Christian Churches of God
No. A_P2025
Passover Calendar for 2025
(Edition 1.0 20250103-20250103)
The 48th Year of the 120th Jubilee begins on 1 Abib or 29 March 2025. The Passover season of the First month is the most important in God's Sacred Calendar. Observing all the Feasts in the correct manner is essential for a continuing relationship with God in the Holy Spirit, and for our progression in the Faith. This schedule outlines the requirements for keeping the full 21 days of Passover. A New Moon and Holy Day Calendar for 2025/26 is appended.
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Passover
Calendar for 2025
The New Year on 1st Abib (Nisan) is on Saturday 29 March 2025. The
luni-solar conjunction of the New Moon is at 12.58 on Saturday 29 March 2025 in
Jerusalem. Preparation day for the Sacred New Year occurs on the Friday before
the Sabbath / New Moon of 29 March 2025. At the end of Friday at 18.50, at the
end of evening nautical twilight (EENT) Jerusalem time, the First Day of Abib, Saturday
29 March 2025, begins.
This is the First day of the First month of the 48th year of the 120th Jubilee and the 40th Jubilee since the baptism of Messiah. The number forty is significant as it is often the period allotted for repentance (Num. 14:33-34). See the paper Forty Years for Repentance (No. 290).
The
Vernal or Spring Equinox is on 20 March 2025 @ 11.01 this year.
Preparing
for the Passover
The
Passover is a commemorative Feast representing a series of features in God’s
Plan of Redemption. The keeping of the Passover and Days of Unleavened Bread is
a sign that we are God's people (Ex. 13:3-10). The paper The Passover (No. 098)
should be studied.
The Exodus
under Moses forms the basis of the Passover and, while the story is based on
the physical salvation of the nation of Israel, the Feast symbolises the
spiritual salvation of the entire planet (see also Moses and the Gods of Egypt
(No. 105)).
Moses' six
ascents of the mountain to speak with the Angel of God show
that we are able to enter into a relationship of glorification with God through
Christ, who was that Angel. We who are predestined are chosen and called, then
justified and glorified through Christ. See the paper The Ascents of Moses (No. 070).
Legislation
and Timing
The
legislation concerning the Passover is found at: Exodus 12:3-49; 23:15-18;
34:18; Leviticus 23:4-8; Numbers 9:2-5,13-14; 28:16-25; Deuteronomy
16:1-8,16-17; Ezekiel 45:21-24.
Passover is the first of the three annual pilgrim Festivals – the others being Pentecost and Tabernacles – and it is to be kept for a full eight days. It represents the first of three major spiritual harvests in the Plan of God – in this case, of Jesus Christ, as the first of the first-fruits (1Cor. 15:20).
The entire Feast is to be kept outside our homes in order to remove ourselves somewhat from the world, even as Israel was taken out of Egypt (Ex. 12:40-42; Mat. 26:17-19).
Leaven
We are required to remove any leavened products from our accommodation at the Feast site before the start of 15 Abib (Ex. 12:15,19; 13:6-7; Deut. 16:3-4). Our permanent residences must also be deleavened prior to leaving for the Passover. See the paper Preparing for the Passover (No. 190).
While physical deleavening is important, the sanctification process during the Passover season is not one of outward cleansing but of inward cleansing, which is the hardest of all to achieve. The Feast of Unleavened Bread is understood as a time of replacing the old leaven of malice and wickedness with the leaven of sincerity and truth (see the paper The Old and the New Leaven (No. 106a)).
Purpose
In all seven of the major Passovers mentioned in the Bible, the sanctification process and the keeping of the Feast for the full seven days were critical to the restoration of the congregation of Israel, as seen in the paper The Seven Great Passovers of the Bible (No. 107). It is incumbent upon us to worship the One True God on the days that He set aside as holy and not on any other days.
It is also one of the few opportunities in the year for isolated and scattered brethren to eat together in worship, and gives participants a stronger sense of belonging to the Body of Christ (see the paper Eating Together in Worship (No. 267)).
