
There
is a strong Hebrew tradition that each of the twelve tribes
of Israel was associated
with one of the twelve constellations of the zodiac. The
precise identification of which constellation goes with
which of Jacob's sons has only been known with certainty
for four of the tribes. Each of the twelve carried a banner
or flag, and the many of those flags are believed to have
displayed one of the zodiac symbols. Thus, those figures
came to symbolize the entire tribe to a large degree, much
as the eagle represents the United States.
This article proposes a correspondence of each of those
tribes to one of the zodiac emblems, based on proposed dates
for the birth of each. Knowing those dates then leads to
greater understanding of the holy days on the Hebrew Calendar,
and testifies of the Lord's foreknowledge of all things
and of his great plan of salvation.
| |
| Jacob alludes to
the zodiac as he blesses his twelve sons. |
What
does the zodiac have to do with the twelve tribes of Israel?
Aren't the zodiac signs the basis of astrology, and isn't
that a false belief system? Wasn't Israel
admonished over and over not to worship the hosts of heaven?
Why would Israel
put zodiac figures on their flags?
It is
not surprising if these are your first questions as you
read this article, especially if this is the first you've
read on the subject. As has been pointed out in numerous
earlier articles,[1]
the Book of Enoch records that an angel revealed the constellation
figures to the prophet Enoch some 5,000 years ago, and many
scholars claim they symbolize the key features of the gospel
of Jesus Christ. Last month's article proposed that each
of the twelve constellations of the zodiac, through which
the sun appears to travel during the year, represents one
of the twelve principal roles of the Savior.[2]
Satan
twists truth and perverts it for his own purposes, which
he has clearly done with the zodiac signs. That causes many
to avoid the entire subject, but the symbolism of these
figures is so rich that it would be a tragedy not to learn
of the beauty of their meaning, and the clarity of their
symbolism. So my articles on the subject attempt to ignore
the perversions and focus on the good. My position is that
the sun, moon, and planets are like the hands on a huge
clock, with the twelve zodiac constellations through which
they move being the 12 numbers on the clock face. The Lord
uses his clock to time key events in world history. But
when Israel began
to worship the hands on the clock, as did the pagan nations,
then they were told they had missed the whole point, and
to desist. Similarly today, if someone believes the planets
are controlling his life, rather than merely keeping time,
then Satan could falsely convince him that he is not responsible
for his actions.
Having
that disclaimer in mind, let us look at the evidence, even
from the Bible itself, that the twelve sons of the prophet
Jacob were each identified with a different sign of the
zodiac.
| |
| Naphtali shows Joseph's
blood-stained coat to Jacob. |
First,
consider the dream of Jacob's son Joseph, of the sun, moon
and 11 stars (11 constellations?). He dreamed that they
all bowed down to him (Gen. 37:9). When he told the dream
to his family, they immediately knew that the 11 stars referred
to his 11 brothers. Was that just because of the number
eleven, or what it also because they already knew that each
was associated with a different zodiac constellation? Evidence
for answering this question affirmatively comes from noting
that most of their names have close ties to the zodiac constellations,
as discussed below.
Secondly,
when the tribes received blessings under the hands of their
father Jacob and many years later by Moses, many unmistakable
references were made to zodiac constellations. Moreover,
visions such as those of Ezekiel and John, describe figures
with the heads of a man, lion, ox, and eagle, which just
happen to match the four "cornerstone" constellations
(Ezek. 1:10, Rev. 4:7).[3]
It is precisely these four key figures which are the most
easily matched with the four principal sons of Israel
because each is mentioned in the blessings. Reuben is compared
to a man and to water, Judah
is compared to a lion, Dan to a serpent (counterpart of
the eagle), and Joseph's two sons to the horns of the wild
ox. Those link to the constellations of the Water Bearer,
the Lion, the Scorpion, and the Bull, respectively (Gen.
49: 4, 9, 17; Deut. 33:17).
Those
four sons are each also assigned to four directions (Num.
2:3, 10, 18, 25), and those four constellations are evenly
spaced around the circle, as are the four points of a compass.
And even non-Israelite prophets, such as Balaam, have used
the same figures to represent the tribes (Num. 24:7-9).
All of this has been discussed in detail in earlier articles,
and is summarized here only as review and to make it clear
that the Lord himself uses the symbolism. There is something
very profound going on here, and it is certainly seems worth
investigating.
Until
now, the identification of the constellations associated
with the other eight tribes has not been known with any
degree of confidence. The other references to the zodiac
are sketchy, and different scholars have proposed a variety
of associations based on scriptural clues. But historical
evidence of exactly what emblems were shown on which flags
has been weak, and is based mostly on tradition. Thus, the
information about the zodiac associations has been lost.
This article proposes a correlation based on the "brute
force" method of actually determining the birth dates
of the twelve sons, and then looking at which constellation
the sun was in at their birth.
