Sunset to Sunset - What does that mean?«Return to Passover Paper Directory | Printer Friendly
"Like the weekly
Sabbath, each day is reckoned from sunset to sunset;" so it
is taught by the Churches of God. Some COG organizations may specify
the phrase sundown to sundown, but that is just a matter of
nomenclature. The idea, the doctrine is the same; each day consists
of the interval of time between two sunsets.
However, the Bible
teaches that the day is reckoned from evening (erev)
unto evening (erev); as Leviticus 23:32 specifies.
We clearly understand, by reading the Word of God, both in the Old
and New Testaments, each day ends at evening, the period of
time at the end of the day, as the light of the day is diminishing,
fading out, before the darkness of night commences (for a detailed
explanation from the Bible, see When Does the Day End? in
Part I of the Passover Study).
The Hebrew phrase
bow shemesh (English - sunset or sundown) is not found in
Leviticus 23:32; this verse does not state, from sunset unto
sunset. The term sunset to sunset is never used in the
Scriptures as it relates to a 24-hour day. Moses never wrote,
nor did God ever teach, that the sunset or sundown (bow shemesh)
ends the day.
The term evening
(erev) is the operative word in Leviticus 23:32 and
throughout the Scriptures, not sunset (bow shemesh). The
Scriptures clearly teach that the evening ends the day, not the
sunset.
Why then do the
Churches of God teach; "a day is reckoned from sunset to sunset?"
Do the Churches of
God have a complete understanding of the phrase from sunset to
sunset?
Sunset to Sunset - an expression which explains when the Sabbath
should be observed
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The phrase sunset
to sunset, as consistently taught by the Churches of God, is
expressed to explain when the Sabbath Day and Holy Days should be
kept. The Church of God teaches that the Sabbath begins on Friday at
sunset and ends on Saturday at sunset. Considering this time
element, it is logical then to teach that every day should be
reckoned from sunset to sunset.
Interestingly and of
importance to know, the phrase sunset to sunset or sundown
to sundown did not originate with the Church of God; rather this
phrase has been borrowed from the Jews. This phrase
originated with the House of Israel/House of Judah.
The Jews teach
generally, the sunset to sunset, or sundown to sundown
day.
Simply witness any
wall calendar and you will see the reference to sundown whenever
Jewish Holy Days are dated. For example, the text, "Rosh Hashanah
begins at sundown," or "Passover begins at sundown" are commonly
seen in the day box on the average Gregorian wall or desk calendar;
as well as Jewish calendars. The average "man on the street" could
be familiar with this expression - "such and such begins at
sundown."
As the Jews teach,
sunset to sunset or sundown to sundown or such and
such begins at sundown, so it was logical for the Church of God
to use the same phraseology, since the Churches of God, (without
doubt since the inception of the Radio Church of God) keep the same
Holy Days as do the Jews, with the exception of Pentecost.
Both the Jews and
the Churches of God know the Sabbath begins at sunset of Friday and
ends at sunset of Saturday.
This phrase,
sunset to sunset is taught, even though the Scriptures
specifically teach, evening unto evening is how to reckon the
day and that the day ends at evening.
Should a sunset
to sunset day then be taught?
Why do the Jews use
the phrase sunset to sunset or sundown to sundown?
Why is sunset to
sunset used by the Churches of God?
Do the Churches of
God understand the phrase differently than do the Jews?
Do the Churches of
God misunderstand the meaning of the phrase?
What should we know
about the phrase from sunset to sunset?
Sunset to sunset as commonly understood by the Churches of God
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If you were to ask
the average Church of God member; "What do you understand the
term sunset or sundown to mean," you would get a
response somewhat as follows. "The sunset is the time when
the sun drops (falls) below the western horizon."
The average
Church of God member understands, as has been taught over time
through sermons, articles and booklets, that sunset is fixed to a
moment in time activity. Sunset is a precise time, an exact
on the clock, time. Sunset or sundown is when the sun exactly drops
below the western horizon.
