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Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.
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Page 1: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

Passover 2008: Part 1

How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the

Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

Page 2: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 2

Introduction

• The Passover is the Celebration of the Lamb of God, the gracious sacrifice God provided for the enslaved Israelites in Egypt, to foreshadow the deliverance of all mankind from sin slavery by Jesus Christ.

• The only ritual commanded to the Church is the Passover, “Do this in remembrance of me.”

Page 3: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 3

Introduction

• Jesus ate his Last Supper, a Passover meal, in the "Upper Room" with his followers (Mark 14:15; Luke 22:12).

Page 4: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 4

Introduction

• The Upper Room of the Last Supper was a second story room wherein Jesus and his disciples dined together the evening of his arrest on the 14th of Nisan (Luke 22:8–10 and Mark 14:13).

• The disciples also stayed in an upper room while they remained in Jerusalem for Pentecost (Acts 1:13).

• There is no hint in the accounts by Luke and Mark that the Upper Room of the Last Supper was also place where they lodged.

Page 5: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 5

Introduction

• When Jesus and his disciples visited Jerusalem during his public ministry they stayed outside the city usually on the Mount of Olives.

• John's gospel records that Jesus' residence for this festival was Bethany (John 12:1).

• Some time after the Resurrection the Twelve were found in the city staying in an upper room in Jerusalem.

• To reach this facility, probably the house of Mary, the mother of John Mark, they had to enter the city and go up implying they put up in the Upper City (Acts 1:13).

Page 6: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 6

Introduction

• For them, this new Passover ritual commemorated the realization of the New Covenant through Jesus’ giving himself in suffering and death on their behalf – the fulfillment of the Passover type.

• They kept the Christian Passover annually, at the beginning of the fourteenth day of the first month, originally called Abib and called Nisan in Jesus' day, as determined by the priestly luni-solar calendar.

Page 7: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 7

Introduction

• Nisan was the Babylonian name for the first month.

• Abib was the Hebrew word for the first month in Moses' day.

• The word abib refers to a stage in the grain ripening process between green and ripe.

Page 8: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 8

Introduction

• The Hebrew sacred year began with he month of Abib during which the early barley harvest began the ripening process, the stage called abib, such that during the Days of Unleavened Bread the wave sheaf offering of the fresh barley could be made as the first of the Firstfruits.

• With this offering the barley harvest could commence.

Page 9: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 9

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In the time of Jesus there were at least two, and possibly more, conflicting and opposing Jewish calendar systems at work.

• This should quickly become evident if you attempt to harmonize the gospel accounts of the events of the passion week.

Page 10: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 10

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Many explanations have been attempted:• The current “Messianic” explanation has

been the juxtaposition of the “Feast of Unleavened Bread” and the Passover.

• This explanation satisfies the seeming two Passovers dilemma, but misses entirely the fact that Jesus died at the moment of the sacrifice of the Lamb of Israel on “Preparation Day”.

Page 11: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 11

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• This multiple calendar situation should come as no great surprise.

• In Herodian times Judaism was not a unitary religion but a collection of sects reflecting a far greater range of cultural diversity than often recognized (Howlett 1957:171; Bowker 1969:7-8; Johnson 1976:14-15).

Page 12: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 12

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In this sociocultural milieu the priests and the Sanhedrin followed a luni-solar calendar.

• The Essenes, on the other hand, adhered to a strictly solar calendar.

• This meant that for the most part the two groups kept the Passover at different times.

Page 13: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 13

The Essene Calendar

• The Essene calendar, attested in I Enoch and the Book of Jubilees, consisted of a solar calendar of 364 days divided into seven-day weeks, twelve months of thirty days each except for one extra day in the last month of each quarter (Jaubert 1965:27; Pfeiffer 1969:64-65; Vanderkam 1998:55; Finegan 1998:44).

Page 14: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 14

Essene Calendar

•     The use of their own calendar was a most particular way in which members of the sect differentiated themselves from the rest of Israel.

• They celebrated their festivals on different dates, with the deliberate intention of differentiating themselves from the other Jews.

