on the 15th of the month (at it’s peak) on the Feast of Tabernacles. But this twin stuck his hand out first as a “sign” or a banner that he was the “first-born!”

Listen to the similarity of the wording from Genesis 38:28 to Revelation 12:2:

Bereshiyth (Genesis) 38:28 And it came to pass, when she travailed, that the one put out his hand: and the midwife took and bound upon his hand a scarlet thread, saying, This came out first.

Chazown (Revelation) 12:2 And she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered.

You see, Tamar giving birth to twins is a symbol of the Two Houses of Yisra’el: Ephrayim & Yahuwdah (Judah). And who was her first-born? It was Zerach (Zarah) who was given the sign of the “scarlet ribbon” on the hand.

That first-born son of Tamar was a prophetic picture of the “first-born” son of Miryam who also became the “first-born” from among the dead.

Luqas (Luke) 2:7 And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn.

Romiym (Romans) 8:29 For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren.

Qolasiym (Colossians) 1:18 And he is the head of the body, the qehillah (congregation): who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead; that in all things he might have preeminence.

You see the first-born son of Tamar bore the scarlet thread to symbolize our Messiah who is also the first-born from among the dead. His blood flowing out of his hands when he was nailed to the tree was the scarlet thread:

Tehilliym (Psalm) 22:16 “…..they pierced my hands and my feet. 

The Hebrew word for “scarlet thread” in Genesis 38:29 is #8144 “shaniy” which means the following: Scarletcrimsonthe insect ‘coccus ilicis, the dried body of the female yielding colouring matter from which is made the dye used for cloth to colour it scarlet or crimson.

This female insect is an illustration of the woman giving birth to a man-child with the scarlet thread!

Yeshayahuw (Isaiah) 1:18 “… though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool.”

In this verse from Isaiah, the Hebrew word for “scarlet” is once again, “shaniy,” which refers to this insect, “coccus ilicis.” The word, “crimson” (towla #8438) is often used in conjunction with the word “scarlet.” They are synonymous with each other, but “towla” refers to the worm, more than the color. This grub, or scarlet worm, is found in a species of oak trees around the Mediterranean and is about the size of a pea. The female has a very round shape and red color. This Hebrew word crimson (towla) is also translated as “a worm, a grub, a maggot” in Scripture.

There is a fascinating story behind this little worm, which will explain the profound meaning of this verse. When the life of the female coccus ilicis, (or scarlet worm) is nearing the end of her life, she climbs a tree and attaches her body to it, fixing herself so firmly and permanently, she virtually impales herself on the tree, and never leaves again. Just before she dies, her eggs hatch and she gives birth to her young. The eggs deposited beneath her body are now protected from predators. 

After the larvae hatch, they are able to enter their own life cycle. As the mother dies, crimson fluid from within her body, stains her own body and the surrounding wood she is attached to. She makes the ultimate sacrifice and because of her own death, her offspring are given new life. From the crushed, dried dead bodies of such female scarlet worms, the scarlet dye is extracted and used to dye wool red. 
This dye is referred to in the Bible as simply “scarlet” (the color), or “crimson” (the worm).

Tehilliym (Psalm) 22:6 speaks of Messiah: “But I am a worm, and not a man, A reproach of men, and despised by the people.” 

The word “worm” in this verse, is also “towla” (the word crimson) which is the color of blood. This verse is actually saying, “But I am crimson,” referring to the coccus ilicis as a metaphor for his very own blood that would be shed for us. He was impaled on a tree just as the female worm was for her young so that we might live!

In addition to this, the crushed “coccus ilicis” contains a chemical that is an anti-bacterial agent which is why it was used in two types of purification ceremonies:

1.) When there was a plague, scarlet was included in the purification of the house. “And he shall cleanse the house with the blood of the bird, and with the running water, and with the living bird, and with the cedar wood, and with the hyssop, and with the scarlet” (Leviticus 14:52).

2.) The scarlet worm was also used in the formula with the ashes of the red heifer “And the priest shall take cedar wood, and hyssop, and scarlet, and cast it into the midst of the burning of the heifer” (Leviticus 19:6).

These ashes were used to cleanse a person when they came into contact with a dead body (a host for bacteria). This crimson, the worm coccus ilicis, was necessary to make one clean, which is symbolic of the blood of Yahuwshuwa removing the sin of disease and death from us.

Yeshayahuw (Isaiah) 53:5 But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised [crushed] for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed.

Ibriym (Hebrews) 9:13-14 For if the blood of bulls and of goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean, sanctifies to the purifying of the flesh: How much more shall the blood of Mashiyach (Messiah), who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to Elohiym, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living Elohiym?

The scarlet cord (thread) is also referred to in the book of Joshua, when Rahab the harlot, hung a “scarlet” thread from her window, which preserved her life from the Yisra’elite invasion to come.

Yahuwshuwa (Joshua) 2:21 And she said, According unto your words, so be it. And she sent them away, and they departed: and she bound the scarlet line in the window.

The scarlet cord that had been dyed (using the scarlet worm’s body), is used to identify the home of Rahab, who befriended the Yisra’eli spies. It this act of faith and obedience that spared her and her family from destruction. 

In the same way, we are chosen and identified by YaHuWaH, through the blood of Yahuwshuwa ha’Mashiyach that washed our sins away. The last words of our Messiah when he died on the tree are also deeply profound in light of this metaphor of the ilicis worm:

Yahuwchanon (John) 19:30 When he had received the drink, Yahuwshuwa said, “It is finished.” With that, he bowed his head and gave up his spirit. 

Interestingly, that word in Latin, ilicis means….“It is finished!More specifically, the Latin word  ilicis means to droop,which is what a dying plant does---it droops, as it begins to die. The connection between the wool that comes from a lamb that his shorn, and the red dye that comes from this worm are now coming into focus:

Yeshayahuw (Isaiah) 1:18 Come now, and let us reason together, says YHWH: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimsonthey shall be as wool.

Ibriym (Hebrews) 9:19 For when Mosheh had spoken every precept to all the people according to the law, he took the blood of calves and of goats, with water, and scarlet wool, and hyssop, and sprinkled both the book, and all the people…

The bride of Messiah is typified as the woman in Proverbs 31:21 whose household is clothed in scarlet: “She is not afraid of the snow for her household: for all her household are clothed with scarlet (coccus ilicis).” This means that the bride of Messiah is “covered” in the blood of the lamb!

The prophecy that Ya’aqob (Jacob) spoke over his son Yahuwdah (Judah) in Genesis 49:11 says that he would “Bind his foal unto the vine, and his donkey’s colt unto the choice vine; he washed his garments in wine, and his clothes in the blood of grapes.” 

This same prophecy is seen again in Revelation 19:13 about our Messiah, the Lion of the Tribe of Yahuwdah (Judah) and it says that “he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood: and his name is called The Word of Elohiym.”

In Isaiah 63:1, the Messianic prophecy says that Messiah will come from “Edom” which is a word that means “scarlet red,” and it goes on to say that he “dyed his garments.” 

You see, that “banner” or that “sign” was the scarlet thread and that is when this third trumpet blast is sounded on the Feast of Trumpets! 

Miryam gave one last shout as she pushed the baby out of her womb!

And when did our Messiah die on the tree? He was nailed to the tree at the third hour of the day (9:00 a.m.). And he died at the ninth hour of the day or 3:00 p.m.! He was also in the heart of the earth for “Three days and three nights!” Can you see the witness of three yet for his birth on the Feast of Trumpets? He was resurrected (born-again) from the dead on the third day!

Why did I go down this seemingly mysterious path to show you what the Teruw’ah trumpet blast signifies? It is because I aim to illustrate why our Messiah was born on the “Day of Blowing” and how the word for “Teruw’ah” (blowing) is a “sign, a banner, and a signal” of the promised Messiah.

Now, let’s take a look at the Hebrew word for “blowing:”

#8643 truw`ah ter-oo-aw from 7321; clamor, i.e. acclamation of joy or a battle-cry; especially clangor of trumpets, as an alarm, blowing of the trumpets, joy, jubilee, loud noise, rejoicingshouting, high, joyful sounding.

The root word for this word is as follows:

#7321 ruwa` roo-ah a primitive root; to mar (especially by breaking); figuratively, to split the ears (with sound), i.e. shout (for alarm or joy):--blow an alarmcry (alarm, aloud, out), destroy, make a joyful noise, smart, shout (for joy), sound an alarm, triumph.

Are you making the connection yet? Let’s take a look at what the angels were doing on that same day when Messiah was born:

Luqas (Luke) 2:

9 And, lo, the angel of YHWH came upon them, and the glory of YHWH shone round about them: and they were sore afraid.

10 And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.

11 For unto you is born this day in the city of Dawiyd (David) a Saviour, which is Mashiyach (Messiah) YHWH.

12 And this shall be a sign unto you; You shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger (sukkah).

13 And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising Elohiym, and saying,

14 Glory to Elohiym in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men.

Do you see this yet? 

The angels were shouting and rejoicing on the Feast of Trumpets, with the trumpet sound of the “Teruw’ah!” This is a “banner” or a “sign!” The sign shown to the shepherds was a babe lying in a manger (animal stall) in swaddling clothes!

However, the final trumpet sound, (the fourth and last one), on the Feast of Trumpets is called the Tekiah Gedolah, which is a prolonged, unbroken sound, typifying a final appeal to sincere repentance and atonement. This is when he would have actually been born---at the last trumpet! Miryam gave her last prolonged shout, as she pushed and the baby came out!

And when will the future bride, the “one new man” be born into immortality? At the last trumpet!

1st Qorin’tiym (Corinthians) 15:

51 Behold, I show you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,

52 In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed.

Do you see the pattern yet? The Messiah was born at the “last trumpet” on the Feast of Trumpets and the future bride will also be “born” into incorruption at the last trumpet on the Feast of Trumpets!

Why is this significant? Because it shows the pattern and the typology for Yahuwshuwa being born at the last trumpet on the Feast of Trumpets!

You see, our Messiah came to us in the 4th Millennium from creation, and he also died on the 4th day of the week (Wednesday), before he resurrected three days and three nights later on the evening of the 7th day, Sabbath. 

It is no surprise then, that the 4th trumpet blast is what brought about his arrival into the world. The number “4” in scripture symbolizes the “four corners of the earth” and YaHuWaH our creator will harvest the earth at the second coming of Messiah. His bride will also be resurrected at the beginning of the seventh millennium (the 7th  day). 

It is fitting therefore that Messiah would be born on this day, since YaHuWaH was announcing his son into the world as the Malkiy-Tzedeq in Hebrew, “King of Righteousness.” Dr. Ernest L. Martin cites the many discoveries which reveal the exact date when our Messiah was ushered into the world.

The entire book can be downloaded for free at the link below: 


The video below gives an illustration of the planetary alignment that took place that night when our Messiah was born:


How can we know for sure that Yahuwshuwa was born on September 11th in 3 B.C. on “Yom Teruw’ah?” In his book entitled “The Star That Astonished the World,” Dr. Ernest L. Martin shows that the planetary alignment which occurred that year when Yahuwshuwa was born was from the prophecy in Revelation 12. On no other day except on September 11th in 3 B.C. do we see this planetary alignment taking place. On this day, (and never before this date), nor ever again afterwards, has this same configuration of the planets and stars been seen.

The Hebrew word for “virgin” is “Bethuwlah” which is what this constellation is named after. The pagans renamed these constellations after pagan deities, and they assimilated this “virgin” to their false mother goddesses, but it’s origin has always pointed to only one “mother” which is Jerusalem “the mother of us all.”

