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Common sense tells us that shepherds don’t live in the field during winter time. Sheep graze in the fields during the spring, summer, and fall. Grass dies down in the winter and sheep are fed hay that is harvested in the summer time. The celebration of Christmas on December 25th, as if it were the birthday of the Messiah, is a misguided and man made custom.

December 25th was celebrated for several hundred years before Yahshua’s birth, as a pagan worship day. A day we are told not to learn about in Yeremyah 10:1-5.

Tishrei, the 7th month of the scriptural year, is warm as it usually falls within September of the Gregorian calendar.

The first day of Tishrei, the Feast of Trumpets, is when Yahshua was born. Yahseph and Miriam had to go to Bethlehem for a census and thaCwould have been done on an annual Holy Day. The Israylites were required to go up to Yerusalem for the Passover Feast of Unleavened Bread, The Feast of Pentecost, and the Feast of Tabernacles. The Feast of Trumpets and Day of Atonement are Feasts that do not require the Israylites to go up to Yerusalem, although many of them did.

Yahshua should be the English translation of the the 4th day of the week, in the year 31 C.E., the 3866th year since creation.

The Messiah, Yahshua, was not born in December! We find in scripture that Yahshua was born when the weather was warm, this would either be during the late spring, summer, or early fall.

Luke 2:8; “Now there were shepherds in the same country living out in the field, keeping watch over their flock by night.”

Common sense tells us that shepherds don’t live in the field during winter time. Sheep graze in the fields during the spring, summer, and fall. Grass dies down in the winter and sheep are fed hay that is harvested in the summer time. The celebration of Christmas on December 25th, as if it were the birthday of the Messiah, is a misguided and man made custom.

December 25th was celebrated for several hundred years before Yahshua’s birth, as a pagan worship day. A day we are told not to learn about in Yeremyah 10:1-5.

Tishrei, the 7th month of the scriptural year, is warm as it usually falls within September of the Gregorian calendar. The first day of Tishrei, the Feast of Trumpets, is when Yahshua was born. Yahseph and Miriam had to go to Bethlehem for a census and thaCwould have been done on an annual Holy Day. The Israylites were required to go up to Yerusalem for the Passover Feast of Unleavened Bread, The Feast of Pentecost, and the Feast of Tabernacles. The Feast of Trumpets and Day of Atonement are Feasts that do not require the Israylites to go up to Yerusalem, although many of them did.

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