Month: כ״א באב ה׳תשס״ט (August 2009)

The Top 10 Myths about the Middle East Conflict by Jonathan Tobin

Sixty-one years after the birth of the State of Israel, the Jewish state continues to be assailed by its enemies. From the halls of the United Nations to the classrooms of major universities and in the pressrooms of major newspapers and magazines, attacks on the legitimacy of every move by Israel — and even of the state’s existence itself — continue to be made.

What lies behind the calumnies and canards that are constantly thrown at the one Jewish state on the planet? In the Arab and Islamic world, the notion that any portion of the Middle East could be placed under Jewish sovereignty is anathema. Elsewhere, some of the brickbats thrown Israel’s way stem from prejudice and hatred rooted in classic anti-Semitism.

But what about the American press, much of which is Jewish, and other American opinion-makers for whom the anti-Semitic tag doesn’t really apply? The reasons for much of the slanted commentaries about the Middle East and biased news coverage has less to do with the ancient hatreds based in Europe than it does with sheer ignorance.

For all too many members of the press (as well as other Americans who like to think of themselves as being informed about the great issues of the day), lack of knowledge about the underlying facts of the Middle East conflict is commonplace. Myths about the State of Israel, its origins and its actions have found their way into general discourse in the academy and the media. Those who seek to stand up for Israel need to recognize that many of the problems that Israel has in getting its case across stem from a failure to debunk these myths and to answer them with the truth.

So here is a list of the top ten myths about Israel and the Middle East conflict. This list is by no means comprehensive, but it is a good start to understanding the heart of the problem.

Myth #1: Jews have no historic connection to Israel/Palestine.

A key element of Arab and anti-Zionist attacks on Israel is the notion that the Jewish presence in the country is a remnant of 19th century imperialism in which Europeans colonized and exploited parts of the third world. But far from being outsiders there, the Jewish ties date back 4,000 years to the very beginning of Jewish history recounted in the Bible and verified by much of the evidence of archeology that has been discovered.

Though the Romans expelled most of the Jewish population from the country, Jewish settlement continued without interruption throughout the last 2,000 years. In all this time, the Land of Israel remained a constant in thoughts and the hearts of Jews throughout the world, as it was remembered in their daily prayers and in their dreams.

Myth #2: Jews have no unique claim to the ancient and holy city of Jerusalem.

Though both Christianity and Islam have holy sites in the city, the Jewish ties predate that of any other existing religion. King David made Jerusalem the capital of Israel 3,000 years ago — 1,700 years before Islam was even founded. Jerusalem never served as even a provincial capital during the centuries of Muslim rule. The entire city is sacred to Jews; only the Dome of the Rock has religious significance to Muslims. Moreover, in the modern era, Jews have been the majority of the population of the city since the 1840s.

As for freedom of worship, the only period during which all faiths have been free to worship in peace has been since 1967 when the city became unified under Israeli sovereignty.

Myth #3: The Zionist movement was never prepared to share the land.

From the very start of the Jewish return to their historic homeland in the late 19th century, it has never been the goal of the Zionist movement to uproot the Arab population or to create a state where only Jews could live. In 1922, the League of Nations’ Mandate for Palestine was partitioned by Britain, with the east bank of the Jordan River reserved for Arab rule (it eventually become the Kingdom of Jordan), and the area between the Mediterranean and the Jordan being designated as the Jewish National Home. Dating back to the 1930s, every subsequent peace plan that has been proposed involved some sort of partition of the Western portion of Palestine. Though all of these schemes involved painful concessions for the Jews, the leadership of the Zionist movement and subsequently the Jewish state always accepted this principle of sharing the country.

Myth #4: The lack of an independent Palestinian Arab state is the fault of the Zionists.

In 1947, the United Nations approved the partition of Palestine between a Jewish state and an Arab state. The response of the Palestinian Arabs, as well as the rest of the Arab and Muslim world, was a categorical rejection of any scheme that allowed a Jewish state on any part of the land, no matter what its borders might be. No effort was made to set up an independent Arab state in the part of Palestine allotted for that purpose. In the aftermath of Israel’s War of Independence, in which it repelled the invasion by five Arab armies, the West Bank, Gaza and half of Jerusalem, were left in Arab hands. But for the next 19 years when these territories remained under Arab control, there was never any consideration given to creating an Arab state there. On the contrary, the focus of the Arab world was on extinguishing the fledgling state of Israel that existed in the truncated borders left by the 1949 armistice lines.