If you asked a
member to tell you "what time on Friday you should quit working, so
as not to violate the 4th commandment," or "what time one should be
home before the start of the Sabbath" or "what time to start fasting
(Day of Atonement implied)," the average member would look at
the newspaper (perhaps the internet, now) or at a time of sunset
listing and say, "Well, at 5:37 pm or at 7:46 pm."
You would get the
exact time of, the listed time of sunset, as your answer.
If a member's
teenager wants to know what time the Sabbath sunset is, that is when
the Sabbath is over, in order to go out with the friends, the answer
would be more often than not, "sunset is at 6:33 pm, or at 7:34 pm,
etc."
Again, a fixed,
exact moment in time of the sun dropping below the western horizon
would be the answer.
A fixed time would
be given, regardless of the fact that there is still light in the
sky, especially as it is during the summer months in the northern
latitudes.
A member of the
Church of God would look at the paper, then look at a clock or watch
and when the clock strikes the time as listed in the newspaper or on
the internet, the member would say, it is sunset or
sundown and the Sabbath either begins or is over.
Once the sun is seen
or understood (by times on a listing) to be below the western
horizon, the Sabbath has either begun or it is over.
To the average
church member, sunset is a fixed moment in time that occurs at the
beginning of the day and at the end of the day. This is how the
majority of the members within the various Churches of God
have been taught and how they understand the term, sunset to
sunset. An exact moment in time of sunset is typically
practiced.
But is this how the
Jews, those from whom the phrase sunset to sunset was
borrowed, understand this phrase?
Is this what the
Scriptures teach?
Sunset to
Sunset as the Jews understand the term
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Since this phrase
originated with the Jews, is there something we can and should learn
beyond the general understanding which the Churches of God practice?
First, sunset
should not be narrowly understood as an exact,
precise, moment in time event, when the sun drops below the western
horizon. The sunset is more than an exact moment in
time of the sun dropping below the horizon.
Sunset encompasses a
period of time (always occurring within the evening of the day) when
the sun is setting, continuing with the twilight and lasts until the
commencement of the night.
The Jewish
understanding of sunset or sundown acknowledges that
sunset (bow shemesh) is a process of or an
action of the sun which occurs during the evening (erev)
of the day - just as the Scriptures teach.
They understand that
the evening sunset occurs as the day is coming to an end, but does
not end the day.
The Jews further
understand that observing the sunset to sunset principle
requires an acknowledgement that sunset extends beyond (the
narrow understanding of) an exact moment in time of the sun dropping
below the western horizon, whether it be at the start or end of the
day.
The Jews acknowledge
that the evening ends the day, as explained in Leviticus
23:32, Exodus 12:18 and other Scriptures. It is from the
laws within the Old Testament that the Jews obtained the
"principles" to justify the phrase sunset to sunset as it
applied to the Sabbath and the Holy Days; doing so in order to
protect the sanctity of the day. The Jewish understanding of the
sunset is different than what the Churches of God understand.
The Jews (after
their return from the Babylonian captivity) felt it necessary to
protect the Sabbaths and Holy Days, in order to properly keep
the day holy, in order to honor the 4th commandment (and
not get into trouble with God again as a result of breaking the
Sabbath).
The repatriated
House of Judah, went the "extra mile" so as not to make the same
Sabbath-breaking mistakes which got them "into trouble" prior to
their punishment and captivity. The Jews, long ago, acknowledged
one is to "take from the secular and apply to the sacred"
in order to keep the Sabbaths.
What does the phrase take from the secular and apply to the
sacred mean?
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Let us first review
the scriptures that provide the Jews the justification to observe a
sunset to sunset day.
As the Scriptures
teach, each day is reckoned "from evening until
evening." Each day is reckoned from the (evening),
the end of the old day until the (evening), end of
that current day.
Leviticus 23:32
(KJV) "It shall be unto you a Sabbath of rest, and ye shall
afflict your souls: in the ninth day of the month at even (ba
erev), from even (erev) unto even (erev),
shall ye celebrate your Sabbath."
