The most significant prophecy in the Bible concerning the resurrection
of Jesus is known as “the prophecy of Jonah.” It is a symbolic prophecy
represented by the three days and three nights that Jonah spent in the
stomach of a great fish (Jonah 1:17).
Jesus explained the prophetic symbolism of this unique event on an
occasion when He rebuked the Pharisees for seeking a “sign” from Him. By
a “sign,” they meant a miracle that would validate Jesus’ claim to be
the Messiah.
The Prophecy’s Meaning
Jesus took their word and played with it by telling them that the only
“sign” they would be given would be “the sign of Jonah.” Jesus then
proceeded to explain what He was talking about:
“for just as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the
sea monster, so shall the Son of Man be three days and three nights in
the heart of the earth” (Matthew 12:38-40).
Jesus clearly and distinctly prophesies here, using the example of
Jonah, that He will spend three days and three nights in the tomb before
His resurrection will occur.
This prophecy, like all Messianic prophecies, had to be fulfilled in the
life of Jesus if He truly was the Messiah of God. Jesus emphasized this
point Himself after His resurrection when He told His disciples,
“All things which are written about Me in the law of Moses and the
Prophets and the Psalms must be fulfilled” (Luke 24:44).
The Prophecy vs. Tradition
But was the prophecy of Jonah really fulfilled in the burial experience
of Jesus? According to the traditionally accepted chronology of events,
it was not!
The traditional chronology places the crucifixion on Friday morning and
the burial on late Friday afternoon. It fixes the resurrection on Sunday
morning. Thus, according to the traditional view, the body of Jesus was
in the tomb only one full day (Saturday) and two full nights (Friday and
Saturday). Jesus said His body would be in the tomb three days and three
nights.
There have been many attempts to reconcile the problem that is raised
here by the divergence between the prophecy and the traditional view of
its fulfillment, but all the attempts I have read have always fallen
short of producing a true fulfillment of the prophecy. Jesus said all
Messianic prophecy had to be fulfilled in Him, and I believe He meant
every detail of every Messianic prophecy. Otherwise, it could be argued
that He was not the Messiah.
The Source of the Problem
Let’s consider the events in the last week of Jesus’ life to see if we
can find some clues that will solve the problem. Perhaps the best place
to begin is with the problem itself. It is rooted in Mark 15:42 where it
says that the crucifixion took place on “the day of preparation before
the Sabbath.”
This verse has led most people to assume that the crucifixion took place
on a Friday since the Jewish Sabbath is Saturday. And that assumption
has in turn led to the conclusion that the crucifixion had to take place
in either 30 or 33 AD because those are the only two years in the
general time period of Jesus’ death when the day of preparation (14
Nisan on the Jewish calendar) fell on a Friday.
Peculiarities of the Jewish Calendar
A careful study of Jewish calendar practices will show that the
assumption that the day of preparation in the year of Jesus’ death had
to fall on a Friday is invalid! Such an assumption is based upon Gentile
ignorance about Jewish feast days.
What the Gentile church has failed to recognize over the centuries is
that the first day after Passover (15 Nisan) is a feast day, or “high
day” because it is the beginning of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. It is
therefore considered to be a Sabbath, regardless of which day of the
week on which it falls. Read Numbers 28:16-18. Verse 18 clearly
indicates that the first day after Passover, Nisan 15, is to be observed
as a Sabbath — and so it has been throughout Jewish history to this day.
Now, the Gospel of John makes it clear that the Sabbath after the
crucifixion was not a regular Sabbath. Rather, it was a feast day
Sabbath, marking the beginning of the Feast of Unleavened Bread.
Consider the words of John 19:31 — “The Jews, therefore, because it was
the day of preparation, so that the bodies should not remain on the
cross on the Sabbath (for that Sabbath was a high day), asked Pilate
that their legs might be broken, and that they might be taken away.”
Solving the Problem
Again, the point of all this is that Jesus did not have to be killed on
a Friday in order for His crucifixion to precede the Sabbath because
there could have been two Sabbaths during the week of His crucifixion,
depending on what day of the week the high feast day fell on. If it fell
on Saturday, then there was only one Sabbath. But if it fell on another
day of the week, as it usually does, there would be two Sabbaths.
Take the year 31 AD for example. In that year the 14th of Nisan, the
Passover day on which Jesus would have been crucified, fell on
Wednesday, April 25th. The next day, Thursday, would have been the high
feast day, and therefore it would have been a Sabbath.
Thus, if Jesus was crucified in the year 31, He would have been
crucified on Wednesday and buried that evening before the high feast day
Sabbath began. His body would have remained in the tomb for three days
(Thursday, Friday and Saturday) and three nights (Wednesday, Thursday
and Friday), just as He predicted. That means His resurrection would
have taken place on Saturday evening, April 28th. To the Jew, that would
place the Lord’s resurrection on Sunday, the first day of the week,
because the Jewish day begins at sundown.
