Reference

Ezra 7:9

For upon the first day of the first month began he to go up from Babylon, and on the first day of the fifth month came he to Jerusalem, according to the good hand of his God upon him.
7

And there went up some of the children of Israel, and of the priests, and the Levites, and the singers, and the porters, and the Nethinims, unto Jerusalem, in the seventh year of Artaxerxes the king.

8

And he came to Jerusalem in the fifth month, which was in the seventh year of the king.

9

For upon the first day of the first month began he to go up from Babylon, and on the first day of the fifth month came he to Jerusalem, according to the good hand of his God upon him.

10

For Ezra had prepared his heart to seek the law of the Lord, and to do it, and to teach in Israel statutes and judgments.

11

Now this is the copy of the letter that the king Artaxerxes gave unto Ezra the priest, the scribe, even a scribe of the words of the commandments of the Lord, and of his statutes to Israel.

Counter-Arguments

The strongest case that this verse does not belong in this theme.

First Day of the Week

The verse explicitly mentions the "first day of the first month" and the "first day of the fifth month," referring to specific days within a lunar calendar, not the first day of a seven-day week.

Time-Bound Fulfillment

The verse describes a journey with specific start and end dates, but it does not mention any prior prophecy or prediction that included these dates, nor does it suggest that the journey itself was a fulfillment of a time-bound prophecy.