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On what day of the feast did the crucifixion occur?
Synoptics: On the Passover.
John: On the day of Preparation.
It is expressly stated in the Synoptics that he celebrated the Passover before his death. “Then came the day of unleavened bread, when the passover must be killed. And he sent Peter and John, saying, Go and prepare us the passover, that we may eat.... And they made ready the passover. And when the hour was come, he sat down, and the twelve apostles with him. And he said unto them, With desire I have desired to eat this passover with you before I suffer” ([Luke xxii, 7–15]; [Matt. xxvi, 17–20]; [Mark xiv, 12–18]).
The author of the Fourth Gospel declares that the Last Supper was not the Paschal meal, and that Jesus was crucified on the day preceding the Passover, that is, on the day of Preparation. He refers to the events connected with the Last Supper as having taken place “before the passover” ([xiii, 1]); after supper, when Jesus bade Judas do quickly what he proposed to do, he states that the disciples “thought because Judas had the bag, that Jesus had said unto him, Buy those things that we have need of against the feast” ([xiii, 29]); at the trial, he says, the Jews “themselves went not into the judgment hall, lest they might be defiled, but that they might eat the passover” ([xviii, 28]); when Pilate is about to deliver him up to be crucified, he even goes out of the way to repeat that “It was the preparation of the passover” ([xix, 14]).
This discrepancy is not, like many other Bible discrepancies, an unintentional error. It represents a conflict between two dogmas. The primitive church was rent with dissensions regarding this question, some contending that Christ suffered on the 14th Nisan, others that it was on the 15th. During the second century—the century in which our gospels appeared—this controversy was especially bitter.
According to John ([i, 29], [xix, 33, 36]) Jesus was the Paschal Lamb, and as such, must be slain on the day of Preparation. The slaying of the lambs began at three o’clock in the afternoon, the hour at which Jesus is said to have expired. The Synoptics, on the other hand, in order to enable him to partake of the Paschal meal and institute the Eucharist, which is a survival and perpetuation of the Passover, must prolong his existence until after this meal, and consequently his crucifixion cannot take place until the following day. It was impossible for him to be the Paschal Lamb and at the same time partake of the Paschal meal. This necessarily produced a schism. The Fourth Gospel was written in support of the one side, the Synoptics in support of the other.
It is declared by the most eminent fathers of the second century that the Apostle John, whom some of them had known, was accustomed to observe the Paschal meal. This is another argument against the Johannine authorship of the Fourth Gospel.
Referring to the Lord’s Supper, as recorded in John, the “Bible for Learners” says: “It was not the Paschal meal. The Passover did not begin until the following evening; for he himself who was the true Paschal Lamb, and as such made an end of all sacrifices, must be put to death at the very day and hour ordained for the slaughter of the lamb—not twenty-four hours later as the Synoptic Gospels say” (Vol. iii, p. 684).