So, are you saying that Anderson is wrong or that Daniel is wrong? Would seem that saying one is wrong is saying the other is wrong. Not placing Anderson and Daniel on the same level, but the prophecy is what it is. It is either accurate or it isn't. And since Messiah was resurrected on the very same day on the calendar that Noah and ark came to rest on the mountain (17th of Nisan) seems to suggest that God is a stickler for details. And that Jesus (our Passover lamb) died at the same hour the passover lamb was being sacrificed at the Temple seems to confirm that further. Up until Jesus rode into Jerusalem on the donkey, He had said many times that His hour had not yet come. Yet on that day, He not only allowed Himself to be proclaimed as the Messiah (as per the hallel Psalm 118 that the crowd was chanting and only pertains to that day on the Jewish annual religious calendar cycle) but arranged it by telling His disciples to get the donkey for him to ride in.
All civilizations, prior to 701 BC had 360 day calendars. Mayan, Chinese, Israel, Persian, etc. The Roman calendar was adjusted by adding 5 days in March (where the concept of Lent came from... the lengthened month). The Jews adjusted by adding a month every 19 years, factoring in Jewish calendar leap years that occur every 7 years. Kinda goofy in a way, and Rabbis still debate why it was done that way. Either way, virtually all civilizations ditched the 360 day a year calendar idea after 701 BC, and there has been some speculation as to why they all needed to change things at all. The British observatory helped Anderson work out the details and took this into account.
Being associated with someone doesn't mean you conform to everything that other person adheres to. Two of my uncles are pastors of congregations that hold to significantly different theology than I do. We have our family gatherings with no conflicts.
All civilizations, prior to 701 BC had 360 day calendars. Mayan, Chinese, Israel, Persian, etc. The Roman calendar was adjusted by adding 5 days in March (where the concept of Lent came from... the lengthened month). The Jews adjusted by adding a month every 19 years, factoring in Jewish calendar leap years that occur every 7 years. Kinda goofy in a way, and Rabbis still debate why it was done that way. Either way, virtually all civilizations ditched the 360 day a year calendar idea after 701 BC, and there has been some speculation as to why they all needed to change things at all. The British observatory helped Anderson work out the details and took this into account.
Being associated with someone doesn't mean you conform to everything that other person adheres to. Two of my uncles are pastors of congregations that hold to significantly different theology than I do. We have our family gatherings with no conflicts.
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