TRES DÍAS Y TRES NOCHES
¿CRISTO MURIÓ UN VIERNES Y LEVANTÓ UN DOMINGO?
La mayor parte de la cristiandad creen tradicionalmente s que Jesús fue crucificado el viernes por la tarde , “colocados en la tumba antes del anochecer Frida y noche, descansó en la tumba el día de reposo (sábado) y fue resucitado el domingo por la mañana antes del amanecer. Sorprendentemente, incita er que la tradición es falsa, o que no tiene Salvador!
Tres días y tres noches
Winston Churchill dijo una vez: “La gente a menudo tropieza con la Verdad, pero la mayoría se levanta y se apresura como si nada hubiera pasado”. ¡Cuan cierto!
Las personas son criaturas de hábito. Una vez establecido en una creencia o hábito, una vez que nuestro sistema de creencias está cómodamente en su lugar, no queremos cambiar. De hecho, por naturaleza, tendemos a luchar y argumentar para defender nuestras creencias anteriores, incluso cuando nos enfrentamos a hechos contrarios.
¿Alguna vez te has preguntado por qué crees las cosas que crees y haces las cosas que haces? Quizás nunca te has parado a hacerte esa pregunta. Debido al “instinto de las ovejas” en el hombre, la tendencia a aceptar lo que todos a su alrededor creen, la mayoría de las personas creen muchas cosas que no son ciertas. Por ejemplo, la mayoría de los cristianos profesos se sorprenden cuando alguien señala que no hay un mandato bíblico para celebrar la resurrección de Jesucristo, sino que, por el contrario, se nos ordena solemnemente conmemorar su muerte ( 1 Corintios 11: 23-26 ). Además, debido a la tradición confusa, la mayoría está bíblicamente equivocada acerca de cuándo Jesús realmente murió y cuándo resucitó.
El desafío de dios
La Palabra inspirada de Dios, la Biblia, nos invita: “Vengan ahora, y pensemos juntos, dice Jehová” ( Isaías 1:18 ). “Probemos todas las cosas” con la Biblia, no con las tradiciones contradictorias, sin fundamento o paganas de los hombres ( 1 Tesalonicenses 5:21 ). Es hora de dejar de lado los grilletes de la tradición y mirar su propia Biblia. Cristo dijo: “Y conocerán la verdad, y la verdad los hará libres” ( Juan 8:32 ). ¿Gratis? ¿Libre de qué? Libre de errores, libre de falsas doctrinas y libre de las esposas de la tradición hecha por el hombre. La verdad es lo que es , no lo que quisiéramos que fuera.
Una conspiración satánica
Your Bible says Satan the devil is deceiving the whole world (Revelation 12:9). This includes the churches of this world. Unfortunately, most people today are biblical illiterates. The Bible, it seems, is the book everyone wants to read but few do—the book nearly everyone has an opinion about based upon what others have said about it. It is high time to blow the dust off your Bible and read it for yourself! Unsuspecting, trusting, innocent people all over the world have been deceived into thinking that pagan customs, superstitions, and counterfeit doctrines come right from their Bibles, and yet nothing could be further from the truth. Your Bible reveals that Satan himself appears as an angel of light (2 Corinthians 11:14), and “Therefore it is no great thing if his ministers [yes, Satan has ministers!] also be transformed as the ministers of righteousness” (verse 15). Christ warned repeatedly, “Take heed that no man deceive you. For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many.” That is, many would come saying truthfully that Jesus is the Chris, yet, by wresting scriptures, adding false doctrines and customs, making false prophecies, and even performing great signs and wonders “in His name,” would deceive many (Matthew 24:4-5,11,24).
Satan has provoked scholars, teachers, and “free thinkers” to ridicule and deny the only sign Christ gave that He was indeed the Messiah. Jeremiah told of the same thing: “Then the LORD said unto me, The prophets prophesy lies in my name: I sent them not, neither have I commanded them, neither spake unto them: they prophesy unto you a false vision and divination, and a thing of nought, and the deceit of their heart” (Jeremiah 14:14). “I have not sent these prophets, yet they ran: I have not spoken to them, yet they prophesied” (Jeremiah 23:2 1).
Dejando de lado esas falsas profecías, señales y maravillas, Cristo dijo que la única señal que daría de que realmente era el Mesías era que estaría tres días y tres noches en el corazón de la tierra ( Mateo 12: 39-40 ) . Léelo en tu propia Biblia. Qué usted cree que este signo? Sin embargo, los teólogos y los posibles eruditos afirman que Cristo estuvo en la tumba solo un día completo y dos noches, solo la mitad del tiempo que dijo que estaría. Lo que la mayoría de la cristiandad no se da cuenta es que extraer las Escrituras para que encajen en este escenario en realidad anula la única señal que Jesús dio como prueba que El era el Mesías. ¡Descartar esta señal más importante que dio Cristo es en realidad rechazar lo que las Escrituras dicen claramente! En lugar de celebrar Su resurrección de entre los muertos, se nos ordena conmemorar Su muerte a través de la Pascua (ver Lucas 22: 19-20 ; 1 Corintios 11: 23-26 , etc.). ¡El cumplimiento de esta señal fue un testimonio no solo para esa generación, sino también para todas las generaciones futuras de que Él era en verdad el Mesías! Con esto en mente, ¿puedes pensar en alguna razón por la cual Satanás no ¿Quiere confundir y negar la única señal que dio Cristo de que Él era el Mesías? ¡Ciertamente no! Satanás es anticristo, el maestro engañador, luchador de las Escrituras y enemigo de la humanidad. Está en el proceso de engañar al mundo entero ( Apocalipsis 12: 9 ). No podemos confiar en la palabra de los hombres engañados. Solo hay un registro confiable e histórico sobre esto, la Biblia misma, y cualquier tradición que entre en conflicto con la Palabra de Dios debe ser descartada sumariamente.
Cristo, nuestra pascua
En 1 Corintios 5: 7 nos dice: “Porque aun Cristo nuestra Pascua es sacrificada por nosotros”. Jesús vino a cumplir las profecías del Cordero de la Pascua. Así como la sangre aplicada a los postes eximió al primogénito de la muerte en la noche de Pascua original, la sangre de Jesucristo aplicada a nuestros pecados nos exime de la pena de muerte ( Éxodo 12: 7 ).
Poco antes de la crucifixión de Jesús, los líderes religiosos que tramaban asesinatos, amenazados por su popularidad y que buscaban desacreditarlos, exigieron que les mostrara algún tipo de “señal”, preferiblemente una señal sobrenatural, para demostrar su mesianismo.
El hecho de que ya habían presenciado o escuchado personalmente innumerables milagros y curaciones, o signos, no significaba nada. Los escribas y fariseos falsos, con la esperanza de atrapar a Jesús, burlonamente y con falsa humildad, preguntaron: “Maestro, veríamos una señal de ti” ( Mateo 12: 3 8 ).
Bien escribió el apóstol Pablo: “Porque los judíos requieren una señal, y los griegos buscan la sabiduría” ( 1 Corintios 1:22 ).
