TIME.. A very important TOPIC. Time, only exists here and now, upon this Earth and it has an expiration date. It sits somewhere out there is Eternity, surrounded by it. One day we will all step into that eternity. When? God does not allow us to know. At least, until he decides. I am well aware that there are people who get to know when they are going to die, at some point near that time. Both my Great Grandmother and my Grandmother had that experience. They both concluded their business and went to bed for the last time.
But, most of us are out here doing our best to live the life we believe to be right. Some of us are lucky enough to have come to Christ and walk by the Spirit so that we are not walking blindly. Still, we don’t know when…
There is concerted effort to keep us from GOD and from everything that would keep us walking in the way that leads to HIM. One major area of course is TIME. God created TIME. He created the Sun and Moon and Stars as heralds of TIME. They are in the sky where they can be easily seen by anyone. Signs that guide us through God’s designated seasons, years, months, weeks, and days. God ordained those and declared them to us, in His Word.
Now, the Devil/Adversary/Satan is a very clever fellow. He knew he had some time, so he was in no rush. He also knew that there were cycles of TIME. As God told Ezra, it is not possible for all the people who are to pass through the earth to be born at one time. So, there have been cycles wherein each group of people, each generation has had the same opportunity as the first through the last. The story repeats. All people have suffered through the same trials, have experienced the same revelations, have had the same opportunity for redemption and salvation.
The Devil and his minions have also played out their scenario for each generation. Nothing that we are seeing today is NEW. There is nothing new under the sun. The Devil has no need to come up with new lies or strategies. The same ones work over and over again.
Meanwhile, as the Angels also told Ezra, each generation of humanity, is a little weaker and a little more susceptible. At the same time, the Devil now knows that we are the last generation, so he is pulling out all stops. Darkness is about to get as DARK as it has ever been or will be again. Deception is the rule. Humanity has been so oppressed for so long that can’t tell good from evil, right from wrong, deceit from TRUTH.
With every advancement in Technology, every Industrial Revolution, our concept of TIME, the way we perceive it, the way we measure it, the way we serve it, changes. This time is no different. With this INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION they are once again planning to change TIME.
When I read the News Report, at first I almost shrugged it off. I am so glad the Holy Spirit did not let me do that. You may read it and laugh it off. But, I promise you, this is no idle threat, no whimsical passing thought. This was printed in the NEWS for a reason. Nothing happens by accident.
Stick with me to the end, I am sure you will agree.
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Daniel 7:25
25 And he shall speak great words against the most High, and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and laws: and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times and the dividing of time.
By Holly Bishop
Published: 13/04/2024- 19:31
Updated: 13/04/2024
Norway’s northernmost region plans to introduce a bizarre plan to make a new time zone with a 26-hour day.
Vadso, a remote town in Finnmark County, has sent a proposal to the European Commission which suggests that clocks go up to 13 instead of 12.
Wenche Pedersen, the town’s mayor, told the Commission that the plans would “offer individuals the opportunity to enjoy more quality time’ with their families”. (Ya, we know how much they care about the people. This is just the way they want to justify it in your mind. It is really a trap to gain more control and steal more souls.)
When asked how the new time zone would work in practice, Pedersen said: “We haven’t thought a lot about that.”
“The clock will go from 12 to 13… and we have to see how this will go. I don’t think they’re going to say yes so we haven’t thought about all the details,” she admitted to Politico.
She said that the extended day would allow people to participate in “activities such as fishing, hunting, learning new languages”, or simply give people more time to be “with loved ones”. (ya remember how they promised us that robots and computers would make our lives so much easier, that we would have so much more leisure time and freedom to do what we wanted to do. Meanwhile, from that time to this, life for all of us has been so much more stressful and demanding. We work harder, for longer hours, with no breaks. No benefits, No raises, No retirement. NOW, robots are taking all of our jobs and they want to wipe out 95% of us who they call worthless eaters! As for FREEDOM… GONE. they steal more and more freedom from us every day.)
Pedersen said that the town has been struggling to attract new residents, so is hoping that the new time zone would encourage more people to make the move. (There is the bait.)
“Through our ‘MOREtime’ project, we aim to celebrate and promote this unique way of life, offering individuals the opportunity to enjoy more quality time engaging in activities such as fishing, hunting, learning new languages, or simply being with loved ones,” she said in a letter to the European Commission.
She said that with more hours in a day, residents can enjoy more time to focus on things that make them happy, rather than rushing to take public transport or travel long distances to get to work.
Pedersen said that even if the plans were rejected, it would still shine some publicity on the town.
“In this respect we are one of the richest regions in Europe because […] we have more time,” Pedersen said.
The town is near the Russian border and the mayor said that now it is “more important than ever” to ensure that the area is populated.
“We like our lifestyle and we think that could be very exciting, especially for families with small children,” the mayor told the publication.
“I think it’s a more calm and better everyday life than for example in a big city.”
An official from the European Commission has reportedly said that time zones are down to the countries themselves to organise.
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Ok…if you are a regular reader of my posts, you know that anything coming out of the Scandinavian Countries is suspect. I thought I would take a look at the Town and the Country in which it is located.
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Vadso – Name
The municipality is named after the town of Vadsø. The name of the town comes from the island Vadsøya, since that was the original townsite. The Old Norse form of the name would be *Vazøy, *Vatsøy, *Vassøy; the eldest references to the town show the forms Vasthøen (1520) and Vaadsøenn (1567).[10] The first element is the genitive case of vatn which means “water“ and the last element is øy which means “island“.
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Vadsø, town, northern Norway. Located on the northern shore of Varangerfjorden, the original settlement was on the adjacent island of Vassøya, but in the early 1700s the port was reestablished on the mainland. Vadsø received its town charter in 1833, and the town prospered, principally through trade with Russia.
Woe to you inhabitants of the seacoast, you nation of Cherethites! The word of the LORD is against you, O Canaan, land of the Philistines; and I will destroy you until no inhabitant is left.
– Zephaniah 2:5 (ESV)
Advanced civilizations in the lands of the Bible were invaded by so-called ‘sea-people’ in 1190 B.C. . .” according to Newsweek.com. The “Sea Peoples” have long been suspected of playing a key role in ending the prosperous Bronze Age in the eastern Mediterranean, and plunging many societies into prolonged dark periods. They also are involved in one of the chief objections to the idea of shifting Egypt’s timeline, allowing a link between archaeological evidence and the Bible’s Exodus account. Source
Daniel 11:13-15
13 For the king of the north shall return, and shall set forth a multitude greater than the former, and shall certainly come after certain years with a great army and with much riches.
14 And in those times there shall many stand up against the king of the south: also the robbers of thy people shall exalt themselves to establish the vision; but they shall fall.
15 So the king of the north shall come, and cast up a mount, and take the most fenced cities: and the arms of the south shall not withstand, neither his chosen people, neither shall there be any strength to withstand.
COULD NORWAY BE THE LAND OF THE KING OF THE NORTH??
NORWAY
Indo-European peoples settled Norway’s coast in antiquity, establishing a permanent settlement near the present capital of Oslo some 6,000 years ago.
Dependent on fishing and farming, early Norwegians developed a seafaring tradition that would reach its apex in the Viking era, when Norse warriors regularly raided the British Isles, the coasts of western Europe, and even the interior of Russia; the Vikings also established colonies in Iceland and Greenland and explored the coast of North America (which Leif Eriksson called Vinland) more than a thousand years ago.
modern Norway, which gained its independence in 1905, emerged as a major maritime transporter of the world’s goods as well as a world leader in specialized shipbuilding. In the 1970s the exploitation of offshore oil and natural gas became the major maritime industry, with Norway emerging in the 1990s as one of the world’s leading petroleum exporters.
Lying on the northern outskirts of the European continent and thus avoiding the characteristics of a geographic crossroads, Norway (the “northern way”) has maintained a great homogeneity among its peoples and their way of life. Small enclaves of immigrants, mostly from southeastern Europe and South Asia, established themselves in the Oslo region in the late 20th century, but the overwhelming majority of the country’s inhabitants are ethnically Nordic
With the Barents Sea to the north, the Norwegian Sea and the North Sea to the west, and Skagerrak (Skager Strait) to the south, Norway has land borders only to the east—with Sweden, Finland, and Russia
IF NORWAY IS THE LAND OF THE NORTH. THEN WHO IS THE KING OF THE NORTH or WHO WILL BE THE KING OF THE NORTH MENTIONED IN PROPHECY??
