| SUBJECT: Jesus
QUESTIONS:
What are the dates and years of Jesus’
birth?
What are the dates, years and duration of Jesus’ ministry?
What are the dates, years and hours of his crucifixion and
death?
What proof do we have that Jesus died on a Wednesday and was
resurrected on Saturday?
ANSWERS:
The purpose of this document is to have
one paper, which establishes the dates, years, hours and the
days of the week of these various events of the life of Jesus
Christ. It will include resources from Bullinger’s Companion
Bible and the Internet.
*********************************************************************************
QUICK ANSWERS:
Jesus was born on the 29th of September 4 BC.
Jesus was born on the first Holy Day of the Feast of
Tabernacles.
Jesus was circumcised on the Last Great Day (a Holy Day).
Jesus began His ministry at age 30 in the late autumn of 27 AD.
His ministry was 3.5 years.
He was crucified in 31 AD.
He was crucified on Passover day, Wednesday, the 25 of April in
the late afternoon (14 Abib or Nisan).
He died at about 3 PM.
He was put in the tomb before sundown on Wednesday, the 25 of
April 31 AD.
He was in the tomb for 3 days and 3 nights (72 full hours).
See diagram on this
here.
He was resurrected in the late afternoon of Saturday, the 28 of
April 31 AD (17 Abib or Nisan).
Pentecost that year was on Sunday, June 17, 31 AD. (Count
backward 50 days for confirmation)
*********************************************************************************
DETAILED ANSWERS:
We will address these questions in 3
parts:
Part 1) Questions about His birth.
Part 2) Questions about His ministry.
Part 3) Questions about His death and resurrection.
Part 1) Questions about His birth
Part 2) Questions about His ministry
Part 3) Questions about His death and resurrection
PART 1) QUESTIONS ABOUT HIS BIRTH
Questions: What are the dates and years of Jesus’
birth?
Jesus was born on the 29th of September 4 BC.
Jesus was born on the first Holy Day of the Feast of
Tabernacles.
Jesus was circumcised on the Last Great Day (a Holy Day).
PART 1-----ITEM A-----Birth
Year-----Quote from book ‘The Real Jesus’:
A quote from Mr. Armstrong’s book, "The
Real Jesus":
"Jesus was born sometime in the late summer or early autumn
of 4 BC
The first time I ever made this statement to anyone I was
viewed with a combination of doubt, incredulity, hostility and
outright pity.
"How in the world could Jesus have been born before Christ?"
I was asked.
It so happens that the present system in the Western
Christian-professing world of counting years either prior to or
subsequent to the event of our Savior’s birth was not
established until the work of Dionysius the Little, many, many
centuries this side of the event.
In the events surrounding Jesus' birth, God managed to move a
whole empire by causing the world leader of that time to
establish an entirely new government bureau (the taxing and
census bureau) which finally resulted in Joseph and Mary ending
up in Bethlehem at the time of Jesus' birth! Part of the
requirement of the vast worldwide census-taking was each family
returning to the city of its origin ("And all went to be taxed
everyone (into) his own city" (Luke 2:3-4), so since the Bible
claimed Joseph was of the lineage of David (as both genealogical
records in Matthew and Luke prove) he had to journey with his
wife who was in an advanced state of pregnancy from Nazareth to
Bethlehem, which is called the "city of David." The census in
Palestine took place in our faulty chronological reckoning about
the year 4 BC." (end of quote from "The Real Jesus")
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 1-----ITEM B-----Birth
Year-----Appendix 179 of the Companion Bible:
Resource:
Bullinger’s Companion Bible Appendix
179
It goes through all of the calendar math and other facts and
concludes:
"It thus appears without the shadow of a doubt that the day
assigned to the Birth of the Lord, videlicet: December
25, was the day on which He was "begotten of the Holy Ghost",
that is to say, by pneuma hagion = divine power (Matthew
1:18, 20 marg.), and His birth took place on the 15th of
Ethanim, September 29, in the year following, thus making
beautifully clear the meaning of John 1:14,"The Word became
flesh" (Matthew 1:18,20) on 1st Tebeth or December 25
(5 B.C.), "and tabernacled (Greek eskenosen) with
us", on 15th of Ethanim or September 29 (4 B.C.).
The 15th of Ethanim (or Tisri) was the first day of
the Feast of Tabernacles. The Circumcision therefore took place
on the eighth day of the Feast = 22nd Ethanim = October
6-7 (Leviticus 23:33-43). So that these two momentous events
fall into their proper place and order, and the real reason
is made clear why the 25th of December is associated with our
Lord…"
Other texts and Biblical scripture in this document can be
used to show that this conclusion is correct.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 1-----ITEM C-----Birth
Year----- Year-by-Year Breakdown:
The following is presented for clarity
of the number of years Christ was alive.