By reading
Leviticus 23:27 we learn that the 10th day of the
seventh month is the Day of Atonement. The 9th day of the
seventh month is not the Day of Atonement, consequently the evening
(ba erev - at even) of the 9th day
is not at the beginning of the day.
Ba erev
(at even) is at the end of the 9th day. Once
the 9th day "at evening" has concluded, the night
of the 10th day commences; the 10th day
begins; now the Day of Atonement is to be kept.
It would be correct
to say, generally, at even (ba erev) of the 9th
day (and not the sunset (Hebrew: bow shemesh) because sunset
is not used in this verse), as a reference, as a starting time, you
start your fast.
It would be correct
to say, specifically, once the evening of the 9th
day is complete, once the evening sunlight, then twilight (which
occurs in the evening) of the 9th day has concluded, and
dark/night of the 10th day commences, then the 10th
day begins, and the fast begins. After all, the fast is on the 10th
day of the seventh month.
Another way to say
this would be from even(ing) of the 9th day, the
10th day begins. As we read "in the ninth day at even"
"from the evening." The 10th day begins from
evening of the 9th day, not with or
through or at evening of the 9th day.
The term "at
evening" or "at even" (ba erev)
always and only connotes the ending of the day, never the beginning
of the day.
Notice also
Leviticus 23:32 does not state: "from
bow shemesh to bow shemesh."
Leviticus 23:32
states: "from evening" because it is the evening of
the 9th day which is being given consideration.
As the Scriptures
teach, just as actual observation confirms, the actual sunset
(in this case, the exact moment in time of the sun dropping below
the horizon) and the twilight (the light of the sun
diminishing in intensity as the sun is dropping further below the
western horizon) are both part of the evening activity, both
of which occur as the day is coming to an end.
Now as this verse
also states: you shall afflict your soul in the ninth day of the
month, at even ... we see that the fast begins as the 9th
day is ending. You take a portion of the previous day, the evening
or ending of the previous day (the 9th day) and apply it
to the 10th day.
Rather than
beginning the Day of Atonement from the "at evening
(be erev)" of the 9th day, as Leviticus 23:32
stipulates, the Jews incorporated the sunset (in this case
the exact time of), as it occurs during the "at even"
(ending) of the 9th day, as the time to begin this Holy
Day.
In the keeping of
the Day of Atonement, the Jews begin keeping (just as Israel was
taught) the fast day at the time of the evening of the 9th
day of the seventh month. And of course the evening of the 9th
day includes the sunset of the 9th day. The evening of
the 9th day is included in observing the Day of
Atonement.
When it comes to the
Sabbath day, the Jews begin keeping the Sabbath at
the actual sunset (the sun actually hitting and dropping below
the western horizon) of the sixth day of the week (Friday as we call
it today), instead of from the evening of the sixth day of
the week.
The Jews likewise
begin keeping the Holy Day at the actual sunset (the
sun actually hitting and dropping below the western horizon) of the
previous day, instead of from the evening of the previous
day.
When it comes to an
ordinary (non-Sabbath or non-Holy Day) day, the Jews observe the
beginning of the day from the evening of the previous
day. It is only with the Sabbaths and Holy Days that the Jews
consider the sunset (the sun actually dropping below the western
horizon) of the previous day as the actual beginning of the Sabbath
or Holy Days.
This is how the
Scriptures explain taking from the secular and apply to the
sacred. We will learn more as we continue.
It is necessary to
understand and recognize that the sunset is an action of the sun
occurring in the evening. By understanding this, we learn why
the Jews use the term sunset to sunset even though the phrase
sunset to sunset (bow shemesh to bow shemesh) is not
found in the Scriptures.
Scriptures that aid in understanding why the Jews are correct to use
the phrase sunset to sunset
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Let us examine a
couple scriptures which the House of Judah understands, giving
reason as to why the sunset to sunset principle is correct to
use.
Notice Nehemiah
13:19 (KJV). And it came to pass that when the gates of
Jerusalem began to be dark before the Sabbath, I commanded the gates
should be shut....