King Harald of Norway could consider ceding the crown …
33 year reign. Has been frequently hospitalized and has had heart surgery. Is currently recovering from his latest hospitalization when he was fitted with a ‘temporary’ pacemaker. Despite Harald’s precarious physical condition, the royal is certain that he wants to continue as Norway’s reigning monarch.
He caught a respiratory infection in January, days after dismissing speculation that he might abdicate, following the lead of distant cousin Queen Margrethe II in Denmark.
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Would you work 13 1/3 hours a day three days a week? …
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How to take care of yourself while working 13-hour days?
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What would you choose… work 3 days a week with 13 hour …
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What I Learned From Working 13.3 Hours a Day, 6 Days …
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5 Lessons I Learned from Working 13 Hours a Day
Hani Mashnouk
Business Apps Manager / Head of Engineering
I recently had to work 13 hours a day for a couple of months in order to meet a tough deadline. Working 13 hours a day (while knowing that that might not be enough to finish on time) has been one of the toughest professional experiences I have been through so far. The psychological and the physical pressure have tested my endurance. Or to put it simply: they changed me. Nevertheless, it has been a very rewarding experience. I’ve learned more about myself during that special time than during other years of professional experience.
I’ve always believed that we can only grow when push ourselves to the limit. I discovered that this also applies to our professional lives.
I decided to share how this experience has changed me and what I learned throughout this small journey. These lessons, mind you, are merely my own reflections on my experience. They might not necessarily reflect scientific facts or academic research. And whether you agree with me or you don’t, I would be glad to read your comments. At the end of the day, there might not be any right answers. It might all depend on your beliefs, your values, you priorities, your needs, and your ambitions. Read on, and let me know your thoughts.
Lesson 1: Perception of ‘Hard Work’
I have always believed that productivity cannot be only measured in hours. There are many factors that account to how productive a professional is. But I’ve learned that, although productivity is not just the number of hours, ‘hard work’ implicitly means working for a considerable amount of time. I started to believe working for less than 13 hours a day is not really hard work. Hard work is when you close your laptop at 2 am. Hard work is you get to the last day of the week unable to do anything but to go sleep early. Hard work is when you are constantly thinking about your commitments and deadlines. When there is a strong dedication to finish something, anything less than 13 hours a day is not real dedication.
When the work was done and when the load was normal again, it made me feel guilty to know that the same number of hours that used to fit so many tasks is now filled with a considerably less amount of tasks. I noticed that I haven’t been working hard all my life! But my goal is not to instill any feeling of regret or to make you feel guilty about your working day, my goal is to point out that you might not be putting in enough effort to reach the goals you aspire for. Once you start putting in the necessary time, then you can hope to achieve some of your goals.
But hard work is not everything, it’s also about efficiency.
Lesson 2: Perception of ‘Efficiency’
Working 13 hours a day makes time management extremely hard. Simply because: there’s no more time to manage! It forces you to take advantage of the minutes you can spare. It forces you to enjoy the few breaks that you take. It makes you treasure every minute you spend talking to somebody you care about. It forces you to be efficient. When calling is faster than texting, you’ll definitely choose calling. If going to a restaurant to have a meal will cost you less time than having to cook the meal yourself, you’ll definitely stop cooking at home. If taking a taxi is faster than having to park your car or using public transport, you’ll definitely take a taxi. If missing an event will give you a couple of hours extra to finish a task you started, you’ll definitely miss that event. Sure, it forces you to sacrifice many things. Sure, some things will not work out because you’re not giving them enough attention. Sure, you will miss some people. But it’s the price you have to pay. You can be as efficient as you can, you’ll still lose some things. Is this lesson in efficiency worth it? It’s up to you to decide. For me, it was.
But efficiency is not only about getting things done, it’s about getting the right things done. It’s about prioritizing.
Lesson 3: Perception of ‘Prioritizing’
I kind of ‘discovered’ that our minds will automatically prioritize tasks and people. It filters out all the “noise” that was just distracting us. It forces you to prioritize. As cool as that might sound, it’s quite dangerous. You discover things about your priorities that you did not know before. It forces you to leave things and people that you had convinced yourself are important. This will definitely hurt others and will, in turn, hurt you; so when you learn to prioritize, it comes at a cost. It even comes at the expense of losing people from your life and stopping activities you used to enjoy doing. In Pirates of the Caribbean, Captain Jack Sparrow told the pirate Will Turner that “death has a curious way of reshuffling one’s priorities”. As dramatic as that sounds, I think that tough deadlines and a strong a dedication can also shuffle one’s priorities. Knowing what is a priority and what is not can be used to change our habits or become more efficient. It’s up to you to decide how you react to the reshuffling of your priorities.
As much as I learned about prioritizing, I learned about my own capabilities even more.
Lesson 4: Perception of ‘One’s Capabilities’
I used to make the excuse of not having enough time in a day. I used to think that a day is not enough to do much. I used to think that afternoons are for rest and nothing productive can be done in the late afternoons or at night. The pressure I was under led me to change my perception of what I was capable of doing. When I didn’t have a choice, I could finish much more than that I thought I could. Sometimes not having a choice is a great way to discover our capabilities. I believe I had underestimated my capabilities before and now I cannot give myself an excuse for not filling my time enough. I have already proven to myself that my excuse was all what it really was: “an excuse”. They say we never really use our full potential. I feel like I have proof of that now. I’ve experienced first-hand that with focus and dedication, our capabilities are much more than we think.
Although it’s important to know one’s capabilities, one’s health is equally important.
Lesson 5: Perception on ‘Health’
My health was a concern during this period because I was overworking myself to the extent that I would sometimes feel too tired to work the next day. The last day of the week was when I couldn’t work for more than 10 hours. I could not think properly. On weekdays, I didn’t have time to exercise. I had to plan an intense weekend workout just to balance the sedentary lifestyle during the weekdays. The only reason I didn’t gain weight was because I had no choice but to eat healthy food. I knew that unhealthy food with such a lifestyle would definitely ruin my health. This experience taught me that there will always be a way to stay healthy and in shape during tough work hours. So it has to be easier during normal hours. Leading an unhealthy lifestyle might just be an excuse for us to enjoy the delicacies this life has to offer. But a suitable diet and exercise can definitely counterbalance any tough hours we have during the week.
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In case you didn’t know, there are already people working 12 hour shifts…it is not much of a jump to a 13 hour day.
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people who work 12 hours a day 5+ days a week – HOW?
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7 Different 12-hour Shift Schedule Examples to Cover …
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What is the point of living if you are working 12 hours a day?
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Fatigue and Shift Work | UE
Science Says You Shouldn’t Work More Than This Number ...
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SLEEP DEPRIVATION
Mental health benefits
Sleep helps your brain work properly. While you’re sleeping, your brain is getting ready for the next day. It’s forming new pathways to help you learn and remember information.
Studies show that a good night’s sleep improves learning and problem-solving skills. Sleep also helps you pay attention, make decisions, and be creative.
Studies also show that sleep deficiency changes activity in some parts of the brain. If you’re sleep deficient, you may have trouble making decisions, solving problems, controlling your emotions and behavior, and coping with change. Sleep deficiency has also been linked to depression, suicide, and risk-taking behavior.
Children and teens who are sleep deficient may have problems getting along with others. They may feel angry and impulsive, have mood swings, feel sad or depressed, or lack motivation. They also may have problems paying attention, and they may get lower grades and feel stressed.
Physical health benefits
Sleep plays an important role in your physical health.
Good-quality sleep:
- Heals and repairs your heart and blood vessels.
- Helps support a healthy balance of the hormones that make you feel hungry (ghrelin) or full (leptin): When you don’t get enough sleep, your level of ghrelin goes up and your level of leptin goes down. This makes you feel hungrier than when you’re well-rested.
- Affects how your body reacts to insulin: Insulin is the hormone that controls your blood glucose (sugar) level. Sleep deficiency results in a higher-than-normal blood sugar level, which may raise your risk of diabetes.
- Supports healthy growth and development: Deep sleep triggers the body to release the hormone that promotes normal growth in children and teens. This hormone also boosts muscle mass and helps repair cells and tissues in children, teens, and adults. Sleep also plays a role in puberty and fertility.
- Affects your body’s ability to fight germs and sickness: Ongoing sleep deficiency can change the way your body’s natural defense against germs and sickness responds. For example, if you’re sleep deficient, you may have trouble fighting common infections.
- Decreases your risk of health problems, including heart disease, high blood pressure, obesity, and stroke.