Determining
Birth Dates
As is
known to readers of my earlier papers, I have discovered
a variety of sacred calendars, which the Lord seems to be
using, including the Venus, Mercury, Enoch, and (Perpetual)
Hebrew calendars.[4]
My articles have proposed a framework of key religious dates
in the history of mankind, from Adam down to the present
day. Let us now begin to fill in more dates into that framework,
and even be bold enough to propose precise dates for all
of the twelve sons of Israel,
and for two of their mothers, Leah and Rachel.
Seven
Children in Seven Years
How
is it possible to propose precise birth dates when the birth
year is not given in the Bible for even one of the sons?
In my former articles, at least the year was provided. Dates
were proposed based on the birth dates being holy days on
sacred calendars (especially the Hebrew calendar). How should
we proceed if the years are not even provided? The answer
is that it is clearly a puzzle to be solved, and the years
are not necessary. The big clue is that we can calculate
the seven-year period in which eleven of the twelve sons
were born, and also the one daughter Dinah. If those dates
must also fall on holy days on the Hebrew calendar and simultaneously
on holy days of the Mayan Sacred Round,[5]
then there are only a few dates available. If it turns out
that there are twelve dates in the seven years specified,
and it also happens that all twelve occur in different signs
of the zodiac, then we have the beginning of evidence that
we are correct. If the four principal tribes fit the cornerstone
constellations and that the names and blessings of other
tribes fit their respective figures, then the evidence becomes
more compelling that we have solved the puzzle. So with
that hope in mind, let us proceed.
The
curious thing about the history of the birth of Leah's six
sons and one daughter in a seven-year period is that she
had a barren period during that time. She was so distressed
that she had stopped bearing children that she gave her
handmaid Zilpah to her husband to bear children for her.
Now when is the last time you saw something like that on
the evening news? How many mothers do you know who had four
children in four years who then became distraught when they
didn't have a fifth in the next year? Both of Jacob's wives
clearly qualify as understanding the importance of the blessings
of having a large posterity. So we begin to see that the
pieces of this puzzle must be very tight-fitting indeed
because seven births can barely be squeezed into those time
constraints. So if it turns out that they drop into place
perfectly, then it will be amazing indeed. Of every 18,600
families that have exactly twelve children, on the average
only one of those families will have each child born in
a different month of the year or with the sun in a different
constellation. If the precise time of birth is known, then
there is only about one chance in forty that any one date
is holy on both of those calendars. Accordingly, if blind
chance governed the universe, then there would be negligible
probability that even one family in history could have such
a noble set of birth dates. It has occurred to me that it
would be interesting to calculate just how many seven-year
periods even contain twelve such dates.
| |
| Jacob and Rachel
meet (Gen. 29). |
Let
us review the entire story briefly in order to find the
seven-year period. Jacob worked seven years to marry his
beloved Rachel, and awoke after the wedding to find he had
married her older sister Leah. How could that happen? The
Book of Jasher, which is an excellent chronological source,[6]
states that they were twins. It was still very important
that one was slightly older than the other. Moreover, the
bride's face was most likely veiled. In any case, seven
days later he married Rachel. Leah gave birth to four children
in succession: Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah. Rachel was
barren, which was considered a great curse, because it would
mean no posterity, no family. When it was clear she was
not bearing, she gave her handmaid Bilhah to her husband,
and Bilhah bore Dan and then Naphtali. Note that we are
not told that Dan is born after Judah, although that is
usually assumed. Then it was Leah's turn to have a barren
period. Each of her four children were probably born about
a year apart. It must have been at least six months after
the birth of Judah that she realized that she was not expecting
and got nervous because by then Bilhah's second son was
probably born. So Leah gave her handmaid Zilpah to Jacob
to even up the odds. Zilpah bore Gad and Asher. Again we
are only told the order of birth to each mother.
Now
the plot thickens. We find that part of the reason for Leah's
barren period was that Jacob was not spending his nights
with her. When Leah's son found some fertility herbs, Rachel
traded her sister Leah a night with Jacob in exchange for
them. Sure enough, the trade was a success for Leah, who
soon gave birth to Issachar, and later to Zebulon and Dinah.
Then, finally, Rachel gave birth to Joseph. His birth was
the last because immediately afterward Jacob told Laban
that the second set of seven years had past, and that he
wanted to take his family back to his own country (Gen.
30:25).
So these
four women had twelve children (11 sons and a daughter)
in seven years. And Leah alone had seven of them, with a
barren period. Allowing a least an extra year for the barren
period, wouldn't that have taken Leah eight years to have
seven children? When I began calculating the dates, it became
clear that the only solution was that Zebulon and Dinah
had to be twins. After I discovered that, I found it confirmed
in two sources. First it is Hebrew tradition that they were
twins.[7]
Secondly, it states it implicitly in the Bible itself. For
all of the other children, we are told that "Leah conceived"
and brought forth a son. When it gets to Dinah it doesn't
state that she conceived again, but only that she brought
forth Dinah after Zebulon (Gen. 30:21). In other words,
it implied that they are twins by leaving out the word "conceived."