Notice Nehemiah
13:19 (Interlinear Bible (Masoretic text)): And it was when
began to be shaded the gates of Jerusalem before the Sabbath that I
ordered that should be shut the gates ...
Notice what this
scripture communicates to us, as we examine scriptural realities in
the light of known scientific phenomenon. Logically, we understand
that before the sun actually drops (sets) below the
western horizon (when the sun is still visible in the sky),
objects on the earth are illuminated by the light of the sun;
objects are not getting dark.
It is only
after the sun has set below the western horizon, a
time of day called the evening twilight, as the light of the sun is
diminishing, that objects are beginning to darken.
During the twilight, objects on the earth begin to be less visible
as the light of the sun decreases, as the darkness of the night
approaches; consequently, objects begin to get (be) dark.
An object is or
looks shaded by a lack of light projected on it.
Shaded or shading is a degree of darkness produced by a diminishing
of light.
Now consider
Jeremiah 6:4 and Jeremiah's reference to the evening shadows;
for the day goeth away, the shadows of the evening are stretched out.
Just as we
understand, Jeremiah understood: when the sun is visible in the
western portion of the sky, above the western horizon,
the light of the sun illuminates objects on the earth and those
objects cast shadows, which lengthen or stretch out as the
evening sun travels closer to the western horizon. When the sun is
at the horizon, the shadows cast are well stretched out.
It is only after
the sun drops (sets) below the western horizon that the objects
on earth begin to grow dark, as the light of the sun diminishes in
intensity, as the night approaches. Once the sun is below the
western horizon, objects no longer cast shadows; they only begin
to be (get) dark. During the twilight, the objects
are beginning to grow dark; objects begin to be shaded
because the light of that day's sun is diminishing as the darkening
of the night is approaching.
During the twilight,
objects do not cast shadows; rather objects grow dark. After
the twilight is complete and the night commences, objects are
dark.
In Jeremiah 6:4,
evening shadows cast by objects illuminated by the light of the sun
were possible because the sun was (still in the sky) above the
western horizon.
In Nehemiah 13:19
the twilight (of the sun below the western horizon) was evident,
as the light was fading and objects (the gates of the temple)
were growing dark.
We read that it
was getting dark, (after the sun had set, in
the twilight is clearly understood), and that period of time
was before the Sabbath.
Let us notice the
Hebrew word tselel (Strong's 6751 a noun), which is
derived from the Hebrew root word tsalal (Strong's
6752 a verb or noun). Tselel is translated into the
English as either dark or shaded and is used in
Nehemiah 13:19. Let us notice the full extent and meaning of
this word. To understand tselel it is necessary to understand
its root word, tsalal.
"Tsalal - a
prime root ... to be shaded, dusky." Gesenius' Hebrew-Chaldee Lexicon
to the Old Testament
"Tsalal - a
prime root ... to shade, as twilight or an opaque object - begin to be
dark, shadowing (as a covering)." Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of
the Bible
We see the
translation of tselel in the context it is used in the Book
of Nehemiah. Clearly, the translation and its root express a
description of a period of time we call twilight. Of this
fact, there can be no debate.
In this verse we
read that it began to be dark (twilight time)
before the Sabbath.
Implicit
is the fact that when it was dark, it then was the Sabbath.
The lesson expressed
here is that at the time of Nehemiah the Sabbath did not begin
at the exact moment of sunset (an exact moment in time - look
at your watch time or as written on a sunset time chart in your
newspaper). After sundown there is still a period of time called the
twilight and twilight (which is part of the evening) was before the
Sabbath.
Consider Genesis
15:12-18. Start at verse 12 - "And when the sun was
going down, a deep sleep fell upon Abram..."
Here we read that
the sun was going down. The sun was in the process of setting. The
sun was above the horizon and was going down. Simply a process: the
sun was going down. The term bow shemesh is used.
Continuing the
narrative, now read Genesis 15:17: "And it came to pass
that when the sun went down and it was dark..."
Genesis 15:17
clearly states, "the sun went down (again bow shemesh is
used) and it was dark."
Logically and by
observation, we know these two events do not happen that quickly.
Notice what happens between the sun went down and it was
dark.
