Posted on 04/15/2014 3:53:45 PM PDT by Salvation
As the Church prepares to enter into Holy Week, we do well to consider the final week of Jesus’ life, from Friday to Friday. In a later post, we will look at the last twenty-four hours (from the Last Supper to the death of Jesus on the Cross) in greater detail.
It will be helpful to review the Gospel accounts given by Sts. Mark and John, the two who offer the most explicit chronology of Holy Week. See Mark 11:1 – 15:37 and also John 11:54 – 19:30.
The Friday before the Passion
Jesus was in the city of Ephraim, in hiding since the Jewish authorities desired to kill him. On this day (before evening), Jesus and his disciples went up to Jerusalem, before the pasch to purify themselves (John 11:55).
They spent the night in Bethany, which is very close to Jerusalem.
Saturday before the Passion
Jesus therefore, six days before the pasch, came to Bethania, where Lazarus had been dead, whom Jesus raised to life. And they made him a supper there: and Martha served: but Lazarus was one of them that were at table with him. Mary therefore took a pound of ointment of right spikenard, of great price, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped his feet with her hair; and the house was filled with the odour of the ointment. (John 12:1-3)
The pasch (i.e. Passover) was on a Thursday that year (beginning Thursday eve with the Passover Meal), and so six days before, that is, on Friday, Jesus came to Bethany.
The next day, which is to say, Saturday, Jesus came to the feast there and was anointed by Mary of Bethany (that is, Mary Magdalene [here]). In this first anointing, Mary pours the oil over the Savior’s feet.
This meal and anointing occurred, most probably, at the house of Lazarus known as the Lazarium.
Our Savior spent the night in Bethany.
Palm Sunday
And on the next day, Sunday (John 12:12), Jesus rode triumphantly into Jerusalem upon an ass and upon a colt, the foal of an ass. This was the first Palm Sunday, when the children of the Hebrews bearing olive branches went forth to meet the Lord, crying out and saying, “Hosanna in the highest!”
Our Lord returned to Bethany for the night.
Monday of Holy Week
On the way into Jerusalem, Jesus sees a fig tree which has born no fruit – which tree he curses in the presence of his disciples.
Upon entering the city, our Lord goes up and cleanses the Temple for the second time (he had cleansed it once already, two years ago – cf. John 2:13ff [see our article, here]).
That eve, Jesus returned to Bethany (cf. Mark 11:19).
Tuesday of Holy Week
On the way to Jerusalem, Jesus’ disciples notice that the fig tree which he had cursed the morning before has now withered. They are amazed.
Entering the Temple area, Jesus preaches extensively and answers the questions of the Pharisees and Sadducees.
It is on this day that our Lord tells the parable of the vineyard workers who kill the owner’s son who is the heir to the vineyard. Also, on this occasion, the Lord answers the questions regarding the tribute to Caesar, the resurrection of the body, the greatest commandment, and whether the Christ will be the son of David.
Further, while in the Temple, our Lord sees a widow offer two small coins and declares her gift to be greater than those of the others.
Finally, Jesus foretells the destruction of the Temple and speaks of the final judgment.
He returns that night to Bethany.
Spy Wednesday
Now the feast of pasch and of the Azymes [i.e. Unleavened Bread] was after two days [i.e. in two days' time] ... and when [Jesus] was in Bethania, in the house of Simon the leper, and was at meal, there came a woman having an alabaster box of ointment of precious spikenard: and breaking the alabaster box, she poured it out upon his head. (Mark 14:1,3)
Spending the day in retirement, our Lord attends a feast at the house of a certain Pharisee, Simon the Leper. During this meal, Mary of Bethany (i.e. the Magdalene [here]) again anoints our Lord, but this time upon his head.
Update: I am aware of the fact that there is a good deal of diversity among the Church Fathers on whether Mary anointed Jesus on Spy Wednesday. I side partially with Origen, Chrysostom, and Theophylus (against Augustine and Gregory) in affirming that there were two anointings, one on Saturday and another on Wednesday; but then agree with Augustine and Gregory (against Origen and Chrysostom) insofar as I claim that there was one and the same woman, Mary of Bethany who is the Magdalene. St. Thomas Aquinas did not come down on one side or the other of the question, so there is clearly room for doubt.
Update II: As I consider this further, I am beginning to lean more toward the side of Sts. Augustine and Gregory. Perhaps there was only one anointing (which would then be on Saturday) and Sts. Matthew and Mark mention it here as a way of connecting the betrayal of Judas more clearly with the incident.
Judas is now set against our Savior, and so goes to the priests to betray Jesus. And Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve, went to the chief priests, to betray him to them. (Mark 14:10)
Because it was this evening that Judas conspired against Jesus, the day is called “Spy Wednesday”.
Holy Thursday
Now on the first day of the unleavened bread, when they sacrificed the pasch, the disciples say to him: Whither wilt thou that we go, and prepare for thee to eat the pasch? (Mark 14:12)
Because the Passover meal would be consumed Thursday evening, Jesus sent his disciples to make the preparations for the pasch. They went from Bethany to Jerusalem and prepared the upper room.