In the years after the 1967 war, Israel has maintained a willingness to negotiate a peace deal based on the concept of “land for peace.” Indeed, at Camp David in July 2000 and the following January at Taba, Egypt, Israel offered the Palestinians a state in these lands as well as part of Jerusalem. The answer from Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was “no,” and he followed up that refusal by launching a terrorist war of attrition that resulted in over a thousand Jewish deaths and even more suffering on the part of his own people.

Myth #5: The plight of Palestinian refugees is a special case of dispossession that must be redressed by international action.

In the aftermath of World War II, millions of refugees were created by the partition of India, the re-drawing of the map of Europe, as well as by the war brought on by the Arab refusal to accept the UN’s partition of Palestine. Only in the case of Palestinians who fled their home during the course of Israel’s War of Independence, was there a failure to re-settle the refugees. The Palestinian refugees, whose exit from the country was caused more by a general fear of the war sweeping over the land than by any action on the part of the Israelis, were the only refugees who were kept in camps and not allowed to integrate into the populations of the Arab countries that received them. They were kept homeless as a means of maintaining the illusion that the creation of Israel could be undone. Subsequent generations of this population have been raised in these camps and inculcated in an irredentist ideology whose premise is the rejection of any Jewish state. They remain the wards of a UN agency (the United Nations Relief Works Agency) that is devoted to perpetuating their status as refugees at a cost of billions of dollars on international aid.

On the other hand, several hundred thousand Jews living in Arab countries were evicted from their homes during this same era and forced to flee to safety in Israel or the West — where they were integrated into society.

Myth #6: The occupation of eastern Jerusalem, the West Bank, Gaza and the Golan Heights in 1967 was the result of an Israeli war of aggression.

In May 1967, Egypt launched a blockade of Israel’s southern port of Eilat. Egyptian and Syrian forces massed on Israel’s borders. Egypt demanded, and got, the UN peacekeeping force that separated their army from Israel in the Sinai, to withdraw. Egyptian dictator Gamal Abdul Nasser and other Arab leaders told their peoples that they would soon launch a battle of annihilation that would result in Israel’s destruction. When international diplomacy failed to get the Arabs to back down, Israel decided that it would not wait to be attacked and launched a defensive war to forestall the Arab assault.

After the war ended in a sweeping Israeli victory, Israel stated its willingness to make peace, but an Arab summit conference a month later answered with three no’s. No peace. No recognition. No negotiations.

Myth #7: Jewish settlements are the main, if not the sole, obstacle to peace in the Middle East.

Though many legal sources claim that Jewish settlements in the West Bank are illegal, the fact remains that the right of Jewish settlement in those lands was guaranteed by the Mandate for Palestine of the League of Nations. This territory was never part of any other sovereign state and its final legal status is subject to negotiations that must be concluded between the competing parties. Until such time as there is a peace accord which gives one side or the other sovereignty in this territory, it is inaccurate to refer to this land as belonging to one side or another.

Twice before, Israel has shown a willingness to uproot Jewish communities for the sake of peace: in the Sinai (given back to Egypt in the 1979 Peace Treaty) and in Gaza (from which Israel withdrew unilaterally in 2005). The existence of settlements in these areas is no bar to a peace deal under which they might be withdrawn.

Myth #8: The failure of the Oslo peace process was the result of actions by hard-line Israeli governments.

The Oslo process was embraced by Israel in the hope that an offer of land would be met with genuine peace. However, the result of years of negotiations and various Israeli withdrawals has not been peace. From the start of Palestinian Authority rule in the West Bank and Gaza in 1994, Palestinian leadership has encouraged terrorism against Israel and fomented hatred against the Jewish state — while “peace education” is promulgated in Israeli schools. Throughout the 1990s as Israel signed several agreements that gave the Palestinians more autonomy, the corrupt PA leadership continued to tolerate and even fund terror groups. In 2000, Yasser Arafat refused Israel’s offer of a Palestinian state in virtually all of the West Bank and Gaza as well as part of Jerusalem — and launched the terror offensive known as the Second Intifada.

