— Category III · The Day —
The Day
Yahuah called the light Day. Yahushua said the day has twelve hours. Then Babylon and Rome crept in, and the church and the synagogue both forgot when the day actually begins.
Study 1
Dawn to Dusk
From the very first verse where Yahuah names the day, the day is the light. Yahushua confirmed it in plain language: there are twelve hours in the day. The Hebrew word yom is used two different ways in Genesis 1:5 — and once you see them both, the entire framework comes into focus.
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The Babylonian Sundown Tradition
Walk into any synagogue or Torah-keeping community and you'll hear it: "the Sabbath begins at sundown." It sounds biblical. It feels Hebrew. But it isn't. The sundown tradition was picked up in Babylonian captivity, codified by rabbis afterward, and Yahushua's burial chronology is the definitive witness against it.
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The Roman Midnight Lie
Ask any modern Christian when their day begins and they'll say midnight. Sunday begins at 12:00 AM. Christmas begins when the clock strikes twelve. It feels universal. It feels obvious. It is none of those things — it is Caesar's day, smuggled into the church through Rome, and it has nothing to do with the lights Yahuah hung in the heavens.
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