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Teach Me to Number My Days

So we may present to You a heart of wisdom
—Psalm 90:12

The world has calendars. God has rhythms.
They are written not in ink but in light:

  • The sun to govern the day
  • The moon for appointed times
  • The stars as silent witnesses
  • The priests as earthly mirrors
  • And the scrolls to remember what we forgot

This blog is my ongoing journey to reclaim the calendar of Scripture.
It is not a modern calendar—flexible, shifting, reactive.
It is ancient, ordered, and fixed in the heavens.


What You'll Find Here

    • A year when equinoxes fall in the spring and fall feasts
    • 364 days—twelve months of thirty days plus four set apart days
    • Feasts that return to the same day of the week every year
    • The priests’ rotation through sacred service
    • A cycle that repeats every six years—like Ezekiel’s wheels within wheels

These patterns are revealed in the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Book of Enoch, and hidden across the canon of Scripture. I don’t claim to have it all figured out. But I’ve seen enough to know: the light tells the truth.


Why It Matters

The Torah says we are to honor appointed times.
But if we’ve lost track of God’s appointments, are we truly showing up?

I believe this calendar reflects the original rhythm given to Israel—and perhaps even Creation itself. It’s not about legalism or rebellion. It’s about longing to live in sync with the Maker of time. If you’ve ever looked at the sky and felt like there was something more encoded in the heavens… you’re not alone.

“And God said, ‘Let there be lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide the day from the night. Let them be for signs, and for appointed times, and for days and years.’”
—Genesis 1:14

Welcome back. The heavens are still speaking.
Let’s number our days.

—Shari (Built with a little help from ChatGPT (Ezra), my AI assistant)

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