Though all Israeli governments have, at times, been forced to reply with force to terrorist attacks from Gaza, Lebanon and the West Bank, all have stated a willingness to negotiate a peace. Today the Palestinians are split between the Palestinian Authority led by Mahmoud Abbas which is too weak to make peace and Hamas, the rulers of Gaza, who reject it under any circumstances. Both factions reject the legitimacy of a Jewish state.

Myth #9: The Arab-Israeli conflict is the key to all of America’s political, diplomatic and military problems in the Middle East.

The battle over Israel/Palestine is but one of many disputes in the Middle East. The rivalry between the two great Muslim religious strains, Shia and Sunni, has been the source of more wars and more bloodshed than any battle between Arabs and Jews. Similarly, the tensions between Persians (modern day Iran with its Islamist rulers and nuclear ambitions) and Arabs is another perennial conflict that predates the renewal of Jewish sovereignty in the region.

Even more to the point, the conflict between radical Islamists who seek to impose their religious and political views on the rest of the Muslim world, and those who oppose them in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, has nothing to do with Israel or the Palestinians. It is this schism which is at the core of the rise of Al Qaeda and the Taliban. It is this battle for the soul of Islam that gave the impetus to the 9/11 attacks, not the dispute over the borders of the Jewish state.

Though Israel’s foes claim that resentment over its creation fuels Arab and Islamic resentment of the West, such sentiments long predate the rise of Zionism. The clash of civilizations between Islam and the West was the cause of wars between European nations and Muslim countries for centuries with no Jewish involvement. Linking world peace to a resolution of the Palestinian conflict is just another tactic of rejectionist groups bent on perpetuating the conflict and diverting attention from the real issues.

Myth #10: American support for Israel is the result of the manipulations of the U.S. government by Jews.

Support for the return of the Jews to their ancient homeland dates back to the very beginning of American history. Sympathy for the idea of a renewed Jewish state is rooted in the faith of most Americans, as well as in their belief that the persecuted Jewish people were entitled to find a new life in their old home. From the very beginnings of the Zionist movement, it found both a welcome and support from large numbers of Americans. In the aftermath of the Holocaust that support became even greater.

Today, the overwhelming majority of Americans of all faiths and both major political parties see Israel as a friend and an ally. They need no prodding from a Jewish lobby to understand that the alliance with the Jewish state is based on common values and a shared belief in democracy. While Israel’s supporters in Washington are vocal and proud of it, their financial clout is dwarfed by that of an oil industry and other factions with a vested interest in appeasing Arab dictators and monarchs. But the American people’s identification with Israel and their sense of solidarity with it have prevailed because these ideas are rooted deeply in American history and tradition.

For even more information about myths and facts about Israel go to jewishvirtuallibrary.com This article appeared in aish.com

Author: Jonathan Tobin

In the Wilderness, B’Midbar by Jennifer Ross

Have you ever found yourself wandering in a place in your life that is dark, foreign and foreboding? Maybe it’s troubles with finances. Maybe its family or health issues. And considering current economic times it could be everything rolled into one. And you are struggling to make sense of this place that seems to have no long-term relief in sight.

As believers we tend to fall back on soothing verses from Scripture to comfort our pain. King David’s songs (psalms) are a good first stop. Paul’s words about the LORD not giving us more than we can handle is a good one, too. Isaiah is a candy store of wisdom and reassurance. But if we just stop…be still…and go to the beginning of GOD’s Word, the Torah, we find a reward not of sympathy, but of power.

Let’s start with a point of reference: Deuteronomy 8:2-3

And you shall remember all the ways which Adonai your God has caused you to go these forty years in the wilderness, in order to humble you, to try you, to know that which is in your heart, whether you will keep His commandments or not.

And He has humbled you and caused you to hunger and caused you to eat the manna which you had not known, even your fathers had not known, in order to cause you to know that man shall not live by bread alone, but man shall live by every word that proceeds from the mouth of Adonai.

Midbar, the Hebrew word for wilderness, is indeed a physical place. But don’t miss this…because it has a Divine purpose. I am pleading with any of you who, like me, have found yourselves in the Wilderness, to take heed of this truth. As we journey together we will see just how intentional GOD is. We will see how relevant to our current circumstances these words found in Deuteronomy are; and we will see the Spiritual Truth that lies within.

