Monday, March 25, 2013

Holy Week 33AD


Holy Week 33 A.D.
By Rev. Dave Kulchar

In the study of the events of Holy Week, it can be confusing trying to reconcile the Gospel accounts of the timing of the events of Jesus' last week in Jerusalem. Several assumptions shaped by church tradition and practice added to this confusion. So in an attempt to understand and experience a historical and Biblical flow of this incredible week it seems right to begin by examining the Post-Exilic observance of the Feast of Unleavened Bread or "Pesach" (Passover).

This feast is a seven day festival falling on the first full moon after the vernal or spring equinox (this is important because it will set the calendar so the year and date of the events of Holy Week can be determined). This feast is the first and most important of the three great festivals of Israel. It helps Jews recount God's deliverance of His people from bondage. The paschal meal or Seder, the central event of this festival, was celebrated on the evening of the 14th of Nisan with the following seven day feast of unleavened bread observed by the children of Israel (Leviticus 23:4-5). This was a period of family gathering, remembrance, meals, offering of special sacrifices and additional ritual worship. During the entire feast normal work patterns were reduced, no leavened bread was made or eaten and two special days of rest were observed.

The first day of the feast, the 15th of Nisan, is marked by worship and the gathering of the nation called a "convocation" or "sacred assemble". No work is done on this first day, a sabbath is observed and special sacrifices are made in thanksgiving for the nation's deliverance. The last day of the feast is observed in a similar fashion while the intervening days are marked with fewer sacrifices and yet limited activities called "half-holy days".

The first day of the feast begins on the night of the 14th of Nisan with the meal. This night is the actual time of Passover events described in Exodus 12:6. In the Hebrew reckoning of days the new day begins at sunset. Hence, the meal is the initial celebration of the first day of the feast. This pattern of marking of days beginning at sunset was later mirrored by the early church which began its Easter celebration with the Easter Vigil on Saturday night at sunset. Preparations for the Passover meal of remembrance could take several days but an official period of preparation began the evening of the 13th of Nissan through the full day of the 14th. The "Day of Preparation" therefore spans two days which is important to remember when reckoning the Gospel accounts of Holy Week.

The Day of Preparation begins on the evening of the 13th when the house is cleaned of leavened bread. The head of the family ritualistically searches the whole house by candlelight and the leavened bread is consumed, sold, or burned by morning. The paschal lamb is killed in this period as well, but not till the evening sacrifice of the 14th.

The year old lamb was to serve a company not less than 10 and no more than 20 because it must be totally consumed at the paschal meal. A representative of the company takes the lamb to the temple on the day of preparation at the evening sacrifice (normally 2:30 in the afternoon) and offers the blood, the fat and other parts as a sacrifice on the temple altar only an hour later. The butchered lamb was then taken home at dark and roasted. Great care is taken to keep the meat pure and no bone of it was to be broken. When the lamb had been roasted the meal of remembrance begins.

According to John 19:31, in reference to the timing of Jesus death on the cross, the apostle wrote:

"Now it was the day of preparation, and the next day was to be a special Sabbath."

This description, "a special Sabbath", meant that the Feast of Unleavened bread, a movable feast according to the phases of the moon, would have to start on a Saturday, the Jewish day of rest and worship. Because this is an astronomically calculable event, one can mark back the time in the Jewish calendar to the time of Christ and observe which years during His life that the 15th of Nisan fell on the Sabbath. Using Stephen P. Morse Jewish calendar calculator (www.stevenmorse.org) for the years between 28 A.D. and 37 A.D. (a reasonable period of estimating Christ's death), one can observe the following facts in this period (the years 3788 to 3797according to the Jewish calendar):

6 times Pesach started on a Tuesday

1 time on a Sunday

2 times on a Thursday (30 A.D. and 37 A.D.)

2 times on a Saturday or Sabbath (33 A.D. and 36 A.D.)

This means that to fit into John's description of the timing of holy week, Jesus must have died in the years 33 or 36. A case for 36 A.D. is weakened because we know from other historical writings that Pilate was called back to Rome in 36 A.D. and Herod Antipas was preoccupied that year with a regional conflict with the Nabateans. These facts makes it improbable that either or both of them were in Jerusalem if Holy Week took place in 36 A.D.. Even if they were present that year this would leave little time for the two to have had any additional friendly relations after the events of Holy Week as indicated in Luke 23:12 since Pilate would in short order return to Rome.

