לא סלקא דעתך דכתיב (במדבר לג, לח) ויעל אהרן הכהן אל הר ההר על פי ה' וימת שם בשנת הארבעים לצאת בני ישראל מארץ מצרים בחדש החמישי באחד לחדש וכתיב (דברים א, ג) ויהי בארבעים שנה בעשתי עשר חדש באחד לחדש דבר משה וגו' מדקאי באב וקרי לה שנת ארבעים וקאי בשבט וקרי לה שנת ארבעים מכלל דר"ה לאו תשרי הוא
Perhaps we reckon them from Tishri?<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Which is the beginning of years reckoned from the creation.');"><sup>9</sup></span> - Do not imagine such a thing. For it is written, And Aaron the priest went up into Mount Hor at the commandment of the Lord, and died there, in the fortieth year after the children of Israel were come out of the land of Egypt, in the fifth month,<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Ab.');"><sup>10</sup></span>
The Sabbath Epistle
I shall explain the verse “it will bring forth produce for the three years” (ibid. 25:21). Be aware that a minute remaining of a Biblical day is considered a full day. For example, it is written “On the eighth day the flesh of his foreskin shall be circumcised” (ibid. 12:3). If one is born on Friday one-half hour before the Sabbath commences, he is circumcised the following Friday morning, even though he has not completed seven full days. Similarly, one day in the year is considered a full year. Sometimes it is counted as a separate year and sometimes it is left as part of the previous full year. Thus it is written “you will bear your sins for forty years” (Numbers 14:34). Now this incident occurred in the second year, and God did not punish them before they sinned. The number forty was due to their not crossing the Jordan until the “tenth of the first month” (Joshua 4:19) in the forty-first year. This is in contrast to “they ate the manna forty years” (Exodus 16:35). In Scripture the “seventeenth” (1 Kings 14:21) is identical with “the eighteenth year” (ibid. 15:1); also the “nineteenth.” “The eleventh year” (2 Kings 9:29) is the same as “The twelfth year” (ibid. 8:25). Also, Ahaziah ruled for two years beginning with “the seventeenth year of Jehoshaphat” (1 Kings 22:52), yet Jehoram his brother ruled after him “in the eighteenth year of Jehoshaphat” (2 Kings 3:1). There are many similar examples.
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