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Updated r.2.9.

6
11/25/2017
Vol. III Supplement, No.6
Passion Week Chronology

IRENT Vol. III. Supplement:

No. 1 (Words, Words, and Words)


No. 2 (Text, Translation, and Translations)
No. 3 (Names, Persons, and People)
No. 4 (Place, Things, and Numbers)
No. 5 (Time, Calendar, and Chronology)
No. 6 (Passion Week Chronology)

WALK THROUGH THE SCRIPTURE

No. 6 Passion Week Chronology

[See the files in Collection #6A, #6B and #6C for this Supplement.]

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Contents

Passion Week Chronology


A. Summary of Calendar Issues
B. Summary on Terminology
C. Events from Arrival to Burial
D. Timelines of the Passion Week
E. List of Timeline tables in different scenarios
F. Event-by-event in the Passion Week
G. Liturgical Holy Week vs. Passion Week

Sources of errors in Passion Week Chronology


Time-related terminology
Biblical Lunar calendar system
Appendix
References

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The aim of this paper is, among others,

(1) to resolve the issue of what day is of the Crucifixion and


Resurrection,
(2) to present the biblical timeline of the Passion Week,
unaffected by the traditional church liturgical Holy Week, and
(3) to urge people to look for the issue of calendar systems to
find the biblical lunar calendar to use it for their following the
biblical narratives in the correct timeline, which has been
obscured and muddled by proleptic use of non-biblical
calendars the rabbinic Jewish calendar (only since 4th
century!) and the Gregorian calendar a.

As the essential requirement for all sorts of our discussion and


debate, we need a basic vocabulary with words and terms to
be clearly defined. Otherwise, when all we say its good, it
is nothing more than its good to me or it seems good; our
effort will be in vain for us to be on the common ground with
common sense.

a
Gregorian calendar. Cf. a more neutral term is Common Era Calendar
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Take-home message:

To follow the narratives in the Passion Week in the Bible,


(not the liturgical Holy Week of the Church),
it is essential to employ the true Biblical lunar calendar.

The two calendars, rabbinic Jewish and Gregorian, actually cause


confusion.

Basic points in using the true Biblical calendar:


(1) The word day throughout the Bible is that which begins at
sunrise.

This common word should not be confused with a calendar day,


which may be reckoned to start at different point of time than
sunrise 12 a.m. in Gregorian; sunset in Jewish.

(2) The word hour in ordinal numbers is hour-period by the


sundial, not hour on the clock.

(3) The week in the bible is the lunar week. The 7th day of the week
is unrelated to Saturday of the solar week. In the bible there is
no such a vocabulary of the 7 named days of the week, Sunday
to Monday.

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Basic Vocabulary

Basic Vocabulary
Festival, Feast, Season

Pesach a is the transliterate of the Hebrew word. b It is used as a translation word for
IRENT by replacing the traditional English word Passover.

It denotes the historical memorial service (in the Exodus event with Pesach vigil) with
the Pesach sacrifice (in the midafternoon) with the Pesach lamb (1Co 5:7) and Pesach
meal (in the evening).

When the word Pesach alone is used in the Biblical texts as a time-marker, it should be
carefully distinguished between the Pesach Day and the Pesach Festival.
(a) the Pesach Day for the Pesach sacrifice and meal (on Abib 14)
(b) the Pesach Festival = the festival of the matzah = Pesach Week of 7 days

the festival of the matzah

Name: The festival of the matzah (Heb. Chag haMatzot) = the Festival of the unleavened bread,
the Festival of the Unleavened Bread NWT-4, NIV; /x: the Feast of Unleavened Bread
ESV; /x: the feast of unleavened bread KJV. Cf. Lk 22:1, where it says it is called Pesach
i.e. Pesach Festival.

It is a 7-days long period from Abib 15 to 21, with Abib 15 = high sabbath. [An inclusive term
Pesach festival season covers an 8-day period from the Pesach day (Abib 14) to the end of the
Pesach festival (Abib 21). c

See the file on <Difference between the first day of the Festival of the Unleavened Bread
and the beginning day for the unleavened bread eating> (Mk 14:12 //Mt 26:17).

Matzah = *unleavened bread (Heb. matzah/matzo, pl. matzoth) (Exo 12:34) thin flat bread
baked of dough before it rises.

Leavening is the process dough to rise in time when it is left in room temperature because of yeast
naturally present in flour. Chametz/leavening agent may be added to speed up the process of rising,
e.g. dough starter. (e.g. Mt 13:33). [No other leavening agents were available then, such as yeast,
baking soda, cream of tartar, etc.] [See the zip file <<*Leavening and Unleavened Bread> in
IRENT Vol. III Supplement Collection WB #6 A (Passion Week Chronology).]

a
the Greek word , or , was by Josephus used interchangeably with the Festival of the
unleavened bread, and both together = Pesach.
(www.worldslastchance.com/yahuwahs-calendar/the-passover-puzzle.html).
b
This should not be confused with Pascha (or Pasch by some) which is transliteration of Greek
and used in Orthodox Church to refer to Easter.
c[AT Robertson (1922), A Harmony of the Gospels reads The feast of the unleavened bread followed the
Passover meal, beginning the next morning and lasting a week. But the one term was used to include the other. The
Passover was expanded to mean the entire feast that followed, and vice versa. p. 280. (bold is not in his).]
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Here, in discussion of the Passion Week timeline, it is to be always distinguished from
Jewish Passover (which is on Nisan 15th of the rabbinic Jewish calendar).

The Jewish Passover of the rabbinic Judaism is a 7-day long festival (Pesach I to Pesach
VII, from Nisan 15th to 21th). a This corresponds to the Festival of the matzah (in N.T.
and O.T.). The Pesach meal in the Bible is the precursor of the rabbinic Jewish ritual
Seder (on Nisan 15th).

Without such clear distinction, the result is not only confusion of the biblical narrative,
but also misinterpretation (e.g. question/confusion on whether the Lords Last Supper
was Passover meal or not with apparent contradiction between G-John and the Synoptic
Gospels, from misreading and misinterpreting the Synoptic narratives), baffling to most
people. It cannot be overemphasized that, in any area of doctrinal or exegetical arguments
and conflicts, our improper choice and usage of the vocabularies is a seed of such
wrongheadedness, all being inescapably agenda-driven (of religious-political, doctrinal
and scholarly agenda) words without precision definition and without considering the
context of the text in locus as well as in whole.

Sabbath [Heb. shabbat] on Day 7 of the biblical lunar week for Sabbath rest during
daytime. Not equivalent to Saturday which is 7th day of the solar week of the Gregorian
calendar. Sabbath-keeping from the Mosaic covenant. In the Bible it is a lunar sabbath.
It should not be confused with solar sabbath a sabbath which is on Saturday in rabbinic
Judaism (24 hours from Friday sunset) and other Sabbatarians is .

High Sabbath the 7-day Sabbath on the first day of week-long festivals.

Three different calendar systems (1) Gregorian vs. (2) rabbinic Jewish vs. (3) biblical
lunar calendar all do employ words and terms not quite same.

See the section Summary on Terminology to follow below for the term day, week,
month, hour, etc.

a
[Diaspora Jews keep from Nisan 15th to 22th eight days].
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Questions to be asked:

Question:
When was He crucified?
What day of the week was it?
Friday, Thursday, or Wednesday?

Answer:
The best reply should start with So?a with various tones, followed by How
son? So then? So what? as if anyone should care about it as it does not
really matter which is to be correct. So then? Is there something to be at stake?
Nothing, except for the church liturgical tradition for those in position and
power.
When we remain stuck to follow the narrative in terms of those non-biblical
named day of the week, it actually distorts the narrative time-line.

Actually, we should not say He was crucified/resurrected on certain days (Friday-


Sunday or Wednesday-Saturday), nor He was raised on Sunday morning. This is in
reality how the Church has allocated on those days in their fictitious liturgical Holy
Week, deviated from the Biblical Passion Week.

However, there are a few we have to know in order to correctly follow the narrative
timeline of the Passion Week and to fully understand its narrative in the Bible and
get rid of all the accumulated baggage from traditions, being free to return to the
Scripture. The basic principles are straight forward; it is unlearning which is actually
harder. The fundamental problem is that it is the church language (for doctrines,
theologies, liturgies) people use it instead of the biblical language to understand the
biblical narrative.

The seed of the Passion Week timeline problem is the common mistake that the
sabbath as Saturday (the 7th day of the solar week), simply following the rabbinic
Jewish tradition. It has nothing common with the biblical Sabbath on the Day 7 of
the biblical lunar week (only for daytime period). There is no such word Saturday
used in the Bible. To follow the biblical narrative, what is important is what day of
the lunar month, which by itself fixes what day of the lunar week to be, as the biblical
calendar is not of cyclical 7-day weeks. Nor we find it even in the early Julian
calendar, which had 8-day week, in the first century. When the date in the Biblical
calendar is known in the first century, it is simple matter to find the named day of
the solar week in the proleptic Gregorian calendar.

Arguments and counter-arguments on different scenarios for the day and date of the
Crucifixion and the Resurrection have shown some bits of facts, but they are often

a
So? How so? So then? this is a best response to any statement or claim asserted by anyone
in any setting.
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used for wrong arguments as well, making things more confusing and conflicting.
Their source material is not precisely giving the needed data, but their own claims
without rigorous astronomical and chronologic clarification. the New Testament is
supposed to tell and proclaim is not found in the religious language of the Church.
Something to serve for the religious purpose of the Church may be fine in itself,
appealing, even essential for the conduct of religion, but it surely has nothing to do
with what the Bible teaches. What has compounded the problem is the unbiblical
convention in the rabbinic Jewish calendar which reckons a day to start at sunrise
quite contrary to the natural way of seeing day as a day light period to begin with,
before being defined as a unit of 24 hours, i.e. day + night.

Of all this, the Bible is here with us to liberate from all human ideas and speak its
own truth to those who are open to hear without presumptions and premature
knowledge. The take-home message is:
(1) that we should read the Biblical narratives with the biblical calendar (not
rabbinic Jewish, nor Roman calendar) using the terms of biblical language,
not religious church language,
(2) that He was crucified on 14th of Abib, the first month of the biblical year
the day of Pesach sacrifice serving as the typology of the Pesach lamb of
Elohim.
(3) and that the Gospels report He was raised to life on 16th of Abib at dawn
on the third day after his death. The Matthean expression 3 days and 3
nights in the heart of the land is not relevant to the Passion narrative and
timeline and does not have something to do with the Crucifixion-Resurrection
scenarios.
When the Biblical Lunar Calendar is aligned with the proleptic Gregorian calendar,
we find it fell on Wednesday for the crucifixion and Saturday for the resurrection (
with the resurrection at dawn, not in the late afternoon).
However, that it is found correctly with Wednesday-to-Saturday, not Friday-to-
Sunday would have a marginal effect on Church liturgical use. Even if it becomes
accepted, there is no impetus to make changes in the fond fictitious Holy Week of
the Church.

The purpose of my effort on this work is not so much to argue for truths, but to help
others to deal with those agenda-driven half-truths which people have become
enamored of.

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Passion-Passover Week Chronology

Clarifying the Passover Week Timeline


for the Last Week of the Mashiah

The scope of this paper is (1) to find a biblically sound solution on the question of day,
date, and year of the Crucifixion, and (2) to construct coherent a Passion Week timetable.
This has been done by clarifying several important issues, which has resulted in so many
different positions and arguments, adding confusion, contradiction and contention rather
than clarification and consensus-finding to this important subject.

The Passion-Passover narrative is the bulk of the Gospel and the only that which flows
on the precise timeline, while the rest shows the life teaching with healing ministry but
without tightly being bound to the timeline. a

Several issues to be resolved:


(1) different scenarios for the Crucifixion day (Friday, Thursday, or Wednesday) and
the Resurrection day (Wednesday or Thursday);
(2) lack of understanding precise meaning of the terms b and the idioms c in the
Scripture; and
(3) clear understanding of a week-long timeline in the Passion Week narrative. Note:
Chronology-related issue is about what year for the events. Calendar-related issues
are dates and days in the narrative timeline. d

The ultimate solution cannot be found unless various issues of different calendar systems
the one in the biblical times and those in the modern times. It is at the core of
misunderstanding and misinterpretation of the biblical texts of the Passion Week
narratives. e It is futile like trying to open a door with wrong keys the sunset-to-sunset
day and the Saturday of the solar week instead of the 7th day of the biblical lunar week.

That it was Friday He was crucified? What difference does it make if it turned out to
be different day of the week? It should be reminded that it is something only for Church

a
Compared with chronology issue (not timeline issue) when we are concerned with His nativity
narrative, the duration of Yeshuas ministry, and the year of His Crucifixion.
b
E.g. the word Passover itself used in various senses. Since they dont have a clear idea of the
calendar system used in that time, but imposing the Gregorian calendar on to the Scripture, they
remain confused even on the date, whether the Passover was on Nisan 14th, or Nisan 15th. They
have no clear way to find what year and what day of the week was the Crucifixion. Nor they are
sure of whether Lords Last Supper was a Passover meal or not. E.g. AT Robertson (1922), A
Harmony of the Gospels (Notes on Special Points:11. Did Christ Eat the Passover (p. 279) and
12. The Hour of the Crucifixion p. 384)
c
A common but serious misunderstanding of what the unique Matthean phrase in the heart of
the land three days and three nights (Mt 12:40) which prompted people to find the correct
scenario of Crucifixion.
d
Note: Chronology-related issue is about what year for the events. Calendar-related issues are
dates and days in the narrative timeline. The expression Passover Week is synonymous with
Passion-Passover Week.
e
[The detailed on the topic of Time, Calendar and Chronology is the sister file WB#5 Walk
through the Scripture for IRENT Vol. III Supplement.]
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liturgy in conjunction of keeping of the Easter. Which day for His crucifixion and
resurrection as such have no relevance to our belief, it is of no theological significance,
only ecclesial liturgical. The problem for the Bible readers is that it is without full
chronological support and evidence in the Biblical narrative itself. This paper is simply
to provide the readers enough information and idea to avoid confusion and wrong
conviction on the biblical matters.

In the Bible, there was no such day named Sunday, Saturday, or Friday, etc. Its simply
non-biblical vocabulary. That a certain day is Saturday simply means it is between
Friday and Sunday; it has no meaning of Sabbath. It is only take it as Sabbath, which is
a solar sabbath. It doesnt belong to the Bible text, nor it is useful to follow any biblical
timeline. Here we are dealing with substantially different calendar systems. Dating an
event can be done to see how a certain day would fall on the other calendar. A solar
sabbath, that is, sabbath on a solar week, is not something which is translatable to the
biblical lunar sabbath. On the contrary, it brews confusion, conflict and contradiction in
the biblical text itself. The early Julian Roman calendar itself used a 8-day week, not 7-
day week as now! Its prudent to follow the Passion narrative by using the truly biblical
lunar calendar (instead of the Roman calendar, overlaid on the rabbinic Jewish calendar).
Again, the Day 7 (of Sabbath) in the biblical lunar week is Sabbath, but is not related to
Saturday.

Only after one finds the valid Scriptural calendar to be applied to the Passion Week
timeline, it is possible to superimpose with the Roman calendar to see that the day was
Friday or any other named day of the week. We should not allow a wrong way by
thinking in terms of our named days of the week to reach a verdict on what date of the
month is to be for the Crucifixion. Finding a correct day of the week is a marginal
importance and not essential for following through the biblical narrative.

[Note: References are quoted for the materials I have found useful, not only to solve
problems but also to find challenges and raise questions. Not all things written there are
relevant to the topics under the discussion here. Not all written statement can be correct,
right, or accurate. The readers are to exercise their own judgment to make use of them.]

With not a few tasks to confront, which all are interlinked and tend to be
dovetailed, only after we take on the first thing first, then we should be able to
settle on what should have been only secondary issues. We are to take up different
competing and conflicting scenarios of the Crucifixion day Friday, Thursday,
and Wednesday (with Saturday dawn or Saturday afternoon resurrection). Each
tends to attack the problems which are not substantial but ghosts as result of
misunderstanding of the biblical terms and expression along with blinded
misinterpretation of the biblical texts. Not only we have to deal with bits, but also
to take methodically sound approach in order to bring all to the common ground
of understanding and knowledge.

It is not enough to keep emphasizing that what counts is not what day in the week
on which the Crucifixion falls. It is what date in the month Abib that matters. We
should find and construct the correct timeline of the biblical Passion Week, not
the liturgical Holy Week of the church tradition.

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The chronological and timeline issues:

(1) the year of the crucifixion and the duration of His ministry CE 30 and
three years. This paper does not have space for this. The year 33, which is
actually to justify the idea of Friday for the crucifixion theory, is not worthy
of consideration);
(2) the date Abib 14th of the crucifixion. Was it Wednesday Thursday, or
Friday in that year CE 30? This question is a contentious issue, but matters
only from a church liturgical aspect. It is not really of any importance in
following the Passion week narrative.
(3) the timeline of the Passion-Passover week day by day, especially the date
and time of the Pilates sentencing (Jn 19:14 sixth hour not on Abib 14,
but Abib 13 see preparation) to keep it in harmony with the timeframe
when Yeshua was on the Cross (from third Mk 15:25, through sixth 15:33,
to ninth hour 15:34). This latter gives a clue that the Trial should be place
the day before Crucifixion and consequently to debunk the absurd traditional
allocation of quite a number of event from His Arrest to Sentencing
impossible in a short overnight period. [See details to follow below.]

Many issues, question and problems are interlinked. Unless we deal with them in
totality, it is futile to tackle each of them as if they stand alone. The day and date
problem are unsolvable without understanding of the proper biblical calendar,
setting aside the rabbinic Jewish and the Gregorian calendation. Without careful
and unbiased scrutiny of the time related expression in the Passion narrative, all
that has come out is the product of conjectures, unproven hypotheses, and
unsupported illogical arguments. a

The task presented here is not just to give correct answers, but to show
how to think and how to deal with the wrong positions and approaches
and unconvincing arguments.

a
E.g. taking absence of evident as the evidence of absent. That there has not been found any
evidence in the writings in the
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What are the issues in controversy?

A list of major issues with confusions and questions

(1) on the date and day of the Crucifixion, and


(2) on the timeline of the Passion week
The dates and the timeline are of great importance for anyone who reads the Bible, as they are
often confronted with the liturgical Holy Week, which stands independent of the biblical
narrative. While the day of the week is of importance only for the church liturgy and religious
tradition,

The great hindrance to a logical approach with common sense to rely to have
the Scripture give solutions is lack of knowledge on the calendar systems. Those
theological and scholarly traditions often tend to hinder rather than to help, with
a plethora of conjectures, some are palatable and some are outrageous.

Was it in 30, 31 or 33 CE?

It was 30 CE. This a chronology-related issue.

Was it Nisan 14th or Nisan 15th?

It was Abib 14th (Nisan 14th), the Pesach day. a A timeline issue
of a daytime event.

The is no room for confusion when Abib dates of the biblical lunar calendar
are used. However, a great confusion exits regarding which date Nisan 14th
or 15th is for the Jewish Passover. b This also contributed unnecessary
confusion of the nature of the Last meal, what date, with some misreading it
as the Pesach meal. Even the date of Crucifixion (Nisan 14th vs. 15th) gets
mixed up because of this. It is a confused calendar issue is confounded by
the unbiblical practice in the rabbinic Jewish calendar which reckons a day
to start at sunset. In addition, though it is a luni-solar calendar, it mixes with
elements of Gregorian solar calendar system (e.g. solar week), thus

a
Abib 14 = Nisan 14 for the daytime event. It was not Friday.
b
John Meier (1991), A Marginal Jews p. 389.
the day for the Passover meal was held in the evening after sundown (of the Nisan
14). The sabbath which followed was the 16th of Nisan. In Johns reckoning,
therefore, Thursday as the 13th of Nisan up until sunset; the Last Supper was held as
the 14th of Nisan began and so was not a Passover meal; Jesus was crucified, died,
and was buried on a Friday that was the 14th of the Nisan up until sunset; and Passover
Day began with the Passover meal at sunset on Friday, as the 15th of Nisan began.
Here in this typical confusing argument on the Nisan 14th vs. 15th, the author unfortunately
labelled Nisan 15th as Passover Day proper, which by itself is a confusing inappropriate term.
All such confused ideas of Jewish Nisan 14th vs. 15th is fundamentally caused by the rabbinic
Jewish calendar with a sunset-to-sunset day.
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confusing itself about which date is which. [See under *14th or 15th for
Passover]

Where does the Bible tell when was the Crucifixion date? It is Mk 15:42
which says the preparation day, that is sabbath eve. a

The biblical sabbath (in contrast to Jewish sabbath) is not related to Saturday
of the solar week. The [sabbath] preparation day is on day 6 of the lunar
week, not related to Friday. Nor this text means that the Last Supper took
place Thursday on the evening before His death. To find on what day of
the solar week in the proleptic Gregorian calendar would be the Crucifixion
date is not much of a biblical issue, but of the tradition and liturgy of the
Christian churches. For that matter, we simply need to know what biblical
calendar and how the biblical narrative followed in the Passion Week.

Gods Anointed One would voluntarily lay down His life at the appointed
time to die the death by crucifixion for the sins of man (Rm 5:6), His
death on any day other than the Pesach day is biblically useless and destroys
the typology of the very Pesach lamb of Elohim (Jn 1:29, 36) as Pesach
sacrifice (1Co 5:7) delivered into the hands of men (Mk 9:31), men of
outcast sinners (Lk 24:7), been rejected by and suffered many things from
the Elders and chief kohanim and soferim (Mt 16:21; Mt 8:31; Lk 9:22).

The central teaching of the N.T. on who Yeshua is (1) the Incarnate Logos
of the Elohim (not God incarnate), (2) Mashiah, the one-and-only Son of
the Elohim, and (3) Mashiah our Pesach sacrifice all through the infinite
Love of the Creator. He came to lay down himself to be what He was and
to become who He will be the believers of the redemptive of the Elohim.
That Yeshua had Pesach meal on the day before His crucifixion is what
came out of the scholars ignorant and ignoring such central teachings
myopically focused on the bible verses here and there, without ability to see
in the context and with the whole Passion Week narrative.

Was it Friday the day of His Crucifixion?

If we say His death was on Good Friday we are church


jargon, as the bible does not have such a vocabulary of Gregorian
named days of the week. Biblically the word does not mean a thing,
be it Friday, Saturday or Sunday! Most are ignorant that the calendar
system in the Bible is not the Gregorian one which was after 1582
EC and not even the rabbinic Jewish calendar. The calendar used by
Romans in 1st century was Julian calendar with 8-day week!

a
Other Gospels express the same basic idea but in a more diffuse way:
Mt 27:57 when evening came Mt 27:62 Next day, when is [the day] after the day of
the preparation.
Lk 23:54 this had been the day of sabbath-preparation and there sabbath day was coming
to dawn. Lk 23:56 after they returned to their lodging they rested on the Sabbath
according to the commandment.
Jn 19:31. since it was sabbath-preparation [next day],
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With the accurate astronomical data available for dates of the
astronomical new moon days (i.e. of conjunction) we then have to
determine when is the first day of the first month (i.e. the New Moon
Day) of the biblical year. Depending on how it is to be determined,
the date itself may be off one day. In 30 CE, it would fall on Thursday
(Apr 6) or Wednesday (Apr 5). [Not to be automatically concluded with
Wednesday or Thursday scenarios, for which have various timeline in which
the whole week is involved.]

When the Gregorian calendar is in mind while reading the Bible, its
vocabulary leads to confusion, conflicts and contradictions on the narrative
timeline. Day 7 of the biblical lunar week in the bible is mistaken as
Saturday, the vocabulary which is both Jewish and Gregorian, to be the
day of Sabbath for them. Thus, Crucifixion was then put on Friday, which
is the day before sabbath. Proper understanding of various calendar systems
should show that the lunar and the solar weeks are not same. Gregorian
vocabulary actually hinders to clear grasping of the biblical narrative, just
as with the rabbinic Jewish calendar.

How and why should we find the correct day?

This requires to read the Passion-Passover Week with the calendar


used in the Bible, not with the Gregorian calendar overlaid with the rabbinic
Jewish calendar.

We only have to align the dates on the true biblical calendar with a
proleptic Gregorian calendar to see what [named] day of the [solar] week it
falls on, as if this is essential to know the understand the biblical narratives.

The timeline in the Passion-Passover week should not be read with non-
biblical calendars, as is with the case of the Church Liturgical Holy Week
with unbiblical vocabulary of Friday, Saturday, Sunday, etc.

When does a day begin, at sunrise or sunset in the Bible?

A day is that which begins at sunrise. Not to be confused with


Jewish calendar reckoning of a day (as a calendar date) to start at
sunset. Even with the Gregorian calendar a day does begin at
sunrise, but a calendar day is reckoned to start at 12 A.M.

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Can the rabbinic Jewish calendar be used in for the biblical times?

No. It was only from 4th century CE and not in the Bible (after
Hillel II, 358/359 CE).

An outlandish claim was proposed that there were two calendar systems
being used in CE 30 and diffident groups of people were observing two
occasions of Pesach, one day apart. a

How did we get the traditional Friday crucifixion scenario?

Not based on the biblical calendar. Its simply a result of


following the Jewish convention of Sabbath from evening of Friday to
evening of Saturday; on the 7th day of the solar week was taken as
Saturday, not based on the Biblical calendar system.

After reading the biblical statement that the Crucifixion was on the before
sabbath, preparation day, they wrongly interpreted it as Friday. Sabbath
is Saturday for them, and the 1st day of their week is Sunday, which is taken
as the day of His resurrection. The Bible does not say the day was Sunday,
but plainly says His resurrection was on Day 1 of the (lunar) week in the
dawn.

Was the Last Supper of Yeshua the Passover meal?

No, as it is plainly shown in G-John. It was a special fellowship supper


for farewell and teaching on Abib 12. The confusion with the Pesach
meal of Yehudim of Abib 14th Pesach. is one of the major causes of a
number of misunderstanding of the biblical text (of the Synoptic Gospels)
and a variety of the Passion Week timeline schemes.

The special occasion where He was going to use the common bread and
the fruit of vineyard (wine) to explain the significance of what he was
about to accomplish on the cross on the appointed time of the death of
the Mashiah, the Pesach day. His death on any day other than the
Pesach day is biblically impossible and meaningless. However, absence
essential components of the Pesach meal, such as unleavened bread
(matzah), bitter herbs (maror), and lamb roasted whole (with none of its
bones unbroken) tell us simply and plainly that the Last Supper was not
and was not meant to be the Pesach meal.

a
. Hoehner (pp. 84, 90-91) describes Billerbecks fanciful theory that the Galileans (incl. Jesus
and His disciples) reckoned a day of sunrise-to-sunrise while the Judean reckoned sunset-to
sunset. Both calendars were used at the same time, so that there were two consecutive days for
Passover observed by two different people groups!!
15 | P a g e
What is the main issue of concern? To see the day is correctly on a certain day of
the week, e.g. Friday Crucifixion or not? It would be something of importance
only for the tradition of Church liturgy. All of this is actually a non-issue, however,
for those who reads the Bible and want to follow the biblical narrative.

What we need and we have to concerned with is to find a correct and accurate
timeline out of the biblical texts, armed with the knowledge of calendar systems,
with the biblical lunar calendar to be used to read the Bible, not the rabbinic Jewish,
neither Gregorian calendar. These have been actually causing confusion, conflict,
and contentions, including some incredulous absurdity.

Why and what confusion and conflict regarding the Passion Week narrative?

1. Most are not aware that is not the traditional rabbinic Jewish calendar is not
the calendar system used in the Bible.

In reading the Bible, one should always think in terms of the biblical lunar
calendar, which is so unlike our calendars which are for civil, astronomic,
or religious use. We are to understand the calendar systems without
preconceived ideas and to have a clear idea on the one used in the Scripture. a

2. Year as in the Bible is solar (as in Roman calendar), but Biblical month is
lunar. Hence, luni-solar calendar (same as in rabbinic Hebrew).

3. Day as in the Bible is that which begins at sunrise. It means a daylight period
[Gen 1:5a <Elohim called the light period day and the darkness period
night.>; Jn 11:19 twelve hours in the day]. It is sometimes used in the
sense of a calendar day. b

It is in this sense that a day is reckoned to start at different time depending


on the calendar systems. It is at sunrise in the Biblical calendar, but it is at
midnight c in Roman calendar and, at sunset in the rabbinic Jewish calendar,
which was Greek on origin. [See in the file Walk through the Scripture #1
for day. When does a day begin?]
d
4. Hour as in the Bible means an hour period on a sundial, not oclock.

5. Week as in the Bible is lunar. A full week has seven numbered days (1st to
7th). In the Gregorian and Jewish calendars, they are solar week, cyclic and
continuous.
a
It actually hinders to use a proleptic Gregorian calendar and its vocabulary to correctly follow the
timeline in the biblical texts.
b
[day + night = corresponding to the present 24-hour day], especially for counting-off days.
c
[currently at 12 A.M., which is not same as midnight.]
d
E.g. in Jn 19:14 sixth hour is counted from sunrise, about 11 a.m. to noon. It is not 6 a.m. Even in
the early Roman calendar whether a day was reckoned to start at mid-night or sunrise, the hour was
counted from sunrise and sunset. [The date cannot be on the day of the Crucifixion to contradict Mk
15:25 (it was then the third hour-period and they crucified him.) Mk 15:33 (And when the sixth hour
had come, there was darkness )]
16 | P a g e
In the truly biblical lunar calendar, the weeks are not continuous and non-
cyclic. In any lunar month, there are 4 full weeks of 7 days a, with four days
of Sabbath (Sabbath). It is on day 7 of the full lunar week (on Day 8, 15, 22
and 29).

Then seventh day in the lunar week is not related and do not correspond to
Saturday of the solar week of our Gregorian Roman calendar. Equating Day
7 of the week to Saturday as well as sabbath preparation day (= sabbath
eve = on Day 6) to Friday is one of the main source of errors in following
the timelines of the biblical narratives. Another serious error is 24-hour
sabbath keeping (from sunset). The sabbath rest is only for day time period;
day in a sabbath day means same as any other way it is used, that is,
daylight period, not a calendar day of 24 hours.

The days of the week are not named in the bible. Sunday, Monday, etc. of
the named days of the Gregorian week are not in the biblical vocabulary.
Sunday is not equated to day one of the lunar week; Saturday is not to
day 7. Of course, when we align two calendar systems, a certain date in the
biblical narrative might be found to fall coincidently on a certain named day
of the solar week on a proleptic Gregorian calendar. b

6. Sabbath as in the Bible is on Day 7 of the biblical lunar week. It does not
correspond to the sabbath for Sabbatarians and Jewish kept on the 7th day of
the solar week, that is, on Saturday. There is only one sabbath day in a lunar
week of the Scripture. The first days of several 7-day long Festivals are always
on the weekly sabbath day called High Sabbath (Jn 19:31)

The day of Resurrection in CE 30 was at the end of the day one of the lunar week
in the dawn (in the latter part of fourth watch of the night, before sunrise).

Precious determination of the actual Crucifixion date in a proleptic Gregorian


calendar is not possible as we need to have a Biblical Lunar calendar to follow the
chronological Passion Week timeline. How the calendar of a month is made
precisely is dependent on calendation of how the first day is determined [Hence
CE 30 for Abib 14th on Apr 5 (Wed) or Apr 6 (Thu)]. See below in the Appendix:
<Apr-5 Wed or Apr-6 Thu?> below under the section of <Biblical Lunar Calendar
System>.]

On what named day of the Gregorian week was the day of the Crucifixion? This
issue is of no importance in the biblical narratives, but actually it hinders to follow

a
Four full weeks of 7 days: 1st week (2nd to 8th day); 2nd week (9th to 15th); 3rd week (16th to 22nd);
4st week (23rd to 29th). 1st day (of New Moon Day) and 30th day (a transitional day) of a month are
not sabbath days, nor week days.
b
Which day is the first day of a week in a calendar? Despite of Sunday being included in the notion
of weekend in English, most of us takes Sunday itself as the first day in the calendar, whereas in some
cultures it is Monday that is the first day of the week.
17 | P a g e
them correctly. It remains to be an issue, but only for Church tradition and
liturgical purpose.

Even if the dates in the biblical times can be accurately determined proleptically with
Gregorian calendar without a single day in error, that itself wont be much use. It would
only give some help in following the timeline of the narratives in the Scripture.

The liturgical Holy Week of Constantine Catholic Church tradition is not same as
the Biblical Passion Week. The date of Easter Sunday is arbitrarily determined by
the Church authority without being chronologically and historical/y related to
Pesach (Passover) week.

18 | P a g e
A. Summary of Calendar Issues
1. The most important thing is to understand difference of three calendar systems.
The rabbinic Jewish calendar is not a biblical calendar. People tends to bring a
non-biblical Roman calendar itself into the Biblical text and thereby are misled to
come up with wrong timelines. When we try to follow the timeline of the biblical
narratives, it should be read firmly with the Biblical Lunar calendar as a guide.
2. We have to pay careful attention to several points on the differences among
calendar systems. Whether it is in reference to a daylight period or a date on a
calendar), the word day in the Scripture is that which begins at sunrise. a A
different convention may be in different calendar systems to reckon a day to start
at different point of time: e.g. at 12 a.m. (as in Gregorian calendar), at sunset (as
in the rabbinic Jewish calendar which was from the Greek origin). In these cases,
it is in the sense of calendar day that the word day is use.
3. The numbered days of the week in the Bible is of the lunar week. It is does not
correspond to the notion of solar week used in two other calendar systems. Seventh
day (of Sabbath) is not related to Saturday and the Day 1 of the lunar week is
one is not related to the first day of the Gregorian week, Sunday. b

4. Nisan is the 7th month of the year in the rabbinic Jewish calendar with its calendar
day reckoned from sunset to sunset. [To say a day begins at evening or at sunset
is a simply illogical expression.] Abib is the 1st month of the year in Biblical
Lunar calendar with a day from sunrise to sunrise. The month of Abib/Nisan falls
in March to April of the Julian calendar. c
[As Abib and Nisan dates are off 12 hours, day time events do not cause problems
since they are on the same date. However, night time events are one different date
one-day late on Nisan.]

5. The Biblical Lunar calendar is essential in understanding and following the


narrative timelines in the Bible correctly and accurately without confusion and
contradiction. d For resolving the Passion Week Chronology controversy, only a
few points from the biblical calendation is sufficient to keep in mind:
(1) a biblical day begins at sunrise with morning coming, not at sunset,
(2) a biblical week is a lunar week; its numbered days do not correspond to the
named days of the solar week in Gregorian calendar, and
(3) a biblical Sabbath is Day 7 of the lunar week, which does not correspond to
Saturday, the 7th day of the solar week. (Cf. a rabbinic Jewish sabbath is from
Friday sunset to Saturday sunset.)

a. Sunrise is a day-break. Cf. dawn vs. dusk = twilights. dawn is the last part of a night (fourth watch of
the night). Cf. www.differencebetween.com/difference-between-dusk-and-vs-dawn; Cf. Different expressions of
different meaning - morning breaking at dawn break at dawn day is dawning).
b The terms, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, etc. are of a non-biblical vocabulary by used in the church liturgical Holy

Week. The traditional Friday crucifixion scenario is not true to the Bible, creating confusion and contradictions.
[Even the year CE 33 was determined as the Crucifixion year that the year had the Passover Day on Friday! It is
like putting the cart before the horse.]
c [Gregorian date = Julian date 2 (from 100 BC to100 CE). Julian dates are used throughout this file on Passion-

Passover Week Chronology.]


d
For the list of reference www.hope-of-israel.org/godscal.htm
19 | P a g e
Abib vs. Nisan
In order to clearly follow the timelines of the biblical narratives, it is not just useful,
but also essential to think of in terms of the true biblical calendar. The name of the
first month is Abib with all other months being numbered, not named.
It corresponds to Nisan, 7th month, of the rabbinic Jewish calendar. It is by a different
calendation and fixed by Hillel II in 4th century. This non-biblical calendar cannot be
applied proleptically to the Biblical times. Moreover, more disturbingly, its calendar
day is reckoned to start at sunset in such a way that events occurring during night in
the narrative is difficult place in correct and clear timeline.

Likewise, it is essential to simply follow the events in Abib dates, instead of the
Gregorian named days of the week. Sunday, Saturday, Friday, etc. of the solar week
cannot be applied to the biblical texts meaningless and misleading. It is a different
matter of comparing a particular day on both calendars.

[It pays to study the calendar system problems think always with Abib instead of Nisan
to read Biblical narratives.]