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Why poor sleep leads to aggressive behavior
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Study Links Violent Crime to Less Sleep, More Stress in …
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Figure 3.1 presented below shows a dramatic decline in the average working week in manufacturing across the world. In the late 19th century, working hours were in the region of 60 per week while, by the start of World War I, working hours were around 55 hours per week. After World War I there was a dramatic decline in working hours in the West, with the introduction of the eight-hour day and the forty-eight-hour week in both Western Europe and in the Western Offshoots (including the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand). By the start of the second half of the century, working hours in manufacturing were generally somewhere between 40 and 48 hours a week. Since then, the decline in working hours has to a substantial degree stalled. In the most recent period, there is some evidence that they are beginning to increase again. Figure 3.1 also shows the decline in working hours outside the West. This generally followed a similar trend as in the West but condensed into a shorter time period.
Table 3.3 below allows us to look more closely at these changes in working time by presenting developments at a national level since 1820. In both Western Europe and the Western Offshoots, the early 18th century was characterised by an increase in working time from high levels to even higher levels, followed by a decline. This suggests a familiar Kuznets (inverted U) shape to the development of working hours relative to GDP (Spoerer and Streb, 2008[27]), i.e. one where the initial stages of industrialisation bring a number of negative side effects but, as economic development proceeds, those negative effects diminish. As with most other types of Kuznets curve, the relationship appears to break down in the 1980s and 1990s, with the decline in hours plateauing in the West and increasing in medium-income countries like Turkey, Egypt and China.
Table 3.3. Average working week for manufacturing workers in selected countries, 1800-2010
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Western Europe |
Eastern Europe |
Western Offshoots |
Latin America and Caribbean |
Middle East and North Africa |
Sub-Saharan Africa |
East Asia |
South and Southeast Asia |
|||||||||||||||||
|
GBR |
NLD |
FRA |
DEU |
ITA |
ESP |
SWE |
POL |
RUS |
AUS |
CAN |
USA |
MEX |
BRA |
ARG |
EGY |
TUR |
KEN |
NGA |
ZAF |
CHN |
JPN |
IND |
IDN |
THA |
1800-10 |
|
|
|
72.0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1810-20 |
63.0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1820-30 |
|
|
|
77.5 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1830-40 |
63.0 |
|
|
90.0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
65.4 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1840-50 |
62.0 |
|
|
90.0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
68.7 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1850-60 |
62.6 |
|
|
90.0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
67.8 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1860-70 |
60.9 |
|
|
81.0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
65.1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1870-80 |
57.9 |
64.6 |
66.0 |
61.0 |
63.3 |
64.2 |
69.0 |
|
68.8 |
55.4 |
57.7 |
62.4 |
60.6 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
59.4 |
|
|
|
|
|
1880-90 |
54.5 |
63.0 |
66.0 |
62.3 |
63.5 |
62.6 |
63.6 |
|
|
52.6 |
59.2 |
61.8 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1890-00 |
54.9 |
61.5 |
65.7 |
61.1 |
63.7 |
60.1 |
60.4 |
|
|
49.8 |
61.4 |
59.5 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1900-10 |
55.0 |
61.4 |
62.2 |
57.6 |
63.8 |
58.4 |
59.5 |
|
64.5 |
48.9 |
58.3 |
57.8 |
69.0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
58.5 |
60.0 |
|
|
|
|
1910-20 |
51.7 |
60.0 |
58.1 |
54.9 |
60.7 |
56.4 |
54.3 |
|
|
48.7 |
55.9 |
55.0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1920-30 |
47.1 |
48.2 |
48.0 |
49.7 |
46.1 |
48.5 |
45.1 |
46.2 |
|
46.3 |
50.8 |
48.7 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
46.8 |
|
54.7 |
|
|
|
1930-40 |
47.3 |
47.6 |
41.5 |
45.2 |
39.5 |
47.5 |
45.9 |
43.6 |
|
45.3 |
48.1 |
38.5 |
45.2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
47.2 |
|
55.8 |
|
|
|
1940-50 |
46.7 |
47.9 |
43.0 |
41.9 |
43.9 |
|
47.1 |
|
|
43.0 |
47.1 |
41.5 |
45.6 |
|
46.3 |
51.6 |
|
|
|
45.0 |
57.8 |
54.7 |
|
|
|
1950-60 |
45.9 |
48.8 |
44.8 |
47.4 |
44.3 |
|
40.3 |
|
39.9 |
40.0 |
41.1 |
40.3 |
|
45.3 |
|
50.4 |
45.0 |
|
|
44.4 |
|
49.4 |
46.2 |
|
|
1960-70 |
46.2 |
46.2 |
45.8 |
44.0 |
43.7 |
44.2 |
37.4 |
42.6 |
40.5 |
43.5 |
40.6 |
40.6 |
45.7 |
46.7 |
|
49.5 |
|
|
|
45.8 |
|
45.4 |
|
|
47.8 |
1970-80 |
43.8 |
42.2 |
42.6 |
42.1 |
38.5 |
43.4 |
38.8 |
38.3 |
40.6 |
42.4 |
39.2 |
40.2 |
45.8 |
45.6 |
44.2 |
56.1 |
|
|
|
46.7 |
|
41.2 |
|
|
|
1980-90 |
42.8 |
40.3 |
39.2 |
40.6 |
38.7 |
36.9 |
38.0 |
35.0 |
40.5 |
37.1 |
38.5 |
40.4 |
46.3 |
44.8 |
41.3 |
58.3 |
39.5 |
42.3 |
|
47.1 |
|
41.3 |
46.2 |
|
47.8 |
1990-00 |
41.7 |
39.0 |
38.6 |
38.0 |
40.5 |
36.7 |
37.0 |
39.4 |
37.7 |
38.5 |
38.5 |
41.4 |
45.4 |
42.8 |
45.1 |
56.7 |
45.3 |
43.1 |
|
45.4 |
44.1 |
38.1 |
46.5 |
43.1 |
48.5 |
2000-10 |
41.0 |
38.2 |
36.1 |
37.9 |
37.8 |
36.1 |
37.4 |
41.2 |
36.4 |
38.0 |
38.0 |
40.8 |
45.2 |
41.7 |
45.0 |
55.8 |
52.4 |
|
|
|
48.8 |
38.5 |
47.0 |
43.4 |
|
The early stage of this curve has been well studied by historical research. The increase in working time during industrialisation has been a major issue in both social history (Thompson, 1967[28]; Reid, 1976[29]) and economic history (Bienefeld, 1972[30]; Clark and Van der Werf, 1998[31]; Voth, 1998[8]; Allen and Weisdorf, 2011[6]; Humphries and Weisdorf, 2017[9]). It should be noted that the very high working times observed during this period often involved a different rhythm of work to what might be considered as normal today. The early 19th century in the United Kingdom saw the transition from the “workshop system” – where workers had substantial autonomy around their work time, being free to enter and leave work at their leisure, but often spending their entire working day with their family at their workplace – to the “factory system” in the early 19th century, with workers subject to “factory discipline” and having little control over work time, set times for meals, and fixed hours for starting and ending work.7
The high levels of work time led to workers’ demands for their reduction relatively early in the Industrial Revolution. A major concern at the time was the impact of long working hours on children and family life. As early as 1802, legislation was introduced in the United Kingdom restricting the working time of children serving as “parish apprenticeships”8 to 12 hours a day excluding breaks. In 1819, working hours for all children under 16 were restricted to 12 hours in cotton mills. In 1833, this was reduced to eight hours for children under 13, with a requirement that children attend two hours of schooling a day. In the 1840s, similar restrictions were placed on the working time of women. The result of these legislative changes was that by the end of the 1840s women and anyone under 18 could work no more than 12 hours per day. The introduction of restrictions on the working time of men however progressed much more slowly.
In other industrialising countries such as France, Germany, the United States and the Benelux, the process of industrialisation happened later and faster, as did the introduction of restrictions on working time, with many basic reforms coming in the 1890s and early 20th century (Huberman, 2012[22]).
By the start of World War I, manufacturing workers in most Western countries were working around 55-60 hours per week. However, immediately after the war, legislation introduced the 8-hour day across most of the Western world, leading to a sudden reduction of working time to around 48 hours per week. The 48-hour week persisted in most countries until World War II, with a few exceptions.9 By the early 1970s, most developed economies had shifted from the 6-day week to the 5-day week, resulting in a 40-hour week. Simultaneously, there was an increase in paid holidays (a pattern described in the section below on Holidays and annual working time). Since the early 1970s, the decline in hours has somewhat stalled, with full-time manufacturing workers generally continuing to work roughly around a 40-hour week, although the average working week for manufacturing workers for some countries in Western Europe declined by 1-2 hours. However, the growing numbers of workers working part-time or flexi-time makes the analysis of this decline hard to interpret. Uniquely in France, there has been a greater reduction in hours with the shift to a 35-hour week.
