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This one, it says “hour was about the sixth”Which version of the Bible are you using? The Catholic NAB says noon for John 19:14.
biblehub.com/interlinear/john/19-14.htm
This one, it says “hour was about the sixth”Which version of the Bible are you using? The Catholic NAB says noon for John 19:14.
This is why I don’t really trust the NAB.Which version of the Bible are you using? The Catholic NAB says noon for John 19:14.
Exactly my words.
You claimed it was six o’clock.
That is false. It was the sixth hour.John does not say “noon” he says six o’clock…
And in Roman time, that was the modern equivalent of 6 AM.That is false. It was the sixth hour.
In the Roman empire, just as today, the sixth hour in a day, is six o’clock, because each new day begins at midnight.You claimed it was six o’clock.
That is false. It was the sixth hour.
The source is the Spirit that came after Jesus. The Spirit reminded John of all that Jesus had said to him.In the gospel of John we find Jesus saying things that are not found in the other three gospels:
Before Abraham came to be, I am.
The Father and I are one.
For my Father’s will is that everyone who looks to the Son and believes in him shall have eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day.
And now, Father, glorify me in your presence with the glory I had with you before the world began.
that all may honor the Son just as they honor the Father. He who does not honor the Son does not honor the Father, who sent him.
If you really knew me, you would know my Father as well. From now on, you do know him and have seen him.
All that belongs to the Father is mine.
For this reason the Jews tried all the harder to kill him; not only was he breaking the Sabbath, but he was even calling God his own Father, making himself equal with God.
…
But we don’t find these quotes in the other three gospels, Mark, Matthew or Luke, which were written much earlier than the gospel of John. The gospel of John was written about 60 years after the death of Jesus. Why is his gospel so much different from the other three gospels which were written earlier and is this an indication that the gospel of John may not be historically accurate? What is the source of the gospel of John other than an oral tradition which was handed down from year to year ?
Mark 15:25 saysAnd in Roman time, that was the modern equivalent of 6 AM.
The gospel of John was written to the world not to the Jews, that’s why John uses standard Roman time in his text, and not local Jewish time (unknown to people of the Roman empire)Is there any other place in the whole Bible where they use Roman time?
Mark is well behind John on all levels and uses local Jewish time.Mark 15:25 says
25 And it was the third hour when they crucified him.
I’ve heard this explanation, and it’s an attractive one admittedly, but I personally don’t buy it. The conservative scholar Leon Morris once objected to the explanation because he sees no evidence that this midnight-to-midnight reckoning was used “other in legal matters like leases.” (cf. Pliny, Natural History, 2.79.188) In fact, Pliny expressly says in the preceding sentence that "“the common people everywhere” count the hours of a day “from light (i.e. daybreak) to darkness.”John does not say “noon” he says six o’clock. Jesus stands before Pilate at six o’clock in the morning. And gets crucified at nine in the morning. On the day of preparation for the Passover festival.
There may be discrepancies elsewhere, but not here.
This is very fascinating. It seems to me that Natural History must have been written before 79 AD, which is where Pliny’s death is reckoned. It is possible that, within the 20 years or so before the Gospel of John was written, the whole empire would lean toward the priests and presiders over the day (Roman). We know this eventually did happen, as that is the calendar we have to day.The days have been computed by different people in different ways. The Babylonians reckoned from one sunrise to the next; the Athenians from one sunset to the next; the Umbrians from noon to noon; the multitude, universally, from light to darkness; the Roman priests and those who presided over the civil day, also the Egyptians and Hipparchus, from midnight to midnight.Code:I've heard this explanation, and it's an attractive one admittedly, but I personally don't buy it. The conservative scholar Leon Morris once objected to the explanation because he sees no evidence that this midnight-to-midnight reckoning was used "other in legal matters like leases." (cf. Pliny, *Natural History*, 2.79.188) In fact, Pliny expressly says in the preceding sentence that ""the common people everywhere" count the hours of a day "from **light** (i.e. daybreak) to darkness."
Yes, I also have the sense that it was a long and grueling day.(Personally, I prefer John’s chronology over Mark’s here, because if we assume the Markan timeline - where Jesus was tried, mocked and carried the cross somewhere in between 6 to 9 AM - it all seems a bit rushed. You’ve only got two or three hours to cram that all in. It’s more likely that the trial and the mocking and the procession took the greater part of the morning up until before noon - especially if you assume that the trial before Antipas is also historical.)
Finally, I should note that traditionally, many Catholics have understood the “sixth hour” in John to mean midday, not early morning. That’s why we have the Tre Ore (three hours) devotion from 12 PM to 3 PM. (Admittedly, it’s a recent devotion, but I’d still give as an example of what at least certain Catholics thought historically.) In fact, the 11th century commentator Theophylact expressed this: “Man was created on the sixth day, and on the sixth hour he ate of the tree. At the same hour that the Lord created man, did He heal him after his fall. On the sixth day, and on the sixth hour, was Christ nailed to the Cross.”
This framework also accounts for the two crminials who outlasted Him on the crosses, and the desire of the Jews to have the bodies taken down before sundown.To me, arrested at night, judged early morning, executed before midday, sounds accurate.
Guess what? Our ‘traditional’ midnight-to-midnight 2 x 12-hour time reckoning (the so-called ‘French hours’ or ‘French time’, aka ‘small clock’) actually only started to become the standard during the mid-17th century, only becoming universal around the 19th century, I believe.This is very fascinating. It seems to me that Natural History must have been written before 79 AD, which is where Pliny’s death is reckoned. It is possible that, within the 20 years or so before the Gospel of John was written, the whole empire would lean toward the priests and presiders over the day (Roman). We know this eventually did happen, as that is the calendar we have to day.
