You can use the Joda Time library to do this pretty easily - I use it for anything time related other than using the standard Java Date and Calendar classes. Take a look at the example below using the library:
MutableDateTime epoch = new MutableDateTime();
epoch.setDate(0); //Set to Epoch time
DateTime now = new DateTime();
Days days = Days.daysBetween(epoch, now);
Weeks weeks = Weeks.weeksBetween(epoch, now);
Months months = Months.monthsBetween(epoch, now);
System.out.println("Days Since Epoch: " + days.getDays());
System.out.println("Weeks Since Epoch: " + weeks.getWeeks());
System.out.println("Months Since Epoch: " + months.getMonths());
When I run this I get the following output:
Days Since Epoch: 15122
Weeks Since Epoch: 2160
Months Since Epoch: 496
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