Outside of Western Europe and the Western Offshoots, the shift to a 48- or 45-hour week in the post-war period has also stalled, albeit at a higher level. The transition to a 40-hour week has been achieved in relatively few developing countries, and where it was achieved it did not persist for long. Indeed, in some developing countries not only has the reduction in hours stalled but over the last 20-30 years the average working week in manufacturing has increased in length. Conversely, other countries such as Ukraine and Moldova saw substantial reductions in hours of work in the late 1990s. This decline was presumably driven by the economic distress and poor economic performance experienced in those countries. The low value of 36 hours per week as the average working week for Eastern Europe and the former USSR for the 1990s in Table 3.4 below is partially explained by these developments.
Generally, the population-weighted regional averages shown in Table 3.4 tell the same story as above. For Western Europe, Eastern Europe and the former USSR and the Western Offshoots: a gradual decline until the introduction of the eight-hour day after World War I, the shift to a five-day week over the subsequent 40 years, followed by a lengthy period since the 1970s with little if any reduction in the average working week. In Latin America and the Caribbean, the average week seems to have stabilised earlier and at a slightly higher average level. In the rest of the developing world, average working hours in manufacturing appear to have persistently remained at higher levels than in the West.
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HUMANITY IS BEING AUTOMATED. They are doing every thing they can to treat us like machines and to make us see ourselves as machines. This is to prepare us for transhumanism, the merging of man with machine.
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What is automation?
Automation is the application of technology, programs, robotics or processes to achieve outcomes with minimal human input.
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Automation is the latest buzzword to hit the business community – and although it seems initially complicated – once implemented, it runs quietly in the background, drastically increasing efficiency by saving you hours each week.
Businesses worldwide are realizing that automation can save costs, eliminate boring tasks, and allow employees to focus on higher-value activities.
Automation reduces your payroll by either replacing, repurposing, or augmenting your staff.
With some types of automation, staff may no longer be needed, as the task is entirely completed by the automation. These staff can then be reassigned to higher-value work, driving growth in areas of your business that cannot be automated, such as sales, relationship management, or customer service.
The THREAT
Throughout history, businesses that have failed to adopt new technologies have suffered as a result.
(this is the same tactic they use to promote the advancement of weaponry and space travel, fear that ones enemies will surpass you and/or overtake you. FEAR is a strong motivator, no doubt. BUT, it is the WRONG motivator.)
Recent examples include Kodak, who missed the switch to digital media and Nokia, who missed the smartphone revolution.
Companies miss out on new technologies for a wide range of reasons, including fear, technological pessimism, and the cost of adoption. (some choose to give a pass on it due to their strong beliefs and faith in GOD, and some because they recognize the negative impacts and affects.)
Put simply, if you don’t automate, your competitors will outpace you. At first, the improvements might be modest, but as the printing press example shows, these improvements compound dramatically over time.
The JUSTIFICATION
Automations work tirelessly 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, with 100% accuracy. (LOL..that is funny. I don’t know what your experience tells you, but my experience with technology tells me it is a nightmare wrought with errors, and drawbacks.)
Humans are not so perfect. We need regular breaks, sick days, holiday pay, and are occasionally unproductive at work. Research suggests that 13% of employee productivity is lost on browsing social media alone.
SOURCE
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February 16th, 2022.
A history of time – the story behind our days, weeks, and months
/in Articles
Who do we have to thank for our divisions of time? And how did the days and months get their names? Read on to find out in our brief history of time…
We’ve been thinking a lot about time recently. It’d be fair to say that the days, weeks, and months of the past year have lost a little of their definition, with current restrictions causing the passage of time and normal routine to become a little, shall we say, distorted. Time seems more fluid (though, on some days, the speed at which it seems to move feels A LOT slower), and it reminds us that our units of measuring its passing haven’t always been in place…
Dividing the days
As with many things, we have the ancient Babylonians to thank for our 24-hour days. They were the first to divide both the day and night into 12 equal hours, later separating each hour into 60 minutes and the minutes into 60 seconds. Though these divisions of time were based on the movements of the Sun and Earth, they also had their roots in the Babylonians’ numbering system – and here’s where it gets mathematical!
Unlike our standard decimal system today based around grouping numbers in ‘10s’, the Babylonians used duodecimal (base 12) and sexagesimal (base 60) numeral systems – systems that were in fact started by the Sumerians, a culture that began 2,000 years before the Babylonians, in around 4000BCE. It’s believed the system likely originated from ancient peoples using their thumbs as a pointer, and counting by using the three jointed parts on the other four fingers (try it yourself!) It was pretty logical, then, for them to divide their time using this same mathematical system.
(If you want to fall down the rabbit-hole of information on this, here’s a pretty good starting point!)
Days become weeks, weeks become months…When it comes to the number of days in a week, and weeks in a month, it seems we have the Babylonians to thank again. For them, the number ‘7’ held a particular significance, observing as keen astronomers, that there were seven celestial bodies in sky – the Sun, the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. Through their lunar calendar, which tracked the transitional phases of the moon, they also calculated that it took approximately 28 or 29 days for the moon to complete its full lunar cycle. This period (give or take a few ‘transitional’ days) became a ‘month’, and, divided into four equal parts, produced seven-day ‘weeks’.
Though other great civilizations chose to divide their weeks slightly differently – the Egyptians’ week was 10 days long and the Romans’ originally lasted for eight – it was the Babylonians’ system, born from such an influential culture, that lasted, spreading quickly through the neighbouring large empires of Persia and Greece.
(N.B. How the modern year came to be divided into 12 months is a more complex story, and the subject of another blog entirely! Later we’ll see that originally, the Romans chose to divide their calendar into 10 months, before necessity caused them to swap to 12)
It’s all in the name
So that’s the maths out the way, now what about the origins of the names we now use for the days and months? Unsurprisingly, the names have their roots in astronomy and the deities that were once associated with the planets. It was our old friends the Babylonians once again who set the trend, naming each day after the celestial body they believed held sway over the first hour of that day. But it’s the Romans’ adaptation of the idea which led to the days and months being named as we know them today.
In the ‘romance languages’, like Italian and French, the days of the week have predominantly remained very close to their original Latin forebears. If we take the Italian, starting with our equivalent of ‘Monday’: Dies Lunae, the day of the moon, became Lunedi, combining lunae (moon) and di (day); Dies Martis, the day of Mars, became Martedi; Dies Mercurii, the day of Mercury, became Mercoledi; Dies Jovis, the day of Jupiter, became Giovedi; and Dies Veneris, the day of Venus, became Venerdi. Interestingly, Dies Saturni, day of Saturn, and Dies Solis, day of the Sun, are not the root for the modern Italian sabato (Saturday) and domenica (Sunday), though they clearly influence our English versions. Instead, the pagan names for these days were replaced and influenced by the Hebrew Sabbath, day of rest, and the Latin Dominus dies, day of the Lord.
Germanic adaptations
As for our English words for the days, we’ve seen they bear traces of the Roman, but it’s a connection that’s been heavily filtered through centuries of Norse and Anglo-Saxon influences. Like the Romans before them, Germanic people also adopted the system of identifying the days with deities, this time simply replacing the Roman gods with the names of their own. Monday derives from the Old English Mōnandæg and Norse Mandag, associated with Mani the Norse goddess of the Moon; Tuesday is associated with the Norse god Tyr, a warrior god like Mars, whose name in Old English gave us Tīwesdæg; Wednesday derives from Odin’s or Wōdensdæg, like the Roman god Mercury, Odin (Anglo-Saxon Wōden) played a part in guiding souls to the realms of the dead; Thor gave his name to Torsdæg or Thursday, sharing Jupiter’s association with the sky and thunder; Frigg, the Anglo-Saxon goddess of love, gives her name to Frīgedæg or Friday; strangely, Saturday retained its Roman deity, becoming Sæturnesdæg in Old English; and finally Sunday comes from the Old English Sunnandæg, deriving from the Norse sun goddess Sunna or Sól.