20 | P a g e
www.avoiceinthewilderness.org/saccal/calbook.html
Mar April Abib Nisan a

Calendar Biblical Lunar Calendar Rabbinic Jewish


Month 1st month of the year b 7th month of the year

Day Sunrise to sunrise Sunset to sunset c


1st day With dawning after Dark Moon. Fixed by calculation and rules
Full moon On 14th On 15th (variable)
Lunar sabbath Solar sabbath
(for daylight period). (for night and day time)
Sabbath
On day 7 (of the lunar week); On every Saturday (of the
Always on Day 8, 15, 22, 29. continuous cyclic solar week)

Biblical narratives cannot be clearly followed with the rabbinic Jewish


calendar, which came out in 4th century.
It is essential to think always with Abib instead of Nisan to avoid confusion,
conflict and contradiction. Date on Nisan and Abib do not match as both are of
different calendation. A Gregorian date may fall on the different month/date on the
biblical lunar calendar and the proleptic rabbinic Jewish calendar.
Nisan dates, 12 hours ahead of Abib dates, as shown here for discussion of the
Passion Week chronology in IRENT, are for comparison purpose only and may or
may not be actual dates.

A calendar date
Month of Half-day point
A day of date Difference
@
Nisan is reckoned from sunset 6 hrs ahead at sunrise
March April$ is reckoned from 12 a.m. at 12 p.m. d
Abib begins at sunrise 6 hrs behind at sunset
@
A Nisan date is 12 hours ahead of the corresponding an Abib date. For daytime it is same
date in both Abib and Nisan; for night-time, Nisan is one day ahead. E.g.
Abib 14th daytime for the Crucifixion = Nisan 14th daytime
Abib 14th evening for the Pesach meal = Nisan 15th evening for Jewish Seder.
Abib 16th dawn (before day-break of Abib 17th) = Resurrection
Abib 17th morning the Risen Lord to the disciples on Abib 17th morning.
$ of Gregorian calendar [ = Common Era Calendar with a day of 12 a.m. to 12 a.m.]

a
All Nisan dates are for comparison purpose only.
b
See Appendix how does the first month begin
c
See Appendix When does a day begin. A day-long activity was described in O.T. to have begun
at sunset. That should not make believe that a day was then being reckoned sunset to
sunset! (E.g. Lev 23:32). Regrettably and confusingly, this sunset-to-sunset notion remains in the
otherwise true biblical luni-solar calendar (e.g. in www.yhrim.com )
d 12 p.m. is not identical to midday (noon) which is the mid-point of daytime when the sun is at
highest point. Nor the midnight is 12 a.m. Reckoning events in the night gets easily confused because
the date changes past 12 p.m.
21 | P a g e
A diagram of day

[There should be no zero hour. hour


on the yellow dot is actually hour period as corrected placed by arrows.]
Edited on the diagram from www.thecreatorscalendar.com/day-genesis-genesis-1-1-5/

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/14/Ancient_Roman_time_kee
ping_hora_vigilia_equinox_solstice.svg

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_timekeeping#cite_note-5

22 | P a g e
Sunrise, morning, sunset, evening; dust and dawn; forenoon and afternoon; midday;
and midnight.
[Cf. *evening = Heb. ereb and Gk. opsias (Mk 15:42 etc.); opse. A few examples of
hesperan (Lk 24:29; Act 4:3; 28:23)]
[cf. midday noon, high noon. Cf. noon time (or noon hour) = 12 P.M.]

23 | P a g e
B. Summary on Terminology
General terms:

*Entombment; burial; anointing;

*secondary burial in ossuaries: This practice involved collecting the deceaseds bones and
placing them inside an ossuary after the flesh had been left to decompose and desiccate. The
ossuary was then placed into a loculus.
www.jesusfamilytomb.com/back_to_basics/burial_practices/jewish_law.html

*shroud burial clothes


*tomb, grave, memorial-tomb

Time-related terms:
day; date; dawn; twilights morning and evening; midnight and
midday; hour-period vs. hour; week; month.

[See the detail cover in the IRENT Vol. III Supplement, the file Walk through the
Scripture 5 Time, Calendar, and Chronology.]
The common time-related terms used in the Scripture have meanings different from what
they are in English usage:
A biblical day is that which begins at sunrise with coming of morning, and it is how
people of every linguistic and cultural background do naturally experience. This is how the
word is used in the Bible throughout. Usually it refers to the daylight period between
sunrise and sunset (= dawn to dusk). Syn. daytime (Ko. ). It is distinguished from
night. The word is sometimes used in the sense of a calendar day (as of a date on a
calendar with a day + a night) a (Ko. ). [*night is that which begins at sunset with coming
of evening (Gk. opsias; Heb. ereb).]

A 24-hour day may be reckoned to start at various time point. The present universal
Gregorian calendar reckons to start at 12 A.M. b which is not same as midnight which is
at midpoint between the sunset to sunrise. Reckoning events occurring in the night is
confusing because the date changes past 12 p.m.

In the rabbinic Jewish calendar (since 4th c. CE) it is reckoned to start at sunset with a
careless reading of Gen 1:3-5 which serves as proof-text. Such erroneous idea has a serious
biblical and practical implication, including confusion when following timelines in the
Biblical narratives found. c

a Day as 24-hour day, which does not exist in the biblical world, is a term for unit of time in physics, corresponding
to a rotation of the earth on its axis (solar day). Cf. civil day. Note: 12 a.m. is not same as midnight. 12
p.m. is not identical to midday (noon) which is the mid-point of daytime when the sun is at highest point.
b [Cf. Local time zone vis--vis UTC. The problem with a single time zone for a large country like China; in

contrast to the problem with multiple time zones for a large country like USA.]
c Note that the difference between Abib and Nisan date is not just 12 hours, but date for the daylight period may

not same, since the first date of the Abib (1st month of the biblical year) and of Nisan (7th month of the Jewish year)
are determined differently.
24 | P a g e
In the Bible, hour is not used as the duration of 60 minutes. It is not the hour on the clock,
but an hour-period which is 1/12 of a day (or a night). a [E.g. Sixth hour on a sundial is an
hour period before midday (noon; not 12 P.M.). Third hour is the period of time on a
sundial 8 to 9 a.m. It does not mean 9 on the clock.]

A biblical week is a lunar week, not a solar week [which is for Gregorian calendar and
for rabbinic Jewish calendar]. Unlike cyclic continuous solar weeks. The weeks in the
Biblical Lunar calendar are discontinuous and non-cyclic. The 7-numbered days of the
lunar week are independent of the 7-named days of the Gregorian week. b Note: a week in
early Julian calendar has 8 days (labeled A to H), not 7days.

Month in the Scripture is a lunar month (29 or 30 days); with its first day to begin a
month with new moon [which literally means new month]. [See References on Moon
Phase]

After dark moon c (which occurs at lunar conjunction and may be precisely determined
by astronomical calculation), the crescent of the rebuilding (waxing) moon light then
becomes visible [how many hours later?]. Thus, full moon is on the Abib 14th (Nisan
15th) of the lunar month.
Using the dawn after conjunction for ones specific location is the only method to be
used for the New Moon of the month with Day 1 to begin with sunrise. d The First
Visible Crescent vs. First Dawn After Conjunction method:
www.worldslastchance.com/yahuwahs-calendar/new-moon-day-the-dawn-
after-conjunction.html New Moon Day: The Dawn After Conjunction [Note:
the article says Beginning a Day at Dawn (as opposed to sunrise?).]
It is NOT the day after the first visible crescent of the moon. But the only lunar
phase can be the New Moon is the moment immediately following the dark
phase, otherwise called astronomical New Moon, or conjunction.
https://youtu.be/tZGkk3yahAU How to Identify New Moon Day
www.worldslastchance.com/luni-solar-calendar-guide.html
https://youtu.be/qTvN7Sxhgxg
Calculating Conjunction: No Computer? No Problem!

a The length of a biblical hour that is, hour-period varies since the daylight period by itself varies according to the
latitude and the season.
b
Moreover, some countries have other than Sunday as the first day of their week e.g. Saturday in
Arabic usage; Monday in Eastern Asia and European countries. [ www.cjvlang.com/Dow/SunMon.html]
c
= so-called astronomical new moon
d
[Some makes a bizarre claim that it is the day of full moon that should be taken as the New Moon day
(1st) of the month!!]
25 | P a g e
Dawn a = dawn-watch = The last fourth watch of the night, dawn-watch, belongs to the last part
of a night in the Scripture. (1Chr 23:30-31 dawn and dusk). Cf. The phrase early morning
should be located in the first half of the period from sunrise to noon (about 6 to 9 a.m.);
forenoon is a period before the noon from morning [break].

Morning twilight (dawn) before sunrise vs. Evening twilight (dusk) after sunset.
dawn vs. dusk = twilights. dawn is the last part of a night (fourth watch of the night). Cf.
www.differencebetween.com/difference-between-dusk-and-vs-dawn;

To grasp the Passion narrative clearly it is essential to follow its internal timeline in the
Scriptural narrative, which should be followed with the Biblical Lunar calendar. One
cannot mix it up with external timeline using the Gregorian calendar system without
getting bogged down with confusion. With Rabbinic Jewish calendar (with sunset-to-
sunset reckoning) there is one more degree of complexity.

(To align the Biblical Lunar calendar of 30 CE with a proleptic Gregorian calendar
cannot be accurately made, since the assumptions used to calculate in constructing our
modern calendar system may not be same as those used by the people in the ancient times
where it was an observational calendar system they used, not a calculated calendar
system (astronomical and data and mathematical calculation) as we do have now. All we
can say, as is now, that the day of Pesach Abib 14th of 30 CE for the Crucifixion date
is to fall either on Wednesday (with the Resurrection on Saturday dawn, not at evening)
or on Thursday (with Resurrection on Sunday dawn).

If Sunday is the day of His Resurrection, the day of His crucifixion cannot be on Friday,
but Thursday. If Friday was for the crucifixion, His resurrection cannot be on Sunday,
but Monday. Biblical narrative in the Passion Week should not be confused with the
traditional liturgical Holy Week of Constantine Catholic Church tradition.

a
Cf. various expressions of different meaning - morning breaking at dawn break at dawn day is
dawning). Cf. in the dawn vs. at dawn since dawn is not a point of time, but a short period (until
sunrise toward the end of the pre-dawn watch (=fourth watch) of the night.
26 | P a g e
Biblical special terms:
sabbath (> sabbath); 7th day of the week; preparation; festival vs.
feast; Pesach, Pesach day, Pesach festival; unleavened bread;
Festival of the matzah (festival of the unleavened bread);

Sabbath; High Sabbath


(Biblical lunar) Sabbath is on Day 7 of the lunar week. There is only one sabbath
day in a 7-day long week, on its seventh day.

In 7-day long Festivals, such sabbath of Day 7 always fall on the first day of the
Festival, and thus it is called High Sabbath [Heb. Sabbath ha-Gadol, great
sabbath], not because it is another different or a doubled-up sabbath. (Cf.
www.triumphpro.com/jesus-in-grave-new-truth.htm)

That there were two different (kinds of) sabbath days in the Passover week, one
is weekly and another is annual, is simply from ignorance on the biblical calendar;
it was used to explain away the problem on timeline on the Passion week for
various Crucifixion scenarios.

This should not be confused with nonbiblical solar Sabbat of Saturday (of Jewish
and other Sabbatarians).
Solar sabbath (Jewish) Saturday (from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset).
Lunar sabbath daytime of Abib 8. sabbath in the biblical lunar calendar is
unrelated to and does not corresponds to Saturday
High Sabbath (Day 7 of the lunar week on the first day of the 7-day long festival)
daytime Abib 15th.

Weekly sabbath is unrelated to the only annual sabbath rest on Yom Kippur (Day of
Atonement). [There is no such thing called annual sabbath as if a separate and
different one exists in the Passover Week.

(Cf. Lev 16:31 sabbathh sabbathhon) Day of the Atonement the only
annual Holy day, which can be rightly called an annual Sabbath.
The term sabbathhon in Lev 23:24 and 39 is applied to the Day of the Trumpets
and to the first and last days of Succoth, respectively, but they are not a Sabbath
Sabbathon as is the weekly Sabbath and the Day of Atonement. [Finch, The
Passover Papers, p. 148]

7th day of the lunar week vs. 7th day of the solar week

The Julian week at the time of the Crucifixion was an eight-day week system (nundinal
cycle) and cannot be equated with the Biblical week and the modern week.
What is called Saturday Sabbath (7th day of the solar week) has nothing to do with the
biblical seventh-day Sabbath (day 7 of the lunar week). This fundamentally faulty conviction
that their assumption that the sixth day of the Biblical week was identical to Friday is one of
several fatal causes of chronological confusion. This feeds back to find some text verses
interpreted to support their position.

27 | P a g e
As to the 14th of lunar months in the Scripture is always the sixth day of the lunar week,
which is the preparation day for sabbath which is on Day 7 for every month in the biblical
lunar calendar.

*preparation:

paraskeu S3904. x 6
preparation as preparation of sabbath: [Abib 14]

Mk 15:42 [Abib 14] it was preparation, that is sabbath-eve (prosabbaton).


Lk 23:54 [Abib 14] day was of preparation and Sabbath was coming on.
Jn 19:31 [Abib 14] it was preparation (of Abib 15 High Sabbath) - death of Yeshua
Jn 19:42 [Abib 14] the preparation of the Yehudim -/Jewish day of Preparation;
/xxx: the day of preparation for the Jewish Passover - NLT; to entomb
Mt 27:62 [Abib 15] after the preparation request for Roman guard.

preparation as preparation of Pesach (day)

Jn 19:14 it was preparation of the Pesach - sixth hour - Pilate's sentencing.

It is Abib 13 = Erev Pesach (Pesach eve) of Abib 14 Pesach day. When it is as usually
translated as preparation of the Passover, it is read by most preparation of Passover
Festival (= of Matzah), that is the preparation of Pesach festival sabbath. Such a
misreading put the day of this mid-day sentencing on Abib 14 (Passover day), same day
as for the crucifixion in the Synoptic Gospels (Mt 27:45; //Mk 15:33; //Lk 23:44) (=
Friday in their traditional crucifixion day scenario). They have no solution for such
discrepancy and have to leave the biblical texts contradictory. [See on significance of
Jn 19:14.]

feast or festival?

Two are distinguishable in English in different sense and usage. Note: KJV has no
festival in its vocabulary.

[see for detail in other Collection for Word Studies]

28 | P a g e
unleavened bread; Festival of the matzah vs. 'season of matzah eating':

unleavened bread [Heb. matzah, matzot (pl.)] [Gk. ta azuma (pl.)] [unleavened (=
not risen) means that bread is baked of freshly made dough without letting it ferment and
rise. It does not mean made with no yeast in it.]

Festival of the matzah (Heb. Chag haMatzot) a = synonymous with Festival of Pesach;
It lasts 7 days Abib 15th to 21th; no bread other than unleavened is allowed. b The
phrase appear x 4 in N.T.
Act 12:3; 20:6 during the days of the Matzah Festival.
Mk 14:1; the Pesach day and the Matzah festival
Lk 22:1 the Festival of the matzah, the one called Pesach, i.e. Pesach festival.

Note: Cf. Lk 22:7; //Mt 26:17 //Mk 14:12 This provides a very important time-marker for the
Passion week timeline. Most are not aware that the text does not have a word 'festival' and is
usually misread it as the first day of the Matzah Festival (which is Abib 15th the day after
Pesach of lamb sacrifice and the meal.
IRENT correctly translates as unleavened bread instead of unleavened bread festival and
moreover it renders as beginning instead of first as usually translated. This way we have
completely removed a source of confusion and contradiction in the Passion Week chronology
the beginning day for eating the unleavened bread (i.e. ~ of the season of matzah
eating), not the first day of the unleavened bread festival:
[www.truthsearch.org/ContentsFirstDayofUnleavenedBread.html (Juan R. Rains)!! See its
copy in WB #6 Collection for IRENT Vol. III <Problem of the First Day of Unleavened
Bread'>.]

a Heb. Chag Matzoth (Festival of unleavened bread). It has been variously translated Festival of the Unleavened
Bread NWT-4, NIV; Feast of Unleavened Bread ESV; feast of unleavened bread KJV. However, IRENT
translate consistently as Festival of the matzah and the phrase unleavened bread is used as in an idiomatic phrase,
which is eaten during the Pesach festival season, not necessarily for 7 days of the festival.
b
It necessarily requires to remove leaven from the house on the Pesach day (of sacrifice and meal, Abib
14th).
29 | P a g e
C. Events from Arrival at Bethany to Entombment:
Nisan in the manner of 7th month of rabbinic Hebrew calendar - sunset-to-sunset day.
Abib 1st month of the Scripture-based calendar with a day of sunrise-to-sunrise.

Flow of the events follows G-Mk with <Temple Incident>. Cf. G-Mt and G-Lk
place on the same day as <Jerusalem Entry> to affect the timeline to allow one
more full day for Sanhedrin II.
Flow of the events ( 17 to
21 ) Sanhedrin I (Interrogation) & II (judgment) and
E
A A
E
A

Pilate I & II more than one day for the Passion


long segments - interrupting the narrative flow. (Jn 12:20-36a; 36b-50; Jn 14:1
17:26)
Note: the events 4 to
A
E 9 are on the dates as read from G-Mk. G-Mt involves
A A
E
A

different dates for these (with G-Lk possibly similar to it), which can result in a different
timeline for the Passion Week from Abib 10 to Abib 12 in this reconstructed timeline!
See in the Table following, separates columns are made for G-Mt and G-Lk with
highlighted entries.

30 | P a g e
Table: List of 26 events from Arrival at Bethany to Resurrection:
(dates in Abib) Events
9 B-1
1 Arriving at Bethany [6 days before Pesach Festival (Abib 15)] (Jn 12:1)
A
E
A

B-2
2 Supper and Anointing (Jn +12:2-8) + Crowd came (Jn 12:9-11)
A
E
A

= [M-4
11 Anointing (Mk 14:3-9; Mt 26:6-13) (flashback)] A
E
A

B-3 3 Anti-triumphal Jerusalem Entry [Palm Day]


A
E
Pesach Lamb
A

10 (Mk 11:1-10; Mt 21:1-11; Lk 19:28-40, 41-44; Jn 12:12-19#);



A
4 Temple visit; return to Bethany (Mk +11:11)
E
A

B-4 5 Barren Fig Tree (Mk +11:12-14) E

11
A A

B-5 6 Temple Incident (Mk +11:15-19) 6 Mt +21:12-17 6 Lk +19:45-48



5 Mt +21:18-19
A
E
A

M-1
7 Withered Fig Tree (Mk +11:20-26)
A

7 Mt +21:20-22E
A
A
E
A

M-2
8 Confrontation & Teaching A
E
A

(Mk +11:27-33; 12:1-44; Mt +21:23 23:39; Lk +20:1 21:4)


12 M-3 Olivet Discourse (Mk +13:1-37; Mt +24:1 25:46; Lk +21:5-36)
9 A
E
A

D

10 [2 more days to Abib 14 (Pesach day) Mk 14:1a; Mt 26:1-2]
A
E
A

Yehudim plot (Mk +14:1b-2; Mt +26:3-5);


11 Anointing (Mk +14:3-9; Mt +26:6-13)] ( B2)
M-4 [ A
E
A


12 Judas (silver money) (Mk +14:10-11 //Mt +26:14-16; Lk +22:2-6)
A
E
A

M-5
13 Upper Room Preparation (Mk +14:12-16; Mt +26:17-19; Lk +22:7-13)
A
E
A

M-6 14 Last Supper (Mk +14:17-26; Mt +26:20-30; Lk +22:14-30; Jn 13:1-35)


A
E
A

<Kefas warned> (Mk +14:27-31; Mt +26:31-35; Lk +22:31-38; Jn +13:36-38)


12
15 Gethsemane (Mk +14:32-42; Mt +26:36-46; Lk +22:39-46; Jn 18:1)
A
E
A

N M-7
16 Arrest (Mk +14:43-52; Mt +26:47-56; Lk +22:47-53; 63-65; Jn +18:2-12)
A
E
A

M-8
17 Hannan (Jn +18:13-14Peter 18:19-24) (Mk Mt Lk )
A
E
A

M-9
18 Sanhedrin I (Mk +14:53-65; Mt +26:57, 59-68) (Lk )
A
E
A

<Kefas whereabouts> (Mk +14:54; Mt +26:58; Lk +22:54-55; Jn +18:15)


<Kefas denial> (Mk +14:66-72; Mt +26:69-74; Lk +22:56-62; Jn +18:16-18, 25-27)
M-10 19 Sanhedrin II (Mt 27:1-2; Mk +15:1a; Lk +22:66-71)
A
E
A

<Judas suicide> (Mt +27:3-10. Cf. Act 1:18-20)


13 M-1120 Pilate I (Lk +23:1-7); Herod Antipas (Lk +23:7-12);
A
E
A

M-12 21 Pilate II (Mt +27:11-26; Mk +15:1b-15; Lk +23:13-25; Jn 18:28 19:16@)


A
E
A

*** [In custody]


***
[To be continued on next page.]

31 | P a g e
[Continued:]

*** [In custody]


A-1
22 < Via Dolorosa>
A
E
A

Pesach Day
14 A-2
23 Crucifixion 3rd hour (Mk 15:25)
A
E
A

A-3
24 Death 9th hour (Mk 15:34; Mt 27:46)
A E A
Pesach Sacrifice
A-4
25
A
E
A Entombment evening into night; Pesach Meal

[High Sabbath] <Posting Roman guard> (Mt 27:62-66) Pesach Festival begins
15

[Wave sheaf of the Firstfruit]


16
A-5
26 Resurrection in the dawn
A
E
A

<to the Roman guard> (Mt 28:4, 11-15);


<to the Women> (Mt 28:5-10; Mk 16:9-11; Jn 20:11-18)
17 <on the road to Emmaus> (Lk 24:13-49; Mk 16:12-13)
<to the Eleven> (Mk 16:14-18) (Jn 20:19-25)

Events numbering and notation symbols


[Boxed letters, such as B, D, L, P-P, etc. are used in the tables]

Events numbering and notation symbols in the Charts


B for Beginning; M for Middle A for After
Lamb presented; taught Last Supper; Arrest; Trial Crucifixion; Death; Resurrection
B-1 <Bethany arrival> M-1 <fig tree withered> A-1 < Via Dolorosa, bearing the cross>
B-2 <Anointing G-Jn> (M-4) M-2 <Debate and Teaching> A-2; A-3 < - Crucifixion & Death>
M-3 <Olivet Discourse> A-4 <Entombed>; <P-m> Passover meal
M-4 <Anoint G-Mt, MK> (B-2)
B-3 < Palm day; & <Judas silver money>
Yerusalem Entry> <In the tomb>
M-5 <Upper Room Prep>
B-4 <Barren Fig tree > M-6 <Last Supper>
<Gethsemane> A-5 < Resurrection (dawn of Abib 16)
M-7 <Arrest> w/ Empty tomb (morning of Abib 17)
B-5 <Temple Incident> M-8 <Hannan>
& <Peters denials> A-6 <risen Lord> to the Disciples
M-9 <Sanhedrin I>
(, resurrection proposed
M-10 <Sanhedrin II> other than on Abib 16)
M-11 <Pilate I>
M-12 <Pilate II>
<In custody overnight>

32 | P a g e
D. Timelines of the Passion-Passover Week

All happened in one week,


that momentous events in the history.
[About the term Nisan: a In all the subsequent tables for the Passion-Passover
40F

week, the entry under Nisan is simply to show what it would have been when
a day was taken 12 hours ahead of an Abib date, in the way of the Jewish
reckoning of a day from sunset. See in detail for Abib vs. Nisan]

[It is the Passion-Passover Week to be known, rather than the Passion Week
since His Passion cannot be without being meshed in the Passover week on
that year.]

[For the Crucifixion and Resurrection dates, see below under the heading of
<Table for the list of scenarios>.]

The week called Passion Week, more accurate Passion-Passover Week for
which the church liturgical Holy Week is a pale resemblance. The anchoring
events in the timeline of the week, which allocates all the events in a coherent
timeline of the week:

(1) Abib 10 Palm Day with presentation of Yeshua as the Pesach lamb
(2) Abib 13 (= erev pesach Pesach eve) the trial by Pilate sentencing midday
(Jn 19:14)
(3) Abib 14 the Pesach lamb laying down Himself in the mid-afternoon at the
very appointed time by Elohim and
(4) Abib 15 High Sabbath, the first day of the Pesach Festival (of the matzah).
(5) Abib 16 (dawn, its closing part) the Resurrection. [Cf. the day of the Firstfruits
offering].
(6) Abib 17 the risen Lord to the disciples (morning & evening).

Aside from finding correct days on which the Crucifixion and Resurrection
fall, the more pressing need is to have the timeline of the Passion week
constructed out of the Gospel narratives. As we often do not clear-cut time
indicators to arrive at an unequivocal timeline, we have to accept some
variations (within different scenarios of crucifixion day) as long as these three
are fit in the timeframe from the Arrival at Bethany on Abib 9.

A Gospel book consists of His life teaching (with teaching, Gods mighty
works, and healing, and challenging and confronting the established religion

a
Nisan dates in all the Passion Week timelines the word has * are for comparison only. A
Nisan date is 12 hours ahead of Abib date. Its date itself, however, cannot be fixed since
calendation to locate the first day of this month in a proleptic rabbinic Jewish calendar is
different from Abib of the Biblical calendar.]

33 | P a g e
of that time) and the narrative of His life. One may say a Gospel is Jesus story.
But is it about Him? What about from and by Him and on Him? The first
division of the Gospel book deals with the His life teaching mostly. There is
the story of His nativity. By and large, narrative is not of its picture. However,
when we move into the second and final division we are presented by the
narrative of the Passion Week. It is the literary work of narrative genre par
excellence. It cannot be read properly and profitable with following its timeline
correct and accurate one, which is only feasible with the correct biblical lunar
calendar (the rabbinic Jewish calendar actually hinders for properly understand
the text).

The task for the readers is then how to grasp the whole picture of this week
with the timeline presented by the Gospel itself. As a practical purpose, it is
found to be very useful to divide the 9-day period in three segments, adding
Abib 9 & 17 to the Passion-Passover Week (Abib 10 to Abib 16).

First 3 days
Abib 9 (Anointing), Abib 10 (Palm Day), Abib 11 (Temple Incident)

Middle 2 days
Abib 12 (Olivet Discourse Last Supper) to Abib 13 (Trial)

Last 4 days
Abib 14 (Crucifixion), Abib 16 (Resurrection), Abib 17 (Risen Lord)

To revisit and construct the correct and accurate timeline of the Passion Week,
the first task is to deal with the last half from the Crucifixion to the
Resurrection. Once its timeline is fully grasped, unshackled from the frame of
the Church Holy Week, the clear picture is formed for the first half of the week
to the closing with the Trial. The crucial point here to realize is that (1) the
Crucifixion cannot be allocated on the same day as the sentencing by Pilate
and (2) the breath-taking run of quite a number of events from the Last Supper
to the Road to Golgotha cannot be squeezed into a short time-period of single
overnight from night to morning. The inevitable conclusion is that His trial
before Pilate cannot be other than on the day before the Crucifixion. That
means that the Last Supper itself is to be placed two days earlier (in terms of
Gregorian dates) than His Crucifixion. There wont be a day like the so-called
Silent Wednesday as in the Holy Week. [See a separate file in the Collection
#6 <Significance of John 19.14>.

We cannot discredit what the Bible tells for the several important time-
markers (time indicators) and leave them standing contradictory. We
cannot read and interpret the Bible to justify the tradition explanation of the
Church Holy Week timeline. A product of religious mind is not only useless
but also misleading.

34 | P a g e
List of the Charts in vertical and horizontal formats:
Below is a collection of several charts in tables in two formats:
[V -- in a vertical format and H -- in a horizontal format]

V-0 Horizontal Timeline: Seven days


from Arrival (9th) to Resurrection (16th Abib)
V-1 Last 3 days from Crucifixion (14th) to Resurrection (16th Abib)
H-0 Vertical Timeline from Arrival (9th) to Risen Lord (17th)
H-1 From Arrival (9th) to Crucifixion (14th)
H-2 From Crucifixion (14th) to Resurrection (16th)

Annotation to the charts:


L Last Supper (DoW 4); Trial (DoW 5)
A Arrest
S Sanhedrin
P-P Pilates trial
the bearing the cross to Golgotha
Crucifixion (3rd to 9th hour-period)
w.s. Wave sheaf offering
Resurrection in the dawn, Day 1 of the lunar week

Resurrection in the morning, Sunday


Resurrection in the evening
*** [from two-day Passion chronology = a day for Trial + next day Crucifixion]

[Boxed letters, such as B, D, L, P-P, etc. are used in the tables]

35 | P a g e
S-W a biblical Wednesday Crucifixion scenario (w/ Sat. dawn resurrection). CE 30 Abib 14
on Wed (Apr-5). Both and fell on Sat (sabbath??).
S-X a non-biblical Wednesday Crucifixion scenario. similar to S-W but with wrongly placed
in the late afternoon, ignoring the plain biblical statements.

S-T Thursday Crucifixion Scenario (w/ Sunday dawn resurrection). CE 30 Abib 14 on Thu
(Apr-6). Both and on Sundays. Difference of one day from S-W scenario is due to
determining the New Moon day ( For how the New Moon Day is determined, see IRENT Vol.
III Supplement - Walk through the Scripture 5 - Time, Calendar and Chronology.). A different
Thursday scenario is common one (See Boice, John - commentary) all the events Thu-Friday
night and Friday daytime (i.e.Last Supper/Arrest/Trial/Crucifixion/Death) are moved one day
backward and placed to Wed-Thu night and Thu daytime.
S-F Traditional Friday Crucifixion scenario with Sunday morning resurrection). CE 33. [The
Palm Sunday in the church liturgical Holy Week does not fall on Nisan/Abib 10! It is not possible
to see both and on the same day of the week (Sunday).]
(Blue colored Saturday as sabbath day as in the rabbinic Jewish convention).

The internal timeline within the Passion narrative shows


(1) Abib 14 (the preparation of sabbath) for Pesach sacrifice and Pesach meal;
(2) Abib 15 High Sabbath - (on Day 7 of the lunar week for daytime period only);
(3) Abib 16 as the Firstfruits (Day 1 of the lunar week)
(1Co 15:20, 23; Lev 23:10-12. Cf. Lev 23:20).
Day of Week = Numbered day of the lunar week (here, in the 2nd week of the month Abib).
The numbered Day of the Passion Week = Day No. of the lunar Week.
The date in April for Thursday scenario is same as the numbered Day of the Passion week.
Into such a short period of time ( ), so many events [from M-6 <
12 Last Supper> to M-
A E A

12 <
A21 Pilates sentencing>] are impossible to be crammed the fatal Achilles heel in the
E A

one-day Passion chronology. [Note: In Friday scenario, Last Supper is interpreted as the A-4
<Pesach Meal> in their poor understanding the Bible text.]. A few suggest unattainable three-
day Passion chronology by Annie Jaubert (1965) and (2) Eugene Ruckstuhl (1963) vide infra.

Mnemonic with initials of the words Mnemonic works only with a Thursday and the Friday
crucifixion scenarios only.
Sat for Start into Sun for Mounted on a colt into Mon for Temple
into Tue for WWW (withered, watch, wait; triple warnings) into Wed for Trial
into Thu for Final into Fri for Silent into Sat for Start into Sun for Meet.]

Day of the Week (DoW):


It is for the day of the lunar week (Day 1 to Day 7) and totally unconnected to the named
days of the Gregorian solar week.

In the Pesach week (the 2nd full week of Abib CE 30 day 2 to 8), the numbered Days
of a lunar week (Day 1 to Day 7, instead of Sunday to Saturday) correspond to the days
of the Passion week (1st day to 7th day before the resurrection on 8th day). This makes
it easier to grasp the narrative timeline.

36 | P a g e
First 3 Days of the Passion
Arrival 9th to Temple Incident (11th Abib)
B-1 Bethany Arrival; B-2 Anointing ( M-4)
B-3 Palm Day (Jerusalem Entry)
B-4 Barren fig tree; B-5 Temple Incident

Middle 2 Days of the Passion Week


From Olivet Discourse (12th) to Trial (13th Abib)
M-3 Olivet Discourse
M-6 Last Supper M-7 Arrest;
M-9 & 10 Sanhedrin M-11 & 12 Pilate & Sentencing

Last 3 Days of the Passion Week


From the Crucifixion (14th) to the Resurrection (16th Abib)

A-1 < Via Dolorosa> A-2 Crucifixion


A-3 Death; A-4 Entombed; P-m <Pesach meal>
A-5 < Resurrection; Empty Tomb
A-6 Risen Lord

37 | P a g e
V. Seven Days from Arrival to Resurrection Abib 9th to 16th:
[A timeline in a biblical Wednesday/THURSDAY Crucifixion Scenario] [sabbath]

*Nisan Apr Abib Events (*Nisan 15 = Day 0)


8 Thu 8D [Sabbath for the daytime period]
/FRI (Day 7 of the lunar week)
8N
9 Fri (Day 1) (-6
d)* [6 days before Pesach festival (Abib 15)]
9D
/SAT B-1
at Bethany before sunset (Jn 12:1)
1 <Arriving>
A
E
A

B-2
2 <Anointing> (Jn 12:2-8) ( M-4 11 Mt; Mk)
9N
E
E
A A A A

10 Sat (Day 2) (-5


d) Pesach lamb
/SUN 10 D B-3
3 Palm Day <Anti-triumphal Jerusalem entry>
A
E
A


4 E

10 N
A

Sun (Day 3) (-4 d)


11 /MON 11 D B-4
5 <Barren fig tree> (Mk) [Cf. Mt]; B-5
A
6 <Temple Incident>
E
A A
E
A

11 N
(Day 4) (-3 d) M-1 7 <Withered Fig Tree> (Mk) A
E
A

Mon M-2 <Confront & Teaching>;


8 9 M-3 <Olivet Discourse>
12 D
E
E
A A A A

12 /TUE
10 2 more days to Pesach day (Abib 14); <Plot>; M-4
A
E
A
11
12 <Judas Money> A E
A A E
A

M-5 <Upper Room Preparation>


13 A
E
A

M-6 15 <Gethsemane>; M-7


14 <Last Supper>; A
16 <Arrest> E
A A
E
A A
E
A

12 N
M-8
17 <Hannan>+ <Kefas Denials>; M-9
A
18 <Sanhedrin I> E
A A
E
A

Tue (Day 5) (-2 d) <Trial day> Pesach eve


13
/WED 13 D
M-10 <
19 Sanhedrin A
E
A II>
M-11/12 21 <Pilate - I & II> (Sentencing noon)
20 A
E
A A
E
A

13 N <In custody>#
Wed
14
Apr 5 (Day 6) (-1 d) A-1 22 <Via Dolorosa> A
E
A Pesach day
14 D
/THU A-2 23 <Crucifixion>; A-3 24 <Death>; A
E
A A
E
A Pesach sacrifice
Apr 6 A-4
25 <Entombed>; E
Pesach Meal
14 N
A A

15
Thu
/FRI 15 D High Sabbath [Festival begins] a [Posting the Roman guard] 41F

15 N
16
Fri
16 D
/SAT
17 Sat 16 N
/SUN A-5 26 <Resurrection> (in the dawn)
A
E
A

# See More Than One Day Passion chronology.

a
i.e. the first day of the Festival of Matzah.
38 | P a g e
V-2 -- Last Days in the Passion Week

*Nisan Abib Events


14 N 13 N [In custody]

(Day 6) A-1 < Via Dolorosa> Pesach day


14 D 14 D A-2 <Crucifixion> (3rd hour);
A-3 <Death> (9th hour); Pesach sacrifice

15 N A-4 <Entombed>; Pesach Meal


14 N
15 D
(Day 7 = High Sabbath) Pesach Festival begins a
15 D 42F

[Sabbath (for daytime period); unrelated to Saturday]


16 N
15 N
16 D (Day 1) (unrelated to Sunday)
16 D Day of First-fruits with Wave Sheaf Offering and
Omer countdown to Shavuot (> Pentecost).

