m08) Quartodeciman Assemblies (14thers)

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THE CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA

Easter Controversy
Ecclesiastical history preserves the memory of three distinct phases of the dispute
regarding the proper time of observing the Passover Feast. It will add to clearness if
we in the first place state what is certain regarding the date and the nature of these
three categories.
First phase
The first was mainly concerned with the lawfulness of celebrating Passover on a
weekday. We read in Eusebius (Church History V.23): "A question of no small
importance arose at that time [i.e. the time of Pope Victor, about A.D. 190]. The dioceses
of all Asia, as from an older tradition, held that the fourteenth day of the moon, on which
day the Jews were commanded to sacrifice the lamb, should always be observed as the
feast of the life-giving pasch [epi tes tou soteriou Pascha heortes], contending that the
fast ought to end on that day, whatever day of the week it might happen to be. However it
was not the custom of the churches in the rest of the world to end it at this point, as they
observed the practice, which from Apostolic tradition has prevailed to the present time, of
terminating the fast on no other day than on that of the Resurrection of our Saviour.
Synods and assemblies of bishops were held on this account, and all with one consent
through mutual correspondence drew up an ecclesiastical decree that the mystery of the
Resurrection of the Lord should be celebrated on no other day but the Sunday and that we
should observe the close of the paschal fast on that day only." These words of the Father
of Church History, followed by some extracts which he makes from the controversial
letters of the time, tell us almost all that we know concerning the paschal controversy in
its first stage. A letter of St. Irenus is among the extracts just referred to, and this shows
that the diversity of practice regarding Passover Feast had existed at least from the time
of Pope Sixtus (c. 120). Further, Irenaeus states that St. Polycarp, who like the other
Asiatics, kept Passover on the fourteenth day of the moon, whatever day of the week that
might be, following therein the tradition which he claimed to have derived from St. John
the Apostle, came to Rome c. 150 about this very question, but could not be persuaded by
Pope Anicetus to relinquish his Quartodeciman observance. Nevertheless he was not
debarred from communion with the Roman Church, and St. Irenus, while condemning
the Quartodeciman practice, nevertheless reproaches Pope Victor (c. 189-99) with having
excommunicated the Asiatics too precipitately and with not having followed the
moderation of his predecessors. The question thus debated was therefore primarily
whether Easter was to be kept on a Sunday, or whether Christians should observe the
Consecrated Day of the Jews, the fourteenth of Nisan, which might occur on any day of
the week. Those who kept Passover with the Jews were called Quartodecimans or
terountes (observants); but even in the time of Pope Victor this usage hardly extended
beyond the churches of Asia Minor. After the pope's strong measures the Quartodecimans
seem to have gradually dwindled away. Origen in the "Philosophumena" (VIII, xviii)
seems to regard them as a mere handful of wrong-headed nonconformists.
Second phase
The second stage in the Passover/Easter controversy centres round the Council of Nicaea
(A.D. 325). Granted that the great Easter festival was always to be held on a Sunday, and
was not to coincide with a particular phase of the moon, which might occur on any day of
the week, a new dispute arose as to the determination of the Sunday itself. The text of the
decree of the Council of Nicaea which settled, or at least indicated a final settlement of,
the difficulty has not been preserved to us, but we have an important document inserted
in Eusebius's "Life of Constantine" (III, xviii sq.). The emperor himself, writing to the
Churches after the Council of Nicaea, exhorts them to adopt its conclusions and says
among other things: "At this meeting the question concerning the most holy day of Easter
was discussed, and it was resolved by the united judgment of all present that this feast
ought to be kept by all and in every place on one and the same day. . . And first of all it
appeared an unworthy thing that in the celebration of the Jews, who have impiously
defiled their hands with enormous sin. . . for we have received from our Saviour a
different way. . . And I myself have undertaken that this decision should meet with the
approval of your Sagacities in the hope that your Wisdoms will gladly admit that practice
which is observed at once in the city of Rome and in Africa, throughout Italy and in
Egypt. . . with entire unity of judgment." From this and other indications which cannot be
specified here (see, e.g. Eusebius, "De Paschate" in Schmid, "Osterfestfrage", pp. 58-59)
we learn that the dispute now lay between the Christians of Syria and Mesopotamia and
the rest of the world. The important Church of Antioch was still dependent upon the
Jewish calendar for its Easter. The Syrian Christians always held their Easter festival on
the Sunday after the Jews kept their Pasch. On the other hand at Alexandria, and
seemingly throughout the rest of the Roman Empire, the Christians calculated the time of
Easter for themselves, paying no attention to the Jews. In this way the date of Easter as
kept at Alexandria and Antioch did not always agree; for the Jews, upon whom Antioch
depended, adopted very arbitrary methods of intercalating embolismic months (see
CALENDAR, Bol. II, p. 158) before they celebrated Nisan, the first spring month, on the
fourteenth day of which the paschal lamb was killed. In particular we learn that they had
become neglectful (or at least the Christians of Rome and Alexandria declared they were
neglectful) of the law that the fourteenth of Nisan must never precede the equinox (see
Schwartz, Christliche und judische Ostertafeln, pp. 138 sqq.). Thus Constantine in the
letter quoted above protests with horror that the Jews sometimes kept two Paschs in one
year, meaning that two Paschs sometimes fell between one equinox and the next.
The Alexandrians, on the other hand, accepted it as a first principle that the Sunday to be
kept as Easter Day must necessarily occur after the vernal equinox, then identified with
21 March of the Julian year. This was the main difficulty which was decided by the
Council of Nicaea. Even among the Christians who calculated Easter for themselves there
had been considerable variations (partly due to a divergent reckoning of the date of the
equinox), and as recently as 314, in the Council of Arles, it had been laid down that in
future Easter should be kept uno die et uno tempore per omnem orbem, and that to secure
this uniformity the pope should send out letters to all the Churches. The Council of
Nicaea seems to have extended further the principle here laid down. As already stated, we
have not its exact words, but we may safely infer from scattered notices that the council
ruled:
that Easter must be celebrated by all throughout the world on the same Sunday;
that this Sunday must follow the fourteenth day of the paschal moon;
that that moon was to be accounted the paschal moon whose fourteenth day
followed the spring equinox;
that some provision should be made, probably by the Church of Alexandria as
best skilled in astronomical calculations, for determining the proper date of Easter
and communicating it to the rest of the world (see St. Leo to the Emperor Marcian
in Migne, P.L., LIV, 1055).
This ruling of the Council of Nicaea did not remove all difficulties nor at once win
universal acceptance among the Syrians. But to judge from the strongly worded canon i
of the Council of Antioch (A.D. 341; see Hefele-Leclereq, "Conciles", I, 714), as also
from the language of the Apostolic Constitutions and Canons (see Schmid,
Osterfestfrage, p. 63), the Syrian bishops loyally co-operated in carrying into effect the
decision of the Council of Nicaea. In Rome and Alexandria the lunar cycles by which the
occurrence of Easter was determined was not uniform. Rome, after the hundred-and-
twelve year cycle of Hippolytus, adopted an eighty-four year cycle, but neither gave
satisfactory results. Alexandria adhered to the more accurate nineteen-year cycle of
Meton. But it seems to be clearly established by the most recent researches (see
Schwartz, op. cit., pp. 28-29) that the lunar cycles were never understood to be more than
aids towards ascertaining the correct date of Easter, also that where the calculations of
Rome and Alexandria led to divergent results, compromises were made upon both sides
and that the final decision always lay with accepted ecclesiastical authority.
Quartodecimans
When Yehoshua died on the Cross, he gave the care of his earthly mother
to the Apostle John.... John was the disciple whom Jesus loved.
Sometime before the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 A.D., John moved
to Ephesus. He was arrested by order of the Emperor Domitian and
banished to the Isle of Patmos where he wrote the incomparable
Book of Revelation: a prewritten history of the Christian church.
John had a disciple named Polycarp who became Bishop of Smyrna.
Polycarp had a meeting with Anicetus, Bishop of Rome about the
middle of the 2nd century about this very Passover controversy. Even
at this early date, Rome was trying to change the times and seasons.
Rome tried to disparage those who kept the correct date by calling
them quartodecimans. She used every trick in her book to get the
church to change and adopt her false computation.
Sect ion II
Early Christ ian Schools
260
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Seven Days of Unleavened Bread
Seven-Day Khag of Phasekh and Unleavened Bread
Phasekh Six Days of Eating Unleavened Bread (Deut., 16:8)
Phasekh Meal with Unleavened Bread and Wine (Eucharist)
Month of Abib
First Day
(High Sabbath)
Seventh Day
(High Sabbath)
Sunset
Dark
Legend
24 Hours
QUARTODECIMAN SYSTEM A
CHART F
261
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Seven Days Used to Determine the Phasekh of the Resurrection
Month of Abib
The Festival of the Phasekh of the Resurrection and
its Eucharist is celebrated on the first day of the week
(i.e., Sunday) that falls on one of these seven days.