The constellation was renamed in Latin as “Virgo the Virgin” and she had 12 stars around her head (for the twelve tribes of Yisra’el), and the moon was under her feet. The sun was “mid-body” and so she was “clothed with the sun.” She was also giving birth to “Ariel,” the Lion of the Tribe of Yahuwdah (Judah). The planet Jupiter was also seen inside this constellation which is called Malkiy-Tzedeq (King of Righteousness) or Melchizedek. The pagans renamed this planet after the pagan deity from Greece (Zeus) or Jupiter (Roman).

It has become customary within Messianic Judaism to believe that our Messiah was born on the Feast of Tabernacles rather than on the Feast of Trumpets. I must admit, that when I first began this research in 2002, I grappled with the idea of his birth being on Tabernacles (Sukkot) or on Trumpets (Teruw’ah). 

However, the more I studied the scriptures surrounding these two feasts, it became apparent that our Messiah actually fulfilled all three of the Fall Feasts at his birth and all four of the Spring Feasts at his death. That was a revelation that truly astounded me, and you will soon learn why.

Circumcision Typology on Yom Kippur

I can understand why most Messianics and others within the Hebraic Roots Community have concluded that our Messiah was born during the Feast of Tabernacles. In Luke 2:7-16 we are told that our Messiah was “laid in a manger.” The Greek word for “manger” is “phatne” which is a stable where animals eat their fodder. 

In Genesis 33:17, we read that Jacob built “booths” for his cattle at “Sukkot.” During the Feast of Tabernacles, we are commanded to dwell in a “sukkah,” (a temporary shelter) for seven days.

On the eighth day following these seven days of Sukkot, it is called “The Last Great Day” (Leviticus 23:36-39). Many scholars believe that this would have been the perfect time for our Messiah to have been circumcised.

There are several reasons why he could not have been born on the Feast of Tabernacles, and you are going to understand why if you follow my reasoning with the scriptures that I will present. So please bear with me and pay close attention. I am going to illustrate for you now, why I believe he was circumcised for Yom Kippur rather than the eighth day of the Feast of Tabernacles as traditionally taught. 

Since ancient times in Yisrael, traditionally, Yom Teruw’ah has always been celebrated for two days (due to the fact that the sighting of the first new moon sliver demanded two credible witnesses). By the time the new moon was finally sanctified (set-apart) by the Sanhedrin, half of the day had already been spent, therefore, the entire next day (on the second day of Ethaniym/Tishri), the Feast of Trumpets continued to be celebrated. 

While we are waiting for the new moon of the Feast of Trumpets, 
“No man knows the day, nor the hour when it will make its sudden appearance. So it is with baby in the womb, whose gestation can be approximated, but “No man knows the day, nor the hour when this baby will suddenly make his appearance into the world. The baby’s head first appears, as it begins to make its way out of the mother’s birth canal. The moon likewise, begins to show its first crescent. 

On the first day of Yom Teruw’ah, Yisrael reads Genesis 21 where Sarah conceives Yitzqach (Isaac) and they also read 1st Samuel 1-2:10 where Channah cries out to YaHuWaH for a son, and she conceives and gives birth to the prophet Samuel. This Scriptures that are traditionally read on this feast relate to conception and birth, even though Orthodox Jews do not believe that Yahuwshuwa is the Messiah! 

Can you imagine the shock they will experience when they will one day learn that these verses were being read as a symbol of their Messiah, who was also born on this feast day? Messianic Jews also read 1st Thessalonians 4:13-18 & 
1st Corinthians 15:51-54, 
where it speaks about the catching away of the bride of Messiah, when she is reborn (resurrected) into immortality! Once again, the typology here speaks of birth and rebirth.

On the second day of Yom Teruw’ah, Ancient Yisrael read the Akedah, (the binding of Isaac) in Genesis 22:1-24. 

This is the account of Abraham offering up his son Yitzqach (Isaac) on the altar, and YaHuWaH providing a ram as a substitute offering. Isaac was for all intent and purposes “dead,” even though he was not killed. 

Abraham had to “die” in his heart to his son, as he was about to plunge the knife into him. Isaac also had to accept his own death, thus, in his heart he “died” and was willing to give up his life for the love of his father and his Creator. When the angel then appeared to Abraham and stopped him from killing Isaac, we could then say that he was “born-again.” This was essentially the  birth of his new destiny as the son of promise!

It is also customary to read Jeremiah 31:1-19, where it speaks of the restoration and salvation of Yisra’el at the second coming of Messiah. Why is it important to explain this? Because as we uncover the details of when Messiah was born, we will be able to see that the traditions practiced by the House of Yahuwdah (Judah) on this particular feast all point to the birth of their long-awaited Messiah, if they will only have eyes to see! 

Miryam went into labor on the evening of the 30th day of Elul, (the last day of the 6th Hebrew month). Then as the sun went down, began the 1st day of the 7th month of Tishri, and she was in labor all that day as these four trumpets would have been sounded. By the evening of the 1st day of the 7th month of Tishri, just before it became the 2nd day of Tishri, at sundown, he was born at the last trumpet! 

At this website, by Hillel ben David (Greg Killian) he explains why Yom Teruw’ah was and still is celebrated for two days.

http://www.betemunah.org/knowday.html

Originally….the New Moon was not fixed by astronomical calculations, but was solemnly proclaimed after witnesses had testified to the reappearance of the crescent of the moon. On the 30th of each month, the members of the Sanhedrin assembled in a courtyard in Jerusalem, named Beit Ya’azek, where they waited to receive the testimony of two reliable witnesses; they then sanctified the New Moon based on their calculations and the testimony of these two witnesses. If the moons crescent was not seen on the 30th day, the New Moon was automatically celebrated on the 31st day (which was the first day of the next month).

Normally we know several days in advance, the date of the next festival. However, there is one festival which actually falls on the new moon. The only festival that falls on a new moon is….Yom Teruah….

Yom Teruah, therefore, is the festival that, “No one knows the day or hour that it starts, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.” Until the Sanhedrin sanctifies the New Moon of the seventh month, no one know when Yom Teruah will begin….

….These days of Yom Teruah are called “yoma arichta” (one long day) to indicate that the sanctity of both is not a doubtful sanctity, but a definite one….The reason that we celebrate for two days is because if we waited to start our celebration until after the new moon had been sanctified, we would have missed half the celebration because the new moon can only be sanctified during daylight hours. The new moon is also very difficult to see on the first day because it can be seen only about sunset, close to the sun, when the sun is traveling north. So, looking for a very slim faint crescent moon, which is very close to the sun, is a very difficult thing to do....

These two days are celebrated as though it is just one long day of forty-nine hours from candle lighting time, eighteen minutes before sundown; to havdalah time, forty-two minutes after sundown....

*Note by Maria Merola: Could it be that these “forty nine hours” used to celebrate this feast represents the “seventy sevens” or shebuwah (forty nine years) of when Daniel’s 70-Week prophecy cycles around? If 70 X 7 = 49 and 70 “shebuwah” (weeks) equals 490 years, can we see a pattern of 70 X 7 equaling how many times we must forgive our brother? (Matthew 18:22).

Now according to the testimony of Ernest L. Martin, the birth of Messiah took place at sundown on the Feast of Trumpets around 6-7 p.m. The Towrah tells us that on the ninth day of the seventh month of Tishri, the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) is to begin at evening:

Wayyiqra (Leviticus) 23:32 It shall be unto you a sabbath of rest, and you shall afflict your souls: in the ninth day of the month at evening, from evening unto evening, shall you celebrate your sabbath.

We should then be able to count eight days following his birth until his circumcision just before Yom Kippur. So let us count: 

Messiah born at sundown 1st of Tishri just before the 2nd of Tishri
2nd of Tishri sundown: day #1
3rd of Tishri sundown: day #2
4th of Tishri sundown: day #3
5th of Tishri sundown: day #4
6th of Tishri sundown: day #5
7th of Tishri sundown: day #6 
8th of Tishri sundown: day #7 
9th of Tishri sundown: day #8 Messiah circumcised.
9th of Tishri @ sundown becomes the 10th of Tishri, Yom Kippur begins (Leviticus 23:32).

Now it makes sense that he was circumcised at the on-set of the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) just as the ninth day of Tishri was about to end and the tenth day was beginning. Then five days later he also dwelled in the sukkah (manger) as a new-born with his parents during the seven days of Sukkot.  

The typology of a Yom Kippur circumcision is a much better fit, because the “foreskin” is likened to a “veil” that covers our hearts and it must be removed so that we may come “face-to-face” with our creator (Deuteronomy 10:16; Jeremiah 4:4). Yom Kippur also has been prophetically referred to as “Face-to-Face.”

Why is it called Face-to-Face?

It is when the High Priest was to go behind the veil once per year, and then he would come “face-to-face” with YaHuWaH in the Holy of Holies. This is also when Ya’aqob (Jacob) wrestled with YaHuWaH all night long, and by morning he had declared that he had seen Elohiym “face-to-face” (Genesis 32:30).

Jacob’s wrestling was likened unto a baby coming out of the birth canal. He had to “die” to his old sinful nature, and by the morning he was reborn into a new man who had an encounter with his maker. His new name accompanied his “born-again” experience as he went from being called Ya’aqob to Yisra’el. 

At the future Marriage Supper of the Lamb, the House of Yahuwdah (Judah) will finally see their Messiah “face-to-face” and they will finally recognize him as prophesied in Zechariah 12:10. The veil will then be lifted from their eyes so that they can see him face-to-face!

Since, the blood of the lamb is sprinkled on Yom Kippur “behind the veil,” on the altar, Messiah’s Yom Kippur circumcision was being portrayed as a “type and shadow” of his ultimate sacrifice. His blood sprinkled at his circumcision would ultimately “cover” (atone for) our sins once and for all when he would later die on the tree for us. The word “atonement” in Hebrew is “kippur,” but it comes from another root word:

#3722 kaphar kaw-far’ a primitive root; to cover (specifically with bitumen); figuratively, to expiate or condone, to placate or cancel:-- appease, make (an atonement, cleanse, disannul, forgive, be merciful, pacify, pardon, purge (away), put off, (make) reconciliation.

As you can see by the definition of “kaphar,” it means “to put off.”

And what gets “put off” during a circumcision?

The foreskin!

And what is “covered” during Yom Kippur?

Our sins!

The Apostle Sha’uwl (Paul) spoke in this very same prophetic language:

Qolasiym (Colossians) 2:11 In whom also you are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, in PUTTING OFF, the body of sins in the flesh by the circumcision of Mashiyach (Messiah). 

Do you see this? The word “atonement” is “kippur” which comes from the root word “kaphar” which means to “put off the body of sins in the flesh by circumcision!”

The infant Yahuwshuwa’s blood was released at his circumcision as a foreshadowing of him being the Yom Kippur sacrificial goat in the future. The blood of the goat enables us to have the “veil” (foreskin) removed from our hearts so that we can “see” him face-to-face!

The “covering” of the heart is called a foreskin in scripture. We are commanded to “remove the foreskin of our hearts” in Deuteronomy 10:16 & Jeremiah 4:4. And when this “veil” or foreskin is removed, we are able to come “FACE-TO-FACE” with our Creator!

This is why the Jewish people have nick-named the Day of Atonement aka Yom Kippur as “face-to-face!”

This is when the High Priest in the Temple would go behind the veil into the Holy of Holies and sprinkle the blood of the lamb on the mercy seat once per year on Yom Kippur. This would bring him “face-to- face” with YaHuWaH as he interceded for Yisra’el. The fact that the blood of a goat was used for Yom Kippur to be sprinkled on the mercy seat by the High Priest, (behind the veil) was being foreshadowed here at Yahuwshuwa’s circumcision.

Do you see this? The word “atonement” is “kippur” which comes from the root word “kaphar” which means to “put off the body of sins in the flesh by circumcision!”

