My Annual Mon-Sun Calender Rant

I’m with you on the metric system, but you’ll pry the Sun-Sat calendar from my cold, dead hands…

THAT’S my girl!

Canada uses Sunday to Saturday as well.

So does New Zealand, as I said.

We do, yes :cool:.

Damn editing limit. Grumble.

Wikipedia has an article on ISO week date.

Yeah, those dumb Gospel-writers! Where did they get off, thinking that Sunday was the first day of the week!

What “most common religious week” are you referring to? Sunday is the beginning of the week in the Christian calendar. It’s the celebration of the new beginning, marked by Jesus’ resurrection.

That’s right, they do. Monday is one end and Sunday is the other. I’m not sure what the point you’re trying to make is, because so far all you seem to be doing is agreeing with most of my points but insisting that you aren’t. :confused:

They’re one and the same.

I’m not a theologian but my understanding is that Sunday is the Sabbath, which means all those Bible passages appear to be referring to Monday, not Sunday.

Look, as far as I’m concerned, Monday is the start of the week and nothing anyone can say will convince me otherwise. That’s all there is to it.

For what it’s worth, Sam, today I was at a bookstore, picked up a random calendar with traditional Thai images in it and it had the weeks arranged from Sunday to Saturday. This was in the Esplanade B2S bookstore, I suppose all the other B2S stores should have the same and similar calendars.

Half the planet loves it, the other half can’t even be in the same room as it. The last time my mother made the mistake of cooking that thing in my house I opened every single window and kept it open until the smell had dissipated according to my nose (according to hers, it had dissipated a lot earlier). It was April in a place where it snows as late as June.

Nope. The Gospels all agree that the crucifixion and death occurred on a Friday. Some of Jesus’ followers then went to Pontius Pilate and asked for permission to take his body down off the cross before the start of the Sabbath at evening. Since this was before Christianity was up and running, the only interpretation of that is that they were referring to the Jewish Sabbath, Saturday. So they hurriedly placed the body in the tomb, but because the Sabbath starts at evening, they weren’t able to prepare the body properly for burial. As soon as the Sabbath was over, on Sunday, the first day of the week, Mary and the others came to prepare the body and found the empty tomb.

See:

Glad you’ve got that “fighting ignorance” thing down pat. :rolleyes:

The point being that Monday is not a part of the weekend, even though you consider it one of the ends of the week.

That seems really weird, as the Sabbath is on Saturday. And it is defined Biblically as the seventh day. If they’re going to use the Biblical months, why not the Biblical week?

(and if you are wondering why the Sabbath starts Friday night, it’s because, in Genesis, night came before day. So all days start at sunset.)

:eek: Groan Thanks, but we’ve already mailed the other calendars. And there’s a B2S close to where we live too, in Central Rama III. I guess we’ll be checking there next year!

But Monday isn’t the weekend. Saturday and Sunday are.

Not according to us Jews. We came up with the whole concept of the Sabbath, and we say the Sabbath is Saturday.

Not all of them! In fact not many. I have a NZ Gardener calendar hanging by my desk that starts the week on Monday, as well.

That’s what I’ve been saying. :confused: Both days combine to form a weekend. They’re not “bookends” to the week, they’re two days at the end of the week.

Israel.

Of course, since our work-week is Sunday through Thursday, I will leave it as a debate for the readers whether this supports the Sun-Sat or the Mon-Sun layout for the rest of the world… :stuck_out_tongue:

Well, I think the “Thai-themed” calendar below is Sun-Sat, but I doubt my elderly aunts would appreciate it. My uncle might! :smiley:

Slightly Not Safe for Work, so I’ll unparse the link:

www.afterdarkasia.com/calendar2009.html