Calendar Overview
A clear public introduction to the OneGodian Calendar™, the OTS-V5 timekeeping structure, Day Order™, month architecture, and dual-date standard.
What the Calendar Overview Explains
The Calendar Overview introduces the OneGodian Calendar™ in plain language. It explains the purpose of the system, the fixed epoch, the 13-period year, the Skénra/Sunday weekly anchor, and the correct relationship between OneGodian Time™ and Gregorian Time.
Purpose of the Calendar
The OneGodian Calendar™ provides a structured way to organize time, records, public writings, community updates, educational materials, certificates, archive entries, and internal system logs.
It is designed to support consistency, historical continuity, and clear date interpretation across the OneGodian ecosystem.
The calendar does not replace Gregorian Time for legal, financial, banking, tax, government, or contract purposes. Instead, it operates as a supplemental internal sequencing and cultural timekeeping layer.

The Calendar at a Glance
These are the foundational rules every public page, record, and calendar tool should follow.
Fixed Epoch
Genesis 01, 0000 OT equals March 18, 2025 Gregorian.
13 Periods
12 standard months plus Ascension, the year-end alignment period.
Skénra Anchor
Every week begins on Skénra, synchronized with Sunday.
Dual Dating
OneGodian Time™ and Gregorian Time should be displayed together where clarity matters.
The Three Main Calendar Pages
The calendar system is organized through three connected pages: this overview, the live interface, and the official OTS-V5 standard.
Calendar Overview
This page explains the calendar in plain language for public visitors, members, learners, and readers who need the basic structure.
Calendar Interface
The live tool converts Gregorian dates into OneGodian Time™, displays Day Order™, and lets users select dates interactively.
OTS-V5 Standard
The official rules page documents legal control, UTC storage, fixed epoch, year rollover, leap-year logic, and implementation requirements.
OneGodian Month Structure
The OneGodian Calendar™ uses twelve 30-day months and one Ascension period at the end of the year.
Foundation Months
- Genesis
- Wisdom
- Planting
- Justice
Expansion Months
- Freedom
- Prosperity
- Innovation
- Transformation
Continuity Months
- Remembrance
- Covenant
- Invention
- Independence
- Ascension
Day Order™
The Day Order™ gives every day of the week a fixed name, position, and function. The weekly cycle begins with Skénra and closes with Niyóhsera.
Skénra
Day 1: Initiation. The weekly anchor.
Teyó·ra
Day 2: Stabilization and balance.
Ahsténha
Day 3: Execution and action.
Yawénni
Day 4: Alignment and center.
Onyá·ta
Day 5: Expansion and growth.
Shakó·wa
Day 6: Completion and output.
Niyóhsera
Day 7: Reset, reflection, and closure.
How Dates Should Be Written
Public OneGodian pages may place the OneGodian date first, followed by the Gregorian date in parentheses. This preserves OneGodian identity while keeping the date readable for the public.
For legal, banking, tax, contract, and government purposes, use Gregorian Time as the controlling reference. OneGodian Time™ may be included as supplemental notation.
How to Use the Calendar
Use the OneGodian Calendar™ for internal sequence, identity, archive meaning, educational records, cultural continuity, and public-facing date context.
Public Pages
Use dual dates for announcements, articles, records, community updates, historical entries, and milestone pages.
Member Records
Use the calendar for membership milestones, certificate dates, dashboard activity, archive logs, and community records.
System Logs
Store UTC and Gregorian time as system truth, then compute OneGodian Time™ as a derived display layer.
Explore the Full Timekeeping System
Move from overview to tool, then from tool to official standard.
Read the Standard
Review OTS-V5 rules, legal clarity, database rules, and implementation logic.
Study the System
Use the Calendar System page for deeper structure and implementation details.
One Calendar. Clear Structure. Dual-Date Clarity.
The OneGodian Calendar™ helps organize time, records, education, community milestones, and internal sequence while preserving Gregorian legal clarity.

