Joshua's Seventieth Jubilee
By John P. Pratt
Joshua led the children of Israel into the promised land of Canaan after the Lord divided the waters of the Jordan River for them to cross on dry ground. This miraculous event was similar to the parting of the Red Sea by Moses, and surely was a convincing sign to all that he was now God's new chosen leader.
The date of that event is precisely given in scripture using their calendar at that time: it was the 10th day of the first month (later called Nisan), forty years after the Exodus from Egypt (Joshua 4:19; 5:6). On that very day, the Lord commanded them to circumcise all of their males who had been born in the wilderness (Joshua 5:2).
On the Hebrew calendar, that day 10 Nisan (Consecration) is one of two days each year that is especially appropriate for making a covenant with God, the other being the Day of Atonement. Correlating that day to our calendar implies that Joshua passed over Jordan on Mon 12 Apr 1422 BC.[1]
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| The River Jordan |
An extremely impressive anniversary of that date is approaching. Mon 6 Apr 2009 will mark exactly seventy jubilees on the (Perpetual) Hebrew Calendar since that date.[2] The year of the jubilee has been lost to modern Hebrews, but the results of my research indicate that the jubilee year occurred in that very year of entering the Promised Land.
The Lord told Moses to begin counting sabbath years and the jubilee cycle when they entered the promised land (Lev. 25), which suggests beginning the count immediately at that time.[3] The jubilee is the fiftieth year after the cycle begins, but the cycle only has seven sets of seven years, or 49 years. Thus, the 50th year of the cycle is the same as the first year of the cycle.[4] That and several other events indicate that they indeed entered the promised land in a jubilee year.[5] The year 2009 marks 70 sets of 49-year jubilee cycles since 1422 BC.[6]
There were many key events in the history of Israel that occurred during the final year in the wilderness and then shortly after crossing the Jordan. Let's consider several of them so that we might remember each during the coming jubilee year.
Events to Remember
In the Lord's reckoning, both the first and the last are sacred (D&C 29:30). In the 49-year jubilee cycle, both the first year (the jubilee year) and the last year (the 49th year) are important. At the time of Moses with the children of Israel, several key events occurred in the last of the forty years in the wilderness, which was the 49th year of the jubilee cycle. Then several more events occurred during the following (jubilee) year. One tricky point here is that the 40th year in the wilderness was counted from spring to spring, whereas the jubilee year begins in the autumn.
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| Figure 1. The Jubilee Calendar |
Before looking at those events, it is important to note that almost all of the Book of Numbers in the Old Testament occurred in either the second or very last of the forty years that Israel spent in the wilderness. It is not obvious on a first reading that 38 years are covered in only a few chapters. The exodus from Egypt and the events of the first year after are recorded in the Book of Exodus. The Law of Moses was given at the beginning of the second year and it is found in the Book of Leviticus.
The Book of Numbers begins describing other events of the second year. The episodes of Miriam's withered hand, and the twelve spies and forty days occurred that summer, are described in Numbers 12-14, where the Lord told them they would wander for 40 years in the wilderness because of their unbelief. A mere six chapters later we are told Miriam died in the first month (Num. 20:1). The Book of Jasher, an excellent source for dates,[7] adds that her death occurred in the fortieth year (Jasher 84:24). If so, then all of the following events occurred in the last year in the wilderness: the death of Miriam (Num. 20:1), the smiting of the rock at Meribah (Num. 20:11), the death of Aaron (Num. 20:28), the Brazen Serpent (Num. 21), the prophecy of Balaam (Num. 22-24), and the capturing and distribution of lands of inheritance on the east side of Jordan (Num. 31-32).
A confirmation that all of those events indeed occurred in that last year is that in the scriptural review of the entire journey, Aaron's death date is explicitly given as the first day of Ab in the fortieth year (Num. 33:38). The entire book of Deuteronomy was given beginning in the 11th month of that year (Deut. 1:3), in Jan. 1422 BC, and then Moses was translated ("died" in Deut. 34:1) after Joshua was given command.
Right at the beginning of the 41st year (in Apr, 1422 BC), the Jordan River was parted and Israel finally entered into the promised land of Canaan (Joshua 3-4). Shortly afterward they celebrated the passover (Josh. 5:11), and then took the city of Jericho (Joshua 6).
Proposed Dates
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| The Brazen Serpent |
Some precise dates have already been proposed for those events. One of the most important was the raising of the Brazen Serpent. My proposed date for that event is Sat 19 Sep 1423 BC, being a holy day on six sacred calendars.[8] It occurred right at the beginning of the Jubilee year according to the Hebrew calendar and on the Great Day of Atonement at the very end of the last year on the Jubilee calendar. The giving of Deuteronomy was in the jubilee year according to both calendars.
Passing Over Jordan
One date which is given explicitly in the Bible, but which has not yet been mentioned in my articles, is the precise date of passing over the Jordan River into the Promised Land. The Book of Joshua explicitly gives that date, being 10 Nisan, exactly 40 years after the first Passover lambs had been chosen at the Exodus (Ex. 12:3). On our calendar, using the Perpetual Hebrew Calendar, that date was Mon 12 Apr 1422 BC.