Late autumn 4 BC –birth
Late autumn 3 BC -1 year old
Late autumn 2 BC -2 years old
Late autumn 1 BC -3 years old
Late autumn 1 AD -4 years old (Note: there was no year "0")
Late autumn 2 AD -5 years old
Late autumn 3 AD -6 years old
Late autumn 4 AD -7 years old
Late autumn 5 AD -8 years old
Late autumn 6 AD -9 years old
Late autumn 7 AD -10 years old
Late autumn 8 AD -11 years old
Late autumn 9 AD -12 years old
Late autumn 10 AD -13 years old
Late autumn 11 AD -14 years old
Late autumn 12 AD -15 years old
Late autumn 13 AD -16 years old
Late autumn 14 AD -17 years old
Late autumn 15 AD -18 years old
Late autumn 16 AD -19 years old
Late autumn 17 AD -20 years old
Late autumn 18 AD -21 years old
Late autumn 19 AD -22 years old
Late autumn 20 AD -23 years old
Late autumn 21 AD -24 years old
Late autumn 22 AD -25 years old
Late autumn 23 AD -26 years old
Late autumn 24 AD -27 years old
Late autumn 25 AD -28 years old
Late autumn 26 AD -29 years old
Late autumn 27 AD -30 years old—begins His ministry
Late autumn 28 AD -31 years old
Late autumn 29 AD -32 years old
Late autumn 30 AD -33 years old
Passover (spring) 31 AD -33.5 years old---crucified
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 1-----ITEM D-----Birth
Year-----Quote from Plain Truth December 1966 :
Quote: From
Plain Truth article, December 1966, by Dr. Dorothy, "The
Greatest Story Never Told":
The Great Story Proved (posted on the Internet at: http://home.sprynet.com/~pabco/magi.htm)
The proof of history is in the "Chronicle of John Malalas",
translated by Matthew Spinka (Univ. of Chicago Press, 1940).
John Malalas was a historian of Antioch, Syria (c. 491-578 AD).
On pages 32-33 he writes: "In the 39th year and the 10th month
of his [Augustus'] reign he commanded the taking of a census of
all his lands, including all that the Romans held during the
consulship of Agrippa II, and of Donatus. And all the earth
under the Romans was registered by Eumenes and Attalus, the
Roman senators." Using the October to October calendar Malalas
used, that dates the issuance of the decree for the census to
JULY, 5 BC
Suidas -- another reliable authority -- and many others, add
information about Augustus' decree, which proves the census in
Palestine was conducted the very next year -- 4 BC, the very
time Christ was born!
Abundant evidence from both early Christians AND EARLY PAGANS
corroborates this census (see the excellent article in Unger's
"Bible Dictionary" under "Chronology")."
Note: This is proof for the birth year (4 BC) and also
confirms beginning of ministry (27 AD) and year of Jesus’ death
(31 AD).
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 1-----ITEM E-----Birth
Year-----Quote from Unger’s Bible Dictionary :
CHRONOLOGY, NEW TESTAMENT (excerpt)
---From Unger’s Bible Dictionary
The Two Registrations. There has been in the past an
interesting question: How could Cyrenius conduct an enrollment
of the Jews at the birth of Christ, 4 B.C. when it is a known
fact that he was appointed governor of Syria and made a registry
ten years later, namely, in A.D. 6? The answer is that Cyrenius
was twice appointed to this service. In the first instance it
was a census of the population, taken with a view of replacing
their tribute to the empire in produce by a head tax in money;
and in the second it was a registration of their property. The
census occurred 4 B.C. to A.D. 1. It was begun by Sentius
Saturninus, was then continued by Quintilius Varus until 4 B.C.
and concluded by Cyrenius from the year 4 B.C. to A.D. 1, the
time of the nativity. Luke expressly says, "This was the first
census" (2:2). The second enrollment by Cyrenius occurred A.D.
10-14, according to the correct chronology.
Now, Luke makes historical notation of both enrollments in a
way that indicates a perfect understanding of them on the part
of his contemporaries. He refers to the first as a principal
fact connecting it with the birth of Jesus; he refers to the
second enrollment incidentally, in narrating what Gamaliel said
in defense of the apostles before the Sanhedrin. In recounting
different rebellions against the Romans in that country,
Gamaliel said, "After this man Judas of Galilee rose up in the
days of the census" (cf. <Luke 2:1-3; Acts 5:37>). It is of this
registration that Josephus says: "Under his administration [Cyrenius's
as procurator of Judea] it was that a certain Galilean whose
name was Judas prevailed with his countrymen to revolt" (Wars
2.8.1); "I mean that Judas who caused the people to revolt when
Cyrenius came to take an account of the estates of the Jews"
(Ant. 20.5.2).