The arguments for 33 A.D. are much stronger as one attempts to date Jesus' death according to other evidence in the Scriptures. Luke remarks that Jesus was "thirty years of age" when he began his ministry (Luke 3:23). A close examination of synoptics seem to indicate that Jesus' ministry lasted at least three years. Significant Biblical scholars believe that Jesus was born 3-2 B.C.. Herod the Great died in 1 B.C.. This means Jesus begins His ministry around 29 A.D.. This then means Jesus was 34 to 35 years old when he died in 33 A.D.. (Note: There is no year "0" in the B.C. to A.D. transition, therefore one loses a year in the counting of age.) This, of course, strongly supports a 33 A.D. dating.

On first reading the synoptic accounts of Holy Week, there seems to be a discrepancy in the description of events. Matthew, Mark and Luke all report that Thursday is the "first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread" when the disciples meet in the upper room for the first time (i.e. Mark 14:12). Also many in contemporary Christian culture, because Jesus remarks "I have eagerly desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer", teach that Jesus was celebrating the "Seder" meal with them that evening. This would suggest that he initiated the meal of the new covenant in the midst of the Seder meal.

We must keep in mind that all the events of the feast make up the Passover remembrance. The term "first day" is the 13th Nisan beginning with the search for the leavened bread. In Mark 14 the gospeler comments that this "first day" is when it is "customary to sacrifice the Passover lamb" which meant this was the day of preparation. Jesus had made arrangements for the disciples to celebrate the Passover which was over a week long. He chose a location in Jerusalem itself, in a second story guest room located near the Temple. Jesus appears to demonstrate a "word of knowledge" that the disciples will find the proprietor of the upper room carrying a pitcher of water, which is typically a woman's task, in Mark 14:13. At sunset Thursday night Jesus gathers with his disciples as the day of preparation begins. The first action of the Passover remembrance is to search for and consume all leavened bread. In Jesus' mind, and the minds of the disciples, this is the beginning of the Passover experience. It was tradition that the eldest son would fast on the day of preparation until the Passover meal on the evening of Nisan 14. Jesus eats the bread and drinks the wine initiating a new covenant meal and then begins his fast.

Imagine now in an atmosphere of preparing the upper room for the Paschal meal and for the week of subsequent feasting and celebration that Jesus prepares them in a humble act of serving them by washing their feet. One can envision in this ceremonial washing Jesus' actions alluding to the second major sacrament of the church, water baptism. In his washing his disciple's feet Jesus was not just cleaning their bodies but their very souls.

One might argue that with the room being prepared for the Passover meal, Jesus might have celebrated the "Seder" early, but the central symbol, the lamb, would not have been sacrificed yet. It seems likely that preparations for the meal to be held on the following evening were being made, the table set, and the other symbols except for the lamb were gathered. John even suggests that some thought that when Judas left during the meal he went to purchase items needed for the feast, when actually he went out to meet with the Jewish authorities to betray Jesus (John 13:29). Assumptions about Judas' leaving infers that the meal they were about to partake Thursday night was not the Seder meal, but the evening meal of the first day or preparation day when the leavened bread is consumed.

We also know that early Friday, the Jewish leaders did not want to enter the Roman garrison, for fear of being made "unclean" and therefore unable to "eat" the Passover meal which they would have been partaking of that evening, Friday the 14th of Nisan (John 18:28).

For those who might insist that Maundy Thursday night was the Passover Meal, this would mean that Friday was the 15th of Nisan. This did not occur during the years Jesus might have been executed (see list above). In the end, the timing of John's account collaborates with the Jewish calendar and the synoptics' description of Thursday being the "day of preparation." At first it appears that the synoptic accounts conflict with John's claim when John reports that Friday was the "day of preparation" (John 14:19), but remember this Jewish "day" overlaps Thursday night and Friday daylight hours. Thus, in 33 A.D. with the 15th of Nisan falling on a sabbath, the day of preparation took place Thursday night and Friday daylight, and all four Gospel accounts line up.

Several other interesting events line up with the dating of the week in this manner. On the "Great Sabbath" which is the Sabbath before the feast begins, worshipers read from Malachi 3:6-4:6 which reminds them to be pure before the Lord, follow Moses' teaching (which includes keeping the Passover) and to give tithes and offerings to God. On this Sabbath day they were instructed on how to observe the feast in the coming days. This "Great Sabbath" would have been Saturday the 8th of Nisan in 33 A.D. (see chart below). One could presume that Jesus and his disciples who were on route to Jerusalem, would honor the Sabbath and not travel on this day. Then "six days before Passover" ( John 12:1) they arrived in Bethany and had dinner with Mary, Martha and Lazarus whom he had raised from the dead. This would have been Sunday the 9th of Nisan. This dating means that Jesus' triumphant entry into Jerusalem was really "Palm Monday". One might be tempted to be disappointed upon the discovery that this dating challenges the widely held tradition of a "Palm Sunday" entrance into Jerusalem. Disappointment is short lived when one sees that in 33 A.D. Monday was the 10th of Nisan. This day holds significant Biblical meaning in the celebration of the Feast of Unleavened Bread.