Of course, Jesus, through His Father, could have performed any number of signs, miracles, or wonders. Had He done so, they would have undoubtedly been dismissed as “magician’s tricks.” Or perhaps they could have called upon one of their own to duplicate some wonders as did Jannes and Jambres who withstood Moses in Pharaoh’s court (Exodus 7:11).
Knowing their deceitful hearts and intents, Jesus gave the religious leaders, instead, a sign that actually depended upon their interplay—a sign that could not be manifested until they had first performed their devious part in putting Him to death!
Jesus Gives a Sign!
Jesus said, “An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign; and there shall no sign be given to it, but the sign of the prophet Jonah. For AS Jonah was three days and three nights in the whale’s belly, SO [in like manner] shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth” (Matthew 12:39-40).
Paraphrasing, Christ was saying, in effect, “The only sign that will absolutely prove the truth of My message and Messiahship is one that I will have no control over. When you put Me to death, I will be in the grave exactly three days and three nights. I will not be able to resurrect Myself. If God the Father restores Me to life after exactly three days and three nights, it will be proved beyond doubt that I am the Messiah. This is the only sign I will give you.”
Part of Friday, all day Saturday, and part of Sunday could conceivably give us three DAYS, using the inclusive reasoning that any part of a day can be counted as a “day,” BUT—WHERE DO WE GET THREE NIGHTS? This inclusive reasoning would give us ONLY TWO nights: Friday night and Saturday night! An inquiring mind searching for the truth must admit there is a problem with the generally held belief about the times of the crucifixion and resurrection.
What Was the Sign?
Notice carefully, the sign Jesus gave was not just the fact of His death or even of His resurrection—no, not at all—but the LENGTH OF TIME would be in the heart of the earth—the grave—before being resurrected. That was the sign! It was, in effect, a double sign. Most of orthodox Christianity acknowledges the fact that Jesus was crucified and rose again from the dead, but waffle at the second part of His sign—that of being exactly 72 hours in the grave. Yet the Good Friday—Easter Sunday tradition emphatically denies this all-important detail.
As an aside, it is interesting to note that, although the Old Testament accurately predicted the Messiah’s rejection, abuse, death, and resurrection, nowhere does it say anything about the length of TIME He would spend in the grave. This was Christ’s own prediction, based upon one of the most ridiculed and least believed stories in the Bible—that of the prophet Jonah. Did Jesus fulfill His very own prediction? Indeed He did!
So significant was this promised sign that it was repeated in various ways on at least 18 separate occasions! The Bible repeats things for emphasis. Why would this be so carefully documented if it were not significant? Let’s “bookend” the scriptures that describe the length of time Christ was in the tomb so we can see them all together.
“Three Days and Three Nights”
Matthew 12:40: … For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish; so shall the Son of man be three days AND three nights in the heart of the earth. (Emphasis added throughout.)
Matthew 16:21: From that time forth began Jesus to show unto his disciples, how the he must go to Jerusalem, and suffer many things of the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised again the third day.
Matthew 17:23: And they shall kill him, and the third day he shall be raised again.
Matthew 20:19: And shall deliver him to the Gentiles to mock, and to scourge, and to crucify him: and the third day he shall rise again.
Matthew 26:61: And said, This fellow said, I am able to destroy the temple of God, and to build it IN three days.
Matthew 27:63: Saying, Sir, we remember that this deceiver said, while he was yet alive, AFTER three days I will rise again.
Mark 8:31: And he began to teach them, that the Son of man must suffer many things, and be rejected of the elders, and of the chief priests, and scribes, and killed and AFTER three days rise again.
Marcos 9:31 : porque enseñó a sus discípulos, y les dijo: El Hijo del hombre es entregado en manos de los hombres, y lo matarán; y después de que lo maten, resucitará el tercer día .
Marcos 10:34 : Y se burlarán de él, y lo azotarán, y lo escupirán, y lo matarán; y al tercer día resucitará.
Marcos 14:58 : Le oímos decir: Destruiré este templo hecho con manos, y DENTRO de tres días construiré otro hecho sin manos.
Marcos 15:29 : Y los que pasaban lo criticaron, meneando la cabeza y diciendo: Ah, tú que destruyes el templo y lo edificas en tres días …
Lucas 13:32 : Y él les dijo: Id, y decidle a ese zorro: He aquí, expulso demonios, y haré curas hoy y mañana, y al tercer día seré perfeccionado.
Lucas 18:33 : Y lo azotarán, y lo matarán; y al tercer día resucitará.
Lucas 24: 7 : Diciendo : El Hijo del hombre debe ser entregado en manos de hombres pecadores, y ser crucificado, y al tercer día resucitar.
Lucas 24:21 : Pero confiamos en que había sido él quien debería haber redimido a Israel: y además de todo esto, hoy es el tercer día desde que se hicieron estas cosas.
Lucas 24:46 : Y les dijo: Así está escrito, y así fue apropiado que Cristo sufriera y resucitara de los muertos al tercer día .
Juan 2:19 : Jesús respondió y les dijo: Destruyan este templo [Su cuerpo], y en tres días lo levantaré.
Hechos 10:40 : Dios lo levantó el tercer día , y lo mostró abiertamente.
1 Corintios 15: 4 : Y que fue enterrado, y resucitó al tercer día según las Escrituras …
There you have it! Let’s be honest! There are no contradictions here. The Scripture cannot be broken (John 10:35). When we compile and compare all scriptures, we can reach only one logical conclusion: if Jesus Christ was to be raised from the dead IN three days, and ON the third day, and AFTER three days, he had to have been in the tomb EXACTLY three days and EXACTLY three nights—72 full hours to the second—not one minute more, not one minute less! If He was resurrected either earlier or later, we have no Savior, because the only sign He gave repeatedly by His own mouth would have failed!
The Scriptures themselves substantiate that Christ was in the grave the full length of time He expected to be. An angel testified before dawn—as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week (Matthew 28:1), “He is not here: for he is [already] risen, as He said. Come, see the place where the Lord lay” (verse 6). The apostle Paul confirmed, “For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures; and that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures” (I Corinthians 15:3-4). The evidence is conclusive, that while Jesus Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, on the third day He rose again for our justification according to the Scriptures (Romans 4:25). Christ’s crucifixion, death, and burial were according to the Scriptures—not contrary to them.
The Key to Understanding: How Long is a Biblical Day?
The key to understanding the chronology of the crucifixion week hinges upon the word “day.” Many are unaware of how the Bible counts a day. Some even argue that it makes no difference if Jesus was mistaken, but by the words of Jesus Himself, this claim must be totally rejected. Everything Jesus said matters. The issues here are much deeper than most realize. It was absolutely essential that every prophecy of the Messiah should be fulfilled in His life and death. Had Christ not fulfilled every single type, shadow, and prophecy pointing forward to His atoning death and resurrection, how could He be the true Messiah?