The latest word on these enrollments is that of the eminent
Augustus W. Zumpt, the classical scholar and archaeologist of
Berlin, whose researches have secured us "full historical
probability; and whose conclusions of the date of the birth of
Christ at the time of the census taken 4 B.C. by Cyrenius is
endorsed by the scholarly Mommsen, and accords with the view of
Ideler, Bergmann, Browne, Ussher, and Sanclemente" (Schaff).
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 2) QUESTIONS ABOUT HIS MINISTRY
Questions: What are the dates, years and duration
of Jesus’ ministry?
Jesus began His ministry at age 30 in the late autumn of 27
AD.
His ministry was 3.5 years.
PART 2-----ITEM A-----Duration
of Ministry-----Scriptures that establish age and chronological
sequence of His ministry:
---Luke 3:23---Jesus is 30 years old
23 And Jesus himself began to be about thirty years of age…
---Luke 4:1-2---40 days in wilderness
1 And Jesus being full of the Holy Ghost returned from
Jordan, and was led by the Spirit into the wilderness,
2 Being forty days tempted of the devil.
---Mark 1:13-15—Jesus begins to preach
13. And he was there in the wilderness forty days, tempted of
Satan; and was with the wild beasts; and the angels ministered
unto him.
14. Now after that John was put in prison, Jesus came into
Galilee, preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God,
15. And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is
at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.
---Luke 4:14-16---Begins to preach
14. And Jesus returned in the power of the Spirit into
Galilee: and there went out a fame of him through all the region
round about.
15. And he taught in their synagogues, being glorified of all.
16. And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up: and,
as his custom was, he went into the synagogue on the sabbath
day, and stood up for to read.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 2-----ITEM B-----Duration
of Ministry-----From Nelson’s Dictionary:
JE SUS CHRIST
Beginnings of Jesus' ministry-- Jesus began His public
ministry when He sought baptism at the hands of John the
Baptist. John preached between A. D. 27 and 28 in the lower
Jordan Valley and baptized those who wished to give expression
to their repentance <Matt. 3:13-17; Mark 1:9-11; Luke 3:21-22;
John 1:29-34>. The descent of the dove as Jesus came up out of
the water was a sign that He was the One anointed by the Spirit
of God as the Servant-Messiah of His people <Is. 11:2; 42:1;
61:1>. (Nelson’s Dictionary)
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 2-----ITEM C-----Duration
of Ministry-----Counting Passovers to establish a 3 ½ year
Ministry:
We can count forward, using the table
above and count from His birth in 4 BC and count forward to 31
AD. We know that He began His ministry at age 30 and that it was
a 3.5 year ministry. We know He kept 4 Passovers in this 3.5
year ministry.
3 and 1/2 Years
"The Gospel of John, by recording the annual Passovers that
Jesus attended, provides evidence that three and a half years
did indeed elapse between Christ's baptism and His death.
"John 2 and 3 tell about
a Passover during which Jesus talked at night with Nicodemus and
told him that he must be born again.
"John 5:1 tells of a
feast, most probably a Passover, in connection with which Jesus
healed a man who had suffered thirty-eight years from paralysis.
"John 6:4 tells of a
Passover season during which Jesus fed a very large crowd with a
boy's small lunch.
"John 12:1 introduces the
Passover season during which Jesus died."
Note: Jesus began in ministry in the late autumn of 27 AD.
Counting the Passovers and knowing that He was killed on the 4th
Passover helps to establish the duration of His ministry.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3) QUESTIONS ABOUT HIS DEATH AND
RESURRECTION
Questions: What are the dates, years and hours of
his crucifixion and death? What proof do we have that Jesus died
on a Wednesday and was resurrected on Saturday?
He was crucified in 31 AD.
He was crucified on Passover day, Wednesday, the 25 of April in
the late afternoon (14 Abib or Nisan).
He was put in the tomb before sundown on Wednesday, the 25 of
April 31 AD.
He was in the tomb for 3 days and 3 nights (72 full hours).
He was resurrected in the late afternoon of Saturday, the 28 of
April 31 AD (17 Abib or Nisan).
Pentecost that year was on Sunday, June 17, 31 AD. (Count
backward 50 days for confirmation)
PART 3-----ITEM A-----The
Year He was crucified-----From Internet Source:
Web site source:
Passover Dates
26-34 AD
Passover dates 26-34 A.D.
