![]() In Revelation “the number of the beast” is called “the number of a man.” That number is 666 (Revelation 13:18). In some passages of the Bible, the number 6 is associated with mankind. Interestingly, man was created on the sixth day of creation. In these instances, 7 signifies a completion of some kind: a divine mandate is fulfilled. ![]() So we see the command for animals to be at least seven days old before being used for sacrifice (Exodus 22:30), the command for leprous Naaman to bathe in the Jordan River seven times to effect complete cleansing (2 Kings 5:10), and the command for Joshua to march around Jericho for seven days (and on the seventh day to make seven circuits) and for seven priests to blow seven trumpets outside the city walls (Joshua 6:3–4). Thus, right at the start of the Bible, the number 7 is identified with something being “finished” or “complete.” From then on, that association continues, as 7 is often found in contexts involving completeness or divine perfection. The seventh day was to be “set apart” for Israel the Sabbath was a holy day of rest (Deuteronomy 5:12). This is our template for the seven-day week, observed around the world to this day. God spends six days creating the heavens and the earth, and then rests on the seventh day. The first use of the number 7 in the Bible relates to the creation week in Genesis 1.
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