17 N 16 N
A-5 < Resurrection> (dawn = end of Day 1 of the lunar week)
17 D (Day 2) A-6 <Risen Lord> morning
17 D
A <Empty Tomb> the women (Mk 28:9-10; Mk 16:9-11; Jn 20:11-18)
A
E
A


B on the Emmaus Road (Mk 16:12-13; Lk 24:13-49)
A
E
A

18 N
C to the Eleven (Mk 16:14-18) (Jn 20:19-25 Thomas absent)
17 N
E
A A

Abib 15 colored for High sabbath.

a
i.e. the first day of the Festival of Matzah.
39 | P a g e
H. Timeline from Arrival to the Risen Lord (Abib 9 to 17)

Day Night

Day of Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2
Mnemonic Start Mounted Temple WWW Trial Final Silent Start Meet
13 14 15 16 17
Abib 9 10 11 12
Erev Pesach Pesach** Matzah 1 Matzah 2 Matzah 3
*Nisan 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18

High
Pesach + + Lamb + Eve Prep. ++Meal Sabbath
Wave Sheaf
B A Y F T f DOJ L S P-P < I n t h e t o m b> Risen Lord

Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
30 (Thu) S-T
Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

[ For comparison One-day Passion chronology]



(B&A) F T fDOJ (silent Wednesday) SP -
Mar-31 Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
30 (Wed) S-W
Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
Mar-31 Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
30 (Wed) S- X
Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
30 (Thu) S-T
Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
Mar-29 30 31 Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6
33 (Fri) S-F
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon

Abib 14 sabbath preparation day (= sabbath eve); **Pesach = Pesach sactrifice + Pesach meal.
[Note: *Nisan date, which is 12 hours ahead, in all the Passion Week timelines, is for comparison only. Its date cannot be fixed since calendation to
locate the first day of this month in a proleptic rabbinic Jewish calendar is different from Abib of the Biblical calendar.]
[Btw two, a Wednesday and a Thursday scenario on biblical calendars it depends on what day of the solar week was Abib 1 (the New Moon Day).]

40 | P a g e
H-1 -- From Arrival to Crucifixion
day night
Day of Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
10 13 14
Abib 9 Pesach lamb
11 12 Pesach eve Pesach Matzah
BA Y FT fDOJ L A S P-P <in the tomb>

CE 30
Mar-31 Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6
S-W

CE 30 Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6 7
S-T Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed <Thu> Fri
[Nisan] 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

CE 33 29 30 31 Apr-1 2 3
S-F Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu <Fri> Sat
Y FT fDO J (silent)
LSP
(Hoehner) (crowd) Y FT f DOJ

Pesach = Pesach sacrifice + Pesach meal (on the same date in Abib)

H-2 -- From Crucifixion to Resurrection

Day of Week
(lunar) 5 6 7 1 2
Trial < I n t h e t o m b >

Preparation High Sabbath Wave Sheaf

13 14 15 16 17
Abib
Pesach eve Pesach Matzah 1 Matzah 2 Matzah 3
[*Nisan] 13 14 15 16 17 18
S-W 5 Wed 6 Thu 7 Fri 8 Sat
CE 30
S-T April 6 Thu 7 Fri 8 Sat 9 Sun
CE 33 S-F 3 Fri $ 4 Sat @ 5 Sun 9 Mon

[Sat Jewish Sabbath; $ preparation day = sabbath eve; @ doubled-up sabbath; full moon]
[ to Golgotha; Resurrection correctly placed; resurrection incorrectly in late afternoon]

41 | P a g e
E. List of Timeline tables of different scenarios
[Nisan starts at sunset; solar sabbath (solar) on Saturdays;
[Abib begins at sunrise; lunar Sabbath on Day 7 of the week (8, 15, 22, & 28th day of a month).]

1. With a biblical Wednesday/THURSDAY scenario based on the biblical lunar calendar:

Apr *Nisan Abib (Counting back from Abib 15 = 0)


8 [Sabbath daytime]

9 (-6) <Journey from Yericho>


Fri
/SAT
1 <Arriving> at Bethany (Jn 12:1)
A
E
A

9 2 <Anointing> (Jn 12:2-8) [



A
E
11 Anointing (Mk; Mt)] A A
E
A

10
Sat (-5)
3 <Jerusalem Entry> [Palm Day];
A
E
A Pesach Lamb
/SUN

4 <Temple court visit>
E

10
A A

Sun 11
/MON
(-4)
5 <Barren Fig Tree>;
A
6 <Temple Incident>
E
A A
E
A

11
(-3)
7 <Withered Fig Tree>; 8 <Confront & teaching>
E E

12
A A A A

Mon
9 <Olivet Discourse>;
A
E
11 ;
10 <Yehudim plot>; 12 <Judas Money>
A A
E
A A
E
A A
E
A

/TUE 12
13 <Upper Room Preparation>
A
E
A


14 <Last Supper>;
A
15 <Gethsemane>; 16 <Arrest>; E
A A
E
A A
E
A

$
<Hannan> (Jn); <Kefas denials>; 8 <Sanhedrin I>
17 A
1 E
A A
E
A

13 $
Tue (-2) 19 <Sanhedrin II>;
A
20 <Pilate I> + <Herod Antipas> (Lk); E
A A
E
A

/WED 21 <Pilate II> [sentencing: 6th hour ( noon) Jn 19:14]



A
E
A
$
13 <In custody>

Wed (-1)
22 < Via Dolorosa>;
A
E
A

Pesach Day
5th 14
23 <Crucifixion> 9 AM (Mk 15:25);
A
E
A

/THU 14
24 <Death> 3 PM (Mk 15:34; //Mt 27:46); Pesach Sacrifice
A
E
A

6th 25 <Entombed>;

A
E
A
Pesach Meal
15
Thu (-0) <Posting Roman guard> [High Sabbath] Pesach festival begins a
/FRI
43F

15
16
Fri
/SAT [Wave Sheaf of the Firstfruit]

16
26 < Resurrection> (dawn)
E

Sat
A A

17
/SUN <to the Roman guard> (Mt 28:4, 11-15); <to the Women> (Mt 28:5-10; Mk 16:9-
<on the road to Emmaus> (Lk 24:13-49; Mk 16:12-13)
17 <to the Eleven> (Mk 16:14-18) (Jn 20:19-25)

Note: Wednesday Scenario (with Palm Saturday and Resurrection Saturday)


Thursday Scenario (with Palm Sunday and Resurrection Sunday)

a
i.e. the first day of the Festival of Matzah.
42 | P a g e
2. With a non-biblical Wednesday scenario with the resurrection in the afternoon.

Apr *Nisan Abib (counting back from Abib 15 = 0)


9
F (-6) <Journey from Yericho>
R
A
1 <Arriving> at Bethany (Jn)
E
A

I 9
2
A
E
A <Anointing> (Jn)
S 10
A
(-5)
3 <Jerusalem Entry> [Palm Day] (Saturday)
A
E
A Pesach Lamb
T
4
A
E
A <Temple court visit>
10
S 11
U (-4)
5 <Barren Fig Tree>;
A
E 6 <Temple Incident> A A
E
A

N
M 11
12 (-3)
7 <Withered Fig Tree>;
8 <Confront & Teaching>
O A
E
A A E A

N
12
T 13 (-2)
A
10 <Yehudims plot>;
9 <Olivet Discourse>; E
12 <Judas money>A A
E
A A E A

U
13 <Upper Room Prep>
A
E
A

13 14 <Last Supper>; 15 <Gethsemane>;


E
A 16 <Arrest>;
E A A E
A A E
A

$
17 <Hannan> (Jn); <Kefas denials>;
18 <Sanhedrin I>;
$
E
A A A E A


19
A <Sanhedrin II> E A

$
W
20 <Pilate>+<Herod>; 20 <Pilate > [sentencing: 6 A.M. ]
E

14
A A A E A

E
(-1) 22 < Via Dolorosa>;
A

Pesach Day
E A

23 <Crucifixion> 9 AM (Mk)
A E A

D 14 24 <Death> 3 PM (Mk //Mt);


A
Pesach Sacrifice
E A

25 <Entombed>
A E A

Pesach Meal

T 15
H <Posting Roman guard> [Annual sabbath] Pesach festival begins a
U 15 4F

F
R 16
I 16
S [Weekly Sabbath]
A 17
T 17 26 < Resurrection> Saturday (late afternoon )

A E A

<to Roman guard> (Mt 28:4, 11-15); <to the Women> (Mt 28:5-10; Mk 16:9-11; Jn 20:11-18);
<on the road to Emmaus> (Lk 24:13-49; Mk 16:12-13)

[Note: Events
5 to
A 18 are not covered in detail in Torreys.]
E A A E A

a
i.e. the first day of the Festival of Matzah.
43 | P a g e
3. With a Thursday scenario after Boice with the non-biblical calendation:
[Yellow highlighted events are the only portion for the events sequence different from the biblical Thursday scenario, aside from
those related with the calendar issues.]

Apr *Nisan Abib (Counting back from Abib 15 = 0)

S
9 (-6) <Journey from Yericho> [sabbath violation ]
A
T
A
1 <Arriving> at Bethany (Jn);
E
A

9
A
2 <Anointing> (Jn 12:2-8) [
E
11 ] A A
E
A

10
S (-5)
3 <Jerusalem Entry> [Palm day] (Sunday)
A
E
A Pesach Lamb
U
N 10
4 <Temple court visit>
A
E
A

M 11
O (-4)
5 <Barren Fig Tree>;
A
E6 <Temple Incident> A A
E
A

N
11
T (-3)
7 <Withered Fig Tree>;
A
E 8 <Confront & Teaching> A A
E
A

U 12

A
E 10 <Yehudims plot>;
9 <Olivet Discourse>; 12 <Judas Money>
A A
E
A A
E
A

E 12
W (-2)
13
E
13 <Upper Room Preparation>
A
E
A

D

A
15 <Gethsemane>;
14 <Last Supper>; 16 <Arrest>;
E
A A
E
A A
E
A

$

17 <Hannan>; <Kefas denial>; <Sanhedrin I>;
1 8
13
E
E
A A A A

T $
14
19 <Sanhedrin II>;
A
E
A

$
H
20 <Pilate>+<Herod>;
A
21 <Pilate II> (sentencing 6 a.m. )
E
A A
E
A

U (-1)
22 < Via Dolorosa>;
A
23 <Crucifixion> 9 AM (Mk 15:25)
E
A

Pesach Day A
E
A


24 <Death> 3 PM (Mk 15:34; //Mt 27:46);
A E
A
Pesach Sacrifice
6th 14
25 <Entombed> A
E
A

Pesach Meal
F 15
R <Posting Roman guard> [Annual sabbath] Pesach festival begins a
45F

I 15
16
S
A [Weekly sabbath]
T
16
17
26 < Resurrection> (Sunday dawn)

S
E
A A

U <to Roman guard> (Mt 28:4, 11-15); <to the Women> (Mt 28:5-10; Mk 16:9-11; Jn 20:11-18);
<on the road to Emmaus> (Lk 24:13-49; Mk 16:12-13)
N 17
<to the Eleven> (Mk 16:14-18) (Jn 20:19-25)

a
i.e. the first day of the Festival of Matzah.
44 | P a g e
4. With the Friday scenarios with the non-biblical calendation:

A Friday Scenario (CE 33 Apr-3) (Counting back from Nisan 14/15)


Apr Nisan Abib Traditional Hoehner (further adjusted)
(-6)
S
8 <Journey from Yericho> [sabbath violation ]
A 8
T
1 <Arriving> at Bethany (Jn)
A
E
A

(-5)
2 <Anointing> (Jn);
A
E
A

S 9 3 * [Palm Day] (Sun) Pesach Lamb (-6)


E

U <Crowd came>
A A

N
9
4 <Temple court visit>
A
E
A


1 <Arriving>
A
E
A

(-4)
2 <Anointing>
A
E
A

M 10 (-5)

5 <Barren Fig Tree>
O
E

3 [Palm Day] (Mon) Pesach Lamb


A A

10
E
A A

6 <Temple Incident>
N A
E
A

(-3)
T 11
7 <Withered Fig Tree>;
8 <Confront & Teaching>

5 <Barren Fig Tree>
E E
A A A A

(-4)
E

U
A A

11 9 <Olivet Discourse>
A
E
A


6 <Temple Incident>

10 <Yehudim plot>;
E

12 <Judas Money>
A A

E E

E
A A A A

(-2)
W
12
A
7 <Withered Fig Tree>;
E
A
8 <Confront & Teaching>(-3) A
E
A

E 12 [Silent Wednesday]
A
9 <Olivet Discourse>
E
A

D
10 <Yehudim plot>;
A
E 12 <Judas Money>
A A
E
A

(-1)
T (-2)
13
H
13 <Upper Room Preparation> E

13
A A

U (0)
14 <Last Supper>;
A
15 <Gethsemane>; E
A A
E
A


16 <Arrest>; <Hannan> (Jn);
A
17 18 <Sanhedrin I>
E
A A
E
A A
E
A

F

19
A <Sanhedrin II> <Pilate I>; <Pilate II> (sentencing at 6 A.M. );
E
A
20
A
E
A
21
A
E
A

(-1)
R

22 < Via Dolorosa>;
23 <Crucifixion> 9 AM (Mk) Pesach Day
14
E
E
A A A A

I <Death> 3 PM (Mk //Mt);


24
A E
A
Pesach sacrifice
3rd 14 25 <Entombed>

A
E
A

Pesach meal
S
15
(0)
A <Posting Roman guard> [sabbath (Doubled-up? )] Pesach festival begins a 46F

T 15

S 16 26 < Resurrection> (Morning) [Easter Sunday]



A
E
A

U
N 16 <to Roman guard> (Mt 28:4, 11-15); <to the Women> (Mt 28:5-10; Mk 16:9-11; Jn 20:11-18);
<on the road to Emmaus> (Lk 24:13-49; Mk 16:12-13)

17 <to the Eleven> (Mk 16:14-18) (Jn 20:19-25)

(-6) counting from Nisan 14; (-6) counting from Nisan 15.
[Note: *Palm day on Sunday does not fall on Nisan/Abib 10.]

a
i.e. the first day of the Festival of Matzah.
45 | P a g e
5. Examples of some other timeline schemes:
[Yellow highlighted and green font dates divergent from a common pattern.
[Sabbath; High Sabbath Note: All schemes follow the Jewish calendar (with Saturday = Sabbath).]
[Column of Abib for reference only after the biblical scenario timeline. D & N Day and night-time]

CE 33 CE 30
Hoehner Finch Sherrill Coulter
Abib
Fri Fri Fri Wed
Nisan 8 Sat Nisan 9 Nisan 9
Group 1: Arrival at Bethany.
9D Nisan 9 <crowd> [Apr 3 Sun] Mar-29-Fri Nisan 8
and Anointing Nisan 10 Nisan 10 Nisan 10 [Mar-30 Thu]
9N
[Mar 30 Mon] [Apr 3 Mon] [Mar-31 Sun]
Group 2: Palm Day
10
Nisan 11 Nisan 11 Nisan 11 Nisan 9
[Mar 31 Tue] [Apr 4 Tue] [Apr 1 Mon] [Mar-31 Fri]
Group 3: Temple Incident.
11 Nisan 10
[Apr-1 Sat]
Temple visit
Nisan 12 Nisan 12 Nisan 12 Nisan 11
[Apr 1 Wed] [Apr 5 Wed] [Apr 2 Tue] [Apr-2 Sun]
Group 4: Confront/Teaching
and Olivet Discourse;
Judas money Nisan 13 Nisan 12
12D [Apr 3 Wed] [Apr-3 Mon]
Nisan 14 Silent
[Apr 4 Thu]
Group 5: Upper Room Prep Nisan 13 Nisan 13 (Bethany dinner) Nisan 13
[Apr 2 Thu] [Apr 6 Thu] [Apr-4 Tue]
Group 6: Last Supper & Arrest Nisan 14 Nisan 14 Nisan 15 Nisan 14
12N Group 7: Trial Sanhedrin I [Apr 3 Fri] [Apr 7 Fri] [Apr 5 Fri] [Apr-5 Wed]
13D Group 8: Trial Sanhedrin II
and Pilate I & II.
13N [In Custody]
14D Group 9: Via Dolorosa;
Crucifixion; Death;
14N Group 10: Entombment
15N <In the tomb> Nisan 15 Nisan 15 Nisan 15
[Apr 4 Sat] [Apr 8 Sat] [Apr 6 Thu]
16D <High Sabbath> Nisan 16 Nisan 16 Nisan 16 Nisan 16
[Apr 5 Sun] [Apr 9 Sun] [Apr 6 Sat] [Apr 7 Fri]
Early morning Early morning Nisan 17 Nisan 17
16N [Apr 7 Sun] [Apr 8 Sat]
Group 11: Resurrection
Early morning Late afternoon

Can any of these discrepant timelines be the right one? The answer is Hardly. Without clear
knowledge of various calendar systems and the astronomical date, proper construction and explanation
of each one example is incomplete and inaccurate with confusion, contradiction and conflicting; it is
impossible to be close to the biblical timeline of the Passion week.
Harold W. Hoehner (1978), Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ (pp. 74-76)
(http://books.google.com/books?id=fS28b9GC1dcC)
F.R. Coulter (2001), A Harmony of the Gospels (pp. 216-217, 320-321 timeline tables) has
the Palm day wrongly placed on Nisan 8.
Also it has Nisan 10 eventless (other than Mk 11:20 finding the fig tree withered); and Nisan 12
left eventless, claiming to be sabbath (Jn 19:28-41).]
Paul Finch, The Passover Papers (2009, 2nd Ed.) [Ch. 8 Chronology of Passion Week., pp. 93-
118.] [Note: The date Apr. 7 Friday for Nisan 14 is only once shown in p 151 citing data from
Fotheringham, Parker and Dubberstein, and O.T. Olmstead.]
Nathaniel Huntting Sherill (2012), The Laymans Gospel Harmony (p. 343)

46 | P a g e
Various Timelines compared:
The aim here is to make the task of all those having interests and questions easer in
challenging any claim for its validity vis--vis the biblical Wednesday scenario presented in
this work.

Solar sabbath (Jewish) Saturday (from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset).


Lunar sabbath daytime of Abib 8. sabbath in the biblical lunar calendar has
nothing to do with Saturday
High Sabbath (Day 7 of the lunar week on the first day of the 7-day long festival)
Abib 15th (only for daytime period). [The only annual sabbath is on the Day of
the Atonement - Lev 16:31 sabbathh sabbathhon)].
[some events not possible on Sabbath e.g. long-distance journey]
<Palm Day> = on Abib 10. [Sun, Mon, or Sat]
<Upper Room Preparation > = it is to have the place ready with necessary provisions. It is
not about the disciples themselves were preparing the festival celebration (including the Last
Meal and Pesach meal) by the disciples. Allocating it to take up a whole day(time) is a pure
conjecture.
problems with sabbath violation (of Saturday).
$$$ traditional timeline cramping so many events in one overnight. %% Pilates Trial is
allocated from the morning to noon, not in the fourth watch of the night. Yeshua was in
custody till next morning to begin His journey to the Golgotha. The time indicators in all
four Gospels also show a break in the time flow of events: (1) the formal Sanhedrin session
in the morning and Pilate v. Yeshua (till noontime) and, on next day, (3) the road to Golgotha
to Crucifixion. [See above for significance of Jn 19:14.]
Most follow the G-Mk sequence of events for <Barren Fig Tree> and <Withered Fig Tree>,
placing them on consecutive days. day> and <Temple incident>. G-Mt put them on the same
day after <Temple Incident>, chronologically and thematically awkward. G-Lk does not
have the periscope of <the Fig Tree>.
Most places <Upper Room Prep> on the day after <Olivet Discourse>. The narrative itself
is continuous and follows the Mark and Matthean <Anointing>. However, that it is on
another day is by the pericope starting with a time indicator phrase toward the beginning
day for the unleavened bread.
Scenarios with Palm Day and Resurrection Day both happen to be on Sunday the
traditional Friday crucifixion scenario and a Thursday scenario.
The date of His arrival on Abib 9. That would be six days before the Pesach festival (Abib
15). On Nisan dates, however, it is may not be straightforward, depending whether He
arrives before or after sunset. It takes about 8 hours hike from Yericho. If Yeshua arrives
before sunset, the date of Arrival at Bethany itself would be not Nisan 9th, but Nisan 8th.
Whether counting inclusive or exclusive, or counting from Abib 15th or Abib 14th, it does
not materially affect the timeline (with sequence of events) in the first few days of the
Passion Week, as long as the anchoring events <Anointing> (on Abib 8 / Nisan 9) and
<Palm day> (on Abib/Nisan 10) are correctly placed.

47 | P a g e
Our purpose is to examine handful variations of the timeline in several Crucifixion day
scenarios for comparison purpose vis--vis the biblical model in order to show how and
how much they deviate from the Scriptural evidences and harmony, not only the major
anchoring events and date, but also detailed flow of events.

For our evaluation of different timelines, the major event groups are checked for their date
allocation and alignment.

Group 1: Arrival at Bethany and Anointing.


Group 2: Jerusalem entry on Palm Day.
Group 3: Temple Incident.
Group 4: Confrontation/Teaching and Olive Discourse
Group 5: Upper Room Preparation
Group 6: Last Supper/Arrest
Group 7: Trial Sanhedrin I (interrogation)
Group 8: Trial Sanhedrin II (judgment) and Pilate I & II.
Group 9: Via Dolorosa; Crucifixion; Death;
[Group 10: Entombment]
[Group 11: Resurrection]

Several points are needed to find whether any scenario and its different schemes of timeline are in
error and to allow to draw a valid conclusion.

1. The day of the Crucifixion cannot be other than Abib 14 (Nisan 14).
2. The year of the Crucifixion cannot be CE 33, since the year was determined to have
Nisan 14 on Friday, when the Bible has no such idea. Most were mistaken the day of
Sabbath as Saturday by simply follow the non-biblical rabbinic Jewish calendar.
3. CE 30 Abib 14 is Apr. 5 Wednesday or Apr. 6 Thursday, according to the astronomical
data for biblical calendation to determine the New Moon Day of Abib.
4. In the timeline, it is out of biblical ignorance the <Upper Room Preparation> to take
up a whole daytime period.
5. <Palm day> and <Temple Incident> are on two consecutive days as in G-Mk. The
cannot be on the same as G-Mt has it unclear.
6. Multiple <Trial Sessions> cannot be placed into one overnight period. It is impossible
and impractical, though the biblical text itself for narrative reads as if contiguous.
7. The bible explicitly says the entombment was taken place not late in the afternoon, but
in the evening., not completed in the late afternoon in fear of sabbath coming at sunset.
[//Mt 27:59; //Mk 15:42; //Lk 23:54]
8. Sabbath is on Day 7 of the lunar week, not Saturday which is the 7th day of the solar
week, and it is only for the daytime. People dont need rest in the night, which is the
time for resting.
9. These have the time of Entombment in the late afternoon, despite the biblical witness
of the evening time.

48 | P a g e
1. Scenarios with the biblical calendar: Wed vs. Thu for Abib 14.

Wednesday Scenario (with Palm Saturday and Resurrection Saturday dawn)


Thursday Scenario (with Palm Sunday and Resurrection Sunday dawn)

[Compared to the tradition Friday scenario, no Silent Wednesday (day and night);
additional day between the Sentencing and the Crucifixion; entombed in the evening, not in late afternoon.]

2. Wednesday scenario as suggested by Torrey (with non-Biblical calendation):


[Compared to the tradition Friday scenario, the events (Upper Room Prep to Olivet Discourse) are pushed back
by one day filling up the Silent Wednesday;
Crucifixion to Resurrection one additional day.]

The fatal error in the timeline of their theory is the Resurrection being placed on the
later afternoon. This also results the Resurrection day to be put on Nisan 17 (of
Saturday sabbath), and the Wave Sheaf Offering to be put on the sabbath. [Cf.
sheaf of the Firstfruit Lev 23:10-11 on the day after the Sabbath).
Palm day cutting palm leaves is not fit for Sabbath.
No different Sabbaths of annual vs. weekly.
Burial is entombment, not be confused with buried in the ground as in a grave.
Torrey does not give a detail on the events following <Jerusalem Entry>.

3. Thursday scenario after Boice (with non-biblical calendation).


[Compared to the traditional Friday scenario, the events of Thu to Friday daytime (Upper Room Prep to Olivet
Discourse) are pushed back by one day filling up the Silent Wednesday; Crucifixion to Resurrection one
additional day.]

Boice, p. 931 found to have the Crucifixion on Thursday solves the several issues while
keeping the Resurrection on Sunday no hint of calendar or astronomical data used to find
Nisan 14 itself as Thursday.
A whole day is allocated solely for Upper Room Preparation of Passover.
See under the Biblical Lunar Calendar system the related calendar <Abib 14 in 30 CE: Apr-
5 Wed or Apr-6-Thu> for competing Wednesday vs. Thursday Crucifixion scenarios. Correct
astronomical data for the New Moon and Full Moon, but the date for Abib 14 (Nisan 15) was
determined the untenable method of the first visible crescent.
Journey to Bethany not fit for Sabbath.

4. Friday scenarios

The Friday crucifixion scenario is basically the result of mistaking the biblical phrase
Preparation (day) for Sabbath as Friday, a Gregorian calendar vocabulary which is
not in the Bible. Then, they choose CE 33 as the year to show Nisan 14 as Friday.
Once they have the year CE 33, that used it as an evidence of Friday being the day of
the crucifixion a circular logic par excellence!
2 N and 1 D for His being remained in the tomb.

# Resurrection on Sunday (Easter) in the morning. It should have been pushed


down to Monday, if Friday is for the Crucifixion. If Resurrection is for Sunday, the
Crucifixion is to be Thursday (i.e. a Thursday scenario). Note: Dawn and morning
are on the same day of the solar week and same Nisan date, but they are of different
Abib dates.

49 | P a g e
(A) Traditional Friday scenario as in the Church Liturgical Holy Week: (CE 33 Apr-3)
The word Passover in Jn 12:1 six days before Passover is rather wrongly taken
as the Passover day (Abib 14) (why?) instead of its usual sense of Passover festival
(Abib 15) in G-Jn.
Problem of the so-called Silent Wednesday how is it acceptable in the narrative
timeline???
To place its Palm Sunday on Abib 9 simply ignores what the bible says (i.e. Abib 10)
and good only for the Holy Week of the Church liturgy.
(B) Friday scenario after Hoehner (CE 33)
(Chronological Aspects, pp. 90-93)
This is the only thing he altered the traditional timeline of Friday scenario is to
allocate <Crowd coming> (Jn 12:9) in one whole day, making Palm Monday, in
place of Palm Sunday. Was it his attempt to get rid of the so-called Silent
Wednesday of the Holy Week of the Church liturgy disappeared in his timeline?
He does not mention the significant time indicator ninth hour in Jn 19:14 for Pilate
sentencing, apparently accepting the conventional interpretation as 6 A.M.

(C) Friday scenario after Finch, CE 30: [Not CE 33!]


Ref. Paul Finch, The Passover Papers (2009, 2nd ed.)
Ch. 8: Chronology of Passion Week., pp. 93-118
Ch. 9: The day of the Week of the Crucifixion (a section The calendar and the year
of crucifixion pp. 149-151)]
Ch. 11: Did Jesus spend a night in jail? pp. 171-178 [Unfortunately the author
maintained the traditional treatment of the issue as in Friday Crucifixion scenario and
dismissed this very idea without carefully examining its merit and validity.]
The flow of the events is basically same as in the Hoehners modification of Friday
scenario which removed the so-called Silent Wednesday, except it corrects to place
<Arriving> and <Anointing> on Sunday after removing <Crowd came in>. Thus, to arrive
at Bethany the counting back correctly starts from Nisan 14.
However, his actual numbering is curiously shown to be from Nisan 15. E.g. He says
<Nisan 13 as second day before Nisan 14>. How can 13 be second day after 14? is it
due to his arithmetical confusion on counting (inclusive vs. exclusive)? Was he confused
of which date (Nisan 14 vs. 15) to be beginning counting?
Note: He uses the term Nisan. With a sunrise-to-sunrise day, it is not Nisan of the Jewish
calendar, but rather Abib as used in the Biblical Lunar calendar.

His claim of Nisan 14 to be on Friday (Apr-7-CE) is should corrected. That year, Nisan
14 is on Wednesday, not Thursday, nor Friday. So, it is basically similar a Wednesday
and a Thursday scenario, with only date and days of a different year.

Despite having accurate astronomical data on the conjunction in CE 30 - Wed. Mar-22,


8 p.m. (Jerusalem) they have Apr-7 Friday as Nisan 14 simply claiming that it was by
the Jewish calendar, not having known that the calendar used in the Bible is different.
www.astronomycafe.net/qadir/q867.html
www.asa3.org/ASA/PSCF/1985/JASA3-85Humphreys.html
www.judaismvschristianity.com/passover_dates.htm
www.nowoezone.com/NTC24.htm (vide supra in *14th or 15th day for
Passover?)

50 | P a g e
(D) more than one day chronology:

Eugen Ruckstuhl (1963 in German, 1965 English trans.), Chronology of the last days of Jesus:
A critical study

Annie Jaubert (1965), The date of the Last Supper, (Ch. 2. The Events of the Passion
in the Chronology of Three Days, pp. 111-113)

In contrast to the model timeline of a Thursday crucifixion scenario with Sunday dawn
resurrection, both Ruckstuhl and Jaubert add two more days are to cover Sanhedrin I & II and
Pilate I & II, coming up with a three-day Passion chronology.

Eugen Ruckstuhl (1965), Chronology of The Last Days of Jesus A Critical Study
[Trans. from German 1963] [for The Chronology of More Than One Day.

Ch. V. From the arrest of Jesus to His Crucifixion Timetable and Duration of the Events.
A. Survey of the Events (pp. 32-35)
B. How long did the Passion last? Reasons in favor of the More Than One Day theory.
(pp. 35-55)

[For a copy of relevant portion from his book, see a file ((For WB #6 )) More than one day chronology
in IRENT Vol. III Supplement (Collection #6B Trial Time and Duration.)]

His conclusion: By scrutinizing several secessions of His Trial in the Passion narrative
(Sanhedrin session I for interrogation in the night, Sanhedrin session II for judgment in the
day time, Pilate I, and Pilate II) the Passion story requires more than one day.

His proposal is to add two more days, making it a three-day Passion chronology: (1)
Tuesday Arrest; (2) Wednesday Sanhedrin; (3) Thursday Sanhedrin + Pilate; and (4)
Friday Crucifixion. This may account well for the multiple sessions enough time allocated
to each. However, there are just not many extra days to spare in the timeline from the events
from the Bethany Arrival to His Arrest, with only one day which would be available for such
a purpose the so-called Silent Wednesday in the traditional Friday Crucifixion scenario.

In contrast, the biblical Wednesday scenario allocates in the timeline for the Trial of Yeshua
vs. Pilate on a separate day (early morning to noon), with the Crucifixion to follow next day.
We have to look for hidden time indicators (which the narratives demand) as well as the
explicit ones in order to examine various timelines to deal with.

51 | P a g e
F. Event-by-event in the Passion Week timeline

This is important to scrutinize and identify each event so that they can be put them in their proper positions
in the timeline in the whole perspective at one glance, rather than struggling with them to understand their
meaning in a piece-meal fashion worse with eisegesis mind set. It has to be logical non-contradicting
and kept in harmony with biblical and historical (astronomical) data and information.

Once the issue of which days were the Crucifixion and the Resurrection, the remaining issue is the narrative
timeline of the ever in the Passion Week. Once the several anchor points are (1) Abib 10 as the Palm day
and (2) Abib 14 as the Crucifixion day are set in the timeline, as well as (4) Abib 16 of the Wave sheaf
(Lev 23:10-11) of the Risen Lord as the Firstfruit, we come to what the conventional scenario and the
alternatives all fail to pay attention on the time-indicator in Jn 19:14 (the time for Pilates sentencing) and
the literarily impossible task of allocating so many events in a short overnight period following His arrest
at Gethsemane.

Not just the time of events but the flow of events. One example is <Crowd coming> Jn 12:9-11 to see
Yeshua when He arrived at Bethany belongs to the same day, not a separate whole day as Hoehner broke
the flow of narrative, without any suggestive time indicator. More important example is a crucial one for
the middle third of the Passion Week is the need of clear break between the night time of Abib 13 for <His
Arrest>, <Sanhedrin v. Yeshua>, <Pilate v. Yeshua I and II>. Usually, quite a number of events are
crammed into less than 6 hours of the night to the dawn with Yeshua brought to crucifixion to Golgotha at
the supposed time of 6 a.m. This is despite clear indicators of flow of events in the biblical text in all four
Gospels (Mk 15:1; //Mt 27:1; //Lk 22:66; //Jn 18:28-29)! [See also significance of Jn 19:14.]

Table: Events numbering and notation symbols

Events numbering and notation symbols in the Charts


B for Beginning; M for Middle A for After
Lamb presented; taught Last Supper; Arrest; Trial Crucifixion; Death; Resurrection
B-1 <Bethany arrival> M-1 <fig tree withered> A-1 < Via Dolorosa, bearing the cross>
B-2 <Anointing G-Jn> (M-4) M-2 <Confront and Teaching> A-2; A-3 < - Crucifixion & Death>
M-3 <Olivet Discourse>
M-4 <Anoint G-Mt, MK> (B-2) A-4 <Entombed>; <P-m> Passover meal
<Judas silver money>
B-3 < Palm day; &
M-5 <Upper Room Prep> <In the tomb>
Yerusalem Entry>
M-6 <Last Supper>
B-4 <Barren Fig tree >
<Gethsemane>
B-5 <Temple Incident> M-7 <Arrest> A-5 < Resurrection (dawn of Abib 16)
M-8 <Hannan> w/ Empty tomb (morning of Abib 17)
& <Peters denials>
M-9 <Sanhedrin I> A-6 <risen Lord> to the Disciples
M-10 <Sanhedrin II> (, resurrection proposed
M-11 <Pilate I>
other than on Abib 16)
M-12 <Pilate II>
<In custody overnight>

52 | P a g e
B-1 to B-5

B-1 <Bethany arrival> (Jn 12:1)


B-2 <Anointing> (Jn 12:2-8) [ M-4 (Mk 14:3-9; Mt 26:6-13) - flashback]
B-3 <Yerusalem Entry>. [Palm Day]
(Mk 11:1-10; Mt 21:1-11; Lk 19:28-40; 41-44; Jn 12:12-19); (cf. Jn 12:20-36a; 36b-50)
Temple court visit (Mk +11:11; +Mt 21:10-11)

B-4 < Fig tree cursed> (Mk +11:12-14; Mt 21:18-19) a


B-5 <Temple Incident> (Mk +11:15-19; Mt 21:12-17; Lk 19:45-46)

B for Beginning with Bethany Arrival:

B-1 <Bethany arrival> (Jn 12:1) ( Jn 11:54)

six days before Abib 15th of the Pesach Festival)


On Abib 9, Day one of the lunar week; it is the first day of the Passion Week
The crowd came (Jn 12:9-11).

Here the Pesach refers to the Festival of Pesach = the Festival of the Matzah (starting
on Abib 15), not the Pesach (on Abib 14 for Pesach sacrifice and meal). b

Returning from Ephraim (Jn 11:54) after finishing his Judean mission, Yeshua was now
heading to his final destination, Jerusalem. There he was to be the very Pesach sacrifice
to die on the cross at the appointed time by his Elohim.

Journey from Yericho to Yerusalem takes about 8 to 9 hours hiking on a steep ascent.
This cannot be placed on any day of Sabbath [= Saturday in the case of the conventional
Friday crucifixion scenarios].

B-2 <Anointing> (Jn 12:2-8) [Cf. M-4 (Mk 14:3-9; Mt 26:6-13)]

[Typologically and chronologically fit here since it was time to prepare His body
selected for the Pesach lamb, presaging the anointing for entombment. The placement
of the pericope in the G-Mt and G-Mk (with no parallel in the G-Lk) on the day for Last
Supper and Arrest is a flashback to thematically combining with <Judas Silver Money>
(Mk 14:10-11 //Mt 26:14-16). The text of G-Jn does not say it was at the house of Lazarus and his
sisters. Cf. G-Mk and G-Mt told it was at the house of Simon, the leper.]

Quite a number of Yehudim came to see while a plot was cooking in the Yehudim of authority
[Jn 12:9-11] this was allocated in Hoehners modification onto next day, a single day, Sunday,
with the Palm day pushed down onto Monday.

a See under M-1for the sequence of the events Barren Fig Tree, Withered Fig Tree, and Temple incident.
b
as in Coulter, Harmony (pp. 216-7).
53 | P a g e
B-3 <Yerusalem Entry>. [Palm Day]

(Mk 11:1-10; Mt 21:1-11; Lk 19:28-40; 41-44; Jn 12:12-19); (cf. Jn 12:20-36a; 36b-50)


( return to Bethany Mk 11:11b)

Abib 10 It was the day of His anti-triumphal entry to Jerusalem. The traditional known
as Triumphal Entry has nothing triumphal about it in the theme of the Passion narrative. It
would be more appropriate to call it anti-triumphal as Yeshua were standing against the
triumphant world power, religious and political, as Pilate relocates from his usual residence in
Caesarea Maritima a to Jerusalem to have control of the City to keep secure during the Festival;
he would be entering from the west, while Yeshua was from the east starting from Bethany.