It is accuracy in minute details such as this which has
led me to believe that Genesis is a revelation from God,
rather than an attempt by Moses to record oral traditions.
So that eases the requirement somewhat, for now we need
only six birth dates in seven years, with an extra year
between the fourth and fifth dates.
Which
Seven Years?
Just
when is the seven-year period during which Jacob's first
twelve children were born? The scriptures provide us enough
detail to zero in on the exact seven-year period. Let us
begin by reviewing the chronological framework already established
in earlier articles.
Jacob,
later renamed Israel, was the father of the twelve sons
who became the heads of the twelve tribes of Israel. As
was proposed in an earlier article, Jacob was born on Wed
20 Mar 1892 BC pm* ("pm star" means after 6 p.m.,
when the stars are shining).[8]
That is a precise starting point, but we are not told in
Genesis how old he was when he had his children. With all
of the other prophets and patriarchs discussed in my articles,
we have been given their age when their children were born,
but in the case of Jacob, we need to do a little detective
work to get the answer.
| |
| Jacob, age 130,
meets Pharaoh. |
Long
after his children were born, and Joseph was prime minister
of Egypt, Jacob took his family there to survive a famine.
When he appeared before Pharaoh, he stated that he was 130
years old (Gen. 47:9), which was probably in the summer
of 1762 BC. How old was his son Joseph at that time? Joseph
had become prime minister of Egypt at age 30 (Gen. 41:46).
The seven years of plenty began in the following year, and
in the second year of the famine, Jacob's family came to
Egypt (Jasher 55:26). Thus, the time that Joseph became
prime minister would have been nine years earlier in 1771
BC. [9]
He was age 30 at that time, so he would have been born in
1801 BC. Joseph was born at the very end of the seven years
during which Jacob's first twelve children were born, so
that puts the seven years from 1808 to 1801 BC.
The
proposed date for the marriage of Jacob to Leah is Sat 30
Mar 1808 BC, which was the day 14 Spring 14 SPRING on the
Enoch calendar. That means it was Passover day (14 Spr)
in the year also representing Passover (14 SPR). That day
only occurs once in 364 years, so that was a rare day indeed,
but it was nothing special on the Hebrew calendar. The next
week he married Rachel on Sat 6 Apr 1808 BC, which is the
last day of passover on the Enoch calendar (21 Spr) and
also the minor holy day 1 Iyar on the Hebrew calendar.
This
example shows how the days are equally important, and neither
wife is favored over the other because one date is more
special on the Enoch calendar and the other on the Hebrew
calendar. The same will be true of the twelve sons of Jacob.
In other words, the birthright went to Joseph not because
his "stars" were better, but because of both his
actions and Reuben's actions. The proposed twelve birth
dates are all very nearly equally good, which is another
factor which defies chance.
If these
marriage dates are correct, then the birth of Jacob's first
twelve children occurred during a seven-year period that
corresponded to the Passover week of seven years on the
Enoch calendar. The last born, Joseph, has a proposed birth
date in the year 21 SPRING on the Enoch calendar, corresponding
to the Last Day of Passover. In the Hebrew reckoning of
years, it is similar. The marriage is in the year 10 NISAN,
which is the year of Consecration, and the seven years includes
the year of PASSOVER. And both the first and last years
are SATURDAY, the sabbath year of rest. If so, then it was
a very unusual seven-year period during which these children
were born from 1808 to 1801 BC.
Twelve
Birthdays
Many
years have been spent by this author in trying to determine
the twelve actual birth dates for the twelve sons of Jacob.
There are many problems but the principal one is to discover
whether or not there is a pattern of holy days on sacred
calendars which they all follow. Either God is using the
sacred calendars to determine the birth dates of his prophets
and key leaders, or he is not. Either they all follow a
pattern or not. If they do, then there is a chance to discover
the actual birth dates of these twelve sons of Jacob. If
they do not, then the best we could hope for might be to
determine the constellation associated with each birth,
which would require an accuracy of about a month.
In the
former published articles from my research, there have been
three general patterns proposed that the birth dates of
major prophets have followed. First, all births have
occurred on holy days on the Hebrew Calendar, and usually
also on holy days on other sacred calendars, with the Sacred
Round being the second most important. Second, the length
of their lives has usually completed an exact number of
cycles on at least one sacred calendar. In the case of the
antediluvian patriarchs who lived hundreds of years, sometimes
the lives completed two or more such cycles.[10]
And third, there has usually been a link from one parent
to at least one child. That is, the interval between the
birth of one child and the death of one parent is often
an exact number of cycles on one calendar. In this case,
there is one such link no matter what dates are proposed,
because Benjamin was born on the day his mother died. That
is exactly zero cycles on all of the sacred calendars, and
it is perhaps the strongest parent-child calendrical link
possible.