As for the months…
The months are brought to us by the Romans again, who followed a similar naming method to the days to begin with, before, it seems, losing their creative flair as they approached the end of the year. Originally the Roman calendar began with March or Martius, named for one of their favourite deities Mars. Aprilis came next, named from the Latin word aperire, meaning ‘to open’, and sacred to goddess Venus. Maius (May) and Junius (June) were named for the goddesses Maia (a deity of springtime and growth) and Juno (the goddess of marriage and childbirth). When we reach July and August though, the calendar gets a reshuffle…
As we mentioned above, originally the Roman calendar (borrowed from the Greeks) had only 10 months, and as the fifth and sixth months of the year, July and August were once known as Quintilis and Sextilis. However, under the authority of Julius Caesar in 46BCE, two additional months were added to the year, in order to better synchronise the year with the seasons and tie in with the 12 lunar cycles of the moon. These were Januarius, named after the Roman god Janus (god of doors and beginnings) and Februarius, named after an ancient festival of purification known as Februa. At first, these two months formed the end of the year, but were later moved to the beginning (which explains the odd positioning of the leap year in the modern calendar). Quintilis and Sextilis, now out of order in the calendar, were renamed Julius (July) after Caesar himself, and Augustus (you guessed it, August) after his great-nephew and Rome’s first emperor Augustus.
And as for the rest of the months? Well, here’s where the creativity runs out. September, October, November and December are also named after the Roman numbers 7 (septem), 8 (octo), 9 (novem) and 10 (decem). After January and February were moved to the beginning of the year, these too were placed out of order numerically. Though later emperors had a go at changing the names of the months (Caligula insisted that September be renamed Germanicus, after his father, and Nero had a go at renaming April Neronium), unsurprisingly, none of these stuck, and so the original names were kept.
So, if, like us, you’re struggling with the slow passage of time and uncertainties of the year ahead, take comfort in the knowledge that January, though it may be a bleak time of year, is named for the god of gateways and new beginnings. Time will pass, and whether you’re counting in days, weeks or months, lockdown too will pass.
WHY WE DIVIDE THE DAY INTO SECONDS, MINUTES, AND HOURS
Syed Shahid Hussain .
Supply Chain Professional
The concept of needing to divide up the day seems second nature to even the smallest kid who asks, “is it snack time”. The reality is, even though we’ve decided that there is a need to divide up time, the actual process and the way we go about it has been changing for millennia. The cruel irony is that even though we know we need to measure time, there has never been a consensus on what time really is.
Throughout all of history there have been two main schools of thought on what time is, and even many more opinions on how we should measure it. The first concept of time is one that most current physicists tend to subscribe to, and that is time is a fundamental dimension in the universe. The 4thdimension in which the other three dimensions of space (length width and height) can move through in sequence. The second concept of time argues against the idea that it is a dimension, but rather an intellectual concept that allows people to sequence and compare events. That time does not exist on its own, but is a way in which we represent things.
While many physicists tend to view time as a dimension, I assume because they are trying to hold fast to Einstein’s theories on Space-Time, I prefer to view it as a tool. This is because our universe is constantly changing. From one moment to the next, it is always in motion. From electrons moving around atomic nuclei, to the Basketball player trying to get their shot off before the game-clock runs out, everything in our universe is in motion. To be able to understand it, we need a tool. If you view the universe as a car and time as a very important tool in a toolkit, you can see how time would not be a dimension. You need tools to take apart a car and just like the socket set is needed to take apart and understand all the inner-workings of that automobile, so too time is needed to take apart and understand the change in our universe from one moment to the next. But just like the socket set will never be a part of the car, so too time will never be a part of the universe, just a needed tool to understand it.
Whatever your position on what time actually is, one constant has always remained; how do you measure it? In chronometry (The science of the measurement of time) there are two distinct forms of measurement, the calendar and the clock. The calendar is used to measure the passage of extensive periods of time, and the clock is used to count the ongoing passage of time and is consulted for periods of less than a day. We obviously will focus on periods of less than a day, because if we go into the calendar debate, we would inevitably decide our world was ending in 2012!!
Today the most widely used numerical system is a base 10 system (decimal). This seems appropriate given we all have 10 fingers and toes, so grade-schoolers and myself, after a few beers, can do math easily! Unfortunately for us, the pre-Dewey Decimal civilizations either never tried to count their sheep drunk, or just plain hated their kids, but all seemed to use other more complicated systems like a base 12 (duodecimal), or base 60 (sexagesimal)
The first society credited with separating the day out into smaller parts was the Egyptians. They divided a day into two twelve hour sections; night and day. The clock they used to measure time was the sundial. The first sundials were just stakes in the ground and you knew what time it was by the length and direction of the suns shadow. Advances in technology, namely a t-shaped bar placed into the ground, allowed them more accurately measure the day in 12 distinct parts. (Damn duodecimal system!!) It was thought that one explanation for this base system was that one could get to twelve easily by counting the knuckles on all four fingers with their thumb. (Apparently they did not have DUI patrols for drunken camel driving and ancient cops performing field sobriety tests having folks touch their thumbs to their fingers; otherwise, they would realize that this method for counting was not a good idea!)
The drawback to this early clock was that at night there was no real way to measure time. Egyptians, like us, still needed to measure time after dark. After all, how else would we know when the bars close? So their early astronomers observed a set of 36 stars, 18 of which they used to mark the passage of time after the sun was down. Six of them would be used to mark the 3 hours of twilight on either side of the night and twelve then would be used to divide up the darkness into 12 equal parts. Later on, somewhere between 1550 and 1070 BC, this system was simplified to just use a set of 24 stars, of which 12 were used to mark the passage of time.
There were many other methods, in ancient times, for measuring the passage of time after dark. The most accurately known clock was a water clock, called a clepsydra. Dating back to approx. 1400-1500 BC, this device was able to mark the passage of time during various months, despite the seasons. It used a slanting interior surface that was inscribed with scales that allowed for a decrease in water pressure as the water flowed out of a hole at the bottom of the vessel.
Since the day and night could now be divided up into 12 equal parts, the concept of a 24 hour day was born. Interestingly enough, it wasn’t until about 150 BC that the Greek astronomer Hipparchus suggested the idea of a fixed set of time for each hour was needed. He proposed dividing the up the day into 24 equinoctial hours observed on equinox days. Unfortunately for the bean-counters in charge of overtime hours, most laypeople continued to use seasonally varying hours for several centuries to come. It wasn’t until about the 14th century, when mechanical clocks were commonplace, that a fixed length for an hour became widely accepted.
Hipparchus himself, and other astronomers, used astronomical techniques they borrowed from the Babylonians who made calculations using a base 60 system. It’s unknown why the Babylonians, who inherited it from the Sumerians, originally chose to use 60 as a base for a calculation system. However, it is extremely convenient for expressing fractions of time using 10, 12, 15, 20 and 30.
The idea of using this base 60 system as a means of dividing up the hour was born from the idea of devising a geographical system to mark the Earth’s geometry. The Greek astronomer Eratosthenes, who lived between 276-194 B.C., used this sexagesimal system to divide a circle into 60 parts. These lines of latitude were horizontal and ran through well-known places on the Earth at the time. Later, Hipparchus devised longitudinal lines that encompassed 360 degrees. Even later, the astronomer Claudius Ptolemy expanded on Hipparchus’ work and divided each of the 360 degrees of latitude and longitude into 60 equal parts. These parts were further subdivided into 60 smaller parts. He called the first division “partes minutae primae”, or first minute. The subdivided smaller parts he called “partes minutae secundae”, or second minute, which became known as the second.
Once again, these measuring techniques were lost on the general public until around the 16th century. The first mechanical clocks would divide the hour into halves, quarters, or thirds. It wasn’t practical for the layperson to need the hour divided up into minutes.
Advances in technology and science over the centuries have required that there be a more precise defined value for the measurement of a second. Currently, in the International System of Units (SI), the second is the base unit for time. This then is multiplied out to get a minute, hour, day, etc. etc.
The first accurately measurable means of defining a second came with the advent of the pendulum. This method was commonly used as a means of counting time in early mechanical clocks. In 1956, the second was defined in terms of the period of revolution of the Earth around the Sun for a particular epoch. Since it was already known that the Earth’s rotation on its axis was not a sufficiently uniform standard of measurement, the second became defined as; “The fraction 1/31,556,925.9747 of the tropical year for 1900 January 0 at 12 hours ephemeris time.”
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If you have not seen the following related posts, check them out.
THE FACE OF TIME
It’s About TIME – Part 1 – Changing Clocks to Change Time
It’s About TIME – Part 2 – Astronomical Clocks around the World
Are You Having a Mari-Time? Part 2 – Dateline
BAAL – BELGIUM – LORD/OWNER/MASTER – ROYAL LINE – 10 Kingdoms
Temple of BAAL – BERN Switzerland – Part 1 – The Event and the Town
Temple of BAAL – BERN Switzerland – Part 2 – Unveiling the Connections
Temple of BAAL – BERN Switzerland – Part 3 -BERN, SWITZERLAND; LONDON, ENGLAND; New York, NY- USA; – What do they have in common??