Sunset
Dark
Legend
24 Hours
QUASI-QUARTODECIMAN SYSTEM D
CHART G
262
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Seven Days Used to Determine the Phasekh of the Resurrection
The Festival of the Phasekh of the Resurrection and
its Eucharist is celebrated on the first day of the week
(i.e., Sunday) that falls on one of these seven days.
Sunset
Dark
Legend
24 Hours
Month of Abib
ROMAN SYSTEM E
CHART H
263
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Seven Days Used to Determine the Phasekh of the Resurrection
The Festival of the Phasekh of the Resurrection and
its Eucharist is celebrated on the first day of the week
(i.e., Sunday) that falls on one of these seven days.
Phasekh
Phasekh Meal
Sunset
Dark
Legend
24 Hours
Month of Abib
HYBRID SYRIAN SYSTEM F
CHART I
14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Eight-Day Observance
Seven-Day Khag of Unleavened Bread
Phasekh
Phasekh Meal
Feast of
Unleavened
Bread
Month of Abib
First Day
(High Sabbath)
Seventh Day
(High Sabbath)
Memorial
Sunset
Dark
Legend
24 Hours
MODERN HYBRID SYSTEM G
264
CHART J
Int roduct ion: Sect ion II
T
he Festival of Phasekh and Unleavened Bread and the Festival of
Shabuath (Pentecost) were not just Jewish concerns. Today, few English-
speaking Christians, largely due to their long practice of glossing the Hebrew
word Phasekh with the name Easter and their abandonment of the Festival of
Pentecost, realize that Phasekh and Pentecost were the chief religious obser-
vances of the early Christian assemblies. In one form or another, all early
Christian groups not only observed the Phasekh and Pentecost but calculated
the Phasekh observance in connection with the seven days of unleavened
bread. The Roman Catholic writer Augustine (c.400 C.E.) reminds Christians:
Phasekh and Pentecost are festivals with the
strongest Scriptural authority.
1
With regard to Pentecost, general agreement was maintained among the
various Christian factions. The 50 days of Pentecost were celebrated by the
Aristocratic method, counting from the first day of the week following Abib
14. The Phasekh was another matter. Unfortunately, as had occurred with the
Jewish experience, divergent opinions about the Phasekh soon sprang up.
Epiphanius (c.378 C.E.), for example, informs us that confusion over Phasekh
arose among the various Christian groups shortly after the circumcised bish-
ops of Jerusalem were removed from power at the beginning of the Jewish re-
volt led by Bar Kochba against Rome:
For long ago, even from the earliest days, the
Phasekh was celebrated at different times in the
Assembly,
2
occasioning ridicule every year. For some
kept it a week early and quarreled with others, while
others kept it a week late. And some celebrated it in
advance, others in between, others afterward. And in
a word, as is not unknown to many scholarly per-
sons, there was a great deal of muddle and tiresome-
ness whenever trouble was stirred up in the
Assemblys teaching on the question of this festival.
In the time of Polycarp (c.158 C.E.) and Victor (196
265
1
Augustine, Epist., 55:17 32.
2
The Greek term ej kklhsiv a/ (ekklesia), Latin ecclesia, shall be translated throughout as
Assembly, if the reference is to the world body, and as assembly, if the reference is to a local
congregation (see GEL, 1968, p. 509; SEC, Gk. #1577). The Hebrew term behind the Greek and
Latin is lhq (qahal), hlhq (qahalah), an assemblage:assembly, congregation (SEC, Heb. #6951,
6952; HEL, p. 228; cf., CS, 1, p. 433). The English term Church, which is often used to translate
the Greek and Latin words, is misleading in that it gives a connotation of a building for public
worship as well as for the congregation.
C.E.) the East was at odds with the West and they
would not accept letters of commendation from each
other. But in as many other timesin the time of
Alexander, the bishop of Alexandria, and Criscen-
tius, when we find each of them writing argumenta-
tively to the other, and down to our own day. This
has been the situation ever since (the Assembly) was
thrown into disorder after the time of the circumcised
bishops (ending in 133 C.E.).
3
One fact is certainly cogent. Since the messiah never sinned, the Phasekh
observed by the messiah and his disciples provides an important key to the
correct Phasekh celebration. In this regard, all the various early assemblies
made the claim that they were continuing the Phasekh, either in fact or in
spirit, as the messiah had commanded. Yet only one of these practices, if any,
can be correct. Therefore, in our search for the original and true observance
of Phasekh and the seven days of unleavened bread, it is incumbent upon us
to fully examine these various early Christian systems in order that, in our
second and third volumes, we might weigh their credibility and worth
against Scriptures.
The Christian Systems
Few Christians today realize the vibrant and rich history that has been pre-
served for us from the Ante-Nicaean Christian period (30324 C.E.) and after-
ward. Contrary to the popular opinion of a Christian dark age, what we
actually find is a time of great debate, turmoil, and doctrinal evolution. As we
search through the ancient records from this period, we discover that during
the first several centuries of our common era four basic Phasekh systems, with
some local variations, were competing with each other for the hearts and
minds of the numerous Christian assemblies.
For simplification purposes, this study shall utilize the following labels to
identify each of the four early Christian systems: System A (the Quarto-
deciman), System D (the early western quasi-Quartodeciman), System E (the
Roman), and System F (the hybrid Syrian). We shall also add to our investi-
gation the discussion of a recent innovation among some Christian groups,
which we have labeled System G.
System A (Quartodeciman Phasekh): Buried in the pages of antiquity is
the little known fact that the original Phasekh practice of the early Christian
assemblies was the Aristocratic System A (see Chart F). We retain the System
A label due to the fact that the original Quartodeciman practice was a direct
descendant of the old conservative Zadok (Tsadoq) system of the priests. For
that reason, those who followed this system, or one of its later variants, were
subsequently called Quartodecimans (14th keepers).
The Quartodeciman formula was nothing less than a continuation of the
Aristocratic understanding: the 14th was Phasekh and the seven days of
unleavened bread continued from the 14th until the end of the 20th of Abib
266 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
3
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:9:79. For the Quartodeciman practice of the circumcised Christian
bishops of Jerusalem see below Chap. XVIIXIX and FSDY, 2.
(the first lunar month). The early Quartodecimans differed from the old
Jewish Aristocratic system in that they did not practice the ritualistic sacrifices
or offerings of the handwritten Torah, including the slaughter of the Phasekh
lamb. In its place, they counted the messiah as the true Phasekh lamb and his
death as a realization of the prophetic type expressed in the handwritten
Torah and sacrificed and eaten on the night of Abib 14 during the Exodus.
Unleavened bread and the mystery of the Eucharist became the focus of this
new Christian Phasekh repast. Neverthless, the method for determining the
dates for the Phasekh dinner and the seven days of unleavened bread was
identical to that used by the conservative priests (System A).
The Quartodecimans noted that the Phasekh of the Jewsa reference to
the Phasekh repast on the 15th of Abib as practiced by the state religion of the
Phariseeswas not the true Phasekh of the Torah. Instead, they gave that
honor to the 14th of the first moon, claiming four points of doctrine:
The 14th was a high Sabbath.
It was a day of remembrance of the messiahs (the lambs) death.
It was the day of the Phasekh meal (the Last Supper).
It was the day of the fellowship of the Phasekh Eucharist.
The Quartodecimans always celebrated the Phasekh festival (i.e., the
Phasekh supper and the Eucharist) on the 14th of Abib, regardless of which
day of the week it fell on. Also for the early Quartodecimans, the 14th and
20th were always observed as high Sabbaths.
During the first three centuries C.E., support was very strong among the
early Christian assemblies in the East for the Quartodeciman method, espe-
cially in Asia Minor where the apostles John and Philip taught. Nevertheless,
after this system was condemned by the Council of Nicaea in 325 C.E. as
Judaizing, it was suppressed and soon faded into disuse.
System D (Early Western quasi-Quartodeciman Phasekh): In the early sec-
ond century C.E., along with the collapse of the power of the circumcised
Christian bishops of Jerusalem, a dissenting opinion appeared among some of
the western assemblies. As a result, a variation of the Quartodeciman view
was constructed by some of the bishops in the West (see Chart G). This west-
ern quasi-Quartodeciman method (System D)which must not be confused
with other minor quasi-Quartodeciman systems
4
retained the Aristocratic
understanding for the seven days of unleavened bread, i.e., that these days ex-
tended from the beginning of the 14th until the end of the 20th day of the first
moon. This system also recognized that the messiah ate the Phasekh supper
on the 14th of Abib.