The LORD says:

“You shall remember…”

The word ‘remember’ in Hebrew is zakar. It’s not like an “Ooops, I almost forgot!” kind of remember. Zakar is to remember in the sense of recording something. It is a point of time designed for a deliberate response. GOD remembered Noah in the Ark and caused a wind to blow the waters away. He remembered Rachel and opened up her womb. And when it was time, He remembered the Israelites in Egypt and delivered them. Think of the moment He called you and you responded by accepting Yeshua to reign over your life. That was a moment when GOD remembered you.

If He has remembered us by our redemption (just like the Israelites)… what exactly is it that He wants us to remember?

all the ways which Adonai your God has caused you to go”

I am redeemed. I hold fast to the sacrifice of my Savior, Yeshua. I serve my King Messiah with the full assurance of my inheritance. I’m not ashamed to tell people WHOM I serve, regardless of what they serve. I strive to live a Holy life and since both my husband and I lost our jobs, I haven’t complained or moaned. I just keep trying to make ends meet trusting in the LORD. In fact, I find myself consoling others who are worrying about me.

Regardless of how positive my attitude sounds… something is wrong. Do you see it? Do you see the problem? If you look closely… the problem is found in one, tiny, seemingly insignificant word… and that word is ‘I’.

My vision has been out of focus. It’s not about me! It’s about GOD! It’s not about what I am enduring. It’s about what He is doing! The path I have been marching down has led me here and if I turn and look at my steps, I need to record them. I need to record the steps I took that were pleasing to my GOD…and the steps I took that disappointed Him. After careful scrutiny, I must then react accordingly.

I need to stop thinking about GOD rescuing me out of this wilderness… and start thinking about the path He is leading me down. I have to stand firm (believe) in the truth that He led me here according to the plan and purpose He set for me.

So let’s look a little deeper with clear vision to SEE just what GOD’s intentions are as we walk in the way in which He has caused us to go.

‘in order to humble you’

We have studied anav (humble) before. To have a character of anav is to be like Moses, in complete submission to GOD. No pride. We are in the wilderness to be humbled. Perhaps we just got too comfortable receiving His blessings and foolishly allowed the adversary to sneak in. Perhaps we thought we were living a life of humility, but the very fact that we think we are humble…is pride; a ‘wolf in sheep’s clothing’ if you will.

In my humility, the LORD is showing me the truth between what is necessary and right according to His system; and what is foolish and wrong. I’ve been wrestling with my own wickedness as He brings me low. He is stripping away any level of security I had in this world (on all fronts) and reminding me I am not of this world. After bringing us so low, we are ready for the next step.

‘to try you’

Another way to say this is “to test you.” ‘Try,’ ‘test,’ or ‘tempt’… the LORD is going to allow our enemy to have some fun with us. Whether you call him the ‘destroyer’…or the ‘deceiver’…or the ‘adversary’…or one of his many other names, he is roaming the earth, to and fro, seeking those he can devour.

For any of you who doubt it, Satan not only has access to an audience before the LORD (read the book of Job)…but the evil that he is…was created by GOD.

that they may know from the sunrise and to the sunset I am the LORD and there is none else; forming light and creating darkness; making peace and creating evil– I, the LORD, do all these things. Isaiah 45:6-7

The LORD has led us into the Wilderness exposed and confused. He knows our shortcomings. He knows our weaknesses. And He allows our enemy to tempt and entice our flesh. Be aware of your sinful nature… and guard against it.

When we are feeling low…it’s easy to fall victim to something that makes us ‘feel’ better. The enemy will throw all kinds of things at us to tickle our senses and give us a false sense of comfort and security. The ways of the enemy haven’t changed. He will try to cause us to question GOD…or lift ourselves up with the false idea that we don’t need GOD…or even worse, He will try to cause us to doubt GOD. And GOD is watching.

‘to know that which is in your heart, 
whether you will keep His commandments or not’

He’s looking to see if we truly love Him. The key is to know Torah! Torah shows us what sin is. If we recognize sin, we can then choose to obey Him and resist the enemy’s games. Holding to His instructions, especially in hard times, shows our true nature. Are we only striving to be Holy when things are going well? When it’s easy? Or do we stand firm as everything around us crumbles?

WE HAVE TO IDENTIFY SIN IN ORDER TO DEFEAT IT!