Temple of BAAL – BERN Switzerland – Part 3 -BERN, SWITZERLAND; LONDON, ENGLAND; New York, NY- USA; – What do they have in common??
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With the development of the atomic clock, it was decided that it was more practical and accurate to use them as a means to define a second, rather than the revolution of the Earth around the Sun. Using a common-view measurement method based on the received signals from radio station, scientists were able to determine that a second of ephemeris time was 9,192,631,770 ± 20 cycles of the chosen cesium frequency. So in 1967 the Thirteenth General Conference on Weights and Measures defined the second of atomic time in the International System of Units as; “the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the cesium-133 atom.”
Unfortunately for laypeople, scientist with their constant need to be correct and absolutely accurate, found the effects of gravitational forces cause the second to differ depending on the altitude at which it was measured. A uniform second was produced in 1977 by correcting the output of each atomic clock to mean sea level. This, however, lengthened the second by about 1×10−10. This correction was then applied at the beginning of 1977.
Today, there are atomic clocks that operate in several different frequency and optical regions. While state-of-the-art cesium fountain atomic clocks seem to be the most widely accurate, optical clocks have become increasingly competitive in their performance against their microwave counterparts.
What seems to remain true is that as technology becomes more and more advanced, the need to more accurately measure time will continue to evolve. What remains true for most of us however is that we get to use easy ghetto math and simply know that there are 60 seconds in a minute, 60 minutes in an hour, and 24 hours in a day!
Bonus Facts:
- Because the second is based on the number of times the cesium atom transitions between the two hyperfine levels of its ground state compared to ephemeris time, and the fact that the earth’s rotation is slowing down, it becomes necessary to add periodic “leap seconds” into the atomic timescale to keep the two within one second of each other.
- Since 1972 to 2006 there have been 23 leap seconds added, ranging from one every 6 months to 1 every 7 years.
- The International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service (IERS) is the organization which monitors the difference in the two timescales and calls for leap seconds to be inserted or removed when necessary.
- Although it is not a standard defined by the International System of Units, the hour is a unit accepted for use with SI, represented by the symbol h.
- In astronomy, the Julian year is a unit of time, defined as 365.25 days of 86400 SI seconds each.
- It is though that the moon was used to calculate time as early as 10,000-28,000 BC. Lunar calendars were among the first to appear, either 12 or 13 lunar months (either 346 or 364 days). Lunisolar calendars often have a thirteenth month added to some years to make up for the difference between a full year (now known to be about 365.24 days) and a year of just twelve lunar months. The numbers twelve and thirteen came to feature prominently in many cultures, at least partly due to this relationship of months to years.
14 And God 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, and for days, and years:
15 And let them be for lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth: and it was so.
16 And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also.
The Spread of Christianity and Timepieces
Beleaguered by the ceaseless tumult of their times, many medieval Christians of the west prayed for the promulgation of the Savior and Christianity. Church bells were struck three times a day (morning, noon, and evening) or every three hours in churches and convents throughout all of Europe.
The daily routines for prayer, work, and reading in the convent were strictly governed by time. Nuns, monks, and priests followed rigorous precepts and codes of behavior for all of their religious activities and events. Manual clocks of many types were used to record the times of announcements and directives. Common types included clepsydras, sundials, sandglasses and candle clocks with markings calibrated in minutes or hours. Timekeepers closely watched the clocks and rang bells to broadcast the time every 15 or 30 minutes. They awaited a clock capable of ringing a bell automatically.
Before the Church was able to grow, the devil had infiltrated it. The Druids first polluted it with their lies. They developed the idea of the monastery and celibacy. They developed the philosophy of self sacrifice and self mutilation and all manner of reaching GOD by ones own effort and merit. Totally the opposite of what Christ taught. The ROMANS STOLE the Church and made it ROMAN solidifying the continuance of Roman beliefs in the ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH.
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Check out the following related posts:
The Ancient Mystery Religion – The MAGI(CIANS)
What’s in the ALPS?
TALE AS OLD AS TIME
The Papal Roman CULT of BAAL
Are You Having A Mari-time? Part 1: Part 2; Part 3; Part 4; Part 5; Part 6
REVIVED ROMAN EMPIRE –Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Part 4;
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Emergence of the First Mechanical Tower Clock
The world’s first mechanical clock capable of automatically striking a bell was said to have been installed in the tower of a convent and church in the Renaissance, in around 1300.
Driven by the force of weights, the clock and bell were installed high in the tower to maximize the distance the weights would drop. The crown wheel escapement was fashioned on the wheel of the weight to fix the speed of the wheel’s rotation and regulate the drop of the weight rather than letting it fall all at once.
The most important role of the clock was to tell time for the monks, who organized their religious activities according to a time-governed schedule. Not long after the clock was installed, the time kept at the convent was adopted as the public time for people living nearby. Eventually it became the time for the whole society, conveniently sounded by the resounding bell in the tower.
By the way, the word “Clock” derives from Clocca, the Latin word for “bell.”
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Check out the following related posts:
BAAL – BEL – BELL – HELLS BELLS
Bell, Book and Candle – Black Magic at the National Mall
tower (n.1) |
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TowerThat a tower is the worship of self, is evident from the signification of a tower. The worship of self exists when a man exalts himself above others even to the point of being worshiped. And therefore the love of self, which is arrogance and pride, is called height, loftiness, and being lifted up; and is described by all things that are high. As in Isaiah:–
The eyes of man’s pride shall be humbled, and the loftiness of men shall be brought low, and Jehovah Himself alone shall be exalted in that day. For the day of Jehovah of Armies is upon every one proud and high and upon every one that is lifted up, and he shall be humbled; and upon all the cedars of Lebanon that are high and lifted up, and upon all the oaks of Bashan; and upon all the high mountains, and upon all the hills that are lifted up, and upon every lofty tower, and upon every fenced wall (Isaiah 2:11-18); |
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From a Seasonal Time System to a Fixed Time System
The mechanical tower clock, which sounded one chime for every hour -once at 1 o’clock, twice at 2 o’clock, and so on- was said to have spread from Italy across the Alps to Germany, France, and England in the 14th century. The adoption was encouraged by the Christian Church and later churches and convents all over Europe. When cities began to install mechanical tower clocks in public squares such as city halls and markets in the 15th and the 16th century, citizens began to order their lives according to the fixed time system.
When the precision of mechanical clocks improved in the late 16th century, clocks were installed in all cities, inculcating a consciousness of fixed time all over urban Europe.
People in the countryside continued to live by diurnal and seasonal rhythms. People in the cities lived by fixed time, by the ticking of the mechanical clock. (They ordered their lives by the NEW SYSTEM of MECHANICAL TIME, turning their backs on GOD)
Revolution in Our Consciousness of Time
Since time was originally governed by God according to the Christian faith, the Church censured acts to gain profits (interest) by selling time as blasphemies against God. But when life based on fixed time came with the advent of the mechanical clock, merchants and craftsmen in cities gained from the concept of working hours in their commercial and industrial ventures. Conflicting views of time created friction between the Church and commercial classes.
The change in the consciousness of time revolutionized society. Time became an objective phenomenon apart from God in the community. The pursuit of profits using time systematically based on fixed time was justified, as the value of a product was measured by the human capacity and time spent to produce it. (Society moved from the worship of the One True and Living GOD to MAMMON/MONEY)
In this way, the mechanical clock became a means of social and political control for the merchants governing free cities. Time came to be measured as precisely as money itself, shifting society closer to modern capitalism.
The Formation of Early Capitalism
“The Statute of Apprentices,” a directive specifying an hourly wage for workers in the country, was already established in England in 1563, during the reign of Elizabeth I.
Time shifted from a community-owned resource to a private asset, though only the rich-royalty, titled nobility, and the bourgeoisie could actually afford to purchase the extravagantly priced clocks of the day. This was a great advantage for the bourgeoisie who could buy clocks. They helped to form the first iterations of modern capitalism by equating time with wages, starting in about the late 16th century.
The mass production of the watch started when the pocket watch became affordable by middle class families as well as the rich bourgeois, in the late 18th century. Until then, the bourgeoisie had forced workers to work long hours. The workers were cheated of their time.
Capitalism is a social system in which the capitalist, the owner of the means of production, profits from the labor of wage earners, who hold no stake in the capitalist’s enterprise. Time management with the timepiece played an important role in the system.