Yet the advocates of this system did not always keep the Phasekh supper
and Eucharist on the 14th, counting that day as far too sad an occasion for such
a joyous celebration. In fact, they considered such an observance an act of
Judaizing. In its place, its supporters observed the day of the omer wave
offering (emphasized as being the date of the messiahs resurrection) as the
267 Int roduct ion: Sect ion II
4
For the variant practices of some of these minor quasi-Quartodeciman groups see below
Chap. XVII, pp. 278f.
sacred day for the Phasekh festival and Eucharist celebration. This festival was
always placed on the first day of the week within the seven days of unleavened
bread and, therefore, it would only occasionally fall upon the 14th day. Since
the festival of Phasekh was only observed on the first day of the week within
the seven days of unleavened bread, the Quartodeciman method of
always counting the 14th and 20th of Abib as high Sabbaths was abandoned.
This early western quasi-Quartodeciman system became the basis for the
first major breach within the early orthodox Christian community. It was orig-
inally used in the western districts of the Roman empire, especially in places
like Rome and Alexandria, until the latter end of the second century C.E. At
that time it was replaced in those districts with the Roman assembly doctrine
of Phasekh (System E). The System D (quasi-Quartodeciman) construct was
condemned at the Council of Nicaea (325 C.E.) in the name of unity and under
the guise of avoiding any appearance of Judaizing. Nevertheless, System D
continued in use for centuries among various outlying assemblies. It was
eventually suppressed by the Roman Church, which had slowly gained polit-
ical power over the other assemblies, and fully disappeared by the early
eighth century C.E.
System E (Phasekh of the Roman assembly): In the late second century
C.E. a third important construct was developed in the West, chiefly by the
bishops governing the assemblies in Rome and Gaul. In the early second cen-
tury C.E., the assemblies at Rome and Gaul had abandoned System A for
System D, regarding the former as an act of Judaizing. Yet they found it diffi-
cult to overcome the Quartodeciman argument that, since the messiah and his
disciples had kept their Last Supper Phasekh on the 14th of Abib, all
Christians should do likewise.
In response to the Quartodeciman position, those in the West took on a
new strategy. The western bishops had already found reason to fault the
Quartodeciman construct that Phasekh should be held on the 14thit was the
same day that the Jews sacrificed their Phasekh lamb and it was the sad occa-
sion of the messiahs death. The Roman assembly advocates of System E,
therefore, believed that if one were to observe the Phasekh Eucharist
5
on this
date he was also committing the heinous act of Judaizing.
To remove the Quartodeciman claim that the 14th was important, the
supporters of System E dismissed the Aristocratic construct altogether and
adopted the Hasidic premise, which held that the legal Phasekh and the seven
days of unleavened bread began on the 15th of Abib (see Chart H). The 14th,
they now argued, was merely the day given under the handwritten Torah for
the Phasekh sacrifice. Indeed, they retorted, since we are no longer under the
Torah and since the true lamb has been sacrificed with the death of the mes-
siah on the 14th, that day has been fulfilled. The celebration of the 14th, as a
result, is simply no longer necessary or relevant and, to the chagrin of the
Quartodecimans and advocates of System D, they proclaimed that the 14th
should never be observed as the Phasekh festival or for the giving of the
Phasekh Eucharist.
268 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
5
See above Intro.to Part II, p. 138, n. 9.
The advocates of System E then carried over the idea developed in System
D that, since the messiah was murdered on the 14th, it was only a commem-
oration of a sad occasion. The first day of the week (Sunday), on the other
hand, being the day of the week of the messiahs resurrection, was a much
happier and more proper day on which to celebrate the Phasekh. Therefore,
the first day of the week falling within the seven days of unleavened bread
(counting from the 15th until the end of the 21st) should be observed as the
festival. The preceding Friday and Saturday were marked as the day of the
messiahs crucifixion and burial (time in the grave). These days were honored
but only as a time to fast, not to celebrate. At the same time, the advocates of
System E disregarded the Hasidic interpretation that the 15th and 21st days of
Abib were always high Sabbaths.
Beginning with Emperor Constantine in the early fourth century C.E., the
Roman Church obtained the backing of the Roman empire. It is at this point
that the Roman Catholic (Universal) Church truly began. With the Roman
government behind them, System E eventually gained the upper hand and
overcame all other Christian Phasekh systems. Though slightly modified over
the centuries, this system is presently the dominant practice among Roman
Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Protestant Christians.
System F (Hybrid Syrian Phasekh): The transition to System E proceeded
along a different path in Syria. A strong Quartodeciman heritage existed in the
East and did not allow for any quick transformation. In response to this real-
ity, those who gravitated toward the western views developed a hybrid sys-
tem that incorporated both Quartodeciman and western elements. In many
ways this hybrid system mimicked the efforts of the Jewish Karaites and the
neo-Samaritans (System C), who blended together the Aristocratic and
Hasidic constructs to form a hybrid third view (see Chart I).
In the late second century C.E., the Syrian assemblies were Quarto-
deciman. They kept the 14th day of the first moon as the Phasekh and their
seven days of unleavened bread were counted from the 14th until the end of
the 20th day of the first moon. Yet during this same period some of the Syrian
Christian assemblies had already adopted the western format of celebrating
the day of the resurrection (the first day of the week following the 14th) by
keeping the preceding Friday and Saturday as a fast.
Major change came after the Council of Nicaea in 325 C.E. The council,
dominated by the Roman Emperor, made the decision to disregard any
Quartodeciman or quasi-Quartodeciman system for the observance of the
Phasekh festival. They then ordered the various Christian assemblies to adopt
the Hasidic construct for the seven days of unleavened bread. Unwilling to
immediately abandon the 14th as Phasekh, many Syrian Christians continued
to observe the 14th. Yet to satisfy Rome, some began to attach the Hasidic
seven days of unleavened bread (from the 15th to the 21st) to their celebration,
and like Rome they disregarded the Hasidic idea that the 15th and 21st of
Abib were always high Sabbaths. They also continued to keep the Friday and
Sabbath preceding Phasekh Sunday as a fast, though at times this conflicted
with the 14th as Phasekh, and they continued to observe Sunday as the
Phasekh of the resurrection, the messiah being raised on that day. In doing so,
269 Int roduct ion: Sect ion II
they remained in harmony with the Roman Catholic celebration. This hybrid
form we have labeled System F.
Once the Hasidic construct for the seven days of unleavened bread was
fully accepted, it was not long before the hybrid System F construct was, for
the most part, abandoned and the Roman Catholic System E Phasekh com-
pletely adopted.
System G (modern hybrid Phasekh): In our present time a new hybrid has
developed. In this form, which we dub System G (see Chart J), the 14th of
Abib is the day of the Phasekh supper, and the 15th is the Festival of
Unleavened Bread. The seven-day Festival of Unleavened Bread extends from
the 15th until the end of the 21st day of Abib, a total observance of eight days.
Despite the fact that the 14th is also a day of eating unleavened bread, under
this system the 14th is not a high Sabbath and is not counted among the seven
days of unleavened bread. Rather, the 14th is a solemn memorial day in ob-
servance of the messiahs death. At the same time, the Hasidic interpretation
that the 15th and 21st days of Abib are high Sabbaths has been retained.
Though System G is not explicitly found mentioned among any ancient
Jewish or Christian assemblies, its proponents argue that it was the original
practice. Therefore, for comparative reasons, we shall touch upon this system
now and explore its potential in our later volumes.
Minor Views: There are likewise some other minor variant views that
have been extrapolated over the centuries. Some believe that arab is merely a
point in time. Some claim that the messiah offered his Phasekh lamb on the
13th of Abib;
6
while others believe that some of the rites of Phasekh, such as
the Eucharist, should be offered every Sunday as communion. Such views are
either so speculative as to have no substantive support or are so far from the
original system that they cannot be remotely considered as celebrating
Phasekh and the seven days of unleavened bread. When relevant, we shall
deal with these and other similar views as we proceed with our study.
A Common Foundation
There were eight basic premises concerning Phasekh, the seven days of un-
leavened bread, and Pentecost which were almost universal and formed the
foundation upon which the overwhelming majority of the early Christian as-
semblies, whatever system they followed, stood:
(1) The Phasekh celebration was required for all Christians.
7
(2) The Christian Phasekh was an innovation in that it did not require any
ritualistic animal sacrifice.