The following astronomical data was
obtained from the U.S. Naval Observatory Astronomical
Applications Department. The pertinent file may be accessed on
the Internet at http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/SpringPhenom.html
.
Note.
The times of day given in the chart below have been adjusted +2
hours from U.S. Naval Observatory figures to account for the
difference between Jerusalem Israel and Greenwich
England (universal) time.
It should also be noted that the first evening of a visible
crescent moon is always after sundown and after
the beginning of a new day on the Hebrew calendar. This day
correlates more to the following day on the Julian
calendar. The observation of the new crescent moon occurs right
at the beginning of first day of the month as opposed to
the end of the first day.
| Year |
Vernal
Equinox |
Astronomical New Moon Conjunction |
First
evening of visible crescent |
Date of
the first of Nisan |
14th day
of Nisan (Passover) |
| |
|
(First after vernal
Equinox) |
(Julian calendar.
Midnight to midnight) |
(Beginning at sundown the
evening before...) |
(Beginning at sundown the
evening before...) |
| 26 A.D. |
Fri. Mar. 22, 0* |
Sat. Apr. 6,
7 a.m. |
Sun. Apr. 7 |
Mon. Apr. 8 |
Sun. Apr. 21 |
| 27 A.D. |
Sun. Mar. 23, 6
a.m. |
Wed. Mar. 26, 7
p.m. |
Thurs. Mar. 27 |
Fri. Mar. 28 |
Thurs. Apr. 10 |
| 28 A.D. |
Mon. Mar. 22, noon |
Tues. Apr. 13, 2
p.m. |
Wed. Apr. 14 |
Thurs. Apr.15 |
Wed. Apr. 28 |
| 29 A.D. |
Tues. Mar. 22, 6
p.m. |
Sat. Apr. 2,
7 p.m. |
Sun. Apr. 3 |
Mon. Apr. 4 |
Sun. Apr. 17 |
| 30 A.D. |
Wed. Mar. 22, 0* |
Wed. Mar. 22, 8
p.m. |
Thurs. Mar. 23 |
Fri. Mar. 24 |
Thurs. Apr. 6 |
| 31
A.D. |
Fri. Mar. 23, 5 a.m. |
Tues. Apr. 10, 2 p.m. |
Wed. Apr. 11 |
Thurs. Apr.12 |
Wed. Apr. 25 |
| 32 A.D. |
Sat. Mar. 22, 11
a.m. |
Sat. Mar. 29, 10
p.m. |
Sun. Mar. 30 |
Mon. Mar. 31 |
Sun. Apr. 13 |
| 33 A.D. |
Sun. Mar. 22, 5
p.m. |
Fri. Apr. 17,
9 p.m. |
Sat. Apr. 18 |
Sun. Apr. 19 |
Sat. May 2 |
| 34 A.D. |
Mon. Mar. 22,11
p.m. |
Wed. Apr. 7, 2
p.m. |
Thurs. Apr. 8 |
Fri. Apr. 9 |
Thurs. Apr. 22 |
* Midnight at the end of the given day.
Note.
No Passover during the years 26-34 A.D. ever fell on a Friday.
A Passover on Wednesday is the only day of the week that works
with all Biblical accounts of the crucifixion.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM B-----The
Date of Pentecost in 31 AD-----Quote from booklet by Herbert W.
Armstrong :
This item is given to show its
correspondence to April 25, 31 AD in Item A above.
Quote: from the booklet,
"Pagan Holidays or God's Holy Days Which?"
by Herbert W. Armstrong.
"Meaning of Pentecost"
"Passover symbolized Christ's sacrifice for the remission of
our sins, and the days of unleavened bread the putting away of
sin. Pentecost pictures the first part of the spiritual harvest
the calling out of the Church the called-out ones, which, for
the New Testament dispensation, began on Sunday Pentecost, June
17, 31 AD. On that day the Holy Spirit came to dwell within
flesh, as prophesied by Joel."
Note: Clearly the resurrection was the same year. Note also
that this date of Pentecost (17 June 31 AD) corresponds with
Passover being the 25th of April and the resurrection
being on Sabbath afternoon, the 28th of April 31 AD
using our calendar.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM C----- The
Year He was crucified -----31 AD in the Hebrew Calendar:
In this item, we look at the
month of Abib-Nisan to establish the year and the day of the
week of the crucifixion, which was Wednesday.
In AD 31, Passover was on Wednesday and the first Holy Day of
Unleavened Bread was on Thursday.