The sun went down,
then the twilight. During the twilight, the sky is still light but
growing dark. The land is growing dark as objects (like the gates
in Jerusalem) are growing dark, because the light of the sun is
fading away. The evening is evident as it is getting dark and
closing in on the night. Once the night commences, it is dark.
As we read, we can
logically see that the sun went down, the twilight was past, the
evening was past and finally, it was dark, it was now night.
Reading verse 17
again: "and it came to pass that when the sun went down and it
was dark ..."
Notice now
Genesis 15:18 "In the same day the Eternal made a covenant
with Abram..."
Here verses 17
and 18 state, it was dark and in the same day.
Consider this fact -
we do not read any of the following:
- "the sun went down
and in the same day;"
- "the sun went down
and the next or new day,"
- "it was twilight
and the same or next or new day;"
- "it was evening
and the same or next or a new day."
We simply, and only
read, "it was dark...and in the same day." We do not even
read it was dark and the next day. Again, these verses only state -
"it was dark ...and ... in the same day."
We are told it was
dark (night) and it was "in the same day" that a covenant was made.
The sun went down, it was set (completely); the twilight was now
over, the evening was past, it was now dark, it was night.
The dark
definitely was part of a new day. During that new day, of
which the night is distinguished, the covenant was made.
The dark
(night) and in the same day logic is the
same teaching we gain from the Genesis creation account which shows
us that darkness begins a new day. (See Genesis
1:5,8,13,19,23,31: What about the word evening as found in the
Genesis creation account; what does that teach us? in Part I
of the Passover Study.)
Through Nehemiah,
God shows us the Sabbath certainly did not begin right at the exact
moment of sunset. The Sabbath began when it was dark.
Not only did
Nehemiah and Ezra understand but also the House of Judah and the
Elders of Judah understood that the evening, in which the last event
to occur was the twilight (when things begin to get dark), was
before the Sabbath begun.
Consider the Sun Rules the Day; the Moon and Stars Rule the Night
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Consider the
following verses:
Genesis 1:16
"And God made two great lights; the greater light (the sun) to
rule the day, and the lesser light (the moon) to rule the night, he
made the stars also."
Psalm 136:8-9
"The sun to rule by day: his mercy endures forever: The moon and
stars to rule by night..."
Jeremiah 31:35
"Thus saith The Eternal, which giveth the sun for a light by day,
and the ordinances of the moon and of the stars for a light by
night...."
Psalm 148:3 "Praise
ye him, sun and moon, all ye stars of light."
It is correct to say
that the sun's light controls (rules) the day. The sun's light
(which rules the day) is manifest during the day. There are (in
general terms) 12 hours in the day (cf. John 11:9). There are
also 12 hours in the night.
The following events
or sequence of time is what we witness every day (bear in mind
clouds do not block the view). We know the day is evident:
- from the time
of the sun's first illuminations in the morning, which occurs at
dawn, before the sun has actually risen above the eastern
horizon and continuing with sunrise and through the morning
light,
- then late
morning into midday; noon,
- continuing
with the sun's light, during the afternoon,
- then late
afternoon (the declining of the day),
- then during
the going down of the sun and at sunset, during the evening,
- finally,
concluding with the twilight, which is the sun's diminishing
light still illuminating the earth after the sun has dropped
(set) below the western horizon.
Once the sun's light
is gone, no longer visible, then the dark and night commences.
As the Scriptures
teach, the sun's light rules the day, and the day comes to an
end when the sun's light (illuminating the portion of the earth on
which the observer is standing), is no longer present, when the
sun's light no longer controls (or rules) the day. The sun is the
greater light and the greater light is evident during the day.
Once the sun's light
is "all gone," when it rules no longer, then the day has ended. And
as we have read, the evening ends the day, as the evening occurs at
the end of the day.
The action of the
sunset occurs during the evening of the day. Once the evening is
over because the (sun's) light of that day is no longer evident,
then the night of the new day commences.
A new day begins at
the commencement of night, when the night light of the moon
and/or the stars is evident and begins to rule.