8
(3) The Phasekh lamb of the Torah and its sacrifice was a typology of the
death of the messiah, the true Phasekh lamb of Yahweh.
9
(4) The bread and wine (or grape juice) of the Last Supper Phasekh pos-
sessed a higher typology than formerly stated under the Torah.
10
270 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
6
CBTEL, 5, pp. 744746.
7
Cf., 1 Cor., 5:7f.
8
Cf., Heb., 7:2628, 10:113; Matt., 9:13, 12:7.
9
E.g., 1 Cor., 5:7; cf., John, 1:29, 36; 1 Pet., 1:19; Rev., 5:612.
10
Cf., Matt., 26:2629; Mark, 14:2225; Luke, 22:1720; 1 Cor., 5:8.
(5) The day of the messiahs resurrection was observed, being one and the
same with the day of the omer wave offering. This omer wave offering
always took place on the first day of the week, on the day following
the weekly Sabbath which fell within the seven days of unleavened
bread. The resurrection day was also the first day in the 50-day count
to Pentecost.
(6) The messiah ate his famous Last Supper on the night of the 14th of
Abib and suffered his death in the daylight portion of that same day
(Hebrew sunset-to-sunset reckoning).
(7) The celebration of Phasekh was based upon the occurrence of the
seven days of unleavened bread.
(8) The festival of Pentecost was a required Christian celebration. Its date
was determined by the Aristocratic method, which counted the 50
days from the first day of the week that fell after Abib 14. Pentecost, as
a result, always fell on the first day of the week (Sunday).
These eight premises relating to the celebration of Phasekh and Pentecost
are everywhere expressed in ancient Christian literature, regardless of their
particular Phasekh preference. Nevertheless, today there is not a general
knowledge of items six and seven. Since they are so vital to our research and
are basic to understanding the ancient Christian practices, we are obligated at
this point to give examples for these two concepts using representatives from
each of the four ancient Phasekh systems.
The Last Supper: Abib 14
That the messiah ate his Last Supper Phasekh at night and suffered
death during the following daylight period is clearly established in the
Synoptic Texts.
11
It is likewise stated that these events occurred on the day of
the preparation of the Phasekh,
12
being also the day of the preparation of
the Jews.
13
This day of preparation is an obvious reference to the Jewish state
religious practice, wherein the Phasekh preparation is on the 14th and their
Phasekh supper is on the 15th of Abib.
14
What is not so well-known is that the ancient Christian assemblies held a
universal understanding that the messiah observed his Last Supper
Phasekh on the night of Abib 14 and died during the daylight portion of that
same day (Hebrew reckoning). For example, Apollinarius of Hierapolis
(161169 C.E.), an advocate of the Quartodeciman System A, argued:
The 14th is the true Phasekh of the sovereign, the
great sacrifice . . . who was buried on the day of the
Phasekh with the stone placed over the tomb.
15
271 Int roduct ion: Sect ion II
11
Matt., 26:1727:61; Mark, 14:1216:47; Luke, 22:754; 1 Cor., 11:2326.
12
John, 19:14.
13
John, 19:42.
14
See above Chaps. XIIXIII.
15
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 13f. Also see Eusebius, H.E., 5:24.
Anatolius of Alexandria (c.270 C.E.), a supporter of System D, while
speaking of the events dealing with the Phasekh of the Last Supper, writes:
And there is no doubt as to its being the 14th day on
which the disciples asked the sovereign, in accor-
dance with the custom established for them of old,
Where will you that we should prepare for you to
eat the Phasekh?
16
The advocates of System E also held to the doctrine that the messiah both
ate his Last Supper Phasekh and then died on the 14th of Abib. Eusebius
(fl. 303339 C.E.), for instance, after reporting that the Jews sacrificed the
Phasekh sheep on the 14th of the first moon, defines this day as the (day
of) preparation, on which the saviour suffered.
17
He adds:
Nor did the saviour observe the Phasekh with the
Jews at the time of his suffering. . . . But before he suf-
fered he did eat the Phasekh and celebrate the festi-
valwith his disciples, not with the Jews.
18
Clement of Alexandria (fl. 182220 C.E.), as another example, states that
the messiah died on the 14th, prior to the day that the Jews (Pharisees) cele-
brated their Phasekh (i.e., the 15th):
Suitably, therefore, to the 14th day, on which (day) he
(the messiah) also suffered, in the morning, the chief
priests and the scribes who brought him to Pilate, did
not enter the Praetorium, that they might not be de-
filed, but might freely eat the Phasekh in the evening
(of the 15th).
19
Those following the Syrian hybrid (System F) likewise believed that the
messiah ate the Phasekh on the 14th and then suffered. To demonstrate, the
fourth century C.E. Syrian Christian named Aphraates writes:
Our saviour ate the Phasekh with his disciples in the
sacred night of the 14th . . . And he was taken in the
night of the 14th, and his trial lasted until the sixth
hour, and at the time of the sixth hour they sentenced
him and lifted him up on the (torture-)stake.
20
Seven Days of Unleavened Bread
The requirement among the various early Christian assemblies to observe the
Phasekh at the time of the Festival of Unleavened Bread is also well-established.
272 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
16
Anatolius, 8, cf., 10; also cf., Matt., 26:17; Mark, 14:12; Luke, 22:79. Also see the discussion
between Coleman, bishop of Lindisfarne, and Wilfrid at the Synod of Whitby in Bede, Hist., 3:25.
17
Eusebius, Pas., 7, 9. Also see Peter Alex., frags. 5:1, 2, 7, who specifically identifies the date
as Abib 14. Augustine similarly calls the first month Abib (Epist., 55:3 5).
18
Eusebius, Pas., 9, 10.
19
Clement, frag. 28.
20
Aphraates, Dem., 12:6.
It was never a matter of whether or not one should use the seven days of un-
leavened bread to set the date, but rather an issue of which method one was
to use: the Aristocratic or Hasidic. The Aristocratic position of the
Quartodecimans (System A) and quasi-Quartodecimans (System D), for ex-
ample, is vigorously defended by Anatolius, who wrote:
Calculate, then, from the end of the 13th day of the
moon, which marks the beginning of the 14th, on to
the end of the 20th, at which the 21st day also begins,
and you will have only seven days of unleavened
bread, in which, by the guidance of the sovereign, it
has been determined before that the most true festi-
val of Phasekh ought to be celebrated.
21
Similarly, abbot Ceolfrid (an advocate of System E) wrote to King Naitan
of the Picts of Scotland about the people in that district holding to the System
D view, stating, For they which think that the sovereigns Phasekh day must
be kept from the 14th of the first moon to the 20th anticipate the time
commanded in the Torah.
22
Referencing the events around the year 601 C.E.,
Bede writes, For they (the quasi-Quartodecimans of Britain) kept not the
Phasekh on the Sovereigns day in its due time, but from the 14th to the 20th
of the moon.
23
Meanwhile, those of Systems E and F regarded the Hasidic method as cor-
rect for calculating the seven days of unleavened bread (i.e., from the 15th to
the 21st). Proof of this detail is demonstrated in a letter sent by Pope John IV
(mid-seventh century C.E.) to the Scots. This letter was composed for the sake
of persuading the Scots to amend their System D position. As part of this let-
ter the Pope is found plainly asserting therein that the sovereigns Phasekh
ought to be sought for from the 15th moon up to the 21st, as was approved in
the Council of Nicaea.
24
The Hasidic arrangement also appears in the works of Aphraates (writing
in c.344 C.E.), a supporter of the System F Phasekh. In his work, the 14th is still
claimed as the day of the Phasekh and of the sovereigns suffering.
25
Neverthe-
less, to this celebration is attached the Hasidic construct for the seven days of
unleavened bread,
26
for he states, AFTER the Phasekh come the seven days
of unleavened bread to the 21st (day).
27
The seven days of unleavened bread,
as calculated by the Hasidic system, are also a requirement under the more re-
cent Phasekh construct we have called System G.
Conclusion
In our present section we shall examine in greater detail the evidence for each
one of the four major forms of the Phasekh celebration practiced by the early
273 Int roduct ion: Sect ion II
21
Anatolius, 8.
22
Bede, Hist., 5:21.
23
Bede, Hist., 2:2.
24
Bede, Hist., 2:19.
25
Aphraates, Dem., 12:6, 8, 12.
26
Aphraates, Dem., 12:8, 12.
27
Aphraates, Dem., 12:12.
