Update Good Governance Calendar (GGC)

2025-12-18 07:44:47 -05:00
parent 44e7f59c3e
commit fcdda0fc3c

@@ -142,7 +142,7 @@ Roman calendar had 10 months starting from March, until a around 713 BCE, when t
Jewish leadership is conjectured to be infiltrated to abandon YHWH prescribed concepts of a year found in the Bible, Book of Enoch and Book of Jubilee to establish the modern, fixed Hebrew calendar in 358/9 CE, adopting the calendar derived from the Babylonian 12 month moon god worship practices. Jewish leadership is conjectured to be infiltrated to abandon YHWH prescribed concepts of a year found in the Bible, Book of Enoch and Book of Jubilee to establish the modern, fixed Hebrew calendar in 358/9 CE, adopting the calendar derived from the Babylonian 12 month moon god worship practices.
In 325 A.D. the General Council of Nicea decreed that the celebration of Easter should be uniform throughout the Christian Church. The Decree does not appear to have contained any definite reference to the date of the vernal equinox, but that date was certainly assumed by the framers of the Easter Tables to have been the 21st of March, although in 325 A.D. With GCC, Easter will always be Vernal Equinox, first of the year. In 325 A.D. the General Council of Nicea decreed that the celebration of Easter should be uniform throughout the Christian Church. The Decree does not appear to have contained any definite reference to the date of the vernal equinox, but that date was certainly assumed by the framers of the Easter Tables to have been the 21st of March, although in 325 A.D.
The Roman Catholic Church adopts the Gregorian Calendar in 1582, changing the Julian Calendar naming convention order, adding confusion and misalignment to the Latin root meanings of certain months. The Roman Catholic Church adopts the Gregorian Calendar in 1582, changing the Julian Calendar naming convention order, adding confusion and misalignment to the Latin root meanings of certain months.
· September means "seventh" (from Latin septem). · September means "seventh" (from Latin septem).