The Bible Recap - Day 313 Matthew 26, Mark 14 - Year 4
Episode Date: November 9, 2022SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: -... John 6:54-58 - Exodus 12:1-28 - Matthew 12:40 - Image: Timeline of Jesus' Death - Image: Passover - Article 1 of 4: Was Jesus Crucified on Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday? - Article 2 of 4: The Day Christ Died - Was it on a Thursday or Friday? - Article 3 of 4: Solving the Three Day Three Night Mystery - Article 4 of 4: On What Day Was Jesus Crucified? - Video: John Overview (Part Two) - Subscribe to The Pour Over SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
Today's reading is really similar to tomorrow's reading, so today we'll recap the first
half, then tomorrow we'll tackle the last half.
Today Jesus drops a bombshell on his disciples.
He says he's only got a few days to live.
The authorities are already plotting it in fact
and are just waiting for the right moment.
Judas knows they want to arrest Jesus
and he sees an opportunity to make some cash from it
if he can be the one to turn Jesus in.
The religious leaders arrange to pay Judas
30 pieces of silver for it.
Depending who you ask, this is anywhere from $200 to $2,000.
As soon as Judas gets the money,
he starts finding an
opportunity to make the betrayal happen. There are a few noteworthy things about this section. First,
we see that God's will always comes to pass. Second, we see that there are passive agents and
active agents involved in bringing his will to pass. The active agent here, Judas, has woe pronounced
on him. And while verse 24 tells us it would have been better for him, if he hadn't been born,
his birth was necessary as a part of God's plan of redemption.
Some of you have a really compassionate heart, and you feel sorry for Judas, and I'm so
grateful for your tender heart.
It's important to remember though that Judas got exactly what he deserved, but we all deserve,
in fact.
But Jesus did not get what he deserved, but we all deserve in fact, but Jesus did not get what he deserved.
As they sit down to dinner that night,
Jesus makes things awkward right off the bat
by announcing that there's a betrayer at the table.
They're all mortified, wondering if it could be them.
They all know that they had the capacity to betray him.
They ask, is it I, Lord?
But Judas doesn't ask that.
He asks, is it I, Rabbi? He calls Jesus
Teacher, not Master, which is a bit of a giveaway on its own. Then Jesus affirms that, yes,
he's the one. Judas isn't shocked by this. He's already got the silver in his pocket.
Then Jesus blesses the bread and gives thanks for it. This is a bit of a side note, but this is one
of those places in Scripture where it reveals that those are two separate things. He blesses the food, and he thanks the Father.
Then he makes reference to a speech he gave earlier. Remember in John 6, when he talked
about eating his flesh and drinking his blood, and it grossed everyone out? Here, he gives
them an object lesson about it. He feeds them what we call the Lord's Supper, or communion,
or the Eucharist, which means to give thanks.
And in doing this, he gives them a physical action that connects them to a spiritual reality.
Just like with baptism, there are a lot of different perspectives on how and when and why this should be practiced,
but there's one thing we can agree on.
The Lord's Supper may not taste like much, but it's truly the best feast we'll eat on this side of eternity.
It's the most privileged
meal in the universe. It marks us as God's children, and it helps our forgetful hearts remember.
In fact, he commands us to remember, to regularly bring it to mind that his body was broken,
and his blood was poured out for many. We need that reminder, or we'll become like the people we
read about yesterday who didn't wait well.
They were sidetracked and foolish and fearful.
So we partake and we remember.
Jesus and his disciples eat the bread, drink the wine, sing a hymn, and in John's account
of this story, Jesus tells Judas to do what he's going to do quickly.
Jesus knows the timing of it all, and I think Jesus is also just ready to get it over with.
He knows waiting is hard.
After dinner, they head out to the Mount of Olives. The Passover dinner is a big deal,
but there's no mention of them eating anything here besides bread. We never see them eat the Passover
Lamb, which is a command. Why isn't it mentioned? I'm going to unpack a theory for you. It's layered,
so bear with me. And if you have time, read Exodus 12 1 through 28,
because it really helps get an overall picture of what happens at Passover, also known
as the Feast of Unleavened Bread. Here are some important points. It's typically a week-long
celebration. But some scholars say that in Jesus' day, it was actually an 8-day celebration,
with the additional day being tacked on at the start of the week. Because during this 7-day
event, the Jews aren't allowed to eat anything with leaven in it.
So that day zero was their chance to finish off
all the existing leaven in their homes
before the seven-day event actually started.