It is the day the Pesach lambs were selected to be kept till Abib 14 [Exo 12:3, 6] with
Yeshua presenting Himself as the Pesach Lamb.

The name for this day should simply and accurately as Palm Day b. The traditional term Palm
Sunday is a day in the Holy Week of the Church Liturgy.

[Note: Hoehner, without showing any source, tweaked the first few days of the Week to push
this event onto Monday (which would be called Palm Monday) for the otherwise conventional
scenario with < Friday + Sunday > in CE 33. Ostensibly it removes the so-called Silent
Wednesday in the Holy Week timeline.

Palm Sunday the traditional Friday scenario; Thursday scenario


Palm Monday in Friday scenario (Hoehner)
Palm Saturday in Wednesday scenario

The traditional Friday scenario is unacceptable and unbiblical as it places Palm Sunday
incorrectly on Abib 9, unlike the modified ones by Hoehner and others have it on Abib
10.

Note: After B-3 <Y>, G-Jn does not record the events shown in the Synoptic Gospels until it
resumes with M-6 <L-s>.

B-4 <Fig tree cursed> (Mk +11:12-14) [See M-1 <Withered Fig Tree>.

B-5 <Temple Incident> (Miqdash incident); (Mk +11:15-18; Mt 21:12-17; Lk 19:45-46)


It has been traditionally called Temple Cleansing, which is thematically a misnomer. It
is not about cleansing, but about foretelling destruction of the Temple-based Judaic
religious system. The Temple is not something that could be cleansed to keep Elohim
honored. [Cf. This pericope is similar to but distinct from the one in Jn 2:13-17, which
places it very early in the Yeshuas ministry.]

a
On the Mediterranean coast, 85 miles NNE of Jerusalem [between Tel Aviv (Yafo) and Haifa of modern Israel].
bThe neutral term Palm-day (instead of Palm Sunday) is the one used in Frederick Godet (1886), The Commentary
on the Gospel of John (Vol II) http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=yale.39002051184100;view=1up;seq=9.]
[Boice (p. 930) for a Thursday crucifixion scenario mentioned Frederick Godet for the Palm Day to be on Monday.]
[Note: when re-stated in term of Abib with Abib 14 as their Friday (for the crucifixion scenario), this Monday for Palm
day = Abib 10. ARJ]
54 | P a g e
M for Middle (btw <Bethany Arrival> and <Pilates sentencing>)
M-1 to M-10
M-1 < fig tree withered> (Mk +11:20-26) (cf. Mt +21:20-22)
M-2 <Confront & Teaching> (Mk +11:27-33; 12:1-44; Mt +21:23 23:39; Lk +20:1 21:4)
M-3 <Olivet Discourse>; (Mk +13:1-37; Mt +24:1- 25-46; Lk +21:5-38)
M-4 <Anointing in G-Mt & G-Mk> (Mk 14:3-9; Mt 26:6-13) ( B-2)
+ <Judas silver money> (Mk 14:10-11 //Mt 26:14-16)

M-5 <Upper Room Prep>. (Mk +14:12a; 12b-16; Mt +26:17a; 17b-19; Lk +22:7; 8-13)
M-6 L-s <Last supper>; (Mk +14:17-26; Mt +26:20-30; Lk +22:14-30; Jn 13:1-35)
[verses in red Judas betrayal foretold]
Mk +14:17-21; 14: 22-26;
Mt +26:20-25; 26:26-30;
Lk +22:14-20; 22:21-30;
Jn 13:1-17; 18-30
<Foretelling Kefas denial> (Mk +14:27-31; Mt +26:31-35; Lk +22:31-38; Jn +13:31-38)
<Gethsemane - Agony & Prayer> (Mk 14:32-42; Mt 26:36-46; Lk 22:29-46; Jn 18:1)

M-7 <Arrest> (Mk+14:43-52; Mt +26:47-56; Lk +22:47-53; 63-65; Jn +18:2-12).


M-8 <Hannan>
<Kefas denial>;
Kefas whereabouts Mk +14:54; Mt +26:58; Lk +22:54-55; Jn +18:15
Kefas denial Mk +14:66-72; Mt +26:69-74; Lk +22:56-62; Jn +18:16-18, 25-27
1st denial Mk 14:66-68; //Mt 26:69-71a; //Lk +22:56-57; //Jn +18:17-18
2nd denial Mk +14:69-70a; //Mt +26:71b-72; //Lk +22:58; //Jn 18:25
3rd denial Mk +14:70b-72; //Mt +26:73-74; //Lk +22:59-62; //Jn +18:26-27
M-9 <Sanhedrin session I> (for interrogation) (night-time) (Mt 26:59-66; Mk 14:53-72)
M-10 <Sanhedrin session II> (for judgment) (morning/day) (Mt 27:1-2; Mk 15:1a; Lk 22:66-71)
M-11 <Pilate I> (Lk 23:1-7); <Herod Antipas> (Lk 23:7-10);
M-10 <Pilate II> (Mt 27:11-26; Mk 15:1b-15; Lk 23:13-25; Jn 18:28 19:16)

The Trials of Yeshua 1


1 Before Hannan (>Annas) Jn 18:13-14; 18:19-24 Abib 12
2 Before Kayafa (Sanhedrin I) Mt 26:57, 59-68; Mk 14:53, 55-65 night /Nisan 13
3 Before the Sanhedrin -II Mt 27:1-2; Mk 15:1a; Lk 22:66-71
4 Before Pilate I Lk 23:1-5 morning
5 Before Herod Antipas * Lk 23:6-12 Abib 13
Mt 27:11-14, * 15-26; /Nisan 13
6 Before Pilate II //Mk 15:1b-5, * 6-15
Jn 18:28-38; * 18:39 19:16 Till midday
Lk 23:13-25
Mt 27:32-33; //Mk 15:21-22; Abib 14
To Golgotha //Lk 23:26; //Jn 19:17
Next morning
/Nisan 14

* - placement of the Lukan pericope (Lk 23:6-12) in the narrative in G-Mt, G-Mk, & G-Jn.

55 | P a g e
M-1 f <Withered fig tree> (Mk 11:20-26)

G-Lk does not have the Fig Tree pericope.

The two events B-4 <Fig tree cursed>and M-1 <Withered Fig tree> are placed as in
G-Mk on two consecutive days flanking B-5 <Temple Incident> between them
chronologically accurate to read the timeline. The effect is to enable the readers to see
the same symbolism for the fate of unrepentant Israel in both <Temple Incident> and
<Withered Fig Tree>.

In contrast to G-Mk, however, a literary editorial work in G-Mt is not polished in. Both
episodes F (B-4) <Barren Fig Tree> and f (M-1) <Fig Tree>are merged into one. Thus,
it is made to follow B-5 <Temple Incident> without an interruption. That the tree
withered right in before their eyes is a crude and awkward literary work.

The text seems to give an exaggerated report of the tree withered instantly (instead of
got withered or withered already) as if withering happened right in front of their eyes.

G-Lk does not have the Fig Tree pericope.

M-2 <Confrontation & Teaching>;

(Mk +11:27-33; 12:1-44; Mt +21:23 23:39; Lk +20:1 21:4)

Widows offering (Mk +12:41-44; //Lk +21:1-4)

(Cf. Yeshua's foretelling with pronouncement, but nothing of 'prediction of future'.)

M-3 <Olivet Discourse>; (Mk +13:1-37; Mt +24:1- 25-46; Lk +21:5-36)


concerning about the imminent future of Yerusalem in apocalyptic imagery; not
about the so-called end-time eschatology.

Note: <Two more days until Pesach Day> (Mk 14:1; Mt 26:2; cf. Lk 22:1); Plot against
Yeshua (Mt +26:1-5; Mk +14:1-2; Lk +22:1-2)

= It is Abib 12 now with two more days until the Pesach, which in the context means (the day
of) Pesach (on Abib 14 with a Seder-type meal). Not to be confused with the sense used as
Pesach festival (Jn 13:1), which begins on Abib 15.

56 | P a g e
M-4 <Anointing in G-Mt & G-Mk> (Mk 14:3-9; Mt 26:6-13)
+ <Judas silver money> (Mk 14:10-11 //Mt 26:14-16)

G-Mk //G-Mt place this <Anointing> on DoW 4, in tying it thematically with <Judas
silver money>, giving a picture of presage of anointing the body after death of
Yeshua. Here it was by an unnamed woman in the house of Simon the leper a.

Note: It should be same as the <Anointing according to G-Jn> (B-2) which is


chronologically accurate in the timeline as it was placed before the day of His anti-
triumphal Yerusalem Entry, thereby typifying it as the preparation for the Pesach
Lamb on Abib 10. G-John alone gives the name of the woman, Mariam, a sister of
Eleazar (Lazarus).

Cf. Lk 7:36-50 has a different anointing pericope outside the Passion narrative with
the presage of anointing Yeshua by an unnamed woman at a Pharisee named Shimon
possibly a prequel.

M-5 <Upper Room Preparation for the Pesach festival season>.

(Mk +14:12-16; Mt +26:17-19; Lk +22:7-13)


Here, preparation (of the upper room) was for celebration of the coming Pesach festival
season; not meant for one day activity, nor for the Pesach meal of the Pesach day of
Abib 14. The preparing was not something done by the disciple taking a whole day.
Relying on the master of the house, they simply had the room and other things to be
ready for the celebration of the Pesach festival season.

The text gives a time-marker in Mk 14:12 //Mt 26:17 the beginning day (/x: first day) for the
unleavened bread eating (cf. different wording in //Lk 22:7). It is not the first day of 7-day
long Festival of the matzah (= Abib 15th which is the day after Pesach sacrifice and meal), but
the day for removing leaven from the house [ = Abib 14, the very day of Pesach sacrifice and
meal]. [In IRENT Matzah is reserved for the Festival name, the Festival of the matzah =
Festival of Pesach.]

The setting is on the same day (Abib 12) of the opening of the section Mk 14:1a, Mt
27:1-2; Lk 22:1. Here the narrative has it move heading towards the day not on the
day of the beginning day for the unleavened bread as leaven is being removed from
the house.

See elsewhere on <*leavening and unleavened>.

The idiom here to eat the Pesach should be clearly understood simply equivalent to celebrate the
Pesach festival with the unleavened bread. It should to be not taken to indicate only the particular
Pesach meal (as in the Jewish ritual Seder in which roasted lamb is an integral part). The verbal
phrase is rendered in IRENT as eat the festival meals for the Pesach festival season.

a
Leper - The epithet the leper probably from his history of contracting leprosy and got healing from
Yeshua. Was he the same Pharisee who hosted Yeshua before as recorded in G-Lk and now appears
again in the Mt-Mk pericope of his spreading a table of hospitality to Yeshua in his gratitude, to make
the Lukan pericope as a prequel?
57 | P a g e
The translated phrase eat the Passover (or Pesach) is not in English diction and fail to make its
meaning clear. More importantly, reading the phrase in the Synoptic texts is easy for the readers to
associate the Lords Last Supper with the Pesach Seder itself, contradictory to Johannine narrative.
The Last Supper was NOT the Pesach Seder, but a farewell meal of Yeshua and His disciples, as
they were waiting the Pesach festival season to come upon soon.

As for the disciples, they would not be aware of Yeshuas plan for this special Pesach in which He
Himself was to be offered as the Pesach lamb.]

M-6 L-s<Last supper>; (Mk 14:17-26; Mt +26:20-30; Lk 22:14-30; Jn 13:1-35)


[See under the subheading Last Supper vs. Pesach meal (Cf. Jewish ritual Seder)]
[Cf. Christian jargon Eucharist.] [The common expressions New Testament Passover (after
Coulter) and Christian Passover are misnomers and nonbiblical.]

(Mk +14:17-21 14: 22-26; Mt +26:20-25 26:26-30; Lk +22:14-30 (22:21-23) (cf. Jn


13:1-20 13:21-30) [red font Judas betrayal foretold]

The so-called Lords Last Supper. [The expression Last meal gives a wrong
picture of a meal as the Passover meal.] It was not the Pesach meal (of Seder-type
as in later rabbinic Judaism), though many wrongly interpret it that way, and as a
result the Johannine testimony is left contradictory to the Synoptic narrative. [See
below A-4 <P-m> coming on Day 6 of the Week]

Foretelling Kefas denial (Mk +14:27-31; Mt +26:31-35; Lk +22:31-38; Jn +13:36-38)

<Gethsemane Prayer> (Mt 26:36-46; Mk 14:32-42; Lk 22:29-46; Jn 18:1)

M-7 <Arrest> (Mt +26:47-56; Mk+14:43-52; Lk +22:47-53; 63-65; Jn +18:2-12).


M-8 <Hannan> and <Kefas denial>;

[Cock-crow twice (Mk 14:72) Temple-criers call at beginning and at ending of


the cock-crow watch (3rd watch of the night).

M-9 + M-10 <Sanhedrin I & II>;

M-9 <Sanhedrin session I> (interrogation) (Mt 26:59-66; Mk 14:53-72) (Night time)
M-10 <Sanhedrin session II> (judgment) (Mt 27:1-2; Mk 15:1a; Lk 22:66-71) (Daytime)

It was not on the Pesach day, nor on the first day of Pesach festival (= Festival of
the matzah).

58 | P a g e
A typical example of misunderstanding and misinterpretation (strike-out
words):
It was against Jewish custom to begin a trial on Passover day. The arrest of
Jesus and his appearance before the Sanhedrin are recorded in Mark as having
taken place on the Passover night, so that we are to presume that instead of
celebrating the great Passover festival in a normal way, all those in authority were
milling about the city involved in a criminal case. The crucial point remains
that in John too the Sanhedrin sits in judgment at night, though Jewish custom did
not allow nocturnal judgment, nor could be a sentence of guilt handed down on the
same day as the interrogation itself. From Joel Carmichael (1962), The Death of
Jesus. pp. 37-38)

Note: The erroneous statement of his is crossed-out, which are simply out of his
confused interpretation of the Gospel text. Here he uses Passover in the sense usually
taken. In truth, the event of his Trial cannot be on the Pesach night (Abib 14; Nisan
15), but it is before. In IRENT the whole of formal phase of <Sanhedrin v. Yeshua> is
located in the early morning Abib 13 (Mk 15:1) and the following session of <Pilate
v. Yeshua> is from morning to midday (Jn 19:14).

M-11 + M-12 <Pilate I & II>; <Trial and Sentencing> Pilate v. Yeshua.
M-11
19 <Pilate I> (Lk 23:1-7); <Herod Antipas> (Lk 23:7-10);
E
A

M-12
20 <Pilate II> (Mt 27:11-26; Mk 15:1b-15; Lk 23:13-25; Jn 18:28 19:16)
A
E
A

Roman scourging of Yeshua Mt 27:26 = Mk 15:15 (at the end of trial); Jn 19:1 (in mid trial);
Cf. Lk 23:16

www.truthmagazine.com/archives/volume44/v440106010.htm ...The victim of a scourging


was bound to a post or frame, stripped of his clothing, and beaten with the flagellum from the
shoulders to the loins. The beating left the victim bloody and weak, in unimaginable pain, and
near the point of death.

In the usual scenario, in contrast to the scenario of His trial into the night, He was forced to
carry the cross in his near exhausted condition right after scourging!

Bleeding from scourging would not have fresh blood from the wounds left on the body and
be transferred to a shroud as in the case of Shroud of Turin of a medieval relic!
https://ptl2010.com/2012/03/22/the-scourge-its-role-in-biblical-history-and-jesus-
execution/
www.cbcg.org/scourging-crucifixion.html

Note: Importantly, most commentaries have the many events from the ending of
M-6 <Last supper> to the final sentencing M-12 <Pilate> cramped into such a short
period of one overnight from the midnight to the next morning before the beginning
of A-1 < Road to Golgotha> in a breakneck speed people going through all!

The correct timeline accounts for all the events which were taking up considerable time and
the setting of the scene which cannot possibly occur in the night (cock-crow and dawn-
watch). a

a
Some dismisses the possibility of placing the Trial on a day before the Crucifixion. In the otherwise
excellent book by Paul Finch (2009, 2nd Ed), The Passover Papers Controversy, Myth, Fairly Tales
59 | P a g e
Most commentators do not see the flow of the events which shows that it took
more than one day for the Trial and Crucifixion of Yeshua. The trial of Sanhedrin
v. Yeshua and the trial of Pilate vs. Yeshua took place from the early morning to
noon.

Note: This timeline of the week is reconstructed here in keeping with the biblical
lunar calendar. It allocates the Pilates Trial of Yeshua on a separate day Abib 13
(Tue). After final sentencing in 6th hour period not 6 a.m. as most interpreted, the
crucifixion was carried out on the next day, Abib 14 (Wed).
Consider two important observations of (1) Jn 19:14 6th hour which cannot be
manipulated to be interpreted as 6 A.M., and (2) of the physical impossibility to keep
all the actors move one place to another in an incredible frantic pace in one short
overnight period of about 6 hours the events from His arrest to the final Pilates
sentencing. Moreover, the Scripture texts are plain and clear to give the time indicator
for the Trial by [the final session of] the Sanhedrin to be in the morning Mt 27:1;
Mk 15:1a, Lk 22:6, after which they brought Yeshua to Pilate.
[Quote from Finch, p. 171 a capital crime was not to be conducted on a day before a Feast
day and that it required two days to convict a person of death penalty by Jewish Law. based
on the rule Mishnah.
William F. Dankenbring, "The Mystery of Mysteries: John 19: 14 - What Do You Mean,
'About the Sixth Hour'?", Prophecy Flash! (Triumph Prophetic Ministries, vol. 12, no. 1,
April-May, 1998): 41-54; "A New Look at: Jesus' Last Week and the Sufferings of
Messiah!", Prophecy Flash! (vol. 11, no. 2, April-May, 1997): 3-36
www.triumphpro.com/sixth-hour-of-john-19.htm [he asserts that, since it is impossible
to be 6 A.M. (allegedly by Roman reckoning), it cannot be other than noon. He failed to
consider another alternative, i.e. midnight (6th hour by counting from sunset both in
Jewish and Roman reckoning, regardless how a calendar date begins (at sunset, at sunrise,
or at midnight.] [The other example of time in the night in this way is Act 23:23 third
hour-period of the night which is 8-9 p.m. if sunset is 6 p.m. [This is the only example
of an ordinal number for Roman reckoning of hour-periods of the night with a night
period divided by 12, same as a day was. Jewish reckoning is to divide a night into four
watches and to divide a day into 12 hrs.]
Glen Myers (August 20, 1999), 'Hebrew Time vs. Roman Time' - Did the Apostle John
use Hebrew Time or Roman Time in His Writings in the New Testament: (6 pp.)
https://web.archive.org/web/20151026162000/http://churchofgodcount.com/timehr.html

[See the separate file in Supplement (Collection #6) for <Significance of the 6th
hour in Jn 19:14>.]
Ruckstuhl - More than One Day chronology
Glenn E Weeks (with a modified Friday crucifixion scenario) he
interprets 6th hour in Jn 19:14 as midnight. Yeshua vs. Pilate occurring
through the night. About 18 hours from Thu morning to mid-night, with
the Crucifixion next day (Friday).] http://christiantext.com/chapters.php
Ch. 4 (Establishing Time Elements of the Trial of Jesus) & Ch. 5 (The
Trial and Elapsed Tim of Trial Events) a copy in the Collections for WB
#6B.]

and Nonsense! Ch. 11: Did Jesus Spent a Night in Jail? pp.171-178, the author concludes that there
is no discrepancy between Jn 19:14 and Mk 15:25!]
60 | P a g e
A for After Pilates sentencing: Abib 14-17

A-1 to A-7
A-1 <Via Dolorosa>; A-2 Crucifixion
A-3 Death; A-4 Entombed; P-m <Pesach meal>
A-5 In the Tomb A-6 Resurrection; Empty Tomb
A-7 Risen Lord

A-1 <Via Dolorosa> [Bearing His cross to Golgotha. Cf. So-called Stations of
the Cross in the ecclesial liturgy.]
Mt 27:32; Mk 15:21; Lk 23:26; Jn 19:17

The horizontal cross-bar (patibulum) of the execution stake (cross) was carried to
the place of execution where an upright post (stipes) is in place.
www.frugalsites.net/jesus/crucifixion.htm

Where was He crucified and buried?


Ref. EL Martin (1996, 2nd Ed.), Secret of Golgotha www.askelm.com/books/book001.asp
[Reviews: www.leaderu.com/theology/stunning.html http://reconciliationoutreach.net/wp-
content/uploads/2016/01/Introduction.pdf ]
http://triumphpro.info/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/where-did-jesus_-die1.pdf

A-2 - <Crucifixion> on the day of Pesach


The Crucifixion day (Abib 14) falls on Thursday in CE 30 (Apr-6).
Put on the execution stake in third hour-period (8 9 a.m.) (Mk 15:25).
Darkness covered of the land in the 6th hour period (towards noon) (Mk 15:33; //Mt
27:45; //Lk 23:44).
His death in ninth hour-period (2 3 p.m.) (Mt 27:46; Mk 15:34; cf. Lk 23:44). It was
the time the Pesach lamb was scarified it in O.T. the Heb. phrase ben haArbayim Exo
12:6; Num 9:3, 5, 11; Lev 23:5 *between the two setting-times (i.e. mid-
afternoon). [See below under a separate heading - Sabbath, Pesach (Passover), and
Last Supper in the time-related terminology.]
His side pierced Jn 19:34.

Cf. different chronological scenarios: Apr. 25, Wed in CE 31; Apr. 3 Fri in CE 33); Apr 7
Fri CE 30 (after Finch, which ignore that it was Nisan 16);
The execution cannot occur during the Festival (of Pesach = of the Matzah) (Mt 26:5). The
prevalent conjecture of taking the Last meal as the Pesach meal (as in Fri scenarios) is
simply untenable, just as G-Jn telling unequivocally that it was preparation of Pesach (Jn
19:14).
To find out what year was of the Crucifixion, they searched out one year (btw the extremes
of CE 26 and 36 p. 99 Hoehner, Chronology) which had Nisan 14 fall on Friday because
of their presupposition (they knew it was Friday because thats how it was on CE 33). Voila,
they found CE 33 a circular reasoning actually to prove nothing! It was reinforced by
interpreting Daniels 70-Week prophecy to give the support for CE 33. In fact, others have
done even to for 30, 31, 32, 34, etc. of their choice!

61 | P a g e
Seven Sayings from the Cross:

"Father, forgive them..."


"Truly I say to you today: with me youre going to be in paradise"
"Woman, behold thy son..." [darkness: noon 3 pm]
"My Elohim, My Elohim ..."
"I thirst"
"It is completed"
"Into Thy hands..."

Yeshua foretells His suffering and death:

On three occasions before entering Jerusalem,

1st Time 2nd Time 3rd Time


G-Mt 16:2123 17:2223 20:1719
G-Mk 8:31 9:3032 10:3234
G-Lk 9:2122 9:4345 183133
G-Jn 12:2036

A-3 <Entombment>
All four Gospels cover it clearly //Mt +27:59-61; //Mk +15:42-47; //+Lk 23:53-56; //Jn 19:38-42.
[Cf. Unique in Jn 19:39 is There along with him also came Nicodemus, the man who had on a former
occasion paid a visit to Yeshua by night, bringing a mixture of myrrh and aloes about seventy-five
pounds.]

(His *burial was by *entombment, not burying in a grave. Cf. interment)

http://craigaevans.com/Burial_Traditions.pdf Craig Evans, Jewish Burial Traditions


and the Resurrection of Jesus

The so-called burial of him should not be confused with the body to be buried in a grave
dug underground. Yeshua was NOT buried; but his body was entombed. The body was
prepared with anointing (washing and spices); no embalming a as customary in Christian
countries and in the ancient Egypt.

[See below a separate entry <*Mt 12:40 three days and three nights and Jonahs
sign> under Examining Time-indicators and terms in the Biblical passages].

The so-called Shroud of Turin, an ancient genuine product, a medieval Catholic relic,
but a modern hoax for the real burial cloth (shroud) of Yeshua. [See in the Appendix
below on the shroud relics.]

a
https://bartonfuneral.com/funeral-basics/history-of-embalming/
http://americacomesalive.com/2010/08/03/wars-drive-advances/
Alvin J. Schmidt (2015), Cremation, Embalmment, or Neither? A Biblical/Christian Evaluation.
62 | P a g e
His entombment was not in the late afternoon before sundown (as a big issue for those with
the non-biblical solar sabbath of Saturday), but in the evening as the time-indicator in the text
shows:
Lk 23:54 Thus, [all] this had been the day of sabbath-preparation [Abib 14], and there
sabbath day was coming to dawn sabbath is for daytime period.
Mt 27:57 Now evening having arrived ~~ Yosef of Ramathayim came to Pilate to ask
for the body of Yeshua to be taken down.
Mk 15:42 It was already evening there arrived Yosef of Ramathayim ~~.]

Most ignore what the Bible plainly says, and they picturesquely explain that the burial process
was in haste before sabbath sets in with sunset, ignorant of Sabbath which has nothing to do
with Saturday. Some would say the burial was a temporary one and to be completed by the
women group when Sabbath was over, little knowing that the burial was not a task for women.
Some would believe the Shroud of Turin would keep the image with the blood on the body
left unwashed!

The process taking time was fully completed by Yosef, having taken place in the evening into
night (not in haste). Often a fanciful imagination carried people to think it was temporary so
that someone else would come back to finish the job when their Jewish Sabbath from sunset
to sunset is over. Preparing the body consists of a ceremonial washing (called taharah) and
wrapping. No women were allowed for this task.

A-4 P-m <Pesach meal>


Yehudim were to take it in the evening of Abib 14, at the very time the body of
Yeshua was being entombed.

[When the sacrificial system and Temple worship is no longer a part of the rabbinic Judaism
of today, the only remaining practice of the ancient Pesach is what is now called the Seder
ritual and meal, which is observed on the (beginning) evening of Nisan 15, which
corresponds to Abib 14 evening]

[Cf. A second Seder is a Diaspora Jewish practice on the evening of Nisan 16]
[Note: Yehudim, not Jews, who are in the modern setting in diaspora after the Fall of Yerusalem
in 70 C.E.

Abib 14 is Pesach Day the day of Pesach sacrifice (late afternoon) and Pesach meal (in the
evening). [Cf. the expression to eat the passover (Mt 26:17 //Mk 14:12, 14; //Lk 22:8, 11;
also Jn 18:28) should be taken as an idiom for to eat festival meals for the Pesach festival
season, that is, to keep the Pesach festival celebration as in Mt 26:18;]

Last Supper is interpreted as the Pesach Meal, without clear solution to resolve apparent
contradiction to John 13:1, etc. compounded by inadequate understanding of the Synoptic
time-makers (Mk 14:12 and parallel). It is hopeless to attempt to construct any sensible
timeline from there on, as it takes that the Crucifixion was to come after the Passover day!

Note: 18<High Sabbath>


The women rested on Sabbath (daytime period only) Lk 23:56b (Exo 20:8-11)
The women bought spice after Sabbath Mk 16:1

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Abib 15th is Sabbath (on Day 7 of the lunar week in the lunar month) in the biblical calendar
This special one is called High Sabbath; the week-long annual festival begins always on
the Sabbath of Day 7 of the lunar week. [Note: Sabbath rest is for the period of daytime only,
not 24 hours. Night is by itself a period of rest, whether sabbath or not.] [Abib 15th is the
first day of the Matzah Festival (Lev 23:6-7; Exo 23:15; 34:18, etc.)

In a full 7-day week, whether the week is festival or ordinary, there is always only one
Sabbath day. There is no another separate different Sabbath for annual (festival) or weekly.
The Friday crucifixion scenario has two different Sabbaths fall on the same date (doubled-
up sabbath). Neither we have two sabbath-days back-to-back in that week as explained away
by a Wednesday crucifixion scenario.

A-5 <Resurrection in the dawn> (= the risen Lord Yeshua Himself presented as
the First-Fruits) w/Empty tomb. It is not in the morning hour. The expression
resurrection morning refer to the time setting of the risen Lord appearing to the
disciples.

His death: From the ninth hour of Abib 14 (Wed 3 p.m.) to the dawn of Abib 16 (Sat
6 a.m.) 3 hours short of than 72 hours.

Coulter claims that full three days are required for ones being legally dead. Hence,
Jesus was being dead more than 72 hours from the death as in Mk 15:25 to the time
the later afternoon (or early evening) as the resurrection time which he had to come
up to meet this requirement. [eisegesis and proof texting.] a

In the Gospel narratives, the Resurrection was in the dawn, not in the morning, of Day 1 of
the lunar week Abib 16 (which was the day after High Sabbath of Abib 15). It should be
clear that dawn is at the closing of a calendar day, ending the fourth watch of the night (=
dawn-watch), before a new day to begin at sunrise.

<Day of Wave Sheaf of First-fruits> with Wave Sheaf Offering (barley harvest). Abib 16.
(Yom haBikkurim) (Cf. Chag haBikkurim feast of the firstfruit). The day after High Sabbath
= is the first day to begin counting down (seven full sabbaths + 50 days) to find the day of
Shavout (Pentecost) to fall in the summer wheat harvest + grapes, etc. in the fourth month
of the lunar year. It has nothing to do with Sunday.
[www.worldslastchance.com/yahuwahs-calendar/pentecost-calculation-restoration.html ]

<At the Empty Tomb>


The women group set out to go back to the tomb in the dawn before morning break. [Lk 24:1
(with the spice prepared) //Mk 16:2.] It was not to anoint the boy for (permanent) burial, as
the job was not for women and it was completed by Yosef and Nicodemus taking quite a time

a
Quoting from him: Jesus statement that He would rise three days after He had died is acutely
significant. According to Jewish law to be declared legally dead, a person had to be dead for three full
days or more. Therefore, if Jesus had risen from the dead before 3 PM on the afternoon of Nisan 17, a
weekly Sabbath. He would not have been considered legally dead. As a result, His return to life would
not have been considered a true resurrection from the dead.
If He had been crucified on a Friday and restored to life on Sunday morning at sunrise. His death
would not have been "valid'' since only two nights and one day would have passed between Friday
sunset and Sunday morning. In order for His death to be publicly recognized and acknowledged, it
was necessary for Jesus to remain in the tomb grave for three nights and three days before He was
raised from the dead.
64 | P a g e
in the evening to the night period of the same day Abib 14 (as the day of Crucifixion).

Cf. Jn 20:1 Mariam Magdalene (possible with others) went to the tomb and found empty.

In the morning they encountered the risen Lord it was now Day 2 of the lunar week (Abib
17). As no date changes with sunrise in Jewish or Gregorian calendars, it is still in the same
named day of the Gregorian week. That means, the Resurrection fell on Saturday for the
Wednesday crucifixion scenario; Sunday for the Thursday scenario, and, alas, Monday for
the Friday crucifixion scenario when the two events are correctly placed in harmony with
the whole of the biblical narratives.

A-6 <risen Lord> to disciples [on Abib 17; Day 2 of the week]
(1) The women;
(2) The two disciples on Emmaus (> Emmaus) road;
(3) The rest of disciples;
(4) The Disciples w/ Thomas (a week later).

Post-resurrection period
After Resurrection in the dawn of Abib 16 He showed Himself:

Shortly with sunrise, now was Abib 17 (Day 2 of the week): It was in the morning
and day time that the Risen Lord appeared to the women group and other disciples.

Abib 17
1. (morning) to Mariam Magdalene and other women Mk 16:9-11; Mt 28:5-10; Jn
20:11-18.
2. (afternoon) to two disciples on the road to Emmaus Lk 24:13-49; Mk 16:12-13;
3. (evening) to the Eleven Mk 16:14-18 //Jn 20:19-25 (Thomas being absent);

The risen Lord Himself later:


1. to the eleven disciples including Thomas Jn 20:26-29;
2. to the Eleven (in Galilee) (Mt 28:16-20) (Jn 21:1-24)
3. Ascension Mk 16:19-20; Lk 24:50-51; Act 1:9-10;
4. Pouring of the holy Spirit to the Mashiahn people Act 2:1-4;
(Disciples acts Lk 24:52-53; Act 1:12-26)

Five appearances shortly after He was risen Abib 17:

1. To Mary Magdalene [given a message to the disciples]


2. To the other women who come to the tomb [intending to complete the burial
preparation of His body]
3. To two disciples on the Road to Emmaus
4. To Simon Peter [nowhere recorded, but alluded to in Lk 24:33 and 1Co 1:5]
5. To the astonished disciples [Thomas is absent]

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The women who followed Yeshua in His ministry and Passion narratives:

Mt 27:55 many women who had followed Yeshua from Galilee


Mk 15:40 there were women from distance looking on
Lk 23:27 women beating on their chest and wailing in Via Dolorosa (a legend of
Veronica, if a true story, it is possibly Yeshuas mother)
Lk 23:49 they watched as Yeshua breathed His last.
Lk 23:55 at the scene of the tomb (Yosef)
Lk 24:10 Mariam the Magdalene, Yohanah, Mariam the mother of Yaakob and other
women reports to the apostles.
Cf. Lk 8:2-3 Mariam the Magdalene, Yohanah the wife of Kuza, Susanna and others.

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G. Liturgical Holy Week vs. Passion Week

Liturgical Holy Week vs. Passover-Passion in 30 CE

Abib 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

*Nisan 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
30 C.E.
Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

Lazarus* Palm Maundy Good Holy Easter


Holy Week
Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

The Passion Week 30 CE in the Scripture and the Holy Week in the Church liturgy of the current year are not same;
dates do not mach. Sabbath is on Saturdays (Friday evening to Saturday evening) from the Jewish tradition.

Current years for the Passion week

Current years for the Passion week

2008 Apr-14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue
2011 Apr-13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu
2012 Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Palm Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Good Fri Sat Easter Sun# Mon
2013 Mar-20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28
Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu
2014 Apr-9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu
2015 Mar-29 30 31 Apr-1 2 3 4 5 6
Palm Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Good Fri Sat Easter Sun# Mon
2016 Mar-17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Thu Fri Sat Palm Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Good Fri
Abib 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Nisan <varied depending on which year>

The liturgical Easter Sunday is not same as Resurrection day (Abib 16).
Nisan dates of the rabbinic Jewish calendar cannot be aligned here, since each year is different.
The liturgical Holy Week is not parallel to the biblical Passion-Passover Week.

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The Church liturgical Holy Week is a period of one week, Sunday to Sunday, before
Easter Sunday, beginning with *Palm Sunday. It is a church construct and its timeline
does not correspond to that of the internal timeline in the passion narrative in the Scripture.

Good Friday is not related to Crucifixion Day (Abib 14)


Easter Sunday is not related to Resurrection day (Abib 16). [Sunday
morning Resurrection is a nonbiblical term.] originates from Constantine Catholic
Church since early 4th century
Maundy Thursday [fr. Latin mandatum = commandment (to love each other as He
loved)]
So-called Silent Wednesday by some. Hoehner tweaked the first few days of the
Holy Week, resulting in Palm Monday and erasing Silent Wednesday in the
timeline.
Cf. *Lazarus Saturday 1st day of the Holy Week in the Eastern Orthodox Church.
Paschal Triduum (Easter Triduum, Holy Triduum) - the period of three days that
begins with the liturgy on the evening of Maundy Thursday (Holy Thursday) and ends
with evening prayer on Easter Sunday.

The liturgical Resurrection is in the morning of Sunday, which is at the beginning of a


day of the Holy Week in Gregorian calendar; while the biblical Resurrection was in the
dawn, which was at the end of an Abib date ( in the middle of a Nisan date one day later)
for the Passion Week in the biblical lunar calendar.

