Forty Days and Forty Nights


   A previous article in this issue discussed the strange and quite astonishing error in Part 4 of The Urantia Book regarding its use of a forty day interval elapsing between the time of Jesus crucifixion on the eve of the Jewish Passover and the time of his ascension on the day appointed for the feast of Pentecost. This ancient Jewish harvest festival came seven weeks and one day after Passover, a fifty day period  that derived its name from the Greek word "pentekostos" which means fifty days.

One must be wrong

   The Paper provides the date of Passover as April 8 AD 30, and the date for Pentecost as May 18 AD  30, an interval of forty days being the elapsed time between the two dates. At least one of the dates must be wrong, probably the last one as judged from astronomical evidence.

On saying forty but meaning fifty

   The dates for the period prior to the crucifixion are well catalogued in the Urantia Paper, as are the day of the week and its actual date for the following period up to and including the day of ascension. There is no way of accounting for the forty day error as due to being a copying, typing, or copy editing error. Neither can the forty day interval be a simple mistake by someone writing forty when they really meant fifty, as it is repeated three times and in a different context for each occasion. The first is in relation to a forty day interval that Jesus passed with the Morontia Directors (2040), the second refers to Jesus' morontia career (2057) and the third to the forty days during which the apostles were in hiding after the crucifixion. (2060). And this last reference occurs in the first line under the section heading entitled "The Pentecost Sermon,"--which surely must alert some readers to the occurrence of an inconsistency.

Date for Easter also changes annually

   Many Urantia Book readers, with or without a Christian background, would be aware that the Easter holiday period varies each year because it follows the Jewish tradition for Passover which is fixed by the first new moon following the March equinox. In our earlier article, wonderment was expressed about how the error apparently went undetected by those who read the Papers prior to first printing and how the Midwayers responsible for Part 4 could make such an error--if indeed it was an error. An alternative is that the revelators meant to put it there for some logical reason.

Forty days and forty nights in the Bible

   An examination of the phrase "forty days" in both the Old and New Testament and even The Urantia Book provides a possible clue. The Bible has twenty two "forty day" references, most being associated with events of significance in Jewish history. These range from the great flood and Noah's survival, the period of embalming of the body of Jacob (alias Israel) prior to the return of his body to Canaan, the period that Moses spent on the mount when receiving the ten commandments, a period for exploration of the promised land, a period during which the Philistine giant, Goliath, paraded before the Israelites chiding them until slain by David with a stone from his sling. In the New Testament, there was the forty days of Jesus' temptation in the wilderness and the forty days of his appearances after the resurrection.

   It seems highly unlikely that a majority of these periods were exactly forty days. If not then perhaps "forty days" is a symbolic term that was attached to significant events of modest duration in Jewish history. An additional "forty day" interval occurs in The Urantia Book as a kind of rest and resuscitation period following directly after the fusion event for our morontia selves with our Thought Adjuster.

Forty days as a symbol

   Did the revelators choose to use an intensely symbolic "forty day" period to describe the interval between Passover and Pentecost, even though it meant that they would introduce error for their dates? If so, were they also drawing attention to their use of symbolism, legend, parable, allegory,  mythology, and "what have you" throughout The Urantia Book to describe and illustrate what is essentially a universe frame (1260) in which we can think rationally about our place and purpose in the universe. My personal opinion is that this is exactly what they did. They appear to have attempted to tell us so in the explanation of the mandate, their use of human sources wherever possible, and their description of the Urantia Papers on page 1008.

   The "forty day" error is the last, the most obvious, and the most conclusive in the Urantia Papers. It is followed by some of their most magnificent material. It appears to be impossible to assume this particular error is not there for a very good reason. 

The sovereignty of free will

   We humans are an intractable lot. The revelators were aware that many of the early

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