The infant Yahuwshuwa’s blood was released at his circumcision as a foreshadow of him being the Yom Kippur sacrificial goat in the future. The blood of the goat enables us to have the “veil” (foreskin) removed from our hearts so that we can “see” him face-to-face!

Our eternal High Priest after the order of Melchizedek, was having his foreskin removed on the 8th day following his birth as a picture of the veil in the Temple being torn away. The foreskin (veil) to our hearts must also be torn away or removed by his once-and-for-all sacrifice. His blood was being released through circumcision (covenant) on Yom Kippur as a sign that only his blood could atone for our sins!

In the future, when the bride is “born-again” into immortality, she will also have the “veil” of her mortal flesh removed. The bridegroom will remove the “veil” from her face as is done in a traditional wedding ceremony, and she will come face-to-face with him at last!

It is therefore, prophetically fitting that he be born on Yom Teruah, and then 8 days later, be circumcised on Yom Kippur. And then five days later he would have “dwelled” in a “tabernacle” or sukkah (manger) with his parents for seven days!

All three Fall Feasts are the season of his nativity, just as all three Spring Feasts are the season of his death & resurrection!

Why He Was Not Born on the Feast of Tabernacles 

Another reason why it is not possible for the birth of Messiah to have been on Sukkot, is that according to Luke’s Gospel, Yahuwceph (Joseph) and Miryam (Mary) had to travel to Bethlehem to be taxed. While they were there, Mary gave birth to Yahuwshuwa Messiah:

Luqas (Luke) 2: 

4 And Yahuwceph (Joseph) also went up from Galilee, out of the city of Nazareth, into Yahuwdah (Judaea), unto the city of Dawiyd (David), which is called Bethlehem; (because he was of the house and lineage of Dawiyd:)

5 To be taxed with Miryam (Mary) his espoused wife, being great with child.

6 And so it was, that, while they were there, the days were accomplished that she should be delivered.

7 And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn.

*Note: This is very important because there are three pilgrimage feasts that every Yisra’elite man must travel to Jerusalem to keep each year. According to the Towrah commandment in Deuteronomy 16:16, they are: Passover (Pesach), Pentecost (Shavuot or Feast of Weeks), and the Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot).

But since Jerusalem is 6 miles away from Bethlehem, we know that Yahuwceph (Joseph) and Miryam (Mary) could not have been in Jerusalem for the Feast of Tabernacles if Messiah had been born on that day. Had he been born on the Feast of Tabernacles, he would’ve been born in Jerusalem six miles away (not in Bethlehem).

Yahuwceph (Joseph) had to appear before YaHuWaH in the Temple in Jerusalem and bring an offering on the Feast of Tabernacles according to Exodus 23:19-20. But if Yahuwceph (Joseph) was in Bethlehem 6 miles away helping his wife give birth in a sukkah (manger), how then could he go to Jerusalem to make on offering for the Feast of Tabernacles? 

You see, he could not be in both places at once. Yahuwceph (Joseph) would not have left Miryam there alone giving birth while he went to Jerusalem to offer sacrifices in the Temple. Also, there is an ancient adoption custom that says that whoever helps the woman give birth to the child gets to adopt the child and bring him into his tribe! Hence, the reason we are able to determine that our Messiah came from the line of Levi (his mother’s tribe) and the line of Judah (Joseph’s tribe) according to Matthew 1:16! That means that Joseph had to be there for the birth to adopt his son into the Tribe of Judah! Melchizedek is both a priest (Levi) and a king (Judah). 

The shepherds were also told to go to Bethlehem to see the child, but they were not told to go to Jerusalem. If this was the Feast of Tabernacles, the Angel of YaHuWaH would’ve told them to go to Jerusalem to keep the feast in Jerusalem (not to Bethlehem).

Luqas (Luke) 2:

15 And it came to pass, as the angels were gone away from them into heaven, the shepherds said one to another, Let us now go even unto Bethlehem, and see this thing which is come to pass, which YHWH has made known unto us.

16 And they came with haste, and found Miryam (Mary), and Yahuwceph (Joseph), and the babe lying in a manger.

Actually, there is clear proof that Yahuwshuwa could not have been born at any of the three pilgrimage Feasts of Passover, Pentecost or Tabernacles. These were times when all Yisra’elite men were required by biblical law to be in Jerusalem (Deuteronomy 16:6, 11, 16). Yet Luke tells us that during the time of Messiah’s nativity “everyone went into his own city” (Luke 2:3). Besides, the Romans would not have selected the three primary festival seasons for a census when most of the Jews in Palestine were required to be in Jerusalem.

The reason there was no room at the inn was not because the people were crowding into the Jerusalem area for ceremonial purposes, but, as Luke tells us, they were there to be registered for the census. 

According to the Towrah commandment in Leviticus 12, Miryam (Mary) had fulfilled her 40 days of purification following the birth of a male child and then they brought the child to Jerusalem to be dedicated to YaHuWaH. If he had been born in Jerusalem during the Feast of Tabernacles, they would not have had to travel there following her days of purification because she would’ve already been there for his birth and for the remaining 40 days afterwards.

Luqas (Luke) 2:22 And when the days of her purification according to the Law of Moses were accomplished, they brought him to Yerushalayim (Jerusalem), to present him to YHWH.

According to the Towrah, a woman is considered unclean for 7 days following the birth of a male child. But she is considered unclean for 14 days following the birth of a female child:

Wayyiqra (Leviticus) 12:

2 Speak unto the children of Yisra’el, saying, If a woman have conceived seed, and born a man child: then she shall be unclean seven days; according to the days of the separation for her infirmity shall she be unclean.

3 And in the eighth day the flesh of his foreskin shall be circumcised.

What this means is that she had to remain separated for seven days following the birth of Messiah. 

This means that she could not celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles with Joseph in a sukkah (manger) because this would render his celebration of this holy feast as unclean. Also, during the Ten Days of Awe, Yisra’elites would fast and pray leading up to Yom Kippur to cleanse and purify themselves. 
Miryam had seven days of being unclean and then the male child would be circumcised. 

It is fitting that Miryam was “unclean” during the first seven days of the “Ten Days of Awe,” but by Yom Kippur she was cleansed so that she could go to the Temple for her son’s circumcision. She would not be allowed into the sanctuary for 33 more days, but she could at least be in the outer court of the Temple for Yom Kippur to observe the circumcision of her baby boy.

Wayyiqra (Leviticus) 12:4 And she shall then continue in the blood of her purifying three and thirty days; she shall touch no hallowed thing, nor come into the sanctuary, until the days of her purifying be fulfilled.

Since Miryam had seven days of uncleanness following the birth of her male child, her uncleanness would have lasted during the “Ten Days of Awe” between Trumpets & Atonement. By Yom Kippur, she would have been cleansed and eligible to attend the circumcision of her baby boy in the Temple.

What is this a picture of?

The future bride of Messiah typified in Smyrna must “suffer tribulation for ten days” (Revelation 2:10). Who could Smyrna be speaking of? The name “Smyrna” means “strengthened for myrrh.” Who else prepared herself with myrrh before going to meet her bridegroom? It was Esther (a Jewess) who prepared herself with “oil of myrrh” (Esther 2:12). The bride in Song of Solomon (chapter 5) also prepares herself for her beloved bridegroom with myrrh.

Smyrna is commended for their “good works,” but nothing is said about their ability to acknowledge his name. In contrast, Philadelphia also has “good works” but they are also commended because they have “not denied his name.” In Song of Solomon 1:3, the wise virgins love the bridegroom because “his name is like oil poured forth.” 

This would give us a clue as to the lack of oil in the lamps of the foolish virgins, versus the wise virgins in Matthew 25. The wise virgins have taken the time to learn his name, while the foolish ones refuse to call him by his name. The House of Judah has a man-made tradition where they refuse to call upon the name of YaHuWaH, but instead, they call him “Adonai” or “Ha’Shem.”

It is because they lack this one thing (knowing him by his name), that they must “suffer tribulation for ten days.” During these Ten Days of Awe, these foolish virgins will go and “buy oil of myrrh” and anoint themselves to meet the bridegroom by Yom Kippur!

Miryam’s name means “bitter” and the Hebrew word for “myrrh” (marar) also means “bitter.” Miryam (Mary) pictures Smyrna who will be “unclean” until Yom Kippur when she meets the bridegroom at the Mount of Olives according to Zechariah 12:10.

However, Philadelphia will have “an open door” to meet the bridegroom on Yom Teruw’ah, for her “womb will be open” as she gives birth to the bridegroom! Miryam was told to name him Yahuwshuwa “for he shall save his people from their sins” (Matthew 1:21). 

The name “Yahuwshuwa” is Joshua in Hebrew, and it literally means “YaHuWaH saves.”

Miryam represents both brides of Messiah. She pictures Philadelphia because she obeyed and “called his name Yahuwshuwa,” therefore she had “an open door” (an open womb) to give birth to the bridegroom of Yisra’el!

However, Miryam also pictures Smyrna who had to “suffer tribulation for ten days” (Revelation 2:10) because Miryam was unclean during “The Ten Days of Awe,” but then she was clean by Yom Kippur so that she could behold her son’s circumcision! 

Why Was There No Room at the Inn?

Because even though the Feast of Tabernacles was the only “pilgrimage feast” out of the three Fall Feasts, many people were traveling and coming to stay in the surrounding cities of Jerusalem early in order to observe all three of the Fall Feasts. And as I stated previously, it was because of the census also, that every-one returned to their home town, so that the Inns were booked up.

Messiah Fulfilled an Intermediate Fulfillment of all three Fall Feasts at His First coming:

1.) Announcement: Yom Teruw’ah, ushering in the King.
2.) Circumcision: Yom Kippur, removal of the veil (foreskin) called “face-to-face.”
3.) Dwelling with us: Sukkot; dwelt with us in a corruptible body.

Messiah Will Fulfill all Three Fall Feasts at His Second Coming: 

1.) Husband Ushering in the Bride: Yom Teruw’ah.
2.) Husband removes veil from the bride’s face: Yom Kippur.
3.) Husband consummates the marriage with the 4th cup: Sukkot; Dwells with bride for 1,000 years of Sabbath rest.

In this study, I am going to be using the research of several different sources in order to narrow it down to precisely when Yahuwshuwa was born. I first wanted to show evidence from Scripture that absolutely proves our Messiah, Yahuwshuwa was not born on December 25th. This website (below) by Michael Schiefler shows the time-line charts for the schedule of the priesthood set up by King David in 2nd Chronicles 24. 

It is very easy to determine the date when our Messiah was born, simply by knowing that Yahuwchanon (John) the Baptist’s father (Zechariah) was a priest in the Temple, of the division of Abiyahuw (Abijah) as seen in Luke 1:5. This helps us narrow down the birth of Yahuwshuwa to around sometime in September.

After we rule out a December 25th birth for Yahuwshuwa, using the
Scriptures presented by Michael Schiefler, I will then follow with Dr. Ernest L. Martin’s astronomical research. And finally, Roy Reinhold’s Bible Code Matrix research which absolutely narrows it down to The Feast of Trumpets (Yom Teruw’ah) September 11th in 3 B.C.

Judging from all the evidence and research that I will present here, I believe that we can actually show that Yahuwshuwa Messiah fulfilled all three of the Fall Feasts at his birth as follows:

1.) Feast of Trumpets (Yom Teruw’ah): day of birth.

*Note: I believe that the announcement came on September 11th, with the constellation appearing in the sky that night, and Mary/Miryam began going into labor that night, but his birth actually took place by sun-down that evening just before the 2nd day of Tishri. This would mean that he was born at sundown on the 1st of Tishri just before the 2nd day of Tishri. As I noted earlier, since ancient times the Feast of Trumpets was traditionally kept for two days because two witnesses were required to sanctify the new moon. This would have left only 8 days until Yom Kippur when he would’ve been circumcised.