Let us see in your own Bible how God counts a day. Notice in Genesis 1:5: “…and the evening and the morning were the first day. And Genesis 1:8, “…and the evening and the morning were the second day.” And Genesis 1:13, “…and the evening and the morning were the third day.” See also verses 19,23, and 31. In every case, the order is: first the evening, and then the morning. Even today, in the twenty-first century, the Jewish people today count sunset as the beginning and the end of the day. The Hebrew day begins and ends at sunset, not in the middle of the night by a man-made watch or clock.
Could anything be any clearer? God here identifies a “day” as the daylight portion of a 24-hour period, and a “night” as the dark portion of the same 24-hour period.
Christ confirmed: “Are there not twelve hours in the day” (John 11:9)? Yes, and therefore twelve hours in the night—a total of 24 hours. At one point, Jesus even spoke of the three four-hour watches of the night, extending from sunset to sunrise, making a total of twelve hours (Luke 12:36-38). There is no question that Jesus understood a full twelve hours of daylight and a full twelve hours of night to be one to be one full calendar day. The Hebrews have used this reckoning, this scriptural method of keeping time, for centuries.
Therefore, there is no mistake—allowing the Bible to interpret itself—the Bible shows that God counts a “day” as an evening and a morning, not midnight-to-midnight as man commonly counts time today.
Was it Only a Greek Idiom?
Many commentators pretentiously claim that Jesus was dead wrong. To uphold their “Good Friday—Easter Sunday” tradition, religious authorities must wrest the Scriptures to make them seem to say something they do not say. They claim that since the New Testament was written in Greek, the three days and three nights was merely a “Greek idiom” —that the three days and three nights can count any periods of a day as a full day. Many seize upon this phrase, “a Greek idiom,” thinking, “Ah-ha!” —they have found a satisfactory explanation, and dismiss it without further thought—without even knowing what an idiom is! The dictionary says an idiom is an expression whose meaning cannot be inferred by the meaning of the words that make it up. Some English idiomatic expressions are, “he kicked the bucket,” “she hung her head,” “it’s as easy as pie,” or, “he’s true blue.” Thus, they claim, Jesus’ prophecy failed, and He was in the heart of the earth only half as long as He thought He would be.
One popular commentator, Hank Hanegraaff, writes, “Let’s look at the record. Jesus died on a Friday afternoon and rose from the dead early Sunday morning.” Note that he begins his reasoning from the assumption that the Friday—Sunday tradition is true, and then “squeezes” the time factor to fit his theory. He goes on to say, “The inescapable conclusion is that Jesus was literally dead for only two nights and parts of three days—no more than about 40 hours…. Now, the real problem is that most of us are unfamiliar with ancient, and especially Jewish, idiomatic ways of speaking.”
This “ancient idiom” rationalization may satisfy those who wish to continue believing in their man-made hand-me-down traditions—those who may “stumble over the truth’’ but wish to hurry on as though nothing had happened—but it does not explain the fact that Christ said, “For AS Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish; so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth” (Matthew 12:40). Jesus Christ would not have spoken in Greek to His disciples, who were Galilean hill country folk—who spoke Aramaic, a dialect of the Hebrew language that had developed among Jewish captives during the Babylonian captivity. Further, the book of Jonah upon which Jesus relied, was written in Hebrew, not Greek, thus invalidating the “Greek idiom” hypothesis completely! Thus, Christ’s prophecy served a double purpose: proving that He was, indeed, the Messiah, as well as validating the historical truth that the prophet Jonah was actually swallowed by a great fish (Jonah 1:17). Is it any wonder, then, that critics and skeptics attack the validity of Jonah and the great fish?
Bullinger’s Companion Bible, Appendix 144, page 170, clarifies,”… when the number of ‘nights’ is stated as well as the number of ‘days,’ then the expression ceases to be an idiom, and becomes a literal statement of fact. … Hence when it says the ‘Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights’ (Jonah 1:17) it means exactly what it says, and that can be the only meaning of the expression in Matt. 12:40; 16:4.”
Was Christ Mistaken, a Liar, or a Truth Teller?
Was Christ telling the truth when He said He would be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth? Was this important? Was He kidding? Was He lying? Was He simply “mixed up” and mistaken? Or, being the Son of God incarnate, did He know precisely how long He would be in the grave? According to Jewish law, a person was not counted as “officially dead” until after three days! Therefore it was absolutely crucial that Christ should remain in the “heart of the earth” for exactly three days and three nights, or He would not have been considered ‘legally” dead. If someone who was pronounced “dead” revived prior to three full days, he or she was not legally considered to have been dead. Christ said in Revelation 1:18, “I am he that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive for evermore, Amen; and have the keys of hell and of death” —meaning He had supreme power over hades, the grave, and death. If Christ was wrong about such an important and oft-emphasized matter, how can we believe anything He said? His very character, reliability, integrity, and Messiahship was hanging in the balance! He must not be wrong about this sign!
Ironically, traditional Christianity denies this, taking away the only sign that Christ gave to validate His Messiahship! They would rather cling to their Good Friday—Easter Sunday legends. The vast majority of mainstream Christianity teaches people from childhood on up that Christ was crucified on a Friday afternoon and was resurrected on Easter Sunday morning. By adulthood, the teaching is so ensconced in people’s minds that it is taken for granted and never even questioned. Many will even become angry if this tradition is questioned. “Don’t try to figure it out,” one pastor told an inquiring member. “It’s a mystery. Just accept it on faith.” What unsound advice! This is just the opposite of what God’s Word says: “Prove all things; hold fast that which is good” (1 Thessalonians 5:21).
Further, traditional Christianity has based two of its most cherished holidays on its false reckoning of the events that occurred during that pivotal week. Sunday observance and Easter sunrise services are founded on the false assumption that our Savior was crucified on Friday and rose from the dead at dawn on the following Sunday. But, we repeat for emphasis, either this tradition is false, or you have no Savior! So says your own Bible!
The Crucifixion Preceded a Sabbath—But Which Sabbath?
Unbeknownst to most people, there was more than one Sabbath the week of Christ’s crucifixion. (See our free booklet, Sunday Saturday—What Difference Does It Make?)
The weekly Sabbath is always the seventh day of the week, the day we call Saturday. Those unfamiliar with the Hebrew calendar and God’s holy days carelessly assume there can be only one Sabbath day per week. The Scriptures themselves reveal there are two kinds of Sabbaths: the weekly Sabbath and the annual—sometimes called “high” Sabbaths. These annual or high Sabbaths can occur on any day of the week (except Pentecost, which always falls on a Sunday). When a holy day falls on a weekly Sabbath, the special observance of the annual holy day takes precedence. Thus there can be two Sabbaths during some weeks. Such was the case in the week Jesus was crucified. And just as there can be two Sabbaths in a single week, there can also be two preparation days. It is here that many, not knowing the Scriptures, have: become confused.
God instituted seven annual Sabbaths, or “high days,” to picture His plan of salvation. All seven are described in chapter 23 of Leviticus.