As the enemy tests you…test the test. Test it against the Word of GOD… for the Word is your weapon…and the enemy can’t stand against it. We know that the battle is the LORD’s, but just like Joshua leading the Israelites into the Promised Land, we are called to engage the enemy head on, empowered by the LORD.

So here we are, humbled and tested. But another dimension to this wilderness experience is at hand. The LORD continues in Deuteronomy 8:

’caused you to hunger’

We’ve talked before about ‘peeling the onion,’ so yes, it is literal hunger. Peel away some layers and hunger represents a general aching. We ache for comfort. We ache for security. We ache for what we’ve lost. We trust the LORD yet still struggle with the aches of our flesh none-the-less.

In my personal walk, more than ever, I’ve ached for GOD to reveal Himself to me in this Wilderness. And with every step I take I’m gaining a clearer vision of Wisdom & Understanding, Humility & Love.

And you know what? He has been feeding me…

‘and caused you to eat the manna which you had not known…”

In Exodus 16:3 the Israelites are complaining about being hungry. They say to Moses and Aaron: Would that we had died by the hand of the LORD in the land of Egypt in our sitting by the flesh-pots, in our eating bread to satisfaction. For you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill all this assembly with hunger.

A few days before this, they were singing and dancing glorifying the LORD for His majesty and salvation. They were praising Him for destroying their enemy and now, in the wilderness, they are aching for what they had. They were aching for the ‘good’ parts of their lives back in Egypt.

And the LORD told Moses “Behold I AMBread will rain from the heavens for you. And the people shall go out and gather the matter of a day in its day, so that I may test them, whether they will walk in my Torah or not.”

The bread the LORD rained on them was called manna. In Hebrew, manna means ‘what is it’ (Ex: 16-15) because it was something the Israelites had never seen before. And GOD designed it so they only took what they needed each day. You can read on in Exodus and find that the Israelites who didn’t trust and tried to take more than a day’s share were found to be disobedient to His instructions (Torah). In GOD’s economy, intentional disobedience equates to not loving Him.

I lost my job and after several months of searching, a job I wasn’t searching for… fell in my lap. I accepted, no questions asked, anticipating with full assurance GOD was fixing my problem. Immediately after I started, I doubted that was the case at all!

This job has put me in a place I jokingly refer to as ‘my own personal Nineveh’. Like Jonah, who resisted the call to go to Nineveh, once I saw the reality of where I was, I fought against it. In fact, every time I had a good reason to quit…and I was prepared to do just that…the problem would disappear. The LORD wasn’t going to let me leave.

Let me explain. At my new job I am surrounded by evil. I’m not quick to judge so when I say ‘evil’ it is a real darkness that permeates the air. Every day I feel dirty… and the pay is substantially less than the bills. Yet again, we see the focus on me and not on GOD. I sound like the Israelites complaining to Moses, don’t I? Can any of you relate to what I am saying?

As I struggle with the monetary issues of this world, the LORD has been doing a work in me that is absolutely amazing. I am working as a front-desk clerk at a motel and He has put people who desperately need to know Him right in my path. Management, co-workers and guests alike, all day long I deal with people who are lost; people who call my wilderness ‘home’.

I’ve come to terms with the fact that the Spirit has led me here and go to work wielding my weapon: the WORD of GOD. I open it at the front desk for all to see and go about my tasks.

You are the light of the world; a city situated on a mountain cannot be hidden. Nor do they light a lamp and put it under the grain measure, but on the lampstand; and it shines for all who are in the house. So let your light shine before men so that they may see your good works and may glorify your Father in Heaven. Matthew 5:14-16

Now the focus is not on me…it’s on His work through me.

I have drawn my weapon in several situations and GOD, in His Faithfulness, has seen me through. It’s amazing how people who don’t walk according to GOD change when you bring GOD into the picture. I’m not talking about preaching, no, no, no. But if you love Adonai, Elohim with all of your heart, soul, mind and strength (which He is leading you into the wilderness to judge) He rises and reveals Himself. Your words, your methods, your attitude…all of it…should reflect His Power and Glory. “Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart be pleasing to you, LORD.” Psalm 19:14 
As always, to GOD be the victory!