Rather
than drag the reader through all my years of research on
this subject, and preliminary attempts to discover any pattern
that could be proposed for the twelve birth dates, I will
simply report the results. It turns out that the requirement
to fit eleven birth dates into eleven different constellations
(four of which are known) in only seven years, with the
twelfth birth many years later into the remaining zodiac
figure is so difficult that one can easily rule out many
potential patterns.
Here
is the pattern that emerged. Exactly as in the case of the
patriarchs, each was born on a holy day on the Hebrew calendar,
and each was also born on either a day "1" or
"7" on the Sacred Round. This latter proposal
concerning day 7 being a minor holy day is new in this article.
I have wondered about it for years. There are thirteen days
in the time unit called the trecena on the Sacred Round,
and it has been clear that both the first and last days
("1" and "13") are sacred, but there
has not been an instance where the midpoint (or "meridian")
day 7 of the trecena is also known to be holy. Now that
has changed. The birth requirements are so strict for these
twelve that to me it now appears that the day 7 must be
a minor holy day. All twelve of the birth days turn out
to be equally important. The ones that occur on minor holy
days instead of major are compensated by also occurring
on other sacred calendars, or having impressive conjunctions
of the planets occur in the sky on those dates. We have
already seen this in the case of Abraham, whose birth date
was not as impressive on the calendar, but which was accompanied
by a double conjunction of planets.[11]
Before
listing the twelve birth dates, let us first turn to the
difficult problem of determining at least the year of Benjamin's
birth.
Benjamin
What
about the twelfth son, Benjamin? He was born many years
later, and we are not even given the year. Do we have any
way of determining Benjamin's birth date? The answer appears
to be in the affirmative because of the many clues we are
given about the time of his birth.
| |
| On his way to Hebron,
Jacob
stayed at Succoth, Shechem, and Bethel. |
Let
us review the history in just enough detail to deduce the
year of Benjamin's birth. Laban convinced Jacob to work
for him six more years after the birth of Joseph (in the
spring of 1801 BC). At the end of those six years (in 1795
BC) Jacob took his family and left on his way to Canaan.
During that year he crossed the Jabbok at Peniel where he
wrestled the angel who said his name would be changed from
Jacob to Israel. Then they sojourned a while in Succoth,
and then moved to Shechem. There his daughter Dinah was
defiled by Shechem (the prince and namesake of the town),
leading to Simeon and Levi destroying the entire village.
This caused Jacob to fear retribution from the local inhabitants,
and when Jacob prayed for help, the Lord told him to go
south to Bethel, where he should stay and offer sacrifice
(Gen. 35:1). This he did, and there the Lord appeared to
him and officially changed his name to Israel, and told
him that whole groups of nations would descend from him
(Gen. 35:11). While there, his mother Rebekah's nurse Deborah
died and they also got word that his mother had also died
in Hebron at the age of 133. After mourning for both, Rachel
conceived, and later they decided to relocate back to Hebron,
further south. During that journey, when they came near
Bethlehem, his beloved Rachel died while giving birth to
their twelfth son Benjamin (Gen. 35:16-18). They continue
on south to Hebron, where his father Isaac lived (Gen. 35:27).
| |
| Hebron, home of
Isaac and Rebekah. |
So when
was Benjamin born? The unknowns have been how long the family
was at Succoth and then how long they remained at Bethel.
Of many possible approaches to solve this problem, the following
now seems the most straightforward. If we start from the
premise that Rebekah died at age 133, a year or so before
the birth of Benjamin, then everything works out easily,
because Rebekah's birth date was already established in
an earlier article.[12]
This method avoids the problems of exactly how long the
family stayed in those two areas because it skips most of
that time period. It also dovetails nicely with the record
of events after they arrived in Hebron.
Proposed
Birth Dates
Here
is a table of the proposed birth dates for the twelve sons
of Jacob, as well as some other related events, such as
the births of Leah and Rachel. If the day on the sacred
calendar is not a holy day, then it is indicated at a dash
(—). In the event column, "b." means birth, "c."
means circumcised (one week later), and "md."