Without the revealed understanding of God’s holy days, the world has little, if any, idea what God is working out on this planet. After careful study and observance of God’s holy days, we find that within the annual holy day cycle, God unveils His awesome plan of salvation for all mankind!
Here is a summary of these annual festivals and their profound meaning for Christians:
The Passover pictures Christ’s sacrifice, when He took our sins upon Himself and paid the death penalty for us, in our stead. The Days of Unleavened Bread remind us of a Christian’s lifelong task of putting sin out of his life (sin is the transgression of God’s laws as defined in 1 John 3:4). Leaven is used as a type of sin which puffs up, while eating the unleavened bread is a type of putting Christ in us. Pentecost memorializes the “birthday” of the New Testament church upon receiving the Holy Spirit, and points forward to the reaping of the firstfruits of God’s Family.
The Feast of Trumpets denotes the Second Coming of Jesus Christ to the earth and the resurrection of the saints to immortality. The Day of Atonement pictures mankind’s repentance and the binding of Satan during the coming 1000-year reign of Christ on earth, which is typified by the Feast of Tabernacles. Finally, the Last Great Day represents the Great White Throne Judgment period when “the rest of the dead” (Revelation 20:5)—those not in the first resurrection, including all those who have never even heard the name of Jesus Christ, the only name under heaven whereby we must be saved (Acts 4:12)—will have their first and only opportunity for salvation. (Be sure to send for our folleto gratuito , God b Seasonal Plan, para una comprensión mucho más profunda de los días santos de Dios, que explica estos días con gran detalle).
¿Qué es un día de preparación?
Dios le dio instrucciones a Israel sobre cómo prepararse para el sábado antes de que llegaran al Monte Sinaí ( Éxodo 16:23 ). Un día de preparación es el día anterior a un sábado, ya sea semanal o anual, en el que debemos prepararnos o prepararnos para el próximo sábado. Los cuatro escritores del Evangelio confirman que Jesús fue juzgado, condenado, crucificado y enterrado en un día de preparación. Como es de conocimiento común que los judíos observan su sábado semanal el sábado, muchos, al leer este versículo, asumen descuidadamente que el día de preparación mencionado aquí fue un viernes, el día anterior al sábado semanal.
Jesús dijo a sus discípulos: “Ustedes saben que después de dos días es la fiesta de la Pascua, y el Hijo del hombre es traicionado para ser crucificado” ( Mateo 26: 2 ). El apóstol Pablo luego verifica este hecho en 1 Corintios 5: 7 , “Porque en verdad Cristo, nuestra Pascua, fue sacrificado por nosotros”. Los historiadores han entendido por mucho tiempo que, mucho antes de la época de Cristo, los judíos habían comenzado a llamar a todo el período de la Pascua y la siguiente Fiesta de los Panes sin Levadura de siete días ( Levítico 23: 6-8 ) por el solo nombre de “Pascua”. Este “atajo” lingüístico ha aumentado la confusión para los no judíos, especialmente cuando leen el relato de esta Pascua en particular.
Juan, sin embargo, aclara el asunto: “Los judíos, por lo tanto, porque era la preparación , para que los cuerpos no permanecieran en la cruz en el día de reposo ( porque ese día de reposo era un día alto ) , le rogaron a Pilato que sus piernas pudieran ser quebrantados, y que se los lleven ”( Juan 19:31 ).
Did you catch it? Read that again! Notice that that Sabbath was “an high day”! The designated time of the Passover was on the 14th day of the Hebrew month of Nisan. The high, or annual Sabbath—the First Day of Unleavened Bread—was on the very next day, the 15th day of Nisan (Leviticus 235-6). The Sabbath that followed the Passover was the First Day of Unleavened Bread, an annual “high” day.
Based upon this information alone—that Christ was killed on a preparation day (John 19:14), and not knowing this was an annual Sabbath—has led many to assume the crucifixion ‘bust” have taken place on a Friday, the preparation day before the weekly Sabbath. Hence the controversy, because there is no way to squeeze three days and three nights into the allotted space between Friday sundown and Sunday morning!
The Passover is not only a festival in its own right; it also functions as the preparation day for the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, a “high” day. Clearly, our Savior was crucified on a Passover day, on Nisan 14.
Thus, it was on a preparation day—the Passover—that Jesus was executed and buried. Jewish law demanded that a crucified body could not remain on the torture stake on the Sabbath day. Further, the Jews were required to bury a dead body before a Sabbath day began! “Then assembled together the chief priests, and the scribes, and the elders of the people, unto the palace of the high priest, who was called Caiaphas, And consulted that they might take Jesus by subtlety, and kill him. But they said, ‘Not on the feast day [not on the first Day of Unleavened Bread], lest there be an uproar among the people”’ (Matthew 26:3-5). The self-righteous Pharisees, after all, had their reputations to uphold!
Deuteronomy 21:22-23 required that an executed criminal be buried before nightfall. Jewish law demanded all dead bodies to be buried before a Sabbath or a feast day (John 19:3 1). Death by crucifixion was perhaps the most cruel and shameful death that could be devised by man. It was Roman practice inflicted only upon slaves and criminals of the worst kind. Crucifixion was not a Hebrew form of execution, and the body was not to be left on the Sabbath to putrefy or become a prey to ravenous birds. It was to be buried that day, because the hot climate would cause a dead body to quickly bloat and decompose, causing a nauseating stench in the air, as well as the exhibition of an exposed corpse bringing ceremonial defilement on the land.
Methods of Execution
There were four methods of execution in use among the ancient Israelites: stoning (Exodus 17:4; Deuteronomy 13:10, etc.), burning (Leviticus 20:14; 21:9), the sword, (Exodus 32:27), and strangulation. The latter, though not named in Scripture, is regarded by the rabbis as the most common, and the proper one to be adopted when no other is expressly enjoined by the Law. Suspension, whether from cross, tree, stake, or gallows, was not used as a mode of taking life, but was sometimes added after as an enhancement of punishment. Pharaoh’s chief baker (Genesis 40:19) was hanged after being put to death by the sword; and similarly, Joshua (Joshua 10:26) appears to have dealt with the five kings who made war against Gibeon. Compare also Numbers 25:4.
It was common practice to break the legs of the crucified sufferers to hasten their death so they would not linger on the stake during the high day. Interestingly, this custom was broken to fulfill the prophecy that “a bone of him shall not be broken” (John 19:36).
The scribes and Pharisees, as is usually the case with hypocrites, had tunnel vision, directing their whole attention to small matters, such as removing a corpse from his crucifixion stake before sundown, and yet passed by the greater misdeed of premeditated murder with no conscience or hesitation! Indeed, in order to keep their strict observance of the Sabbath, they were careful to avoid outward wrongdoing, and yet did not consider how shocking a criminal act it is to take away the life of an innocent man!
Can You Count 1-2-3?
