Below is a
discussion between The Refiner’s Fire and one our cherished readers on a subject that may be of interest to all. The readers comments are in red:
READER COMMENT: I find how you calculate and keep Passover and
the other Biblical Feasts to be very accurate with the scriptures. I do,
however, have a question about when Yeshua was resurrected. I read the article
"Correcting the Sunday Myth" and I have always assumed Yeshua was
crucified on Passover, since He is our Passover Lamb. Therefore his resurrection
on Saturday before sundown would be completely inaccurate.
No, it's accurate. Wednesday, Passover afternoon, Yeshua is placed in the
tomb by sunset. Wednesday, at/after sunset to Saturday at sunset is 3 days and 3 nights.
(Some argue that the "3 days and 3 nights" must be literal, that the
first period must be a "day", but the phrase is just a metaphor for
the same period Jonah was in the belly of the fish. So the phrase does not
require the "day" period to be first.) Since absolutely no one knows the exact start
and end of the "3 days & 3 nights", a resurrection just as the
7th day Shabbat ended and the 1st day of the next week began is completely
valid.
READER COMMENT: But I was reading
in Mark 14:12: Now on the first day of matzah, when they were slaughtering the
Passover lamb, Yeshua's disciples say to Him, "Where do You want us to go
and prepare for You to eat the Passover?". Reading on they have the
Passover that evening, he is nailed to the stake at the third hour the next
morning and dies at the ninth hour that afternoon. I read in Matthew and Luke,
as well, and they also say it was the first day of matzah, when they were
slaughtering the Passover lamb, that the disciples prepared for the Seder. So
wouldn't that mean it was the 14th of Nissan and therefore Yeshua didn't die
until 3pm on the 15th of Nissan?
No, this is only an interpretation of the events as conveyed in English. Let's look at Mark 14:12 carefully. It reads: "And on the first day of the
Unleavened Bread, when they killed the Passover, His disciples said to
Him, Where do You desire that going we may prepare that You may eat the
Passover?" (HRB).
We must study this verse to interpret it
correctly. "On the first day of
Unleavened Bread" means what? Immediately, one thinks "Well the 15th is the 1st day of Unleavened
bread by Leviticus 23:6", which is partly true, but the 15th is NOT the first day
that matzah is needed! The first day
matzah is needed is the 14th! Exodus 12:18: "In the first month, on
the fourteenth day of the month, at evening you shall eat unleavened bread, until the twenty-first day
of the month, at evening". So
matzah is needed the afternoon of the14th!
Now, Mark 14:12 makes sense. When the disciples ask the question, it is at or near sunset the 13th, and the "first day of
matzah" (the 14th) is imminent (or perhaps the sun has just set and it has become the
14th), and the Talmidim are asking Yeshua where He wants to have His seder.
(The Talmidim have not accepted or understood that Yeshua won’t be at the
Passover seder the next evening.)
Next, look at Mark 14:17. It reads: "And evening having come, He came with the
Twelve." Most read this verse and
assume that Yeshua and the Talmidim are now at the Passover seder. But all the verse says is the it's now
evening and it's suppertime. The most
logical conclusion is that it is the same evening - but after dark when the date
had just became the 14th! You see, in Mark
14:12, they only had go to prepare for the seder, the scripture does not
require that when Yeshua and the Talmidim are then eating together that that
meal is the Passover seder! And look at verse 22. Yeshua took BREAD and broke it. Had it been the Passover seder, Yeshua would have broken matzah, not bread. But the Aramaic clearly says bread (Hebrew: l'chma in verse 22), and not unleavened bread which would have been a variation of the Hebrew: matzah. The commandment, which Yehsua would not have broken if it were the Passover seder, was to eat only matzah had it been the Passover!
It is confirmed in Luke 22:15 that it was not the Passover. It reads: "And He said to them, I have greatly desired that I eat
this Passover with you before I suffer." While most think Yeshua IS eating the Passover meal, that is not what
the verse says. What Yeshua is saying is
this: "I have greatly wanted to eat the Passover [meal] with you [this
year] before I suffer [but I must suffer and I will not get to participate in the Passover meal this year].
Therefore, the scripture most definitely does NOT require that Yeshua died
the 15th before sunset. Scripture
completely supports that Yeshua only had a "last supper" with His Talmidim
as the 14th had just begun, and the events in scripture of his arrest play out that same
evening, as midnight approached on the 14th, before the lambs would be slain
in the next afternoon before the next sunset.
READER COMMENT: I know that doesn't add up to the 3 days and 3 nights in the
grave, if he is seen early on the 1st day and you start the count at his burial
in the evening of the 15th. But since scripture reveals Yeshua ate the Seder on
the 14th of Nissan (I think), the only thing I can think of is the count
started at his actual death at 3pm on the 15th (1st day), his burial (1st
night), Friday the 16th (2nd day and 2nd night), Saturday the 17th (3rd day and
3rd night) and him rising Sunday morning when it is still dark.
Yes, I've seen this argument and I can't agree with it. The conclusion is based on the assumption
that Yeshua's last meal was the Passover meal, and it assumes that the daytime
of the crucifixion counts as the 1st day of "3 days & 3 nights". But this is a shallow argument. Matthew 12:40, in Yeshua's own words He says:
"And even as 'Jonah was in the belly of the huge fish three days and three
nights,' so shall the Son of Man be in the heart of the earth three days and
three nights" - so Yeshua identifies the condition that to count 3 days
& 3 nights, He must be IN the heart of the earth! So the first part of the 3 day, 3 night count
cannot be the afternoon He's crucified, while He is still on the stake, unburied, outside the tomb!
READER COMMENT: But even if that were so, there still is the question about
"the dawn of the new day" which I know according to Andrew Roth would
be the evening of the new day not the morning.
