If you are following Enoch’s calendar you would know that the day of this writing is the Sabbath, and is the last day of the fifth week in the “Feast of Weeks.” One interesting fact of this seven week period leading up to the Feast of Firstfruits, was the prohibition instruction in the Torah about not eating any grain. I just heard a giant gulp!
Here is the quote, about which I have written …
And you do not eat bread or roasted grain or fresh grain until the same day that you have brought an offering [Wave Loaves] to your Elohim – a law forever in all your dwellings. (Lev 23:16)
What does this mean for us?
For some, it probably is “proof” that there are some “nuts” in the world. But for those with insight and understanding, it should mean that there will be no “harvest” (speaking of resurrection and eternal life) during this time.
And that is exactly what the Scriptures teach concerning those pesky seven “weeks” of Enoch’s vision. …
It is very difficult for most People to understand that the time in the Enoch Year (2009/2010) from Monday at Sunset through Tuesday at sunset is the Sabbath Day as taught in the Torah and the Sabbath that was set apart at the beginning. Is that relevant today? But that is only one item. What about the Torah or even the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution? Are they relevant? Some opine that none of these are “relevant in this age of ‘new enlightenment.’”
Some ask: How could the Sabbath be on a Monday and Tuesday? Wasn’t it “supposed” to be on Friday and Saturday? or on Sunday? Or maybe, as some believe, it was “done away” or “fulfilled.”