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Moses and Passover

During the waning of the age of Taurus, Moses led the Jews 'out of Egypt' shortly after Passover. The term 'Passover' is a literal reference to the sun passing over the equator at the Vernal Equinox with regards to the annual solar year, as well as the period between two ages, when the sun passes between the two Houses or Ages.

Moses climbed Mount Zion, only to find that many of his followers had turned back towards Baal worship because they were not fully aware of the fact that the ages were changing. Moses knew better, however, which is attested in the Judaic tradition of the first Passover taking place with the slaughter of the Paschal (aka Passover) Lamb in remembrance of the Slaughter of the First-born Sons of Egypt. In the solar year sense, the term Passover is a reference to the sun passing over the equator at the Vernal Equinox, which was considered a symbol of the divine balance of God and nature because at the equinoxes, there are equal periods of day and night. The word Equinox literally means 'Equal (Equi) night (nox)', and can therefore be considered a sort of Evening time.

There are two equinoxes each year: the Spring Equinox and the Autumn equinox. What is also worth noting at this point, is that the Jewish New Year's conception actually takes place at the Autumn Equinox, whereas the conception of the Great Year takes place at the Spring Equinox. These two 'new years' are not in conflict, as each denotes two systems working together simultaneously, much like reduction gears within a transmission, one marking solar-lunar (mundane) time and the other marking celestial (Spiritual) time.

The Passover referenced in the Exodus story, however, was of twofold significance: it marked not just the passing over of the sun across the equator at the equinoxes, but also the passing over of the sun from the house of Taurus into the house of Aries, which is memorialized to this day with the onset of the tradition of the sacrifice of the Paschal Lamb at the equinoxes (the Lamb is itself the symbol of the age of Aries). Note that it was during this waning period of Taurus, the slaughter of the first-born sons of Egypt also took place.

There is much confusion in Judaism with regard to the Passover sacrifice taking place 'between the eves', when the true significance is quite simple. The sacrifice in question is not simply the annual sacrifice, but rather the sacrifice that is to take place between the equinoxes (evenings) during the transit of the sun from the waning age and into the next. Both yearly equinoxes are evenings, and as such, the sacrifice in question would thus be made directly between the two - at High Noon on the Summer Solstice.

Each day has, in reality, two evening periods: dusk and dawn. Dusk evens out day and night, and dawn evens out night and day. As such, the Passover mentioned in Exodus took place at the time between the two ages, between the two equinoxes, and between dawn and dusk: high noon on the summer solstice of the cusp between Taurus and Aries.