During the time of Jesus, the injunction in Deuteronomy against leaving the dead bodies of hanged criminals overnight was being adapted in the context of crucifixion. While for most parts of the Roman Empire it was the norm to just leave the corpses of crucified victims hanging on the crosses for as long as possible as a deterrent, for the Jews it was the norm to take down and bury the corpses of people who have been crucified, because the Jews believed that failure to bury a dead body in the Holy Land would pollute the land God had given them. That’s why they made sure that anyone who had died at the very least be buried somewhere.This framework also accounts for the two crminials who outlasted Him on the crosses, and the desire of the Jews to have the bodies taken down before sundown.
Ah, Alfred Edersheim.When John speaks of the Passover meal, he means the hagigah offering made on Nisan 15.
Jesus indeed gathered with His family for the Last Supper. And still, Mark and the other synoptics relate it as the Passover.Ah, Alfred Edersheim.
Actually, there’s no need to refer to the (obligatory) ḥagigah of Nisan 15 here, since there was another (voluntary) ḥagigah for Nisan 14, which one may bring along with the paschal sacrifice. However, since there was no requirement in the Torah that the ḥagigah sacrificed on the 14th be eaten at the Seder, its slaughter does not override the Sabbath or the prohibition of making an offering or eating it in a state of defilement. (Unlike the paschal offering, which even one who is ritually unclean may eat.) Therefore the voluntary ḥagigah was not brought when Nisan 14 falls on a Sabbath or by people who are defiled. For all we know, the priests could be concerned with the paschal offering of the afternoon of 14 Nisan, not necessarily the one in 15 Nisan.
Again, I may be just biased towards John here (I know, right?), but IMHO I think John’s scenario of Jesus being crucified before the Passover may be the historical detail. Is it not possible that Mark and the other synoptics have ‘passoverized’ the historical Last Supper, because in Christian theology and liturgy the Eucharist - the body and blood of Jesus, the sacrificed lamb of God - has become the new Passover meal. I already pointed out how Mark may have ‘liturgicalized’ (is that even a word?) the passion of Jesus by assigning events to the liturgical hours. Who knows, maybe the same thing happened here?
Maybe this ‘passoverization’ was not entirely caused by the gospel writers or the early Christians; it could have been a process that started with Jesus Himself. He might indeed have patterned the Eucharist after the Seder, even if the actual Last Supper was not (historically) a Seder (although of course it was still a meal eaten during Passover season - which could have contributed to the Eucharist being passoverized).
After all, in the synoptics you have the chief priests hesitating to arrest Jesus during the Passover festival “lest there be a riot among the people” - but they go ahead and arrest Him on Passover night anyway. In addition, you might consider other factors like Jesus apparently only being with the Twelve, whereas the Passover Seder was a family gathering (then again, one might imagine that Jesus now considered the disciples His family), not to mention that the bread is referred to as artos and not as azyma (yeah, I know, this sounds like the old argument the Eastern Orthodox used against the Latin and Armenian use of unleavened bread for the Eucharist, but still) - but that being said you do have evidence from the Greek OT to support the synoptics’ use of artos.
Plus, the supposed parallels between the Last Supper and the Passover meal are actually debatable in nature: many of these are IMHO rather incidental. The fact is, we really don’t know much about the Seder as 1st century Jews would have celebrated it other than the bare essentials (there was obviously the lamb, unleavened matzo, wine, bitter herbs, a recounting of the Exodus, singing - but beyond that, not much else). The modern Jewish Seder is actually the product of later development. Many of the stuff we now associate with the Seder like the afikoman or the singing of the Mah Nishtanah or the four cups of wine actually originate later than the time of Jesus. So to draw parallels between the modern Seder and the 1st century Last Supper (something that some Christians often attempt to do) is just anachronistic.
To go back to a past post of yours: “In the synoptic gospels Jesus eats the Pasch with the Twelve.”Jesus indeed gathered with His family for the Last Supper.
That’s the thing. I tend to agree with Fr. John Meier at this point: a stronger case can be made for the Johannine chronology than the synoptic. As he pointed out, the only real indicator that it was the Passover in Mark is verses 1 and 12-16. But outside those parts, there’s really not much to hint that the meal was a Seder. In fact, the words of the Jewish leaders (“Not during the feast, lest there be an uproar from the people”) could be seen as actually supporting the Johannine scenario.And still, Mark and the other synoptics relate it as the Passover.
Indeed the twelve were his family.To go back to a past post of yours: “In the synoptic gospels Jesus eats the Pasch with the Twelve.”
That’s the thing. I tend to agree with Fr. John Meier at this point: a stronger case can be made for the Johannine chronology than the synoptic. As he pointed out, the only real indicator that it was the Passover in Mark is verses 1 and 12-16. But outside those parts, there’s really not much to hint that the meal was a Seder. In fact, the words of the Jewish leaders (“Not during the feast, lest there be an uproar from the people”) could be seen as actually supporting the Johannine scenario.
Obviously Luke’s gospel indicates this was a Passover as well.The hymn singing is really the only element of the synoptic Last Supper that could convincingly link it to the Seder (the singing of the Great Hallel?) IMHO, but that also is far from certain - since we are not told what “hymn” it was they were singing. The bread, the wine, the reclining positions are far too common to be indicators that this was a real Passover meal.