Christian assemblies during the first seven centuries C.E. What this data re-
veals is that, even though there was a common agreement on the eight
premises stated above, the various early Christian assemblies still arrived at
radically different conclusions. This diversification in the Christian Phasekh
came as the result of different regions emphasizing different aspects of the
messiahs Last Supper, suffering (passion), and resurrection. By applying dif-
ferent interpretations to each of the problems, variant views arose.
Meanwhile, one consistent calculation among the various early Christian
assemblies was the celebration of Pentecost. It was always counted by the
Aristocratic method, i.e., the 50-day period began on the day after the weekly
Sabbath which fell within the seven days of unleavened bread. Yet, as we shall
demonstrate, the first day of the Pentecost count, which was also the anniver-
sary of the messiahs resurrection, came to serve as a guide for the western
Christian reconstruction of Phasekh. For those in the West, those days falling
prior to the first day of the Pentecost count were deemed far too sad an occa-
sion for celebrating the Phasekh supper. It was the time of the messiahs suf-
fering, death, and burialtherefore, a time for mourning. The first day of the
Pentecost count, on the other hand, because it was also the day of Yahushuas
resurrection, took on a more joyous tone. From this interpretation arose the
Phasekh Systems D, E, and F.
274 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
Chapt er IX
What are Phasekh
and Unleavened Bread?
A
s already demonstrated, the gj (Khag; Festival) of Unleavened Bread
forms part of the yd[wm (moadi; appointed times) commanded by Yahweh,
which gain their legal authority by means of a tqj (khoquth; statute).
1
The
term gj (khag) is also used when the entire seven days of eating unleavened
bread is called the Phasekh.
2
The first and seventh day of this khag are de-
scribed as sacred yarqm (miqrai; gatherings for reading),
3
i.e., a sacred convo-
cation on a Sabbath or high Sabbath day during which Scriptures are to be
studied.
4
To understand the Festival of Phasekh (Passover) and Unleavened
Bread, we must first define the meanings of these two terms and explain what
prompts them to be festival observances.
The Covenant Meal
The Phasekh supper and the eating of unleavened bread for seven days are
meant to be a celebration and a reaffirmation of the Abrahamic Covenants.
5
It
is centered around the festival meal of the Phasekh victim and the eating of
unleavened bread for seven days. One of the important ingredients in the
Phasekh and this seven-day khag, therefore, is the Phasekh repast.
In Hebrew culture, a meal binds one to an oath, vow, or contract and can
be used to ratify a covenant.
6
Herein, for example, is the source for the
covenant meal of marriage which accompanies a wedding. The wedding meal
is called a htm (mishteh; banquet).
7
The Phasekh supper, therefore, is in fact
a covenant meal, binding one to the Abrahamic Covenants and to the mes-
siah.
8
The continued observance of the Phasekh repast and the seven days of
eating unleavened bread during the centuries that followed the Exodus were
141
1
E.g., Exod., 13:310; Deut., 4:1214, cf., Exod., 21:1, 23:1417; and see our discussion above
Chap. I, pp. 16ff.
2
Ezek., 45:21; cf., Exod., 34:18; Deut., 16:18, 16; 2 Chron., 30:21.
3
Lev., 23:7f. And see above Chap. I, p. 15, n. 71.
4
For example, Lev., 23:3, reads, Six days work is to be done, and on the seventh day is a
Sabbath sabbathon, a sacred arqm (miqra; gathering for reading), not any work you shall do. It is
a Sabbath for Yahweh in all your dwellings.
5
For the connection between the act of cutting meat and eating a meal as part of the act of
confirming a covenant see above Chap. II, pp. 37f, p. 38, n. 27.
6
E.g., Gen., 14:1824; 26:30; 31:5154; Josh., 9:14; Obad., 7.
7
SEC, Heb. #4960; e.g., Gen., 29:1630, esp. v. 22.
8
The Phasekh lamb served this covenant function. Joachim Jeremias notes that, The blood
of the lambs slaughtered at the exodus from Egypt had redemptive power and made Gods
covenant with Abraham operative (EWJ, pp. 225f, and cf., his ns. 4 & 5). For a complete discus-
sion of the Abrahamic Covenants, the inheritance attached thereto, and its connection with the
messiah see TCP.
expressly stated to be a rkz (zakar; memorial)
9
khag, the purpose of which was
to recall the significance of the Exodus parable signifying the fact that Yahweh
would fulfill the words of his covenant to Abraham.
10
Phasekh is also a night
of yrm (shamarim; observations, guarding, watching),
11
i.e., a night to estab-
lish the covenant. Since the Abrahamic Covenants are an agreement enabling
men to obtain the divine nature (Yahwehs love), after the resurrection of the
messiah, the Phasekh supper was also counted among the Christian aj gav pai~
(agapais; love feasts).
12
Meaning of Phasekh
Phasekh comes from the root meaning to skip or limp over or pass
over, and by extension to spare, protect, or set apart something.
13
It
does not derive from the Greek term pav qo~ (pathos; to suffer) as some of the
early Christians tried to claim.
14
When Elijah challenged the priests of Baal on
Mount Carmel, the latter, we are told, jsp (phasekh; limped) beside the altar
142 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
9
rkz (zakar), means, prop. to mark (so as to be recognized, i.e. to remember . . . a memento . . .
impl. commemoration:memorial, memory, remembrance (SEC, Heb. #2142, 2143); mediate upon,
call to mind (HEL, p. 74).
10
Exod., 12:14, 13:610.
11
Exod., 12:42, cf., 12:7, 25. yrm (shamarim), from rm (shamar), prop. to hedge about (as
with thorns), i.e. guard; gen. to protect, attend to, etc. (SEC, Heb. #8104); means, observance of a fes-
tival (HEL, p. 272); observances (YAC, p. 708). The LXX of Exod., 12:42, translates the Hebrew
to read, It is a watch kept to the sovereign, so that he should bring them out of the land of Egypt;
that very night is a watch kept to the sovereign, so that it should be to all the children of Israel to
their generations.
12
Jude, 1:12 (cf., 2 Pet., 2:13; 1 Cor., 11:2034). NBD, p. 754, notes that, The separation of the
meal or Agape from the Eucharist lies outside the times of the New Testament. It is very possible
that the term Agape was applied early on to all of the early Christian festival meals, from Phasekh
to Tabernacles. Yet, as time proceeded, this term lost its connection with the scriptural festival
suppers and was broadly applied to any fellowship meal. Also see NCE, 1, pp. 193f; ISBE, 1, pp.
69f; ADB, 3, p. 149, Christ placed the new rite in close connexion with the Passover.
13
jsp (Phasekh), a prim. root, to hop, i.e. (fig.) skip over (or spare); by impl. to hesitate; also
(lit.) to limp, to dance:halt, become lame, leap, pass over . . . a pretermission, i.e. exemption; used
only tech. of the Jewish Passover (the festival or the victim):passover (offering) . . . limping . . .
lame (SEC, Heb., #64526455); be lame, limp . . . limp around (in cultic observance) (CHAL,
p. 294); passed over for defense, defended, protected (HEL, p. 211); TO PASS OVER, TO PASS BY
. . . to pass over, to spare . . . sparing, immunity from penalty and calamity (GHCL, p. 683); Passover,
Heb. pesah, comes from a verb meaning to pass over, in the sense of to spare (Ex. xii. 13, 27, etc.)
NBD, p. 936); to pass over, to spare (BJK, p. 324); meaning to pass or spring over, also to
limp (MDB, p. 648); to pass through, to leap, to halt . . . then topically to pass by in the sense of
sparing, to save, to show mercy (CBTEL, 7, p. 733). J. B. Segal shows that, like the term rb[ (heber),
Phasekh can also mean to set apart, as something singled out (for forgiveness or kindness)
(THP, pp. 185ff). On various theories of the etymology of the word Phasekh see THP, pp. 95113.
14
The popular interpretation among many early Greek-speaking Christians that the word
Phasekh is derived as a pun from the Greek term pav qo~ (pathos), paschein being the present in-
finitive, pathein the aorist infinitive of the same verb (EEC, p. 138, #21, n. a), meaning to suffer,
is, as Raniero Cantalamessa concludes, a naive etymology (deriving a Hebrew from a Greek
word (ibid.). It was apparently derived from the Greek-speaking Jewish writer Philo of
Alexandria (Philo, Heir, 40, 192, Cong., 19, 106); cf., Ambrose (Epist. 1, 90), who connects the
Phasekh with pav qo~ (pathos). This etymology quickly became popular among the Greek-speaking
Christians of Asia (e.g., Melito, Pas., 46; an unnamed Quartodeciman writer, Ps.-Hippolytus, 49,
see SC, 27, pp. 175177) and spread among the Latin writers (e.g., Tertullian, Marc., 4:40:1; Ps.-
Tertullian, 8:1; Ps.-Cyprian, 2; Gregory Elv., 9:9). The primary reason for this popularity was the
allusion to the sufferings of the messiah at Phasekh. Despite the efforts of Origen (Pas., 1) and
others (e.g., Augustine, Tract., 55:1, on 13:15), who correctly and strongly opposed this interpre-
tation, it prospered for a long time.
as part of their statutory procedurethis in an effort to ask their deity to per-
form a sign so that they could be delivered from the hands of Yahweh and his
prophet Elijah.