Consider Psalm
104:20-23 as pertaining to the sequence of activity within the
day (complete 24 hours).
"Thou makest
darkness and it is night: wherein all the beasts of the forest do
creep forth. The young lions roar after their prey and seek their
meat from God, the sun ariseth, they gather themselves together and
lay down in their dens. Man goeth forth unto his work and to his
labor, until the evening."
Notice Nehemiah
4:21:
"So we labored
in the work: and half of them held their spears from the rising of
the morning till the stars appeared."
Clearly we can
understand the entire measure of the day (12 hours of light -
generally speaking - John 11:9) is from the rising of the
morning (the dawn) until the stars appeared (no more sun light
visible).
How did the Elders
of Judah and the Jews today understand all these verses as well as
Leviticus 23:32 which explicitly states, evening unto
evening?
How did the House of
Judah understand the evening (as the sun diminishes in
intensity, as the dark of night approaches) as they all pertained to
the day and specifically the Sabbath and Holy Days?
Notice:
"The day begins and ends at sunset,
or more precisely, after dusk [twilight] when three stars of medium
size appear. This rule applies to the theoretical beginning and
ending of Sabbaths, feast days and the daily prayers."
THE COMPREHENSIVE HEBREW CALENDAR
PAGE 13
"DAY (Hebrew "Yom") In the Bible, the
season of light (Gen. 1:5), lasting "from dawn [lit. "the rising of
the morning"] to the coming forth of the stars" (Neh. 4:21). The
term day is used also to denote a period of twenty-four hours (Ex.
21:21). The day is reckoned from evening to evening - i.e., night
and day..."
DAY
THE JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA
PAGE 475
The House of Judah
clearly understood, just as the scriptures teach, the day is
reckoned from evening to evening, as Leviticus
23:32 speaks.
"With nightfall, the day, the period
of twenty-four hours, ends and a new one commences.... The transition
from day to night, from light to darkness and visa versa, is
gradual: in the one case it begins before sunset, and continues till
after sunset; in the other, it begins before sunrise and continues
until after sunrise. The two periods of transition are of undefined
length and are called, in Hebrew "ereb" and "boker" (evening and
morning-compare Ruth 3:14; Deu. 23:11; Num. 9:15). The period of
transition is also called "neshef" (dawn and twilight; Pro. 7:9; I
Sam. 30:17) and "dimdume hammah" (redness of the sun).... Nightfall,
as the border-line between two consecutive days, is the moment when
three stars of the second magnitude become visible ("zet ha kokabim");
and the length of the day as opposed to the night is, according to
Neh. 4:21, "from the rising of the morning ("alot ha shahar" or "alot
ammud ha shahar") "till the stars appeared."
CALENDAR
THE JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA
PAGE 501
"As for the evening Neh. 4:21 was
cited, where work went on "till the stars came out" and from that
analogy it was shown that the appearance of the stars was the sign
that the day had ended and the recital could begin. ... and in the
evening it was either sunset or the ensuing nightfall when the stars
became visible, that provided the line of demarcation. (As the line
between one day and the next, nightfall was later defined even more
precisely as the moment when three stars of the second magnitude
became visible.)
HANDBOOK OF BIBLICAL CHRONOLGY
JACK FINEGAN
PARA. 14, PAGE 10
Those to whom the
oracles of God were given (Romans 3:2), who were God's
Lawgivers (Psalm 60:7 and 108:8) understood and understand
what the Scriptures teach. The light of the sun rules the day and
the day ends once the sun's twilight is gone and the sun (light) no
longer rules for that day.
The Jews know the
exact moment of sunset or sundown is not the
exact start or end of a day.
The Jews know, just
as the Scriptures teach, that the day ends at the evening. It is
from the evening that a new day begins and specifically,
when it is dark enough for the light of the moon or stars to be
evident, the new day begins.
Knowing all this; What then does sunset to sunset really
mean?