During the full 21-day period from 1st Abib, we are required to undertake regular prayer and occasional fasting for the salvation of the people of our nations, and even the fallen Host – for God doesn't wish anyone to perish (2Pet. 3:9). Refer also to the paper Cursing the Fig Tree (No. 090).
First
Day of Abib: New Moon
The First day of the First month is a New
Moon Sabbath (Isa. 66:23; Ezek. 46:1-3; Num. 28:11-15) and commences the
New Year according to God's Sacred Calendar (Gen. 8:13; Ex. 12:2; Ps. 104:19).
It is a Holy Day in its own right, and no onerous or paid work is to be done
either by us or for us. See the paper The Moon and the New Year (No.
213).
It is the day to begin the preparation for the restoration of the worship of the Living God, and commences with the House of God, the Temple, and from the new priesthood of the Elect (2Chr. 29:16-19; 30:1-5; Mk. 11:11,15-18). The paper Sanctification of the Temple of God (No. 241) should be studied here.
As with all days in God's Calendar, 1st Abib begins at dark (or EENT) in our local area and ends 24 hours later at dark, or “evening” (cf. Gen. 1:5; Neh. 13:19; Lev. 23:32).
Seventh
Day: Fast for Error and Ignorance
The Seventh of Abib is the day set aside for prayer and fasting in obedience to God's command to "sanctify a fast" (Joel 1:14; 2:12-17). All baptised members are required to participate in this fast. The paper Sanctification of the Simple and Erroneous (No. 291) should be studied.
The fast begins on Thursday, 3 April at dark and ends on Friday, 4 April at dark, and reflects the fast on the Day of Atonement in the Seventh month (Lev. 23:27-31).
On this day we go before our Father to
appeal for the simple or ignorant among our people, who have not known God’s ways and cannot sanctify themselves
(Ezek. 45:18-20; Mk. 11:1; Heb. 5:2). Sanctification in the Church is the
process of becoming consecrated to God by prayer and fasting in the study of
His word.
Scripture enjoins us "to loose the bonds of wickedness, undo the heavy burdens, and let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke" (Isa. 58:6-12), so that our people may be reconciled to our God and Father.
A few of
the many things to pray for during this fast are that: many are given the gift
of the calling of God and the power of the Holy Spirit is poured out upon them;
we have the opportunity to properly educate people in God's Way and have people
restored to the true Faith; we are able to repair the breach of understanding
and restore the path of righteousness; the work of restoration is not
frustrated by competing false prophecy and doctrines; encouragement is given to
members and leaders of all the Churches of God; there will be peace and freedom
among all men; and that all will be kept from the Evil One (cf. Lk. 11:1-4).
We are
reminded that: "the prayer of a righteous person has great power in its
effect" (Jas. 5:16; 2Chr. 30:18-20).
Tenth
Day: Lamb Set Aside
The Tenth day is for the setting aside of the Passover Lamb (Ex. 12:3-5) that represents Messiah, and falls on Monday, 7 April. It is a time to reflect upon our own spiritual condition after having been called out of the world and "set aside" by God for His purpose.
This is also an appropriate day on which to examine ourselves and to "discern the Body" in preparation for partaking of the Lord’s Supper with those who represent the true Body of believers in the true Spirit under one Lord, Jesus Christ, and One True God (2Cor. 13:5; 1Cor. 11:28-32).
Fourteenth
Day: Lord’s Supper
The Lord’s Supper is to be observed after dark on Thursday, 10 April. A detailed explanation of the ordinance is found in the paper The Lord's Supper (No. 103). It is the second of only two sacraments of the Church, the other being baptism. See also the paper Procedures for the Lord's Supper (No. 103B).
Not
everyone is eligible to take the Lord’s Supper. The primary requirement for
partaking of the Lord's Supper is to be a baptised member of the Body of
Christ. If we are not baptised, we should prepare for baptism (see the paper Repentance and Baptism (No. 052)).
If we are
baptised, we should review our baptism and what it means. It requires the
development of a right relationship with God. The children are consecrated and
given special protection through a baptised and consecrated parent (1Cor.