Which means that when Jesus and His disciples
are having what we've typically thought of as the Passover Feast,
it may actually just be a Passover Feast
where they're kind of cleaning out the fridge.
The original text reflects this too.
In the Greek, there are two different words used for bread, one for unleavened and one
for leavened.
What we see in these passages is that Jesus and His disciples are eating artos, or leavened
bread, whereas unleavened bread is called azimose.
So if this isn't the Passover feast, that explains why they haven't eaten lamb yet.
Put a pin in that, we'll come back to it.
There's some debate over which day of the week this all happened on.
We know Jesus rose on a Sunday, and most people are familiar with the idea that Jesus died
on Friday, so I don't need to present that theory to you, but here's a possible problem
with that theory.
Remember when Jesus told the Pharisees that they wouldn't be getting any signs from him
except what he called the sign of Jonah?
It's in Matthew 1240. He says,
just as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish,
so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.
From this perspective, the problem with the Friday death is that we can't really get three days and three nights.
So how does this work? One theory I find interesting is the idea that Jesus died on a
Thursday. I'm going to give you a bunch of info that may be confusing if you're new to this,
but hang in there. It'll make sense. It's not only important, but it's beautiful. In Jewish
culture, the day starts at sundown, not midnight or whenever you wake. So the Sabbath or Saturday
actually starts at sundown on what we call Friday. In order to prepare themselves to be free from work or travel on Sabbath,
they have a 24-hour period every week called the day of preparation.
In short, this is Friday, except it starts at sundown on Thursday, of course.
The opening day of Passover is also treated like a Sabbath,
and it has its own day of preparation as well.
In the year Jesus has believed to have died,
the opening day of Passover was a Friday.
So, uh oh, they can't use that as their day of preparation
like usual.
That means they have to back it up a whole extra day,
making the day of preparation Thursday,
which for them starts on Wednesday at sundown.
If I've already lost you,
check out the image we've linked in the show notes,
it'll really help.
Terri Lee, you said this was beautiful
and so far it's boring.
Okay, let me zoom out on Passover practices for a second.
In the four days prior to Passover, each family would select their own lamb to sacrifice,
that bring it into their home, live with it, feed it, inspect it to see if it has any flaws,
because it has to be perfect.
Then on the fourth day, the day of preparation that sacrificed it and eat it after sundown,
that paint its blood on the doorways of their homes, on the top, left, and right sides of the door,
to commemorate what their ancestors did in Egypt when God passed over their homes and saved their lives.
That's where this holiday originated.
These door markings would actually form the four corners of a cross.
The left and the right, and the blood at at the top that would drip down to the ground. If you want to see a visual aid for this, check out the image we've
linked in the show notes. So if Jesus was crucified on a Thursday, and we back up four
days prior to Thursday, that's Palm Sunday, the only day Jesus let people publicly and
affirm of him as Messiah King. Then there are four days of Jesus living among the people
of Jerusalem, being interrogated
and inspected, put through trials and questioning, and he's still found to be without blemish, the
perfect, spotless, sacrificial lamb of our Passover. And on the day of preparation, he's sacrificed.
He is the Passover lamb. If all this days of the week talk is confusing or if you're interested
in reading it more on this and other theories,
including the possibility of a Wednesday crucifixion, check out the four articles we've linked in the show notes.
But again, I want to point out, these are just theories and what matters most is not which day he died,
but that he rose from the dead.
My God shot today was in the Lord's Supper. Two things stood out to me.
First, I've always been confused by the fact
that Jesus fed Judas Communion. Since it's something that's reserved only for true followers of
Christ, why would he beat it to the man he just identified as his betrayer? A man the rest of
Scripture marks out as not being adopted into God's family. I don't know what mode of Jesus had in
doing this, but there's one thing it reveals to us. The act of taking the Lord's
supper isn't magical. It doesn't hold any power to save us, otherwise it would have been sufficient
for Judas. And just like when the gospel falls on death ears, Jesus fed communion to a hard heart,
and I imagine it broke his. The second thing that stands out to me here is the way this is a foretaste.
As he tells them to eat his flesh
and drink his blood in the elements,
they are in a way eating the sacrificial lamb.
And by his blood, our sins are covered.
And by his death, our lives are spared.
And by his provision, I know one thing for sure and forever.
He's where the joy is.
Tomorrow we'll be starting the second half
of the Book of John.
So we're linking to a short video overview in the show notes. The we'll be starting the second half of the Book of John, so we're linking to a
short video overview in the show notes.
The video is eight minutes long, so check it out if you have some time to spare.
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