@Larsinger58:
Jesus died on Thursday, Nisan 20th, 33 CE, after a 3.5-year ministry.
So are you suggesting that Nisan 20 was the day on which the passover was celebrated in the year 33 AD? Are you suggesting that Nisan 20 is when the passover is celebrated in any year?
"This month will be the start of the months for you." (Exodus 12:2)
The first month on the Hebrew calendar is Nisan.
"And it must continue under safeguard by you until the fourteenth day of this month, and the whole congregation of the assembly of Israel must slaughter it between the two evenings." (Exodus 12:6)
The passover victim was to be slaughtered on Nisan 14 "between the two evenings"
"In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month, in the evening you are to eat unfermented cakes down till the twenty-first day of the month in the evening." (Exodus 12:18)
Beginning with the passover, unfermented cakes were to be eaten for eight consecutive days from Nisan 14 to Nisan 21, with the first day being the day when the passover was celebrated followed by the seven-day-long festival of unfermented cakes, with Day 1 of the festival being the second day and Day 7 of the festival being the eighth day.
"'In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month, between the two evenings is the passover to Jehovah. And on the fifteenth day of this month is the festival of unfermented cakes to Jehovah. Seven days you should eat unfermented cakes. On the first day you will have a holy convention occur. No sort of laborious work may you do.'" (Leviticus 23:5-7)
The passover meal was to be celebrated on Nisan 14 "between the two evenings," which means, as made clear at Deuteronomy 16:6, that the passover victim was to be slaughtered "in the evening as soon as the sun sets, at the appointed time of your coming out of Egypt."
"When, now, it had become evening, he was reclining at the table with the twelve disciples." (Matthew 26:20)
As required by the Law of Moses, Jesus and 12 apostles gathered for the passover seder on the evening of Nisan 14.
He must die on a Thursday since that is "three nights" to Saturday night, when he rose.
First, it must be noted that the Jews reckoned a day from sunset-to-sunset or evening-to-evening, so Jesus observed the passover with his apostles after 6:00 pm, during the evening hours on Thursday, when Nisan 14 began, but because Jesus was impaled approximately 21 hours later "about the ninth hour" during the daylight hours on Friday before the next evening at 6:00 pm when Friday, Nisan 14 ended and Friday, Nisan 15 began, Jesus essentially died on Thursday/Friday Nisan 14 within a 24-hour period.
Second, the Jews didn't use a midnight-to-midnight reckoning of the day in use today, for unlike what happens when the clock strikes midnight according to our midnight-to-midnight way of reckoning a day, Thursday did not become Friday, Nisan 15 after the stroke of midnight, but at dawn, or at 6:00 am, Thursday became Friday, Nisan 14, for according to the Jews' evening-to-evening way of reckoning a day, Nisan 14 began the previous evening (Thursday, at 6:00 pm) and ended the next evening (Friday, at 6:00 pm), so that Friday, Nisan 14 ended and Friday, Nisan 15 began at 6:00 pm.
Third, the Bible clearly indicates that Jesus died on Nisan 14, in the afternoon of Nisan 14 at "about the ninth hour."(Matthew 27:46) so if it were true that Jesus died on Thursday, Nisan 20, then that evening, Friday, Nisan 21, would have begun Day 1 of the seven-day festival of unfermented cakes, which is a sabbath. But the Bible indicates it was "on the first day of the week," and "while there was still darkness," that Mary Magdalene "and the other Mary" (Jesus' mother) and Johanna, Chuza's wife, and Susana, and maybe Salome, Mary's sister have gone to Jesus' memorial tomb early that morning "bearing the spices that they had prepared."(John 20:1; Matthew 28:1; Luke 24:1, 10).
Whereas 6:00 pm in the evening on Friday, Nisan 21 would have been a sabbath, for Day 1 of the festival of unfermented cakes is always the day that follows the passover, you are here suggesting that when 6:00 pm of the following evening on Saturday, Nisan 22 arrived, Day 2 of the festival of unfermented cakes, which is not a sabbath, these women waited an additional day after the sabbath had ended until Sunday, Nisan 23 to bring spices to Jesus' tomb early in the morning "while there was still darkness." Why would they have waited an additional day to do this?
The truth is that it was "on the first day of the week," which began at 6:00 pm during the evening hours on Saturday, when Nisan 16 began, but at 6:00 am during the daylight hours on Sunday, Nisan 16, or, in other words, it was at dawn the next morning when we learn that "a great earthquake had taken place" on Saturday/Sunday Nisan 16. (Matthew 28:2)
You speak of there being "three nights," but Jesus was dead for only two nights, for the Bible indicates that he would rise "on the third day," and just as Jesus had foretold, he was "raised up the third day." (Matthew 16:21, 17:23, 20:19, Luke 24:46; 1 Corinthians 15:4) Where ever did you get this idea that there were "three nights"?