7:14).
We are
reminded that unless we “drink the blood and eat the body of Christ”, we cannot
enter the Kingdom of God (Jn. 6:27-58). We ought to remember also that we have
been given the Holy Spirit as a down-payment on our redemption as sons of God
(2Cor. 1:22; 5:5).
Hence the
Lord’s Supper service is purely to reconcile us to God. There are three main
elements to it:
1) Foot-washing
The first element is the foot-washing
service (Jn. 13:1-17), which precedes the partaking of the bread and wine. Taking part in the foot-washing ceremony each
year renews and rededicates us to our conversion and the cleanliness we
received from baptism prior to receipt of the Holy Spirit (1Pet. 3:21). See the
paper Significance
of the Footwashing (No. 099).
2) Bread
The concept of the body and blood of Christ is central to the Lord’s Supper. Christ’s sacrifice is reflected in these two symbols of bread and wine, as shown in the paper Significance of the Bread and Wine (No. 100). An example of the early Church observing this ordinance is found at 1Corinthians 11:20-29.
Only unleavened
bread should be used at this service (Ex. 23:18;
34:25), as a physical sign that we are to put the leaven of sin out of our
lives during this Passover period but also
importantly no leaven is eaten with the sacrifices of the Lord, which
this Supper represents (see the paper Steps to Overcoming Sin (No. 011)).
3) Wine
The wine is
symbolic of the High Priest’s annual sacrifice whereby, through the blood of
bulls, he entered into the Holy of Holies. Christ himself is now our High
Priest, interceding for us before the Throne of God (Rom. 8:34; Heb. 5:1ff.;
7:24-25). Wine is also symbolic of Christ's role as the vine (Jn. 15:1-6).
Thus wine is an indispensable part of the Lord’s Supper for each and every person and cannot be delegated or abrogated. Grape juice, which prevents a person from partaking of wine, cannot be substituted for the wine. Wine is alcoholic by nature (see the paper Wine in the Bible (No. 188)).
Memorial
Service at 3:00 p.m.
On Friday 11 April at the “ninth hour” or 3:00 p.m., a service is to be held at the time the lamb was traditionally sacrificed (Ex. 12:6; Deut. 16:5-6). The paper The Death of the Lamb (No. 242) should be referred to.
Offering
An offering is required to be taken up following the 3:00 p.m. service as above. It is one of only three annual collections (Deut. 16:16; Ex. 23:17) and must be handed in before morning on the first day of Unleavened Bread (Ex. 23:18; 34:25). See also the paper Offering (No. 275).
Fifteenth Day:
Passover and First day of Unleavened Bread
The Fifteenth is the First day of Unleavened Bread; it is a Holy Day (Lev. 23:6-7; Num. 28:17), and falls on Saturday, 12 April.
It includes the Passover meal (Ex. 12:6-11), which is to be observed after dark the previous evening, Friday, 11 April. This evening is also referred to as the “Night to be Much Observed/Greatly Remembered” or the “Night of Watching” (Ex. 12:42; 13:3). See the papers Preparation for the Passover Meal on the Night of Watching (No. 093) and The Night to be Much Observed (No. 101).
Everyone takes part in this meal, including the children and the unconverted who are then encouraged to ask about the meaning of the Passover and the symbols associated with it (Ex. 12:26; 13:14). All those present are expected to provide reasons for partaking of the lamb (Ex. 12:27), the wine (Ex. 29:40), unleavened bread (Ex. 12:39; Deut. 16:3-5), bitter herbs (Ex. 1:14, 12:8; Num. 9:11), and the use of salt (Lev. 2:13; Mk. 9:49-50). See the paper Passover Questions and the Reasons for our Faith (No. 051).
For the Passover meal we normally eat lamb or another “herd” animal roasted (Ex. 12:8-9); however, we make no actual sacrifice of the lamb, as that aspect was fulfilled in Messiah. Our vigil on the Night of Watching is in commemoration of his death, and the expectation of his return. It is usual for all baptised persons to maintain the vigil until well after midnight.