Something else He is feeding me is the understanding of true and unadulterated love between the children of GOD. In my pride, I was always the one to give…the one to comfort. But in my humility, I have been the recipient of that love. At first, I was hesitant, relying on the LORD’s instructions to ‘trust not in man.’ I have learned, however, the truth of love when GOD expresses it through His servants.

The LORD has used others to comfort me not only in the physical; but most importantly, spiritually. Speckled throughout the wickedness that surrounds me are points of light. A gentleman I met on the phone of our Holy Land Marketplace (blessings of mercy and peace to you, Tom) has been used by the LORD to teach me His love.

I had a Divine Appointment with a bill collector (blessings of mercy and peace to you, Brandon). I call it ‘Divine’ because I could have reached anyone on the phone that day. But Brandon was the one to take my call. As we spoke he told me, in his words, “Something is telling me to help you.” I was overwhelmed. Not by the fact that this company was willing to work with me…but by GOD’s Presence in our midst! Brandon and I talked about the LORD and His work in both our lives.

It is so beautiful to edify one another! The love shared between true believers is pure and complete! Our Spirits leap inside when we come together! I prayed for Adonai to reveal Himself to me in this Wilderness…and He has…through others. The LORD is feeding me with what I’ve never truly known. I thought I knew it. But I hadn’t lived it. I’m living it now and in His mercy, I’m learning why.

‘in order to cause you to know that man shall not live by bread alone, but man shall live by every word that proceeds from the mouth of Adonai’

I’ve had several opportunities to bring this up… and now is the time. Those of us in the wilderness, take heart, because this is a shared experience with Messiah Himself.

The Wilderness is a requirement for the redeemed. The LORD has designed it that way. Not only for the Israelites redeemed from Egypt, but for all who have joined themselves to Israel and are grafted in by the blood.

John 1:1- In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with GOD, and the Word was GOD.
John 1:14- And the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us. And we beheld His glory, glory as of an only-begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth.

Yeshua was GOD in the flesh and His flesh had to be redeemed. He went to John the Immerser (a voice from the wilderness– Isaiah 40) and after the Holy Spirit descended upon Him, was led into the wilderness. Matthew 4 (or Mark 1…or Luke 4)

Then Yeshua was led up into the wilderness by the Spirit to be tempted by the Adversary. And having fasted forty days and forty nights, afterwards he hungered.

And coming near to Him the Tempter said, if you are the Son of GOD, speak that these stones may become loaves. But answering, Yeshua said “It has been written ‘Man shall not live by bread alone but by every Word that proceeds from the mouth of Adonai.”

Yeshua battled the enemy using Deuteronomy (all three times He was tested if you read further)! All knowledge, all truth, all wisdom is found in the Word and the Word lives and breathes through Old Testament Scripture. The New Covenant writings merely confirm what had already been written before Yeshua walked this earth. We are co-inheritors of His Promise and being in the Wilderness proves we are on the right path and proves GOD is taking special interest in us.

Some of you have already experienced the Wilderness and were brought out into a better place. I encourage you to remember humility.

Some of us are there now. My encouragement is to absorb the Word and put it into action. Be comforted by the knowledge that our Savior and all Israel endured the Wilderness, too. Empowered by the Word, walk as a witness of the Living God using His instructions as your stepping-stones. And take every step with diligence, prayer and joy knowing in your heart the LORD is near. Watch with renewed vision as He molds you on the Potter’s wheel and refines you in the fire; all this to do the good work He purposed you for! AND TRUST THAT IT WILL ALL BE OKAY ACCORDING TO HIS PURPOSE.

CHAZAK! CHAZAK! V’NITCHAZEIK! 
(Be strong! Be strong! And may we be strengthened!)

To all of you… mercy and peace in the name of Yeshua.

Author: Jennifer Ross

The Passover Problem Solved

Illustrations

THE PASSOVER PROBLEM SOLVED

 

 

We are approaching the series of 3 springtime Biblical Feasts that begin on the 1st month of the Jewish Religious calendar year, the month of Aviv. Aviv is the original Hebrew name for this month that, after the Babylonian exile, also started to be called by its Babylonian name Nisan. The first of these 3 festivals is Pesach, Passover.