In Exodus 12:3 the Lord instructed the Jews to select an unblemished lamb to be the "Korban Pesach" or Passover Lamb on the 10th day of the first month. In the Lord's perfect timing then on Monday the 10th of Nisan in 33 A.D. each family was selecting a lamb from surrounding flocks. This very day Jesus is selected by the multitude and hailed as the King of the Jews. It is noteworthy to remember that Bethlehem, Jesus' birthplace, was where many of the flocks for sacrifice where pastured. Jesus, the Lamb of God from Bethlehem, is chosen by the multitude's acclamations as the Messiah, the anointed or "chosen one". Little did they know that Jesus was being chosen by them to be "the perfect sacrifice", selected to die for the sins of the whole world. Even one of Jesus' enemies would unwittingly say "You do not realize that it is better for you that one man die for the people than that the whole nation perish." (John 11:50)

During the feast the selected lamb is then presented four days later for sacrifice on 14th of Nisan and it blood is poured out in remembrance of its substitutionary death on behalf of the first born of Israel. The killing of the lamb normally took place at the time of the daily evening sacrifice (2:30p.m.) but in 33 A.D. the lambs were offered 2 hours earlier. This was the practice when the feast began on a Sabbath so as to avoid a needless breach of the Sabbath prohibitions.

The earliest written gospel reported that Jesus was nailed to the cross around 9 a.m. on Friday (Mark 15:25). Mark records his nailing occurred at the "third hour" which is counted from sunrise, approximately 6 a.m.. All three synoptics report that at "about the sixth hour, darkness came over the whole land until the ninth hour (Luke 23:44)." Thus, at the very time, 12:30 p.m., the lambs were killed and their blood, fat and entrails offered an hour later on the altar, Jesus was dying on the cross outside the city walls of the Holy City. There must have been some commotion in the temple when darkness fell at mid-day just as the lambs were being brought to be sacrificed. Then a short time later when the blood and entrails were being offered, the veil into the Holy of Holies was torn in two and an earthquake struck and rocks were split asunder (Matt. 27:51).

John reports that because it was the day of preparation the Jewish authorities did not want the bodies of the crucified left on the crosses during the Sabbath (John 19:31). They asked that the legs of the "criminals" be broken which they did for the two thieves. Death on the cross was a long torturous process. Death generally occurred not from loss of blood but by suffocation. If the victims could no longer lift themselves up by their pierced extremities they could not breath. Thus to break their legs, the soldiers would cripple their victims ability to help themselves breath and they would die more quickly. When the soldiers came to Jesus he had already stopped breathing and they pierced His heart with a spear to assure themselves that he was dead. Pilate was surprised that Christ was already dead. Jesus probably succumbed due to the severe lashing he received before the crucifixtion which weakened Him to point he could barely walk due to pain and the loss of blood . Yet in a case of sacred irony, like the Paschal Lamb, not a bone was broken on this "Korban Pesach".

With only a few hours of daylight left, as the butchered lambs for the feast were taken from the temple to be roasted for the evening ceremonial meal, Jesus' body was taken down and hastily placed in a new tomb. Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus, members of the Jewish council, the group that condemned Jesus, were moved to quickly deal with his body. There was no time to return him to Bethlehem his ancestral home or Nazareth his boyhood home. Instead a new tomb outside the holy city, believed to be a few hundred yards from Calvary, is where his body was laid to rest. Apparently unknown to the women, Nicodemus, a wealthy resident of Jerusalem, brought 75 pounds of spices and burial linen in which they wrapped the body (John 19:39). After seeing what must have seemed like Jesus' enemies laying his body in the tomb, the women purposed to do their own ritual of burial by preparing their own spices. So Luke tells us that they left the tomb Friday night and prepared more spices for his body and would return after the Sabbath to complete the burial process (Luke 23:56). It was then when they found the tomb empty.

