Because Wednesday allows for people who see the sign of Jonah as three days and three nights ‘in the tomb’..
Problem with that is what happens when Passover falls on a ‘Monday’ like it did last year..
Kind of messes up three days and three nights or raised the third day.
There is a calendar in scripture. And a template is given to Ezekiel 46
The 14th day of every month is the sixth work day of the week. (Passover in the 1st month)
The 15th day of the months would be the weekly Sabbath (feast of unleavened bread - an annual but also a weekly sabbath, hence a ‘high’ Sabbath )
The 16th day of the months would be the 1st work day of the week after the Sabbath( feast of First Fruits)
Passover ‘floats’ in the world’s calendar because it isn’t dependent on the sun only.
The Messiah laid His life down on the 14thday. It wasn’t ‘evening’ but we know there was a supernatural darkness (or some sort of astronomical event) to make it meet the prophecy.
He laid in the tomb, resting even in death, on the High Sabbath (15th day)
He was raised on the 16th day, the first day of the week..
That pattern is not Friday, Saturday Sunday every year.
That pattern fits Torah and the prophet Ezekiel’s template He was given.. and the new testament doesn’t conflict with that..
It does help to ignore religion when they start ‘days’ in the evening or at midnight when Genesis says Day began with ‘Light’..
The 14th, 15th, and 16th template works on any day the 14th may start with.
Trying to tell the bible story with roman days is a recipe for confusion.
He may had been crucified on a ‘Wednesday’ but if we can trust the template in scripture, it would mean ‘Friday’ was resurrection day..
And it would have made ‘Thursday’ the sabbath.
That messes up Judaism and Christendom’s stories and worship practices.. and exposes Rome’s calendars of vessels for changing times(Daniel 7:25)
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More of your fantasies.
The days of the Biblical month have no relationship to the days of the week. They constantly change.
The pattern that occurred when Yeshua was crucified is rare for a number of reasons that relate to the agricultural nature of the biblical new year.
I can tell that you’re not a math major.
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I had wondered about the days of the week being “floatable”...