Good Friday

The Messiah said that 3 nights would be involved with His time in the heart of the earth. There is no 3rd night involved with a Friday afternoon death/Sunday resurrection.
This has been answered a few times now.
Since you are still pursuing and answer to a question that has been answered, I am now thinking that you are asking the wrong question.

What exactly are you looking for?
What do you wish to accomplish here?
 
HomeschoolDad,
re: "By 'mistranslation', I refer to anything that creates an apparent contradiction in God's Word. God does not lie. And keep in mind the original texts are lost."

So then at least some of what we have might not actually be His word.


re: " I hesitate to speak for Haydock, but by 'natural day, I assume he means a 24-hour day, normally beginning and ending at midnight..."

Is that your position also? I thought they used a sunset to sunset to delineate a calendar day back then.


re: "...and by 'common computation', I assume he means the same thing."

I was referring to the "the nights used not to be separated" part of the statement. I don't understand what that means.



re: "'Three days, night or day', could indeed be the true sense of the original Scripture."

Meaning "what" with regard to Matthew 12:40?


re: "May I ask, though, what point you are trying to prove?"

Whether or not the idea of a Friday crucifixion/Sunday resurrection is an official position of the Catholic Church. The replies here seem to be saying that it isn't.


re: "That Scripture contradicts itself? That Scripture is not true?"

No.


re: "That the crucifixion (which from the account of His burial, viz. the rush to bury him before sundown on the Sabbath, clearly took place on a Friday) didn't take place on Friday?"

No, at least not for the purpose of this topic.


re: "Or that the resurrection did not take place on Sunday?"

No.


re: "...please share from what Christian confession, if any, you come."

I was brought up Baptist.
 
So then at least some of what we have might not actually be His word.

That is entirely possible. Only the original manuscripts, which we do not have, are infallible. That's one reason we have a teaching Church, guided by the Holy Ghost.

Is that your position also? I thought they used a sunset to sunset to delineate a calendar day back then.

Sunset to sunset would still be 24 hours.

I was referring to the "the nights used not to be separated" part of the statement. I don't understand what that means.

Not having Haydock here to elucidate what he meant, I assume he meant that a 24-hour day was just spoken of as one day, without distinction between day and night

"'Three days, night or day', could indeed be the true sense of the original Scripture." --- Meaning "what" with regard to Matthew 12:40?

You tell me.

Whether or not the idea of a Friday crucifixion/Sunday resurrection is an official position of the Catholic Church. The replies here seem to be saying that it isn't.

I would have to delve into whether there has ever been an infallible, defined teaching that says this. It has been part of Catholic Tradition from time immemorial. I can't imagine that the Holy Ghost would allow the Church to be deceived in this fashion.

re: "That the crucifixion (which from the account of His burial, viz. the rush to bury him before sundown on the Sabbath, clearly took place on a Friday) didn't take place on Friday?" --- No, at least not for the purpose of this topic.

re: "Or that the resurrection did not take place on Sunday?" --- No.

See above.
 
Please explain what is incorrect about that quote.
In ancient Israel, any portion of a day was counted as a day. So,
Any portion of Friday, Saturday and Sunday = three days in the earth.
Thursday night, Friday night and Saturday night = three nights in the earth.

NOTE: Jesus did not say it would be three nights in the TOMB, but rather the "bowels of the earth" He was not free to travel anywhere else.
 
In ancient Israel, any portion of a day was counted as a day. So,
Any portion of Friday, Saturday and Sunday = three days in the earth.
Thursday night, Friday night and Saturday night = three nights in the earth.
You mention Thursday night time and Friday daytime, but you don't mention Thursday daytime.
NOTE: Jesus did not say it would be three nights in the TOMB, but rather the "bowels of the earth" He was not free to travel anywhere else.
When did He begin His time in the "bowels of the earth"?
 
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Sunset to sunset would still be 24 hours.
But it makes all the difference with regard to the number of night times.
Not having Haydock here to elucidate what he meant, I assume he meant that a 24-hour day was just spoken of as one day, without distinction between day and night
But the Messiah did make a distinction with regard to daytimes and night times.
You tell me.
How can I tell you what you mean?

See above.
I don't understand what I'm supposed to see.
 
This has been answered a few times now.
So, you believe the three hours of darkness in the afternoon can be counted as one of the nights in the "heart of the earth"?

And that the "subterranean dungeon where Christ was apparently kept the night of his arrest at Gethsemane" can also be counted as one of the nights in the "heart of the earth?

What exactly are you looking for?
I started the topic to see if the idea of a Friday crucifixion/Sunday resurrection was an official doctrine of the Catholic Church. Apparently it's not.

 
How can I tell you what you mean?

I meant "I don't know the answer, you might be better able to offer a conjecture than I would".

I don't understand what I'm supposed to see.

See my reference to a teaching Church and her magisterium, guided by the Holy Ghost.

I started the topic to see if the idea of a Friday crucifixion/Sunday resurrection was an official doctrine of the Catholic Church. Apparently it's not.

What the level of belief required of a Catholic in this regard is, I do not know. We do know from Scripture that the crucifixion took place on a Friday, the parasceve before the Sabbath. A Sunday resurrection is not something with which Catholics generally take issue.
 
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