2.) Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur): circumcision.
3.) Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot): dwelled in a sukkah with his parents.

What follows is an article by Michael Schiefler who believes the birth of Yahuwshuwa to be on the Feast of Tabernacles rather than the Feast of Trumpets. The Feast of Tabernacles is 15 days AFTER the Feast of Trumpets each year. Michael Schiefler’s calculations are an “approximation” of the time of year that Yahuwshuwa was born during one of the Fall Feasts of YaHuWaH in September. 

His calculations are based on an undetermined “gestation period” which could set the date anywhere within a “window” of about 15 days between the Feast of Trumpets & the Feast of Tabernacles.

Michael Schiefler’s research is being used here only for the purpose of showing the biblical evidence of the approximate time of year that the Angel Gabriel visited John the Baptist’s father, Zechariah and this helps us to know when John the Baptist was born. From there, we can count 6 months (180 days forward) to find out exactly when Yahuwshuwa was born. I am also using the charts below to show the time of year when Gabriel visited Miryam/Mary (the mother of Yahuwshuwa) to announce that she would conceive.

*The following research comes from Michael Shiefler’s website, but I took the liberty of restoring the sacred names of deity in his article.

On What Day Was Jesus Born?
By Michael Shiefler

While much of the world celebrates the birth of Yahuwshuwa ha’Mashiyach (Jesus Christ) on the 25th of December, can the actual day of Yahuwshuwa’s birth be determined from scripture? This question will be explored in some detail, and will yield a result that is quite intriguing. The first passage we will consider begins with the father of John the Baptist, Zechariah:

Luqas (Luke) 1:5 There was in the days of Herod, the king of Yahuwdah (Judaea), a certain priest named Zekaryahuw (Zechariah), of the course of Abiyahuw (Abijah): and his wife was of the daughters of Aharown (Aaron), and her name was Elisheba (Elisabeth).

Luqas (Luke) 1:8 And it came to pass, that while he executed the priests office before Elohiym in the order of his course...

Luqas (Luke) 1:23 And it came to pass, that, as soon as the days of his ministration were accomplished, he departed to his own house.

Luqas (Luke) 1:24 And after those days his wife Elisheba (Elisabeth) conceived....

The clue given to us here is that Zechariah was of the “course” of Abiyahuw.

The 24 Courses of the Temple Priesthood

King David on Elohiym’s instructions (1st Chronicles 28:11-13) had divided the sons of Aaron into 24 groups (1st Chronicles 24:1-4), to setup a schedule by which the Temple of YaHuWaH could be staffed with priests all year round in an orderly manner. After the 24 groups of priests were established, lots were  drawn to determine the sequence in which each group would serve in the Temple. (1st Chronicles 24: 7-19). That sequence is as follows:

  The Division of the Priesthood

Scripture Reference
Division
Division
1st Chronicles 24:7
1. Jehoiarib
2. Jedaiah
1st  Chronicles 24:8
3. Harim
4. Seorim
1st Chronicles  24:9
5. Malchijah
6. Mijamin
1st Chronicles 24:10
7. Hakkoz
8. Abijah
1st Chronicles 24:11
9. Jeshuah
10. Shecaniah
1st Chronicles 24:12
11. Eliashib
12. Jakim
1st Chronicles 24:13
13. Huppah
14. Jeshebeab
1st Chronicles 24:14
15. Bilgah
16. Immer
1st Chronicles 24:15
17. Hezir
18. Aphses
1st Chronicles 24:16
19. Pethahiah
20. Jehezekel
1st Chronicles 24:17
21. Jachim
22. Gamul
1st Chronicles 24:18
23. Delaiah
24. Maaziah


1st Dibrey ha’Yamiym (Chronicles) 24:19 These were the orderings of them in their service to come into the house of YHWH, according to their manner, under Aharown (Aaron) their father, as YHWH Elohiym of Yisra’el had commanded him.

Now each one of the 24 “courses” of priests would begin and end their service in the Temple on the Sabbath, a tour of duty being for one week (2nd Chronicles 23:8, 1st Chronicles 9:25). 

On three occasions during the year, all the men of Yisra’el were required to travel to Jerusalem for festivals of YaHuWaH, so on those occasions all the priests would be needed in the Temple to accommodate the crowds. Those three festivals were Unleavened Bread, Pentecost, and Tabernacles (Deuteronomy 16:16).

The Yearly Cycle of Service in the Temple

The Hebrew calendar begins in the spring, during the month of Abib (Nisan), so the first “course” of priests, would be that of the family of Jehoiarib, who would serve for seven days. The second week would then be the responsibility of the family of Jedaiah. The third week would be the feast of Unleavened Bread, and all priests would be present for service. Then the schedule would resume with the third course of priests, the family of Harim. By this plan, when the 24th course was completed, the general cycle of courses would repeat. 

This schedule would cover 51 weeks or 357 days, enough for the lunar Jewish calendar (about 354 days). So, in a period of a year, each group of priests would serve in the Temple twice on their scheduled course, in addition to the 3 major festivals, for a total of about five weeks of duty.

The Conception of John the Baptist

Now back to Zechariah, the father of John the Baptist.

Luqas (Luke) 1:23 And it came to pass, that, as soon as the days of his ministration were accomplished, he departed to his own house.

Luqas (Luke) 1:24 And after those days his wife Elisheba (Elisabeth) conceived...

Beginning with the first month, of Abib (Nisan), in the spring (March-April), the schedule of the priest’s courses would result with Zechariah serving during the 10th week of the year. This is because he was a member of the course of Abiyahuw (Abijah), the 8th course, and both the Feast of Unleavened Bread (15-21 Abib) and Pentecost (6th of Sivan) would have occurred before his scheduled duty. This places Zechariah’s administration in the Temple at beginning on the second Sabbath of the third month, Sivan (May-June).


1st Month
2nd Month
3rd Month
Abib - Nisan
(March - April)
Zif - Iyyar
(April - May)
Sivan
(May - June)
First
Week
Jehoiarib (1)
Seorim (4)
All Priests
(Pentecost)
Second
Week
Jedaiah (2)
Malchijah (5)
Abijah (8)
Third
Week
All Priests
(Feast of Unleavened Bread)
Mijamin (6)
Jeshuah (9)
Fourth
Week
Harim (3)
Hakkoz (7)
Shecaniah (10)

Having completed his Temple service on the third Sabbath of Sivan, Zecharyahuw (Zechariah) returned home and soon conceived his son Yahuwchanon (John). So John the Baptist was probably conceived shortly after the third Sabbath of the month of Sivan.

The Conception of Yahuwshuwa Messiah 

The reason that the information about Yahuwchanon (John) is important, is because according to Luke, Yahuwshuwa was conceived by the Ruwach ha’Qodesh (Holy Spirit) in the sixth month of Elisabeth’s pregnancy:

Luqas (Luke) 1:24 And after those days his wife Elisheba (Elisabeth) conceived, and hid herself five months, saying,

Luqas (Luke) 1:25 Thus has YHWH dealt with me in the days wherein he looked on me, to take away my reproach among men.

Luqas (Luke) 1:26 And in the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent from Elohiym unto a city of Galilee, named Nazareth,

Luqas (Luke) 1:27 To a virgin espoused to a man whose name was Yahuwceph (Joseph), of the house of Dawiyd (David); and the virgins name was Miryam (Mary).

*Note: Verse 26 (above) refers to the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy, not Elul, the sixth month of the Hebrew calendar. This is made plain by the context of verse 24, and again in verse 36:

Luqas (Luke) 1:36 And, behold, your cousin Elisheba (Elisabeth), she has also conceived a son in her old age: and this is the sixth month with her, who was called barren.

Mary stayed with Elizabeth for the last 3 months of her pregnancy, until the time that John was born.

Luqas (Luke) 1:56 And Miryam (Mary) abode with her about three months, and returned to her own house.

Luqas (Luke) 1:57 Now Elisheba’s (Elisabeths) full time came that she should be delivered; and she brought forth a son.

Working from the information about Yahuwchanon (John)’s conception late in the third month, (Sivan), and advancing exactly six months (180 days), we arrive late in the 9th month of Kislev (Nov-Dec) for the time-frame for the conception of Yahuwshuwa. It is notable here, that the first day of the Jewish festival of Chanukkah, the Festival of Lights, is celebrated on the 25th day of Kislev, and Yahuwshuwa (Jesus) is called the light of the world (John 8:12, 9:5, 12:46). 

This does not appear to be a mere coincidence. In the book of John, Chanukkah is called the Feast of Dedication (John 10:22-23). Chanukkah is an eight-day festival, celebrating the re-lighting of the menorah in the re-dedicated Temple, which according to the Talmud, stayed lit miraculously for eight days on only one day’s supply of oil.

*Note: there is some controversy as to whether or not this “eight-day” miracle of the oil is true or not, since there is no record of it in the book of Maccabees. See Maria Merola’s other articles entitled: “Chanukkah is the Opposite of Christ Mass!”

The Birth of John the Baptist
By Maria Merola 

Michael Shiefler believes our Messiah was born on the Feast of Tabernacles, but right up until this point in his article, I agree with him. Shiefler uses the correct timeline for Zechariah’s Temple duties. However, he uses a different gestation period for the births of John and our Messiah, citing a 281-day gestation, rather than the more common one for males, which is 271 days. 

This article explains that an average gestation for all infants is only 38 weeks, but most doctors over-calculate to 40 weeks, due to the fact that they do not know know when the conception occurred: Length of Human Pregnancies Can Vary Naturally by as Much as Five Weeks

Normally, women are given a date for the likely delivery of their baby that is calculated as 280 days after the onset of their last menstrual period. Yet only four percent of women deliver at 280 days, and only 70% deliver within 10 days of their estimated due date, even when the date is calculated with the help of ultrasound. Now, for the first time, researchers in the USA have been able to pinpoint the precise point at which a woman ovulates, and a fertilized embryo implants in the womb during a naturally conceived pregnancy.

Using this information, they have been able to calculate the length of 125 pregnancies. We found that the average time from ovulation to birth was 268 days -- 38 weeks and two days, said Dr Anne Marie Jukic, a postdoctoral fellow in the Epidemiology Branch at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (Durham, USA), part of the National Institutes for Health.

Based on a conception shortly after the third Sabbath of the month of Sivan, (and projecting forward), an average gestation for a male child, is 271 days long, as compared to the gestation of a female child, which is 281 days. Additionally, we have a hint from the Hebrew word “herayon” (pregnancy) which has a numerical value of 271, when adding up the letters. This cannot be a coincidence!

Based on using the 271-day gestation for John the Baptist, we arrive at the 1st day of the first month of Abib, which is two weeks before Passover (Pesach). It is interesting that John would have been born in time for Passover, since it is customary for Yahuwdiym (Jews), to set out a special goblet of wine during the Passover Seder meal, in anticipation of the arrival of Eliyahuw (Elijah) that week, which is based on the prophecy of Malachi:

Malakiy (Malachi) 4:5 Behold, I will send you Eliyahuw (Elijah) the prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of YHWH:

Yahuwshuwa identified Yahuwchanon (John) as the “Eliyahuw” (Elijah) that Yisra’el had expected:

Mattithyahuw (Matthew) 17:10 And his disciples asked him, saying, Why then say the scribes that Eliyahuw (Elijah) must first come?

Mattithyahuw (Matthew) 17:11 And Yahuwshuwa answered and said unto them, Eliyahuw (Elijah) truly shall first comeand restore all things.