 

I am regularly asked how it is that Messiah could be crucified on Friday, buried, and then resurrected on Sunday, and that satisfy the “3 days and 3 nights” that prophecy seems to require. Any child knows that the math doesn’t add up. So let’s go through the procedure carefully. I’ll add some facts that have been missing until now, and then it will all come together.

 

So Passover is the first Festival of the season and then Unleavened Bread, the Feast of Matza, is the 2nd of the group and it commemorates the day that Israel actually began its march out of Egypt. While Passover is a 1-day event, Matza is a 7-day event that begins the day immediately following Passover. Because this event happened suddenly and Israel had to leave in hurry there was no time for the Hebrews to prepare their staple food, bread, in the normal way (by adding yeast, letting it rise, and then baking it). Instead the Jews had to prepare a kind of bread that did NOT utilize yeast. This bread, Matza, was not even baked; it was prepared by being placed on an open griddle to cook in a similar way as we cook pancakes. Matza is the bread of nomads, wanderers without a homeland; and Israel was about to become a nation of nomads for a 40-year period.

 

The last festival of the group of 3 is called Bikkurim, or Firstfruits, which on the FIXED Jewish calendar occurred earlier this week. Firstfruits occurs the day immediately following the 1st day of Matza. So we have the commencement of each festival on the 14th, 15th, and 16th of Nisan. The final day of the festival is the 21st of Nisan. We’ll talk more about Firstfruits shortly.

 

Another important feature of the Biblical Festivals is that God added some extra Sabbath days to them. There are 2 kinds of Biblical Sabbath days: the regular weekly 7th day Sabbath that we’re all familiar with, and the festival Sabbaths (also termed “high” or “great” Sabbaths) that were always part of the festivals. In the series of 3 spring feasts, the 1st day of the 7-day festival of Matza was one of those added Sabbaths, as was the final day of the 7 days of Matza.

 

According to the Torah Passover was on Nisan 14: the first day of Matza was on Nisan 15 and then there was a lull until the 7th day Sabbath came and on the following day Firstfruits was to be celebrated. Not all the Jews in Jesus time thought this was correct. But this was the way the Sadducees practiced it because the Sadducees controlled the priesthood and everything that went on at the Temple during that era.

 

Just as the slaughtering of the Pesach Lamb (Passover) is the focal point of the Springtime Festivals, so it is for Believers in Yeshua who understand that His death and resurrection are THE key events in His ministry that so profoundly affect us all.

Let’s examine the momentous events that surrounded Christ’s death and how it would have played out on a timeline.

 

 Look at the chart I’ve prepared for you. Notice that a Biblical day begins and ends at sunset. Our modern day that uses mechanical clocks as our time measuring devices, makes 12 midnight when one day ends and the new begins. It has nothing to do with sunrise or sunset.

 

Nisan13 (which in the year Jesus died would have been a Wednesday) is the day before Passover. It was on Wednesday the 13th that the disciples had the special meal prepared that we call The Last Supper and have transformed it into a church sacrament that we call Communion. We find in the Mishna that the Galileans (Yeshua and his disciples were Galileans) adopted a tradition that in Hebrew is called, seudah maphsehket; this translates essentially to “last supper”. The Galilean Jews (Yeshua and His disciples were Galileans) had established an additional celebration called seudah maphsehket (last supper) that the Judean Jews (the Jews of the Jerusalem area) did not observe. This last supper was about remembering that it was indeed not ALL Hebrews who were in danger from death at God’s hand in Egypt, but ONLY the firstborn sons. So a special nighttime meal was adopted whereby this meal would be eaten and then there would be a 24 hour fast that followed……thus the name “last supper”. The next meal to be eaten was the Passover meal.

 

So on Nisan 13, Wednesday, the seudah maphsehket was prepared; HOWEVER, it was not eaten on Nisan 13. Rather, it was after sundown, at the end of the day of Nisan 13, that the meal was taken. That is, it was eaten as the first meal of the next day, Thursday Aviv 14th (remember the beginning of a new day is just after sundown). The meal called “last supper” was generally eaten starting in the first hour of Passover. It is here that Yeshua says to commemorate this day by drinking wine that symbolizes His blood that establishes the New Covenant, and by eating unleavened bread that symbolizes His body to which we become in union. NOTE: this was NOT the traditional Passover Seder meal; that meal was yet to come because that meal is not eaten until the END of Passover day.