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device (n.)
discipline (n.)
discipline (v.)
Matthew 28:19
19 Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:
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disciple (n.)
To become a DISCIPLE of CHRIST is to ACCEPT the free gift of Salvation that He has provided and learn to walk WITH HIM as HE changes and shapes us in HIS IMAGE. TO SUBMIT ourselves to the HOLY SPIRIT, who leads us and guides us and reveals all truth to us. He comforts us and HE EMPOWERS US to overcome all the works of the enemy.
Again Jesus spoke to them, saying, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” John 8:31-32 …
Jesus said unto him, If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come and follow me .
On another occasion Jesus said, “My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me” (John 10:27)
“If anyone wishes to come after Me, let him deny self, and take up his cross, and follow Me. For whoever wishes to save his life shall lose it; but whoever loses his life for My sake shall find it” (Matt. 16:24-25).
1 Corinthians 11:1
“Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ.”
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You have no need of the CHURCH and its rules and regulations that come from MAN. You do not need anyone to interpret GOD’s Word for you. He is Alive and available to everyone who calls upon HIM. He will make the WORD real to you, specific to you and where you are spiritually. You have no need of a teacher, you have the HOLY SPIRIT whom GOD PROMISED would lead and guide you. You only need to submit to GOD and be LEAD by HIS SPIRIT.
1 John 2:26-28
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Why Did God Make Years, Months, and Days?
by Erik Lutz
1. Times and seasons give rhythm to our lives.
Does God need to divide time in order to keep track of it? No, but we do! We need times to work and times to rest. The cadence of spring, summer, autumn, and winter offers healthy changes in temperature, scenery, and activity—in a dependable cycle over the years. Also, our finite minds relate better to the past and the future when we have definite markers of time.
In an age of computers and smartphones, we don’t have to look far to learn the exact year, month, day, and time—even down to fractions of a second! But for most of history, if people wanted to know the date or time, they looked up at the heavens. Of course, various timekeeping gadgets have been around for thousands of years, from sundials to obelisks, water clocks to hourglasses. These days we certainly don’t need to go outside to see what time it is—just glance at a digital clock or whip out the iPhone.
Other modern advances also affect our perception of time. For instance, when dusk is falling outside, we just turn on the electric lights and keep going. While these incredible technologies have made us more productive than ever, we run a risk of losing our sense of wonder at the changing seasons.
2. Every sunrise reminds us of God’s faithfulness.
People in ancient times were keenly aware of their dependence on the regular patterns of sun, moon, and stars. If the sun didn’t rise every day, crops would fail and life on earth would collapse! Sadly, most civilizations throughout history have worshipped these heavenly bodies as deities rather than acknowledging them as gifts from the wise Creator God. But we know the consistency of day and night is founded on the unchanging nature and promise of God (Numbers 23:19).
As you go to sleep tonight, you don’t have to wonder if the sun will rise tomorrow. The Creator has promised, “While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease” (Genesis 8:22). The sunrise is faithful because our God is faithful. He perfectly upholds the sun, moon, and stars in the courses he has set for them, and we can count on the Lord to fulfill all his promises to his people.
When you’re tempted to complain about the winter weather or summer’s blistering heat, remember that even these point to the faithful hand of God fulfilling his promises.
3. Each day, week, month, and year is a new beginning.
In addition to reminding us of God’s faithfulness, each new day is also a testament to his grace—giving us what we don’t deserve. The Creator is patient and kind even to those who hate him, as Scripture says, “He makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust” (Matthew 5:45).
As sinful people living in a broken world, we especially welcome the fresh start offered by a new year. It’s a reminder of the clean slate that is ours because of the gospel—those who come to God in repentance and faith receive forgiveness and hope of eternal life!
Praise the Lord that each new day is an opportunity to put the past behind us because of his great mercy. No matter what darkness you faced yesterday, today we can say with the prophet Jeremiah, “This I call to mind, and therefore I have hope: The steadfast love of the LORD never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness” (Lamentations 3:21–23).
Conclusion
The Creator didn’t have to bless us with these heavenly markers of times and seasons, but he graciously did. So why not step outside to observe the moon tonight and praise God for a sunrise in the morning?
Passover is an Appointed Time on God’s Biblical Calendar. The Appointed Times all point to Messiah, who is the glory of God!!! God is opening eyes in these last days as we are drawing nearer to the time of His second return. He is moving on hearts to inquire in His Word about His Appointed Times. God invites all to come and join Him as He is uncovering His ways and revealing His truths about His Feasts. God’s Appointed Times reveal His glory.
The Appointed Times were established at Creation when God set the lights in the heavens and said, “Let them be for signs and appointed times (moedim) Gen 1:14. The heavens declare His glory! God leads His people “in ‘cycles’ of righteousness for His name’s sake” Ps23:3. He invites us to join Him and enter into His heavenly ‘cycle’ to be in rhythm with Him, the One who created the universe.
Passover is an Appointed Time of the LORD and it is always on the 14th day of the first month of God’s Biblical Calendar. The first month of God’s Biblical Calendar is in the spring when the barley is ripe (that’s March /April of the Gregorian calendar).
The Gregorian calendar has the first month in the winter in January. Yet, the first month of God’s Biblical Calendar is in the spring. Passover is always in the spring every year.
You may be asking, “When did the calendar change? Why is the Gregorian calendar different from God’s Biblical Calendar? Why do people use the Gregorian calendar which was designed by man?” These are good questions…and only God knows all the answers. But, God’s Biblical Calendar never changed. Currently, the Gregorian calendar is a universal system (a device, contrivance, scheme, a mechanism) that’s in place around the world. Today, this system makes it easy to schedule, meet & plan with others globally.
Even though the Gregorian calendar is in place, God still wants us to be very aware of His Biblical Calendar. God’s Biblical Calendar was established at the foundation of the world and it will remain. Did you know… even when the new heavens and the new earth come down, God’s Biblical Calendar will remain (Isaiah 66:22-23). God’s Biblical Calendar will endure, so it’s important for us to become familiar with it now and to be aware of His Appointed Times.
Did you know Passover is always at full moon? The Israelite people always knew when to go up to Jerusalem for Passover and the Feast of Unleavened Bread by looking at the moon. They knew they had to be in Jerusalem before the full moon of the first month. Passover is always on the 14th day of the first month, and that’s when the moon is full. So when they traveled up to Jerusalem for the Feasts each year, they left in enough time to get to Jerusalem before the full moon, before Passover began.
God established the weekly cycle at Creation. God also established the months. God’s Biblical month begins with the first sighting of the sliver of the new moon. “For just as the new heavens and the new earth which I make endure before Me, declares the LORD, so your offspring and your name will endure. And it shall be from new moon (month) to new moon (month) and from Sabbath to Sabbath (week to week), all mankind will come to bow down before Me, says the LORD” Isaiah 66:22-23 (additions in parentheses by author).
God established the lights in the heavens to be signs for the “moedim“, which are His Appointed Times, and for days and years. “Then God said, Let there be lights…in the heavens…and let them be for signs and for seasons and for days and years” Genesis 1:14. In this passage, the word “seasons” is the word “moedim” in the Hebrew language. It means “Appointed Times” in English.
We can look up at the moon to know when God’s Biblical month begins. His months begin when the first sliver of the new moon is seen in the sky. This first sliver is a very thin sliver, or crescent moon, that declares when God’s month begins. It’s really fun to go outside each month at sunset and look up in the sky to see if you can see the first sliver of the new moon when it appears. The Scripture says, “The heavens are telling of the glory of God; their expanse is declaring the work of His hands” Psalm 19:1. God made the moon to be in the sky to declare when the Appointed Times are going to be. “He made the moon for the seasons (moedim)” Psalm 104:19
The Appointed Times of YHVH are these: Sabbath, Passover, Feast of Unleavened Bread, Firstfruits, Feast of Weeks, Day of Blowing, Day of Atonements, Feast of Tabernacles Lev23. These Appointed Times are the ‘cycles’ of God. Each year we have the opportunity to enter into these ‘cycles’ of God’s Appointed Times. This year, enter into the worship that’s going on in heaven and celebrate with Him! “He leads me in paths (‘cycles’) of righteousness for His name’s sake” Psalm 23:3.
God wants His people to declare Him as He is and give a correct estimate of His character and works. God sent His Son to be born at the Appointed Time of Feast of Tabernacles; He was crucified on the exact day of Passover, in the grave 3 days & 3 nights during the Feast of Unleavened Bread, and raised on Firstfruits. The Holy Spirit was given at the exact time of Feast of Weeks.