• This is a phenomenon typical of many sects throughout the world.

• Even among the Jews, the Samaritan calendar is different from the Karaite one, and both differ from the common Jewish one.

Page 15: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 15

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• The calendar of the Sages, of the whole House of Israel, was different from the Essene one, not only in the dating of the festivals, but in its whole conception of the year.

• The Essenes had a sophisticated solar calendar, in which there were fifty two weeks, and the festivals always began on the same day of the week.

• In this they were different from other Jews, who lived by a lunar calendar.(Flusser 1989:43.)

Page 16: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 16

The Essene Calendar

• The Feast of Unleavened Bread, Feast of Trumpets, Feast of Tabernacles, and Feast of the Great Day (the eighth day of the Feast of Tabernacles), always began on Wednesday, actually on Tuesday evening as the Jews began days at evening not midnight (Jaubert 1965:10; Simon 1967:73).

Page 17: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 17

The Essene Calendar

• Trumpets, Tabernacles, and the Great Day always occurred in the seventh month as set forth in the Law of Moses (Leviticus 23:24-44).

• As Nisan 15, the annual Sabbath, or Passover Sabbath, marking the start of the seven-day Feast of Unleavened bread began at sunset Tuesday night, the Essene observance of the Passover Seder was always on a Tuesday night (Finegan 1998:43, 48).

Page 18: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 18

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In CE 30, however, the two calendars overlapped resulting in the two Passover celebrations occurring in the same week of April resulting in two Nisan 14 Passover celebrations occurring one day apart.

Page 19: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 19

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In Jesus' time, the Pharisees and most Jews kept the Passover of the Jews, the Mosaic Passover, at the end of the fourteenth day and into the evening portion of the fifteenth.

• There is some scholarly debate concerning whether or not the priests fixed the calendar for any given year by calculation, by observation, or a combination of the two.

Page 20: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 20

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Also at issue is what the rules were for fixing liturgical time such as new moons and festivals. 

• While ancient Hebrew priest-astronomers possessed sufficient technical knowledge to develop and use a calculated calendar the question of whether they did so and, if so, to what extent, remains unresolved.

Page 21: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 21

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Strangely, the Hebrew Scriptures provide only limited information about the nature of the priestly Hebrew calendar.

• There is no clear indication of intercalation in the biblical texts "though it must have been done in some way at all times in Israel" (Morgan 1979:577).

Page 22: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 22

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Exodus 12:40 records that God informed the people of Israel that the month of their first Passover and Exodus from Egypt, the month of Abib, would be the beginning of months for them.

Page 23: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 23

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In Jewish tradition the early Hebrew Calendar, with its 19-year lunar-solar pattern, came into being at the time of Adam and Eve.

• God provided, according to this tradition, more details about calendar calculations to the Levitical priests with the inception of the Sinaitic covenant. Exodus 12:40 states that at the end of 430 years "to the very day" (NASB) the people of Israel went out from Egypt.

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April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 24

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Kenneth Herrmann, in Calendar Eclipse Interrelationships, holds that these ancient Israelites could not have left Egypt "430 years (from the date of the covenant with Abraham when he was 99) even to the selfsame day, unless a very careful count of days as well as years had been kept" (Herrmann 1969:15-16).

Page 25: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 25

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Does the Rabbinic Calculated Calendar (also known as the Hillel II Calendar) demonstrate this?

• In biblical chronology, according to Jack Finegan in the Handbook of Biblical Chronology (Finegan1998:202-206), the first Passover, "a night to be much observed" (Exodus 12:42), likely occurred in 1446 BCE (the early Exodus view) or 1250 BCE (the late Exodus view).

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April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 26

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• The Passover, according to the Rabbinic Calculated Calendar, occurred on April 22 (Wednesday) in 1446 and, precisely 430 years earlier, on April 6 (Wednesday) in 1873 BCE.

• In 1680 BCE the Passover was on April 29 (Friday) in 1250 BCE on April 17 (Friday).

• The Friday to Friday exactness could be coincidental but it may attest to the veracity of the Rabbinic Calculated Calendar.