The Fall of Jericho
Now we come to a date that has eluded me until now. The story of the falling of the walls of Jericho at the blast of the trump is one of the strangest stories in the entire Bible, and seems loaded with calendrical significance. Let's review this unusual story and then determine the date.
Shortly after passing over Jordan, Joshua was commanded to conquer the city of Jericho in a very peculiar manner. Afterwards, the taking of the other cities of Canaan was much more routine. But in the case of Jericho, Joshua was commanded to have his army encircle the city once per day for six days. Accompanying the army were to be seven priests, each bearing a trumpet, and carrying the sacred ark of the covenant.
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| Crossing the River Jordan |
On the seventh day, the group was to encircle the city seven times, after which the priests were to give a long, loud blast on their trumpets. At that time, the entire army was to shout, and the walls would fall to the ground, rendering the city an easy mark to conquer (Joshua 6:3-6).
It would have been interesting to hear the army commenting to each other on Joshua's plan as they marched around the city. Have you ever heard of stranger battle tactics? It has seemed clear to me that this entire scheme was designed to symbolize an important future event, but the interpretation has eluded me. The seven priests might represent the seven angels of the last days, each of whom blows a trump (Rev. 8:2-11:15). These priests were to give one long blast. Such a sound is often associated with the earth quaking, as at the giving of the Ten Commandments on the day of Pentecost, when the "whole mount quaked greatly" and the "voice of the trumpet sounded long, and waxed louder and louder" (Ex. 19:18-19). Such a "long and loud" blast is also associated with events preceding the Second Coming, including the resurrection of the dead (D&C 88:94-98).
The battle plan also seems to indicate a date on the calendar. The encircling of the city might represent seven cycles of time. Moreover, the seven angels giving the blast on the trumpet is clearly reminiscent of the seven priests who each did likewise on the Feast of Trumpets, which occurs on the first day of the seventh month on the Hebrew Calendar. While that event seems to represent the seven angels who each give their blast at the opening of the seventh millennium to announce the Second Coming of the Savior, what has been a problem is that the fall of Jericho happens about a month after Passover in the spring (Joshua 5:11), rather than in the autumn as does the Feast of Trumpets.
As this article was in preparation, the search was again made for the date of the fall of the walls of Jericho and now the answer seems so obvious that it is amazing that it was not discovered earlier. The Feast of Firstfruits occurs seven weeks after the ceremony of the Waving of the Sheaf of barley, which in turn occurs on the Sunday following Passover.[9] That waving is equivalent to "Easter" on the Hebrew calendar because it represents the offering of the firstfruits of the ground (1 Cor. 15:20). The modern Christian Easter also usually falls on the Sunday after Passover.
The Feast of Firstfruits is also called the "Feast of Weeks" because of the seven times seven interval. Moreover, that feast also occurs on the "fiftieth" day, counting Easter as the first, and hence it is similar to the "jubilee" which occurs on the fiftieth year after seven weeks of years. Thus the same feast was later called "Pentecost" in Greek, where the "pente" refers to the "fifty" symbolism. Note that the Day of Pentecost, which always occurs on Sunday on the Perpetual Hebrew Calendar, is counted as the fiftieth day from Easter Sunday, even though they are separated by seven weeks (49 days), because Easter is counted as the first day.
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| The Fall of Jericho. |
With all of that in mind, let us now consider the Feast of Firstfruits (Pentecost) as a possible date for the Fall of Jericho. Passover that year was celebrated on the evening preceding Sat 17 Apr 1422 BC.[10] The manna ceased to appear in its weekly cycle the following Sunday morning (Joshua 5:12), which was Easter Sunday, 18 Apr 1422 BC. The disappearing of the manna from the earth clearly represented the return of Jesus Christ to heaven, he being the true manna from heaven (John 6:31-35, 48-51). Note the wonderful significance that the manna returned to heaven on Easter Sunday, the same day on which the Savior resurrected. That Easter morning had two other things in common with the morning of the Savior's resurrection: it was also Easter on the Jubilee calendar and the day of the Priest cycle representing resurrection.[11]
Counting seven weeks from that Easter brings us to Sun, 6 Jun 1422 BC, the Feast of Firstfruits, as the proposed day for the Fall of Jericho. That turns out to have been a holy day on at least five sacred calendars. In addition to being Pentecost, it was 13 Serpent on the Sacred Round (as was "Brazen Serpent Day"), Firstfruits (of Wine) on the Jubilee calendar, 0 Prime (Mercury), and 1 Summer on the Enoch Fixed calendar.[12] With all of those testimonies that the day was special, there is no doubt in my mind that finally the date of the Fall of Jericho has been found.
