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The Catholic Church jumps through serious hoops to make sure that Easter and Passover do not coincide. Why?
Passover is calculated in a much more straightforward way than Easter. It occurs on the first full moon on Nisan, which always falls on the 15th day, since the Hebrew calendar is lunar. This lunar calendar is kept in sync with the solar calendar by adding a 13th month 7 out of every 19 years. This is called the metonic cycle.
Meanwhile, the Islamic calendar is purely lunar, with no leap months, which is why Ramadan moves by about ten days every year.
Official history tells us that the lunisolar Hebrew calendar came first, followed by the Roman solar calendar, followed by the Islamic lunar calendar.
This makes no sense at all.
Logically, the lunar calendar must have come first, the lunisolar calendar must have come second, and the purely solar calendar last. Mainstream history cannot accept this because Jewish, Roman, and Muslim history were broken up and sent back to different fabricated historical periods that are out of order. Not only that, they fabricated all these Babylonians and Sumerians who were supposedly master astronomers.
Passover is defined by a full moon. This suggests to me that the calendar must have started on that day, just as the Christian calendar must have started on the spring equinox itself, which was defined as the first Sunday. It occasionally happens that Passover occurs on the second full moon after the spring equinox (by just a day or two), and I suspect that this only began to happen after the calendar was "solarized" to an extent that was not the case originally.
I am trying to use logic to reconstruct this, not documents. Reality is not always logical, but sometimes logic can suggest how, why, and when certain things might have been changed.
So Passover always occurs on a full moon. It is a lunar holiday, and presumably it was the day the calendar began anew every year. Nisan is the first month in the Bible. The moon's day is Monday, whereas the Jewish Sabbath is Saturday. "Sabbath" comes from the word "Sabbatai" which just means "Saturn". That seems illogical.
According to Wiki there's a Buddhist holiday called "Uposatha" which is celebrated four times in the lunar month, so roughly every seven days. It appears to correspond to the Sabbath in many ways. "Uposatha" sort of looks like the word "Sabbath" rearranged. I may be stretching here.
So what I find myself wondering is: was the moon the original Saturn, and the Sun the original Jupiter? I never understood how and why the Sun and the Moon were lumped in together with the five other classical planets, which are just wandering lights. It doesn't make sense. The Sun and the Moon are huge and dominate life on Earth. They are the exact same size in the sky (this detail alone causes me to doubt our official cosmology). The planets are barely visible and affect nothing. The fact that they wander in the sky as opposed to the fixed stars would probably have been perceived as a minor anomaly, nothing more, without the whole astrology brainwash imposed by the priests.
So here is what I am imagining. The Jewish calendar is indeed older than the Catholic calendar. Both of the exoteric stories associated with this holiest of days are metaphors for the sun returning after an exile. Jesus is reborn, and Moses leads his people out of "Egypt" (=winter) after a period of suffering. But when I think about it, the Christian Easter holiday seems to correspond better to the winter solstice. Why? Because God dies and then returns three days later. If Easter were a true solar allegory, Jesus would return to life months after dying, not days. However, the fact that he is only dead for three days lines up pretty well with the solstice (death of the Sun) and the first observably longer day (a few days later).
Was the original religion one in which Passover and Easter were both celebrated, with Passover occurring around the spring equinox and Easter occurring around the winter solstice? Is today's Christmas nothing but a kind of ersatz Easter that replaced the original one after it was cut out of the original religion and moved to springtime?
When the Catholic Church became Christian and broke away from the previous universal religion, did they promote Jesus above Moses and move Easter to the spring equinox as a kind of "rival Passover" the same way McDonald's will open a store next door to Burger King to put the competition out of business? In Islam, Christ is a prophet, but he is not God. Was this the original religion?
Boba Fett was a huge fan favorite in the original Star Wars trilogy despite having little screen time. He was so popular that George Lucas decided to give him an entire film in the second trilogy. Is this what the Catholic Church did? Was Jesus the "Boba Fett" of the original religion, a secondary character who so popular that he was given a starring role in the "sequel"?
The reason the Catholic Church made it so complicated to date Easter is because they really did not want it to fall on the same date as Passover...ever. I take this as a sign that they were trying to put the old religion "out of business".
So:
Easter - solar - Sunday
Passover - lunar - Saturday
Again, if the original name for the moon were Saturn, then this makes more sense.
We also have all the "Greek" mythology around Jupiter replacing Saturn as the top God. If Jupiter and Saturn are the Sun and Moon, this makes some kind of intuitive sense. But if they were just wandering specks of light...not really.
The Electric Universe people think that Saturn might have been our original sun, and who knows, maybe this is true.
Or maybe it is simpler than that, and the myths about Jupiter replacing Saturn just refer to the moment the Roman Church launched their new rival religion with a new God, a new Sabbath day, and a new calendar. In other words, Jupiter was the original name of the Sun, and Saturn was the original name of the Moon. This is why Kronos, the Greek Saturn (banished by Jupiter), was associated with timekeeping. You can't use Saturn to keep time, but you can use the moon.
I have no evidence for this. I am just brainstorming.
I can't imagine the planets being elevated to the same rank as the Sun and the Moon until telescopes were invented.
Moses used to be represented with horns, which can symbolize the lunar crescent. His name is also similar to the word for "month" in several languages (in French, for example, month is "mois" and Moses is "Moïse"). The sickle of Saturn also looks like a crescent moon. Was Moses the full Passover moon leading the Sun back into summertime?
Chris Jon Bjerknes, the scholar and critic of Kabbalistic Judaism, claims that the moon is the great symbol of Judaism.
TLDR: My hypothesis is that the original calendar was lunar. The original name for the Moon was Saturn. The Sabbath was celebrated on the four "corners" of the lunar month. When the solar year was discovered, the lunar calendar became obsolete, but the priests who administered it did not want to lose their monopoly on sacralizing time. Christ, the Sun, the Son, Jupiter, replaced Moses, the Moon, the Father, Saturn, as the pre-eminent deity. A new priesthood emerged around this new calendar and this new pantheon. Later, when telescopes were invented, the five visible wandering stars were retroactively elevated to the status of "planets" and the whole esoteric cosmology about the seven spheres, etc. was elaborated, mostly to brainwash peasants.
Happy Easter!