Biblical Lunar calendar: with a day beginning at sunrise - Abib as 1st month.
[Seven numbered days of the lunar week are not related to seven named days of the
Gregorian week which Jewish calendar uses.]. Non-cyclic weeks.
Rabbinic Jewish calendar: [not the calendar used in the Bible] with a day reckoned
from sunset - Nisan as 7th month; sabbath on Saturday, being tied with the Gregorian
week of seven named days.
Julian-Gregorian calendar: date in Julian = 2 + Gregorian (in 100 BC to 100 CE).
[Note: All dates for the Passion week throughout this file is in Julian dates.]
Julian date is 6 hrs behind the rabbinic Jewish; 6 hrs ahead of the Biblical Lunar
calendar; with a difference of 12 hours btw the Biblical and Jewish becomes significant
for dating of night-time events (from evening to dawn before sunrise).
Pesach festival season (inclusive 8 days): Abib 14 + Abib 15 21 (days of Festival of
the matzah)
Pesach I to VII in Jewish Passover for Nisan 15th to 21th (Nisan 14 as Erev Pesach).
Passion Week: [Day # of the lunar week = Day # of the Passion Week]
from Abib 9th to Abib 15th (Day 1 to Day 7 of the Week)
CE 29/30 = AM 3790 = SC 4012;
CE 2013 = AM 5773 = SC 5995;
CE 2014/2015 = AM 5775 = SC 5997. www.yhrim.com/Calendars/5997_GMT.pdf
CE 2015/2016 = AM 5776 http://antipas.net/heb_cal_2015-16.htm

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Sources of errors in Passion Week chronology
confusion, conflict and contentions galore

On the calendar system problems:


1. Gregorian and rabbinic Jewish calendars were not in the first century. They
differ fundamentally from the biblical lunisolar calendar. Using the correct and
proper calendar is essential for understanding biblical narratives.
2. Using the named days of Gregorian solar week, rather than the numbered days
of lunar week is the stumbling block.
3. There are 4 full 7-day weeks (2nd day to 29th day with both 1st day and 30th
day), with four Sabbath days in a lunar month; it is on day 7 of the full lunar
week (on 8th, 15th, 22nd, and 29th day of the month). It is not related to
Saturday, which itself is 6th day of the week in some oriental culture. Sabbath
rest is for day-time period, not 24 hours.)
4. Mistaking day 7 of the lunar week equating to Saturday (7th day of the solar
week), and sabbath preparation day (= sabbath eve) is taken to be same as
Friday No.1 culprit for the mistaken un-Scriptural Friday Crucifixion and
Sunday Resurrection.
5. Gregorian cyclic continuous solar weeks instead of the biblical non-continuous
lunar weeks.
6. A biblical day is that which begins with sunrise. A Hebrew day from sunset to
sunset (which was taken over from the ancient Greek practice) is about 12
hours off from the biblical day. Daytime remains same date; however, events
in the nigh time belongs a day later in Hebrew calendar The No. 2 culprit for
confusion, conflict and contradictions in understanding the timeline of the
Passion Week. The biblical timelines and narratives cannot be followed
without confusion when the vocabulary of the Roman calendar is -use (with
day from midnight to midnight, but counting 12 hour-periods of daytime
beginning from sunrise).
7. Confusion on the New Moon to fix the lunar month to begin and on the date
to begin a new year in lunisolar calendar. a
8. With the Gregorian calendar, to determine what date the events in the middle
of a night occurs is easily confused. Similarly, it is easy to get confused for the
events in the late afternoon and evening with the rabbinic Jewish calendar.

a
[Cf. The Sabbatarian issue which is the weekly sabbath is to be on.] [The so-called Postponement
Rules in calendation by Hillel II should not be our concern for fixing the lunar calendar for the
year of the Crucifixion.]

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On the chronology-related issue: the year:

The year of His crucifixion was 30 CE (he was 33-year old) not 31 or 33 CE.
The month was Abib, corresponding to April [spring season; barley harvest]
Using Nisan dates of rabbinic Jewish calendar does harm to read the narrative
of the events almost half century before their calendar was devised. It is
amazing to see how people interpret Daniels 70-week prophecy to support the
year of their favorite 33, 32, 31, and even 30 CE.

On the calendar-related issue: dates and days.

1. Crucified on the day of Pesach (Abib 14/Nisan 14). The Lords Last Meal was
not a Pesach meal (Cf. rabbinic Jewish ritual Seder)
2. The resurrection was in the dawn (before sunrise), the last portion of Abib 16.
3. Instead of following the biblical Passion Week with events in correct timeline,
the liturgical Holy Week is chronologically and thematically disconnected from
what the Bible shows, favoring traditional interpretation of their canonical
Bible. It cannot show adequately and correctly the narratives on a timeline.

70 | P a g e
Summary and conclusion on the Passion Week Timeline:

In a nutshell:

To follow the Passion Narrative in CE 30


just follow the dates
from Abib 14 [afternoon] to Abib 16 [dawn];
from His Death to His Resurrection.

Abib 14 Crucifixion and Death


Abib 15th High Sabbath
Sabbath = the day one of the lunar week [not Saturday]
Sabbath rest is for the daytime period, not 24 hours.
For celebration, commemoration, or memorial are kept
on the anniversary dates, not on certain days of the week.
Friday and Sunday (of the Gregorian solar week) in the Holy Week are
for the Crucifixion and Resurrection are for liturgical use, not related to
the biblical dates. not that they occurred on those days.

When we try to decipher the Passion Week timeline in terms of the named days of the
Gregorian solar week it actually hinders the proper understanding of the narrative.
Which day it was or should be for the Crucifixion or the Resurrection is actually of a
marginal importance except one which is of liturgical tradition.

What we have to do in order to follow the biblical timeline is to keep track of the dates
in terms of Abib month and the numbered day of its lunar week. Our well-accustomed
terms and concepts associated with the solar calendar is alien to the Biblical times.
After fully comprehending the true Biblical calendar and read the narrative, the day of
the solar week on which a certain event falls can be found, but it should be based on
the astronomical data in order solely to find what the date of the proleptic Gregorian
Calendar is Abib 14 in 30 CE to fall on. It is essential then to have the two calendars
compared, the proleptic Gregorian Calendar and the Biblical Lunar calendar, the latter
which requires to fix the date of the New Moon Day with the time of dawn and the
conjunction. Sunday fixed for worship is not based on the Bible but simply the Church
tradition as it divorced itself away from the Judaic mindset.
Many important events in the past of human history are being remembered in
anniversary, that is, on the same date and month; why would anyone be obsessed about
keeping it on the same named day of the week? Would anyone want to keep a birthday
not on the anniversary date, but on the same day of the week? That it was found to fall
on, say, Wednesday, does not compel us to keep a memorial or a celebration on
Wednesday, as the named days of the week have no meaning in the Biblical text and
context. It is also entirely different matter to see what is to be kept Last Supper,
71 | P a g e
Pesach, Resurrection, or any festival, etc. It has thrived and will survive the way
people are hooked on because religious things would not go out of those in power for
control.

Different crucifixion scenarios:

/x: Wednesday crucifixion Saturday late afternoon resurrection


/Wednesday crucifixion Saturday dawn resurrection
/Thursday crucifixion Sunday dawn resurrection a (Apr-6 Thu 30 CE)
/x: Friday crucifixion Monday dawn resurrection

Doesnt the Bible say He was crucified on Wed, Thu, Friday?


Doesnt the Bible say He resurrected on Sat, Sunday?
What is about three days and three nights?

How the New Moon day be determined in terms of the true biblical lunar calendar
(not the unbiblical rabbinic Jewish calendar). This will affect a certain date to be
either Thursday or Wednesday. [The subject is found in detail in the file, IRENT Vol. III
Supplement Walk through the Scripture 5 - Time, Calendar and Chronology.

(1) by astronomical calculation with data b on Conjunction date/time and


sunrise date/time which are same as used in the Wednesday scenario,
they determine the New Moon Day (Nisan 1)
(2) by rather imprecise method of first visible crescent moon,

The Friday crucifixion scenario with Sunday resurrection of the liturgical


Church Holy Week was based on the reading the Bible in terms of the Roman
calendar with a solar week. For them, the expression 7th day of the week is
Saturday for sabbath and the preparation day is Friday. This is the rabbinic Jewish
calendar convention, which they took it in, without its validity to support. They
chose CE 33 as the year since it was the one choice among several years which had
Nisan 14 on Friday (Apr-3). Some even chooses CE 30 Apr 7 = Friday as the day of
the Crucifixion without flimsy astronomical data. [This scenario explains away the
three days and three nights, on the basis of idiomatic reckoning a portion of day as
one day, that is, taking is simply three days (in Gregorian days of the week).]

a
A Thursday crucifixion scenario has an error with an unbiblical two-sabbath theory of the Passion
Week (annual sabbath and weekly sabbath back-to-back). It is unavoidable since they have not
known the fact that the vocabulary of the named days of the solar week does not belong to the Bible
and sabbath in the Bible does not mean Saturday
www.bibleinfo.com/en/questions/what-time-day-did-crucifixion-happen (Here, it is Thursday
Crucifixion on Nisan 14 (AD 31?). Note: it reads Pilate sentencing of 6th hour incorrectly as 6 a.m.).
b
Elsewhere is dealt: the conjuction date/time Mar-22-Wed 30 CE at 17:32 UTC
(www.triumphpro.com/jesus-in-grave-new-truth.htm).
Also H. Goldstine (1973) New and Full Moons.
[One-day discrepancy between the two scenarios of the Crucifixion date is due to different way
of determining the New Moon day. The method of sighting first visible crescent would be only
feasble in the ancient time for the people living in the limited geographic area of Judea.]
72 | P a g e
A Wednesday crucifixion scenario came out to explain the Matthean text of the
so-called sign of Jonah Mt 12:40 to give precisely full 72 hours (3N and 3D),
which they misinterpreted 3D and 3N as the duration of His being remained dead,
whereas they see the Friday scenario can come up only 2N and 1D+. Wednesday
was fixed to be Nisan 14 as they read the astronomical data; but totally unrelated the
Matthean text, by which they were forced to place the time of the resurrection in the
late afternoon, contrary to the Bible.

It is not quite accurate to say on Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday day He was


crucified. We can only say that the day of His Crucifixion was found to fall on a
certain named day of the solar week on the proleptic Gregorian calendar. There is
no such Gregorian vocabulary in the Bible. a

The biblical text cannot be and should not be interpreted in terms of seven named
days of Gregorian solar cyclic week, which is in sharp contrast to the seven
numbered days of the lunar non-cyclic week. With the Scripture based luni-solar
calendar, it is not difficult to see that how a certain biblical scenario would correctly
fit the internal timeline of the biblical Passion narrative. The readers will see how it
is essential to have firm grip on the calendar systems and to find the one which is
used in the Scripture. Without it, it is hopeless to make sense out of the timeline of
the Passion-Passover Week.

Much more than finding the correct day of the solar week on the proleptic Gregorian
calendar, but this controversy helped to appreciate the importance of calendar issue
when dealing with the timeline of the Passion-Passover Week.

Year CE Crucifixion Resurrection*


30 Wed (Apr-5) Sat (dawn) #1
30 Wed (Apr-5) Sat (evening) #2
30 Thu (Apr-6) Sun (dawn) #3
33 Fri (Apr 3) Sun (dawn) #4
* dawn is the last port of night with morning being the first part of day.

#2 Resurrection at late afternoon/evening contradicts the Bible.


#3 If New Moon Day is one day later than (#1).
#3 [Ref. Doig (1990); Boice (1999)]
#4 Traditional scenario of CE 33 for the Crucifixion is the year simply chosen as it has
Nisan 14 on Fri! And to prove that day was Friday, their answer is that it was Friday on CE
33 a fallacy of circular logic. The idea that Friday and Sunday were for Crucifixion and
Resurrection has resulted from a single source of error - misinterpreting a biblical Day 7 of
the week as Saturday [This is from Jewish tradition.]

a
An unbiblical modern easy-read paraphrase-type Bible translation, GNB, has Sunday in place of the
first day of the week as in all other translations. In the early Julian calendar, it should be noted, that
it was with eight-day week (nundinal cycle), designated as A to H.]
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A Thursday crucifixion scenario with Sunday resurrection

Similar to a Wednesday scenario but it has removed an illogical and unbiblical idea of having
the Resurrection in the late afternoon. The resurrection remains same as in the traditional
scenario, in the dawn of Sunday.

It is how the New Moon day was determined makes Abib 14th day fall on Wednesday
(Apr-5, CE 30 or Thursday (Apr-6, CE 30). a However, some has an error with an unbiblical
two-sabbath theory of the Passion Week (annual sabbath and weekly sabbath back-to-back).
It is unavoidable since they would not have known the fact that the vocabulary of the named days
of the solar week does not belong to the Bible and should not be used to interpret the time-related
expressions in the Bible.
www.bibleinfo.com/en/questions/what-time-day-did-crucifixion-happen (Here, it is Thursday
Crucifixion on Nisan 14 (AD 31?). Note: it reads Pilate sentencing of 6th hour incorrectly as 6
a.m.).

the conjuction date/time in 30 CE - Mar-22-Wed at 17:32 UTC

www.triumphpro.com/jesus-in-grave-new-truth.htm).

The Swift Guide to the Galaxy, a software program for computers, under Lunar
Calendar, provides such a program. For the first month of Nisan or Abib, CE 30, it gives a
calendar showing all the moons phases, as seen from Jerusalem, for every day of the month.

In 30 CE, for the month of March, the molad or conjunction of the New Moon occurred on
Wednesday, March 22. The crescent New Moon was seen in the evening of Thursday, March
23, making Abib 1 March 24-Fri. Therefore, in 30 CE, the 15th day of Abib the First Day
of Unleavened Bread was Friday, April 7th! This means that in 30 CE. the day of the
Passover sacrifice, Abib 14, was NOT ON WEDNESDAY, BUT RATHER ON THURSDAY,
April 6th! In other words, the date of the crucifixion was THURSDAY, APRIL 6TH, CE 30!

a
Cf. astronomical calculation vs. by the impractical method of sighting the first visible
crescent. Though both are based on the astronomical data on the Conjunction date/time
and sunrise date/time, how it was actually fixed in the ancient time is not known.

H. Goldstine (1973) New and Full Moons.


One-day discrepancy between the two scenarios of the Crucifixion date is due to
different way of determining the New Moon day. The method of sighting first visible
crescent would be only feasible in the ancient time for the people living in the limited
geographic area of Judea.

74 | P a g e
Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday nonbiblical vocabulary:

It is not quite accurate to say on such and such day He was crucified (be it Wednesday,
Thursday, or Friday). We can only say that the day of His Crucifixion was found to fall
on a certain named day of the solar week on the proleptic Gregorian calendar. There is
no such Gregorian vocabulary in the Bible Sunday, Friday, Saturday, etc. [An
unbiblical modern easy-read paraphrase-type Bible translation, GNB, has Sunday in
place of the first day of the week as in all other translations. In the early Julian calendar,
it should be noted, that it was with eight-day week (nundinal cycle), designated as A to
H.]

The biblical text cannot be and should not be interpreted in terms of seven named days
of Gregorian solar cyclic week, which is in sharp contrast to the seven numbered days of
the lunar non-cyclic week. With the Scripture based luni-solar calendar, it is not difficult
to see that how a certain biblical scenario would correctly fit the internal timeline of the
biblical Passion narrative. The readers will see how it is essential to have firm grip on the
calendar systems and to find the one which is used in the Scripture. Without it, it is
hopeless to make sense out of the timeline of the Passion-Passover Week.

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Table of the scenarios for the Passion week:

First Three Days of the Passion Week A Timeline

First Days of the Passion Week




DoW 2 3 4 5

LS TRIAL

9 Abib 10 Abib 11 Abib 12 Abib 13 14


Nisan 10 Nisan 11 Nisan 12 Nisan 13 Nisan 14

Apr 2 (Sun) Apr 3 (Mon) Apr 4 (Tue) Apr 5 (Wed) Apr 6 Thu
30 CE
Apr 1 (Mon) Apr 2 (Tue) Apr 3 (Wed) Apr 4 (Tue) Apr 5 Wed

33 CE Mar-30 (Mon) Mar-31 (Tue) Apr-1 (Wed) Apr-2 (Thu) Apr-3 Fri

sunrise; sunset; midday; midnight


LS Last Supper; TR Trial; Golgotha and Crucifixion;
ET Entombed; R - Resurrection

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Last Three Days of the Passion Week A Timeline

H-Chart comparing three scenarios:

Last Days of the Passion Week



DoW 5 6 7 1
Passover -meal High Sab. Wave-sheaf

LS TRIAL < I n t h e t o m b>


12 Abib 13 Abib 14 Abib 15 Abib 16 17
*Nisan 13 14 15 16 17

Apr 5 (Wed) Apr 6 Thu Apr 7 (Fri) Apr 8 (Sat) Apr 9 (Sun)
30 CE
Apr 4 (Tue) Apr 5 Wed Apr 6 (Thu) Apr 9 (Fri) Apr 10 (Sat)

Apr-3 Fri Apr-4 (Sat)


33 CE Apr-5 (Sun)
Preparation day Doubled-up sabbath

[full moon 33 CE Apr. 3 at 15:00]

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A summary diagram Last Three Days

Comparing three scenarios


from the Crucifixion to the Resurrection

Scenarios for Crucifixion-Resurrection days


Abib 13 Abib 14 Abib 15 Abib 16 17


Day 6@ Day 7 Day 1

Nisan 14 Nisan 15 Nisan 16 Nisan 17

Wednesday Scenario**

Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

Thursday Scenario

Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

Friday Scenario

Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun

To Golgotha; Crucifixion; Resurrection;


**wrong resurrection time in a popular non-biblical Wednesday scenario;
Full Moon; Pesach meal; @ Day of the lunar week

It is prudent and sensible to follow the timeline in terms Abib dates and the numbered days of
the lunar week. However, below is a diagram for those who insist to compare the two
scenarios in term of the named days of the solar week.

Above is a diagram provided for those who want to compare the two scenarios in term
of the named days of the solar week. Note: Some noted that Apr-7 was Friday in CE
30 (but no other Friday scenario has been proposed).
Note: See the Pesach day to keep is Abib 14 (Nisan 14), and the Pesach meal is
on the evening of that Abib 14th, which is confusingly on Nisan 15th evening by Jewish
reckoning. It is how Jewish Seder is kept on Nisan 15th, even though Torah
commands to keep Pesach on the 14th of the month in O.T.
Confusion of whether Passover is on Nisan 14th or 15th is not because of a possibility
of two different calendars being used at that time by two groups of people (an absurd
proposal), but from the Jewish unbiblical convention of reckoning a day to start at
sunset so that the events in the night period belongs to a day later than the date in
Abib.

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Middle Three Days of the Passion Week A Timeline:
Once the last three days are in place in the timeline, our next task is with the middle
three days from the Temple to the Crucifixion.
Abib 11 12 13 14
B WWW LS AR
F xxxx
*Nisan
A x
11 12 13 14
Gregor Day J Day K Day L

WWW: LS: Last Supper; AR: Arrest;


Yehudim vs. Yeshua; Pilate sentencing;

The only sensible timeline is shown in the [Row B] (B for Biblical). It is futile and impossible to fill
events in the slot marked xxxx of a short overnight period as in the [Row F] (F for false) after the
midnight 18 Arrest with
E
A
19 ex-Chief kohen Annas;
A
E
A
20 Sanhedrin; A
21 w/ Pilate; w/ Herod Antipas
E
A A
E
A

to the dawn with


22 Pilate. Some pushes as in the [Row A] (A for absurd)
A
E
A
22 Pilate into night (before A
E
A

the crucifixion day). But how the Roman governor should conduct the trial in the evening to bring
down the final sentencing towards midnight???

Counting days and dates of the interval; inclusive and exclusive

Once we get acquainted with this table, which may only need a quick glance at it,
we will see the timeline in the biblical lunar calendar in the last part of the Passion
Week involves three days/dates (of Abib 14, 15, 16 as colored) from the crucifixion
to the resurrection.

Because of different reckoning of a day to start, if we count with Nisan, the same
period should involve four days and dates. It is same also when counted with the
Gregorian days of the week. The except is the Friday scenario which in correctly
involve only three days and dates. It is because of its wrong interpretation of the
biblical terms and phrases that one day comes shorter than it should.

We can see it makes much sense if we follow the timeline in the Bible simply in
terms of Abib dates and the numbered days of the week (that is, the biblical lunar
week with Day 7 as the day of sabbath, which is for the daytime period). The church
vocabulary, such as Friday, Saturday, Sunday, etc. is nonbiblical and it has led into
erroneous understanding and interpretation of the biblical narratives.

It is only with the biblical lunar calendar, you can realize how easy and
uncomplicated to figure out the sense with several phrases of time interval in the
Bible these are on the third day, in three days, after three days and, yes, even
three days and three days, each one in different sense in the context.

The Resurrection serves as the terminal endpoint of an interval, while the initial
endpoint is dictated plainly by the context, whether it is to count off the number of
dates or to see a duration (in days) of the interval.

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Note that this has nothing to do with counting days in a wrong interpretation of the
Matthean phrase three days and three nights (Mt 12:40). [See the file Deceived
by Three Days and Three Nights.]

https://snoworld.one/inclusive-versus-exclusive-calendar-counting/
interval ; www.mathwords.com/i/interval.htm

The set of all real numbers between two given numbers. The two numbers on the
ends are the endpoints. The endpoints might or might not be included in the interval
depending whether the interval is open, closed, or half-open (same as half-closed)
Inclusive interval including the endpoints.
Exclusive interval excluding the endpoints

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The following is different ways to tell the same period:
When reckoned with the biblical lunar calendar, the period from the
Crucifixion to the Resurrection covers three days in Abib:
Abib 14 = Day 1;(Pesach day) [Crucifixion - from 3rd to 9th hour-period]
[= Pesach meal in the evening of Abib 14
= in the evening at the beginning of Nisan 15th in Jewish reckoning.]
= the beginning day for unleavened bread.]
Abib 15 = Day 2; (High Sabbath = Festival of the Matzah (from Abib 15-21)
Abib 16 = Day 3 (Day of First-fruits) [Resurrection on third day in the dawn*]

[*dawn as dawn-watch. The women group set out to the tomb in the dawn
(as morning twilight). With the dawn ending for morning break for Abib
17, the Day 2 of the lunar week when the risen Lord appeared to His
disciples.]
When the time period is reckoned not by the Scriptural calendar but by
the rabbinic Jewish calendar it involves four dates in Nisan (from Nisan
14 to Nisan 17) as its calendar day is 12 hours ahead of the Biblical
calendar by reckoning a day to start at sunset.

Counting dates in a Wednesday scenario with resurrection at dawn


three dates (Abib 14, 15, and 16)
four dates (Nisan 14, 15, 16 and 17)
four days (Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat)

Counting days in Gregorian vocabulary (with a calendar day from midnight to


midnight)
in Thursday scenario four days/dates (Thu, Fri, Sat, and Sun)
in Wednesday scenario four days/dates (Wed, Thu, Fri, and Sat).
in Friday scenario only three days/dates (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday).

Controversy, confusion, and contradiction in the various scenarios are


because their understanding and interpretation of the Gospel Passion
Narrative is due to non-biblical calendar system applied to biblical
timeline. It is with anachronistic conflation of Easter liturgy of
Constantine Catholic Church tradition. Again, one should not forget that
there were no such days called or known as Sunday, Saturday, and Friday
in the time of Yeshua. Sabbath day has nothing to do with Saturday as
such the real culprit and seed of all the confusion and contradiction in
the Biblical chronology, esp. of the Passion-Passover Week timeline. The
history must be read with the calendar system of that time. The
traditional Holy Week is a liturgical invention, being disconnected from
the historical Passion-Passover Week.

81 | P a g e
To construct the timeline diagram from the Crucifixion to the Resurrection

Though it is simply and easy to understand the diagram, a better way is to draw
up a table with hand and pencil to find days/dates for the events the result is,
the whole thing will get impressed on your mind.

1. First, take a rectangular box divide vertical lines:


Two columns to represent a day (24-hour period).


DAYTIME NIGHT-TIME

2. Make a table with three such columns:


The shaded represent the night period; unshaded is for the daytime period.

The dividers are at (1) sunrise ; (2) midday ; (3) sunset ; (4) midnight .
Sun Sun Sun
Rise Set Rise

DAYTIME NIGHT-TIME

Midday Midnight

3. Make a table with three such columns:


This covers 3 days (of D & N). Write in three dates 14, 15, and 16 - these are
Abib dates. (Shaded box for Night Period)
Abib 14 15 16

4. Extend vertical diving lines at sunset for one row:


Write down 14, 15, and 16 these are dates in Nisan (after Jewish reckoning)
It is 12 hours head start.
Abib 14 15 16

Nisan 14 15 16

5. Extend vertical diving lines only at midnight for another row:


On 1st day On 2nd day On third day
Abib 14 15 16

*Nisan 14 15 16 17
Gregor. Day J Day K Day L

Notice that day time events belong same date; events in the night will be in a
different date.

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6. Now enter the three crucial events:
carrying His stake; Crucifixion; Resurrection
According to the biblical narrative timeline follow with the biblical lunar calendar:
See how each event is being found in their right place.


On 1st day On 2nd day On third day
Abib 14 15 16

*Nisan 14 15 16 17
Greg Day J Day K Day L Day M

on the third day

Note that this phrase is possible only when reckoning dates in Abib, not
in Nisan.
Note that this has nothing to do with Gregorian days (midnight to
midnight) of the Gregorian solar week.

7. Only then, you may want to bring Gregorian named days. (e.g. Sun,
Mon, etc.) for referencing:
Replacing Day J, K, L with actual date will give you a picture of different
Crucifixion scenarios in terms of Gregorian dates.

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Table: Last three days from the Crucifixion to the Resurrection

- the night period dates in Abib are one day earlier in Nisan:

1st, 2nd, 3rd hour-periods 6 9 am


Abib 14 Nisan 14 4th, 5th, 6th hour-period 9 am noon
(Day) (Day)
7th, 8th, 9th hour-period noon 9 pm
Prep. day
10th, 11th,12th hour-period 3 6 pm

1st watch (evening watch) 6 9 pm


Abib 14 Nisan 15 2nd watch (midnight watch) 6 9 pm
(Night) (Night) 3rd watch (cock-crow watch) 6 9 pm
4th watch (dawn watch) 6 9 pm

1st, 2nd, 3rd hour-periods 6 9 am


Abib 15
Nisan 15 4th, 5th, 6th hour-period 9 am noon
(7th Day) (Day)
sabbath 7th, 8th, 9th hour-period noon 9 pm
10th, 11th,12th hour-period 3 6 pm

1st watch (evening watch) 6 9 pm


Abib 15 Nisan 16 2nd watch (midnight watch) 6 9 pm
(Night) (Night) 3rd watch (cock-crow watch) 6 9 pm
4th watch (dawn watch) 6 9 pm

1st, 2nd, 3rd hour-periods 6 9 am


Abib 16 Nisan 16 4th, 5th, 6th hour-period 9 am noon
(1st Day) (Day)
7th, 8th, 9th hour-period noon 9 pm
10th, 11th,12th hour-period 3 6 pm

1st watch (evening watch) 6 9 pm


Abib 16 Nisan 17 2nd watch (midnight watch) 6 9 pm
(Night) (Night)
3rd watch (cock-crow watch) 6 9 pm
4th watch (dawn watch) 6 9 pm

14 16 17 - dates for the Crucifixion (dates in Abib and Nisan are same) and the
Resurrection (dates in Abib and Nisan are different)
Noon is not same as 12 p.m.
- crucifixion; - resurrection
Note:
The womens visit to tomb from before sunrise as Abib 16 drawing to close;
The Risen Lord to the disciples morning of Abib 17 (2nd day of the week).

84 | P a g e
Time-related terminology
Preliminary considerations:

Arguments and counterarguments:

With pros and cons, it is not possible for both can be right. That does not mean that one side
is to be right. Usually both are wrong and we are to look for a better solution to answer to
both positions. Those trying to refute the other has valid points which are not with answers;
however, the alternatives provided by them on their own do not remain sacrosanct and
irrefutable neither.

Everything can be accepted when it is taken as if; the proof is in the pudding. Every claim
can get easily exonerated should it come with a universal disclaimer, according to one
source.

Twelve points (criteria) to fix the date of the Crucifixion:

[See the Supplement III, Walk through the Scripture 5 Time, Calendar, and Chronology.] a

To determine the date on the proleptic Gregorian calendar:


1. Year = 30 C.E. [Note various proposals for CE 31, 32, 33, etc.] [This affects
the timeline of the Passion week, but is the issue of the chronology, not
timeline.] [Note As interpretations are galore on Daniels 70 Weeks
prophecy, it is hard to believe any one of them turn to be right. Rather, it is
much more sensible to take that they all are wrong. Different interpretations
were made to support for CE 30, 31, 32, and 33, in the manner of circular
reasoning. Thus, Daniels prophecy cannot be used to arrive at the year of His
crucifixion, or even of His birth.]
2. Month = Abib b;
3. Season = spring (late March to early April) of harvest of barley, which is to
be available for Wave Sheaf offering.

a
Note: Whether it is for the year of His Crucifixion or present years with a reconstructed calendar
applicable to the modern days (esp. for a Sabbatarian issue), the main point to clear up for a calendar
system is (1) how to fix the first day of the lunar month in terms of the moon phase, and (2) how to fix
the first day of the year affected by various factors (a) embolic year, (b) tropical vs. sidereal year for
intercalary month (Cf. Metonic cycle). To be checked is the moon rise and sunrise time on the particular
day as a new day begins on sunrise in the Scripture based calendar. Once the detail is settled, the last
step is to superimpose the luni-solar calendar on to the Roman calendars.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunisolar_calendar
(what is the biblical new moon www.yrm.org/whatisbiblicalnewmoon.htm)
www.triumphpro.com/calendar-god_s-true-calendar-new-expanded-book.pdf
b
The Hebrew word abib = ripening ears Lev 2:13, not green ears as in KJV, NWT, etc. /fresh ears
ESV; /fresh grain NIV; etc. [JB shows no hint of this word.]
[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/abib
an ear of barley or flax (x: corn), the month of newly-ripened (not green as in KJV translation) grain
(Exo 13:4; 23:15); the first of the Jewish ecclesiastical year, and the seventh of the civil year. It began
about the time of the vernal equinox, on 21st March. It was called Nisan, after the Captivity (Neh.
2:1). On the fifteenth day of the month, harvest was begun by gathering a sheaf of barley, which was
offered unto the Lord on the sixteenth (Lev 23:4-11). - Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary]
85 | P a g e
4. New Moon day for Abib = after conjunction nearest to the spring equinox.
[The Jewish calendar itself does not follow consistently.
5. First Day of a new month [New Moon Day], the day with dawning after the
conjunction (astronomical new moon; Dark Moon. [Sighting the first visible
crescent cannot be reliable and consistent method the source of date
discrepancy resulting from different calendation.]
6. Pesach day (= Crucifixion day) = 14th of Abib = Day 6 of the lunar week =
Preparation day of High Sabbath (= sabbath eve) = the beginning day for the
unleavened bread (Mk 14:12 parallel). Pesach sacrifice in the afternoon;
Pesach meal in the evening [of Abib 14, but of Nisan 15]. The date falls from
the late March to early April (unlike Jewish Passover)
7. Next day is Day 7 of the lunar week (not Saturday) is High Sabbath
(sabbath day on 1st day of 7-day long Festival to Abib 21).
8. Full Moon (Abib 14) [On different dates in Nisan in the rabbinic Jewish
calendar.]
9. The hour of the Crucifixion: from in third hour-period to in ninth hour-period.
[Final sentencing by Pilate cannot be in the night (dawn watch) on the same
day.]
10. Entombed in the evening; not by burial in a grave at the time for Pesach meal
for Yehudim.
11. His body resting in the tomb in the High Sabbath (Abib 15): The Festival of
Pesach (= Festival of the Matzah) begins to Abib 21.
12. Wave sheaf offering Abib 16 (Day one of the lunar week) and Resurrection
in the dawn (as dawn watch). [The coming morning is Day 2 of the week =
Abib 17 for the Lord with the disciples.]

Basic Sources of common chronological errors in Passion Week


chronology, which in turn create errors in timeline.

Using Gregorian and rabbinic Hebrew calendar which were not in the first
century, instead of the biblical calendar.
Using the named days of Gregorian solar week, rather than the numbered days
of lunar week.
Mistaking 7th day of the week as Saturday, and sabbath preparation day (=
sabbath eve) as Friday.
Gregorian cyclic continuous weeks instead of the biblical lunar weeks.
Biblical day of sunrise to sunrise is replaced with rabbinic Hebrew day of
sunset to sunset (which was copied from ancient Greek practice), mixing with
Gregorian day (midnight to midnight).

86 | P a g e
*Sabbath; sabbath
A sabbath day is always on the Day 7 of the lunar week, 4 times a month on the same
dates in every lunar month. Unrelated to Saturday of the solar week. Biblical lunar
Sabbath is only for the daytime period of 12 hours, not 24 hours from evening the day
before to evening as in a Jewish solar sabbath.

There is no separate and different sabbaths of weekly vs. annual one, the latter being
simply in a sabbath in the annual festival weeks. [Cf. A special day of sabbath rest

Lev 16:29 [Day of Atonement Yom Kippur]


In the seventh month, on the tenth day
you shall humble your souls and not do any work of labor,

Lev 23:24 Also on the first day of this seventh month


you are to have sabbath rest for holy assembly,
a day to remember with loud blasts of a trumpet.

Lev 23:27 Also on the tenth day of this seventh month


there shall be Yom Kippur (/of Atonement);

Num 29:7 And on the tenth day of this seventh month


ye shall have a holy convocation;
and ye shall afflict your souls:
ye shall do no manner of work;

Lev 23:32 sabbath rest from evening to evening

Lev 23:32 It is to be a sabbath of sabbath rest for you


and ye shall humble yourselves;
In the ninth day of the month by the evening [ba ereb],
from evening to evening [of next day],
ye are to have your sabbath rest.

This verse is not about weekly sabbath day, but sabbath rest on the special day
Yom Kippur (v. 27, 28). It is to keep sabbath rest is from sundown to sundown.

Often misinterpreted to be used a proof text that sabbath begins at sunset just as a
day is reckoned to start at sunrise in the rabbinic Jewish calendar. Nor does it say
or hint at a 24-hour sabbath. A weekly sabbath is for the duration of daylight
period.

87 | P a g e
*preparation

The Gk. word paraskeu translated as preparation occurs 6x in the


Gospels all in the narratives of the Passion-Passover Week:

All are in the sense of sabbath-preparation day [i.e. Day 6 of the lunar week.]

Mt 27:62 after the preparation [day]


Mk 15:42 [the] preparation [day], that is, sabbath-eve
Lk 23:54 [a] day of preparation
Jn 19:31 [the] preparation [day]
Jn 19:42 the preparation [day] of Yehudim,

except one:

Jn 19:14 preparation of the Pesach [= rendered as Pesach eve


in IRENT in order to avoid confusion with the expression sabbath
preparation day (=sabbath eve).]

It has nothing to do with Friday of the Gregorian solar week, which is also used in
rabbinic Jewish calendar (taking their 7th day to be Saturday. Lack of such calendar
knowledge has been one of a few main causes of contention, conflict, and contention
in the Passion Week chronology.

88 | P a g e
A Myth of two Sabbaths in a week

The proponents of the Wednesday Crucifixion (with Saturday afternoon


Resurrection) resort to the idea of two consecutive Sabbaths in the festival week
in order to explain away the problem in the time-frame in their scenario. The rebuttal
by the Friday scenario is the double-up Sabbaths, two different Sabbaths falling on
the same date. [Cf. In that sense, the day of sabbath rest should be distinguished
when it comes not on every 7th day of the lunar week, but on the particular day
the Day of Atonement (Lev 16:29, 23:27), once a year, 7th month, 10th day.

It is actually a byproduct of using rabbinic Jewish calendar and modern Gregorian solar
week. If the idea of two consecutive Sabbaths were ever possible and they suppose Nisan
15th happened to be Friday, then they have a festival sabbath on 15th, and Saturday
sabbath on 16th; and then another festival sabbath on the last day of the festival Nisan 21
(which is Thu).
Thus, they have Saturday Sabbaths on Nisan 16th, 23rd and 30th in one 7-day week, plus
preceding Saturday Sabbaths on Nisan 2nd and Nisan 9th. They have total three Sabbaths
in that week, not two!!
And they have total Seven Sabbaths in a month!! (5 Saturday Sabbaths and 2 festival
Sabbaths). Such a grotesque result from their thinking!

rabbinic Jewish calendar


an example of Nisan month
(7th month of the Jewish year) (30 days)
Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri
1
2 8
9 15
@ 22
16 21
23 29
30

Blue Saturday sabbath;


green Festival Sabbath;
@ Red last day of Festival (Nisan 21) as Sabbath, which is
the 7th day of Festival.
Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri - (of Gregorian solar week
We have an absurd illogical picture of total 7 Sabbaths in this
month! according to rabbinic Jewish calendar which with the solar
week (as in Gregorian), not lunar as it should be in the Bible.

89 | P a g e
Compare with the monthly Biblical Lunar Calendar, here the month of Abib.

Biblical Lunar calendar


Abib (1st month of the biblical year) (30 days)
D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 14 15
16 21 @ 22
23 24 28 29 30
D 1 to D 7(numbered days of the lunar week)
Red Day 7 of the full lunar week = sabbath.
(Festival of the Matzah = Abib 15-21),
@ - last (7th) day of the Matzah festival
named days of Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri no applicable)
There are only 4 Sabbaths in any month, (whether it is 29- or
30-day long.) Abib / Nisan is 30-day long
Cf. Lev 23:36 for the 7-day Festival of Booths on the 8th day
is the day one of the lunar week after completion of 7-day long
festival.