How can we be so precise and dogmatic about these times? Easy. Can you count 1—2—3? It is so simple most grade school students can do the math. Let’s do the numbers. Even IF we were to count parts of days as full days, according to the “Greek idiom” theory, the Friday sunset-to-Sunday-sunrise tradition would fall because:
Friday Day-Day One (12 hours)
Friday Night-Night One (12 hours)
Saturday Day-Day TWO (12 hours)
Saturday Night-Night Two (12 hours)
Sunday Day-Day Three (12 hours)
(60 hours total)
Here again, being most liberal, we see at the most, only three days and two nights. Clearly, seventy-two hours—three days and three nights—cannot fit into the traditional Friday-sunset-to-Sunday-sun-rise time configuration! On this one count alone, Easter is demonstrated to be a pretentious fraud.
Bible Truth—or Man’s Tradition?
The Bible admonishes us to “Search the Scriptures” (John 5:39) and “prove all things” (1 Thessalonians 5:21). Christ prayed to His heavenly Father, “I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes” (Luke 10:21).
Por el contrario, ¿qué prueba tienen esos ostentosos “sabios y prudentes” de su tradición del Viernes Santo – Domingo de Pascua? La verdad es que no tienen ninguna prueba. ¡La tradición pascual se remonta a la antigüedad y no es más que un paganismo flagrante con un sombrero de copa “cristiano”! Consulte cualquier enciclopedia confiable. Jesucristo nunca habría permitido que sus seguidores lo adoraran usando símbolos de sexo, costillas y fertilidad, como conejos y huevos de colores. ¡Ciertamente, él nunca hubiera permitido la práctica de un servicio de amanecer “religioso” realizado en su nombre!
¡Pensar! ¿Qué tienen que ver los conejos, los huevos de colores y las gominolas con la muerte y resurrección de Jesucristo? ¡Nada en lo absoluto! Son restos de los antiguos ritos de fertilidad de Babilonia y la adoración al sol. ¿Es de extrañar que Dios diga: “No aprendan el camino de los paganos” ( Jeremías 10: 4 ). Ver también Deuteronomio 12: 30-31 y Ezequiel 8: 13-15 . Por lo tanto, vemos que se debe romper una tradición tradicional: el Viernes Santo, ¡la tradición del Domingo de Pascua no es más que un engaño religioso satánico!
Fue cientos de años después de la muerte del Apóstol Juan que el Viernes Santo, la tradición del Domingo de Pascua arraigó y se extendió por la iglesia. Antes del año 325 dC, la Pascua se celebraba de diferentes maneras en diferentes días de la semana, incluidos viernes, sábado y domingo. En el año 325 d. C., el emperador Constantino convocó el Concilio de Nicea. Este Consejo emitió la Regla de Pascua que establece que la Pascua se celebrará el primer domingo que ocurra después de la primera luna llena en el equinoccio vernal o después. Asegúrese de solicitar nuestro folleto GRATUITO, ¿Deberían los cristianos observar la Pascua? para el trasfondo histórico y bíblico completo sobre este tema vital.
¿A qué hora del día fue enterrado Jesús?
Knowing the time of day Jesus buried is the KEY to knowing the time of day He was resurrected. Whatever time He was buried, the passage of 72 hours brings us to the exact same time of day He was resurrected, three days and three nights later. Once we realize this, we can safely discard the traditional Good Friday—Easter Sunday scenario for what it is—a pagan convention set up for political expediency. It is not possible to fit three 24-hour days between them, especially if we are called to believe He rose from the dead at dawn on Sunday! We state this fact’ time and again to emphasize the point.
What time of day was Jesus raised? Does the tradition of a Sunday dawn resurrection have any basis in fact? Relying upon the biblical test rather than upon the traditions of men, we see it has none at all!
Matthew, Mark, and Luke are very precise as to the time Jesus died. John records only the time of the crucifixion, “about the sixth hour” (John 19:14-16). Luke gives the most concise report:
“And it was about the sixth hour, and there was a darkness over all the earth until the ninth hour. And the sun was darkened, and the veil of the temple was rent in the midst. And when Jesus had cried with a loud voice, he said, Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit [Greek, pneuma]: and having said thus, he gave up the ghost [He expired]” (Luke 23:44-46).
Jesus remained on the stake three hours before He died “at the ninth hour” (see also Mark 15:34,39; Matthew 27:46,50). Since they were using the Hebrew method of counting the hours of the day from sunrise, we know Jesus was crucified around noon and died about 3 PM.
Mark goes on to record, “And now when the even was come, because it was the preparation, that is, the day before the Sabbath, Joseph of Arimathaea, an honourable counseller, which also waited for the kingdom of God, came, and went in boldly unto Pilate, and craved the body of Jesus. And Pilate marvelled if he were already dead: and calling unto him the centurion, he asked him whether he had been any while dead. And when he [Pilot] knew it of the centurion, he gave the body to Joseph. And he bought fine linen, and took him down, and wrapped him in the linen, and laid him in a sepulchre which was hewn out of a rock, and rolled a stone unto the door of the sepulchre (Mark 15:43-46).
Let us notice several important points. Evening was beginning and Joseph had at best less than three hours before sunset, when the Sabbath would begin. Awaiting the confirmation of the centurion, the task of procuring, preparing, and applying the spices for burial would have left very little daylight on that Wednesday for Joseph and Nicodemus to finally roll the stone over the entrance to the tomb. All these things would have required time-consuming work, which was expressly forbidden on the Sabbath (Exodus 20:8-10). On this point all the accounts again concur; sunset was very near (Matthew 27:57; Mark 15:42; Luke 23:54; John 19:31).
No one disputes that Jesus was laid “in the heart of the earth” just before sunset. It was the Jewish law! Now if Jesus was in the tomb for exactly 72 hours, as we have shown, He was also resurrected at sunset, not at dawn as the Easter Sunday tradition claims!
The Preparation Day for the Annual Sabbath
All four Gospel writers confirm Jesus was tried, convicted, crucified, and buried on a preparation day. Taken by itself, this would lead some to conclude the crucifixion must have taken place on a Friday, the preparation day before the weekly Sabbath. However, the Scriptures show there were also “preparation days” for the annual holy days as well.
But was the Sabbath in question the weekly Sabbath or an annual, or “high” Sabbath? Let the Bible answer!
We see Jesus was crucified on a Passover day, Nisan 14, and the Sabbath -that followed was the first day of Unleavened Bread, an annual Sabbath, or “high” day. The apostle Paul later backs up this claim in 1 Corinthians 5:7: “For indeed Christ, our Passover, was sacrificed for us.”
Each year as Easter approaches, churches traditionally announce, “He is risen!” But as is so often done, this saying is taken out of context and read into a Sunday morning resurrection. A text without a context is merely a pretext! We need to examine the other three corresponding accounts before we accept the traditional view so readily.
The three synoptic writers (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) record that Joseph and Nicodemus had witnesses as they prepared Jesus’ body. “And the women also, who came with him fm Galilee, followed after, and beheld the sepulcher, and how his body was laid” (Luke 23:55).
Going on, we read, “And when the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome, had bought sweet spices, that they might come and anoint him” (Mark 16:1).