15
One could also phasekh (limp, pass over) at a funeral, in an at-
tempt to ask a deity to spare or deliver the deceased. In this regard, Theodor
Herzl Gaster writes of the term Phasekh:
Similarly, Heliodorus, a Greek author of the early
Christian era, informs us specifically that the seafar-
ing men of Tyre, on the coast of Syria, used to wor-
ship their god by performing a strange dance, one
movement of which consisted in limping along the
ground. Analogous performances are recorded also
among the pre-Mohammedan Arabs and among the
ancient inhabitants of both India and Ireland.
16
Theodor Herzl Gaster then adds:
The performance of a limping dance happens to be a
characteristic feature of mourning ceremonies among
Arab and Syrian peasantsso much so that in the
Arabic and Syriac languages the word for limp comes to
be a synonym for mourn. It is customary, says the
great Arabist Lane in his famous Manners and Customs
of Modern Egyptians, for the female relatives and friends
of a person deceased to meet together by his house on
each of the first THREE DAYS AFTER HIS FUNERAL,
and there to perform a lamentation and a strange kind
of dance. . . . Each dances with a slow movement and
in an irregular manner; generally pacing about and
raising and depressing the body (italics mine).
Nor is this custom confined to modern times. An
ancient Canaanite poem of the fourteenth century
B.C. uses the word hoppings (or skippings) in
the sense of mourning exercises; and a Babylonian
document now in the British Museum lists the term
hopper (or skipper) as a synonym for professional
mourner. Moreover, it is significant that the standard
poetic meter used in ancient Hebrew dirges was dis-
tinguished by a special limping rhythma fact
which would be readily explicable if they were de-
signed to accompany a limping dance.
17
Therefore, it was ancient practice to phasekh as part of a funeral ceremony.
There are Egyptian people who still limp for three days following a death.
One might readily ask, From where did this common meaning and tradition
143 What are Phasekh and Unleavened Bread?
15
1 Kings, 18:26, in context with 18:1719:1.
16
PHT, p. 23. For the Tyrian dance in honor of Heracles see Heliodorus, 4:17, cf., Herodian,
5:5:9.
17
PHT, p. 24.
in the Near East arise? The answer proves important not only in the story of
the Exodus and the death of the first-born in Egypt at that time, but in the
story of Yahushuas own death and subsequent resurrection after three days.
We shall have more to say about this aspect later.
The Jewish priest Josephus and the Christian theologian Pseudo-
Chrysostom (late fourth century C.E.) both give us the theological interpreta-
tion. Josephus notes that Phasekh signifies uJ perbav sia (hyperbasia; passing
over),
18
because on that day the deity passed over our people when he smote
the Egyptians with a plague.
19
Pseudo-Chrysostom similarly writes:
. . . for Phasekh means uJ pev rbasi~ (hyperbasis; pass-
ing over), when the Destroyer who struck the first-
born passed over the houses of the Hebrews.
20
Philo translates Phasekh as diabathv ria (diabateria), meaning the crossing-
festival.
21
Similarly, Origen,
22
Gregory of Nazianzus,
23
and other Christian writ-
ers render it diabasi~ (diabasis),
24
meaning passage.
25
The Vulgate gives the
Latin form transitus (passing over).
26
In classical Greek diabathv ria (diabateria)
are offerings made before crossing a boundary, and also before crossing a
swollen river.
27
The sacrifice, accordingly, was performed to assure ones safe
passage or crossing. F. H. Colson, meanwhile, argues:
Philo consistently uses diabathv ria or diabasi~ =
pav sca Paskha; Phasekh, and several times, e.g. Leg.
All. iii. 94, allegorizes it as in 147, shewing that he
traces the name not to the passing over of the
Israelites by the destroying angel (Ex. xii. 23 and 27),
but to the crossing of Israel itself from Egypt, the type
of the body, and no doubt also the crossing of the
Red Sea.
28
F. H. Colsons understanding is not quite complete. Philo also equates
diabathv ria (diabateria) directly with the pav sca (Paskha) of the 14th and the
events of the death angel, indicating that all of the events associated with the
Exodus migration out of Egypt were included.
29
Even Jerome, who wrote the
Vulgate version of the Bible, applies the Latin word transitus to both the pass-
ing over of the destroyer and to the passing through of the Suph Sea (Red Sea)
144 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
18
GEL, 1968, pp. 1860f.
19
Jos., Antiq., 2:14:6.
20
Ps.Chrysostom, 1:4. Also see the Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 424f; Gaudentius, Tract., 2:25;
Maximus, Serm., 54:1.
21
Philo, Spec., 2:27.
22
Origen, Pas., 1:18, 22, 2:17, 4:18, 22, as well as uJ pev rbasi~ (hyperbasis; passing over) in
45:14, 47:33.
23
Gregory Naz., Orat., 45:10.
24
E.g., Eusebius, Pas., 13, 7; Didymus, 5:88; Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 424f; CBTEL, 7, p. 734.
25
GEL, 1968, p. 390, crossing over, passage.
26
HLD, p. 1891. Cf., Ambrose, Epist., 1:10, Exp. Luc., 10:34, Sac., 1:4:12; Pas. Proclam., Exsult,
4; Jerome, Com. Matt., 4, on 26:2; Augustine, Tract., 55:1, on 13:15.
27
Plutarch, Luc., 24; cf., Philo, Spec., 2:27 147.
28
Colson, Philo, vii, p. 394, n. a.
29
Philo, Moses, 2:41f, Spec., 2:27f.
by the Israelites.
30
Escaping the death angel was in fact part of their safe
passage. The sacrifice of the Phasekh flock animal by the Israelites was
meant to assure a safe journey for the followers of Yahweh both through the
land of Egypt and through the Suph Sea (Sea of Termination)
31
at the time of
the Exodus.
To jsp (phasekh), therefore, means to skip or pass over, or to pass around
something, showing mercy and sparing it. For this reason it is simply called
Passover in English. The Aramaic Targum Onqelos (fifth century C.E.)
supports this when it renders jsp jbz (zebakh Phasekh; sacrifice of the
Phasekh) as syj jbyd (diybakh khiys; sacrifice of mercy).
32
Likewise, the
LXX at Exodus, 12:13, where the Hebrew has, I will phasekh over you, ren-
ders phasekh as I will skepav sw (skepaso; cover over) you.
33
Isaiah, 31:5, indi-
cates the same sense when it notes that Yahweh will defend and deliver
Jerusalem, jwsp (phasukh; passing over), and saving it. The LXX of this verse
translates the form jwsp (phasukh) as peripoihv setai (peripoiesetai), meaning to
keep safe.
34
In Scriptures the name Phasekh is applied to three different aspects of
the festival:
In both the Old and New Testaments, Phasekh is the name of the lamb
that is sacrificed, roasted, and eaten.
35
It is the name of the festival day upon which the lamb is sacrificed.
36
The name is also applied to the entire seven-day Festival of Unleavened
Bread.
37
The reinstitution of the Phasekh sacrifice after the revolt at Mount Sinai,
when the Israelites built the golden calf, was meant to look back at the parable
type that the original sacrifice performed in Egypt represented, which pointed
to the coming death of the messiah. Yahushua the messiah is the lamb of
145 What are Phasekh and Unleavened Bread?
30
Jerome, Com. Matt., 4, on 26:2.
31
The Hebrew name ws y (Yam Suph; Sea of Suph) is found in the Greek sources (LXX,
Exod., 13:18, 13:8; Jos., Antiq., 2:15:1; and many others) as ej ruqra; n qav lassan (eruthran thalassan;
Red Sea). Many modern day translators assume that the name Yam Suph was Egyptian and
equate it with an Egyptian word that signifies a seaweed resembling wool, hence it has been pop-
ular to call it the sea of reeds or weeds (e.g., DOTB, pp. 785f; DB, p. 556; NBD, pp. 1077f).