The Crucial Clue
There is a clue in the Scriptures that the crucifixion week had two
Sabbaths. In Mark 15:47 we are told that Mary Magdalene and Mary the
mother of James remained at the tomb after Jesus had been buried. In
Mark 16:1 it says that the two of them bought spices to anoint the body
of Jesus after the Sabbath was over. But in Luke 23:56 it says they
bought the spices before the Sabbath and then rested on the Sabbath
before proceeding to the tomb on Sunday morning.
There seems to be only one explanation of the apparent contradiction in
these verses. After resting on the high day Sabbath on Thursday, the
ladies bought the spices on Friday and then rested again on the regular
weekly Sabbath on Saturday before proceeding to the tomb on Sunday
morning.
This explains how they could have bought the spices both before and
after the Sabbath. They bought them after the high Sabbath on Thursday
but before the regular Sabbath on Saturday.
An Amazing Corroboration
A fascinating fact that also indicates that the resurrection may well
have occurred in 31 AD is to be found in calculations done by William
Whiston, the renowned translator of the writings of Josephus. In a very
detailed appendix that he added to his translation, he uses both
biblical and extra-biblical sources to determine the date of the last
Jubilee year in Israel, before the Roman conquest in 70 AD. His
conclusion was that it would have begun in the fall of 27 AD. [1]
The date of 27 AD most likely marks the beginning of Jesus’ ministry,
for His ministry was a symbolic fulfillment of the Jubilee promises.
This is indicated by the scripture that Jesus read in the synagogue in
Nazareth when He launched His public ministry (Luke 4:16-24 & Isaiah
61:1-2):
The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,
Because He anointed Me to preach the Gospel to the poor.
He has sent Me to proclaim release to the captives,
And recovery of sight to the blind,
To set free those who are downtrodden,
To proclaim the favorable year of the Lord.
It is commonly agreed that the ministry of Jesus lasted 3½ years. A
launching date in the fall of 27 AD to coincide with the beginning of
the Jubilee would place His death in the spring of 31 AD — the year in
which the Passover week had two Sabbaths.
A Final Problem
Another point of controversy about the resurrection week concerns the
nature of the Lord’s last supper with His disciples. The church has
traditionally taught that this was the Passover meal. But the scriptures
clearly indicate that the meal was eaten the evening before Passover.
Jesus was crucified on the day of preparation for the Passover. In fact,
He died at three o’clock in the afternoon at the precise moment that the
Passover lambs were being slaughtered for the Passover meal that evening
(Matthew 27:45-46).
Jesus and His disciples had eaten their last meal together the evening
before Passover. Yet, Jesus referred to His last meal with His disciples
as “keeping the Passover” (Matt. 26:18). So, it must have been a
Passover meal that was celebrated one evening early.
Professor Harold Hoehner of Dallas Theological Seminary has proposed a
solution to this problem. [2] He says there is evidence that the
Galilean Jews reckoned time differently from the Judean Jews. Whereas
the Judean Jews counted a day from sunset to sunset, the Galilean Jews,
according to Hoehner, counted a day from sunrise to sunrise. If this is
true, then Jesus and His disciples, being Galileans, would have
celebrated Passover one evening earlier than their Jewish brethren in
the Jerusalem area.
On the other hand, since Jesus knew He was to be sacrificed as the Lamb
of God for the sins of the world, He may simply have decided to
celebrate Passover one day early so that His death on the cross could
coincide precisely with the sacrifice of the Passover lambs the next
day.
A Summary of the Order of Events
Jesus and His disciples ate the Passover meal on a Tuesday evening (April 24th), one day early, in the Upper Room on Mount Zion.
After the Passover meal, Jesus and His disciples departed the Upper Room
and walked to the Garden of Gethsemane in the Kidron Valley between the
Old City and the Mount of Olives.
Jesus was betrayed and arrested early Tuesday evening. His various
trials lasted throughout Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning.
Jesus was crucified at about 9:00 am on Wednesday morning (April 25th). At noon, darkness filled the land. At about 3:00 pm Jesus died.
Jesus was buried on Wednesday about sunset.
The two Marys waited until after the high Sabbath on Thursday (April
26th) to purchase the spices for the anointing of Jesus’ body. They
bought the spices on Friday (April 27th) and then rested again during
the regular Sabbath on Saturday (April 28th) before returning to the
tomb on Sunday morning (April 29th).
The resurrection of Jesus occurred on Saturday evening (Sunday by Judean
reckoning of time).
The resurrection was discovered on Sunday morning
when the women returned to the tomb.
What Difference Does It Make?
Lest you be tempted to write all this off as much ado about nothing, let
me explain why I think it is important. Prophecy and its fulfillment
validate Jesus as who He said He was — namely, God in the flesh.
Prophecy and its fulfillment also validate the Bible as the inspired
Word of God. Prophecy must be fulfilled precisely, not approximately.
The precise fulfillment of prophecy regarding the First Coming of Jesus
is our assurance that all the prophecies regarding His Second Coming
will also be fulfilled completely to the last detail. God will not
forget or overlook anything. He is true to His Word. God keeps His
promises. Hallelujah!