The Restitution Times
"Whom heaven must receive until the Times
of Restitution of all things" Acts
A series of papers devoted to the restoring of
original truth.
By Arthur & Rosalind Eedle
Oxleigh,
Home page www.oxleigh.freeserve.co.uk
No. 20. Michaelmas
Today is
Michaelmas Day, otherwise known as “The Feast of Saint Michael and All Angels.” How come the Archangel Michael has reached “sainthood”?
Isn’t this strange? The Roman Catholic
Church has always been in the habit of “canonising” people, but never before
they died. No other angelic personage
has been granted this accolade, so why?
My own researches have brought a blank.
Does anyone know how this came about? Please let me know.
Here’s
another item. Michaelmas is one of four “Quarter Days.” These have traditionally been days when rents
became due, and magistrates elected. But that is merely an addition to
something more ancient. How did the Quarter Days come about? They have changed since the introduction of
the Gregorian Calendar, and now stand as follows.
Lady Day,
March 25th, Midsummer Day,
June 24th, Michaelmas Day,
September 29th, Christmas
Day, December 25th.
Concerning
Lady Day, the dictionary tells us that “it commemorates the Annunciation of Our
Lady, the Virgin Mary, and used to be called ‘St. Mary’s Day in Lent.’” Christmas Day needs no elaboration, but
notice that it follows Lady Day by nine months, the human gestation
period. Therefore two of the Quarter Days
have been linked to the conception and birth of Jesus.
Midsummer
Day is otherwise known as
Some have
tried to connect the Quarter Days with the astronomical Quarter Days, i.e., the
Solstices and Equinoxes. In our present Gregorian Calendar
these are as follows. Spring Equinox,
March 21st, Summer
Solstice, June 21st, Autumn Equinox, September 23rd, Winter Solstice, December 22nd. But by glancing at the two sets, there is no
match. The attempt to show that the two
sets are identical once the precession of the equinoxes is taken into account
falls down when it is realised that in September there is a mis-match
of some six days, whereas the other
three dates vary by only 3 or 4 days. We may therefore discount the connection,
and return to an ecclesiastical origin for the Quarter Days.
Now we have
an additional problem. It has to do with John the Baptist. If Michaelmas Day is in remembrance of his
conception, then Scripture has no intimation that Zachariah and Elisabeth had
any such dealings with Michael, and certainly not “Michael and All Angels.” In fact Luke
This brings
us to the possibility that the Quarter Days are now out of phase with the original days. Much research has been done to
show that Jesus could not have been born “in the bleak mid-winter”, and many
expositors now believe that it must have been around the end of September, for
reasons that we need not go into here.
If this is the case, then there appears to be a very pressing reason why
Michaelmas celebrates Jesus’ birthday, because the Angel appeared to the
shepherds to announce Jesus’ birth, and “suddenly there was with the Angel a
multitude of the heavenly host praising God.”
(Luke 2:9, 13) Would this not be “Michael and All Angels”?
Let us
restore the Quarter Days to their original designations and see what
happens. If Jesus was born at the end of
September, then His conception would have been nine months earlier, which is
December 25th. The so-called “Christmas
Day” is therefore a time to celebrate the Word “becoming flesh”, and Michaelmas
to celebrate His “dwelling amongst us.”
The other
two Quarter Days, connected with John the Baptist must be restored as
well. Midsummer Day, known traditionally
as
There is
another chronological factor to help us in this enquiry. It is generally
understood that our Lord’s ministry occupied three and a half years. Basing our
study on the fact that John’s and Jesus’ ministry began when they were thirty
years of age, John’s ministry would have begun six months ahead of our Lord’s,
and according to our restored chronology, this would have been in March. Jesus
would therefore have been baptised in
In writing
this message today, we wish all our readers “A Happy Michaelmas” to remember
our Lord’s birth, and on December 25th we shall be equally joyful in
celebrating His conception.