Upcoming Celebration Dates
There will be an anniversary date of each of the above events coming up in the seventieth jubilee year. The fact that the year is not just any jubilee, but marks exactly seventy jubilees from Moses and Joshua makes it a special year indeed.[13]
Here is a table of coming anniversary dates:
| Event |
Date |
Remarks |
| Brazen Serpent |
Sat 20 Sep 2008 |
Great Day of Atonement (Jubilee Calendar; day OOooo, once in 49 years). |
| Jubilee Year Begins |
Sun 28 Sep 2008 |
On Jubilee Calendar (day PPppp); also 1 Autumn (Enoch). |
| Jubilee Trumpet Sounds |
Sat 11 Oct 2008 |
Day of Atonement (PHC, see Lev. 25:9). Also Tabernacles (Enoch) and End of Vine Harvest (Jubilee Fixed) |
| Deuteronomy |
Wed 28 Jan 2009 |
1 Shebat (PHC). |
| Crossing Jordan |
Sun 5 Apr 2009 pm* |
10 Nisan (PHC), 1 Serpent (SR), 1 Res (V), 1 Birth (M). |
| Manna Stops |
Sun 12 Apr 2009 |
Easter Sunday, also Easter on Hebrew, Enoch; Passover on Jubilee |
| Fall of Jericho |
Sun 31 May 2009 |
Firstfruits (PHC and Enoch) |
Most of these dates are not outstanding on their own, but only in commemoration
of great events of the past. On the other hand, one of these date is amazing
by itself: the anniversary of the Crossing of the Jordan River.
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| The bread from heaven symbolized Christ. |
Crossing the Jordan
The discovery of this upcoming date was really the motivation for this entire article. The evening of Sunday 5 Apr 2009 pm* (meaning from 6 pm until midnight) is a holy time on four sacred calendars. It not only begins Mon 10 Nisan on the Perpetual Hebrew Calendar, it is also the day 1 Resurrection on the Venus calendar. 10 Nisan only occurs on one of the four principal holy days on the Venus calendar once in 146 years,[14] so that alignment alone is impressive. But in addition, the day will also be 1 Birth on the Mercury calendar and the day 1 Serpent on the Sacred Round. Moreover, on our (not so sacred) Gregorian calendar, the Savior was also born on the evening preceding 6 April, so it will be an anniversary of his birth. But the real alignment is with the birth of Isaac.
Isaac's Birthday
It has already been proposed that by far the most likely date for the birth of Isaac, the son of Abraham, was on Tue, 10 Nisan, 16 Mar 1952 BC.[15] That day was also 1 Serpent (Sacred Round), 1 Resurrection (Venus) and 1 Birth (Mercury). That is, it was exactly the same holy day on all four of those calendars as is the upcoming anniversary of the crossing of the Jordan River. Let us consider just how rare of an event that is.
Consider any given date on the Hebrew Calendar, such as your own birthday. It was also some day on the Venus, Mercury and Sacred Round calendars. How often will the day repeat on all four of those calendars? The same Hebrew day usually repeats once per year, it is also the same on the Venus calendar once in 584 years (on the average), and also on the Mercury calendar once in 5,200 years, and also on the Sacred Round only once in 105,000 years. That is, most of the time any given date on all four of those calendars does not repeat even once in the 7,000 years of the history of Adam's family in mortality. To be precise, there is only a 1/15 chance that any one date will repeat even once.[16] So if we were to check 15 birth dates of great prophets, we would expect about one to repeat sometime in history. I checked several such dates, looking at the proposed birth dates of several of the Biblical patriarchs, such as Abraham, Ishmael, Jacob, Adam, Enoch, Moses, etc. and also as many of their wives as I could, such as Rebekah. The only date that I found that repeated even once in that 7,000-year interval was the birth date of Isaac.
Now, if the date of Isaac had repeated at some random time, such as in AD 743, then it could be chalked up to chance because we would expect to find about one date in 15 repeating at some time. But the fact that the one date which I found which was not unique in history just happens to repeat on the exact day of the seventieth jubilee anniversary of Joshua's crossing the Jordan makes the day jump out from the crowd as an outstanding anniversary indeed, worthy of my reporting.
As stated repeatedly in my past articles, I have no idea if anything special might happen on that date. It is only being reported here so that in case something of religious significance does occur, it will be a witness that God had planned it millennia ahead of time. In fact, the birth of Isaac was also unique in scripture in that God actually prophesied to Abraham the exact day on which Isaac would be born, being exactly one year from that holy day ("set time" in Gen. 17:21). Thus, the birth of Isaac seems to have been on a special day indeed.
Conclusion
According to the proposed dates from my research, the year from about Sep 2008 through Sep 2009 will mark the seventieth jubilee year from the events of the last year of Moses leading the children of Israel through the wilderness and of Joshua crossing the Jordan River into the promised land of Canaan. It would be a good time to commemorate the raising of the Brazen Serpent, the giving of the Book of Deuteronomy, and even the Easter Sunday on which the manna ceased to come from heaven. But of all of the days to celebrate, the most outstanding will be the anniversary of Joshua's miraculous crossing of the River Jordan. The quarter-day beginning at 6 p.m. on Sun 5 Apr 2009 is a once-in-history repetition of the date of the birth of Isaac on four sacred calendars.
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