Mattithyahuw (Matthew) 17:12 But I say unto you, That Eliyahuw (Elijah) is come already, and they knew him not, but have done unto him whatsoever they wanted. Likewise shall also the Son of man suffer of them.

Mattithyahuw (Matthew) 17:13 Then the disciples understood that he spoke unto them of Yahuwchanon (John) the Immerser (Baptist).

The angel that appeared to Zechariah in the Temple, also indicated that Yahuwchanon (John) would be the expected “Elijah:”

Luqas (Luke) 1:17 And he shall go before him in the spirit and power of Eliyahuw (Elijah), to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children, and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just; to make ready a people prepared for YHWH.

So then, the Feast of Unleavened Bread (Chag Matzah) begins on the 15th day of the 1st month of Abib (Nisan), John the Immerser (Baptist), came two weeks earlier in the same anointing as the prophet “Eliyahuw.”

The Birth of Yahuwshuwa Messiah 

Since Yahuwshuwa was conceived six months after Yahuwchanon (John) the Baptist, and we have established a likely date for John’s birth. We need only to move 180 days (six months) farther down the Hebrew Calendar to arrive at a likely date for the birth of Yahuwshuwa. From the 1st day of the first month of Abib (Nisan), we come to the 1st day of the seventh month of Ethaniym (Tishri). And what do we find on that date? It is the Feast of Trumpets!

Immanuel

Yeshayahuw (Isaiah) 7:14 Therefore YHWH himself shall give you a sign; Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.

Immanuel means “El with us.” The Son of Elohiym (God) had come to dwell with, or tabernacle on earth with His people.

Yahuwchanon (John) 1:14 And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.

The word in the Hebrew for booth is sukkah and the name of the Feast of Tabernacles in Hebrew is Sukkot, a festival of rejoicing and celebration:

Luqas (Luke) 2:7 And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn.

Luqas (Luke) 2:8 And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night.

Luqas (Luke) 2:9 And, lo, the angel of YHWH came upon them, and the glory of YHWH shone round about them: and they were sore afraid.

Luqas (Luke) 2:10 And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.

Luqas (Luke) 2:11 For unto you is born this day in the city of Dawiyd (David) a Saviour, which is Mashiyach (Messiah) YHWH.

Why was there no room at the inn? Bethlehem is only about 6 miles from Jerusalem, and all the men of Yisra’el had come to attend the festival of Tabernacles as required by the law of Mosheh (Moses). Every room for miles around Jerusalem would have been already taken by pilgrims, so all that Miryam (Mary) and Yahuwceph (Joseph) could find for shelter was a stable.

*Inserted explanation by Maria Merola: 

Michael Sheifler makes a case for a Feast of Tabernacles birth, and his circumcision on the eighth-day of the feast (Leviticus 23:36, 39). However, I will show later on in this article, why I the circumcision was on Yom Kippur. Michael Shelifer postulates: Why eight days? It may be because an infant was dedicated to Elohiym by performing circumcision on the eighth day after birth.

Luqas (Luke) 2:21 And when eight days were accomplished for the circumcising of the child, his name was called Yahuwshuwa, which was so named of the angel before he was conceived in the womb.

So the infant, Yahuwshuwa (according to Sheifler), would have been circumcised on the eighth and last day of the Feast of Tabernacles, a Sabbath day. The Yahuwdiym (Jews) today consider this a separate festival from Tabernacles, and they call it Shemini Atzeret which means “The Eighth Day of Assembly.”

Conclusion

If you have followed the above reasoning, (based on the scriptural evidence), a case can be made that Yahuwshuwa Messiah was born on the 1st day of Ethahiym (Tishri), on the first day of the Feast of Trumpets, which corresponds to the month of September on our Western Gregorian calendar. Michael Shiefler, however, presents the following table, for a Feast of Tabernacles birth on the 15th day of the seventh Hebrew month of Ethaniym (Tishri).

*Michael Schiefler’s article ends here, and Maria Merola’s article begins again. I have corrected Michael Shiefler’s table (below) to reflect my research.


Narrowing His Birth Down to the Exact Day

Michael Shiefler has presented a case for the birth of Messiah on the Feast of Tabernacles, but he has not used any specific number of days for the gestation period. Hence, the birth of Messiah landing on the Feast of Tabernacles is still only an approximation, unless we can determine how many days Miryam actually carried him in the womb. We are about to find this out as we progress in this study.

On this website, called Associates for Scriptural Knowledge, Dr. Ernest L. Martin, Ph.D. answers the famous question about why dates do matter when it comes to celebrating the birth and resurrection of Yahuwshuwa Messiah.

The entire book can be downloaded free online and the radio interviews and lectures are also available here:


Another website that agrees with the birth of Messiah being on September 11th in 3 B.C. can be found here:


The entire study can be downloaded here:


Dr. Ernest Martin shows us that the constellation of Virgo (Bethuwlah in Hebrew) and Ariel, the Lion of Judah was also seen as a sign in the heavens according to Revelation 12 and that this was seen precisely on September 11th in 3 B.C., which fell on the 1st of Ethaniym (Tishri),  on the Feast of Trumpets (Yom Teruw’ah). However, most Messianic Jews celebrate his birth on the Feast of Tabernacles, which came 15 days later. There are a few reasons why many assume that his birth fell on the Feast of Tabernacles, but as I already illustrated with Michael Schiefler’s research, they use the wrong timing for the gestation.

Michael Rood, a well-known Messianic prophecy teacher (whom I greatly admire) teaches that his birth took place on September 26th in 3 B.C. on Sukkot (Feast of Tabernacles). The main reason, why this is taught, is because most people rationalize that the word “sukkah” means the same thing as “A manger or stable,” but they do not. I explain in greater detail, the difference between a sukkah and a manger in this other blog: Why Messiah Was Born on the Feast of Trumpets vs Tabernacles

We are shown in Scripture that the Messiah would “Dwell among us,” and the Greek word for “dwell” in John 1:14 literally means “tabernacle.” This is one of the biggest reasons why it is argued that he was born on the Feast of Tabernacles. However, we can make a strong case for the season of his nativity spanning all three fall feasts as follows:

1.) The Feast of Trumpets - his birth at sundown on the 1st of Tishri, going into the 2nd day of Tishri.

2.) The Day of Atonement - we begin counting the eight days until his circumcision, on the second day of Tishri, (after sundown on 1st of Tishri). Thus, his circumcision landed on the 10th day of Tishri, which is Yom Kippur.

3.) The Feast of Tabernacles - as a two-week old infant, he “dwelled” in a sukkah with his parents, and this was after he was circumcised in the flesh for Yom Kippur. This is important, because all males must be circumcised in the flesh, as well as in the heart, before being allowed to enter the Tabernacle (Ezekiel 44:9). 

Both feasts (Trumpets & Tabernacles) seem to fit the prophetic typology for when he was born. However, a closer examination will prove that all three fall feasts provide us with the full story of his nativity. The research of Ernest L. Martin and Roy Reinhold, will help us narrow it down to his precise date of his birth, and even the time of day. The Bible Code Matrices of Roy Reinhold corroborate with the research of Ernest L. Martin, showing within the matrix a birth of September 11th in 3 B.C., which you can view here below at this link:


*I have taken the liberty of restoring the sacred names of deity in Roy Reinhold’s research in his article.

Bible Code Matrix of Yeshuas Birth, part 2
By Roy A. Reinhold February 1, 2001

What it shows is that Yahuwshuwa was born on Rosh ha’Shanah (head of the year), which is also called Yom Teruw’ah (day of blowing) and in English the Feast of Trumpets. 

It’s also Rosh Qodesh which means the head of the month. Rosh ha’Shanah occurs on the 1st of Tishri every year on the Jewish calendar, and is in the fall of the year. The matrix shows that the birth occurred in the Jewish year 3759, which is the fall of 3 B.C. In 3 B.C., the 1st of Tishri occurred on September 11th, 3 B.C. With the matrix showing Rosh ha’Shanah, Yom Teruw’ah, Rosh Khodesh, and “on the 1st of Tishri”, it is clearly showing 1st of Tishri as the exact day of Yahuwshuwa’s birth.

*Note by Maria Merola: The Feast of Trumpets is never referred to in scripture as “Rosh ha’Shanah” (head of the year). The Jewish people call the Feast of Trumpets “The head of the year” because it is the end of the “harvest season.” The true “head of the year” according to scripture is in the month called “Abib” according to Exodus 12:2 & 13:4, when YaHuWaH declared to Yisra’el “This shall be unto you the beginning of months: it shall be the first month of the year to you.” This comes in the spring 14 days before Passover. “Times, Seasons & the Thief in the Night.”

This Hebrew matrix in the Bible Codes reveal that Yahuw-shuwa was born on Yom Teruw’ah (Day of Trumpets) on the 1st of Tishri in the year 3 B.C. or September 11th on the Solar Calendar. The matrix shows that Yahuwceph (Joseph) and Mary (Miryam) were in Bethlehem (Beit Lechem) and stayed in a sukkah, a stable. Yahuwshuwa the Messiah came from heaven, to earth, and his name is called Wonderful, and Counselor, and the Son of Man. 

The manger or feeding trough is mentioned where Mary laid the baby after birth. The Ruwach ha’Qodesh (Holy Spirit) was present and the shepherds came to pay homage. It mentions the angels who announced the birth to the shepherds, and the star in the sky announcing his birth.

All the details from the gospels are present and there is probably much more in this matrix than what I have shown, since it didn’t take me too long to develop it as it is.

The Gestation Period

Have we proven that Yahuwshuwa was born exactly on September 11th in 3 B.C.? If the matrix doesn’t have the conception 270-271 days prior to September 11th 3 B.C. then it didn’t meet the criteria showing all the aspects surrounding Yahuwshuwa’s conception and birth. If we count up the days from January 1st to September 11th in 3 B.C. (a non-leap year, because 4 A.D. is a leap year which would make 1 B.C. a leap year), then we get 254 days. 

That means 18 days back-wards in December 4 B.C., should be the exact date of the conception (December has 31 days). Our target should then be December 13th, 4 B.C. for the date of the conception based on a 271-day average human gestation period for male babies. I should mention that the Hebrew word for pregnancy is “herayon” (hey, resh, yud, vav, nun). Since the Hebrew letters also have numerical values it would be as follows:

Hey = 5, resh = 200, yud =1 0, waw (vav) = 6, nun = 50

Total = 5 + 200 +10 +6 + 50 = 271

How Long is a Full-Term Pregnancy in Months and Weeks? 

As already illustrated, the average gestation for a male child is exactly 271 days. The Hebrew word for “pregnancy” is “herayon”, and it has the numerical value of 271! 

This is why the #271 is used for the calculation of when our Messiah was conceiver on Chanukkah in 4 B.C. and born on the Feast of Trumpets in 3 B.C. YaHuWaH gave us a hint with the numerical value of the #271. 

9 months is exactly 270 days, plus 1 extra day for the delivery! 

9 x 30 = 270 + 1 = 271

Is there scriptural support for Yahuwshuwa being born on the 1st of Tishri? Yes, in 1st Corinthians 15:45 it says in talking about Yahuwshuwa, “The first man, Adam, became a living soul. The last Adam became a life-giving spirit.” In 1st Corinthians 15:22, it states, “For as in Adam all die, so also in Messiah all shall be made alive.” Yahuwshuwa is the second Adam, and the Rabbis have long taught that Adam’s birthdate was on the 1st of Tishri. So it is no coincidence that the second Adam has the same birthdate.

