Secondary 800-Year Ages of Adam and Seth - Part 1

Secondary 800-year age of Adam

 

The secondary 800-year Generation Cycle is the final tool needed to resolve the genealogy of Adam.  Segments of 800-years increment the secondary age category at every primary age division.  Generation Cycles illustrate the wisdom of ancient minds.  Extending the ancient recordings expresses by repeating the secondary 800-year age of Adam.  A repeating 800-year Generation Cycle was included with the secondary age for each later descendant Patriarch.  Antediluvian characters from Adam through Jared utilize the 800-year Generation Cycle as part of their respective secondary ages.  The 800-year Generation Cycle was a single unit of time.  Components from lunar/solar calendar systems assemble the advanced Generation Cycle tool.

 

Generation Cycles allow modern society to examine early scriptures based on identical content meanings.  Numeric remnants of the calendar and names attached to it constitute basic ingredients found with the Jewish Calendar, Egyptian Calendar and Mesoamerican Calendars of the Western Hemisphere.  Manifest in mythology and religion, proto-historic gods and deities aided formulation of the calendar.  The calendar used an agricultural sacred-year of 260-days within every year of 365-days and extends by repeating 800-year Generation Cycles.  Three different calendars combine for a hybrid understanding of extremely remote bonds in history.  All three above were major calendars of the ancient world and commence between 4,241 B.C.E. and 3,113 B.C.E. years.  Entwined with the mythology of the Egyptians and Israelite folklore, the Mesoamericans add their beliefs regarding this advanced form of the calendar.  A pattern emerges to span nearly 8,000-years of history prior to the Great Flood of Noah.

 

The secondary age category begins the first 400-year-Baktun-cycle.  Mere 20-year cycles brought the heavens to a very close arrangement compared to the original state.  The 20-year l/s cycle required further calendar refinements.  The 400-year-Baktun-cycle enhances lunar/solar timekeeping over 20 multiples of 20-year l/s cycles.  The 400-year-Baktun-cycle was a product of the Mayan Calendar and the comprehensive period to indicate 210-years of l/s separation time.  The 400-year-Baktun-cycle doubles to get the secondary 800-year age of Adam.  The secondary 800-year age of Adam completes the first 800-year Generation Cycle.  Later descendants of Adam continued to add 800-year spans.

 

The Mesoamerican Calendars employed a 52-year Calendar Round that used both the 260-day-sacred-year and the 360-day midpoint length of year.  Working like meshed gears, 52-Haab-years of 365-days each and 73-sacred-years having 260-days each pinpointed any calendar date.  The 52-year Calendar Round of Mesoamerica is famous to archeology.  After 18,980-days, the 52-year Calendar Round repeats.  An intensive ideology focused upon the Calendar Round preserved religious and social customs.  The Calendar Round derives from the original calendar of Adam.

 

A Great Cycle in the Mayan Calendar expands the 52-year Calendar Round to 5,200 years.  Concentric time shifts the reference from days to years.  The scale multiple is exactly 100 times greater in the Great Cycles versus the Calendar Round.  The Long Count Initial Series and the Great Cycle are variations along the same theme.  The Long Count was a popular way to synthesize calendar meanings in the mid-twentieth century.  Mesoamerican chronologists point to the cyclic nature of Mayan calendar time.  A Great Cycle consisting of 5,200-Haab-years follows the same sequence of 13 Baktuns as the Long Count.

 

Twelve consecutive 400-year-Baktun-cycles give rise to the presumed Mayan Creation date of 13.0.0.0.0.  The Mayan Baktun numbers range from 1 to 13 in the Long Count Initial Series rather than 0 to 12.  The Long Count is a number line, linear format developed for convenience.  On the other hand, the Great Cycle presumes 12 Baktuns have already elapsed prior to 13.0.0.0.0.  The Great Cycle repeats after 5,200-Haab-years, or 7300-sacred-years, whereas the Long Count happens once.

 

Judeo-Christian history began with similar lunar/solar time reckoning concepts.  Archaic evidence reveals that 800-year Generation Cycles were entrenched during the era of Adam and Eve.  The time line establishes earliest Bible followers held acquired skills in astronomy, mathematics and communications.  Actual observation through ancient eyes taught astronomers the 20-year lunar/solar cycle repeated the same heavenly sun, moon and star positions.  The rational key to this calendar system accounts for precise fractions of degrees to the horizon, the phase of moon and gradual star locations.  Lunar/solar time keeping order warrants a calendar system that later transferred to Mesoamerica either intact or in pieces.  Located near Byblos and Ur, a small pocket of culture preserved the calendar in Genesis 5.