Consider, if Joseph barely had time to bury Jesus’ body before sundown, how much more time would the women have needed to go into town, buy spices, go home and prepare them, and then go back to the tomb to anoint Him—all before sundown?
The harmonized accounts show that when Joseph took Jesus down from the stake, the women followed him to see where he would place the body. They then returned to their homes and observed the high holy day Sabbath, the first day of Unleavened Bread. The day after the high, or annual, holy day, they went to a shop, which would have been closed on the Sabbath, and bought spices and oil, took them home again and prepared them for use on Christ’s body and ‘‘they rested the Sabbath according to the commandment” (Luke 23:56).
The chief priests’ and Pharisees’ own fears and determination to set a watch for three days over the tomb proves that Christ did NOT say He would be only two nights and one day in the tomb, but three days and three nights! When those who had Him put to death reminded the Roman authorities of this statement, His tomb was not only sealed, but several Roman soldiers were required to remain there!
“Now the next day, that followed the day of the preparation, the chief priests and Pharisees came together unto Pilate, Saying, Sir, we remember that that deceiver said, while he was yet alive, After three days I will rise again. Command therefore that the sepulchre be made sure until the third day, lest his disciples come by night, and steal him away, and say unto the people, He is risen from the dead: so the last error shall be worse than the first. Pilate said unto them, Ye have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as ye can” (Matthew 27:62-65).
When Was Christ Resurrected?
The Scriptures show that just before He died, Jesus cried out for His heavenly Father about the ninth hour, which is around 3:00 in the afternoon.
“And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? That is to say, My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Some of them that stood there, when they heard that, said, This man calls for Elijah. And immediately one of them ran, and took a sponge, and filled it with vinegar, and put it on a reed, and gave him to drink. The rest said, Let be, let us see whether Elijah will come to save him. Jesus, when he had cried again with a loud voice, yielded up the ghost [He expired]” (Matthew 27:46-50; See also Mark 15:34-37; Luke 23:44-46).
Knowing that Christ was exactly 72 hours in the grave, all one has to do to find the exact time of Christ’s resurrection is to find the exact time of His burial.
What Really Happened That Sunday Morning
Let us notice Luke’s account of the resurrection. ‘‘Now upon the first day of the week, VERY EARLY IN THE MORNING, they came unto the sepulchre, bringing the spices which they had prepared, and certain others with them. And THEY FOUND THE STONE ROLLED AWAY from the sepulchre. And they entered in, AND FOUND NOT THE BODY OF THE LORD JESUS. And it came to pass, as they were much perplexed thereabout, behold, two men [angels] stood by them in shining garments: And as they were afraid, and bowed down their faces to the earth, they said unto them, Why seek ye the living among the dead? HE IS NOT HERE, BUT IS [already] RISEN: remember how he spake unto you when he was yet in Galilee, Saying, The Son of man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again” (Luke 24:1-7). There was no Sunday resurrection—He was resurrected Saturday evening at sundown!
Now let us turn to the apostle John’s account. “The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when IT WAS YET DARK, unto the sepulchre, AND SEETH THE STONE TAKEN AWAY from the sepulchre. Then she runneth, and cometh to Simon Peter, and to the other disciple, whom Jesus loved, and saith unto them, They have taken ayway the Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where they have laid him. Peter therefore went forth, and that other disciple, and came to the sepulchre. So they ran both together: and the other disciple did outrun Peter, and came first to the sepulchre. And he stooping down, and looking in, saw the linen clothes lying; yet went he not in. Then cometh Simon Peter following him, and went into the sepulchre, and seeth the linen clothes lie, And the napkin, that was about his head, not lying with the linen clothes, but wrapped together in a place by itself. Then went in also that other disciple, which came first to the sepulchre, and he saw, and believed. For as yet they knew not the scripture, that he must rise again from the dead” (John 20:1-9).
Notice! There was no “sunrise resurrection” here! The Scriptures tell us it was very early in the morning while it was yet dark—before sunrise. The stone was already moved away and the tomb was empty. “He is not here. But is [already] risen.” Of course! We have seen that Christ was buried on a late afternoon, some time just prior to sunset on a “preparation” day. He remained dead in the tomb for exactly 72 hours. Counting backwards, we see that Jesus Christ must have been placed in the tomb on a WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON!
Contando hacia adelante, vemos que la primera noche de su entierro fue del miércoles al atardecer al jueves al amanecer. El primer día de su entierro fue el jueves desde el amanecer hasta el jueves al atardecer. La segunda noche de su entierro fue el jueves al atardecer hasta el amanecer del viernes. El segundo día de su entierro fue del viernes al amanecer al viernes al atardecer. La tercera noche de su entierro fue del viernes al atardecer al sábado al amanecer. Y el tercer dia de su entierro fue del sábado al amanecer al sábado al atardecer. Cuando las mujeres llegaron a la tumba, ¡Cristo ya había resucitado doce horas antes al final del sábado! Si, de hecho, la gente quiere observar el tiempo de la resurrección de Cristo, ¡deberían guardarlo el sábado, el sábado!
¿Cuántos sábados esa semana de Pascua?
¡La única forma de conciliar estas cuentas es reconocer que hubo dos días de reposo en este período de 72 horas!
¡Estas mujeres compraron y prepararon especias “cuando el sábado había pasado” y luego “descansaron en el sábado”! Descansaron dos veces: una en “un día alto” y otra en el sábado semanal dos días después.
Esto sólo puede significar que Jesús fue crucificado y enterrado en un W IÉRCOLES ! El día más alto, primer día de panes sin levadura, cayó el jueves. Las tiendas cerraron ese día. ¡Las mujeres prepararon especias el viernes, y nuestro Salvador resucitó el sábado cuando terminó el día! ¡Los eventos no pueden resolverse de otra manera con la evidencia clara provista en las Sagradas Escrituras!
Mateo 28: 1 proporciona una prueba adicional de que dos sábados ocurrieron esa semana. Sin embargo, los traductores de la Biblia, confundidos por la redacción griega de este versículo, siempre lo han traducido erróneamente. Mateo escribe: “Ahora, después del sábado, cuando el primer día de la semana comenzó a amanecer …”. Sin embargo, la redacción del texto original dice: “después de los Snhbaths” (plural). La traducción de Ferrah Fenton tiene esta correcta.
La Santa Biblia en su orden original traduce este versículo, “Ahora tarde en el día de reposo, ya que el primer día de las semanas se acercaba …”, mostrando que el día que siguió al sábado semanal fue el primer día del conteo de siete semanas. a Pentecostés, identificando así este día como el día de la gavilla de las olas ( Levítico 23: 10-11 , 15 , 16 ). La ascensión de Jesucristo en ese día cumplió con la ofrenda de la gavilla de las olas de todos los tiempos.
Así Jesús hizo exactamente lo que dijo. Estuvo tres noches completas (miércoles, jueves y viernes) y tres días completos (jueves, viernes y sábado) en la tumba.