 

Therefore at the start of the day of Nisan 14, Thursday (which is nighttime), Passover day, the Galileans ate a special meal commemorating firstborns, and that meal was called “last supper.” After having the last supper where Yeshua proclaimed the words we now call Communion, the next event is that Judas betrays Him and shortly after midnight Our Lord is arrested. It is still Passover day. In the wee hours a little before sunrise, He is tried and convicted of blasphemy by the Sanhedrin. It is still Passover Day. After the Roman Governor, Pontius Pilate, confirms his death sentence Jesus is scourged and then nailed to Roman cross by Roman soldiers. It is still Passover Day, Thursday, Nisan 14.

 

At about the moment Jesus expires (around 3 pm in the afternoon on Passover Day) the slaughter of the Passover Lambs begins in the Temple grounds. Somewhere around ¼ million sheep will be killed and their blood collected between the hours of 3 pm and 6 pm. It is still Passover Day because the sun has not yet set.

 

While this is occurring the women are hurrying to convince the Roman soldiers to remove Messiah’s corpse from the execution stake; it is a requirement that they MUST get Him buried immediately because otherwise He would just lay exposed for at least 2 days. Why? I’ll show you in a minute. The women are relieved when the soldiers relent, take his dead body down, and then Yeshua is entombed before the sun sets. It is still Passover Day.

 

The butchered lambs are placed in the thousands of collective ovens located all around Jerusalem….both inside and outside the city walls….so that the hundreds of thousands of visiting Jewish pilgrims can cook their Passover Lambs. It is still Passover Day. Shortly after the sun sinks over the horizon 3 stars become visible thus ending Passover Day.  It is nighttime, Passover Day has ended and the 1st day of the Feast of Matza begins. It is now Nisan 15, Friday, the 1st day of Unleavened Bread.

 

What, you say, where did the Passover meal go? Aren’t they supposed to eat the Passover meal on Passover day? NO! Much to many peoples’ surprise the Biblical injunction is that the Passover meal is to be eaten AFTER dark at the end of the day of Aviv 14. This means the day has changed from Thursday the 14th to Friday the 15th…..the 1st day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. That’s right: the Passover meal technically is NOT eaten on Passover Day; it is the first meal of the new day on the Feast of Matza. Why? Because that’s exactly as it was in Egypt. They were still eating the Passover meal at around midnight we’re told, on Nisan 15, when Yehoveh killed all the unprotected firstborns throughout Egypt.

 

Now what did we learn earlier that was special and different about the 1st day of Matza? It was a festival Sabbath day (not the 7th day Shabbat, simply an added Sabbath for preparation purposes). Friday Nisan 15th was a festival Sabbath day. It had some of the same requirements as the 7th Day Sabbath in that handling a human corpse was prohibited on a Sabbath. That is why we read in the Gospels that there was a frenzy to get Jesus buried before dark, when the day changed from Festival of Pesach to the 1st day of Matza, which was a festival Sabbath day.

 

 Nisan 15th was an uneventful day; it was Friday, the festival Sabbath to begin the weeklong Feast of Unleavened Bread. The 15th day of Nisan ends at sundown and now it is now Saturday, Nisan 16th; this is (of course) the regular Hebrew weekly 7th day Sabbath. I already mentioned that while for the past several centuries Firstfruits has been celebrated on Aviv 16 (as a permanent tradition), in fact it was only the Rabbis (who were Pharisees) who long ago ordered it done this way, as opposed to the way it was observed in Jesus’ day. And this change in observance occurred AFTER the Temple was destroyed in 70 A.D. when the priesthood became non-operational. Remember, the Sadducees were the High Priests at this time and so with the end of the Temple and the priesthood the Sadducees lost their control over the matter of ritual and tradition. After the destruction of the Temple the Rabbis now got their way and they decided that rather than Firstfruits moving around on the calendar it would ALWAYS be Nisan 16th that Firstfruits would be celebrated on.

 

Notice that by this timeline Yeshua has been in the tomb for 3 days and 3 nights just as the prophecy of Jonah in the belly of the great fish demonstrated, and that Messiah said would be manifested in Him.

 

6355 N Courtenay Parkway, Merritt Island, FL 32953

Copyright © Seed of Abraham Ministries, Inc.
All Rights Reserved | Copyright & Terms