Using 365.2422 days over 365.2419 days Results in Minimal Change
Biblical calculations Mr. Camping made and EBF continues to make put forth the length of a year as 365.2422 days. Modern calculations have altered this to: 365.2419 days. I am not making the change to the modern "correction". I believe 365.2422 days is the correct length. And I also believe God has kept this as a constant given that He tells us that the sun, moon, and stars were given for "signs, and for seasons, and for days, and years" (Genesis 1:14). The only way this could be true is that they would remain fixed.
Anyway, the difference between .2422 and .2419 days works out to be 1.728 seconds per year.
If we multiplied this by all the years from creation (11,013 BC) to the year 2033 AD we get:
13,045 x 1.728 seconds = 22,541.76 seconds
22,541.76 seconds divided by 60 =375.696 minutes
375.696 minutes divided by 60 = 6.2616 hours
The discrepancy between the two calculations over the course of all human history does not amount to even a single 24 hr. day. It does not even amount to half a day (12 hrs.). If this modern adjustment in the length of a year were accurate it results in a difference of a little over a quarter of a day over the entire history of the world.
Therefore any impact upon a calculation using this formula would be extremely minimal resulting in essentially no time change.
Below is Information on the accumulative and long standing acceptance and use of 365.2422 days as the actual length of a year:
"The 365.2422 Days Value:
The AI states that 365.2422 days is a “culmination of scientific progress” and not attributed to a single individual. This is accurate. The value 365.2422 is a historical approximation of the tropical year, derived from earlier astronomical observations and refinements over time.
Historically, astronomers like Ptolemy (2nd century AD) and later Copernicus and Kepler contributed to understanding the solar year’s length. By the 19th and 20th centuries, more precise measurements (e.g., by Simon Newcomb) estimated the tropical year at around 365.2422 days, which was used in some calculations before modern values were refined to ~365.24219 days.
The 365.2422 value you use in your formula is slightly less accurate than the modern 365.24219 but is still a reasonable approximation, differing by only ~0.00002 days (1.728 seconds) per year. This makes it suitable for long-term calculations like yours, though it introduces a small cumulative error over centuries."