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Consider the
following:
"Twilight on Friday is reckoned as
Sabbath eve and consequently no work may be performed then. The
Sabbath candles must be lit before twilight (Shab.2: 7). The
twilight at the end of the Sabbath is calculated as still belonging
to the Sabbath day, which concludes with the appearance of three
stars in the sky. This rule applies also to the beginning and
conclusion of the holidays. Before the beginning of the Day of
Atonement, twilight is reckoned from approximately one hour before
the stars would become visible."
TWILIGHT
ENCYCLOPEDIA JUDAICA; 1970
PAGE 1474
"ben ha shemashoth" (between the
suns; i.e. between the setting of the sun and the rising of the moon
or the appearance of the stars) denotes the evening twilight. The
Rabbis consider it doubtful whether twilight belongs to the day or
the night (Shab.34b); consequently they treat it as a safeguard
against encroachment upon either - for example, the twilight of
Friday is reckoned as Sabbath eve, and that of Saturday as Sabbath
Day; and the same rule applies to the feast days. This practice is
termed "adding from the secular to the holy." ... The limit of
twilight is important since it separates one day from another..."
SUN, RISING AND SETTING OF THE:
THE JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA
PAGE 591
"At the end of the day there is a
period of time called ben hashemashoth (twilight) which lasts from
the time that the sun disappears below the horizon until there is
complete darkness. The determination of the exact duration of the
twilight period was extremely important, especially as the twilight
of the Sabbath and holidays partook of the sanctity of the day
itself."
TIME, MEASURING OF,
THE UNIVERSAL JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA
VOL. 10 1948 ED,
PAGE 251
"Some Early authorities hold that
there are two sunsets, even on the view that the sun passes below
the earth at night (cf. Pes. ib.). The first is when the sun sets
and disappears from sight but its light is still dominant, as it has
not yet disappeared from the whole world, since one could see it
from the mountain tops, this being the reason its light is dominant
and does not redden the face of the west. The second is when it sets
completely, passing under the world and its light disappears from
the world. At that point the face of the west commences to cast a
red glow by its radiance. For as long as the light is in the world,
the glow is not visible. ... One who does work during the two
twilights, on the eve of, and at the end of, the Sabbath, is in any
event liable of sin-offering. For if it is night, he is liable
because of Sabbath eve, while if it is day, he is liable because of
the end of the Sabbath (Shab. 35b), provided he did the work during
the whole period of twilight ... "
BETWEEN THE EVENINGS
ENCYCLOPEDIA TALMUDICA
PAGES 682, 688
What we have just
read, provides ample understanding why the term sunset to sunset
is used to define the limits of the Sabbath day, when the Sabbath
day begins and when it ends.
Sunset to sunset
is not an exact moment in time of two sunsets; one at the beginning
and one at the end of a day. Rather sunset to sunset
allows for an extended period of time lasting a little more that a
normal 24-hour day, as it pertains to the Sabbath and the Holy
Days.
An ordinary day, a
non-Sabbath Day or non-Holy Day will begin from the
evening of the previous day.
Ordinary days do
not begin at sunset.
Only
the Sabbath and Holy days begin at sunset.
The following time
sequence makes up the sunset to sunset or sundown to
sundown Sabbath or Holy Day.
-
At the time of the sunset (the sun hitting and falling below
the western horizon - which is part of the evening activity) of
Friday (for the Sabbath) or the previous day (for a Holy Day), the
actual Sabbath or Holy Day begins.
-
After the sun has set, the evening twilight commences.
That twilight (in that evening) is considered part of the Sabbath or
Holy Days. That twilight is at the beginning of the Sabbath or Holy
Days.
-
Then of course after the twilight of the sun is extinguished,
the night commences. That Sabbath or Holy Day continues
progressing through the night, then morning -
midday - afternoon - evening - sunset and
twilight of that Sabbath or Holy Day. There are actually two
sunsets on the Sabbath and Holy Days. There are also two twilights
on the Sabbath and Holy Days. The first twilight is at the beginning
of the Sabbath or Holy Days and the second twilight is at the end of
the Sabbath or Holy Days
-
At the end of the Sabbath or Holy Days are both the sunset
(the sun dropping below the horizon) and the twilight. The last
event at the end of the Sabbath or Holy Days is the twilight. That
Sabbath or Holy Day is complete once the night of the first day of
the week (in the case of the Sabbath) or the night of the next day
(in the case of the Holy Day) commences.