Wave-Sheaf
Offering
Although not a Sabbath in its own right, the Wave Sheaf must be held at the time of the morning sacrifice (9:00 a.m.) on Sunday 13 April.
The Wave Sheaf symbolises Christ as the
first of the first-fruits being offered to God (Ex. 34:26; 1Cor. 15:23; Lev.
23:9-14; Ex. 29:24-25). The male lamb was
also Christ as a first-fruits ascending into Heaven to his Father. See
the paper The Wave
Sheaf Offering (No. 106b).
This day always falls on the first day of the week (Sunday) within the Feast of Unleavened Bread and is used to start the count of the fifty days to Pentecost, which will be held at 9.00 a.m. on Sunday June 1st. The Omer Count to Pentecost (No. 173) paper should be studied.
Twenty-first
Day: Last Day of Unleavened Bread
The Last Day of Unleavened Bread is on Friday, 18 April and is a Holy Day (Lev. 23:8; Num. 28:25; Deut. 16:8). Services are held at 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m., that is, at the times of the morning and evening sacrifices in Israel (Ex. 29:39).
It is a day to reflect upon the entire
period of Sanctification and the ongoing Restoration process, the sequence of
which is outlined in the paper Josiah's Restoration (No. 245).
The day also mirrors the Last Great Day in the Seventh month, representing the
coming of God to the earth and the establishment of the City of God as the
final part of His Restoration.
Passover is to be kept in the Millennium as
a commemoration of the redemption of the world.
Passover
of the Second Month
There is provision in God's Law for the
Lord's Supper/Passover to be taken in the Second month, or Iyar. This is for
the occasions when the Lord’s Supper in the First month has been missed due to
unforeseen circumstances, such as travelling, accidents, illness, etc., or in
the event of childbirth. Although the 14th day of the Second month falls on 11 May,
the ceremony is observed after dark on 10 May, as described for the Lord's
Supper of the first month (cf. Num. 9:9-11).
A particularly relevant example of a Passover celebrated in the Second month may be seen in 2Chronicles 29 and 30; this followed the cleansing and sanctification of the Temple in Jerusalem.
Sanctification
of the Nations
The Sanctification of the Nations is a 50-year period that began in 1978 after the Jubilee of 1977 and includes the seven perfect Sabbaths of years as represented within the Omer Count to Pentecost. See the paper Sanctification of the Nations (No. 077). On a year-for-a-day basis, the final part of this sanctification period is correlated with the complete 21-day Passover season, as follows:
·
21st Abib, the Last
Day of Unleavened Bread, represents also the final year 2026/27 (also the last
Sabbath year of the 120th Jubilee cycle and the end of the Six Days
of the creation given to Satan, whose time has already been cut short). The
nations will be in place prior to the commencement of the last Jubilee and the
allocation of lands for the Millennium or “Sabbath Rest of Christ”. The 120th
Jubilee, the six-thousandth year of the cursed earth is in 2027/28. The New
Millennial system takes place from 2028.
Eternal Life
There are three
elements for eternal life that are not normally dealt with in the Lord’s
Supper.
First element: "And this is eternal
life, that they know you the only true God (Deut. 6:4;
Mal. 2:10; Eph. 4:6), and Jesus Christ
whom you have sent" (Jn. 17:3; 1Tim. 2:5; 1Cor. 8:4-6).
Second element: Faith in Jesus Christ
through knowledge of the One True God (Jn. 17:3) and that God raised him from the dead (Rom. 10:9). This leads from our repentance to baptism as an adult and to
receiving the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Third element: Participation in the
Passover and the eating of the body and drinking the blood of Jesus Christ (Jn.
6:53-54; 1Cor. 6:11).
All of
those three elements are predicated upon obedience. Obedience to the One True
God and love of Him are demonstrated by the keeping of His Commandments (Jn.
