Not at all brother I have only quoted God's WORD. They are God's WORD's not my words. According to wiki your claims of a Luna Sabbath is a false teaching.
Wiki
New moon
Some modern sects who are Sabbath keepers have suggested a Sabbath based on the New Moon[
citation needed] citing
Psalm 104:19 and
Genesis 1:14 as a key
prooftexts. Observers recognize the 1st, 8th, 15th, 22nd, and 29th days of the month of the Hebrew Calendar as Sabbath days which should be observed.
[13] They reject the 7 day week as non-biblical.[
citation needed]
The Lunar Sabbath theory is rejected by most Sabbatarian groups and Judaism as false and misleading.
Biblical Sabbath
Further information:
Biblical Sabbath
The Sabbath-Breaker Stoned (watercolor circa 1896–1902 by
James Tissot)
Sabbath (as the verb שָׁבַת֙
šāḇaṯ) is first mentioned in the
Genesis creation narrative, where the
seventh day is set aside as a day of rest (in Hebrew,
shabbath),
and made holy by God (
Genesis 2:2–3). Observation and remembrance of Sabbath (
Hebrew: שַׁבָּת
šabbaṯ) is one of the
Ten Commandments (the fourth in the original
Jewish, the
Eastern Orthodox, and most
Protestant traditions, the third in
Roman Catholic and
Lutheran traditions). Most Jews who observe the Sabbath regard it as having been instituted as a perpetual
covenant for the
Israelites (
Exodus 31:13–17), as a sign respecting two events: the day during which God rested after having completed
Creation in six days (
Exodus 20:8–11), and the Israelites'
deliverance from Egypt (
Deuteronomy 5:12–15). However, most Sabbath keeping Christians regard the Sabbath as having been instituted by God at the end of Creation week and that the entire world was then and continues to be, obliged to observe the seventh day Sabbath. Originally,
Sabbath-breakers were officially to be
cut off from the assembly or potentially killed (
Exodus 31:15).
Observance in the Hebrew Bible was universally from sixth-day sundown to seventh-day sundown (Nehemiah 13:19, cf. Leviticus 23:32),[2] on a seven-day week. Consultations with prophets (II Kings iv. 23) were sought on the Sabbath.
[3] Sabbath corporate worship was not prescribed for the community at large and the Sabbath activities at the shrines were originally a convocation of priests for the purpose of offering divine sacrifices with family worship and rest being centered in homes.
[4][5]
Seven-day week
Main article:
Seven-day week
By
synecdoche (naming the whole for a part), in Jewish sources by the time of the
Septuagint, the term "Sabbath" (
Greek Sabbaton, Strong's
4521) also came to mean an entire "
se'nnight"
or seven-day week, the interval between two weekly Sabbaths.
Jesus's
parable of the
Pharisee and the Publican (
Luke 18:9–14) describes the
Pharisee as fasting "twice a week" (
Greek dis tou sabbatou, literally, "Twice of the Sabbath").
Shabbat
Main article:
Shabbat See also:
Hebrew calendar Jewish
Shabbat (
Shabbath,
Shabbes,
Shobos, etc.) is a weekly day of rest, observed from sundown on Friday until the appearance of three stars in the sky on Saturday night.