90 | P a g e
*Feast or Festival

Festival vs. Feast [KJV uses only the word feast, the word English word festival (since
14th century) is not in the KJV vocabulary. The English word feast (since from 12nd century) as
used now is something to do with festive meals.

Note: The phrase Festival of Pesach (Festival of Passover in most translations) is still rendered
as Passover feast in a few places as in Jn 2:23 (ESV, NET); Jn 13:1 (NET).

It is much helpful and less confusion if we use the word festival for a week-long celebration such
as the Festival of the matzah (Exo 23:15) or the Festival of Sukkot (Lev 23:34), while feast is
reserved for a single day event, as a festival gathering, such as the Feast of Shavuot (> Pentecost)
and the Feast of Firstfruit (Chag haBikkurim on Abib 16, yom haBikkurim - the day after the high
sabbath when omer-counting begins).

[See Walk through the Scripture 5 Time, Calendar and Chronology]

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unleavened bread and the Festival of the unleavened bread

Unleavened bread a: Heb. matzah (or matzo); matzot (pl.), Gk. (artos) azumos the bread
which was home-baked without having let it rise. b Any leaven was to be removed from
the house on Abib 14, which is the beginning day for the unleavened bread eating, to be
followed by 7 days of Festival of the Matzah (Abib 15th 21st). No common bread
was allowed. (Exo 23:15; 34:18; Lev 23:6; Deu 16:16, etc.)

In the NT text of Lk 22:1 the Festival of the Matzah is called Pesach [festival].
Cf. Mk 14:1 the Pesach [day] and the Matzah [festival], where two entities are
connected with Gk. kai (and), not as appositive.

the beginning day of the unleavened bread eating or the first day of the
festival of unleavened bread

Mt 26:17 = Mk 14:12 [Cf. //Lk 22:7 in same setting but different wording.]

Typically, the text is erroneously translated as the first day of the Festival of the
Unleavened Bread c. The fact is, the Greek text does not have the word 'festival'. The word
'first' is not a correct translation of prot. The IRENT renders it as the beginning day for
the unleavened bread eating, which help to remove confusion and misinterpretation of the
text.

The day of Abib 15 (= high sabbath of the festival of the Pesach week) is 'the first day of
the Festival', but such expression by itself does not occur in the NT, unlike 'the first day of
the week'. Moreover, the first day' in Deu 16:4 d refers to Abib 14 when no leaven should
be found in the house.

The text is further elaborated with the specific explanatory clause in Mk 14:12 hote to
pascha ethuon (when the Pesach [lamb] would be sacrificed), and in Lk 22:7 h edei
thuesthai to pascha (when it was necessary to sacrifice the Pesach [lamb]). That clearly
tells us that it cannot refer to the first day of the Festival of the Unleavened Bread'. It can
only mean the beginning day for the unleavened bread, which is Abib 14, the very day of
Pesach [sacrifice and meal] itself.

Most have been baffled by these verses when read in the usual translation which itself was
from misinterpretation. Without having placed the events in their correct places on the
timeline, e they erroneously conclude that the Last Supper in the Synoptics was the Passover
meal itself. As the Johannine text Jn 13:1-2 clearly indicates that it was (coming) before

a
It is not unleavened bread, but common bread (artos) that was eaten during the Passion Week by
Yeshua and his disciples - Mt 26:26; Mk 14:22, Lk 22:19; 24:30 (cf. Jn 13:27).]
b
not quite like matzo crackers
c
(with or without capitalization) [Cf. In case of Mk 14:12 the literal translation of KJV is quite
accurate the first day of unleavened bread.]
d
Any leaven in the house is to be removed in Abib 14 and then 7 more days of the Festival (Abib
15-21) to eat unleavened bread. Deu 16:4 "No leaven shall be seen with you in all your territory for
seven days, nor shall any of the flesh that you sacrifice on the evening of the first day remain all night
until morning."
e
It is only possible with the biblical lunar calendar.
92 | P a g e
the Pesach a , the result is that they let stand contradictory to the Synoptic timeline. The
event of preparing the Upper Room was made to occur even when the Pesach was already
over!

Note: the setting of the narrative in G-Mt and G-Mk is on the same day as in Mt 26:2; //Mk
14:1 two days later Pesach to come. [Cf. //Lk 22:1 is in the same narrative setting but with
different wording.]

The opening time-marker begins

Mt 26:2
meta duo hmeras to pascha ginetai
after 2 days was the Pesach.
Mk 14:1
n de to pascha kai ta azuma meta duo hmeras
after 2 days was the Pesach and the [Festival of] the Matzah.
Lk 22:1
ggizen de h heort tn azumn h legomen pascha
approaching was the Festival of the Matzah,
which is called Pesach [festival season].

Then comes this explanatory description of the setting of the [same] day:
Mt 26:17
t de prt tn azumn,
toward the beginning [day] for the unleavened bread b
Mk 14:12
kai t prt hmera tn azumn hote to pascha ethuon,
towards the beginning day for the unleavened bread in which the Pesach is sacrificed,
Lk 22:7
hlthen de h hmera tn azumn en h edei thuesthai to pascha
came* the day for the unleavened bread in which its necessary to sacrifice the Pesach

The Greek text has in G-Lk lthen de h hmera, while G-Mt and G-Mk has it a dative
adverbial noun phrase, t de prt tn azumn (Mt 26:17a); t prt hmera tn azumn (Mk
14:12a). *The verb in aorist is used in Lk 22:7.

[It is important to see that the opening verse set (Mt 26:2 //Mk 14:1 //Lk 22:1) belongs to the
same date as the subsequent explanatory verse set (Mt 26:17 //Mk 14:12; //Lk 22:7).]

a
before the Pesach, not on the day before, regardless Pesach was either as Abib 14 or the Matzah
Festival.
b
[The word festival is not in the text and should not be in translation here. Rendered as unleavened
bread instead of the matzah which is reserved for the name of the festival.
93 | P a g e
Then the final mopping up is how to see the flow of timeline from the beginning
clauses of Mt 26:17 //Mk 14:12 //Lk 22:7 backward to the preceding event (on the
same day of Abib 12) and forward to the coming event on timeline of the narrative
(Abib 14). It is the point that most has failed with the traditional translation and
interpretation dealing with the phrases on the first day (Mt & Mk) and the day came
(Lk).

The date setting of this verse (which is the same date for getting the Upper Room
ready) is found in the opening verse of the Chapter (2 days before the Pesach Mt
26:2; Mk 14:1; Lk 22:1).

The narrative in its correct setting of Abib 12 for this verse occupies the same date
which goes as far back as in Mk 11:27; Mt 21:23; Lk 20:1 with <the Withered Fig
Tree> episode to begin the day.

Clearly these have to be read in the context of placing each event on the correct place
in the narrative timeline with a proper biblical calendar.

About Gk. prtos (in Mt 26:17a; //Mk 14:12a):

(adjectival) first, earlier;


(adverbial) before earlier
Cf. Gk prot in Lk 2:2;
Cf. Gk. pro Jn 13:1; (www.worldslastchance.com/YHWHs-calendar/the-
Passover-puzzle.html - it should not mean an adverb before)

94 | P a g e
*first day concordance search in N.T.

1. The expression first day of the month (or the year) does not appear in NT text.

2. first day since (2 x with prts)


Phi 1:5 apo ts prts hmeras from the first day (when you heard the Gospel)
Act 20:18 apo prts hmeras from the first day (when I arrived)

3. towards the beginning day for the unleavened bread eating tn azumn: (2 x with
prt)
//Mk 14:12 t prt hmera
//Mt 26:17 t prt);

Cf. the day for the unleavened bread //Lk 22:7).

Note: this should not be confused as the first day of the Festival of the unleavened
bread. To remove confusion, IRET renders it as the beginning day for the
unleavened bread eating.

4. the first day of the week (6 x with mia; 1 x with prt)


kata mian sabbatou 1Co 16:2 every first day of the week
eis mian sabbatn Mt 28:1;
t mia tn sabbatn //Mk 16:2; //Lk 24:1 //Jn 20:1
t hmera ekein t mia [tn] sabbatn; Jn 20:19 (following that first day of the week)
prt sabbatou //Mk 16:9 (the first day of the week)

Cf. Act 20:7 (one of the sabbaths);

95 | P a g e
*Pesach; *Passover
Pesach (> Passover)
1. In the Exodus history, Pesach event; Pesach sacrifice, Pesach meal and
Pesach vigil overnight.
2. Pesach memorial service (Exo 12:25) (service: abodah H5656 labor, work,
service: LXX latreia; /service - KJV; /xx: rite - NASB; /xx: ritual HCSB; /x:
ceremony NIV)

IRENT renders Gk. pascha as Pesach (transliterate of Hebrew word), not with
Anglicized Passover which itself is from inaccurate and biased reading of the
meaning in the OT text in Exodus:

Hebrew noun pesach (H6454) is derived from the verb pacach (H6452 Exo 12:13
and 12:23), which does not mean to pass (over), but rather to protect.

Exo 12:13
And the blood shall be a sign for you on the houses where you are.
And when I see the blood, I shall [pacach] you,
and let the plague not come on you to destroy you
when I smite the land of Mitsrayim (Pharaohs Egypt)
Exo 12:23
Then when YHWH passes through (abar H5674)
to strike the Egyptians,
and sees the blood on the lintel and on the two doorposts,
YHWH will certainly [pacach] over the door,
and he will not let the destroyer (the plague of death) come
into your houses to smite you.

The word Pesach (/Passover) are used in several senses and it is the context that makes it
clear Pesach sacrifice, festival season, meal, etc.
The word used in N.T. carries several different senses (metonymically):
(1) Pesach sacrifice [Heb. Korban Pesach]; Pesach lamb (figuratively for
Yeshua Mashiah); [Cf. Lev 23:5] 1Co 5:7 Mashiah our Pesach
(2) Pesach Day = Abib 14 with (A) Pesach sacrifice (in the midafternoon) and
(B) Pesach memorial service (with meal in the evening) (Cf. Nisan 15th in
Jewish Passover). Pesach meal (Cf. rabbinic Jewish Seder ritual with lamb
roasted whole, bitter herbs, unleavened bread. Esp. Jn 19:14 where the context
requires it to be read as [eve of] Pesach day.
(3) The Festival of Pesach for 7 days (Abib 15 a to 21). The days of the
unleavened bread ( see below) last total 8 days. In G-Jn: 9 verses Pesach
Jn 2:23; 11:25; 12:1 (before the Pesach): 12:1; 18:39; Pesach of the
Yehudim Jn 2:13; 11:55; Festival of Pesach Jn 6:4; 13:1 before the
Festival of the Pesach].
(4) An idiom: to eat the Pesach = to eat meals in the Pesach festival season
(festive meals): Jn 18:28;

a
Abib 15th is High Sabbath; it is call as such simply because it is on the first day of the
festival.
96 | P a g e
Pesach itself is a memorial service, not a feast, after the Exodus event in the history (Exo
12:23). (Cf. Jewish Seder ritual in the rabbinic Judaism is eaten in the evening of Nisan 15th
in their calendar.) www.wwcog.com/10_proofs_passover_is_a_memorial.htm
The Encyclopaedia Judaica, Vol. 13, p. 169: "The feast of Passover consists of two parts: The
Passover ceremony and the Feast of Unleavened Bread. Originally, both parts existed
separately; but at the beginning of the [Babylonian] exile they were combined."

Cf. AT Robertson (1922), A Harmony of the Gospels reads The feast (< festival) of the unleavened
bread followed the Passover meal, beginning the next morning and lasting a week. But the one term was
used to include the other. The Passover was expanded to mean the entire feast (<festival) that
followed, and vice versa. p. 280. (bold is not in his). Here, the author keeps the terminology of feast
and festival confused.]

the Festival of the Pesach (h erot tou Pascha The exact phrase the Festival of
the Pesach occurs only twice in NT in Lk 2:41 and Jn 13:1.)
Cf. Jn 2:23 in the Pesach, in the Festival.

Lk 22:1 the Festival of the Matzah, which is called Pesach i.e. Pesach festival. [Cf.
Mt 26:1 //Mk 14:1] - It is used as synonymous as the Pesach festival season, which
covers the entire 8-day period, consisting of

(1) Abib 14th, day of Pesach (not feast) (the Pesach lamb to be sacrificed in the
afternoon and for the Pesach memorial service with the meal in the evening) as well as
(2) Abib 15th to 21st, Festival of the Matzah (Lk 22:1 a 7-day long period of eating
the matzah).
Note: the word Pesach itself is often used in this sense, lumping both together as one
single period. Hence, the expression before the Festival of Pesach is similar to before
the day of the Pesach, but the exact data referred to should be determined by the timeline in the
context.

Pesach in N.T: 27 (29 matches):


the festival of the Pesach Lk 2:41; Jn 2:13;
the Pesach, the festival of the Yehudim Jn 6:4
in the festival, the Pesach Jn 2:23
the Pesach lamb Mk 14:12; //Lk 22:7;
our Pesach 1Co 5:7
after the Pesach Act 12:4
keep the Pesach Mt 26:18; Heb 11:28
prepare the Pesach Mt 26:19 //Mk 14:16 //Lk 22:8, 13;
eat the Pesach Mt 26:17 //Mk 14:12, 14 //Lk 22:11, 15. Jn 18:28;
the Pesach of the Yehudim was near ~~ before the [Festival of] Pesach Jn 11:55
(x2)
the Festival of the Matzah, the Pesach festival, is approaching Lk 22:7
at the Pesach Jn 18:39;
eve (preparation) of the Pesach Jn 19:14
in two days it will be the Pesach [day] Mt 26:2;
//after two days was the Pesach [day] and the Festival of the Matzah Mk 14:1
six days before the Pesach [festival] Jn 12:1
before [coming of] the Festival of the Pesach Jn 13:1 (not the day before)

97 | P a g e
Passover phrases in Gospels
Mt 26:2; //Mk 14:1 two days later Pesach to come

Here in G-Mt //G-Mk, Pesach refers to Abib 14 of Pesach day [for Pesach
sacrifice in the afternoon and for the Pesach meal in the evening], not Abib 15th
(the first day of Festival of the Matzah).].

Mt 26:2 \meta duo hmeras to pascha ginetai; comes after two days the Pesach
//Mk 14:1 \to pascha kai ta azuma after two days Pesach and the Festival of the
unleavened bread (Greek word kai - and then, not that is.);

It is in contrast to G-Lk where the term Pesach (as festival season) is described as
synonymous with Festival of the Matzah.
//Lk 22:1 h heort tn aumv h legomen pascha. getting near was the Festival of the
Matzah, the one called Pesach [festival].

1 (the word festival does not appear in KJV) ;/the feast of the passover KJV /the
Passover Feast NIrV! (- actually meaning festival), (Bishops); /the feast of the
Passover Cass, (Bishops); /(there are another two days and) the Pesach is coming
Delitzsch;
2 /xxx: the Passover Festival GNB, AUV, GSNT; /xxx: the Festival of the Passover
TCNT; /xx: the Passover Festival ~~~ [Note: This was the annual Jewish festival
commemorating Israels deliverance from Egyptian bondage under Moses leadership],
AUV; /

Note: This day is same as the day of the Upper Room preparation (Mt 26:17 //Mk
+14:12; //Lk 22:7) the beginning day of the unleavened bread eating

prepare for the Passover Mk 14:15, 16 //Lk 22:8, 9, 13

Mk 14:16 //Lk 22:8, 13 (prepare for the Passover); Mk 14:15; //Lk 22:9 (prepare)

In two places in G-Mark and G-Luke, most misreads and misinterprets the expression
prepare the passover as if it is meant for the Passover meal (of Abib 14 evening); some
grossly mistranslating it as prepare the Passover meal (Lk 22:13 GNB). This is self-
serving for those who take the Lords Last Supper as the Passover meal, and consequently
the crucifixion was put a day later than the Pesach day (Abib 14), Gods appointed day
for the Mashiah death!

The text should be carefully read to say preparation for the celebration of the Pesach
festival season, not about preparing the Pesach meal on Pesach day.

eat the passover; Mt 26:17; Mk 14:12, 14; Lk 22:11, 25

eat meals for the Pesach season IRENT so renders the Greek phrase phag to
pascha (also in Mt 26:17; //Mk 14:12, 14; //Lk 22:8, 11). Most renders as eat the
passover or eat the Passover, which is not natural English idiom, but a typical
Biblical jargon, unintelligible to most people. This applies equally to Jn 18:28 on the
part of Yehudim in authority.

98 | P a g e
The phrase is to be understood as eat festival meals for the Pesach festival season
in IRENT renders it, not just the particular Pesach meal (in the memorial service
from the Exodus event in Exo 12:23). The expression eating meal refers to any
festive meal through the season, including the Pesach day itself. Thus, the phrase
should be taken as an idiom of to celebrate of the Pesach and its festival season
with the festive meals, even right before or after the Pesach day.

This point is very important to help avoid misinterpretation of the Gospel texts in
their futile attempt to make the Synoptic Last Supper as the Passover meal on the
evening of Abib 14 (Nisan 15). That leaves in contradictory to the Johannine
statements on the for the chronological issue as well as in the nature of the Last
Supper itself, in effect, finding the Scripture in error.

Jn 18:28 eat the passover

Thus, in this setting of G-Jn the Yehudim in authority refers a festive meal on
Abib 13 [the same day as of the Pilate sentencing] which was a day before
Crucifixion and a Seder type meal on Abib/Nisan 14 to come.
Jn 18:28 They led Yeshua from Kayafa to the Governor's Praetorium a. By
now it was early in the day. They themselves did not enter the Praetorium to
keep themselves undefiled and thus be able to eat meals for the Pesach festival
season.

Entering the Governors Praetorium which was off limits to Yehudim. The
Yehudim in authority wanted to avoid getting ritually defiled by entering the
Gentiles place, especially so during the Festival. The phrase eat the passover
in the context cannot only be just the Passover meal.

Thus, it takes in this setting of G-Jn as the Yehudim in authority to refer to a


festive meal on the same day Abib 13 [the day of the Pilate sentencing], a day
before Abib/Nisan 14 of coming Crucifixion and Seder.

For those who see that the Last Supper as narrated in the Synoptic Gospels was the
Passover meal itself that had already taken before, and take this v. 28b to refer to
something of a meal of Chagigah (the festive and its offerings)] [See a winding
commentary in Gill's Exposition of the Entire Bible and Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible
Commentary.

[In terms of the Passion narrative timeline, this verse by itself would not give
something definite about the nature of the Last Supper. Nor does it offer more
information about the date and time of the Trial and the Crucifixion (Abib 14th
vs. Nisan 14th vs. Nisan 15th), whenever it was the time Yehudim in authority
had faced Pilate early in the morning of Abib 13th or 14th, or Nisan 15th. It is

a
Note: Pilates Praetorium (a Roman camp) of the Fort Antonia [about 36 acres 1,500,000 sq. ft. (about
1200 x 1200 ft.)] was connected to the south by a pair of colonnades to the Temple platform (of 600 x 600
ft.) which was at the summit of 450 ft. high from the floor of the Kidron Valley. (Two bridges 600 ft. long
x 45 ft. across with a narrow space between.) Ref: EL Martin (2000), The Temples that Jerusalem Forgot.
99 | P a g e
only when read in the context it helps to clarify the timeline of the Passion week
narratives.]

14th or 15th day for Passover?

It is an inherent problem when the rabbinic Jewish calendar is used. O.T.


text says Pesach sacrifice to be Abib 14 between the two setting-times (/x:
between two evenings) [ in the mid-afternoon]; with the Pesach meal in
the ensuing evening (of same Abib date). As the Jewish Nisan date changes
at sunset it would be Nisan 14 evening. [In the first month, on the
fourteenth day, between the two setting-times, is the Pesach of YHWH.
(Lev 23:5 ben haArbayim)]

An example of confused statement and argument is seen in Doig, New


Testament Chronology - The 30 CE Crucifixion www.nowoezone.com/NTC24.htm
[A copy in IRENT Vol. III Supplement (Collections #6A)]

Chart XXIX
Possible Astronomical Date of the Crucifixion
Day Day Jewish Day Calendar
30 CE, Apr 6 Thu Nisan 14 Sunrise*
30 CE, Apr 7 Fri Nisan 14 Sunset
30 CE, Apr 7 Fri Nisan 15 Sunrise*
31 CE, Mar 28 Wed Nisan 15 Sunset
33 CE, Apr 3 Fri Nisan 14 Sunrise*
33 CE, Apr 3 Fri Nisan 14 Sunset

The Passover supper is eaten in the evening of Nisan 14 according to the


sunrise calendar (i.e. Abib 14 in the biblical calendar*), and on Nisan 15th
according to the sunset calendar (i.e. in the rabbinic Hebrew calendar, 12 hours
ahead of Abib date).

Note that the alignment of the sunset and sunrise calendars on April 7, 30 CE
allows both Nisan 14th and Nisan 15th to fall on the same Friday. This alignment
is not possible for the other dates considered. [What does it mean at all?? ARJ]
This consideration is critical to the possibility of their having two Passovers
observed, [as he discusses].

In 30 or 31 CE, the sunrise month began first, and it is possible for Passover to
fall on two succeeding evenings, depending on the calendar used. [He offers a
usual unbiblical two-calendar theory.]

In 30 CE, the Last Supper fell on the first Passover, and John's words are fulfilled
by there being a Passover Seder after Jesus' crucifixion. But, in 31 CE the Last
Supper would have to be the second Passover, and John's words must be explained
away. In 33 CE, the sunset month began first and Passover could only occur on
the same evening, by either sunrise or sunset reckoning. If one accepts Jesus'
words that the Last Supper was a Passover supper, and John's words that another
Passover meal followed the crucifixion, then the year must be 30 CE.
100 | P a g e
Considering calendar arrangement, what are the choices? Friday, April 7, 30 CE
uses two possible Passovers, and Jesus was crucified on both Nisan 14th (sunset
reckoning) and Nisan 15th (sunrise reckoning).

A crucifixion on Thursday, April 6, 30 CE and Friday, April 3, 33 CE share a


common problem. They can be satisfied only by the death of Jesus having
occurred on Nisan 14. Then it must be demonstrated that the Last Supper was not
a Passover meal. Such a proof has been repeatedly, and unsuccessfully, attempted
over the years. Such remains a major weakness of these dates.

Only with the crucifixion on Good Friday, Nisan 15, according to sunrise
reckoning, does the preceding Nisan 10 fall on Palm Sunday (See Chart XXVI).
Only the April 7, 30 CE date fully supports such a [Palm Sunday] tradition.

Although the crucifixion on Thursday, Nisan 14, would have Palm Sunday on
Nisan 10, the crucifixion is not on Good Friday and the resurrection not on
Sunday. With a crucifixion on Nisan 14 in 33 CE, Nisan 10 must be renamed
Palm Monday. The Wednesday crucifixion has the preceding Nisan 10 on Friday.
These dates must all be rejected, or the traditional Palm Sunday must be rejected.

Two calendar theories to explain away the problem of Passover on 14 and 15.
A comparison table [Cf. Hoehner p. 89.]
Nisan-G -S Abib
12
13 <Upper Room Prep>
12 <Olivet Discourse>
<Last Supper><Gethsemane>;
<Arrest>;
13 <Pilate> 6th hour.
<Upper Room Prep>
14 13 <Last Supper><Gethsemane>;
<Arrest>;
<Pilate> 6 A.M.
14
22 <Crucifixion> 9 AM
E
A


23 <Death> 3 PM
A
E
A

15 14
24 <Entombed>
A
E
A

15

[High Sabbath - daytime]


16 15
16

Nisan-S after Sadducean calendar with a day of sunset to sunset; 12


hours ahead of Abib.
Nisan-G after Galilean calendar with a day of sunrise-to-sunrise, but no
like Abib as it is one whole day ahead of Abib. The Crucifixion was
groundlessly put on Nisan 15th in this two-calendar theory advocated in
Hoehner. An attempt to explain away the dilemma of Passover on Nisan 15.
It is one thing that the same day is on different dates in the different calendar.

101 | P a g e
It is entirely bizarre to have two different groups were keeping the Passover
on different days!

102 | P a g e
Last Supper vs. Pesach meal vs. festival meal:
(Mt 26:26-29; //Mk 14:22-25; //Lk 22:17-20; Cf. Jn 13:1-20)

That the Last Supper was not the Pesach meal of Abib 14. (Passover meal; Seder, etc.) This
is one of a few important topics in clarifying the Passion-Passover Week timeline. Once it
is settled with its proof; it is easier to put a stop on a fruitless exchange of arguments and
counterarguments for one scenario to another crucifixion. www.triumphpro.com/john-19-
sixth-hour.htm

Jn 19:14 Eve of the Pesach day (not Pesach Festival), about sixth hour Pilates
sentencing
Jn 13:1A supper before the Festival of the Pesach (= 8-day season)
Jn 18:28 Early in the morning ~ wanted to avoid getting defiled for them to eat for the
Pesach festival season may not be referring to the Pesach meal itself.
Bread - Mt 26:26; //Mk 14:22; //Lk 17:19 a loaf of bread (Gk. artos), not
matzah/matzo (Gk. [artos] azumos) (also in 1Co 11:23, 26); no lamb roasted whole.
As to Pesach meal it was the occasion for each family.

To resolve apparent conflict between G-Jn and Synoptics concerting the nature of the
Last Supper, a few proposed an absurd two-calendar theory, that two deferent people
groups had calendars with sunrise-to-sunrise vs. with sunset-to-sunset and thus kept
Jewish Passover it each on two different days! [See in Hoehners for reference.]

This is a problem which is not possible to solve in the Friday Crucifixion Scenario with
Nisan (not Abib) dating of Synoptic reckoning.

To harmonize both the Synoptic Gospels and the Gospel of John over the issue of the
Last Supper vs. the Passover meal, Hoehner wrote,

. it was felt that the most tenable solution is to recognize that the
Galileans [and Pharisees], and with them Jesus and His disciples, [as in
the Synoptic reckoning] reckoned from sunrise-to-sunrise while the
Judeans and Sadducees [as in the Johannine reckoning] reckoned from
sunset to sunset. [See Hoehner (1978), p. 90, bold is not in the original].

The alignment of calendar dates in his book shown in the chart the Reckoning of
Passover does not make sense and impossible to accept, because, by some the day was
Nisan 14, but by others the same was Nisan 15! Moreover, one group had Pasch day
one day and the other group on the next day! Just mumbo-jumbo all gobbledygook of
theology out of fertile human minds! The date Nisan 15th for the Galilean Method
should have been Nisan 14th, as the Crucifixion is to be on no other day than
Nisan/Abib 14, the day of Passover (which is the day the Passover lamb is slaughtered
and the Passover meal is to be eaten) regardless of reckoning methods. Significance
of recognition of a day beginning at sunrise eluded him and a possibility of Biblical
Lunar calendar did not come to their mind, which has the key to understand the Passion
narrative timeline. There are no other verifiable sources including Biblical texts (to fit
Hoehners modification) to claim that Passover howsoever they may have

103 | P a g e
understood the sense of the word is used is on Nisan 15, in which lambs were
slaughtered and the meal was eaten.

Thematically and theological it cannot be the meal of Pesach. Yeshua here was not the
one who had to eat it. Why, He himself is our Pesach Lamb! (See 1Co5:7). That He
might have died after having taken the Pesach meal would negate all the reason for His
suffering and Crucifixion to death to be in the very week of Pesach. He could have died
any day of the year! It would abolish raison d'tre of the biblical Passion narrative. The
profound symbolism, typology, and motive rooted in the Exodus event is at the core of
the Passion narrative in the setting of the Pesach week.
Each people group using their own calendar systems should not prevent people to look
into the biblical calendar to follow correct timeline.

Compare with the table below (after the Passion week with the biblical calendar):

Last Supper Abib 12; Nisan 13


Yeshua arrest Abib 12, Nisan 13

Pilate sentencing Abib 13, Nisan 13

Abib 14 D
Crucifixion
Nisan 14 D
Darkness 6th hr; death 9th hr. Lamb slain

Entombed Passover Meal


Abib 14 N
Nisan 15 N

High Sabbath
Abib 15 D Nisan 15 D

Abib 15 N Nisan 16 N

Abib 16 D Nisan 16 D

Resurrection
Abib 16 N Nisan 17 N

Joseph Shulam has suggested that it may not have been the Seder but a se'udat-mitzvah,
the celebratory banquet accompanying performance of a commandment such as a
wedding or b' rit-milah. [fr. David H. Stern, the Jewish New Testament Commentary]
(p. 77) http://kifa.kz/eng/bible/stern/stern_matfey_26.php

104 | P a g e
Quoting from David H. Stern:

"The Last Supper is considered by most scholars to have been a Pesach meal or Seder. Many
Pesach themes are deepened, reinforced and given new levels of meaning by events in the life
of Yeshua the Mashiah and by his words on this night. However, Joseph Shulam has suggested
that it may not have been the Seder but a se'udat-mitzvah, the CELEBRATORY 'BANQUET
accompanying performance of a commandment' such as a wedding or b'rit-milah.

"Here is the background for his argument. When a rabbi and his students finish studying a
tractate of the Talmud, they celebrate with a se'udat-mitzvah (also called a se'udat-siyum,
banquet of completion, i.e., graduation). The Fast of the Firstborn, expressing gratitude for
the saving of Israel's firstborn sons from the tenth plague, has been prescribed for the day before
Pesach, Nisan 14, at least since Mishnaic times. When it is necessary to eat a se'udat-mitzvah,
this takes precedence over a fast.

" But, Shulam reasons, and if the si'udat siyum custom applied in the first century to the
completing of any course of study, then Yeshua might have arranged to have himself and his
talmidim [students, disciples] finish reading a book of the Tanakh on Nisan 14. Or, since
Yeshua knew he was going to die, he may have regarded it as appropriate to complete his
disciples earthly course of study with a BANQUET. This solution would also resolve the
perceived conflict between Yochanan [John] and the Synoptic Gospels over the timing of the
Last Supper" JNT, p.77).

[Note: his translation in The Jewish New Testament has made a serious error by rendering as
matzah for what should have been bread (common bread, not unleavened bread), even Mt
26:23, in the occurrence in the context of the Lords Last Supper.]

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A. T. Robertson (1922) [Southern Baptist scholar; not John Arthur T. Robertson,
Anglican Bishop], A Harmony of the Gospels
p. 393 Gutenberg online Ed
p. 279 print edition

Note: Cross-out for wrong info; editorial notes in purple ARJ

11. Did Christ eat the Passover meal?


(3). Testimony of John
(d) John 19:14, "Now it was the Preparation of the Passover." This is claimed to mean the
day preceding the Passover festival. Hence Christ was crucified on the 14th Nisan, in
opposition to the Synoptics (- what do they say?). The afternoon before the Passover was
used as a preparation, but it was not technically so called. This phrase "Preparation" was
really the name of a day in the week, the day before the Sabbath, our Friday. We are not
left to conjecture about this question. [Completely misguided!]
The Evangelists all use it in this sense alone. Matthew uses it for Friday (Mt 27:62), Mark
expressly says that the Preparation was the day before the Sabbath (Mk 15:42), Luke says
that it was the day of the Preparation and the Sabbath drew on (Lk 23:54), and John himself
so uses the word in two other passages (19:31, 42), in both of which haste is exercised on
the Preparation, because the Sabbath was at hand. The New Testament usage is conclusive,
therefore, on this point. This, then, was the Friday of Passover week [this vocabulary
doesnt mean anything.] And this agrees with the Synoptics. Besides, the term
"Preparation" has long been the regular name for Friday in the Greek language, caused by
the New Testament usage. [it is caused by the church adopting Jewish calendar practice;
not by the N.T. usage] It is so in the Modern Greek today. It was the Sabbath eve, just as
the Germans have Sonnabend for Sunday eve, i.e., Saturday afternoon. [Etymologically
derived from the wrong understanding of the Bible word and expressions.] So this passage
also becomes a positive argument for the agreement between John and the Synoptics [on
what point?]. [folk etymology; anachronism]

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Chart: Reckoning of Passover (Hoehner p. 90)

Note: Doig (1990), This chart is in error for two reasons. First, it reverses the
reckoning of the Sadducees and Pharisees [as differently from the Hohners text p. 91
that the Galileans, and with them Jesus and His disciples, reckoned from sunrise-
to-sunrise while the Judeans reckoned from sunset-to-sunset - ARJ], with the latter
supposedly using sunrise reckoning. Second, in 33 CE the Passover was on the same
evening by sunrise or sunset reckoning, with no offset; the offset of Passovers did occur
in 30 CE. [from New Testament Chronology, Ch. 21. THE TWO PASSOVERS]

Nisan date with sunrise-to-sunrise is comparable to Abib dates of the true biblical
calendar. the Passover meal to be on 15th. Note the unthinkable idea that there
Passover were kept by the different people group in different days by simply aligning
by reading the timeline in the narrative with the unbiblical Gregorian calendar! [p. 87
Thus, in the year Christ died, there were two consecutive days for Passover.]

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Ref.:
Hoehner (1977) Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ
https://books.google.com/books?id=fS28b9GC1dcC
Doig (1990), New Testament Chronology - Exact Dating of the Birth and Crucifixion of Jesus,
http://nowoezone.com/NTC21.htm Ch. 21. THE TWO PASSOVERS

http://nowoezone.com/NTC17.htm Ch. 17 Astronomical Determination of the New Moon.


Jesus' crucifixion was on a Wednesday, Thursday or Friday, and that day was
either Nisan 14 or Nisan 15. The day began at either sunrise or sunset. No other
combination of days of the week and month seems possible.

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Jn 19:14 eve of the Pesach
This chronologically important verse tells about the date and time of Pilates
sentencing. [See above for the term preparation]
Jn 19:14 Now it was eve of the Pesach sometime in the sixth hour
( )
Eve of the Pesach day; not of the Pesach Festival
sixth hour-period as on a sundial; not six on the clock.
sometime in sixth hour, not about sixth hour as if somewhere imprecisely
btw 5th to 7th hour.]

Here Pesach in this text is Pesach day (for memorial service), NOT the Pesach
Festival (=Matzah Festival) (by the narrative context, not with Gk. paraskeu being
anarthrous). The setting cannot be in the eve of the Pesach Festival. The expression eve
of Pesach Week is imprecise unclear on whether Pesach day of Abib 14 is meant.

Also, importantly not to be confused with use of the same phrase Erev Pesach as well as the
word Pesach (of the festival) as used in rabbinic Jewish calendar.. With them the Pesach
meal falls on Nisan 15th (day of Pesach) as it is taken to refer to preparation of 7 (8) days
of the Festival which are called Pesach I to VII (VIII).]

eve of the Pesach [Heb. Erev Pesach]


This important verse is very important because it flatly tells that the Lords Last
Supper could not be the Pesach meal. Compare Jn 13:1 (Last Supper) before the
Festival of the Pesach.

Gk. paraskeu (preparation) is used as metonymic of day of preparation (i.e., eve


the day before). It does usually refer to the day of preparation specifically for
sabbath (as the day before sabbath as in customary expression).
In a single instance, however, here in Jn 19:14, the context tells that it is not
preparation for sabbath day in the Pesach festival season (Jn 19:31), nor about
preparing the Festival as such (along with interchangeable expressions, Pesach
Festival and Festival of the Matzah (unleavened bread), but preparation for the
Pesach sacrifice and meal. IRENT renders it here as eve (instead of preparation)
to keep differentiated and help avoid automatic association of preparation with
preparation only for sabbath.]
Pilates sentencing was on the same day of His crucifixion (on the day of Pesach) and
moreover they are forced to opt for reading sixth hour as 6 a.m. instead of noon
time so as not to become contradictory to the Synoptic timing, while remaining
contradictory to the Synoptic dating. [See word study on festival vs. feast esp. with
different Hebrew words in WB #5 Time, Calendar, and Chronology and inWB #1
Words, Words, and Words of IRENT Vol. III Supplement.]
Examples of English translations:
1 /preparation for the Pesach;
2 /Day of Preparation of the Passover Festival AUV; /the day of the Preparation of the
Passover NIV2011, TNIV;
3 /the day before the Passover GNB; /the day before Passover CEV;
4 /x: Preparation day in Passover Week NIrV; /x: Preparation day of Passover week ERV;
/x: the day of Preparation of Passover week NIV-old;

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Abib 12 Before coming of the Pesach Festival (Jn 13:1); [= Last Supper]; Arrest at
Gethsemane.
Abib 13 Eve of Pesach day (Jn 19:14); [= Day of His Trial]

Abib 14 Pesach Day the lamb to be slaughtered Preparation day for High
afternoon Sabbath (Jn 19:31) = sabbath eve [= Day of His Crucifixion]
Abib 14 Pesach meal for Yehudim. Yeshua being entombed.
evening
Abib 15 High Sabbath of the Festival of the Matzah; day 7 of the lunar week.
Wave Sheaf offering day time.
Abib 16
[Resurrection in dawn (4th watch of the night = last part of the Abib 16]
The women set out to the tomb at dawn (as morning twilight).
Abib 17 Risen Lord to the women and the disciples (with Thomas absent)
The Festival of the Matzah: 7-day (Abib 15th 21st) with its 1st and last 7th days as
special days. The Festival of Pesach (Jn 13:1): the entire 8-day season; unleavened bread
to be eaten.

