Hebrew Israelite Calendar (2024-2025)
There is a new calendar available for free download. One of the advantages of this Hebrew Israelite calendar is that it is easy to read and navigate, being based mainly on the Gregorian calendar, which we use in everyday life. You can download this calendar for use offline, print it for display on walls, or feel free to use it in its original digital form for quick and easy reference.
The Structure of the Year and Appointed Times
Yah’s year is a true 52 weeks. And 7 days in a week multiplied by 52 equals 364, not 365! On the Hebrew Israelite Calendar, days are locked in, so the feasts and other pure convocation days will fall exactly one year later in the same weeks on the exact days of those weeks, with no surprises or guesswork, as it was in the days of old. For those interested in comparison, the traditional fixed Hebrew calendar can also be seen at a glance.
The Mechanics of the Leap Week
On the Hebrew Israelite Calendar, leap weeks seem to fall every sixth even-numbered year of the Gregorian calendar. So, 2018 was in fact a leap week year. Therefore, 2024, 2030, and 2036 will be leap week years as well. A leap week is exactly 7 days long and does not count toward the year in which it falls.
Regarding the timing, a phantom week will be created after the Spring or Fall equinox of those given years to push the first week of April—particularly the week that holds the first Sunday in April—to the beginning of the Hebrew year, where it belongs. The leap week contains unnumbered days, therefore the year’s count does not truly go from 364 to 371. These leap weeks are substantiated in the book of Ezekiel, chapters 1 to 8, as explained in our documentary, The Hebrew Calendar.
Leap Week Cycle Schedule
| Gregorian Year | Calendar Feature | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Leap Week | 7 Days (Unnumbered) |
| 2024 | Leap Week | 7 Days (Unnumbered) |
| 2030 | Leap Week | 7 Days (Unnumbered) |
| 2036 | Leap Week | 7 Days (Unnumbered) |
Scriptural and Historic Foundations
This is the history of how the days were divided and of the days of the law and of the testimony, of the events of the years, and of the weeks of years, of their Jubilees throughout all the years of the world, as Yah spoke to Moses on Mount Sinai. In this enhanced scripture study, we examine the seven separate events that form the spring and fall feasts or pure convocations on the calendar of Yah.
The result is also corroborated by historic findings, such as an ancient Israelite tablet, as well as empirical testing, and a review of scholarly assessments that are supported by the sure Word of truth: the Scriptures. Furthermore, we provide an in-depth look at the seventh-day Sabbath, both from a historic and scriptural perspective. To prove the relevance of this important day, we call on numerous credible sources and many scriptural verses from the Pre-Messianic Scriptures and Messianic Writings. While many of us usually regard a day as a 24-hour period due to tradition, we explore where this 24-hour day originated and whether it is truly Scriptural.