Month and day of Christ's crucifixion, AD 31
AD 31---1ST MONTH (ABIB-NISAN)
1--Thursday –New Moon
2--Friday
3--Saturday
4—Sunday
5—Monday
6—Tuesday
7—Wednesday
8—Thursday
9----Friday
10—Saturday
11—Sunday
12—Monday
13—Tuesday—Passover observed night before Passover day
14—Wednesday—Passover—Christ crucified (Preparation day—14th
of Abib)
15—Thursday—First day of Unleavened Bread
16—Friday—(Preparation day)
17—Saturday—Day Christ resurrected
18—Sunday
19—Monday
20—Tuesday
SUBJECT: Figuring the month of Abib (Nisan) in modern times
QUESTION: In Biblical times the priesthood determined the
month of Abib. How is it figured today?
ANSWER:
Quote from Garner Ted Armstrong:
For decades, the church has depended upon the Hebrew
Calendar, which is figured far, far, in advance based upon
astronomical cycles measured over many hundreds of years. There
is no priesthood today. We are not priesthood. Therefore, we
(that includes the old Church of God (7th day)), the Radio
Church of God, the Worldwide Church under my father and all the
original leaders, (Including myself), the CGI and now the ICG,
have always adhered to the dates published in the Hebrew
Calendar. The seasonal variations are not so abrupt as to be
"surprising," and requiring the declaration on an "ad hoc" basis
that "this year is an uncommon year" by the Jews.
Remembering Josiah's reforms, and the "observing" of the Days
of Unleavened bread following the alternate Pass-over, and then
tacking on "yet seven other days" is important to remember. God
BLESSED them, NOT because they were precisely within "holy
time:" but because of their HEARTS and their intent. The point
is, that it is up to the church to decide, and set the places
and dates for holy day observance, not for individuals.
The church has put extensive study into the calendar using
the Hebrew encyclopedia, Encyclopedia Britannica (11th edition)
and all the other sources.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM D-----The
Year He was crucified-----From booklet by Garner Ted Armstrong:
Quote: from
the booklet, "Miracle of Pentecost" by Garner Ted Armstrong.
Posted at the web site at:
http://www.garnertedarmstrong.orgpentecost.htm
"Jesus Christ built His true church on the Day of Pentecost,
in the early summer of A.D. 31 in Palestine. HE was Head of His
church then, and He is Head of that same church, wherever there
are "called-out ones" who are joined to Christ through the Holy
Spirit today."
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM E-----Day of
the Week for Crucifixion-----From the Scriptural Account:
F ollowing is information regarding the
day of the week that Christ was crucified.
There were 2 Sabbaths the week He was crucified and 2
preparation days.
We know by the scriptures that Christ took the Passover with
the disciples before he was crucified. What Holy Days come right
after the Passover?
ANSWER: The Days of Unleavened Bread, which last 7 days. The
Days of Unleavened Bread begin and end with a Holy Day.
The Passover is ALWAYS ONE DAY before the first Holy Day. For
example, in the year, 1999, the Passover was 31 March and we
took the Passover on the evening of the 30th again showing that
days begin at sunset [even].
The first Holy Day in 1999---the First Day of Unleavened
Bread--- fell on the 1st of April, just one day after the
Passover day ---31st of March. The Passover day is not a Holy
Day and therefore is the preparation day for the First Holy Day.
Such was the case in Christ's time. He kept the Passover the
evening before. He was crucified the next day.
This Holy Day was on a Thursday that year---31 AD. We know
this from Part 3-----Item A above, which shows Wednesday, the 25th
of April as the Passover. The Holy Day was the next day, a
Thursday. The Holy Day and the Sabbath day could not have been
the same day because in Mark 16:9, we have the women coming to
the tomb on the early morning of Sunday. The preparation day for
the Sabbath was Friday and we know that He could not have been
killed on that day because there are not 3 days and 3 nights
between Friday and Sunday morning.
Conclusion: He was crucified on the first preparation day,
Wednesday and resurrected on the Sabbath day.
Matt 27:62
62 Now the next day, that followed the day of the
preparation, the chief priests and Pharisees came together unto
Pilate.
Mark 15:42
42 And now when the even was come, because it was the
preparation, that is, the day before the sabbath. (the Annual
Holy Day)
Luke 23:54
54 And that day was the preparation, and the sabbath drew on.
John 19:14
14 And it was the preparation of the passover, and about the
sixth hour: and he saith unto the Jews, Behold your King!
Note: In John here we see the phrase, "preparation of the
passover" denoting the Passover Day before the First
Annual Holy Day -- the day Jesus was crucified.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM F-----The Day of
the Week of the Crucifixion---- Appendix 156 of the Companion
Bible
Resource:
Bullinger’s Companion Bible Appendix
156
In this Companion Appendix, the author takes a
close look at the 6 days before the Passover, as recorded in the
scripture, to prove what day of the week the crucifixion took
place and how long Jesus was in the grave. Following is just an
excerpt of this Appendix.