So those thinking he died on a Friday and that he died the same day he ate passover are not following scripture, although, John 19:14 is mistranslated. It has Jesus' trial occurring the same day he dies, which is impossible.
You have here asserted John 19:14 to have been mistranslated, but isn't this just your opinion? I mean, what basis do you have for making such an assertion. Do you have any proof that every English Bible translation "mistranslated" John 19:14 to say something that it really ought not to say? Jesus was tried on the same day that he had observed the passover with his apostles, which day -- Nisan 14 -- began in the evening at 6:00 pm on Thursday, Nisan 14, which day continued until it ended the next evening at 6:00 pm when Saturday, Nisan 15 began, which means that Jesus, who had died "about the ninth hour," or around 3:00 pm on Friday, Nisan 14, had been dead for three hours. You go on to write:
You can't have a noon-time trial, followed by a third-hour (9 p.m.) impalement followed by a noon-time darkness. That takes two days. But when we check the Greek syntax at John 19:14 we find it actually indicates this was the day before "preparation" instead of on preparation as falsely translated.
It's true that John 19:14 states --
"Now it was preparation of the passover; it was about the sixth hour."
--- but do you also find a problem with the Greek syntax at Mark 15:42 and at Luke 23:54?
Mark 15:42: "Now as it was already late in the afternoon, and since it was Preparation, that is, the day before the sabbath,"
Luke 23:54: "Now it was the day of Preparation, and the evening light of the sabbath was approaching."
According to Mark 15:42, "Preparation" was "the day before the sabbath," and remember all of these things were occurring on "the day before the sabbath," that is to say, on the day before the festival of unfermented cakes, the first day of which is a sabbath. Notice that Luke 23:54 indicates that "the evening light of the sabbath was approaching," meaning that the day referred to at John 19:14 as "preparation of the passover" -- Nisan 14 -- was about to come to an end and the festival of unfermented cakes -- "the sabbath" that began on Nisan 15 -- was about to begin.
However, Luke 23:50-56, states that these women followed Jesus' body until it had been laid in the tomb provided for Jesus' burial by Joseph of Arimathea, after which they planned to prepare spices and perfumed oils, "but of course, they rested on the sabbath according to the commandment," which explains why the waited after the sabbath had ended until Saturday/Sunday, Nisan 16 at 6:00 am at dawn the next morning "while there was still darkness" outside to bring those spices and perfumed oils they had prepared to Jesus' tomb. (John 20:1)
@tenyearsafter:
Interesting timeline...just curious...where did you get the death of Herod as being in 1 AD? Everything I have read has his death being somewhere between 4 and 2 BC.
While Larsinger58 will answer your question based on a different set of facts, I do not believe it possible that Herod was alive in 1 AD, but that he had died two years earlier. Here's why:
I've already pointed out that Jesus was born in 2 BC. Herod conspired to use "the Magi" in order to discover Jesus' whereabouts as Herod purposed to order the murder of the future king of Israel (Matthew 2:8), but upon being thwarted by God's angel that had ordered Joseph to flee to Egypt with his wife and son, and not knowing Jesus' whereabouts, Herod went on to order the murders of all male children "from two years old and under" (Matthew 2:16), proving that Jesus was not a newborn infant at the time, for when those astrologers found Jesus -- the Christmas story claims there were three of them, but the Bible doesn't indicate how many of these men had come -- he was not living in a barn, nor was he lying in a manger, but Jesus is described as being the "young child" they saw when they "went into the house." (Matthew 2:11) He was likely at least one year old and approaching two years old when this event occurred.
Because Herod had sought to have Jesus killed by ordering the deaths of all children in Bethlehem from two years old and under, Joseph and Mary had to flee from Bethlehem to Egypt until Herod's death (Matthew 2:13-15), so I'm thinking it logical that his order to kill these two-year-old male children would likely have gone out while Herod was still alive. What do you think?
In Jewish Antiquities, XVII, 190, 191 [viii, 1], Josephus writes that Herod's death occurred some 34 years after his capture of Jerusalem, and if these years are reckoned according to the regnal year, then Herod's death would have been in the year 1 BC. Keep in mind that Jesus stepfather, Joseph, would not have returned from Egypt to where he fled along with his wife and his young son (Jesus) until after Herod’s death (Matthew 2:19, 20), whose death had indeed occurred in 1 BC. Joseph thereupon went on to move his family from Egypt back to Israel, to a city called Nazareth in Galilee.
@djeggnog