Nevertheless, the word is not Egyptian. The ancient Egyptians never even referred to this body
of water by that name. It is Hebrew and means to snatch away, i.e. terminate:consume, have an
end, perish . . . to come to an end . . . a termination:conclusion, end, hinder part (SEC, Heb. #5486,
5487, 5490). The Suph Sea was the sea that formed the border of the ancient frontier of Egypt
proper; it was at the end of the land (VT, 15, pp. 395398). It was also the sea in which Pharaoh
and his Egyptian army perishedan event that terminated the Exodus experience. Accordingly,
some understand Yam Suph to mean the sea of extinction or something quite similar, indicating
the primal significance of the miracle at the sea (MBD, pp. 738f).
32
Targ. Onq., Exod., 12:27.
33
GEL, p. 732.
34
GEL, p. 630, a keeping safe, preservation . . . a gaining possession of, acquisition, obtaining . . . a
possession. The term basically means to gain possession of something in order to keep it safe.
35
E.g., Exod., 12:6, 8, 11, 21, 27; Deut., 16:6; 2 Chron., 30:18, 35:13; Matt., 26:1719; Mark,
14:12, 14, 16; Luke, 22:7, 8, 11, 13, 15; John, 18:28; 1 Cor., 5:7 (verb).
36
E.g., Exod., 34:25; Josh., 5:10; Luke , 2:41; John, 13:1.
37
E.g., Ezek., 45:21; Luke, 22:1.
Yahweh who was sacrificed for our safe passage.
38
The apostle Saul, for ex-
ample, writes, For also the messiah, our Phasekh, was sacrificed for us.
39
Unleavened Bread
The Festival of Unleavened Bread was built around the consumption of un-
leavened bread. The Hebrew word for unleavened bread is hxm (matzah), a
term meaning sweetness (not soured).
40
Leavened bread (ra; seor), on the
other hand, is made by retaining a piece of dough from a previous batch
which has become yeast, i.e., fermented and turned acidic. This piece is mixed
or hidden in the flour and kneaded along with it. When baked, the leavening,
which has diffused itself throughout the dough, causes the bread to rise.
In Scriptures, leavening implies corruption and sin.
41
It represents malice
and wickedness,
42
false teaching,
43
hypocrisy,
44
and false doctrine and culpable
ignorance.
45
Conversely, unleavened bread represents incorruption and sin-
lessness. The unleavened bread of the Phasekh supper, to demonstrate, repre-
sents sincerity and truth.
46
It also signifies the sinless body of Yahushua the
messiah.
47
In another place, in association with the time of Phasekh, Yahushua
called himself the bread of life, living bread, and the manna
48
bread that
was sent out of heaven to the Israelites in the wilderness.
49
Since the mes-
siah has always been without sin,
50
these statements make it clear that sinless-
ness is equated with the incorruption of unleavened bread.
The Story of Phasekh
Our next effort in defining the Phasekh supper and the seven days of eating
unleavened bread is to give an overall summary of the Exodus experience.
This event was the first time in which a Phasekh animal was commanded to
be sacrificed and eaten by the Israelites. On its primary level, the yearly ob-
servance of the Phasekh and seven days of eating unleavened bread is meant
146 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
38
Isa., 53:112; John, 1:29, 36; Acts, 8:3236; 1 Pet., 1:18f; Rev., 5:66:1, 16, 7:917, 9:79, 21:14,
22f, 22:13.
39
1 Cor., 5:7.
40
SEC, Heb. #4682, prop. sweetness; concr. sweet (i.e. not soured or bittered with yeast); spec.
an unfermented cake or loaf.
41
Gal., 5:710.
42
1 Cor., 5:68.
43
Matt., 16:612; Mark, 8:15.
44
Luke, 12:1.
45
Matt., 22:23, 29.
46
1 Cor., 5:8.
47
Matt., 26:19f, 26; Mark, 14:16f, 22; Luke, 22:13f, 19; 1 Cor., 11:23f.
48
Manna was unleavened bread. This detail is verified by the fact that manna, after being de-
livered in the morning from heaven, did not survive until the next morning, unless by divine in-
tervention on the sixth day of the weekand then it would only last until the morning of the first
day of the weekat which time it would rot and be unusable (Josh., 16:1334). Also, only manna
was available for bread during the Israelite 40-year sojourn in the wilderness (Josh., 16:35), yet
during that time they continued to keep the Festival of Phasekh and Unleavened Bread (Josh., cf.,
Exod. 34:1826; Num., 9:15). For example, the Israelites were given and continued to eat manna
in the first few days of the Festival of Phasekh and Unleavened Bread during their first year in
the land of Kanaan (Josh., 5:1012).
49
John, 6:4, 2659. Manna was not allowed to be used once it fermented (Exod., 16:1322).
Therefore, it was always eaten as unleavened bread.
50
E.g., 1 John, 3:5; 1 Pet., 21f; Heb., 4:15.
to recall the Israelite Exodus out of Egypt.
51
Therefore, it is a recollection of
the parables that the Exodus represented (i.e., the death and resurrection
of the messiah, the salvation of the first-born or elect of Israel brought about
by the shedding of the messiahs blood, the death and resurrection of
the elect, and the establishment of the kingdom of Yahweh).
52
The history is
as follows:
After the Israelites spent 400 years in servitude to the Egyptians,
53
Yahweh
sent his prophets Moses and Aaron to Pharaoh with the request to release the
Israelites from bondage in order that they could go and serve Yahweh in the
wilderness. To facilitate this endeavor, Moses revealed signs and plagues to
Pharaoh in a series of attempts to persuade him to allow the Israelites to leave
Egypt. After suffering from each plague, Pharaoh would recant of his stub-
bornness and give permission. Moses would then pray to Yahweh to release
Egypt from the plague. Just as quickly as the plague was relieved, Pharaoh
would harden his bl (leb; inner self) and would once more refuse to allow
Israel to leave the country.
54
The 10th and last of these plagues occurred on the night of the Phasekh
supper. Yahweh had ordered each household of the Israelites to bring in a per-
fect one-year-old male flock animal from among either their sheep or goats
and separate it out on the 10th day of the moon of Abib (later called Nisan).
Then at byn ha-arabim (within the periods of twilight), on the 14th day of Abib
(Nisan), the animal was sacrificed and its blood placed on the door frames of
each respective Israelite house. The animal was then roasted and eaten that
night.
55
The Israelites were commanded to be dressed for hasty travel, to re-
main inside their homes until morning, to eat their Phasekh with unleavened
bread, and then ordered that at morning they must burn what remained of the
sacrificed animal.
56
Meanwhile, in the middle of the night, the destroyer or angel of death
passed through Egypt killing all of the first-born in the land, from the first-born
son of Pharaoh to the first-born of all the livestock. Nevertheless, this angel did
not enter into the houses where the lambs blood was found upon the door post.
The first-born of Israel had been saved by the blood of the Phasekh victim.
57
The devastation to the Egyptian population, on the other hand, was so great
that Pharaoh allowed the Israelites to leave the country, taking with them a
great plunder.
58
147 What are Phasekh and Unleavened Bread?
51
Exod., 12:17, 13:310.
52
See our FSDY, 3, for the prophetic meanings of the Festival of Phasekh and Unleavened
Bread.
53
That the Israelites spent 400 years in Egypt see Gen., 15:13f; Acts, 7:6f; Jos., Antiq., 2:9:1,
Wars, 5:9:4, Table, 2:46; Ps.-Clement, 1:34; etc. The 210-year chronology for the Egyptian sojourn
of the Israelites, which is currently popular, is both late and spurious. It was first formalized by
Demetrius, a second century B.C.E. Jewish chronographer, who wrote in the Greek language and
flourished in Egypt. It was not totally accepted by Jewish chronologists until the second century
C.E. For a full discussion of the correct figure of 400 years and the spurious number 210, see our text
entitled Israelite Chronology (IC), the third volume in our series on Ancient World Chronology.
54
Exod., 5:110:29.
55
Exod., 11:112:28.
56
Exod., 12:8, 10f, 17, 22.
57
Exod., 11:47, 12:12f, 23, 29.
58
Exod., 12:3036.
The night of Phasekh did not end the trauma. On the 15th of Abib, the
Israelites left Rameses and gathered themselves at a place called Succuth.
59
From Succuth they marched through the eastern wilderness of Egypt toward
the Suph (Termination)
60
Sea, called by the Greeks the Red Sea,
61
located on the
edge of the Egyptian frontier.
62
As they were leaving the populated regions of
Egypt, the Egyptians were seen burying their dead.
63
The Israelites continued
marching day and night until they arrived at the Suph Sea, all the while con-
tinuing to bake and consume their supply of unleavened bread.
64
During the Israelite march, Pharaoh once again hardened his leb (inner
self) and repented of having let the Israelites go. In response, he mustered his
chariots and warriors and pursued them.
