April in ce 30

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Nisan CE 30 in the Rabbinate Calendar

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

Nisan CE 30 in the Essene Calendar

12

13

14

15 16 17 18 19
Sunday
(Saturday sunset to Sunday sunset)
Monday
(Sunday sunset to Monday sunset)
Tuesday
(Monday sunset to Tuesday sunset)1
Wednesday
(Tuesday sunset to Wednesday sunset)
Thursday
(Wednesday sunset to Thursday sunset)
Friday
(Thursday sunset to Friday sunset)
Sabbath
(Friday sunset to Saturday sunset)
Sunday
(Saturday sunset to Sunday sunset)
3rd Day 4th Day 5th Day 6th Day Annual Sabbath. The First Day of Unleavened Bread. The Feast of Unleavened Bread begins. The Second Day of Unleavened Bread. Preparation Day for the weekly Sabbath. The Third Day of Unleavened Bread. The Forth Day of Unleavened Bread. The day of offering of the Wave Sheaf at the Temple.
Jesus said after two days it would be Passover (Matthew 26:1-2, cf Mark 14:1, Luke 22:1). Day 1
(sunset Sunday to
 sunset Monday)
Day 2
(sunset Monday to
 sunset Tuesday)
PASSOVER
(began at sunset Tuesday)
    First Christian Passover observed after dark Tuesday evening. Jesus died about 3:00 p.m.

Jesus remained literally "three days and three nights" in the tomb, as foretold by him (Matthew 12:40).

The tomb was empty before dawn Sunday morning as the three days, i.e., three 24-hour days, had already passed as of sunset Saturday night.
The 1st Day The 2nd Day The 3rd Day
In the morning, Jesus and the disciples left Bethany and walked to Jerusalem. Arriving at the Temple the chief priests and scribes challenged him.

Jesus and his disciples left the Temple compound (Matthew 24:1; Mark 13:1; Luke 21:5).

That afternoon, on the Mount of Olives, Jesus speaks to his disciples about the destruction if Jerusalem and his Second Coming (Matthew 24:3-25:46; Mark 13:1; Luke 21:5-36).

Luke summarizes the last few days by recalling that by day Jesus went to the Temple and taught and at night returned to the Mount of Olives where he stayed. Crowds of people gathered at the Temple to hear him (Luke 21;37-38).

The Small Council plots to murder Jesus (Matthew 26:3-5, Mark 14:1-2, Luke 22:2).

Monday morning, Jesus and the disciples left Bethany and walked to Jerusalem. Arriving at the Temple the chief priests and scribes challenged him.

Monday afternoon, on the Mount of Olives, Jesus speaks to his disciples about the destruction of Jerusalem and his Second Coming (Matthew 24:3-25:46, Mark 13:3-37, Luke 21:5-38).

The Small Council plots to murder Jesus (Matthew 26:3-5, Mark 14:1-2, Luke 22:2).

Jesus dines Monday night at the house of Simon the Leper where Mary of Bethany anoints him (Matthew 26:6-13, Mark 14:3-9, John 12:2-8).

Judas Iscariot went to the chief priests and sought to deliver Jesus to them. They paid him 30 pieces of silver to do so (Matthew 26: 3-6, Mark 14:10-11, Luke 22:3-6).

Essenes keep the Passover after sunset Tuesday evening.2

The First Christian Passover apparently observed at the Essene Guesthouse in the Upper City (Mt. Sion).3

The Last Supper, the first Christian Passover, where Jesus ate his last Passover meal, a meatless one, with his followers.

The Preparation Day (Matthew 27:62) of the sacrifice of the Passover lambs (Luke 22:7). 

Essene Holyday
(an Essene annual Sabbath).

The day of the Crucifixion.

Joseph of Arimathea, with the help of Nicodemus, placed Jesus' body hastily in his own new tomb sometime shortly before the beginning of the Passover Sabbath (Luke 23:50-54).

The women observed where and how they laid Jesus' body in the tomb (Luke 23:55).

An annual Sabbath (a Jewish holyday).

Chief priests and Pharisees seek placement of a guard at the tomb (Matthew 27:62-65, cf. Luke 24:21).

Pilate ordered the tomb to made secure.

Authorities placed a seal on the stone and posted guard at the site to secure it until the third day was past (Matthew 27:66).

The women procure and prepare spices to anoint Jesus' body (Luke 23:56 and see also Burial Customs).

The weekly Sabbath.

The women rest according to the commandment (Luke 23:56, Leviticus 23:7).

Jesus arose from the dead on the third day (late Saturday afternoon most likely a moment before sunset so that he was unmistakably in the Tomb for three full days and three full nights).

An angel moves the stone from the tomb entrance and sits on it, implying it was a square stone not a round one, causing the guards to faint (Matthew 28:2-4) and then to flee into the city (Matthew 28:11-15).

While it was still dark, at the dawn of "the first day of the week", the women come to the tomb bringing the spices to anoint the body but Jesus had already risen (Matthew 28:1, Mark 15:47, Luke 24:1, John 20:1).5

Early Sunday morning Jesus appeared first to Mary Magdalene (Mark 16:9).

Travelers, walking to Emmanus from Jerusalem explained that the time of Jesus spending three days in the tomb had already passed (Luke 24:21). 

 

1In Jewish reckoning a normal 24 hour day run from sunset to sunset.

2The beginning of the Essene annual Sabbath (the Feast of Unleavened Bread) when they observed Passover. The Essenes always observed their Passover on a Tuesday night. In CE 30 and 31 their Passover was a full twenty-four hours before that of the rest of the Jews (the Passover of the Jews). The Essenes used a solar calendar which fixed their annual Sabbaths on specific days of the week. See The Essene Calendar.

3While Jesus of Nazareth was not an Essene, the Last Supper, also known as the first Christian Passover, likely occurred in the Essene community. "To my mind" writes Bargil Pixner "this took place in the Essene guesthouse on Mount Zion on the Tuesday night" (Pixner 1992:64). If so, it could explain the persisting tradition that the first Lord�s Supper occurred in an upper room on Mt. Sion. Mackowski, concurring, held that this "must have been a very simple dining hall in keeping with the simple life of the Essenes" (Mackowski 1980:141).

4Jesus instituted the first Christian Passover at the beginning of Nisan 14. The Jews celebrated the Passover at the end of Nisan 14. The first Christian Passover and the Essene Passover occurred at the same time. Judeo-Christians, well into the fifth century, continued to observe the Christian Passover at the beginning of Nisan 14, which according to Bagatti, was due to "the common belief among the [Christian] Jews that the date had been fixed by the Lord and was, therefore, unchangeable. Many believed that this date was superior even to the sabbath itself" (Bagatti 1971a:81).

5This would have been the first occasion for the women to gain access to the body as the authorities, under an order from Pilate, placed a seal on the stone closing tomb (cutting off all access) and posted guards at the tomb until the end of the full three day period.

Page last edited: 01/02/06 04:52 PM

 

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