This is entirely based on the context. Since the same Hebrew or Aramaic
word for "day" can mean the whole day or just the daytime, and the word
for "dawn" can be the beginning of the day which is at sunset or the
beginning of the sunrise which is the beginning of the daytime, one must not just assume that it means one thing or
the other by context alone.
READER COMMENT: Then there is the question about the "Day
of Preparation" when Yeshua's body was buried by Joseph (Luke 23:50-56).
If Yeshua died on the 14th and was buried in the evening beginning the 15th
(when everyone is eating the Seder), how would that be a day of preparation for
the High Holy Shabbat? The 15th is the High Holy Shabbat. But if He had died on
the 15th and buried in the evening beginning the 16th, that would be a day of
preparation for the weekly Shabbat.
But the 14th is preparation day for the High Holy Day of the 15th, the 1st day
of the Feast! Remember, Yeshua died before sunset, and the wealthy man, Joseph,
who asked to have the body for burial in his own tomb, and Yeshua's own mother,
and other Jews with them had ALL foregone the Passover seder! After all, their
beloved Yeshua was being executed! That
event completely negated Passover for them, and, as such, they simply accepted
that they would be unclean and they could not participate in Passover that year
at its time! (Numbers 9:10-11). So it is
a false argument that the "day of preparation" had to be after
sunset the 15th making the next day a Friday - preparation day for the weekly Shabbat. The scripture works whether the crucifixion
was on Wednesday (and Thur was the High Holy Day (Sabbath)), or the crucifixion was on
Thursday (and Friday was the "preparation" day for the weekly Sabbath). In
either case, assumptions must be made as to the timing of events, assumptions
which are not validated by scripture. I've even seen scripture itself changed to "force" the 15th
crucifixion, which is not supported in the Aramaic, and, in my book, pretty close to
blasphemy !
READER COMMENT: So as you can see, I am totally confused. What am I missing?
Scripture does literally say "on the first day of matzah, when they were
slaughtering the Passover Lamb," Yeshua's Seder was prepared, the 14th of
Nissan, right? So how could Yeshua have died at 3pm on the 14th when He hadn't
even eaten the Seder yet?
I hope this is now clear. But for more
to consider, examine this: While it is
acceptable that many lambs in Jerusalem were slaughtered from the afternoon of
the 14th, continuing well into the 15th, the events of Passover had to begin
with a very first lamb, spotless, and representative of all of Israel. That was "THE Passover Lamb". All other lambs were from people wishing to have
their lamb slain at the Temple, even though they had every authority to slay
the lamb at their own homes. All the
lambs slaughtered after "THE Lamb", were for individual homes for the
celebration of Passover. (It was also
optional to stay at the Temple and have your Passover meal there, but that was not
required.)
Now, what did John call Yeshua? John said: "On the morrow, John saw Yahshua coming toward him and
said, Behold! The Lamb of Elohim, who takes away the sin of the world!
" (John 1:29). Only THE Lamb of God could take away the sins of the
world, so I think Yeshua had to represent THE Lamb, and not just "a
lamb", and He did have to be crucified on the 14th, when THE lamb
representing ALL of Israel was slain! It rather offends me that some will justify that Yeshua only needed to
be "a lamb", "any lamb", and that He did not need to be offered on the 14th! The
connection of THE Lamb and what Yeshua did is too great to negate.
There's more!
We know Yeshua was PERFECT in His knowledge and observation of
Torah, right? If he had His Passover
seder on the 14th, then after sunset the 14th it became a High Holy Day, the
15th. Why would Yeshua and his Talmidim
be out walking around in the community after the Passover seder, carrying
swords on a High Holy Day, seeking conflict with those Yeshua knew were against
Him? Would Yeshua step out of Torah to
do that? But if the evening of His last meal was only the evening BEFORE the
Passover, then all His actions were within Torah.
And, who was present when Yeshua was arrested? All the Gospels attest to the fact that the
Chief Priests and the entire Sanhedrin were present when Yeshua was brought to
Pilate before the morning of the crucifixion. If the morning before the crucifixion was the 15th, then the Chief
Priests and the Sanhedrin WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN assembled as it was a High Holy
Sabbath! The Chief Priests and the
Sanhedrin DID NOT MEET on weekly Sabbaths or on High Holy Days! Even if some of the Sanhedrin were corrupt
and desiring Yeshua's death, the Chief Priests and the rest of the Sanhedrin
would not have stepped out of Torah for this despicable act! But if the events took place on the 14th,
before Passover, then nothing the Chief Priests and the Sanhedrin did was far
outside Torah.
READER COMMENT: I appreciate any clarification you can give me. As you can
see, I can't connect all the dots. I did also want to ask, should I be throwing
away all my leaven products before Passover? This is the fist year I am
officially celebrating the Feast of Unleavened Bread and I tried to use up all
my leaven products, but stored the rest of them in the shed. Our budget is a
little tight, so I didn't throw it away. Should I have?
As you can see, the dots are hard to connect, so don't dismay! But I hope what
I have explained help.
As to your leaven products question, yes, they should have been
used up or permanently removed from your home prior to the afternoon of the 14th
– because, while the whole act of “getting rid of the leaven” is purely
symbolic, returning those products back
into the house is akin to bringing “the old sins” back (leaven represents sin).
Getting rid of the “leaven/sin” from
our lives (even symbolically) is important to YHWH and we should be taking it
very seriously. But do not worry about
it this year since the Feast is over and as you said, you are still
learning. Just keep up the good work and
don’t “wrap yourself around the axle.” Allow the Ruach to guide and “grow” you and your family! We have many articles on The Refiner's Fire
website which will help you next year.
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