OK, let's try the weekly chat idea. Here goes!
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1775 Bible with different calendar than what we observe today. Some of the information discussed isn't new to me and probably not most of you. I didn't know about all the changes to the calendar.
Have you ran across information on this subject?
It really makes me rethink celebrating Christmas, decorating the tree and gifts. I'm 56 with a 31 year old daughter it's pretty much impossible at this point unless the entire family is on board. My daughter and husband are awake but the rest of the family isn't and doesn't want to hear the truth.
1775 Bible discovered through Mark Pires's insightful video on his channel, (Mark Inspires) This ancient tome challenges our conventional understanding of time, suggesting that March, not January, marks the beginning of the year, and that our week should start on Sunday, not Monday. Dive into an exploration that questions the very fabric of our calendar, reshaping our perception of historical and modern-day practices. From rethinking significant holidays like Christmas to questioning the alignment of our daily lives with celestial rhythms,
Video is 19 minutes.
1775 Bible
The original Roman calendar only had 10 months. January and February were added later. The beginning of the year was moved from March to January somewhere during the Republican period.
This is interesting. I was raised with Santa, Easter Bunny, Halloween and now find myself feeling ambivalent at best about all of it. What is the tree all about??
I was raised with all that also and it was also part of church life. My church did Halloween for the kids. I've heard a few trafficking survivors say the tree represents the penis. I think it's mentioned in this video as well. As I type this with my first Christmas tree decorated in about seven years. Long story just haven't felt like decorating or celebrating for several years big one missing grandma at Christmas.