means married. On the Sacred Round calendar, the day "1"
represents beginning, so it is ideal for birth. In the cases
where the birth is on "7", then the circumcision
day falls on "1" on an especially significant
day. In the case of Reuben, it is 1 Water, and Water is
his emblem. In the case of Judah, the circumcision is on
1 Temple, where Temple also signifies birth.[13]
| Event |
Gregorian
Date (BC) |
Hebrew |
Sacred
Round |
Other |
| Isaac
b. |
16
Mar 1952 |
Tue
10 Nisan |
1
Serpent |
1
Res (V) 1 Bir (M) |
| Rebekah
b. |
8
Nov 1923 pm* |
Wed
1 Kislev |
1
Jaguar |
1
Bir (V) 1 Res (M) |
| Jacob
b. |
20
Mar 1892 pm* |
Thu
15 Nisan |
1
Temple |
1
Birth (Venus) |
| Leah/Rachel
b. |
2
Mar 1836 |
Sat
15 Adar |
1
Storm |
1
Birth (Venus)
1 Lord (Merc) |
| Jacob
begins work |
9
Apr 1815 |
Sun
16 Nisan |
13
Deer |
15
Spr (Enoch) |
| Jacob/Leah
md. |
30
Mar 1808 |
Sat
— |
— |
10
NISAN (H)
14 Spr 14 SPR (Enoch) |
| Jacob/Rachel
md. |
6
Apr 1808 |
Sat
1 Iyar |
— |
10
NISAN (H)
21 Spr (Enoch) |
| Reuben
b. (Aqr) |
23
Dec 1808 |
Mon
25 Kislev |
7
Wind |
10
NISAN (H)
14 SPR (E) |
| Reuben
c. |
30
Dec 1808 |
Mon
2 Tebeth |
1
Water |
1
Res (Merc) |
| Simeon
b. (Cap) |
16
Dec 1807 pm* |
Wed
1 Tebeth |
1
Flower |
1
Res (Merc) |
| Levi
b. (Psc) |
5
Feb 1805 |
Fri
1 Adar |
1
Condor |
1
Birth (Merc) |
| Dan
b. (Sco) |
9
Oct 1805 pm* |
Mon
15 Tishri |
1
Temple |
1
Adult (M) |
| Judah
b. (Leo) |
19
Jun 1804 pm* |
Tue
1 Tammuz |
7
Condor |
14
NISAN |
| Naphtali
b. (Vir) |
17
Aug 1804 pm* |
Fri
1 Elul |
1
Eagle |
14
NISAN, 1 Prime (V) |
| Gad
b. (Sgr) |
2
Nov 1803 pm* |
Sat
1 Kislev |
1
Quake |
15
NISAN, 1 Cre (M) |
| Issachar
b. (Cnc) |
29
May 1802 |
Wed
1 Sivan |
1
Serpent |
1
Res (M) |
| Asher
b. (Lib) |
23
Sep 1802 pm* |
Tue
1 Tishri |
1
Wind |
1
Res (M) |
| Zebulon
b. (Ari) |
4
Mar 1801 |
Tue
14 Adar |
7
Dragon |
|
| Joseph
b. (Tau) |
6
Apr 1801 |
Sun
18 Nisan |
1
Quake |
15
Spr 21 SPR (E) |
| Rebekah
d. |
6
Apr 1790 pm* |
Sun
18 Nisan |
1
Jaguar |
15
Spr (E), 1 Lord (V) |
| Benjamin
b. (Gem)
Rachel d. |
25
May 1788 |
Tue
1 Sivan |
1
Jaguar |
1
Adult (V), 1 Lord (M) |
| Leah
d. |
1
Jul 1786 pm* |
Sun
1 Tammuz |
1
Light |
1
Res (V), 1 Adt (M) |
| Ephraim
&
Manasseh b. (Tau) |
3
Apr 1767 |
Thu
1 Nisan |
1
Grass |
1
Prime (M) |
| Jacob
d. |
14
Apr 1745 pm* |
Tue
15 Nisan |
1
Storm |
1
Birth (V) 1 Cre (M) |
| Joseph
d. |
5
Mar 1691 pm* |
Sun
1 Nisan |
1
Light |
9
AB (H), 9 MSU(E) |
Let
us consider some of these results and their implications
in more detail.
New
Holy Days
One
problem that has been difficult in all of this research
is to know just what the "official" holy days
are on the Hebrew Calendar. What are the holy dates that
the Lord has on his calendar, not including those which
have just been added by man to celebrate joyous occasions?
It must be remembered that all of these births occurred
long before the birth of Moses, and most of them would celebrate
future events. Many of the holy days are explicitly described
in the Law of Moses, so there is little question about them.
But what about Hanukkah, the eight-day Festival of Lights
that commemorates the rededication of the temple in 165
BC? Was that date on God's calendar from the beginning?
What about the Feast of Esther, which celebrates Esther's
saving the Israelites from execution in the fifth century
BC? These questions have puzzled me for years.
Hanukkah
| |
| Grouping of Mercury,
Venus, Saturn and the Sun in the Water Bearer on Hanukkah,
1808 BC. |
The
dates for Reuben teach us several things. First, to me it
appears to establish the first (and last?) day of Hanukkah
to be an official minor holy day. The first day of Hanukkah
falls on 25 Kislev, near the Christian Christmas season.
The last day occurs seven days later on either 2 Tebeth
or 3 Tebeth, depending on whether the month of Kislev has
29 or 30 days. Reuben's birth date was almost certainly
on Hanukkah, and the day of his circumcision one week later
would have fallen on the last day. That day was "1
Water" on the Sacred Round, and Water is the symbol
of the Water Bearer constellation (Reuben). As shown in
the illustration, there was also a grouping of three planets
with the sun in the Water Bearer on Hanukkah (25 Kislev)
that year.