Page 27: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 27

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• The Levitical priest-astronomers kept the rules and their methods for determination of the beginning of years, months, festivals, and annual Sabbaths a closely-held secret.

Page 28: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 28

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In the Herodian period the Sadducees, who wanted complete political control, and the Pharisees who desired to dominate all aspects of Jewish religious life eroded the authority of the priests.

• Control over the calendar legitimized power and both groups sought it.

Page 29: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 29

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In the Herodian period the priest-astronomers retained the power and authority to determine the new year and the appointed times for the festivals and annual Sabbaths.

• Nevertheless, the Sanhedrin, given certain powers of civil and religious administration by the Romans, held sufficient power to independently verify and officially proclaim them.

Page 30: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 30

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• This they did with observers posted on mountain tops, sending confirmation of the first visible crescent of the new moon by signal fires, by huddling in open displays of deep deliberation ensuring the public that the priest-astronomers were truthful, and then by sounding the trumpet to proclaim the new moon.

Page 31: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 31

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• This focused the people on the authority of the Sanhedrin not that of the Levitical priests. 

• The irony is that the Sanhedrin, in all probability, already knew exactly when the first crescent would appear by priest-astronomer calculation but they put on this symbolic show to promote their own authority and agenda.

Page 32: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 32

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• The Sadducees, supplemented by leading priests, dominated the Sanhedrin, keeping the Pharisees at bay.

• The Pharisees, the minority faction, balked on how the priests determined the Feast of Weeks, known as the day of Pentecost, but were not able to do anything about that matter until after the collapse of the priesthood in CE 70. 

Page 33: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 33

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• New Testament writings presume the rules of the priestly Hebrew calendar as they then existed for the determination of new years, festivals, and annual Sabbaths.

• Annual Sabbath and festival observances of the early church did not negate, but rather acknowledged the validity of the calendar rules as extant in the first century until CE 70.

Page 34: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 34

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Passover Sabbath (the first High Day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread) always occurs with a full moon rising in the east, the 15th day after the new moon.

• It cannot occur before the vernal equinox.

Page 35: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 35

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• By Rabbinical rules Passover Sabbath, starting at the previous sunset, can never occur on a Monday, Wednesday, or Friday (so it can fall on a Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday, or Saturday).

• Preventing Passover Sabbath from falling on Monday, Wednesday, or Friday eliminates the possibility that Tishri 1 could occur on a Friday, Sunday, or Wednesday.

• This is because Tishri 1 is always 163 days after Nisan 15.

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April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 36

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Succoth, the Feast of Tabernacles, was also set to begin on a full moon, the fifteenth day of the seventh month, Tishri (Leviticus 23:34).

• Succoth had to occur in the fall after the gathering of crops (Deuteronomy 16:16).

Page 37: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 37

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• The rabbinic calculated calendar, the Hillel II calendar, provides us with a means for determining an approximation of the priestly calendar that functioned in Temple times.

Page 38: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 38

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• Accordingly, by calculation the Passover Sabbath in CE 30 began, as it did in CE 31 as well, on Wednesday evening making Wednesday Day, at first glance, the most probable candidate for the day of the Crucifixion.

Page 39: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 39

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In Jewish culture days began at sunset so that evening/night came before morning/daytime.

• Sunset marked the end of a day and the beginning of a new one.

• The new day came before it was dark. • The context of Luke 22:8-10 and Mark 14:13,

where Jesus discussed where he would eat the Passover, shows it was still daylight but Nisan 14, a new day, had come.

Page 40: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 40

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• The discussion apparently took place in the period between sunset and when the darkness is complete.

• When it was late (Greek: opsios), that is, later at nightfall, or dark, Jesus and the Twelve came (Mark 14:16-17).

Page 41: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 41

Nisan CE 30

•  In the Rabbinic Calculated Calendar

• Sun MonTue Wed Thu Fri Sat

• 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  

Page 42: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 42

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• While not prominent in the New Testament, the sect of the Essenes made up a significant subdivision of early first-century Judaism.