 

The calendar numbers found in the Holy Bible is, was, and ever shall be -- everlasting.  The eternal domain belongs to God.  Beginning with Adam (generic man) and Eve (sunset, Ĕrēve), the calendar is the human way to measure time and our precious treasure from the Bible.  Message skills developed to permit transfer of the sacred calendar knowledge.  The Word is the sanctuary for calendar material that begins over 10,000 years ago.  Genesis 5 holds the 800-year Generation Cycle legacy of the ancient past.

 

Calendar science highlights more awareness and esteem for early people than what is currently agreed.  Primeval humanity wrote this calendar material in the familiar style common to their culture.  Countless languages and interpretations preserve the sacred calendar numbers.  From original Hebrew and Greek, through Old English and modern, we have the astonishing knowledge of distant past history.  Beyond the sheer numbers and impressive calendar math, this Bible study describes absolute time reckoning in the sense prevalent back then.  Our modern task is to adapt present understanding to reflect a people with extraordinary abilities.

 

Adam and his descendants accent a culture with outstanding perception and reasoning.  Adam first identified a primary 130-year age, which was half of a 260-year-sacred-cycle.  Seth was the first masculine, solar-side time split written for two Mesoamerican 400-year-Baktun-cycles.  The next l/s time split in the primary age category quarters the 260-year-sacred-cycle to derive the primary 90-sacred-year age of Enos.  Third descendant in Adam's line, Enos was born when Seth was 105-years old.  At the end of the primary 90-sacred-year age of Enos, Cainan was born.  The calendar system of halving, doubling and dividing time predicated most history.

 

In order to describe ancient theories of time reckoning, the 260-day-sacred-year and the 260-year-sacred-cycle divide in half.  The calendar applies numerical matching to obtain 130-days and 130-years in a single term.  The division of 210-l/s separation days for a 20-year cycle results in 105-days of solar-side time split.  The calendar squares 20-years by multiplying a 20-year cycle by itself.  The resulting 400-year-Baktun-cycle numerically matches 210-l/s separation years.

 

Significant steps in the secondary age category occur for each 400-year-Baktun-cycle.  The 260-year-sacred-cycle in the primary age category halves for the primary 130-year age of Adam at the completion of the first 400-year-Baktun-cycle.  The second 400-year-Baktun-cycle increments the secondary age category to attain the first Generation Cycle for Adam.  The third 400-year-Baktun-cycle equally halves 210-years of lunar/solar separation to get 105-years of solar-side time split.  A fourth 400-year-Baktun-cycle adds to Seth’s secondary age category.  Seth’s secondary age category concludes 1,600-years l/s time.

 

The end of odd 400-year-Baktun-cycle multiples are the halfway point transitions that determine changes in the primary age category.  For example, the first 400-year-Baktun-cycle ending signals the halfway division of the primary age 260-year-sacred-cycle.  The end of the second 400-year-Baktun-cycle also ends the first Generation Cycle for Adam.  A third 400-year-Baktun-cycle ends to halve 210-years of l/s separation time.  The halfway transition point of Seth’s secondary age category starts, or “begets”, 105-years of solar-side time split in Seth’s primary age category.  A pattern emerges to alternate divisions of the 260-year-sacred-cycle with solar-side time splits in the primary age category.

 

Given by Genesis 5:6, Seth's primary age at the time of fathering Enos is 105-years.  The first 800-year Generation Cycle finishes the secondary age category for Adam at the end of two successive 400-year-Baktun-cycles.  The secondary 807-year age of Seth uses the same method.  Seth repeats the 800-year Generation Cycle for the second time.  Seth’s primary age halves 210-years of separation time to show 105-years of solar-side time split instead of dividing the 260-year-sacred-cycle.  Divisions of the 260-year-sacred-cycle alternate with successive solar-side time splits.

 

Are you a pastor, educator or a student of the Holy Bible?  Timeemits.com seeks anointed people to review and contribute to the Ages of Adam ministry.  Ancient lunar/solar calendars like the Jewish and Mayan calendars provide the background to understanding early time.  Ancient calendars of the Holy Bible use differences between the moon and sun, numerical matching and a 364-day calendar year to describe X-number of days that match with X-number of years.  Ages of Adam is a free read at http://www.timeemits.com.

 

Clark Nelson is webmaster for www.timeemits.com and author of Ages of Adam and sequel, Holy of Holies.

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