The Meaning of New Moon Now and Then
by Ya’acov Natan Lawrence

Let’s first define the phrase new moon. Modern scientists regard the new moon as beginning at the conjunction (when the moon is in its dark phase and is blocked from the sun’s light by the earth), while the ancient Israelites regarded it as beginning when it first appeared as a sliver or crescent. We have a clash of definitions here. The term new moon meant one thing to the ancient Jews as attested to by their writings, and it means something quite different to modern scientists. To properly understand Scripture, we must put ourselves in the proverbial moccasins of the ancient Jewish people and understand the concept of new moon from their perspective. To not do so is to violate Scripture and to take the chances of adding to the Word of Elohim and arriving at false conclusions regarding the truth of Scripture.

The Bible and the New Moon

Let’s start with the Bible, the foundation of all spiritual knowledge. We are confronted with two options when determining truth: we can rely on the mind of man in an attempt to figure things out, or divinely revealed truth as recorded in the Word of יהוה. When we base our beliefs and actions on the latter, we are feeding from the tree of life; if on the former we are feeding from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. To rely on the mind of man (i.e., secular humanism) to determine what is good and evil is tantamount to seeking spiritual truth in Babylon, which is a confused mixture of good and evil. Let’s look to the Spirit of Elohim to lead and direct us into all truth as Yeshua promised ( John 16:13); let us begin searching the Word of Elohim for that truth.

The first question we need to ask is what is the biblical Hebrew word for new moon? It is the Hebrew word Xdx/chodesh (Strong’s H2320/TWOT 613b) meaning “the new moon, month, monthly, the first day of the month, the lunar month.” It is found in the Tanakh (Hebrew Scriptures or Old Testament) 276 times and is translated in the King James Version as “month” 254 times, “new moon” (20 times), and “monthly” (1 time). We see that from these definitions that the terms “month” and “new moon” are synonymous. It has been understood for millennia that ancient Israelites began their month with the new moon.

Why was it important for the Israelites to know when the new moon occurred and when the month began? The dates of the annual biblical festivals that יהוה gave to Israel and instructed them to observe were deter- mined based on when the new moon occurred (Lev 23:5,6,24,27,34).

The next question to answer is this: when does the biblical month begin? As we noted above, for modern astronomers the term “new moon” means something different than it did to the ancients, including those who יהוה inspired to write the Bible. Ancient calendars were determined by the moon, while modern ones are not. Some biblical expositors teach that the new moon begins when the moon is in conjunction or in line with the earth and the sun and is in its dark phase. Others believe that the month begins just after the moon has moved out of its dark phase and begins to show a sliver of light, which is called the visible or crescent new moon. Who is right?

Some Bible teachers claim that there is no place in the Scriptures that specifically states that the new moon begins at the first visible sliver after being dark for several days. Therefore, they reason, it is an assumption to say that it does (even though, as we will see below, this was the understanding of the ancient Israelites), and therefore, the new moon should be determined from its conjunction with the earth and sun while it is in its dark phase. While on the surface, this may seem like a valid argument, one important verse in the Scriptures, however, and some simple logic quickly disproves this notion. It is Genesis 1:14.

And Elohim said, “Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs, and for seasons [moedim/biblical festivals], and for days, and years.”

In this verse we see that the sun and the moon are “signs” for seasons, days and years. The word “sign” is the Hebrew word owt/ twa (Strong’s H226; TWOT 41a) meaning “sign, signal, mark, token, emblem, signboard, standard.” In the Tanakh, owt describes such visible (not invisible) signs as Noah’s rainbow (Gen 9:12–13,17), Cain’s mark (Gen 4:15), circumcision (Gen 17:11), and the Sabbath (Exod 31:13,17; Ezek 20:12). In addition, owt is used some 80 times in the Tanakh to refer to miraculous signs. These include the plagues of Egypt (Exod 7:3; Deut 4:34, etc.), the sign of the virgin birth of the Messiah (Isa 7:11,14); יהוה miraculous signs to Gideon ( Judg 6:17) and King Hezekiah (2 Kgs 20:9; Isa 38:7). In addition, Aaron’s rod that budded was a sign or token (Num 17:25). Many more examples could be given.

What do all these examples of how the Bible uses the Hebrew word owt have in common? They were all a visible sign that one could see. This is the definition of the word owt and how it is used in the Hebrew Scriptures. Simply stated, the visible sliver of the new moon fits the definition of owt as used in Genesis 1:14, while the astronomical conjunction (when the moon is in its dark phase and is invisible to the eye because the earth is between the moon and the sun) does not. The moon cannot be a visible sign to determine seasons or biblical festivals if it is hidden or dark.

The fact that ancient Israelites determined the new moon based on the sighting with the naked eye of the moon’s sliver has been substantiated repeatedly by historians and religious scholars over the past 2000 years.

What Leading Scholars Say About the New Moon

In our research in examining secular records from over the past two thousand years, we found that the world’s leading scholars unanimously agree that the ancient Israelites determined the beginning of their new month (rosh chodesh) based on sighting the first crescent, sliver or sickle of the new moon. We could find no sources that indi- cated that the ancients relied on the astronomical conjunction for determining rosh chodesh. Here is what we found.

Modern Sources

• “In the times of the Second Temple it appears from the Mishnah (R. H. i. 7) that the priests had a court to which witnesses came and reported. This function was afterward taken over by the civil court (see B. Zuckermann, “Materialien zur Entwicklung der Altjüdischen Zeitrechnung im Talmud, “Breslau, 1882).

