top of page
Full Bible Timeline Icon

Full Bible Timeline

Understanding Time - The Great Count
full-bible-timeline-research

FULL BIBLE TIMELINE

DOWNLOAD YOUR COPY IN A  
Digital Format PDF 
for easy study on your mobile device or laptop.

digital-nomads-for-jesus
Understanding Time - The Great Count
The Life of Abraham white paper anchored in the Great Count AM biblical timeline

This study invites the reader to encounter Abraham not as a distant patriarch, but as a living hinge in sacred history—where inherited covenant memory becomes covenant promise. Anchored in the Great Count AM Chronology, it traces faith unfolding in real time through calling, testing, and fulfillment, revealing God’s redemptive purpose advancing not through myth, but through remembered history and measured promise. 


YOUR SUPPORT MEANS A LOT! 

CLICK ON THE BOOK TO PURCHASE OUR E-BOOK 

- AN EASY WAY TO STUDY FROM ANYWHERE

The Life of Abraham

PREFACE — WHY ABRAHAM MATTERS


The Bible is not a collection of religious side stories. It is a single redemptive narrative centered on Jesus Christ. Scripture does not record irrelevant genealogies or incidental lives. Every person included advances the story of how God restores what was broken in Eden.


Time in Scripture does not meaningfully begin at creation, but at death. Genesis 5 marks the moment humanity becomes consciously time-bound—when Adam, 235 years after the Fall, holds his grandson and names him Enosh, a name meaning mortal, frail, doomed to die. This naming is not incidental. It signals the first recorded acknowledgment that human life is now measured by decay, loss, and mortality. From the Fall until this moment, Adam lived in the shadow of judgment; with Enosh, that judgment becomes generationally recognized. From here forward, Scripture begins to count years, lifespans, and successions with deliberate consistency. The Great Count AM Chronology does not impose meaning onto time—it traces the biblical awakening to death-consciousness and follows it forward with covenant purpose, not speculation.


Throughout this work, all Anno Mundi (AM) references follow the Great Count framework, in which counted time begins when death becomes operative and consciously reckoned by Adam—130 years prior to the birth of Seth. Genesis 5:3 records the first explicit age but reflects time already counted. All subsequent chronological markers exist within this same mortal framework and are not reset by later events such as the Flood.


Abraham stands at the hinge of this timeline.

Refresh
Full Bible Timeline Icon
bottom of page