"Six Days Before The Passover" (John 12:1).
We are furnished by Scripture with certain facts and fixed
points which, taken together, enable us (1) to determine the
events which filled up the days of "the last week"
of our Lord's life on earth; (2) to fix the day of His
crucifixion; and (3) to ascertain the duration of the time He
remained in the tomb.
The difficulties connected with these three have arisen (1)
from not having noted these fixed points; (2) from the fact of
Gentiles' not having been conversant with the law concerning the
three great feasts of the LORD; and (3) from not having reckoned
the days as commencing (some six hours before our own) and
running from sunset to sunset, instead of from midnight to
midnight.
To remove these difficulties, we must note :-
That the first day of each of the three feasts.
Passover, Pentecost, and Tabernacles, was " a
holy convocation", a "sabbath" on
which no servile work was to be done. See Leviticus
23:7, 24, 35. Compare Exodus 12:16.
"That sabbath" and the "high day"
of John 19:31, was the "holy convocation",
the first day of the feast, which quite overshadowed the
ordinary weekly sabbath.
It was called by the Jews Yom tov =
(Good day), and this is the greeting on that day
throughout Jewry down to the present time.
This great sabbath, having been
mistaken from the earliest times for the weekly
sabbath, has led to all the confusion.
This has naturally caused the futher difficulty as to
the Lord's statement that "even as Jonah was in
the belly of the fish three days and three nights, so
shall the Son of man be in the heart of the earth three
days and three nights" (Matthew 12:40). Now,
while it is quite correct to speak according to Hebrew
idiom of "three days" or "three
years", while they are only parts of three days
or three years, yet that idiom does not apply in a case
like this, where "three nights" are
mentioned in addition to "three
days". It will be noted that the Lord not only
definitely states this, but repeats the full
phraseology, so that we may not mistake it.
We have therefore the following facts furnished for
our sure guidance:
The "high day" of John 19:31
was the first day of the feast.
The "first day of the feast"
was on the 15th day of Nisan.
The 15th day of Nisan, commenced at sunset
[even] on
what we should call the 14th.
"Six days before the passover"
(John 12:1) takes us back to the 9th day of
Nisan.
"After two days is the passover"
(Matthew 26:2. Mark 14:1) takes us to the 13th
day of Nisan.
"The first day of the week", the
day of the resurrection (Matthew 28:1, etc.),
was from our Saturday sunset [even] to our Sunday
sunset [even]. This fixes the days of the week,
just as the above fix the days of the
month, for:
Reckoning back from this, "three days
and three nights" (Matthew 12:40), we
arrive at the day of the burial, which must have
been before sunset [even], on the 14th of Nisan; that
is to say, before our Wednesday sunset [even].
This makes the sixth day before the passover
(the 9th day of Nisan) to be our Thursday sunset
[even]
to Friday sunset [even].
Therefore Wednesday, Nisan 14th (commencing on the
Tuesday at sunset [even]), was "the preparation day",
on which the crucifixion took place: for all four
Gospels definitely say that this was the day on which
the Lord was buried (before our Wednesday sunset [even]), "because
it was the preparation [day]" the bodies should
not remain upon the cross on the sabbath day, "for
that sabbath day was a high day", and, therefore,
not the ordinary seventh day, or weekly sabbath. See
John 19:31.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM G-----The Day
of the Week He was Put into Tomb----From Scriptural Account:
WHEN JESUS WAS BURIED -- PUT INTO THE
TOMB.
He was put into the tomb after 3 PM, when He died, but before
evening (about 6 PM) the same day, the preparation day. One could
not be crucified or buried on the Sabbath or Annual Holy Day.
Matt 27:57
57 When the even [3798-opsios] was come, there came a rich man of Arimathaea, named Joseph, who also himself was Jesus' disciple:
Luke 23:52-54
52 This man went unto Pilate, and begged the body of Jesus.
53 And he took it down, and wrapped it in linen, and laid it in
a sepulchre that was hewn in stone, wherein never man before was
laid.
54 And that day was the preparation, and the sabbath drew on.
Now notice John 19...
John 19:42
42 There laid they Jesus therefore because of the Jews'
preparation day; for the sepulchre was nigh at hand.
Conclusion: Christ was put in the tomb on a preparation day.
We know it could not have been the preparation day of
Friday...NOT ENOUGH HOURS..........NOT ENOUGH NIGHTS AND DAYS.
So it must have been a preparation day prior to and other than Friday.