Jn 19:31 High Sabbath


n gar megal h hmera ekeinou tou sabbatou the day of that sabbath was high [sabbath]

First and last days of the week-long festival are special (high, great, important). The
first day of the Festival of the Matzah is known as high sabbath [Sabbath haGadol in
Heb.], since it is sabbath (day 7 of the lunar week).

[Not because it was a double-sabbath (sabbath happened to fall on the first day of the
Festival at that time), nor sabbath was the one falling in the middle of the festival, but
because the first day of the festival is set in the biblical calendar on the 15th, which is
always day 7 of the lunar week, i.e. sabbath. Note that the numbered days of the lunar
week (in the Scripture) does not correspond to the named days of the solar week (as in
Gregorian, and even rabbinic Jewish calendars). In short, Day 7 of the lunar week is
unrelated to Saturday.

seasons

Hebrew word moed means appointed (times) often translated as seasons festivals (/x: feast
KJV). It is governed by the sun, not by the moon [Gen 1.5ff]
Cf. Heb. Chag festival/feast

N.T. evening
The word evening in English is used in different sense (incl. as afternoon in
Southern American accent). A common Gk. word opsios in GNT is translated as
evening (but in NWT late in the afternoon Mt 27:57; //Mk 15:42). (Related to opse
Mk 11:19; 13:35; Mt 28:1). Cf. hespera (Lk 24:29; Act 4:3; 28:23)

O.T. *evening; in the evening; between two setting-times; /x:


between the two evenings; *ereb;
See in IRENT III Supplement - Walk through the Scripture 5 - Time, Calendar and Chronology

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Time-indicators in the Biblical passages

Listed below are some verses in the Gospels which deserve further scrutiny for they
serve as important time indicators in the Passion narrative.

[ www.yhrim.com/Teaching_Documents/The_Third_Day, After_Three Days


Sign_of_Yonah 2014.pdf http://ow.ly/xSgg30g9Ov4 https://is.gd/Y8lnr2 ]

Lords Last Supper vs. Pesach meal


Mt 26:17; //Mk 14:12; //Lk 22:7
Mt 27:1; Mk 15:1a, Lk 22:6 in the morning day came
Mt 12:40 three days and three nights; Jonahs sign
Mt 28:1 sabbaths (pl.)
Mt 28:1 at dawn in the first day of the week
Mt 26:2; //Mk 14:1 two days later Pesach day to come
Mt 26:17; //Mk 14:12; towards the beginning day for the
unleavened bread eating (= Abib 14) which is to come up in 2 days
later. Lk 22:1 //Mk 14:1 Festival of the matzah (Abib 15-21) (called
Pesach [festival season] together with Pesach day itself on Abib
14). Also on the unleavened bread [festival] = Pesach festival. [Cf.
//Lk 22:7]
Mk 14:14; //Lk 22:8 eat the passover' (< eat the meals in the
Pesach festival season = celebrate the Pesach festival season)
Mk sixth hour third hour ninth hour
Mk 16:1 after this sabbath had past
Mk 16:2 with the sun about to rise
Mk 16:9 after having risen
Mt 27:57Now evening having come
Jn 12:1 Six days before the Pesach
Jn 13:1 before the festival of the Pesach
Jn 18:28 eat the Pesach
Jn 19:14 eve of the Pesach day
Jn 19:14 sixth hour
Jn 19:31 High Sabbath
Jn 19:42 sabbath preparation day (sabbath eve Mk 15:42)
Jn 20:19 evening that same day, after the day one of the week

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on the third day after three days in three days to third day

These various expressions related to the Passion week timeline all cover the same time period,
but only used in different sense.

on the third day after three days


The expression on the third day is about counting-off dates, whereas the expression after three
days is about the duration; the context tells after three days of what. on third day, in three
days, after three days, and even the phrase three days and three nights

It requires the properly constructed timeline in the Passion Week narrative to see the context.
such a timeline, it is essential to use Abib dates (with sunrise-to-sunrise day), not Nisan dates
(with sunset-to-sunset day), nor Gregorian named days of the solar week.

[For the examples of correspondence of two expressions, third day and three days in OT and
NT, see Ref. www.apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=10&article=756&topic=139
Did Jesus Rise On or After the Third Day?]

t trit hmera on the third day (x 11)


I will shall be raised up on the third day [Mt 16:21; 17:23; 20:19; Lk
9:22; 18:33; 24:7, 46; Mk 9:31 v.l.; 10:34 v.l.]
the Mashiah will rise on the third day [Lk 24:46]
the Elohim raised him on the third day [Act 10:40]
Note that this phrase is possible only when reckoning dates in Abib, not in Nisan.

meta treis hmeras after three days a


Mk 8:31; 9:31, and 10:34. put to death. And after three days I shall be raised
up
Mt 27:63 Sir, we remember, while He was still alive, how that deceiver said,
After three days I will be raised up. Therefore, command that the tomb be
made secure until the third day. Note: On what occasion did they hear him
saying that? Jn 2:19 [not Mt 12:40]. After three days from what? Prob.
from the day of Pilates trial of Him Abib 13th.

in three days
The expression in three days occurs in specific context of the temple motive.
Thematically it alludes to His ministry of three years; rather than the suffering and
death motive of the Passion week:
Rebuild the Temple in three days b
(Gk. en) Mt 27:40; Mk 15:29; Jn 2:19, 20
(Gk. en); (Gk. dia) Mt 26:61; Mk 14:58.

a
Cf. A strange and inconsistent way of interval counting in WNT translation: after two days for
meta treis meras Mt 27:63; Mk 8:31; but in three days in Mk 9:31.
b
Some claims that the English phrase in three days is ambiguous and does not have same sense
in the biblical narrative. Here, he is apparently reading this text as related to the Passion week and
sees a nonexistent conflict between two phrases on the third day and in three days Cf.
http://english.stackexchange.com/questions/95697/within-and-in-when-referring-to-time
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to third day

Lk 24:21b tritn autn hmeran agei {smeron} third to-this day it-is-leading
{today}

it has been these three days (brings this to third day) {as of today} since these
things happened since what?

these - refers to v. 20, to the crucifixion (9 AM on), death (Abib 14, 3 PM) and
burial (before 6 PM) all in Abib 14. This would not include the Matthean unique
pericope setting Roman guard.]

three days and three nights; Jonahs sign

Mt 12:39-40

[See a separate file collection on three days and three nights, in the zip file IRENT Vol. III
Supplement (Collections #5A). e.g. <Deceived by three days and three nights in the
tomb>.]

Mt 12:40 in the heart of the earth three days and three nights

This phrase expressing a duration is in conjunction with the so-called Jonahs


sign is different from the previous expressions on the third day and after three
days which are related to the His Passion.

12:39
But in reply he said to them,
An evil and adulterous generation
it keeps on looking for a sign [+ of coming of the Kingdom reign]!
No, no [such] sign shall be given to it
unless it be such sign as Yonah the prophet was:
12:40
Indeed, just as Yonah was three days and three nights
in the belly of the whale;
so shall the Son-of-man be three days and three nights
in the very heart of the earth
[+ putting Himself there through His suffering].

Mt 12:40 three days and three nights in the heart of the earth;

[Most fails to pay attention to the fact that this much debated unique
Matthean text is outside the Passion Narrative. The text does not tell
anything about How long was Jesus dead in the tomb, nor it does provide
any clue on what day of the week the Crucifixion day. It does not mean at
all that he remained dead in the tomb buried for three full days and three
full nights.

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In Hebrew mindset, Jerusalem was regarded as the navel, center or heart of
the earth. It alludes to 3-year period of Yeshuas ministry culminating in
Jerusalem. [Cf. Ralph Woodrow www.ralphwoodrow.org/articles/three-
days.pdf ]

It is parallel to his prophetic statement Destroy this temple, and I will raise
it again in three days in Jn 2:19.

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early morning Gk. pri

Mt 27:1 (prias genoms morning came);


Mk 15:1 (ethus pri early morning);
Lk 22:66 (egeneto hmera day came);
Jn 18:28 (n pri it was early morning)

Cf. Mk 13:35 pri dawn-watch (4th watch of the night). Cf. time of the resurrection =
dawn as dawn-watch; cf. at dawn as morning twilight the women set out to the tomb.

cf. www.thecreatorscalendar.com/three-days-three-nights/

the first day of the week

Mk 16:2; //Lk 24:1; //Jn 20:1 t mia tn sabbatn on the first day of the week
//Mt 28:1; t epiphskous eis mian sabbatn at dawn (as morning twilight) in the first day of the
week

Here by the context the phrase with the first day of the (lunar) week refers to the ending, not
beginning, of the day (Abib 16) of His Resurrection. With morning, it will be soon Abib 17, the
day when the Risen Lord would have Himself shown to the disciples, incl. the two on the Emmaus
road. Note G-Mk, G-Lk, Jn have it modified with adverbial phrase; whereas G-Mt has a verbal
phrase which should not be read as if it was dawning to bring 1st day as a new day. /x: as the new
day was dawning (NLT); /x: as it began to dawn toward ~ (KJV, NASB; [Cf. at dawn on ~
NET, ESV]; [See below for <Mt 28:1 at dawn in the first day> and also for Appendix on Mt 28:1.]

Mk 16:2
very early to-the [day] one of the week
Lk 24:1
To-the [day] one of-the week of-dawn deep
Jn 20:1
To-the [day] one of the week early of-darkness still being
Mt 28:1 ,
to-the lighting-up into [day] one of-week,
Cf. Mk 16:9
Having-risen early to-first [day] after-Sabbath

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Mt 28:1 at dawn in the first day of the week
[See a separate file for G-Mt Appendix Mt 28.1]

Mt 28:1 at dawn in the first day of the (lunar) week (IRENT)

epiphsk 2 x here Mt 28:1 and Lk 23:54

KJV translation as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week is misleading.
It wrongly suggests the first day was dawning (coming at dawn). Worse is NLT
Early on Sunday morning, as the new day was dawning. Cf. ISR literal rendering,
toward dawn on the first day of the week.

Here the time setting is morning twilight of dawn-watch (= 4th watch of the night.
of the last portion of the first day). It is not to the beginning part of the first day of
the (solar) week (Sunday).

After the Resurrection in the dawn, the first day of the lunar week is drawing to
close. After a short period of morning twilight, soon a new day (the 2nd day of the
week) would come with morning break. It was the day (Abib 17) when the risen
Lord appeared to the rest of His disciples after shown to a group of women
(Sunday).

Note: in the biblical calendar the Resurrection was Abib 16 (= 1st day of the lunar
week = on the third day after the Crucifixion on Abib 14). With morning break
the date changes in the biblical calendar, but remains same in Jewish and Roman
calendars.

Mt 28:1 after Sabbaths (pl.); after Sabbath

[/after the week; /after the sabbath was over; /after Sabbaths were over; /late on the sabbath;
/late on the week. IRENT after Sabbath]

The Greek phrase (opse de sabbattn) only once here in Mt 28:1 (not in the
parallel pericope of the Empty Tomb in other three Gospels), but seems to
correspond to the statement in Mk 16:1 when the Sabbath was over.

The anarthrous plural Gk word does not refer to the two sabbaths. Plural
Sabbaths is also used in the sense of week, as in the day one of the week.

The word in the text is usually treated as a singular and renders as after the Sabbath as
many translation render (NKJV, NET, HCSB, ESV, NRSV, NIV trio, NASB); after the
sabbath (RSV, NRSV, NWT). Same is said of rendering such as the sabbath having
passed (Wuest), the Sabbath day was now over (NIrV), the Sabbath was over (CEV),
when the Sabbath was over (PNT), the day after the Sabbath day was ~ (ERV), at the
close of the sabbath (Mft), and as the Sabbath day ended (AUV). [For the examples of
Sabbath in plural vs. singular, see Mt 12:1-2, 5.]

The Greek conjunction tells that this phrase begins a new topic, that is, it does not belong
to the end of the last verse of the preceding chapter (27:66) as some tries to read.

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Nor the Gk phrase means late on the sabbath day (ASV); late on the Sabbath
day (UPDV); late on the Sabbath (BBE, MRC); late on sabbath (Darby), late
in the sabbaths (LITV); or late in the week (MKJV), in the end of the sabbath
(Geneva), in the later ende of the Sabboth day (sic Bishops).

Other wrong rendering at the end of sabbath (KJV), on the eve of the sabbaths
(YLT) and it is the evening of the sabbaths (CLV). These are frivolous rendering
- after the day of worship (GW) and Early on Sunday morning (NLT). Some
takes these translations to claim that But before Saturday night (the weekly
sabbath) was complete HE ROSE ON THE SABBATH! (with a Wednesday
crucifixion scenario).

Nor can it mean after two sabbaths (an eisegesis to prove their faulty
interpretation) as if there can be more than one Sabbath day in a week. This is what
the Wednesday crucifixion scenario had to fall back, to justify the timeline they
have come up. [Neither the idea of double sabbath in the Passion week that two
Sabbaths happened to fall on the same day on that year a claim by the proponents of the
traditional Friday crucifixion scenario.]

Such a wrong idea of two Sabbaths consecutive in the Passion week came up to
serve their misunderstanding of chronology and calendars. They claim that there are
two Sabbaths of different kind in the week-long festivals
(1) annual festival Sabbath (Nisan 15th Exo 12:16; Lev 23:7; Num 28:16-18
15th of Nisan; in CE 30), and
(2) weekly Sabbath (Nisan 16).
Mt 27:62 the next day (i.e. the day after the crucifixion) which was after the
Preparation in other words, the crucifixion was on the preparation day. Here
preparation means sabbath preparation (not preparation of the Festival per se; nor
preparation of Pesach sacrifice and meal. Cf. eve of the Pesach in Jn 19:14) And
the First day of the Festival of the Matzah falls always on the Day 7 of the lunar
week, also because simply the date Abib 8, 15, 22 and 29 are sabbath days in the
Biblical calendar.
Again, it should be emphasized that there is only one kind of Sabbath day on the
day 7 of the lunar week one Sabbath day in a week. The 7-day long festivals have
its first day set on the day 7, hence called High Sabbath one and same Sabbath,
not another Sabbath in that week.

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Mk 16:1 after this sabbath had past

The women group bought spices not just after the sabbath or after the sabbath
was over which was for the daytime period, now evening has come.

Reading with the Biblical Lunar calendar, it was after this sabbath had past,
referring to the day 7 High Sabbath. And now it was on the day one of the lunar
week. It was only after daytime, evening, early night and late night had past, they
set out to the tomb in the dawn (as morning twilight).

Mk 16:2 with the sun about to rise;

anateilantos tou hliou with the sun about to rise /x: at suns rising;
with the sun about to rise \anateilantos tou hliou; (>VPAA-GMS >anatell) (? Absolute
genitive like Jn 13:2) The exact same phrase is seen in Mt 13:6 (hliou de anateilantos ekaumatisth
of suns rising it was scorched cf. //Mk 4:6 hote aneteilen ho hlios ekaumatisth when the sun
rose up, it was scorched.);

[It is a time-marker of their arrival at the tomb that is, dawn as morning twilight. Cf. Jn 20:1c
Mariam the Magdalene is coming early, still dark,] (of suns rising/having risen; x: having risen
up giving a wrong picture of the sun high up); (Cf. Lk 24:1b; Jn 20:1c);

[all these time-markers in the Gospels have no hint of the resurrection itself (which was not observed
by humans) to be other than in the dawn as dawn watch. Cf. Wednesday crucifixion scenario with
resurrection in the late afternoon or evening (on Saturday).] /as the sun was about to rise ARJ;
/x: at the rising of the sun KJV+;

Mk 16:9 after having risen

Syntax issue anastas de pri prt sabbatou ephan prton Maria t


Magdaln
16:9 Now after having risen [to Life] in the dawn (as dawn watch) on the first day
after Sabbath,
Yeshua appeared first to Mariam the Magdalene,

Understanding the syntax of the verse (9a & 9b) is needed to see how it affects
translation and interpretation on the time of His crucifixion confusingly so when
the narrative is followed with Gregorian calendar, instead of Biblical Lunar
calendar. [Note: This is an example of punctuation problem where to put a
comma.]

AT Robertson in Word Pictures argued that the phrase pri prt sabbatou
could conceivably be construed with ephan.]
1 (resurrection early morning of Sunday): (Cf. = in the dawn watch at the
end of 1st day of the lunar week in the Biblical Lunar Calendar.)
/Now when He rose early on the first day of the week,
He appeared first to Mary Magdalene, - most;
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2 (resurrection time left undetermined, but leaves room to much earlier time
the ardent proponents of Wednesday crucifixion scenario have it in
late afternoon or evening!!)
/After having risen, He appeared first to Mary Magdalene,
early (in the morning) on the first day of the week.
/After rising from the dead, Jesus appeared early on Sunday
morning to Mary Magdalene MSG
/>Early on the first day of the week, after he arose, he appeared
first to Mary Magdalene NET
Compare the syntax in Mt 28:1
Mt 28:1 ,
After but of-Sabbaths [pl.],
,
to-the-[day] lighting-up into one of-Sabbaths,

came Mary the Magdalene and the other Mary

Here the phrase opse de sabbatn stands by itself in the beginning, but it is a
prepositional phrase with a conjunctional de in the middle. In contrast, anastas
de in Mk 16:9 is a clause - a dative verbal participial clause. [Cf. the syntax of
1Co 11:32 for the expression chrinomenoi de hupo tou kuriou being judged by
the Lord]

Most confusion is the result of misunderstanding the expression day one of the
week as Sunday. The resurrection was in the dawn-watch at the end of Abib 16
which was 1st day of the lunar week. In the morning twilight of dawn, the women
set out to the tomb. The morning for the next day, Abib 17, is to break soon. It
was not early on the first day (NET), but in the dawn, which is the last part of
the night in fourth watch (= dawn watch) of the night.

Taking this phrase connected to v. 9c, a Wednesday crucifixion and Saturday


evening resurrection scenario insists that early means right after sunset at the
beginning of a new day by rabbinic Jewish calendar reckoning which was not
present in the first century CE.

[Note:]
1. The verse Mk 16:2 tells about the womens visit to the empty tomb
already. It was early morning when Mary Magdalene went to the tomb and
encounters Yeshua already risen, also in Jn 20:1ff.
2. The phrase having risen occurs only here in the Marks long ending;
no parallel in the Gospels. Some take anastas as an independent time
clause in itself and disconnects it from the subsequent time phrase.
3. Nowhere else the time of His resurrection has been stated; it reflects the
reality that the resurrection per se was not eye-witnessed. Only the empty
tomb was. (Is there any extra biblical source or extracanonical source to
tell what time was the resurrection itself?)
4. Placement of a comma either before or after the phrase early on the first
day of the week is simply a translators idea and by itself cannot give a
clue about what day and what time the crucifixion should have been on
Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday evening or dawn. As to the exact time
He appeared to Mary (other than early in the day one of the week) is not
specified here; it just says (in G-John) that He appeared first to Mary.
120 | P a g e
However, the fact that His resurrection was none other than in the dawn is
well evidenced through the rest of the narratives in all Gospels.

[Note: Such strange questions to the Wednesday crucifixion scenario with the
resurrection in the late afternoon is a result of their wrong interpretation of Mt
12:40 phrase (see elsewhere here dealt in detail) in the heart of the earth three
days and three nights, which was read as being buried in the ground for full 72
hours. If he was risen in the late afternoon, where would He be waiting out until
He make Himself to show in the morning to the disciples?! [Or could the time for
the dramatic scene of visiting the empty tomb be in the evening of Saturday, the
time that the Jewish day would say dawn?]

Mt 27:1; Mk 15:1a, Lk 22:6 in the morning day came


The time for the final Sanhedrin v. Yeshua is clearly stated in these texts to be in the morning,
after which Yeshua was brought to Pilate. Most commentators simply ignore the plain biblical
statement.
The Trial and the Crucifixion cannot be on the same date. [See More than one day chronology
after Eugen Ruckstuhl.]

In the flow of the events in the timeline, Mt 26:5-67 and Mk 14:53-65 Sanhedrin v. Yeshua
should belong to Mt 27:1 and Mk 15:1, respectively, keeping them in harmony with Lk 22:66-
71.

Mt 27:57 Now evening having come


Mt 27:57 Now evening having come /~ having arrived; \opsias (de) genomens (also in8:16;
14:15; 14:23; 16:2; 20:8; 26:20) [that is, the sun has set. Still Abib 14.] [cf. Nisan 15, the new day
(High Sabbath) begun as in Rabbinic Jewish reckoning. the High Sabbath yet to come next
morning. See Jn 19:38 for exegesis of Deu 21:23]

It is not evening was approaching, or evening approached (NIV trio), not late in the afternoon
(NWT).

Not to be confused Hebrew expression between the two setting-times (commonly translated as
between the evenings).

Lk 22:14 had desired to eat ~ this Pesach


Much I had desired to eat with yo this Pesach [coming up]

Most misinterpret the Pesach to eat to refer to the very Last supper Yeshua was having with His
disciples (on Abib 12 evening with an alternative of Nisan 14 to fit the common Holy Week
timeline), when the whole context of narrative in all four Gospels indicates that is the Pesach
which was to come in a few days [Abib 14].

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Pesach in G-Jn

Pesach in G-Jn 9 verses


as metonymic of the Festival of the Pesach: 2:13, (23); 6:4; 11:55; 18:39;
before the Festival of the Pesach: 13:1; [The exact expression in the phrase of the
Festival of the Pesach in N.T. occurs here and only one other place in Lk 2:41.]
before the Pesach: 12:1
eve of the Pesach day 19:14 and
in the idiom in to eat for the Pesach festival season (festive meals): 18:28;

Cf. Lk 22:1 Now the Festival of the Unleavened Bread was nearing, which is called Pesach.

The Pesach festival season, which covers the entire 8-day period, consisting (1) of Abib 14th Pesach
Day (for the Pesach lamb sacrifice in the afternoon and for the Pesach meal in the evening) as well as
(2) of Abib 15th to 21st for a seven-day long period of the Festival of the matzah (a Synoptic Hebrew
phrase) (//Mk 14:1).]

Jn 12:1 Six days before the Passover

Jn 12:1 six days before the [Festival of] Pesach


ho oun Isous pro hex hmern tou Pascha
Yeshua, then, six days before the Pesach [Festival], ...
This verse opens the beginning of the Passion narrative proper. This is the third
and last Pesach in Yeshuas public ministry of two and half years (with total of
three Pesach) Jn 11:55 and 12:1 (CE 30). [Note: The duration of His ministry
and the year of His Crucifixion are the issues of chronology, whereas the day
is an issue of timeline.]

Since Abib 8th was Day 7 of the lunar week, the journey back to Bethany could
not occur on that lunar sabbath day. To arrive at Abib 9th for the date of
Yeshuas arrival at Bethany, counting back needs to be from Abib 15th (the day
before sabbath) in the Pesach festival season, not the Pesach Day of Abib 14th.

Some (using a rabbinic Jewish calendar with solar sabbath = Saturday) propose
to count back from Pesach Day (Nisan 14th), thus to arrive at Nisan 8th, which
then results in different timelines of events leading to the Crucifixion.

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Jn 13:1 before the Festival of the Passover
This verse opens the Johannine account of the Lords Last Meal:

Jn 13:1 pro de ts heorts tou pascha eids ho Isous hoti


Then, before the Festival of the Pesach, Yeshua knowing that

Before [coming of] the Festival of the Pesach is simply before the
Festival meaning before coming of the Festival, not on the day
before the Festival (which puts it on the day of Pesach memorial service).
The actual date setting this refers is the day (Abib 12th) before Abib 13th
of the Trial and Pilates sentencing Jn 19:14) [which is eve of Abib 14th
(eve of Pesach day).]

[This verse unambiguously tells that the Lords Last Supper (which is narrated
from 13:2 on) cannot be the Pesach meal as such. That was to be taken in 2 days
on Abib 14th /Nisan 15th evening (= the precursor of Seder ritual of the rabbinic
Judaism) by Yehudim, when Yeshua was as the Pesach lamb scarified on the
cross. Note also that the nature of meal is incompatible with the Pesach meal -
the text does use of the word artos (common bread), not azuma (unleavened
bread), in the Synoptic accounts of the Last Supper. In addition, the absence of
lamb to be eaten on the table is significant as Yeshua Himself was our Pesach
sacrifice. It is the reason why Yeshua could not have died other than on Pesach
day.]; /the Festival of the Passover NRSV; /> the feast of the Passover
KJV; /the Feast of the Passover NKJV;
[Note: The use of wafer of unleavened bread used in Eucharist for church
liturgy as practiced in Christian religions is a result from conflation of the Last
Supper with eating unleavened bread (for the Festival of the matzah).]

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Jn 20:19 evening following that first day of the week
Jn 20:19 evening following that first day of the lunar week /ouss (oun) opsias
t hmera ekein t mia [tn] sabbatn;


Being t= of-evening to-the day that
[] ,
to-the [day] one {the} of-week,

ouss oun opsias t hmera ekein; /evening on that day /x: on the very same day;

t mia tn sabbatn; /following the first day of the week

Evening = evening of Abib 17


following (coming after) that first day of the week = that is the day of
Abib 16 [= the day after the first day of the week (20:1)].

When the biblical narrative is followed correctly with the biblical lunar
calendar, this event cannot be on the same first day of the lunar week, the day
of Resurrection, which had just past.
Note: If reckoned with the Roman calendar, the calendar day would remain
same (as Sunday) on the date of the resurrection, as the date does not change
with sunrise. It is unlikely here, however, G-Jn was thinking in a Roman way
of reckoning of a midnight-to-midnight day in that way the event was put on
the same first day of the solar week (in Jewish or Roman calendar).

Jn 19:42 sabbath-preparation day


since it was the sabbath-preparation day of the Yehudim (> Judeans, Jews)
\ ; [The time is late evening of Abib 14;
(not late afternoon, since it was already evening for them to have approached Pilate -
Mt 27:57; //Mk 15:42). The High Sabbath of next day Abib 15th was to come at
sunrise.]

[The word preparation (day) is usually (day of) preparation for sabbath, that is, day
6 of the lunar week. The Pesach day (Abib 14) is the preparation day for the (High)
sabbath of Abib 15. Cf. Eve of Pesach Jn 19:14]

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Significance of Jn 19:14 sixth hour
[See relevant files in IRENT Vol. III - Supplement (Collections #6B - Trial - Time & Duration).]

Jn 19:14 \ [] ; sixth hour {/mss third hour}


The expression 6th hour (more accurately, hour-period) a in Jn 19:14 of Pilates
sentencing is a crucial time-marker for the Passion Week timeline.

This stands in contrast to the time-marker (time indicator) in Mk 15:25 of the Crucifixion
beginning about 3rd hour ( 8 to 9 a.m.). This would be incompatible with the time-marker
for Pilates sentencing as sixth hour as long as these two time-marker are interpreted to
belong to same day as on His crucifixion.

With an internal time-marker of sixth hour-period (about 11 a.m. to noon) in Jn 19:14, the
trial with Pilate cannot be placed on the same day of the crucifixion (Abib/Nisan 14). b It
has to be located on the day before, that is, on Abib 13.

Along this line, the text of Jn 19:14 should read it was eve of the Pesach day (not
preparation of Pesach festival sabbath) and it was about sixth hour-period (i.e. near the
noon) as the text plainly says to bring us to the correct understanding of the timeline here.

Several conflicting and contradictory interpretations have appeared. c A common


interpretation takes this as 6 a.m. d in order to avoid contradiction with the Synoptics offered
by Friday scenario proponents. They see it by counting hours from midnight (as is the case
in the modern Roman calendar we use). However, all the time-makers in G-Jn for counting
the hour-period in the day time-period is from the sunrise no calendar at that time (both
the early Julian Roman as well as Jewish convention) counts from mid-night.

The events of Yeshua vs. Sanhedrin (Lk 22:66) and Yeshua vs. Pilate, then, belong to the
period from morning to midday of Abib/Nisan 13, the day before the Crucifixion. This
makes the Last Supper to be located on the previous day - Abib 12 evening [which
confusingly corresponds to Jewish Nisan 13 evening]. Yeshuas Arrest around midnight
was followed by Yehudim authority vs. Yeshua + Peters denial through the night (cock-
crow watch) to the early morning.

[Humphreys (2011), The Mystery of the Last Supper (download), has one observation
correctly that is, the Last Supper cannot be the night before the Crucifixion, but a day
earlier. That way, he allocates a little more than one days span (from midnight arrest till

a
Gk. hora hour is not hour-on-the-clock, but hour-period on a sundial, with a day being divided
into 12 periods (hour-periods). Thus, sixth hour is a time-period 11 a.m. to 12 noon, variable
depending on the season as daylight length varies between 10 to 14 hours (on the clock) in Israel.
b
Hoehner p. 89, describes someones proposal for co-existence two different calendars (with a
day difference) of the Galilean method for Synoptic reckoning used by Jesus, His disciples, and
Pharisees (with biblical reckoning of a day sunrise-to-sunrise) in contrast to the Judean method
for G-Johns reckoning used by Sadducees), thus the two were keeping two Passovers, each a
day apart, in the same place Jerusalem!!]
c
Cf. the Lords Last Supper (a farewell meal of fellowship) which took place before Pesach day
(Jn 18:28).
d
Someone proposes in his ignorance that John must be using the counting hours from midnight
here after Roman reckoning, seeing that on the use of litra by John (as a unit of weight measure
in Jn 12:3 and Jn 19:39). However, in early Julian calendar, though reckoning a day from
midnight became fixed later, the counting hours is from sunrise for daytime period and sunset
for night period. It is same way in Jewish reckoning. [This contrasts Gregorian calendar: a 12-
hour period from midnight to noon and another 12-hour period from noon to midnight.]
125 | P a g e
the morning Crucifixion) to His trial that is, from Wednesday Last Supper Thursday
Trial Friday Crucifixion (p.172).

This may be compared with the Biblical Wednesday scenario present here in Passion Week
Chronology in which the sequence is Mon Last Supper Tue Trial Wed Crucifixion
Sat Resurrection. [Cf. With Thursday crucifixion scenario, it would be Tue Last Supper
Wed Trial Thu Crucifixion Sunday Resurrection.]

If we were to follow any scenario having the Last Supper the day before the Crucifixion,
these seven events from <His Arrest> to <Trial with Pilate> are cramped in a period of
about 6 hours during night, while a whole daytime before the Last Supper has nothing
allocated other than the preparing an upper room! Whether in the Friday scenario (e.g.
Hoehner, Chronological Aspects p. 92, and in the Thursday scenario (e.g. Boice, Gospel of
John pp. 929-32.)

The fact is that it is simply impossible to compress these events and activities within such a
limited time-period, expecting a large number of people bearing a physically demanding
schedule (Torrey, Difficulties p. 158).

Once we give up the traditional interpretation of 6th hour-period (during Pilates trial before
sentencing) as 6 a.m., but read it just as it says (something similar to the Roman time of 12
oclock a), then the narrative can be read smoothly and unencumbered with presupposition,
we can get out of our exegetical dilemma with confusion, controversy, contradiction,
conflicts and contention from conjectures and circular logic, with claims and counter-
claims.

The one thing we cannot allow is to end up with having Pilates sentencing on in the middle
of the Crucifixion on the same day (Abib 14). When we have Pilates trial-and-sentencing
completed the day before the crucifixion, it allows enough time in Abib 13 morning
allocated for Sanhedrin activity with only brief accounts taken place during night time after
His arrest at the same time for Peters denials with formal and final Sanhedrin decision early
in the morning before bringing to Pilate.

Copied from EE Jn 19:14 it was about sixth hour {/mss}


[ noon (11:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m.) Abib 13] [Gk. sixth hour (so renders KJV) usually
rendered as noon. [This cannot possibly be on Nisan 14 the day of His crucifixion as
most commentaries take it rendering the Scriptural witness contradictory to each other
when read time-markers shown on the Crucifixion day the Synoptic accounts.] \ []
; [ different interpretations in support of various Crucifixion-Resurrection
dates scenarios twelve oclock midnight (of Nisan 13); 6 a.m. (of Nisan 14); 6 p.m.; or
taking v.l. of third hour-period, etc.)/
1 /the sixth hour LITV, MKJV; /the sixth hour LITV, Murdock, NIV, BBE, ESV,
KJV++; /As to the hour, it was about the sixth - Wuest;
2(noon none makes clear that it cannot be on Abib/Nisan 14, the same day of the
crucifixion): /noon NET, JNT, CEV, GNB, ERV, AMP mg, NLT, ISV, NIrV, NRSV,
TNIV, TCNT, GSNT, MSG; /the sixth hour (twelve o'clock noon) AMP; /midday
Cass, SourceNT; /it was now getting on towards midday PNT; /
3(x: 6 a.m.by a mistaken Roman reckoning): /six in the morning , HCSB, /six o'clock
in the morning WNT, GW; /six oclock in the morning [Note: This was according to
Roman time, but if Jewish time were meant, it would have been 12 noon] - AUV; /
4 (/x: midnight counting hours of night-time period from sunset. That Sanhedrin
convened in the morning as plainly stated in Lk 22:66 and the setting of the Pilates trial
as narrated in the Gospels, esp. in G-Jn, do not allow this to be occurring during night-
time): /about sixth hour [midnight] ARJ;

a
It is of noon time. The entire Passion narrative does not allow to entertain 12 a.m. (midnight)..
126 | P a g e
[Note: {/mss} {/} (flimsy textual support. /third hour - CLV, Wesley. (If taken as
9 a.m., it does not solve the dilemma. Another alternative would be suggested is 9 p.m.!);

[A wrong claim found in Companion Bible fn.


(Bullinger www.companionbiblecondensed.com/NT/John..pdf The hours in all the
Gospels are according to Hebrew reckoning: i.e. from sunset to sunset.)]

[Ref. Robertson, A Harmony of the Gospels (1922), pp. 284-7 <12. Hour of the
Crucifixion> in Notes on Special Notes.
www.gutenberg.org/files/36264/36264-h/36264-h.htm in Text format.]
https://ia801006.us.archive.org/1/items/harmonyofgospels00robeuoft/harmonyofgospels00robe
uoft.pdf (scanned image)
www.gospelharmony.vear.info/GospelHarmony.pdf

[This text is very crucial in telling that the trial had to be on the day before the
crucifixion and it is impossible to be on the day of the crucifixion in the wee hours of
the day. That also means the Last Supper be Monday evening of Abib 12 (= Nisan 13
evening) This way, it allows to reconstruct the timeline of the Passion Week prior to the
crucifixion without need of juggling to make sense out of nonsense. See two attached
files on this subject.]

[On the expression sixth hour = the period of time on-sundial 11 a.m. to noon. a
An hour-period = a period on a sundial with 12 hour-period in a day (light time). /the
sixth hour KJV, and many; /noon some; /xxx: 6 a.m.]

Perplexed by apparent contradiction to Mk 15:25 which tells specifically the crucifixion


began at third hour-period (8 to 9 a.m.), several explanations have been proposed:

Rodney Whitacre (1999), John IVP NT Commentary Series, p. 455


The sixth hour would be noon, which seems to conflict with Marks statement
that Jesus was crucified at the third hour, that is, 9 a.m. (Mk 15:25).
/x: Again there is a division of opinion, with some take the two accounts simply
contradict one another (Robinson 1985:268).
/x: Perhaps due to a corruption in the text (Alford 1980: 837-98; Barrett
1978:545) or
/x: because both John and Mark cite an hour that has symbolic significance for
them (Barrett 1978; 545. Brown 1994; 1:847).
/x: Others think the imprecision of telling time in the ancient world accounts
for the discrepancy (Augustine In John 117.1; Morris 1971:800-801).

All four Gospels, however, add that Yeshua was brought after Sanhedrin session to
Pilate early in the morning (Mk 15:1 //Mt 27:1; //Lk 22:66 + 23:1; //Jn 18:28) (not
afternoon or evening), telling that the trial scene cannot be placed even in the period of
fourth watch of the night before morning.

a
[Cf. A sole example of the night period divided by 12 in Roman reckoning is in Act
23:23 (third hour of the night).]