Luke also reports that the disciples "rested on the Sabbath in obedience to the commandments." (Luke 23:56). This means that after the events of Good Friday all the disciples could do was gather in confusion and grief and rest. Presumably they gathered in the room that Jesus had helped them prepare for the Passover meal. Instead of feasting on the Seder meal they now wept over the death of their friend and leader. Surely as they grieved, as they feared for their own lives, they began to make plans for a quick departure from Jerusalem on Sunday the day after the Sabbath. On Saturday they could hear the trumpets sounding in the Temple nearby announcing the thanksgiving offerings sacrificed at the start of the Feast of Unleavened Bread while thousands swarmed the temple for the convocation which the disciples dare not attend out of fear of the Jewish leaders and Roman authorities.

We know at least for two disciples, one named Cleopas, an early escape was made from the Holy City mid-morning Sunday the 16th of Nisan. They were headed for the village of Emmaus, only seven miles from Jerusalem (Luke 24:13). The women had reported that the tomb was empty, but they did not stay in Jerusalem to investigate further. This was the 2nd day of the feast, the day called "morrow after the Sabbath" where the firstfruits of the spring barely crop are cut, prepared and dedicated to the Lord (Leviticus 23:9-14). The first sample of the crop is given to the Lord as a thank offering for His provision in the wilderness and His provision in the promised land. Jesus, who declared Himself to be the "bread of life", now showed himself to the women, the 2 on the road, and then to the rest of the disciples to be the firstfruit of the grave or as Paul writes:

"But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep." (1 Corinthians 15:20)

Jesus, unbeknownst to most of the Holy City that year, had fulfilled all that the Passover feast was meant to foreshadow. Jesus had accomplished the ultimate deliverance of all people, everywhere, in every age. Therefore, the church regularly confesses "Christ the Passover is sacrificed for us".

In summary, the chart below lists the days of the week and a brief description of the events surrounding the days of holy week and the Feast of Unleavened bread as they would have occurred in the year 33 A.D. Using the Gregorian Calendar (western calendar used by most of the world today) the first Easter was April 3, 33 and Good Friday April 1st. According to Acts 1:4 we know that Jesus visited the disciples on several occasions in Jerusalem and the Galilee after Easter Sunday. According to Acts 1: 3 Jesus' resurrection meetings took place over forty days until he ascended into heaven on Thursday, May 12, 33. Using this same calendar year, the second major Jewish festival, the Feast of Pentecost began on the 6th of Siven or Sunday May 22, 33. This feast is when the Jewish people would return to Jerusalem in thanksgiving for the spring harvest 50 days after the start of Passover. The Jewish nation would mark with a daily ritualistic prayer and an offering of an "omer" of grain each day from the first day of Passover to Pentecost. They began the counting of days on the second day of Passover, Nisan 16, the day Jesus rose. "Penta" means 50 from which the feast derived its name. Unbeknownst to the Jews that year, they were counting down to the birth of the church. Thus, Sunday May 22 was the date the church was filled with the Spirit and sent out on mission. It was probably from this time on that the church began returning from their mission work and began gathering on Sundays, the day of resurrection, for celebration, breaking of bread and worship.

Holy Week 33 A.D.

Nisan   week day                         notes


8      Saturday     "Great Sabbath" in synagogue, Passover instruction (no travel)

9      Sunday       Jesus stops at Mary & Martha's (6 days before Passover)

10    Monday     Triumphant Entrance late in day - day the lambs are selected

11    Tuesday     Jesus clears the Temple and curses the fig tree

12    Wednesday    Fig tree observed, observes widow in Temple, Mt Olives visit
                               Dinner at Simon the Leper - Judas meets with Chief Priest

13    Thursday     Day of Preparation, Starts at sundown - Upper Room Dinner

14    Friday        Jesus arrest & trial - Lambs sacrifice at 12:30pm
                          Jesus crucified & buried - Seder Meal at Sundown
15    Saturday    Special Sabbath "High Day" and Passover Convocation
                          No work or travel - Many sacrifices offered in temple
                          Chief Priest asks Pilate to post guards & secure tomb

16   Sunday       2nd Day "Morrow after the Sabbath" - Cutting Barley Sheaf
                          Easter - Jesus appears to women, 2 on road, 11 in upper room

17   Monday     3rd Day - Half Holy Days

18   Tuesday     4th Day - Half Holy Days

19 Wednesday 5th Day - Half Holy Days

20 Thursday    6th Day - Half Holy Days

21 Friday        7th and Last Day - Convocation & special sacrifices

The gospel power and impact does not rest on precise accuracy of these dates or that the events of holy week absolutely occurred in 33 A.D. in this fashion. Yet logically, the coming together of the gospel accounts and the calendar events, as suggested above helps bring clarity and a deeper sense of historicity to the Biblical record and may very well be the timeline for Holy Week.

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