On this evening, Jesus offered the Last Supper in which he instituted both the Eucharist and the Priesthood. Upon finishing the meal, our Lord and his apostles (excepting Judas, who left early) sang a hymn and then went forth to the Mount of Olives.
On this night, our Lord suffered the agony in the garden and was arrested. Jesus spends the night locked in the dungeon of the house of Caiaphas, after undergoing a secret night-trial by the Sanhedrin.
Good Friday
It was on Friday that our Lord suffered and died. Condemned to death at 10am, nailed to the Cross at noon, and dying at 3pm.
Christ was buried before 5pm and, the stone being rolled across the entrance, all departed.
Seek, and you will find: FR: HTML Sandbox 2014
I say give it up and accept that you’ve been lied to and start looking for the real truth. Let that truth be the foundation of rock you build your faith upon going forward.
we can never give up searching for the truth. Christians should be ready always to give answers for our faith.
ok, let’s do some math:
14th of Aviv - baby is born - day one
15th of Aviv - day two
16th of Aviv - the third day
17th of Aviv - day 4
18th of Aviv - day 5
19th of Aviv - day 6
20th of Aviv - day 7
21st of Aviv - the eighth day = circumcision day
checkmate folks - on what day is the 17th day of aviv if Jesus died on the 14th of Aviv?
the fourth day!
someone’s been lied to, but it isn’t the Christian Church.
thanks for that, but it might as well be greek or hebrew, i would have a better chance of understanding it.
As I have told you before, you would be better off to answer this question:
If a child is born in the gloaming, which day does his birth belong to?
If a child is born in the gloaming, which day does his birth belong to?
_______
it is irrelevant to the question at hand since Jesus did not die in the gloaming and he was not buried in the gloaming.
please feel free to provide an answer to your own question and what relevance you feel it has to the issue being discussed.
If a child is born in the gloaming, which day does his birth belong to?
i just googled it and found the gloaming is after sunset. well, sunset starts the new jewish day, so if the child is born in the gloaming after sunset, the birth is on that new day.
No. Dusk is not after sunset. look sommore.
Gloaming
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gloaming or ‘The Gloaming may refer to:
Gloaming, or twilight, the time after sunset and before dark, celebrated in Harry Lauder’s Roamin’ In The Gloamin’
______________
do you guys get anything right?
You're getting your days and nights mixed up. It's the nights you're short on with your Friday/Sunday tradition.
I don't care what wikipedia calls it - Look in the Torah.
that’s the whole point, there aren’t “days” and “nights”.
in the Scriptures, any part of a day or night is counted as a whole day.
a baby born one minute before sunset and dies one minute after sunset, lived for two minutes, but according to the SCRIPTURES, was alive two days.
your scenario conveniently ignores the “day” of the 14th of aviv, which is required or else you would have 4 days and 3 nights in the heart of the earth.
misinterpreting Matthew 12:40 causes all kinds of problems, doesn’t it?
lol, i am not chasing any rabbit holes.
do you have a point to this?
Yes it does! But that doesn't seem to deter you...
Matt. 12:40 For as Jonas was three days and three nights in the whale's belly; so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.
You swallow the elephant of an entire missing night but choke on the proverbial gnat of a few minutes either side of dusk - not to mention it's very likely the stone was rolled into place, for the last time, exactly at dusk!
And if that were the case, which it very well could have been, then your entire basis of an extra day (4 days vs. 3 days) also vanishes - though we're only talking minutes regardless if that was the case or not.
You never answered the question:
So will you be actually going to any protestant services on this Easter Week or will you just be home churching yourself?
AMDG
None of your business.
Now, answer mine:
Are you still demanding to be banned from Free Republic? Is anyone forcing you now to continue to post?
>> “how could the whole Apostolic Church believe Jesus rose on the first day of the week, if He rose on the sabbath day?” <
First, there is no “Apostolic” church.
The RCC is chock full of biblically illiterate unbelievers that believe all the satanic unscriptural crud that the RCC purveys.
They’ll believe almost anything, they never bother to think anything out.
The Bible shows that there was a High day, and a regular day, and then the Sabbath. The astronomical calendar proves that there were no years at that time when the Passover could have coincided with a regular Sabbath, so your house of card theology has fallen to the trash bin.
>> “Is anyone forcing you now to continue to post?” <<
Is Jim doing that again?
That is so cruel, I wish he wouldn’t do it.
.
Interesting how unchurched protestants are so quick to give their “helpful suggestions” to faithful church going Catholics.
I’m wondering exactly where in Scripture it tells you to not go to Church, maybe you ‘unchurched’ types could explain it....
For the Greater Glory of God on Good Friday
The Bible shows that there was a High day, and a regular day, and then the Sabbath
_________
chapter and verse for the above statement please.
The astronomical calendar proves that there were no years at that time when the Passover could have coincided with a regular Sabbath
__________
better go back and check your calendar for 33ad. the high sabbath mentioned in John fell on the 7th day sabbath.
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