Angelic Announcement to Mary & Yeshua’s Conception, Part 3
By Roy A. Reinhold February 1, 2001 

We’ve gotten to the point where we are looking for corroboration for the 1st of Tishri, 3759 birthdate for Yahuwshuwa (September 11th, 3 B.C.) by investigating whether the matrix also has the angelic announcement to Mary and the conception. The conception should be 270-271 days prior to the birth, or December 13th, 4 B.C. The matrix report follows:

As you can see, the sub-matrix area on the conception tells quite a story. It shows that the year is 3758 (4 B.C.), and something surprising showed up. In looking for all possible dates for Kislev in the matrix area, it came up with 22 Kislev, plus it showed the evening 1 of Chanukkah as a date. These are both in the Jewish year 3758 (4 B.C.) I would have guessed that the angelic announcement to Mary and the conception took place together, but that is the not the case.

It seems that the Angel Gabriel visited Mary on Kislev 22 in 3758 (December 11, 4 B.C.), and announced to her that she would conceive and bear a child by the power of the Ruwach ha’Qodesh (Holy Spirit). However, the conception didn’t take place until evening 1 of Chanukkah, which begins on the 25th of Kislev every year. Chanukkah is the Festival of Lights and commemorates the victory of the Maccabees over Antiochus Epiphanies and the Syrians. 

They liberated Jerusalem and the Temple Mount and lighted the menorah in the holy place of the Temple, with just enough oil for one day and it burned for 8 days. Chanukkah commemorates that miraculous cleansing of the Temple and the 8 days the menorah was lighted supernaturally.

The words: Yosef (Joseph); Miryam (Mary); Ruwach ha’Qodesh (Holy Spirit); to conceive, become pregnant etc. are all important identifiers that this indeed was the time when the Angel Gabriel appeared to Mary (Miryam) to announce that she would conceive by the Holy Spirit and give birth to a son:

Luqas (Luke) 1:31 And, behold, you shall conceive in your womb, and bring forth a son, and shall call his name Yahuwshuwa.

The matrix shows that as the 24th of Kislev was ending, (and the 25th of Kislev beginning), this was the beginning of Chanukkah, when the power of the Holy Spirit came upon Miryam (Mary) and she conceived. That day was December 14th, 4 B.C., when Mary conceived, and became pregnant with Yahuwshuwa.

The matrix shows that Mary was a virgin (Bethuwlah). Her child was Yahuwshuwa the Messiah who came from heaven to earth. Joseph and Mary lived in Nazareth of the Galilee.

Ereb 1 of Chanukkah is more specific than just saying the 25th of Kislev, since it pin-points the time to a few hours in the evening of December 13th, 4 B.C. Our criterion has been met now, where the conception of Miryam (Mary) was shown to be 271 days prior to the birthdate. The bonus was in finding out the date that the angel made the announcement to Miryam (Mary), which was a couple of days prior to the conception. What we’ll need to look at now, is whether the Brit Milah (first-born dedication and circumcision) at the Temple was on the 8th day following the birth of Yahuwshuwa.

Bible Code Matrix of the Circumcision (Brit Milah) of Yeshua at the Temple on the 8th Day, part 4
By Roy A. Reinhold February 1, 2001


The events at the Temple on the 8th day following the birth of Yahuwshuwa in a sukkah (stable) in Bethlehem are an imp-ortant aspect to show with a high degree of certainty that the Bible code shows the correct dating for all mentioned events. 

We have shown that the angel visited Mary and announced that she would conceive and bear a child by the power of the Holy Spirit. This event occurred on the 22nd of Kislev 3758 (December 10/11, 4 B.C.). I show the 10th and 11th, because the day ran from evening to evening rather than from mid-night to midnight as we reckon time with the Gregorian calendar.

Next, Mary was a virgin, and conceived by the power of the Ruwach ha’Qodesh (Holy Spirit). The conception took place at the very beginning of Kislev 25, the first day of Chanukkah, the festival of lights. In the matrix this is shown by multiple occurrences of ereb 1 or evening 1. That conception took place on December 13th, 4 B.C. in the evening, which is exactly what we pre-calculated based on the 270-271 average human gestation for a male child.

We know that there was no extra month of Adar II in the Jewish year 3758, because the 1st of Tishri started the next year and it occurred on September 11th in 3 B.C. If there had been an extra month, then the 1st of Tishri would have been in early October for 3 B.C. This is important for showing that the conception took place on the first evening of Chanukkah. 

The same sequence was repeated in the Jewish calendar in 1999, Rosh ha’Shanah occurred on September 11th, 1999 (1st of Tishri 5760). Any Jewish calendar you look at will show that going back 270-271 days takes you to December 13th, 1998, which was evening 1 of Chanukkah on Kislev 25. You don’t need to look at ancient events, but just compare the Jewish calendar in 1998 and 1999 and the dates were exactly the same in the civil calendar as in 4 B.C. and 3 B.C.

Is there a Bible scripture that would lead us to believe that we have the date correct for the conception? Perhaps there is an allusion to a prophecy in Haggai 2:18-19:

“Do consider from this day onward, from the twenty-fourth day of the ninth month (24th of Kislev), from the day when the Temple of YHWH was founded, consider: Is the seed yet in the barn? Even including the vine, the fig tree, the pomegranate, and the olive tree, it has not borne fruit. Yet from this day on I will bless you.”

Sometimes we wonder why the scriptures were so specific in citing day and month for an event. The prophet spoke, “Is the seed yet in the barn?” Perhaps this is an allusion to a future event when the true vine, the root of the olive tree, the heavenly fig tree, would be conceived as a human being. The seed in the barn can be an allusion to pregnancy. 

*Note inserted by Maria Merola: the Hebrew word here in Haggai’s prophecy for “seed” is “zera” which is #2233 and it has the same root for the name of Tamar’s twin “Zerach” #2226. 

It means the following: seed, sowing, offspring; a sowing; seed; semen virile; offspring, descendants, posterity, children.

The Hebrew word for “barn” is as follows:

#4035 mguwrah meg-oo-raw’ feminine of 4032 or of 4033; a fright; also a granary:--barn, fear.

But it comes from the following root word:

#4033 maguwr maw-goor’ or magur {maw-goor’}; from 1481 in the sense of lodging; a temporary abode; by extension, a permanent residence:--dwelling, pilgrimage, where sojourn, be a stranger.

This is interesting because Yahuwshuwa came to “dwell” with mankind in a temporary (mortal) body and following his birth, he also dwelled in a manger (barn or sukkah).

*Roy Reinhold’s article continues:

As the 24th of Kislev was ending and the 25th of Kislev beginning, Mary conceived by the power of the Holy Spirit. The seed was in the barn, and a blessing for the world was here from that day on-wards. Let’s go on to the Brit Milah matrix.

I kept the above matrix report simplistic so that you can quickly see that the people mentioned in Luke 2:21-39, were there at the Temple. Shim’on the Tzaddiq is there (Simeon the righteous and devout man, verse 25), along with Channah (Hannah the prophetess, the daughter of Penuel). Brit and Milah are at the same exact ELS (Equidistant Letter Sequence) only 4 columns apart and crossed by milah for circumcision. 

Miryam is there (Mary), and you might ask, where is Joseph? It’s there but is one of those terms that crosses at a higher ELS so I left it out to make it all simpler looking. Yahuwshuwa and Messiah are there in the matrix, and most importantly the date of the 8th of Tishri and the year 3759 (September 18th 3 B.C.).

I should admit that there is probably much more in this matrix, but I hadn’t spent too much time on it yet, because it already shows exactly what we need to know. The entire scenario surrounding the announcement, conception, birth, and Brit Milah (circumcision) at the Temple has been shown to all be in one Bible code matrix. The dates are tightly interwoven and show what occurs. Let’s summarize all that we have:

1.) Announcement to Mary which took place on 22nd of Kislev 3758, which was December 10th /11th in 4 B.C.

2.) Mary conceived the child by the Holy Spirit which took place on the end of the 24th of Kislev, beginning of the 25th of Kislev in the evening, in the year 3758, which was December 13th, 4 B.C. This was the beginning of Chanukkah.

3.) Birth of Yahuwshuwa in Bethlehem--took place on the 1st of Tishri in 3759 (Rosh ha’Shanah), which was September 11th, 3 B.C.

4.) Brit Milah at the Temple--took place on the 8th of Tishri in 3759, which was September 18th, 3 B.C.

Is there additional scholarship to support the above scenario? A friend wrote to me as I was working on the above Bible code matrices and suggested the work by Dr. Ernest L. Martin. I ordered his book, and in the last section of this multi-part article I will relate what Dr. Martin shows in his book related to signs in the sky and the real date of death of King Herod. Needless to say, Dr. Martin’s work agrees 100% with the scenario of the Hebrew Bible Code Matrices.

Other Scholarship Proving the Exact date of Birth of Yeshua part 5, by Roy A. Reinhold March 28, 2002


Roy Reinhold says: “When I first became aware of Dr. Ernest L. Martin’s book The Star that Astonished the World,’ I was working on the Yeshua birth matrices.” His scholarship has withstood peer review and at least one aspect of the book is now in the latest edition of The Handbook of Biblical Chronology.’ Dr. Ernest L. Martin shows in his book, that the signs in the sky shown in Revelation 12:1-3, occurred on only one day in 3 B.C., and they occurred exactly on September 11th, 3 B.C. between 6:15 p.m. and 7:49 p.m. What are these celestial signs?

Chazown (Revelation) 12:1-3 And a great sign appeared in heaven, a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars; and she was with child, and she cried out, being in labor and in pain to give birth. And another sign appeared in heaven; and behold, a great red dragon having seven heads and ten horns, and on his heads were seven diadems.

Because the earth is rotating, there is apparent motion of the sun and moon, while the stars stay somewhat fixed in relation to the earth. The sun was mid-body along the ecliptic in Virgo the Virgin on September 11th, 3 B.C., and the moon was under her feet exactly from 6:15 to 7:49 p.m. on September 11th, 3 B.C. According to Dr. Martin, this great sign in the sky only occurred on that one day in 3 B.C.

The constellation of Virgo was the sign in heaven----“a woman clothed with the sun and the moon under her feet” in the Jewish Year 3759, on the 1st of Tishri which occurred on September 11th in 3 B.C.

While Dr. Martin’s date for the birth of Yahuwshuwa agrees exactly with what is in the Bible code, can we conclude that the birth of Yahuwshuwa took place exactly between 6:15 to 7:49 p.m. on September 11th, 3 B.C.? I believe that we can accept the time of birth as being 7 p.m. plus or minus an hour based on the exact sign in the sky.

What about the death of Herod as it relates to all this? After all, many scholars have said that King Herod died in 4 B.C. or 5 B.C.? Dr. Ernest L. Martin in his book, laboriously goes through each possibility for the death of King Herod and with a number of other scholars, proves that Herod died a couple of weeks after the total lunar eclipse of January 10th, 1 B.C. He pinpoints the date of death of Herod to about January 29th in 1 B.C. plus or minus a couple of days. Flavius Josephus wrote many details surrounding the death and burial of King Herod in his Jewish Antiquities. He writes that King Herod died shortly after a lunar eclipse. The lunar eclipses for that period of time in Yisra’el were as follows:

King Herods Death & Lunar Eclipses

7 B.C. -- no lunar eclipse

6 B.C. -- no lunar eclipse

5 B.C. -- total lunar eclipse on March 23, time between eclipse and Passover was 29 days

5 B.C. -- total lunar eclipse on September 15, time between eclipse and Passover was 7 months

4 B.C. -- partial lunar eclipse on March 13, time between eclipse and Passover was 29 days

3 B.C. -- no lunar eclipse

2 B.C. -- no lunar eclipse

1 B.C. -- total lunar eclipse on January 10, time between eclipse and Passover was 12.5 weeks.

Dr. Martin and a number of other scholars have shown that given the details by Josephus and other historians of that time that King Herod had to have died almost 3 weeks after the lunar eclipse. Then there were preparations for a royal burial and a 30-day period for the procession and burial. After that was over, the new king, Archelaus took care of many royal duties before Passover. Given all this, the two springtime lunar eclipses in 5 and 4 B.C. could not possibly be the lunar eclipse preceding King Herod’s death. You’ll have to read Dr. Ernest Martin’s book to get all the details and other supporting information.