In summary, since Christ was buried on a late afternoon just prior to sunset on a “preparation” day, and since He plainly staked the claim of His very Messiahship on the precise length of TIME He would be in the tomb—exactly 72 hours—then counting backward or forward, we see that Jesus Christ MUST have been placed in the tomb on a WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON at sunset and resurrected on a Saturday afternoon at sunset!
Counting backward:
Saturday sundown to Friday sundown
24 hours
Friday sundown to Thursday sundown
24 hours
Thursday sundown to Wednesday sundown
24 hours
72 hours total
Counting forward:
Wednesday sundown to Thursday sundown
24 hours
Thursday sundown to Friday sundown
24 hours
Friday sundown to Saturday sundown
24 hours
72 hours total
Imagined “Problem” Texts
The disciples once asked Christ, ‘Why speakest thou unto them in parables?” He answered and said to them, “Because it is given unto you to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it is not given” (Matthew 13:10-11).
Isaiah 28:10 explains, “For precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little.” One of the most important rules of biblical interpretation is to allow the Bible to interpret itself. The Bible seldom gives all Bible truth on a subject in one single verse, but it is scattered throughout the Bible as illustrated above. One cannot single out a mistranslated verse, or one taken out of context in order to contradict another verse. Jesus said, ‘The scripture cannot be broken” (John 10:35)!
For example, many will close their eyes to multitudinous scriptures listed in this booklet and seize upon a single verse such as Mark 16:9. This verse in the King James Version reads, “Now when Jesus was risen the first day of the week, Hw appeared first to Mary Magdalene.” The comma after the phrase “first day of the week” gives the impression that Jesus was raised on the first day of the week, i.e., Sunday. It should read “Now when Jesus appeared first to Mary Magdalene….” In other words, this verse says that after Jesus had been raised, He appeared early on Sunday to Mary. There was no punctuation in the originals. A misplaced comma added by men gives an entirely different perspective!
Another account some seize upon is found in Luke 24:13-35. The narrative of two disciples who met the Lord on the road to Emmaus later that same Sunday help us to confirm this (Luke 24:13-35). Two of the disciples, traveling to Emmaus, were conversing with the resurrected Christ, though they did not know it was He (verses 13-16). They were recounting what had happened in Jerusalem to Jesus by the chief priests and rulers of Judea (verses 18-20).
This conversation occurred on Sunday, the same day Peter, John, and the women had gone to the tomb only to find it empty. At first the disciples were not aware that it was really Jesus they were talking to. Their eyes were temporarily holden , hidden, or blinded (Luke 24:16). Assuming they were talking to a very recent visitor to the area, they told Him why they were so distraught. In the course of the discussion they indicated that “today is the third day since these things were done” (verse 21). “Since: is roughly equivalent to “after.” It being Sunday, the previous day (Saturday) would have been the second day since it happened, and Friday would have been the first day since it happened, making Thursday the day since “these things” happened.
“These thing,” referred to in verses 14, 18, 19, and 21, did not end with delivering Him to Pilate for crucifixion! Notice Matthew 27:62-66:
“Now the next day, that followed the day of the preparation [the day Christ was murdered], the chief priests and Pharisees came together unto Pilate, Saying, ‘Sir, we remember that that deceiver said, while he was yet alive, After three days I will rise again. Command therefore that the sepulchre be made sure until the third day, lest his disciples come by night, and steal him away, and say unto the people, “He is risen from the dead”: so the last error shall be worse than the first.’ Pilate said unto them, ‘Ye have a watch: go you way, make it as sure as ye can.’ So they went, and made the sepulchre sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watch.”
The day after “the day of preparation” was Thursday, the first day of Unleavened Bread. These Jewish leaders went to Pilate on the holy day to “guarantee” Christ’s body would not “disappear!” With the Roman guards in place and the tomb sealed, they were confident that was the end of the matter.
Thus, when the two disciples on the road to Emmaus say that Sunday “is the third day since these things happened,” they are referring to the last despicable actions of the Pharisees and chief priests—the setting of the guards in place and the tomb sealed, which took place on Thursday, not Wednesday. Notice, too, that their words rule out a Friday crucifixion as well, since Sunday is only the second day from Friday.
A further key to counting this time correctly is found in a proper translation of Matthew 28:1. A footnote to this text in the Ferrar Fenton translation says, “The Greek original is in the plural; Sabbaths!” He correctly renders this verse: “After the Sabbaths [plural—more than one], towards the dam of the day following the Sabbaths [plural], Mary, the Magdalene, and the other Mary, came to examine the tomb.”
Jesus Christ commanded His disciples and His followers—us, today—to observe the symbols of His DEATH, not His resurrection, each year at the Christian Passover (1 Corinthians 11:23-30). He told His disciples, “HAPPY are ye if ye do these things.”
In Conclusion
In answer to the subtitle of this booklet, Did Christ Die On a Friday and Rise On a Sunday? we must reply with an emphatic, absolute NO! The alleged “mystery” of the three days and three nights is really no mystery at all. The authors of the Gospels, honest men with a wonderful story to tell, gave us a straightforward account of the life, death, and resurrection of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. They gave us all the pieces of the puzzle we need to construct a clear, precise picture of those events. When placed in the correct order, the pieces tightly interlock like a jigsaw puzzle. Everything fits together tightly and perfectly when the puzzle is solved.
And in a way, the chronology we have reconstructed throughout this booklet is only one detail of a much larger puzzle we call “the truth.” It goes on to illustrate, not only the historical facts of the death and resurrection of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, but also the way of life that God has given us to live. The details of the death and resurrection of Christ, when properly understood, serve to undergird the truths of the Sabbath and holy days, and these in turn reveal God’s plan for man. Be sure to request our booklet, God’s Seasonal Plan.
Of course, beyond the details of His death and resurrection is the amazing fact that our Savior voluntarily gave Himself to be crucified to pay the penalty for our sins. “The wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23), not eternal life in another location. Either we will pay for our own sins, or we can accept the sacrifice of Jesus Christ as payment for our sins in our stead. His perfect life and sacrificial death paid for our imperfect and self-centered lives. As the author of Hebrews writes, “So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many; and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation” (Hebrews 9:28).
It is for this second appearance that all creation eagerly waits (Romans 8:19). Just as Christ rose from the dead, so will His faithful disciples—“the saints”—when He returns. Of this promise Paul writes:
“For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord” (1Thessalonians 4:14-17).
May God hasten that day!
When was Jesus crucified? When was He resurrected? Jesus said the only sign of His Messiahship was the amount of time He spent in the grave—three days and three nights—”An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign,” Jesus said, “and there shall no sign be given to it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas: For as Jonas was three days a17dthree nights in the whale’s belly; so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth” (Matthew 12:39-40).
Jesus Christ was crucified on Wednesday, April 25, 31 A.D. —in the middle of the week (Daniel 9:27). He died on the stake shortly after 3 PM that afternoon and was buried before sundown Wednesday evening. Now count three days and three nights—72 full hours. He arose Saturday, the weekly Sabbath, in the late afternoon, shortly before sunset at the same time of day He was buried.