Feast
of Esther
The
same question concerns the Feast of Esther on 14-15 Adar.
Are those two days "official" holy days or not?
Again, the answer seems to be in the affirmative, because
the twins Zebulon and Dinah were most likely born on 14
Adar. Not only does the date fit the pattern perfectly,
the planets Mercury and Venus were both located in the leg
of the Ram which is breaking the bands of death. Henceforth
in these articles, both Hanukkah and the Feast of Esther
will be treated as minor holy days.
Easter
| |
| Joseph was probably
born on Easter. |
Again,
a similar question arises concerning Easter, called the
Waving of the Omer on the Hebrew Calendar. It falls on the
Sunday after Passover, but was not declared to be a holy
day in the Law of Moses, but only the day of a special offering
of the firstfruits from the ground. After the Resurrection
of Jesus Christ, it became clear that this was really a
major holy day, but was it an official holy day from the
beginning? To me the answer now appears to be in the affirmative
because the birth of Joseph most likely occurred on Easter
Sunday of 1801 BC.
An interesting
point is that Genesis states that Joseph was born at the
completion of the second seven years (Gen. 30:25). According
to these proposed dates, it was exactly seven years on the
Enoch calendar from his marriage to Leah, and also exactly
14 years from when he began work for Laban. Apparently the
seven year periods were precise to the very day.
Confirming
Dates
Now
let us look at some of the birth and death dates of the
parents and grandparents of these twelve sons. They form
the same type of interlocking pattern as we have seen in
earlier articles about the birth dates of the antediluvian
patriarchs.
Rebekah
| |
| Rebekah, born and
died on 1 Jaguar. |
One
result of this study is the proposed death date for Jacob's
mother Rebekah. Her death date is the key link in discovering
the birth date of Benjamin. Her death date now appears solid
enough to be the basis of forming an anchor point in history.
As discussed in an earlier article, the proposed birth date
for Rebekah ties perfectly to her husband Isaac's. Her proposed
birth date is Tue 8 Nov 1923 BC pm* which was 1 Kislev (Hebrew),
1 Jaguar (Sacred Round), 1 Birth (Venus) and 1 Resurrection
(Mercury). His proposed birth date is Tue 16 Mar 1952 BC,
being 10 Nisan (Hebrew), 1 Serpent (S. R.), 1 Resurrection
(Venus) and 1 Birth (Mercury). The important feature to
note is that the Venus and Mercury calendar dates are reversed
for the two, just as they are for Ishmael and Isaac. That
was such a rare coincidence as to really lock in her birth
date.
The
Book of Jasher states that Rebekah died at age 133 while
the family was at Bethel, shortly before the conception
of Benjamin (Jasher 36:6). An ideal date is found at that
time, being Sat 6 Apr 1790 BC, which was the same day as
her birth on the Sacred Round (1 Jaguar). It is common in
the ages of the patriarchs (and now matriarchs) to have
their life be an exact number of cycles on one of the sacred
calendars. In this case, the length of Rebekah's life would
be exactly 186 Sacred Rounds. The day was also Easter on
both the Hebrew and Enoch calendars, as was Joseph's proposed
birth date. Again, it is common to have the period to the
birth of a child or grandchild be an exact number of cycles.
Moreover, it was also a holy day on the Venus calendar,
as was her birth, and there are only 16 days in 584 days
that such an alignment occurs. So these fulfillments of
multiple patterns convince me that he death date truly has
been found: Sat 6 Apr 1790 BC pm*.
Leah
and Rachel
After
discovering how impressive Rebekah's death date and life
was, it caused me to search for the birth and death dates
of both Leah and Rachel. Their birth and death years, and
ages, are given in the Book of Jasher (Jasher 36:11, 41:2),
so it was a much easier problem than the birth of the twelve
sons of Jacob. Jasher also mentions that they were twins
(Jasher 28:28), even as were Jacob and Esau. Their birth
date was most likely Sat 2 Mar 1836 BC, which was the Feast
of Esther (Hebrew), 1 Birth (Venus) and 1 Lord (Mercury).
Thus, it is proposed that both of these wives were born
on 1 Birth (V) as was Jacob, so that is a rare match. Rachel's
death occurred at Benjamin's birth, and the day was also
1 Lord (M), so her life completed an exact number of cycles
on the Mercury calendar. It was also on 1 Jaguar, the same
as Rebekah's proposed birth and death dates.
Leah
only lived a few years longer than Rachel, dying before
Joseph was sold into Egypt. Her death was most likely on
Sat 1 Jul 1786 BC pm*, which was 1 Tammuz, the same as her
son Judah. It was also 1 Res (V), the same as Isaac's birth
date, and also 1 Adult (M) the same as Jacob's birth date.
Again, these are not just holy days, but the match the pattern
of being the same as husband and children. It was also 1
Light (S.R.), the day beginning that cycle. These are enough
patterns to merit publishing this date as likely to be her
death date.