It could
not have been Thursday...NOT ENOUGH HOURS...NOT ENOUGH NIGHTS
AND DAYS. It could only have been Wednesday, a preparation day,
therefore making Thursday, the Holy Day. He was put into the
tomb at sometime between 3 PM and even [3798-opsios]
or 6 PM on Wednesday.
DO THE MATH
For the moment, forget about the fact that there was an
Annual Holy Day or two preparation days that week. The only
other preparation day was Friday. This is the day most secular
churches say is the day Christ died.
If Christ died on Friday at 3 PM and was put in the ground
before even [6 PM], say at 5 PM, we can count from there:
Friday....5 PM to midnight..........= 7 hours
Sabbath....24 hours...................= 24 hours
Sunday.....early in the morning he is already
risen........call it 6 AM....= 6 hours
TOTAL: 37 hours.
OOPS, WE ARE 35 HOURS SHORT or 1 whole day plus 11 hours or
about 1.5 days.
37 Hours: No matter where we start the 37 hours, we cannot
get 3 days and 3 nights covered with those 37 hours.
Now verses proving that it was early and dark on that Sunday:
Mark 16:2
2 And very early in the morning the first day of the week,
they came unto the sepulchre at the rising of the sun.
Luke 24:1
1 Now upon the first day of the week, very early in the
morning, they came unto the sepulchre, bringing the spices which
they had prepared, and certain others with them.
John 20:1
1 The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when
it was yet dark, unto the sepulchre, and seeth the stone taken
away from the sepulchre.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM H-----The Day
of the Week He was crucified-----Quote by Herbert W. Armstrong:
Quote: From
the Autobiography of Herbert W. Armstrong (hard copy, 1986,
volume 1, page 339)
"The crucifixion was on Wednesday. The resurrection of Jesus
Christ from the dead was late Sabbath afternoon, prior to
sunset [even]. This is proved conclusively, not only by all the
scriptures on the subject, which are many, but also by
astronomy, and by the Hebrew calendar. In the year in which
Jesus was crucified—AD 31—the Passover was on a Wednesday, not a
Friday."
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM I-----3 Days
& 3 Nights in the Tomb----- Appendix 144 of the Companion Bible:
Resource:
Bullinger’s Companion Bible Appendix
144
This appendix from the Companion Bible establishes the fact
that Jesus was in the Tomb for 3 days and 3 nights. Following is
the complete Appendix.
The "Three Days" and "Three Nights" of Matthew 12:40.
The fact that "three days" is used by Hebrew
idiom for any part of three days and three nights is not
disputed; because that was the common way of reckoning, just as
it was when used of years. Three or any number of years was used
inclusively of any part of those years, as may be seen in the
reckoning of the reigns of any of the kings of Israel and Judah.
But, when the number of "nights" is stated
as well as the number of "days", then the
expression ceases to be an idiom, and becomes a literal
statement of fact.
Moreover, as the Hebrew day began at sunset [even] the day was
reckoned from one sunset [even] to another, the "twelve hours in
the day" (John 11:9) being reckoned from sunrise, and the
twelve hours of the night from sunset [even]. An evening-morning was
thus used for a whole day of twenty-four hours, as in the first
chapter of Genesis. Hence the expression "a night and a
day" in 2 Corinthians 11:25 denotes a complete day (Greek
nuchthemeron).
When Esther says (Esther 4:16) "fast ye for me, and
neither eat nor drink three days", she defines her
meaning as being three complete days, because she adds (being a
Jewess) "night or day". And when it is written
that the fast ended on "the third day" (5:1), "the
third day" must have succeeded and included the third
night.
In like manner the sacred record states that the young man
(in 1 Samuel 30:12) "had eaten no bread, nor drunk any
water, three days and three nights". Hence, when the
young man explains the reason, he says, "because three
days agone I fell sick". He means therefore three
complete days and nights, because, being an Egyptian
(verses 11, 13) he naturally reckoned his day as beginning at
sunrise according to the Egyptian manner (see Encycl.
Brit., 11th (Cambridge) ed., vol xi, page 77). His "three
days agone" refers to the beginning of his sickness, and
includes the whole period, giving the reason for his having gone
without food during the whole period stated.
Hence, when it says that "Jonah was in the belly of
the fish three days and three nights" (Jonah 1:17)
it means exactly what is says, and that this can be the only
meaning of the expression in Matthew 12:40; 16:4. Luke 11:30, is
shown in Appendix 156.
In the expression, "the heart of the earth"
(Matthew 12:40), the meaning is the same as "the heart of
the sea", "heart" being put by the Figure
of Speech, Metonymy (of the Subject),
Appendix 6, for "the
midst", and is frequently so translated. See Psalm 46:2.