What does this all mean? It means that Christmas is entirely pagan and is the continuation of the religious practices of ancient Babylon. Yahuwshuwa was born on September 11th, 3 B.C. and was earlier conceived on December 13th, 4 B.C. 

There is nothing about Yahuwshuwa related to Christmas except man-made customs. Saturnalia was the celebration of the winter solstice from ancient Babylon and Semiramis gave birth to Tammuz on December 25th. The Roman and Greek world worshiped the sun in a religion called Mithraism, and December 25th was the Nativity of the Sun (Sol the sun-god). Tammuz was supposedly the rebirth of Nimrod who is also known as Ba’al. The yule log is from ancient Babylon symbolizing the stump for Nimrod or Baal who was “cut down” by Noah’s son Shem. 

The green tree decorated with silver and gold and nailed down so that it would not totter was celebrated by ancient Yisra’el as they apostatized (Jeremiah 10:3-4), and there are a number of references in the Old Testament to a green tree as an idol. It is the same Christmas tree customs which people use today for Christmas. The round sparkly balls represent the sun. 

The popes in about 350 A.D. deliberately renamed the birth of Sol the sun-god on December 25th as a Christian custom. That is recorded in the Roman writings of that time. All of these Christmas customs were done by the pagans before the day was renamed as a Christian holiday. Isn’t it interesting that there were ancient presentations of the woman and child thousands of years before Yahuwshuwa was born? These Madonna and child representations were Semiramis and Tammuz from ancient Babylon.

So many Christians wonder when reading the Revelation, what Mystery Babylon could be in our modern time. It is partly the modern church, which has a mixture of the true teachings from the Bible, plus the most sacred Christian days being the old pagan Ba’al customs. All of these old pagan customs are part of the celebration of the rebirth of the sun on December 25th. None of this is from YaHuWaH Elohiym our Father. The Puritans in America forbade the celebration of Christmas because they knew and taught what has been presented here, that Christmas has nothing to do with Messiah or the conception or birth of Yahuwshuwa. 

I know, the first excuse usually given is, “well we can do good on that day.” Yes, you can do “good” on any day of the year. Why is it that you have to give gifts and put up a green tree in your house on December 25th? Is it because everyone else does it? Secondly, pastors will say that they preach the gospel on that day and some get saved. Yes, that does occur, but isn’t it the preaching of the Word of Elohiym and not the trappings of the pagan holiday that saves people? That too can occur any day of the year.

The fact is that believers need to repent that they perpetuated these pagan days and called them meaningful. You can make fun of ancient Yisra’el when they adopted the customs of the pagans and were later expelled from the land for their faithlessness, but aren’t we doing the same things? Please reconsider celebra-ting pagan holidays and calling them Christian.

*Roy Reinhold’s article ends here, and Maria Merola’s article begins again:

I have presented the research of three men who have shown us that our Messiah could not have been born on December 25th and that there is no warrant what-so-ever for celebrating his birth at this time of year. We have looked at the evidence in scripture starting with the birth of Yahuwchanon (John) the Immerser (Baptist) and through this we can unequivocally prove beyond any shadow of a doubt that Messiah was born 6 months after his cousin Yahuwchanon (John) in the Hebrew month called Tishri (September-October).

We have also seen the prophetic scriptures in Revelation and the corroborating evidence of the constellations that were seen the night when our Messiah was born. This evidence is further substantiated by the Bible Code research done by Roy Reinhold. And then finally, we have more scriptural proofs that provide us with insights that show the prophetic significance of our Messiah being born on the Feast of Trumpets and his subsequent fulfillment of the other Fall Feasts of YaHuWaH during the season of his nativity.

The Season of Messiah’s Nativity Follows the Pattern of  Jacob’s Wedding to Leah & Rachel

The reason why most people struggle to see that Messiah was born on Yom Teruw’ah rather than Sukkot, is because they are looking it through the lens of Messiah having only one bride. Once we understand that Messiah (like Jacob) has two brides, the picture comes into focus. These two brides will become “one bride” or “one stick” in the hand of YaHuWaH at his return. 

We must look at Jacob & Leah’s wedding in order to see the pattern. Leah typifies the House of Ephrayim-Yisra’el who is called “my first-born” in Jeremiah 31:9. She represents all those who are the “first-born” (born-again) as she was also the first to be married to the bridegroom. All those born-again of incorruptible seed will be “caught up” (after the 3.5 years of tribulation) to meet the bridegroom in the air (1st Thessalonians 4:17) on Yom Teruw’ah.

They will be taken into the New Jerusalem in the “chuppah” (bridal chamber) for “one week” (seven literal days). Ancient Hebrew weddings are seven days long (Judges 14:12-17). The bride that typifies Leah has gentile companions (Philadelphia) and they have an “open door” to go meet the bridegroom right away after the tribulation.

However, there is another bride who typifies Rachel. Rachel represents the House of Judah (those who are not born-again yet). Rachel was buried in Bethlehem-Judah (Genesis 35:19), and she was said to be “weeping for her children” in Judah (Jeremiah 31:15; Matthew 2:18). During the “Ten Days of Awe,” the bride that typifies Rachel will “go buy oil” for their lamps (Matthew 25:9) and then they will be ready to meet the bridegroom at the Mount of Olives on Yom Kippur (Zechariah 12:10). This bride also has gentile companions (Smyrna) and they are told that they will have to “suffer tribulation for ten days” in Revelation 2:10.

Our Messiah being born on Yom Teruw’ah directly parallels to the future bride of Messiah being “re-born” into her immortal body. The second bride typifying Rachel will get married seven days later, and she too will have her heart circumcised as she “looks upon him whom she has pierced.”

These two brides will become only one bride on Yom Kippur, when the High Priest would typically mix the two bloods together----the blood of a bullock and the blood of a goat (Leviticus 16:18). Rachel’s name means “lamb” and Leah’s name means “cow.”

These two families (Rachel & Leah), both Houses of Yisra’el will become one house when Messiah returns on Yom Kippur. After these two brides are brought together as one bride on Yom Kippur, they will go into the marriage supper of the lamb during the seven days of the Feast of Tabernacles. Now, we can see the prophetic pattern within our Messiah’s birth and circumcision as they also apply to his two brides and their re-births and heart circumcision!

In Leviticus 23:24-44, we are shown three Fall Feasts that are to be kept from the 1st day of the 7th Hebrew month of Tishri, and culminating at the 21st day of the month on the last day of the Feast of Tabernacles. These 21 days correlate to the 21 years of “Jacob’s Time of Trouble” (Jeremiah 30:7). Jacob served Laban for a total of 14 years for each of his daughters (seven years each) and then another 6 years for his cattle. At the end of these twenty years, in the 21st year, Jacob finally left Laban’s house and his days of trouble were over. These 21 days of Fall Feasts take us through the journey of Jacob’s Time of Trouble. 

Ya’aqob (Jacob) married these two sister brides within the same 14-day period of these two feasts (Trumpets & Atonement), as he also worked a total of 14 years for them. Leah typifies the Ten Northern Tribes of the House of Ephrayim. The wedding between Ya’aqob & Leah lasted for seven days (Genesis 29:28). I believe that these seven days were between the Feast of Trumpets & The Day of Atonement (Yom Teruw’ah & Yom Kippur). 

The second bride, Rachel was the “second-born” and she typifies the Two Southern Tribes of the House of Yahuwdah (Judah). Rachel was also married to Ya’aqob at the end of Leah’s week which would have been on Yom Kippur. Their wedding would have also lasted for another seven days during the Feast of Tabernacles.

Why is this important? I believe that the season of our Messiah’s nativity begins at Trumpets and ends at Tabernacles, because his nativity symbolizes the rebirth of his future bride, the “Two Houses of Yisra’el” typified in Leah & Rachel. The first-born (born-again believers) typified in Leah & Ephrayim will be married to Messiah first on the Feast of Trumpets (Yom Teruw’ah) and the second bride typified in Rachel will be married to Messiah last on the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur).

When these two brides become “one stick” in the hand of YaHuWaH (one olive tree) according to Ezekiel 37:16, this will take place on Yom Kippur. And then both brides will become only one bride and will have the wedding reception during the seven days of the Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot). Do you see the pattern? The 15-day period of our Messiah’s nativity accurately portrays the rebirth of both brides into one bride which culminates at the Feast of Tabernacles! 

This is how we can tell that he fulfilled all three of the Fall Feasts of YaHuWaH at his birth. He had to fulfill the “birth” of both brides, the Two Houses of Yisra’el! The “woman” in Revelation 12 is mother Jerusalem who will give birth to the “one new man.” To understand this concept, see my other article entitled “Ten Days of Awe Leading Up to Yom Kippur!”

It has been generally taught that our Messiah did not fulfill the Fall Feasts yet, and that he will fulfill them at his second coming. However, what most people have not seemed to figure out yet, is that all the Feasts of YaHuWaH have more than one fulfillment, and they do not stand still in one era of time. If he is the one “Who was and who is and who is to come” (past, present and future), doesn’t it make sense that his prophetic feasts also keep on moving with time? Therefore we can now see that he fulfilled all seven feasts at his first coming and he will again fulfill them at this second coming.

What if I told you that all three Fall Feasts celebrate the season of our Messiah’s nativity, circumcision, and dwelling in a sukkah?

In the same way, all three Spring Feasts celebrate the season of his death, burial, & resurrection. Our Messiah fulfilled “all seven feasts” at his first coming, and he will fulfill them again at his second coming.

If he was born on Sukkot, he would have left “two out of seven feasts” unfulfilled, which does not makes sense symmetrically speaking.

If he only fulfilled three Spring Feasts and Shavuot (Pentecost), and then only one of the Fall Feasts, that would mean, he only fulfilled five out of seven feasts.

Just like Jacob who worked for Rachel & Leah TWO PERIODS OF SEVEN YEARS, and Joseph who also worked under Pharaoh in Egypt TWO PERIODS OF SEVEN YEARS, it is fitting that our Messiah fulfilled SEVEN FEASTS at his first coming, and he will fulfill SEVEN FEASTS again at his second coming!

The Clincher

Since the year 2002, (when I first began researching the birth of Messiah), I had been grappling with the idea of whether or not our Messiah was born on the Feast of Trumpets or on the Feast of Tabernacles.

I carefully weighed all the evidence on both sides of the argument, and yet I could see pros and cons for either of these two feasts as a contender for his date of birth.

Then, one day back in 2008, the pieces to this puzzle came together for me in an instant as I received a revelation from YaHuWaH. While studying about the “forty-day fast” of our Messiah, I was suddenly struck with the awareness that his forty-day fast had to have begun on the 1st day of the 6th Hebrew month of Elul. This would then culminate at Yom Kippur (a High Sabbath), when he read the Isaiah 61 scroll in the Synagogue (Luke 4:14-21).

As I read the account in Luke’s gospel, I realized that he was speaking in “Yom Kippur” terminology when he declared “The Acceptable Year of YaHuWaH.”

Luqas (Luke) 4:

14 And Yahuwshuwa returned in the power of the Ruwach (Spirit) into Galilee: and there went out a fame of him through all the region round about.

15 And he taught in their synagogues, being glorified of all.

16 And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up: and, as his custom was, he went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day, and stood up for to read.