Jacob
| |
| Jacob lived an exact
number of Hebrew years and Venus cycles. |
One
new date that emerged from this study is Jacob's death date.
After discovering that Rebekah's life most likely was an
exact number of Sacred Rounds as well as being a holy day
on the Venus calendar, it seemed like a good idea to search
for Jacob's death date. To me the result was stunning. By
far the most likely date is Mon 14 Apr 1745 BC pm* which
was both Passover and also 1 Birth on the Venus Calendar.
It is amazing that such a date exists exactly 147 Hebrew
years after his proposed birth date on Wed 20 Mar 1892 BC
pm*, which was also Passover and also 1 Birth (Venus). Until
writing this article, I had not even considered that possibility
for at least two reasons. First, 147 = 3 x 49, meaning that
his life was exactly three jubilees long, and that alone
was impressive enough to me to stop looking. Secondly, 1
Birth (Venus) only occurs on Passover about twice in 584
years on the average, so one wouldn't expect it after only
147 years. Note also that both 1 Birth (V) and 1 Temple,
on which he was born, are the very days of those cycles
that represent birth. Thus, this is yet another compelling
confirmation of the birth date proposed for Jacob several
years ago. [14]
Joseph,
Ephraim and Manasseh
| |
| Jacob blesses Ephraim
& Manasseh. |
The
book of Jasher states that Joseph's two sons were born when
he was age 34 (Jasher 50:15). While not stating that they
are twins, my conclusion is that they are, because they
are compared to the horns of the wild ox (Deut. 33:17),
and there is a clear birth date for them when the sun is
in the constellation of the Bull, the constellation of Joseph,
whom they would replace in the set of twelve tribes. Moreover,
there is a clear candidate to be the death date for Joseph
at age 110 (Gen. 50:26) and it occurs on the same day of
the Hebrew years as the proposed birthday for his sons (1
Nisan). Moreover, their birthday fills in one more very
important holy day to the set of twelve (New Year's Day).
Thus, the timing of the births appears to have been foreseen
and carefully planned.
Scriptural
Confirmation
There
are several clues in the scriptures about which constellation
is associated with which tribe, but some are not obvious
at all. When I began this study I was really encouraged
about how easy the four cornerstone constellations were,
because each of those four tribes (Reuben, Dan, Judah, and
Joseph) were compared to the figures (Water Bearer, Scorpion,
Lion, Bull) explicitly in their names or blessings. Moreover,
Dan means "Judge" and Judah means "Praised,"
both of which tie directly to the corresponding roles of
Jesus Christ of Judge and King, as discussed in last month's
article. So those are the four about which everyone agrees.
But the other eight were not obvious and there is little
agreement about them.
After
I had finished this study and had determined the birth dates
in the above table, and was in the process of writing this
article, the idea occurred to me to read those names and
blessings one more time. It was surprising how easy it was
to see that there were strong indications in front of me
all the time, but many of them are only clear in the light
of knowing how the twelve roles of Jesus Christ correspond
to the twelve constellations.
| |
| Joseph reveals himself
to his brothers. |
Simeon
is the Sacrifice. There are two clues that Simeon is
the Sea Goat that is sacrificed. First, the blessing by
Jacob stated, "Simeon and Levi are brethren; instruments
of cruelty are in their habitations" (Gen. 49:5). What
does that mean? Ostensibly, it refers to their slaying of
the village of Shechem to defend their sister Dinah's honor,
but could there be more? It occurred to me that Levi's sign
is Pisces, which contains the chains or bonds that shackle
the fish to the Sea Monster. Those are certainly instruments
of cruelty. And the Sea Goat is the other sign that refers
to an animal about to be slaughtered by the knife. Thus,
the Sea Goat is a good match for Simeon's instrument of
cruelty. Moreover, it was Simeon whom Joseph kept behind
in Egypt as a ransom for Benjamin, that is, he was the sacrifice.
Levi
is The Fishes. Levi means "Joined," which
now seems like a clear reference to the Fishes, which are
joined by two bands or chains to the Sea Monster. Moreover,
Levi's tribe was that to whom the priesthood was given,
which corresponds to the Fishes representing the role of
Jesus Christ as the Great High Priest.
| |
| Conjunction of Mercury,
Jupiter and the Sun in the Maiden at birth of Naphtali. |
Naphtali
is the Maiden. There are at least three scriptural clues
that Naphtali corresponds to the constellation of the Maiden.
First, in the blessing of Jacob, he is compared to a hind
or doe, that is, a female deer. Why not a buck? Perhaps
it is because he ties to the female constellation. Secondly,
in his blessing by Moses, he is told he will be "full
with the blessing of the Lord." As in many languages
today, the word "full" has the double meaning
of expecting a baby. Truly the Virgin Mary was "full
with the blessing of the Lord." Thus both blessings
contain references not only to females, but one to an expectant
mother, which is clearly the Virgin's Seed. Finally, the
name Naphtali means "to struggle or wrestle,"
[15]
which could describe the struggle of giving birth.