15:10; Deut. 6:1-25). Obedience is the necessary prerequisite to the retention
of the Holy Spirit (Acts 5:32). Without the Spirit we
cannot worship God completely (Jn. 4:23; Phil. 3:3), nor can we enter the Kingdom of God and thus have eternal
life in either the First Resurrection (Rom. 8:11) or the Second
Resurrection (Ezek. 37:12-14). However,
with the Holy Spirit we are able to obey all of God's Commandments (1Jn. 3:24).
See the paper Eternal
Life (No. 133).
Obedience
to the Passover ordinance entails keeping the Laws and regulations that Christ
set for our participation in this Festival. If we do not partake in the
ceremony of the Lord's Supper we have no part with Jesus Christ (Jn. 13:8). We
are required to obey God's instructions even before we fully understand them,
as understanding will follow obedience (Prov. 16:3).
By
obedience we also make it possible for others to understand and to be added to
the Body of Christ, and for the Body to grow as the Church of God in truth and
honesty of conviction.
Christ kept
the Passover and the Law (Mat. 26:17-20; Lk. 22:15; Jn. 2:13, 23; 13:1ff.); he
did not change one “jot” or “tittle” of the Law (Mat. 5:18).
There is
only One True God, Eloah, and Jesus Christ, or Joshua the Messiah, is His son.
Knowledge of them is eternal life (Jn. 17:1-3).
AMEN
2025
(Vernal
Equinox: 20 March 2025 @ 11:01)
New
Moons |
EENT
at Jerusalem |
New
Moon and other |
|
29 January
25 14:36 |
18:06 |
Wednesday 29
January |
1 Adar 12th Month |
28 February
25 02:45 |
18:29 |
Friday 28
February |
1 Adar
II 13th Month |
29 March
25 12:58 |
18:50 |
Saturday 29
March |
1 Nisan = New Year 1st Month, 48th
Year of the 120th Jubilee |
**** |
**** |
Friday 04
April |
7 Nisan Sanctification |
**** |
**** |
Friday 11 April (Evening of previous day) |
14 Nisan Lord's
Supper |
**** |
**** |
Saturday 12 April (Evening of previous day) |
15 Nisan Passover/NTBMR |
**** |
**** |
Sunday 13
April |
Wave Sheaf (9:00 AM) |
**** |
**** |
Friday 18
April |
21 Nisan Last
Day of UB |
27 April
25 21:31 |
19:13 |
Monday 28
April |
1 Iyar 2nd Month |
27 May
25 05:02 |
19:38 |
Tuesday 27
May |
1 Sivan 3rd
Month |
**** |
**** |
Sunday 01
June |
Pentecost (9:00 AM) |
25 June
25 12:31 |
19:51 |
Wednesday 25
June |
1 Tammuz 4th Month |
24 July
25 21:12 |
19:41 |
Friday 25
July |
1 Ab 5th Month |
23 August
25 08:06 |
19:09 |
Saturday 23
August |
1 Elul 6th Month |
21 September
25 21:54 |
18:30 |
Monday 22
September |
1 Tishri = Trumpets 7th
Month |
**** |
**** |
Wednesday 01
October |
10
Tishri Atonement |
**** |
**** |
Monday 06 October (Evening of previous day) |
Ingathering |
**** |
**** |
Monday 06
October |
15
Tishri Tabernacles |
**** |
**** |
Monday 13
October |
22
Tishri Last Great Day |
21 October
25 14:25 |
17:53 |
Tuesday 21
October |
1
Heshvan 8th Month |
20 November
25 08:47 |
17:33 |
Thursday 20
November |
1 Kislev 9th Month |
20 December
25 03:43 |
17:36 |
Saturday 20
December |
1 Tebeth 10th Month |
18 January 26 21:52 |
17:56
|
Monday 19 January |
1 Shebat 11th Month |
17 February 26 14:01 |
18:21
|
Tuesday 17 February |
1 Adar
12th Month |
19 March 26
03:23 |
18:42
|
Thursday 19 March |
1 Nisan = New Year 1st Month |
Local time of dark, or EENT, for any day of the year can be obtained from the website:
Table of Sunrise/Sunset, Moonrise/Moonset, or Twilight Times for an Entire Year (navy.mil)
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