Jeremiah 51:1. Ezekiel 27:4, 25, 26, 27; 28:2. It is used of
ships when sailing "in the heart of the seas",
that is to say, in, or on the sea. See Ezekiel 27:25, 26; 28:8;
also of people dwelling in the heart of the seas, that is to
say, on islands (Ezekiel 28:2). Jonah uses the Hebrew
beten (= womb) in the same way (2:2).
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM J-----The
Time of Day of the Crucifixion-----From Internet Source:
Excerpt from paper (Internet site now gone).
The Time of Day
We have now seen that the day of Jesus’ crucifixion was on
Wednesday, and his resurrection was on Saturday, but does the
Bible also tell us the time of day that it occurred? Let’s take
a look.
"And about the ninth hour (3 p.m.) Jesus cried with a loud
voice.... Jesus, when he cried again with a loud voice, yielded
up the ghost." (Matt 27:46-50 also Mark 15:34-37 and Luke 23:32
).
Hence Jesus died shortly after 3 p.m. and was buried before
sunset [even] because of the preparation day, he was buried late in the
day, which means he rose late in the day.
There should be no doubt that Jesus was not crucified on a
Friday and rose Sunday morning, but the truth of the matter is
that he was crucified on a Wednesday and rose on Saturday late
in the afternoon in the year 31 AD truly becoming our Passover
sacrifice.
One last note here, in Daniel's prophecy of the seventy
weeks, Jesus was to be cut of in the middle of the week. This
prophecy speaks of his being cut off three and a half years into
his ministry, yet it is significant that he was also cut off
literally in the middle of a week.
---end quote---
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM K-----The
Hour of the Resurrection-----From the Biblical Account:
S ince He was exactly 72
hours in the grave, the time of the crucifixion and resurrection
are the same hour. The scriptures say that Jesus cried out and died after the ninth
hour or 3 in the afternoon.
Matt 27:46-50
46 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice,
saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? that is to say, My God, my
God, why hast thou forsaken me?
47 Some of them that stood there, when they heard that, said,
This man calleth for Elias.
48 And straightway one of them ran, and took a spunge, and
filled it with vinegar, and put it on a reed, and gave him to
drink.
49 The rest said, Let be, let us see whether Elias will come to
save him.
50 Jesus, when he had cried again with a loud voice, yielded up
the ghost.
Mark 15:34-37
34 And at the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice,
saying, Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani? which is, being
interpreted, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?
35 And some of them that stood by, when they heard it, said,
Behold, he calleth Elias.
36 And one ran and filled a spunge full of vinegar, and put it
on a reed, and gave him to drink, saying, Let alone; let us see
whether Elias will come to take him down.
37 And Jesus cried with a loud voice, and gave up the ghost.
See also Luke 23: 44-46
Conclusion: Christ was resurrected at just after 3 in the
afternoon, 3 days and 3 nights after He died or 72 hours later.
back to top
back to Bible Class
back to Specific
Bible Studies
PART 3-----ITEM L-----The Day
of the Resurrection-----From the Scriptural Account:
WHAT DAY WAS THE RESURRECTION?
First, Mark 16: 2; Luke 24:1 and John 20:1 (above) tells us
that very early Sunday morning while it was yet dark, the tomb
was empty. We know Christ died at 3 PM on a preparation day that
could not be Friday. He was buried around 5 PM (before even-6PM),
the same day He died.
To be in the ground 72 hours, He must come out of the grave
at 5 PM and it could not have been on Sunday at 5 PM for the
tomb is empty. It must have been 5 PM on the Sabbath.
When the women came to the tomb early Sunday the angel says,
"He is not here, but is Risen:
Mark 16:6
6 And he saith unto them, Be not affrighted: Ye seek Jesus of
Nazareth, which was crucified: he is risen; he is not here:
behold the place where they laid him.
Luke 24:3
3 And they entered in, and found not the body of the Lord
Jesus.
John 20:2
2 Then she runneth, and cometh to Simon Peter, and to the
other disciple, whom Jesus loved, and saith unto them, They have
taken away the Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where
they have laid him.
Matt 28:5-6
5 And the angel answered and said unto the women, Fear not
ye: for I know that ye seek Jesus, which was crucified.
6 He is not here: for he is risen, as he said. Come, see the
place where the Lord lay.
Now look at 1 Cor 15 and beginning in verse 3...THIS IS VERY
IMPORTANT
1 Cor 15:3-4
3 For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also
received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the
scriptures;
4 And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day
according to the scriptures:
NOTE: Christ DIED...was BURIED and was RESURRECTED....
ACCORDING TO THE SCRIPTURES. |