Gad
is the Archer. The name Gad means "fortune,"
coming from the root which means an invading troop or an
attack which overcomes. The Archer is like a one man cavalry
(a centaur) attacking and overcoming the scorpion with bow
and arrow.[16]
His blessing was that Gad "shall overcome at last"
(Gen. 49:19) which again fits perfectly with the Archer
representing Christ as the "Savior."
Issachar
is the Crab. The name Issachar means to "he will
bring a reward"[17].
That is exactly the role of the Crab, who represents Christ
as the "Deliverer" who brings the captive dead
forth from Hades. And his blessing echoes this theme: he
is likened to a donkey "crouching down between two
burdens" and "becoming a servant unto tribute"
(Gen. 49:14-15).
Thus,
six of the eight tribes with unknown constellations have
hints in their names or roles of Christ. The other two Asher
("happy") and Zebulon ("habitation")[18]
are not as obvious. Asher may well tie to the Balance because
of the joy that comes after the price has been paid. And
Zebulon's "dwelling" could refer to the everlasting
life of the Ram's golden fleece, but neither of these is
nearly as straightforward as the other six.
Conclusion
The
mystery of how the twelve constellations of the zodiac correspond
to the twelve tribes of Israel appears now to have been
solved by applying knowledge of the Lord's sacred calendars
to the chronological clues in the scriptures and the Book
of Jasher. Confirmation is found in the meanings of their
names, as well as in the corresponding roles of Jesus Christ.
Some of the implications are that Hanukkah, the Feast of
Esther, and Easter are all Hebrew holy days that were on
the Lord's calendar from as early as the time of Jacob.
All of these together testify of the importance of the Lord's
calendars as a tool to determine the exact dates of key
historical religious events, and to provide many more witnesses
of the historicity and accuracy of the scriptures.
Notes
- See
Pratt, John P., "Enoch
Calendar Testifies of Christ," Meridian Magazine
(11 Sep 2001) for authenticity of Book of Enoch, and "
The Constellations Testify of Christ," Meridian
Magazine (9 Oct 2001), section 1.8, for reference
to Uriel revealing the constellations.
- Pratt,
John P., "
The Constellations Tell of Christ," Meridian
Magazine (15 Jun 2005), called "The Zodiac Testifies
of Christ" on my website.
- Pratt,
John P. "The
Lion and Unicorn Testify of Christ, Part I: The Cornerstone
Constellations," Meridian Magazine (8
Nov 2001).
- Pratt,
John P., "Venus
Resurrects This Easter Sunday," Meridian Magazine
(27 Feb 2001) for Venus and Mercury calendars, and footnote
1 above for Enoch Calendar. The Perpetual Hebrew Calendar
has yet to be published, being a work in progress.
- Pratt,
John P., "A
Native American Easter: How the Ancient American Calendar
Testifies of Christ," Meridian Magazine
(28 Mar 2001) is an introduction to the Sacred Round.
- Pratt,
John P., "How
Did the Book of Jasher Know?," Meridian Magazine
(7 Jan 2002).
- The
Book of Jubilees states, "and she bore twins, a boy
and a girl, and she called the boy Zebulun and the girl's
name was Dinah" (Jubilees 28:23), from Charlesworth,
James H., The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha (Garden
City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1985), vol 2, p. 110. I believe
that account correct, but in general Jubilees is entirely
unreliable in chronology and has all the earmarks of having
been largely a fabrication. It gives many precise dates
to give the feeling of authenticity, but they all appear
to be nonsense. In this case, the birth dates of the twelve
sons do not all fall within seven years, but within fourteen,
which is not what is described in Genesis.
- Pratt,
John P., "Divine
Calendars Testify of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,"
Meridian Magazine (11 Sep 2003), section 6.
- Thus,
Joseph would have been 39 years old when his father was
130, meaning that Jacob was 91 years old when Joseph was
born. That age is confirmed in the Book of Jasher (Jasher
31:21).
- One
notable example is Jared, the father of Enoch, who lived
602 Venus cycles and also 1,352 Sacred Rounds. See Pratt,
John P., "Astronomical
Witnesses of the Great Flood," Meridian Magazine
(13 Aug 2003), section 2.5.
- Pratt,
John P., "Divine
Calendars Testify of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,"
Meridian Magazine (11 Sep 2003), section 2.5.
- Pratt,
John P., "Divine
Calendars Testify of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,"
Meridian Magazine (11 Sep 2003), section 5.
- The
meanings of the twenty day names are discussed by Pratt,
John P., "The Twenty
Day Names," (20 Apr 2000).
- See
footnote 8.
- Strong,
James, The Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible
(McClean Virgina: MacDonald) Hebrew words 5321, and 6617.
- Strong,
Hebrew words 1410, 1464.
- Strong,
Hebrew word 3485.
- Strong,
Hebrew word 836 (Asher) and 2074 (Zebulon).