17 And there was delivered unto him the book of the prophet Yeshayahuw (Isaiah). And when he had opened the book, he found the place where it was written,

18 The Spirit of YHWH is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach the gospel (bashar, good tidings) to the poor; he has sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised,

19 To preach the acceptable year of YHWH.

20 And he closed the book, and he gave it again to the minister, and sat down. And the eyes of all them that were in the synagogue were fastened on him.

21 And he began to say unto them, This day is this scripture fulfilled in your ears.

What was so remarkable about him preaching the “Acceptable Year of YaHuWaH?” What exactly does this phrase mean?

In order to decode this mysterious declaration, we must understand the function of the High Priest (Kohen ha’Gadowl) each year on Yom Kippur. The High Priest was to act as the “kinsman redeemer” for the nation.

What is a Kinsman Redeemer?


The kinsman-redeemer is a male relative who, according to the Towrah, (Mosaic Law),  had the privilege or responsibility to act on behalf of a relative who was in trouble, danger, or need. The Hebrew term (go’el) for kinsman-redeemer designates one who delivers or rescues (Genesis 48:16; Exodus 6:6) or redeems property or person (Leviticus 27:9–25, 25:47–55). The kinsman who redeems or vindicates a relative is illustrated most clearly in the book of Ruth, where the kinsman-redeemer is Boaz.

The High Priest represents the “husband” of the bride (just like Boaz who redeemed Ruth), for only he could “stand in the gap” for her and make atonement for her sins year-by-year. The temporary order of High Priests was given to the sons of Aharown (Aaron) after Yisra’el sinned with the molten calf in Exodus 32.

After this “transgression,” the “law” which made mortals into High Priests was “added because of transgression” (Galatians 3:19). After this, Moses appointed Aaron and his sons the new High Priests to minister on behalf of the nation every year for Yom Kippur. However, prior to that, the high priest belonged to Melchizedek (Genesis 14:18).

Why did Mosheh (Moses) hand over the role of the “Kohen ha’Gadowl” to the sons of Aharown (Aaron) instead of to the Tribe of Yahuwdah (Judah) from where the Melchizedek Priesthood came (Hebrews 7:14)?

It was because Aaron was the originator of this transgression. He was the one who caused Yisra’el to sin in the first place with the golden calf. Therefore, the only way that Aaron and his sons could live, is if they were the ones who gave their lives as a ransom for the nation.

Each year when the High Priest performed the role of the kinsman redeemer on Yom Kippur, he had to first “sanctify himself” with the blood of a bullock, and then he had to make a sacrifice for the nation of Yisra’el with the blood of a goat. The bullock was killed to symbolize that “golden calf worship” was being put to death. The goat was killed to symbolize Yisra’el being killed for her own sins after this transgression in Exodus 32. This act was to remind them year-by-year about the “great transgression” in the wilderness (Psalm 19:13) which they would never again want to repeat.

As a result, this “law” which made Levites (mortal men) into High Priests was now being changed when Messiah declared himself as their High Priest!

Ibriym (Hebrews) 7:12 For the priesthood being changed, there is made of necessity a change also of the law.

Our Messiah came to restore the role of the High Priest (the husband and kinsman redeemer) back to the order of Melchizedek from the Tribe of Yahuwdah (Judah). Consequently, when he was baptized by Yahuwchanon (John), the mantle of the High Priestly office was being placed back onto Yahuwshuwa!

John was also an Aaronic High Priest, (a Levite), in the eyes of Yah. But Caiaphas was selected by men (an impostor). John was holding the temporary office of the Aaronic High Priest “until the seed should come” (Galatians 3:19). When John immersed Yahuwshuwa, he was transferring the role of the high priest back to the order of Melchizedek!

This is the reason why John had to die!

The nation of Yisra’el has a custom of fasting for forty days leading up to Yom Kippur to commemorate when Mosheh (Moses) was on Mount Sinai for forty days. At the end of those forty days, Mosheh returned to find them in “transgression” with the molten calf. Mosheh then had to make atonement for them and that is when he instituted the “law” of the high priests after the sons of Aaron.

This is the reason why the nation of Yisra’el to this day calls for “forty days of teshuva” or repentance. Yahuwshuwa fasted for forty days leading up to Yom Kippur to commemorate this same time in history. He performed the role of the sacrificial goat at his baptism, because baptism is a symbol of death (Romans 6:4). Then he was immediately lead by the Ruwach ha’Qodesh (Holy Spirit) into the wilderness as the scapegoat.

The term scapegoat literally means “the innocent party who takes the place of the guilty party.”

When he emerged from the wilderness after his forty-day fast, he went to the Synagogue, and he read the Isaiah 61 scroll. In this passage he was showing them that he was the “Mashiyach” (the anointed one), and he was declaring to them “The Acceptable Year of YaHuWaH,” which only the Kohen ha’Gadowl (High Priest) could announce each year on Yom Kippur.

If the red ribbon miraculously turned white and the white stone came up (as opposed to the black stone), it meant that the nation was “accepted” by YaHuWaH that year on Yom Kippur. It meant that their High Priest had atoned for his own sins and then he would have been a proper vessel to atone for the nation. 

However, if the High Priest did not sanctify himself, then he was not fit to atone for the nation either. Consequently, he could die behind the veil, thus causing the nation to be “not  accepted” that year.

When our Messiah declared “The Acceptable Year of YaHuWaH,” he was essentially saying to them:

“I am now your High Priest, your kinsman redeemer, your husband, after the order of Melchizedek, and you are accepted because I have made atonement for you in eternity as the lamb slain from the foundation of the world!”

Now, why did I go down this rabbit-trail?

Because I aim to show that Yahuwshuwa could not have acted as the high priest that year on Yom Kippur unless his 30th birthday had already taken place. At his baptism in Luke 3:23 it says that he was “beginning to be about thirty years of age,” because he had not turned thirty years old yet.

This means that while he was fasting in the wilderness, his 30th birthday had come and gone. By the time he emerged from the wilderness to read the Isaiah 61 scroll on Yom Kippur, he had to already be 30 years old in order to be the High Priest according to the Towrah (Numbers 4:3-47).

What does this mean?

It means that if he had been born on the Feast of Tabernacles, which is five days AFTER Yom Kippur, he would not have been able to take his role as the high priest that year!

Towrah requires all men to be at least 30 years of age before they can become a high priest. Therefore, his birthday had to take place BEFORE Yom Kippur, and that is what finally brought me to the realization that he was born on Yom Teruw’ah and not on Sukkot!

This means that while he was fasting in the wilderness, his 30th birthday had come. By the time he emerged from the wilderness to read the Isaiah 61 scroll on Yom Kippur, he had to already be 30 years old in order to be the Melchizedek Priest according to the Towrah (Numbers 4:3-47). What does this mean? It means that if he was born on the Feast of Tabernacles, which is five days AFTER Yom Kippur, then he would not have been able to act as the High Priest that year! Towrah requires all men to be at least 30 years of age before they can become a High Priest!

His birthday had to take place BEFORE Yom Kippur and that is what finally brought me to the realization that he was born on Yom Teruw’ah! 

Now, that you have been shown the truth, you have a responsibility before YaHuWaH to come out of “Mystery Babylon the Great the Mother of Harlots and Abominations” as mentioned in Revelation 17.

Christ-Mass is none other than the recycled religion of Nimrod and his wife/mother Semiramis from the Tower of Babel. Modern-day Christianity has adopted all the pagan rituals of the Tower of Babel. 

The word “babel” means “confusion and mixture,” and we are told that YaHuWaH is not the author of confusion (1st Corinthians 14:33). The same Messiah that many Christians claim to be worshiping on Christ-Mass has now called us out of this confusion and mixture.

Chazown (Revelation) 18:4 And I heard another voice from heaven, saying, Come out of her, my people, that you be not partakers of her sins, and that you receive not of her plagues. 


6 comments:

  1. I want you to comment on this site,that talk about the full moon being the first day of the month with their various scriptural back up. https://www.thecreatorscalendar.com/restored-prophetic-feast-days-yahusha-the-messiah/

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    1. Hello Unknown, I disagree that the new moon is the full moon. I have been looking at that for many years, and I have seen lots and lots of studies on it, but it is not supported by Scripture.

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    2. The reason why people come to this erroneous conclusion, is because they are reading Psalm 81:3 wrong. Here is the way it should be read:

      Psalm 81:3  Blow up the trumpet in the new moon, [and] in the time appointed, [and] on our solemn feast day. 

      In other words, there are three times in the year where we are commanded to sound the shofar: 1.) At every new moon each month 2.) At the three Pilgrimage Feasts (Passover, Pentecost & Tabernacles, which land on a full moon); and during all seven feast days.

      The Hebrew word for "in the time appointed" is #H3677 3677 kece' keh'-seh or keceh {keh'-seh}; apparently from 3680; properly, fulness or the full moon, i.e. its festival:--(time) appointed.

      The root word is #H3680 kacah kaw-saw' a primitive root; properly, to plump, i.e. fill up hollows; by implication, to cover (for clothing or secrecy):--clad self, close, clothe, conceal, cover (self), (flee to) hide, overwhelm. Compare 3780.

      #H3780 kasah kaw-saw' a primitive root; to grow fat (i.e. be covered with flesh):--be covered.

      There are three Pilgrimage Feasts commanded for all the males to appear in Jerusalem three times per year:

      Deuteronomy 16:16 Three times in a year shall all thy males appear before YHWH your Elohiym in the place which he shall choose; in the feast of unleavened bread, and in the feast of weeks, and in the feast of tabernacles: and they shall not appear before YHWH empty.

      The Feast of Unleavened Bread falls on the 15th day of the first month; the Feast of Weeks falls on the 7th day of the 3rd month; and the Feast of Tabernacles falls on the 15th day of the 7th month.

      Unleavened Bread & Sukkot fall on a Full Moon (the 15th day of the month); the Feast of Weeks fall on a "quarter moon" (the 7th day of the month).

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  2. There were six months between the birth of Yochanan ben Zachariah and the birth of the Messiah. Elisheva (and later Miriam) probably conceived about two weeks after the new moon. It has been observed in primitive cultures, where there is no artificial light or electromagnetic interference with the natural environment, women commonly ovulate at the time of the full moon. Under these conditions, the timing of the conception of both Elisheva and Miriam would have facilitated the delivery of their sons on the High Sabbaths of the two primary Feasts of YHVH – Passover and Tabernacles – as prophetic shadow pictures of good things to come. The Messiah was circumcised and named on the High Sabbath of the Last Great Day, the eight day of Sukkot. That day is a reference to the eternal Promised Land, just like circumcision is a reference to the earthly Promised Land.

    The wise men (Chaldean astronomers) arrived at the city gates of Jerusalem, more than a year later, a few days before Hanukkah with their lavishly appointed caravan. After their interview with Herod, the temporal king in Judaea, they would have rested on the Sabbath and then made their pre-dawn astronomical observations just before leaving for Beit Lechem on the first day of the week. To their amazement, “his star” (the planet Jupiter) was in retrograde motion and appeared to be fixed in the heavens directly over their destination.

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    1. Hello Unknown, this is not accurate. John was born on the 1st of Abib, and then 180 days later, our Messiah was born on the Feast of Trumpets. He was circumcised 8 days from Tishri 2, which landed on Yom Kippur. Please read the entire blog to get all the details.

      Please see all the reasons why our Messiah could not have been born at Sukkot. See this other blog, where I cite all the reasons:

      https://isaiahsixtyoneseven.blogspot.com/2021/12/why-messiah-was-born-on-feast-of.html?fbclid=IwAR3D1yT7gcWDxhiSINWIQr_r0HfZF81-N40QuKTZs3Pq80C-sSjs7_asumg

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    2. https://isaiahsixtyoneseven.blogspot.com/2021/12/why-messiah-was-born-on-feast-of.html

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