God wants to restore His Biblical Calendar to give a correct representation of Himself and His ways, to testify and witness of His sovereignty in this age and the age to come. Some Gentile believers may think celebrating the Feasts do not relate to today. But these Appointed Times all speak of things that are to come. “Therefore …in respect to a festival or a new moon or Sabbath day – things which are a shadow of what is to come” Col 2:16-17. This passage of Scripture was written after the Messiah had already been raised from the dead and ascended into heaven. The Appointed Times are “shadow picture of things to come”. The Appointed Times are ‘clues from heaven’ that God gave for each generation to know about the first and second coming of Messiah.
God’s Biblical Calendar
is cyclical. Three times a year,
God declares Feasting times.
The Feast of Unleavened Bread
is one of these Feasts. Passover
and the Feast of Unleavened Bread
are always in the first month of
God’s Biblical Calendar.
All these dates, times and seasons
are important because they all point to the Messiah.
God decided the first month of the year would be in the spring, when the barley is ripe. Barley is the grain that is ripe during the Passover season. We can always know when the first month of God’s Biblical Calendar is by the barley crop. If the barley crop is almost ripe, then the first month of God’s Biblical Calendar is approaching, the month of Passover. If the barley crop is not ripe, an extra month, an extra Adar, is added in God’s Biblical Calendar so that Passover & the Feast of Unleavened Bread and Firstfruits will be in the month when the barley is ripe at God’s Appointed Time. Let’s look at the 1st month of God’s Biblical Calendar in the year Messiah died.
The 1st month of God’s Biblical Calendar
– zooming in on the year Messiah died –
10th day = the day a “spotless” Passover lamb, without blemish, was selected. This was the very day Yeshua rode in Jerusalem on a young colt. God selected Him as the Passover Lamb & the people shouted, “BLESSED IS HE WHO COMES IN THE NAME OF YHVH” (John 12:12-15).
14th day = Passover *- It is the day the Passover lamb is prepared and sacrificed. “In the 1st month, on the 14th day… is YHVH’s Passover ” (Lev.23:5). This day is also referred to as ‘Preparation Day’ in the New Testament. “Now it was the day of preparation… so they cried, ‘Crucify Him!” (John 19:14-16). “It was the day of preparation… so the soldiers came…and pierced His side… because of the Jewish day of preparation, since the tomb was nearby, they laid Yeshua there” (John19:31,34,42).
15th day = Feast of Unleavened Bread begins on15th day of 1st month. Feast of Unleavened Bread lasts seven days (Lev.23:6).The first day of Unleavened Bread is a holy convocation “on first day you shall have a holy convocation; you shall do no work” (Lev.23:7). The New Testament refers to it as a ‘Holy Sabbath’ or a ‘High Day’. That’s the reason there was such a rush to get Yeshua’s body in the grave before sunset – before the15th day began, the first day of Unleavened Bread “so the bodies wouldn’t remain on the cross on the Sabbath (for that Sabbath was a high day)” (John 19:31).
16th day = Yeshua, the Bread of Life, was without leaven and lived a sinless life. He was in the grave during the time of the Feast of Unleavened Bread without decay or corruption.
17th day = Yeshua was in the grave three days & three nights (15th,16th,17th). This 17th day was the day of the weekly Sabbath (Friday night & Saturday) in the year Yeshua died. Remember Yeshua said, “No sign will be given to this generation but the sign of Jonah the prophet: for just as Jonah was three days & three nights in the belly of the fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth” (Matthew 12:39-49).
Firstfruits = the day the priest waves the firstfruits of the barley harvest as an offering to YHVH. “Firstfruits …on the day after the Sabbath the priest shall wave it” (Lev.23:10-11). Firstfruits is the day after the weekly Sabbath after Passover. Firstfruits is always on Sunday, the first day of the week. Firstfruits was on the18th day of the month in the year Yeshua died. “Now on the first day of the week Mary Magdalene came early to the tomb, while it was still dark, and saw the stone taken away from the tomb”(John 20:1).HalleluYah! God raised Yeshua from the dead! Yeshua is the firstfruits offering. He is the firstborn from among the dead (Col. 1:18). “Messiah has been raised from the dead, the first fruits” (1 Cor.15:20)
* Passover is on the 14th day of the 1st month of the Biblical Calendar. The Gregorian Calendar has the first month as January, but the first month of the Biblical Calendar is in the spring (March/April ) when the barley is ripe. “YHVH said this …is to be the first month of the year ” (Exd12:1). The Biblical Calendar begins at the first sighting of the sliver of the new moon. As you observe the Biblical Calendar, you’ll find Passover falls on different days of the week each year (it may be Mon, Tues, Wed, Friday, etc.). The year Messiah was crucified; Passover was on Wednesday, in the middle of the week. Yeshua was crucified on Wednesday – on Passover – and put in the grave before sunset- before Feast of Unleavened Bread began. He was in the grave 3 nights and 3 days, arose, and then became the Firstfruits offering. “Now Messiah has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who are asleep” (1 Corth.15:20,23).
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Check out the following related post:
Hidden TRUTHS of GOD in the Calendar
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The Adversary/Satan/The Devil/The Ancient Dragon, has been successfully laboring since time began to pull us away from GOD, out of Grace, and out of God’s plan. He is the great counterfeiter the DECEIVER. He takes what is GOD’s and tries to make a copy or a substitute. He has us all marching to his drum, dancing to his flute, and walking according to his Calendar and His time. It is all a deception and if we don’t wake up, we will be marching right into HELL for eternity!
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Check out the following related posts:
It’s About TIME – Part 7 – 10,000 Year Clock
Sierra Diablo – 10,000 year Clock
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We need to pray that GOD will teach us to number our days according to HIS PLAN. We need to declare that we want to under GOD’s covering, His protection, His provision, His Mercy and His GRACE. WE WILL ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES!!
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Not merely to count them, how many they are, in an arithmetical way; there is no need of divine teachings for that; some few instructions from an arithmetician, and a moderate skill in arithmetic, will enable persons not only to count the years of their lives, but even how many days they have lived: nor is this to be understood of calculating or reckoning of time to come; no man can count the number of days he has to live; the number of his days, months, and years, is with the Lord; but is hid from him: the living know they shall die; but know not how long they shall live, and when they shall die: this the Lord teaches not, nor should we be solicitous to know: but rather the meaning of the petition is, that God would teach us to number our days, as if the present one was the last; for we cannot boast of tomorrow; we know not but this day, or night, our souls may be required of us: but the sense is, that God would teach us seriously to meditate on, and consider of, the shortness of our days; that they are but as a shadow, and there is no abiding; and the vanity and sinfulness of them, that so we may not desire to live here always; and the troubles and sorrows of them, which may serve to wean us from the world, and to observe how unprofitably we have spent them; which may put us upon redeeming time, and also to take notice of the goodness of God, that has followed us all our days, which may lead us to repentance, and engage us in the fear of God:that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom; to consider our latter end, and what will become of us hereafter; which is a branch of wisdom so to do; to seek the way of salvation by Christ; to seek to Christ, the wisdom of God, for it; to fear the Lord, which is the beginning of wisdom; and to walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise; to all which an application of the heart is necessary; for wisdom is to be sought for heartily, and with the whole heart: and to this divine teachings are requisite, as well as to number our days; for unless a man is taught of God, and by his Spirit convinced of sin, righteousness, and judgment, he will never be concerned, in good earnest, about a future state; nor inquire the way of salvation, nor heartily apply to Christ for it: he may number his days, and consider the shortness of them, and apply his heart to folly, and not wisdom; see ( Isaiah 22:21 ) .spacerspacer
Death knell
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The title of the book that was derived from a poem written by John Donne (1572-1631), an English poet and dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. Donne argues that the tolling of church bells, which signified the death of another human life, is a toll for each of us, as we are all bound together.
“ASK NOT FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS, IT TOLLS FOR THEE!”
I urge you to recognize that the Bell Tolls as a reminder to each one of us that we are finite beings. Our time on earth is fleeting. We have a very short time to come to understand the importance and significance of the price Christ paid on the Cross for each of us. To learn about GOD for ourselves. To build a relationship with HIM and to discover His plan for our lives to walk in it.
Today, this message is more important than ever, because we are living in the LAST DAYS. Not only do we not KNOW when our personal time will be up, but time of GRACE is coming to a close. One day very soon, that door will shut. The Earth shall pass through great TRIBULATION, and shall be cleansed by FIRE. Are you READY?
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