Bible Calendar

Here you can download two do-it-yourself Biblical calendar versions. One with Biblical events including feasts. The other with only the feasts (more printer-friendly). You fill in the Gregorian dates and weekdays yourself. You can re-use the same calendar every year only changing the weekdays and Gregorian dates for each year (use a pencil or print a new one). I have added an example from this year (2021) so you can see how you do it. Remember every Biblical month starts with the new moon.

The only feast not put on the calendar is the Feast of First Fruits and Pentecost which are tied with a 50-day bond. You can on this calendar count yourself and mark the date.
Karaite Judaism/Messianic/Adventist: Count 1 from the first Sunday morning within or after the Feast of Unleavened bread. This is the feast of First Fruits. (The only method which always gives you both 7 sabbath’s and 50 days as the law requires)
Rabbinical Judaism: Count 1 from the first day after the first day of Unleavened bread. (With this method you always follow 50 days but sometimes you do not get 7 sabbaths within those 50 days. )

Remember the Biblical date starts at sunset and lasts until the next sunset and not from midnight to midnight like the Gregorian. When you fill in the weekdays, you need to write in two Gregorian weekdays for each date. On the calendar, there is left space behind the moon symbol and behind the sun symbol to show the night and day part of the Biblical date and how it fits with the worldly calendar date (see example sheet below if you have any questions).

The Biblical month usually has either 29 or 30 days, but never 31. The next month has to start with the next new moon no matter what. A 13th month is added every few years.

(Remember the PDF files do not have weekdays or gregorian dates written on them. You have to fill them in all after how it fits the year you use them. The example sheet for the first and the seventh month is only correct for 2021. Do not use it for 2022). The other files you can use every year.

Here is an example for the seventh month falling in 2021 (version without events, only feasts). The moon sign is for the “evening” and the sun sign for the daytime. Just put in the weekday for the night portion of the day and the weekday for the day portion. Then write the Gregorian dates on the right side and you should be able to keep track of both calendars at the same time.

FIRST MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
THE FIRST MONTH WITH FEASTS, WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

SECOND MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
SECOND MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

THIRD MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
THIRD MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

FOURTH MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
FOURTH MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

FIFTH MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
FIFTH MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

SIXTH MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
SIXTH MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

SEVENTH MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
SEVENTH MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

THE EIGHT MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
THE EIGHT MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

THE NINTH MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
THE NINTH MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

THE TENTH MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
THE TENTH MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

THE ELEVENTH MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
THE ELEVENTH MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print

THE TWELFTH MONTH WITH EVENTS AND FEASTS
THE TWELFTH MONTH WITHOUT EVENTS – PDF for download/print