Once the night
of the first day of the week (in the case of the Sabbath) or
the night of that next day (as follows the Holy Day)
is evident then the Sabbath or Holy Day is over.
In terms of hours,
the Sabbath or the Holy Days both contain more than the
normal/general 24 hours in a day.
Depending on the
time of year, and latitude, the Sabbath and Holy Days can easily be
an hour and a half longer than a normal 24 hour day, some 25-1/2
hours.
That is what the
Jews understand by the phrase sunset to sunset.
The Jews allowed
"extra time" at the beginning of the Sabbath Day or a Holy Day,
taking time away from the end of the preceding day, as a safeguard.
They take from the secular and add to the holy.
They established the
"extra time" principle (sunset to sunset) as a result of the
teaching found in Leviticus 23:32 and Exodus 12:18.
They understood from what God taught Moses, regarding when to begin
the Day of Atonement and the First Day of Unleavened Bread. They
borrow (take) from the evening (ending) of the previous day
and apply it to the Sabbath or Feast day.
The 10th
day begins from evening of the 9th day. The
evening of the 9th day is at the end of the 9th
day. Yet, as the Jews read of in Leviticus 23:32; you begin
observing the Day of Atonement as the 9th day is coming
to an end.
In order to protect
the beginning of the Day of Atonement, you borrowed from the
evening, the end of the 9th day. The 10th
day begins at sunset of the 9th day,
rather than from evening of the 9th day. "Extra
time" is allotted at the beginning of the Day of Atonement.
That is how the term
sunset to sunset is to be understood.
The Jews recognize
that, as the Scriptures matter-of-factly state, a day is to be
reckoned "from evening until evening" and not
"sunset unto sunset."
In truth, the Jews
have taught that the Sabbath and the Holy Days should be kept from
sunset to sunset or sundown to sundown in order to
thoroughly protect the day.
The Jews do not
practice looking at an exact moment in time of sunset; the Bible
does not teach an exact moment in time of sunset when it comes to
the end of a day.
The practice of
looking at one's watch or reading in the newspaper for the "exact
time" of sunset or watching the sky for the "exact moment in time
when the sun drops below the western horizon" and thinking this is
what the Scriptures teach, is incorrect.
The Churches of God
teach that the day is reckoned from sunset to sunset and in
so teaching need to understand what that phrase means.
Sunset is
an action of the sun, which occurs during the evening of the
day. When the evening is over for the old day, giving way to the
darkness of night, then with the night, the new day begins.
As the Jews teach,
the Sabbath and Holy Days (only) begins at the moment of
sunset, the sun dropping below the horizon.
All other days begin
at the night and end after the evening is completed. All other days
are reckoned from evening until evening; that is from the
commencement of the night until the completion of the evening.
To teach that every
day is to be reckoned from sunset to sunset is incorrect.
Whether you begin
the Sabbath or Holy Day at the exact moment of sunset or you wait
until the stars appear, is a matter of choice, your own, personal
conviction.
God does not sit in
his heavenly armchair with a watch in hand, looking to see if you
will begin and end His Sabbath at the exact moment the sun drops
below the western horizon, in accord to your wristwatch or the
newspaper listing.
God does observe,
analyzing your attitude, the consistency of your character and your
behavior as associated with Sabbath keeping. He is watching to see
if you are properly prepared for and having the right frame of mind,
are ready to enter into His Sabbaths and Holy Days. He is watching
to see if you keep the entire day Holy.
When to begin the
Sabbath Day is important. How you keep it is critical.
Sunset to sunset is important to understand if you know what this
phrase means. If you spiritually put a hedge about the Sabbath Day
and Holy Days; if you spiritually take from the secular and apply to
the sacred then you are in compliance with Isaiah 58:13-14; then you
have remembered the Sabbath Day to keep it Holy.
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