Following the rules of grammar for the Greek language, “three days and three nights” cannot be interpreted to be just a portion of a day, but can only be three full days and three full nights. “In three days,” (John 2:19), “within three days,” (Mark 14:58), and “after three days,” (Matthew 27:63, Mark 8:31), requires exactly three days and three nights, precisely 72 hours, not one day and two nights as the Good Friday-Easter Sunday tradition would demand.
For further details, see Bullinger’s Companion Bible, Appendix 156.
Appendix 144 From The Companion Bible
The “Three Days” and “Three Nights” of Matthew 12:40
The fact that “three days” is used by Hebrew idiom for any part of three days and three nights is not disputed; because that was the common way of reckoning, just as it was when used of years. Three or any number of years was used inclusively of any part of those years, as may be seen in the reckoning of the reigns of any of the kings of Israel and Judah.
But, when the number of “nights” is stated as well as the number of “days“, then the expression ceases to be an idiom, and becomes a literal statement of fact.
Moreover, as the Hebrew day began at sunset the day was reckoned from one sunset to another, the “twelve hours in the day” (John 11:9) being reckoned from sunrise, and the twelve hours of the night from sunset. An evening-morning was thus used for a whole day of twenty-four hours, as in the first chapter of Genesis. Hence the expression “a night and a day” in 2 Corinthians 11:25 denotes a complete day (Greek nuchthemeron).
When Esther says (Esther 4:16) “fast ye for me, and neither eat nor drink three days“, she defines her meaning as being three complete days, becuase she adds (being a Jewess) “night or day“. And when it is written that the fast ended on “the third day” (5:1), “the third day” must have succeeded and included the third night.
In like manner the sacred record states that the young man (in 1 Samuel 30:12) “had eaten no bread, nor drunk any water, three days and three nights“. Hence, when the young man explains the reason, he says, “because three days agone I fell sick“. He means therefore three complete days and nights, because, being an Egyptian (verses 11, 13) he naturally reckoned his day as beginning at sunrise according to the Egyptian manner (see Encycl. Brit., 11th (Cambridge) ed., vol xi, page 77). His “three days agone” refers to the beginning of his sickness, and includes the whole period, giving the reason for his having gone without food during the whole period stated.
Hence, when it says that “Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights” (Jonah 1:17) it means exactly what is says, and that this can be the only meaning of the expression in Matthew 12:40; 16:4. Luke 11:30, is shown in Appendix 156.
In the expression, “the heart of the earth” (Matthew 12:40), the meaning is the same as “the heart of the sea“, “heart” being put by the Figure of Speech, Metonymy (of the Subject), Appendix 6, for “the midst“, and is frequently so translated. See Psalm 46:2. Jeremiah 51:1. Ezekiel 27:4, 25, 26, 27; 28:2. It is used of ships when sailing “in the heart of the seas“, that is to say, in, or on the sea. See Ezekiel 27:25, 26; 28:8; also of people dwelling in the heart of the seas, that is to say, on islands (Ezekiel 28:2). Jonah uses the Hebrew beten (= womb) in the same way (2:2).
Appendix 156 From The Companion Bible
“Six Days Before the Passover”
Notice what Dr. Bullinger says in his Appendix concerning the events surrounding the crucifixion:
“That sabbath” and the “high day” of John 19:31, was the “holy convocation”, the first day of the feast, which quite overshadowed the ordinary weekly sabbath…This great sabbath, having been mistaken from the earliest times for the weekly sabbath, has led to all the confusion…
III. We have therefore the following facts furnished for our sure guidance:
1. The “high day” of John 19:31 was the first day of the feast.
2. The “first day of the feast” was on the 15th day of Nisan.
3. The 15th day of Nisan, commenced at sunset on what we should call the 14th.
4. “Six days before the passover” (John 12:1) takes us back to the 9th day of Nisan.
5. “After two days is the passover” (Matthew 26:2. Mark 14:1) takes us to the 13th day of Nisan.
6. “The first day of the week”, the day of the resurrection (Matthew 28:1, etc.), was from our Saturday sunset to our Sunday sunset. This fixes the days of the week, just as the above fix the days of the month, for:
7. Reckoning back from this, “three days and three nights” (Matthew 12:40), we arrive at the day of the burial, which must have been before sunset, on the 14th of Nisan; that is to say, before our Wednesday sunset. See John 19:31.
Therefore Wednesday, Nisan 14th [commencing on the Tuesday at sunset], was “the preparation day”, on which the crucifixion took place: for all four Gospels definite& say that this was the day on which the Lord was buried [before our Wednesday sunset], because it was the preparation [day] that the bodies should not remain on the cross [Greek: staztro, meaning an upright pale] on the Sabbath day, “for that Sabbath day was a high day”, and, therefore, not the ordinary seventh day, or weekly Sabbath..
Appendix 166 From The Companion Bible
The Sequence of Events
Following the Lord’s Resurrection
The order of these events in the Four Gospels is partly independent and partly supplementary, taking up the narrative at different points of time. They may be set out as follows:
Appendix 165 From The Companion Bible
The Hours of the Lord’s Last Day
El siguiente diagrama muestra las 24 horas del “ Día de preparación “ , es decir, el día antes de la Pascua ( Juan 19:14 , etc.). Los Cuatro Evangelios están de acuerdo en afirmar que el Señor fue puesto en el Sepulcro en el Día de la Preparación , que fue el 14 de Nisan, inmediatamente antes del “ Gran Sábado “ , el 15 de Nisan ( Mateo 27:62 . Marcos 15:42 . Lucas 23:54 . Juan 19:31 , 42 ). Por lo tanto, debe haber sido crucificado el miércoles 14 de Nisan (ver Apéndice 144, Apéndice 156, Apéndice 166).
Como se muestra arriba, el día 14 de Nisan, que fue el “ Día de preparación “ , comenzó al atardecer de nuestro martes (cálculo gentil). “ La sexta hora ” de Juan 19:14 es la sexta hora de la noche y, por lo tanto, corresponde a la medianoche , según la cual, según los cálculos gentiles, comenzó el miércoles.
Los números romanos en la placa de marcado muestran las 24 horas del día completo de los gentiles. Y a cada lado del dial se muestran las “ horas ” hebreas correspondientes a las horas gentiles am y pm
Las veinticuatro horas se dividieron en las doce horas de la noche (calculadas desde el ocaso), “ doce horas en el día ” (calculadas desde el amanecer. Ver Juan 11: 9 ). Por lo tanto, “ la sexta hora ” de Juan 19:14 fue nuestra medianoche; “ La tercera hora ” de Marcos 15:25 fueron nuestras 9 am; “ La sexta hora ” de Mateo 27:45 ; Marcos 15:33 ; Lucas 23:44 ; Era nuestro mediodía ; y “ la novena hora ” de Mateo 27:45 , 46 ; Marcos 15:33 , 34 ; Lucas 23:44 ; eran nuestras 3 de la tarde