127 | P a g e
William F. Dankenbring (http://triumphpro.info/ ) succinctly and convincingly shows
in John 19:14 What Do You Mean About the Sixth Hour?

http://triumphpro.com/john-19-sixth-hour.htm

1. No one can logically compress all the events of that previous night and morning
the appearance of Christ before Annas, and Caiaphas, and in the morning the full
Sanhedrin, and then Pilate the first time, and then Herod, and then Pilate once again,
the second time all of these before 6 A.M. in the MORNING! That is an utter
rubbish and preposterous nonsense!
2. According to G-Mark, And it was the THIRD HOUR [9:00 AM], and they
crucified him (Mark 15:25). It should be obvious that the "third hour" comes before
the "sixth hour."

Since Yeshua was already nailed to the stake at the third hour, or 9:00 AM in the morning
according to G-Mk, it is obvious that He could not appear before Pilate at the sixth hour --
three hours later on the very same day! IMPOSSIBLE!

Judging from the crucifixion account itself, we see that the "sixth hour" clearly refers to
NOON-TIME! [It is also not possible to see the trial to have occurred night time, from
evening to midnight ARJ] Since Christ was on the cross at the "sixth hour" on the day of
His crucifixion, therefore the "sixth hour" which He made His final appearance before
Pilate had of necessity to be on the PREVIOUS DAY! Since He was crucified on Nisan
14, the very day the Jews were killing their Passover lambs, and died at the very time in
the afternoon when the Passover lambs were being slain, then the sixth hour when He
appeared before Pilate for final sentencing had to be the "sixth hour" of Abib 13 [= Nisan
13] the previous day! This means that the "Last Supper," or final meal Jesus had with His
disciples, also had to be on the previous evening.

Time in G-Jn is always by Jewish reckoning [of time], not a [modern] Roman one. [Jn
1:29, 35, 38-39; 4:3-7, 49-53. See also Mt 20:1-7.] The sixth hour was not by (modern)
Roman reckoning of a day to start at midnight. [Early Julian calendar was same as Jewish
in counting hours from dawn and dusk, which was of Greek origin. This is not to be
confused with reckoning a day to start for a calendar day.]

The "SIXTH HOUR" when Jesus was condemned by Pontius Pilate to be crucified, had
to be about NOON-TIME on NISAN 13, the day before the crucifixion occurred! It could
not have been NOON-TIME on Nisan 14, because Jesus was hanging on the cross from
9:00 AM until 3:00 PM on that day! Therefore, it had to be the previous day, NOON-TIME
on Nisan 13!!!

The expression "SIXTH HOUR" clearly refers to HIGH NOON! Jesus appeared before
Pontius Pilate for His final sentencing about 12:00 NOON -- in the middle of the day!
Therefore, the "Lord's Supper" had to be the PREVIOUS DAY (day before the Trial) -- at
the END [evening] of Nisan 12 and [before] BEGINNING of Nisan 13 -- not the beginning
of Nisan 14, when He had been judged and sentenced by Pilate, and was in the dungeon,
awaiting His crucifixion early the next morning! [Here, beginning a date means
beginning at sunset as he was following Jewish reckoning]

in the very Mishnah that two days were required in all capital cases where a man was
determined to be "guilty", for him to be sentenced. Therefore, since the Sanhedrin found
Jesus guilty early in the morning, soon after sunrise (see Mt 27:1-2, Lk 22:66), they would
not have been able to execute Him until the FOLLOWING DAY!

Therefore, if Jesus Christ was brought before the Sanhedrin on Nisan 14th, by Jewish law
128 | P a g e
itself, His crucifixion could not have occurred until Nisan 15th the next day. But this is
impossible, since the Scripture tell us He was put to death BEFORE the high holy day
the 15th of Nisan arrived (see Jn 18:28; 19:14, 31). Jewish law would have required that
they at least hold Him over to the next day, following their determination of His guilt,
before they could carry out the sentence. But, since He was plainly condemned on a
preparation day BEFORE the high holy day, this requires that His final appearance before
the Sanhedrin be the PREVIOUS DAY on Nisan 13th and that He was condemned by
Pilate on Nisan 13th and executed the next day, on Nisan 14th!

https://bible.org/article/time-jesus-death-and-inerrancy-harmonization-plausible various
explanations of Jn 19:14 sixth hour.

Events Time Indicator Passages that Support


Mt 26:74-75; Mk 14:72;
Peters denials Before the cock-crow watch
Lk 22:60-61; Jn 18:27
Sanhedrin to Early in the morning (pri) Mt 27:1; Mk 15:1; Lk 22:66;
Pilate v. Yeshua I Jn 18:28-29
Pilate v. Yeshua II
Sometime in the sixth hour Jn 19:14
sentencing

With the Sentencing toward noon (G-Jn)


Crucifixion from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. (G-Mk, MK)
cannot be logically on the same Abib date;
cannot be on the same Date on Nisan and Gregorian day
unless one is blinded and willing to go beyond the texts
and believes that the texts are corrupt or inaccurate.
Crucified third hour Mk 15:25
Darkness falling sixth to ninth hour Mt 27:45; Mk 15:33;
over the land Lk 23:44 [hsei about]
Death ninth hour M 27:46-50 [peri about]
Mk 15:34-37

Absurd claims that Roman time-reckoning was used by G-Jn:

G-Jn John does not use so-called civil Roman time-reckoning of a day from midnight
to midnight: Like all other time-markers in G-Jn, in the case of Yeshuas healing
episode at Jn 4:52 in seventh hour, the setting in the narrative does not allow other
than the time around noon to 1 p.m. not 7 a.m. It needs to be read together with the
beginning v. 51 of this segment to clearly follow the narrative. Regardless when a day
is reckoned to start, Jewish or Roman (of early Julian calendar) counting hours always
start from dusk or dawn, unlike our modern convention of counting from middle of
night or day.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_timekeeping#Beginning_of_the_Roman_day

It is amazing to see how far people [e.g. Jack Finegan books on Biblical chronology]
can be carried away with their preconceived idea: Someone finds this verse Jn 4:52
as a proof to claim that John was using a (civil) Roman reckoning method where the
expression seventh hour uttered by a Roman centurions servant. Completely
ignored are other instances of time-markers in the same G-Jn.
129 | P a g e
Here is a short quote from a web page still adhering the wrong idea Another thing
that makes sense in light of all this, is that in John it is mentioned the "Seventh hour"
(Jn 4:52). Unless it's mistaken, there was no "seventh hour" in New Testament Jewish
time of day, but indeed there is in Roman time of day!
www.workmenforchrist.org/Bible/BC_Jesus_Nets.html <When was Jesus crucified?
(Mark 15:25 and John 19:14) - Explained!>

Summary on sixth hour in the Pesach eve:


[See files on the subject in IRENT Vol. III - Supplement (Collections #6B - Trial -
Time & Duration)]

The time of Pilate was giving out sentencing, sixth hour-period of Jn 19:14, could
not be logically possible to be on the day of the Crucifixion Abib 14th, since G-Mk
tells Yeshua was already on the cross from around 9 a.m. to give much confusion for
the Friday crucifixion scenario proponents. The solution for this would not be found
unless one comes to grasp the correct internal timetable in the Passion narratives; it is
only possible with the biblical calendar used in the Bible.

In order to resolve the apparent conflict (Synoptic vs. Johannine data), many opted to
read as sixth hour = 6 a.m. by falling back on the assumption that John was using
an alleged Roman reckoning for this particular verse.

However, (1) by doing so they are simply ignoring all other instances of time-maker,
such as Jn 1:39; 4:6; 4:52. Nowhere G-John shows any example of such a practice.
Moreover, (2) such a method of counting hours from midnight is only in our late-
Julian-Gregorian calendar. In the early Julian calendar which was at the time of the
N.T., counting was from sunrise and sunset both Roman as well as Jewish reckoning!
To their chagrin, they hopelessly leave the Synoptic-Johannine contradiction
unresolved, taking one of them in error in the Bible!

The sentencing around midday (not same as 12 noon) a by Pilate cannot be other than
on the eve of Pesach, that is, Abib 13, the day before the crucifixion. That means, the
Last Supper is logically required to be a day earlier (= Abib 12 evening b; Day 4 of the
week). His arrest and confrontation to Yehudim in authority were through the night to
be followed by His trial by Pilate.

Grasping clearly this way, it is seen that, after sentencing around the midday, Yeshua
spent the remainder of day and through the night in their custody before they finally
set Him out on the road to Golgotha morning of next day (Abib 14). There the
crucifixion itself was to begin about 3rd hour ( around 9 a.m.) with darkness to cover
the land from sixth hour on Mk 15:25.
Though no obvious break in narrative timeline in the Bible text, but we have to be
cautious with the text we know any verse, paragraph, and chapter break in the text
with apparent uninterrupted progression of events is not integral to the Greek text itself.

a
It is not feasible to see it as 12 at mid-night as some tried to entertain without specifying which
date. The biblical scene of trial as narrated by G-John cannot be something possible during
evening to night.
b
The same time-period of Abib 12 would be Nisan 13 evening, In Jewish reckoning, the
beginning of their day.
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Veil of Mishkan torn: Mt 27:51a {//Mk 15:38; //Lk 23:45b}
[Cf. Heb 10:20]

The veil of the Mishkan torn [30 CE. www.etsjets.org/files/JETS-PDFs/48/48-2/48-2-


pp301-316_JETS.pdf 5Robert Plummer, Something Awry in The Temple? The Rending of
the Temple Veil and Early Jewish Sources That Report Unusual Phenomena in the Temple
Around AD 30 JETS 48/2 (June 2005) 30116]

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Biblical Lunar Calendar system:

Passover dates in 30 to 33 CE
Jewish Passover is Nisan 15th with the Seder ritual for a 7-day festival (for some, 8-
day). It begins at sunset the day before the Gregorian date. [Jewish Passover is on
Nisan 14/15]

Biblical Pesach is on Abib 14.

Year (CE) 30 31 33
http://jesus-messiah.com/html/passover-dates-26-34ad.html
Full Moon Abib 14 Apr-6 Mar-27 Apr-3
Julian date to midnight Thu Mon Fri
Time of full moon 22:00 13:00 17:00
Passover Abib 15
Apr-6 Mar-27 Apr-3
at sundown of

Note: www.jstor.org/stable/3262201 G. Amadon, Ancient Jewish Calendation (p. 232)


contains some inaccurate data!

This is another example of the first visible crescent method for determining the New
Moon Day of Abib 1.
www.judaismvschristianity.com/Passover_dates.htm
Mar-22 Wed Mar-23 Fri. Mar-22 Sun.
Vernal Equinox
00:00* 05:00 17:00
Conjunction (Astronomical Mar-22 Wed. Apr-10 Tue Mar-20 Fri 09:00
New Moon) 20:00 14:00 Apr-17 Fri 21:00**
(Near or first after vernal Equinox)??
First evening of Mar-21 Sat.
Mar- 24 Fri Apr-11 Wed
visible crescent Apr-19 Sun.
Mar-22 Sun.
1st day of Nisan Mar-25 Sat Apr-12 Thu
Apr-20 Mon.
Apr-7 Fri. Apr-4 Sat.
14th day of Nisan@ (Passover) Apr-25 Wed.
May-3 Sun.
First evening of visible crescent: Gregorian: Midnight to midnight
@Nisan date: Beginning at sundown the evening before

* Midnight at the end of the given day

The first three columns were obtained from the U.S. Naval Observatory Astronomical
Applications Department. The pertinent file may be accessed on the Internet at
www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/astronomical-applications/data-services/spring-phenom .

Note. The times of day given in the second and third columns have been adjusted UT +2 for
Jerusalem time.

It should also be noted that the first evening of a visible crescent moon (column 4) always occurs
only minutes after sundown, which is at the very beginning of a new day on the Hebrew calendar.
This Hebrew day correlates to the following day on our Gregorian calendar as noted in the chart
below (column 5). Column 6 is Passover dates for the given years.

How the 1st day of Nisan was determined is not explained. Apparently based on visible crescent
method of Jewish calendation. This must be the source of Friday Crucifixion CE 30 Apr-7-Friday
(as Nisan 14).

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Abib 14th in 30 CE: Apr-5 Wed or Apr-6 Thu?

We have astronomically accurate data on astronomical new moon date (dark moon
or lunar conjunction) available online. The New Moon Day, the first day of the
lunar months of the biblical calendars, is differently determined and would result in
a Wednesday or a Thursday scenario for the Crucifixion day.

Jerusalem 30 CE
(UT+2) Equinox Mar 23 (02:00)
Mar-22-Wed (New Moon 19:46) Date in Jewish
Calendar
#1 #2
Mar-23-Thu Abib 1* Nisan 1
Mar-24-Fri Abib 2 Abib 1*
Mar-25-Sat Abib 3 Abib 2 @
Mar-30-Thu Abib 8 Abib 7
Mar-31-Fri Abib 9 Abib 8
Apr-1-Sat Abib-10 Abib 9
Apr-4-Tue Abib-13 Abib-12
Apr-5-Wed Abib-14 Abib-13
Apr-6-Thu Abib-15 Abib-14 Nisan 15
Apr-7-Fri Abib-16 Abib-15
Apr-8-Sat Abib-17 Abib-16#
Apr-9-Sun Abib-18 Abib-17
Abib 6 hours behind Julian date. Nisan 6 hours ahead of Julian date.
Full Moon on Apr-6 at 21:42 at Jerusalem 30 CE]

Column #1 New Moon Day as the day after the dawn following the
conjunction.
Column #2 (as in Thursday crucifixion scenario) is following sighting first
visible crescent. [www.triumphpro.com/jesus-in-grave-new-truth.htm
(Witness #1)]. Here, Abib 14th afternoon is on the same date in Julian
(i.e. Thu), however, Abib 16 dawn is on the next date on Julian, i.e. Sun.

www.worldslastchance.com/yahuwahs-calendar/new-moon-day-the-
dawn-after-conjunction.html New Moon Day: The Dawn After
Conjunction

http://astropixels.com/ephemeris/phasescat/phases0001.html
http://web.archive.org/web/20140909184037/http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phases0001.html
www.timeanddate.com/calendar/monthly.html?year=30&month=4&country=34) (w/ incorrect Full
Moon date of Apr-7)
www.fullmoon.info/en/fullmoon-calendar_1900-2050.html

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30 CE Dark Moon Full Moon
Jerusalem Mar-22 (Adar 29) Apr-6 (Nisan 15)
Chicago Mar-21 Apr-6
31 CE Dark Moon Full Moon
Jerusalem Mar-12 (Adar 29) Mar-27 (Nisan 15)
Chicago Mar-11 Mar-27

Roger Rusk, The Day He Died Jesus died during a Passover Festival in the early
part of the first century. Which Passover? Which year? Christianity Today, March
29, 1974. [A copy in IRENT Vol. III Supplement (Collection) #6B] [Thu Apr 6, AD 30.]

https://web.archive.org/web/20110709062802/http://user.txcyber.com/~wd5iqr/tcl/dayhedie.htm

[Note: His article is often cited for a Thursday crucifixion scenario. However, he
uses data from Goldstine, Herman H. (1973). New and Full Moons: 1001 B.C. to
A.D. 1651. As shown in the table below is nothing more that time and date of the
four moon phases. Further arguments are needed to assert Thursday for the
Crucifixion.]

[Jerusalem time = UT+2]


Year New Moon First Quarter Full Moon Last Quarter
30 Mar-22 19:46 Mar-31 00:18 Apr-6 21:42 Apr-13 13:34
31 Mar-12 00:19 Mar-19 23:41 Mar-27 12:55 Apr-3 06:30
33 Mar-19 12:38 Mar-26 12:33 Apr-3 16:51 Apr-11 05:45
[The data are extracted (for the relevant portion) from (UT used)
http://web.archive.org/web/20090301015349/http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/phase/phases0001.html

[Jerusalem time = UT+2]


Year New Moon Full Moon
30 Mar-22 19:59 Apr-6 21:47
31 Mar-12 00:29 Mar-27 13:01
33 Mar-19 12:41 Apr-3 17:02
Goldstine, Herman H. (1973), New and Full Moons: 1001 B.C. to A.D. 1651@
Table of Julian dates and time (it was in UT+3 Bagdad)
@ https://books.google.com/books?id=lgsNAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false

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[The Conjunction and New Moon Day date is location-dependent. Only different one
shown in red for USA.]

Year Dark Moon Full Moon


CE
Israel USA Jerusalem USA
2017 Mar-28 Mar-27 Apr-11 -
(Nisan 1) (Nisan 15)
2016 Apr-7 - Apr-22 -
(Adar II 28) (Nisan 14)
2015 Mar-20 - Apr-4 -
(Adar 29) (Nisan 15)
2014 Mar-30 - Apr-15 -
(Adar II 28) (Nisan 15)
2013 Mar-11 - Mar-27 -
(Adar 29 (Nisan 16)
2012 Mar-22 - Apr-6 -
(Adar 28) (Nisan 14)
2011 Apr-3 - Apr-18 Apr-17
(Adar II 28) (Nisan 14)
2010 Mar-15 - Mar-30 Mar-29
(Adar 29) (Nisan 15)
2009 Mar-26 - Apr-9 -
(Nisan 1) (Nisan 15)

In conclusion: This study should challenge and help find the day and date locatable
in the proleptic Gregorian calendar for the Crucifixion. Whatever actual date we may
find the correct one (for the calendation we choose to use), nothing is at stake at all,
aside from religious liturgical tradition. This is what we should be able to do: to
correctly follow the timeline of events in the Passion-Passover week narrative with
the Abib 14th of CE 30 for the Crucifixion day. Any event worthy for commemoration
is done on the anniversary date, not on a certain day of the week artificially settled.

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How to find a Scripture-based scenario with Biblical Lunar Calendar?

The Year in the rabbinic Jewish calendar (not in the Biblical Lunar Calendar)
begins at the moment of sunset at Jerusalem, on the evening of the first potentially
visible crescent moon beginning Day 1 of Month 1. A Year can begin before or
after the spring equinox. The rule of the equinox always places 15th day of Month
1 on or after the Hebrew Day of the spring equinox. A Hebrew Year always contains
12 Hebrew Months in a regular year or 13 Hebrew Months in a leap year. The Year
begins on Day 1 of Month 1 based on the rule of the equinox and the typical Civil
Year begins on Day 1 of Month 7.

It ensures that Unleavened Bread will always be kept in its season from year
to year as Exodus 13:10 instructs.

Elohim created the sun and the moon for calculating years, and the equinoxes and
solstices are His demarcation points in the solar cycle. In calculating a Hebrew
Year, the spring equinox governs the start of a Hebrew Year according to Exo 12:1-
2. The spring equinox is the demarcation point governing the solar cycle. The first
day of Unleavened Bread on 15th day of Month 1 is the critical day for calculating
a Hebrew Year. In the Creation Calendar, the first day of Unleavened Bread on
15th Day of Month 1 always occurs on or after the Hebrew Day of the spring
equinox. The first day of Unleavened Bread never occurs before the spring equinox.
This ensures that all three festivals take place within a single year as YHWH
specified.

This rule is called the rule of the equinox, and it always places Day 15th of Month
1 on or after the Hebrew Day of the spring equinox. If, at the moment of sunset at
the end of Month 12, on the evening of the first crescent moon at Jerusalem, there
are 15 Hebrew Days or less until the spring equinox, then Month 1 is declared. If
there are 16 Hebrew Days or more until the spring equinox, then Month 13 is
declared. The spring equinox will always occur on or between Day 16th of Month
12 in a Spiritual Regular Year, and Day 15th of Month 1 in the year following. The
spring equinox will always occur on or between Day 16th of Month 13 in a Spiritual
Leap Year, and Day 15th of Month 1 in the year following.

The Creation Calendar only intercalates, or inserts an extra month, at the end of
Month 12. The intercalary month is called Month 13.

www.torahcalendar.com/ORBITS.asp?HebrewDay=2&HebrewMonth=2&Year=2015

How do we find one amoung various scenarios on the proposed dates of His
crucifixion and resurrection, based on the Biblical Lunar calendar (as shown
above) to follow the biblical Passion week, which is not same as the church
liturgical Holy Week?

1. To determine the year His crucifixion was - which year, CE 30, 31, 33 on what
basis?
(1) An interpretation of Daniels 70-week prophecy simply cannot be the proof
for the year of His death. (Some finds CE 31 to fit the prophecy as they
interpreted. Cf. Abib 14th to fall on Mon, not Wed. For some it is for CE 33,
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all in manner of circular reasoning.). Daniels prophecy as in various
interpretations are of course different from Jewish exegesis for the Hebrew
Scripture. Thus, it cannot be used to arrive at the year of His crucifixion, or
even of His birth.
(2) To look for the year in which Nisan 14th falls on Friday is not the proof of
CE 33 as the year. Its sole aim is to support the traditional ecclesiastical Holy
Week which is based on erroneous understanding of Gregorian Saturday = 7th
day sabbath of the rabbinic Judaism. [Note: with the Friday crucifixion, the
resurrection should fall on Monday if read as in the Biblical narrative.]

2. With the astronomical data on the date and time of dark moon. [Dark Moon
from conjunction of the sun and the moon is a less confusing term than
astronomical new moon, as the moon is not visible from the earth.] To
determine the biblical New Moon Day of the 1st month (Abib) (crescent new
moon) around the time of spring equinox and ensure the Pesach to fall in the
barley harvest season late March to April in the solar year, not rainy season of
early March. This process of finding the first month is unrelated to Gregorian
calendar and is independent of the rabbinic Jewish calendar systems, both of
which were not used or existed in the time of Yeshuas time.

3. Abib 14th is the Pesach day with the Pesach full moon. It varies on Nisan dates
(14th to 16) if followed a rabbinic Jewish calendar reckoning.

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One calendar for all the months in the true Biblical Calendar
[See Supplement III Walk through the Scripture #5 - Time, Calendar and Chronology]

New Work Days Weekly


@
Moon Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5 Day 6 sabbath
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14
15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 (30)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1 (new moon); @ 30 (transitional day); 14 ( full moon)

The Biblical Lunar calendar (diagram)

www.worldslastchance.com/luni-solar-calendar-with-feasts-days.html

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2017 Calendar 1st Month (Abib)

1st Month [Abib]

New Work Days Weekly


@
Moon Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5 Day 6 sabbath
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

3/28 29 30 31 4/1 2 3 4

9 10 11 12 13 14 15

5 6 7 8 9 10 11

16 17 18 19 20 21 22

12 13 14 15 16 17 18

23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30

19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

27 28 29 30 5/1

1 (New Moon); @ 30 (transitional day); 14 (full moon)

Black Moon Mar 27; Apr 26


Pesach Abib 14 2017 Apr 11

Troy Miller www.CreationCalendar.com


The 15th day (4-11-2017) is the Second Sabbath of the Lunar Month: The
Full Moon can be seen rising in the eastern sky about the time the sun sets in
the west on the 14th day of the lunar month (4-10-2017)!!. This full moon
announces the 15th day of the lunar month as the Sabbath. [See the data on
QuickPhase Pro program www.quickphase.com/ ]

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30 CE Abib calendar (Abib 14 = Apr-5)

(as in a Wednesday Crucifixion scenario)

Gray Abib; Pale blue Nisan; Red - Sabbath


Abib 14 = Apr-5 (Wednesday)
[4 Sabbath days in a month = on day 7 of the lunary week, non-cyclic]
[Spring equinox Mar 22 (19:28); Dark Moon Mar 22 (22:40)]
[Sighting of the first visible cresent moon cannot be used to fix the New Moon day
which globally unifies.]

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30 CE Abib Calendar (Abib 14 = Apr-6) for comparison
(as it would be for a Thursday Crucifixion scenario)

Note: Given the accurate data on the conjuction date/time Mar-22-Wed 30 CE at 17:32
UTC (www.triumphpro.com/jesus-in-grave-new-truth.htm), if the New Moon Day is
determined by other methods, such as sighting of the first visible crescent, it brings Nisan
1st and Nisan 15th a day later than in the Wednesday scenario.

2016 CE Abib calendar for comparison:


[Cf. Spring equinox Mar-20. Note. Nisan 15th of Jewish Passover on their calendar is on Apr. 23]
[Pesach (sacrifice) is on Abib 14. In 2016, it is on Mar-22.]
[14 days after a New Moon will always be a Full Moon.]

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Note: If the New Moon Day is determined differently, another calendar is possible to see
Mar-8-Tue as New Moon day; Mar-21-Mon as Abib 14.
Note: in rabbinic Jewish calendar, in AM 5776 (for CE 2015/2016) [in the year 19 of the
Metonic cycle], there is a leap month before Nisan; thus, Nisan 15th of Jewish Passover
is a month later on Apr-23-Sat (it is kept from the sunset of Apr-22). Thus in this year
the (Jewish) Passover is during the 2nd Full Moon of spring. equinox. Some who follow
Judaic customs keep it in March, on the date closely connected to the Easter date.

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Appendix

Questions on Jewish Passover vs. Christian Easter dates:

How the dates are determined?


List of earliest and latest Easters (with Passover dates). List of earliest and latest Passovers
(with Easter dates)
List of Easters dates coming before Passover, or rather Passover coming later than Easters.
Difficult Easter dates to fix when the equinox comes right after a full moon.
Jewish Passover date coming in late April in the presence of a leap month before Nisan.

The time setting of Easter approximates the biblical Pesach having Paschal Full Moon as the
reference point. [cf. astronomical vs. ecclesiastical Paschal Full Moon. Cf. astronomical equinox
vs. ecclesiastical (approximation) of equinox]
day

13 14 15 16 17
Abib
Erev Pesach Pesach Matzah 1 Matzah 2 Matzah 3
14 15 16 17 18
Nisan 13 Erev Pesach Pesach I Pesach II Pesach III IV

[The date of Abib and Nisan cannot match, since the latter is based on a different calendation which
has been 4th century. Nisan dates, 12 hours ahead, are listed for comparison purpose.]

*Easter

[See <WB #5 Time, Calendar and Chronology> of IRENT Vol. III Supplement]

Pesach meal (Abib 14th evening); cf. Seder ritual of modern Rabbinic Judaism (Nisan
15th evening)
Easter celebration kept by majority of Christians - a tradition from Constantine
Catholic Church.
Quartodecimanism Keeping of Passover in the early Christian churches of Jerusalem
and Asia Minor (instead of Easter celebration). Quartodeciman controversy -
Suppressed by anti-Judaism of anti-Semitic Catholic Church history.
www.keithhunt.com/Quarto.html www.triumphpro.com/passover-quartodeciman.pdf

Computus Determining dates of Easter vs. Passover


www.rayfowler.org/writings/articles/determining-the-dates-for-easter-and-passover/

Daniel 9 70 weeks of Daniel prophecy; Daniels 70th week

Interpretation of this prophecy has been used also to find the year of Yeshuas crucifixion. It is
a chronology-related issue, not calendar-related issue which concerns days of the week and dates
of the month. Many have offered various interpretations on Daniel prophecy for their use, even
for the year of the Crucifixion (30, 31, 32, 33 CE you pick!); not worthy to be consider for the
purpose of the Passion-Passover Week Chronology. See in <Walk through the Scripture 5
Time, Calendar and Chronology>

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References

[Listed here the various reference and reading material used for this work pertaining to the
problem of Passion Week Chronology/timeline.]

Abundant intriguing material is within our easy reach in this information technology age.
Some give challenges, some present inaccurate data, some offer helpful or insightful
information, and some pull us down with biased interpretations its up to us to take up and
scrutinize them before we should accept what they can offer.

Reading material:

http://goo.gl/CU1wCr - [Got stuck with Gregorian mindset of seven numbered days of the
solar week and Jewish mindset of day of sunset-to-sunset to refute Friday crucifixion
scenario!]
http://thechronicleproject.org/PDF1/calendarfraud.pdf
www.thejournal.org/issues/issue63/nelte.html [on calendar issue challenges]

General references

1. Ernest L. Martin (1996), Secrets of Golgotha (2nd Ed), pp.414-437 Addendum One: The
Year of Jesus Death. [Detailed study to show the year to be 30 CE. Note, in pp. 430-432
he was shown to still adhere to the traditional Friday crucifixion scenario.]
Paul Finch, The Passover Papers (2009, 2nd Ed.) [Esp. Ch. 8 Chronology of Passion Week.,
p. 93-118.] This is a must read. Excellent coverage and writing with abundant references.
It major fault is that he sticks to a Friday crucifixion scenario with his own tweak of CE 30
stead of CE 33 for the crucifixion year (Ch. 8 Chronology of Passion Week., p. 93-118).

For his rather unusual CE 30 for the crucifixion with a Friday scenario (p. 151), by retro-
calculating the Easter Canon to the year 30 CE yielding a date of Sunday, Apr-9, then the
Crucifixion occurred Apr 7. Aa reference was given to someone named A.T. Olmstead.
Hogwash! Easter of Constantine Catholic Church tradition itself has nothing to with biblical
historical Passion week. No discussion on astronomical data and calendation is found on
this issue as they seem to have been beyond his research. Apr-9 CE 30 itself was not Abib
14, but Abib 16 (Nisan 16).

As such he dismisses the idea of having the Trial day in the daytime and the crucifixion day
the day after.

2. Eugen Ruckstuhl (1965), Chronology of The Last Days of Jesus A Critical Study
[Trans. from German 1963] (pp. 35-71 for The Chronology of More Than One
Day)
[the Crucifixion date on Friday Apr. 7, AD 30. Nisan 14th (p. 2, 4)

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3. https://books.google.com/books?id=fS28b9GC1dcC

Harold Hoehner (1978), Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ

4. The file: Deceived by Three Days and Three Nights? and the file: Reviews on
the articles on Three Days and Three Nights see in the collection for IRENT
Vol. III Supplement (Collections #A)]

Materials reviewed:

Fred R. Coulter (2004), The Day Jesus the Christ Died The Biblical Truth
about His Passion, Crucifixion and Resurrection [pp. 71-79; a table in 80-81.]
Reuben Archer Torrey (1996), Difficulties in the Bible, Ch. 21 (pp. 155-164),
Was Jesus Really Three Days and Nights in the Heart of the Earth?
[Wednesday Crucifixion scenario. Basic on the mislead literal interpretation it
claims that the resurrection had to be late afternoon (!) of that Saturday.]
Larry M. Wishon (2010), The Only Sign Given [Misreading it as the sign of
Jesus being Messiah is this 3D and 3N thing!] (pp. 125-9) (Wednesday
Crucifixion scenario)
Ralph Woodrow, Three Days and Three Nights Reconsidered in the Light of
Scripture [it debunked the Wednesday scenario, but failed to go beyond,
missing a chance to look for the answer.]
Ralph Woodrow, Three Days and Three Nights (June 2013)
www.ralphwoodrow.org/articles/three-days.pdf
Harold W. Hoehner (1978), Chronological Aspects of the Life of Christ
(http://books.google.com/books?id=fS28b9GC1dcC) [Arguments for Friday
scenario are not convincing at all. The year 33 A.D. scenario is with too facile
arguments. It can be seen that once he made up his mind on the day of Nisan
14th as Friday, he looked for the candidate year to fit. That would in turn be used
to reinforce the unproven idea of so-called Crucifixion Friday.]
McRay and Eoff (2013), Was Jesus *Three Days and Three Nights in the Heart of the
Earth. (www.eschatologyreview.com/) They claim Scripture actually shows the
resurrection to have occurred at the same time (of day) as the burial
[Check an ad in BAR magazine (www.biblicalarchaeology.org) which contains non-
scholarly material.]

5. Kstenberger, Taylor, Stewart (2014), The Final Days of Jesus: The Most Important
Week of the Most Important Person Who Ever Lived
It follows the traditional scenario of Thursday Last Supper, Friday Crucifixion,
Sunday Resurrection, year 33 CE.

6. Kenneth F. Doig (1990), New Testament Chronology,


www.nowoezone.com/NT_Chronology.htm www.nowoezone.com/NTC17.htm

7. James Montgomery Boice (1999), Gospel of John, (Vol. IV, p. 929) (pp. 929-932)
When did Jesus Die? copy to be found in the WB #6 Collections for IRENT Vol. 3
Supplement.

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8. www.truthontheweb.org/calendar.htm (on calendation)

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9. James Davis (2013)

Wrong interpretation of the biblical texts reinforced by the lack of understanding the
calendar systems:
https://bible.org/
James Davis (2013), The Time of Jesus Death and Inerrancy: Is Harmonization
Plausible?

Wrong view One: John 19:14 had an original reading of the third hour which was
confused for the sixth.
Wrong view Two: John is using a roman civil reckoning that started the day at
midnight John 19:14.
Wrong effort: View Three: Marks Reference to Crucifixion is a General Statement
that included some event(s) that led up to the lifting of Jesus on the Cross
Wong effort: View Four: Time approximation allows for adequate harmonization of
Mark and John.

Note: This article gives a good summary of the issue, presenting the predicament the
traditional understanding faces with several different views but offering no solution to
contradiction and confusion. All four viewers have missed the genuine solution.

10. http://www.the13thenumeration.com/Blog13/wp-
content/uploads/2014/04/Yeshuas_Passover_Week1200_2014.jpg

See in the IRENT Vol. III Supplement (Collections #6A)

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11. Jean Meeus, Astronomical Tables of the Sun, Moon and Planets

[book review: by Hurl, R. F. Monthly Notes of the Astron. Soc. Southern Africa, Vol. 44, p. 37
SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data Systems (ADS)
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/full/1985MNSSA..44...37H ]

SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

Title: Astronomical Tables of the Sun, Moon and Planets by J. Meeus: Book Review
Authors: Hurly, R F.
Journal: Monthly Notes of the Astron. Soc. Southern Africa, Vol. 44, p. 37
Bibliographic Code: 1985MNSSA .. 44 .. .37H

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Ref: Boice, John [Ch. 153 Jn 12:12-19 When Did Jesus Die?]

Boice, John [p. 929 Ch. 153 Jn 12:12-19 When Did Jesus Die?]

[p. 929] It is the difficulty of squaring a Friday crucifixion with Christ's prophecy (its
not a prophecy ARJ) that the Son of Man shall "be three days and three nights in the
heart of the earth" (Matt. 12:40). It is true that according to Jewish idiom the phrase
"three days" does not necessarily mean a period of seventy-two hours. It can mean
merely one whole day plus parts of two others. But while this observation helps us in
dealing with texts that actually say "three days", it hardly helps us in dealing with this
important prophecy (its not a prophecy) from Matthew. "It is possible that parts of
one day and one night are involved, rather than three full days and three full nights;
nevertheless, three periods of light and three periods of darkness must be accounted
for. And this, regardless of anything else, is fatal to a Friday crucifixion theory. As one
writer says, "Add to this indictment of Friday the statement of the two disciples on the
way to Emmaus, spoken on the afternoon of Sunday (Luke 24:21), 'Today is the third
day since these things were done', and the case looks black indeed against Friday.
Sunday is not the third day since Friday." [Ref. a Roger Rusk The Day He Died,
Christianity Today, 29 Mar 1974, p. 63]

[p. 930] April 6, A.D. 30 (Thursday)


First, it clearly allows for the required three days and three nights in the tomb in
line with Christs prophecy. Jesus had spoken of a period beginning with daylight and
comprising the whole of three days and nights, with the possible qualification that the
opening period of day and the closed period night need not necessarily be a full twelve
hours. This is provided for as follow. Jesus died on Thursday afternoon about three
oclock; hence, the hours from 300 p.m. until dusk qualify as the first day. This period
is followed by Thursday night, Friday, Friday night, Saturday, and Saturday night; that
is, a total of three days and three nights in that precise order. In this scheme of things
Jesus could have risen from the dead at any point after dark on Saturday evening. We
know that he had been raised before the women got to the dam at dawn on Sunday
morning.
[p. 931]
Thursday: Jesus is tried and eventually crucified. The trial begins on what we would
call Wednesday night (but which is actually the early hours of Thursday by Jewish
reckoning and is completed in the morning. Jesus sis buried that evening by Nicodemus
and Joseph of Arimathaea. The women observe where Jesus is buried and buy spices,
but as it is now the start of the Jewish Passover (that is, the Friday Passover Sabbath
that began at dusk on Thursday evening), they are unable to attempt to anoint the boy
until Sunday morning.
Friday and Saturday: The boy of Jesus remains in the tomb. The women and disciples
observe the two Sabbaths Jesus rises from the dead sometime between the coming of
darkness on Saturday evening and the coming of the dawn on Sunday morning.

[End of File]

a
See a copy of the article in the IRENT Vol. 3 - Supplement Collection WB #6.
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1
Trials of Jesus Ref. Farrar (1891), Life of Christ, p. 465 the three successive trials which our Lord
underwent at the hands of the Jews, the first only that before Annas is related to us by G-John; the
second that before Caiaphas by G-Mt and G-Mk; the third that before the Sanhedrin by G-Luke
alone. That of Annas was the authoritative praejudicium, that of Caiaphas the real determination, that of
the entire Sanhedrin at daybreak the final ratification.

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