The fixing of the lengths of the months and the intercalation of months was the prerogative of the Sanhedrin, at whose head there was a patriarch . The entire Sanhedrin was not called upon to act in this matter, the decision being left to a special court of three. The Sanhedrin met on the 29th of each month to await the report of the witnesses.

• On the evening before the announcement of the intercalation the patriarch assembled certain scholars who assisted in the decision. It was then announced to the various Jewish communities by letters. To this epistle was added the reason for the intercalation. A copy of such a letter of Rabban Gamaliel is preserved in the Talmud (Sanh. xi. 2).

The country people and the inhabitants of Babylonia were informed of the beginning of the month by fire-signals, which were readily carried from station to station in the mountain country. These signalscould not be carried to the exiles in Egypt, Asia Minor, and Greece, who, being accordingly left in doubt, celebrated two days as the new moon.

Owing to the weather it was frequently impossible to observe the new moon. In order to remove any uncertainty with regard to the length of the year on this account, it was ordained that the year should not have less than 4 nor more than 8 full months. After the fixing of the calendar it was settled that the year should not have less than 5 nor more than 7 full months.”

R. Gamaliel II. (80-116 C.E.) used to receive the reports of the witnesses in person, and showed them representations of the moon to test their accuracy. On one occasion he fixed the first of Tishri after the testimony of two suspected witnesses. The accuracy of the decision was disputed by Rabbi Joshua, who was thereupon commanded by the patriarch to appear before him prepared for travel on the day which was, according to his ( Joshua’s) calculation, the Day of Atonement, an order with which he most reluctantly complied.”

• One of the important figures in the history of the calendar was Samuel (born about 165, died about 250), surnamed “Yarinai” because of his familiarity with the moon. He was an astronomer, and it was said that he knew the courses of the heavens as well as the streets of his city (Ber. 58b). He was director of a school in Nehardea (Babylonia), and while there arranged a calendar of the feasts in order that his fellow-coun- trymen might be independent of Judea. He also calculated the calendar for sixty years. His calculations greatly influenced the subsequent calendar of Hillel. According to Bartolocci his tables are preserved in the Vatican. A contemporary of his, R. Adda (born 183), also left a work on the calendar.

Mar Samuel reckoned the solar year at 365 days and 6 hours, and Rab Adda at 365 days, 5 hours, 55 min- utes, and 25 25/57 seconds.

• Under the patriarchate of Rabbi Judah III (300-330) the testimony of the witnesses with regard to the appearance of the new moon was received as a mere formality, the settlement of the day depending entirely on calculation. This innovation seems to have been viewed with disfavor by some members of the Sanhedrin, particularly Rabbi Jose, who wrote to both the Babylonian and the Alexandrian communities, advising them to follow the customs of their fathers and continue to celebrate two days, an advice which was followed, and is still followed, by the majority of Jews living outside of Israel.”

Nineteenth Century Sources Second Century Sources

In the Mishnah, the book containing the late second century record of Jewish legal rulings and other religious records, we find recorded that the Jews’ religious leaders established rigorous protocols and rituals for determining when the new moon had been sighted. The following quotes are from the Mishanah.

“A father and son who saw the new moon...” (Rosh Hash 1:1a)
“Tobiah, the physician, saw the new moon in Jerusalem...” (Rosh Hash 1:7e)
“He who saw the new moon...” (Rosh Hash 1:9a)

The Mishnah then goes on to discuss how to examine those who claimed to have been eye witnesses of the newmoon to determine if their testimony was accurate or not (Rosh Hash 2:6ff ). One of the questions the religious leaders in Jerusalem would ask of the Jewish witnesses was, “How did you see the moon?” (Rosh. Hash 2:6c). The Jewish leader, Gamaliel [of Acts 5:34] actually showed pictures of the shapes of the moon to the witnesses to help ascertain the accuracy of the witnesses’ testimony (Rosh Hash 2:8).

From the most ancient Jewish records in existence, including the Mishnah, there is no hint that the Jews before, during or after the time of Yeshua (until at least the middle of the fourth century) determined the new moon in any other way than by sighting the visible sliver of the new moon! Based on these facts, we can be absolutely certain that Yeshua and his early followers (the authors of the Apostolic Scriptures or New Testament) determined the new moon's advent, the beginning of the biblical month and, hence, the biblical calendar and the biblical feasts based on the visible sighting of the new moon's crescent! We can find no evidence to the contrary that they determined the new moon in any other way.

Another ancient Jewish record that testifies to the fact that the ancient Jews looked to the visible new moon to determine the appointed times (biblical feasts) is the Old Testament pseudepigraphal Book of Jubilees (ca. 2nd century b.c.) that mentions “those who will examine the moon diligently...” (6:36, emphasis added).

First Century Sources

Philo was a Jewish historian who wrote in the first century and was a contemporary of Josephus.

“[A]t the time of the new moon, the sun begins to illuminate the moon with a light which is visible to the outward senses, and then she displays her own beauty to the beholders.” (The Works of Philo, Special Laws II, 141, p. 581, Hendrickson, 1997, emphasis added)

Conclusion

The Biblical and scholarly evidence speaks for itself; therefore, we rest our case. The ancients Israelites determined the beginning of the each month based on sighting the first crescent or sliver of the new moon after it had emerged from being dark for a day or two and so should we.

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