• The Essenes were an extremist monastic group, holding to a rigid, austere, and bizarre form of religion with Gnostic overtones, awaiting the Messiah to appear to deliver them to a new Israel.

Page 43: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 43

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• The Essenes, unlike the rest, followed a solar calendar, and always observed the Passover on a Tuesday night.

• The Essenes fixed Nisan 14 on their calendar as the third day of the week, sunset Monday night to sunset Tuesday night or simply Tuesday as we reckon time.

Page 44: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 44

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• In the Essene community the Passover Sabbath, the annual Sabbath known as the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, always began at sunset Tuesday night and ended at sunset Wednesday night.

Page 45: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 45

The Jewish Calendars of Jesus' Day

• This means of marking time differs from our Gregorian calendar wherein specific weekdays are not preset to exact dates.

• In the United States, for example, President's day always falls on a Monday, but it can come on different days of the month.

• Nisan 15 was always a Wednesday on the Essene calendar. 

Page 46: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 46

The Essene Nisan

• Sun MonTue Wed Thu Fri Sat

• 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

Page 47: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 47

Nisan CE 30

•  In the Rabbinic Calculated Calendar

• Sun MonTue Wed Thu Fri Sat

• 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  

Page 48: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 48

Harmonizing the Passion Week

• Understanding such calendar distinctions is important when considering which specific weekday Jesus consumed his last Passover meal with his disciples and for ascertaining the explicit weekday of his execution.

• There have been many attempts to harmonize the events surrounding Jesus' crucifixion into a coherent timetable.

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April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 49

Harmonizing the Passion Week

• All have their failings, nevertheless passionate arguments exist for a Wednesday crucifixion, a Thursday crucifixion and a Friday crucifixion as well as some for other days of the week.

• There have been serious obvious flaws in each argument and some biblical scholars have come to shun any attempt at harmonization of the gospel accounts of the Crucifixion week.

Page 50: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 50

Harmonizing the Passion Week

• Raymond Brown's concern is that "the end products are not simply historical and that harmonizing them can produce a distortion" (Brown 1994:23).

• For Brown a distortion certainly does occur when the results do not conform to a Friday Crucifixion--Sunday resurrection scenario.

• Any other result is untenable to many Christian scholars. Barry Smith says the "consensus seems to be forming that it is a lost labor of love to attempt to harmonize these accounts" (Smith 1993:189).

Page 51: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 51

False “Judaizing” of The Christian Passover

• Fastening on the Pharisaic Judaism of the Talmud, many Christian fellowships have adopted Hebrew words and contemporary Jewish customs thinking that this somehow makes their praxis more biblical.

• It doesn't. • More often than not, it results in erroneous and

misleading anachronistic readings of the New Testament, unbiblical legalism, and self-righteousness.

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April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 52

The 1st Christian Passover

• Now then, Jesus of Nazareth, the evening before his execution, instituted a memorial for his followers to observe.

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April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 53

The Early Christian Passover

• First-century Christians kept the Christian Passover, or new Passover, as an annual commemoration of the suffering and death of Jesus the Messiah (Luke 22:19–20).

• Linked to the Jewish Passover, and Nisan 14, not 15, it was an annual event and not more frequent.

Page 54: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 54

The Early Christian Passover

• Today, in Protestantism, we call this event the Lord's Supper based on an early Reformation anachronistic reading of I Corinthians 11:20.

Page 55: Passover 2008: Part 1 How Jesus Christ could Celebrate the Passover, be Crucified on the Passover, and be Buried before the Passover.

April 13, 2008 Passover 2008 55

The Early Christian Passover

• I Corinthians 11:20. In early Christianity the Last Supper was a Passover meal, but by the time of the Reformation, orthodox Greco-Roman Christianity, distancing itself from Jewish customs, had removed the paschal features of the ritual, and it became the Lord's Supper.

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The Early Christian Passover• The Reformers, still caught in the

sociocultural paradigm of sixteenth-century Roman Catholicism, brought into early Protestantism some of the customs and traditions associated with the mass.

• The practice of celebrating Eucharist at anytime, however, was not that of the very early Church (CE 30-70).


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