65
As the seventh day of unleavened
bread arrived, while the Israelites were in the process of eating their festival
meal and celebrating the high Sabbath of the last day of the festival, Pharaoh
caught up with his prey.
66
Using his well-trained and massive army, he cor-
nered the Israelites at the mouth of a natural pocket formed by the sea and a
mountain that terminated at its shore.
67
It was at this point that Yahweh,
within a pillar of cloud, moved in between Pharaohs army and the Israelites.
68
At the same time, just after the arrival of Pharaohs army, a tremendous
storm rose up. Under instructions from Yahweh, Moses next stretched out his
hand over the sea with his staff and a pathway through the water opened.
During the rest of that night, the Israelites followed Moses through the midst
of the Suph Sea, escaping to the opposite shore.
69
Shortly before dawn, as the last of the Israelites were escaping to the
opposite shore, the Egyptian army, in hot pursuit, followed the Israelites into
the sea. However, Yahweh and his cloud of glory still formed a barrier be-
tween the rear guard of the Israelites and the front lines of the Egyptians.
Then, when all the Israelites had reached safety, Yahweh looked upon the
Egyptians from his cloud, causing them great consternation. Suddenly, the
148 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
59
Num., 33:35; Exod., 12:37. Josephus notes that many years later the Persian leader King
Cambyses built the Egyptian city of Babylon upon the previously deserted site of Succuth (Jos.,
Antiq., 2:15:1). Today the ruins of Egyptian Babylon are found in Fostat, located near Old Cairo.
60
See above n. 31.
61
In the LXX the Hebrew name Suph Sea is translated by the Greek name for this sea, the
ej ruqra` ~ (eruthras; Red) Sea (e.g., at LXX Exod., 13:18, 15:4, 22, 23:31, and so forth).
62
Exod., 12:3742, 13:1714:1; Num., 33:37. When the Israelites crossed the Suph Sea they
found themselves located in Etham, in the wilderness of Shur (Exod., 13:20, 15:22; Num., 33:68),
the territory that bordered the front of Egypt (Gen., 25:18; 1 Sam., 15:7).
63
Num., 33:3f.
64
Exod., 12:34, 39, 13:1814:2.
65
Exod., 14:39.
66
Exod., 14:512. For the evidence that the Israelites were eating their feast meal when
Pharaoh arrived see FSDY, 3.
67
This detail is indicated by Exod., 14:3, They are entangled in the land, the wilderness has
shut them in. Josephus explains that the Egyptians had, confined them between inaccessible
cliffs and the sea; for it was the sea in which terminated a mountain whose rugged face was des-
titute of tracks and prohibitive for retreat. Accordingly, occupying the pass where the mountain
abuts upon the sea, they blocked the passage of the Hebrews, pitching their camp at its mouth, to
prevent their escape to the plain (Jos., Antiq., 2:15:3). And again he writes that the Israelites were,
hemmed in by mountains, sea, and enemy, and seeing nowhere from these any imaginable es-
cape (Jos., Antiq., 2:15:4).
68
Exod., 14:1320.
69
Exod., 14:21f.
water, which had formed great walls on each side of the passageway through
the sea, collapsed on top of the Egyptian army, who were now well inside the
sea basin.
70
All the Egyptians were destroyed; all the Israelites were saved.
71
In the representation from the book of Exodus, the Phasekh sacrifice for
Yahweh had assured safe conduct for the Israelites during their seven-day
journey out of the land of Egypt (the Exodus). The association of a sacrifice
made to assure a safe passage and the act of limping (passing over) at a fu-
neral service were also both brought together in this Phasekh episode. Not
only was there the death of the Phasekh victim, but the Israelites left Egypt in
the midst of a great Egyptian funeral for their first-born. The result of these
great events was the birth of the new and independent twelve-tribe nation of
Israel, governed by the priests of Levi, and their submission to Yahweh.
Easter Versus Phasekh
Today, many proclaiming themselves to be Christians are under the illusion
that the Phasekh has nothing to do with them. Instead, they celebrate Easter.
In reality, all ancient Christian assemblies celebrated a form of Phasekh
(though opinions on just how to observe this festival varied greatly from as-
sembly to assembly). The celebration of Easter as a Christian festival is in re-
ality a perversion of Phasekh. The New Catholic Encyclopedia, for example,
characterizes this alteration of the Phasekh (Pasch) by the Roman assembly
as follows:
Not only was the significance of the Jewish feast
changed by the Christians, but also the date. The
Jewish method of fixing the date, the 14th day of
Nisan, did not confine it to any one day; at a very
early time Christians assigned their Pasch to the
Sunday following the Jewish feast . . . In the begin-
ning Christians depended on Jewish authorities to
calculate the date of the Passover, and thus of Easter;
but by the 3rd century some Christians started to de-
termine Easter independently. . . Probably a night
celebration was determined for this feast because
Easter is the Christian Passover, the fulfillment of the
Jewish Passover. The Jewish feast was always cele-
brated at night; it is natural that the Christian feast,
which replaced it, would also be a nighttime feast.
72
According to Bede (early eighth century C.E.), the English name Easter is
derived from Eostre, or Ostra, the Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring.
73
Easter
was originally a pagan religious day later modified and adopted as a substi-
tute for Phasekh as part of an ongoing effort to Christianize pagans. There is
no reference to Easter in the original Scriptures. The word Easter is found only
149 What are Phasekh and Unleavened Bread?
70
Exod., 14:2328.
71
Exod., 14:2831.
72
NCE, 5, pp. 7, 8, 9.
73
Bede, Temp. Rat., 15.
once in the King James Version, at Acts, 12:4, but the original Greek word is
pav sca (Paskha = Phasekh).
74
Albert Barnes refers to the English substitution of
Phasekh with Easter as an unhappy translation. He adds:
The word Easter is of Saxon origin, and is supposed
to be derived from Eostre, the goddess of Love, or the
Venus of the North, in honor of whom a festival was
celebrated by our pagan ancestors in the month of
April (Webster). As this festival coincided with the
Passover of the Jews, and with the feast observed by
Christians in honor of the resurrection of the Messiah,
the name came to be used to denote the latter. In the
old Anglo-Saxon service books the term Easter is used
frequently to translate the word Passover.
75
The simple fact is, all ancient Christian assemblies did in truth observe
some form of the Phasekh. The name Easter only came centuries later
incorporated into English from their contacts with the Germans and other
pagan cultures. This fact is a matter of common knowledge. The New Bible
Dictionary remarks:
EASTER, a word used in the Germanic languages to
denote the festival of the vernal equinox, and subse-
quently, with the coming of Christianity, to denote
the anniversary of the resurrection of Christ (which
in Gk. and Romance tongues is denoted by pascha,
Passover , and its derivatives).
76
Websters Dictionary comments:
ME. ester, esterne; AS. eastre, in pl. eastron (akin to Ger.
Ostern), spring, Easter; orig., name of pagan vernal
festival almost coincident in date with the paschal
festival of the church < Eastre, dawn goddess.
77
The Encyclopaedia Britannica notes:
EASTER, the annual festival observed throughout
Christendom in commemoration of the Resurrection
of our Lord Jesus Christ. The word EasterAnglo-
Saxon, Eastre, Eoster; German, Osternlike the names
of the days of the week, is a survival from the old
Teutonic mythology. According to Bede (De Temp.
Rat., c. xv) it is derived from Eostre, or Ostra, the
Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring, to whom the month,
answering to our Aprilthence called Eostur-monath
150 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
74
See Greek text in ILT.
75
BN, p. 181, commentary on Acts, 12:4.
76
NBD, p. 330.
77
WNWD, p. 456, s.v. Easter.
was dedicated. This month, Bede informs us, was the
same as the Mensis Paschalis, when the old festival
was observed with the gladness of a new solemnity.
78
According to Alexander Hislop, the Germanic goddess Easter (Eostre) orig-
inates with the Eastern pagan goddess Astarte:
Easter is nothing else than Astarte, one of the titles of
Beltis, the queen of heaven, whose name, as pro-
nounced by the people of Nineveh, was evidently
identical with that now in common use in this country
England. The name, as found by Layard on the
Assyrian monuments, is Ishtar. The worship of Bel
and Astarte was very early introduced into Britain,
along with the Druids, the priests of the groves.
79
This evidence demonstrates that certain late English Christian groups delib-
erately altered the name Phasekh to Easter in order to guise a pagan celebration
as Christian, justifying their act by claiming they were giving the pagan festival a
new solemnity.
Because of their merging of this pagan celebration with a scriptural doc-
trine, the pagan fertility cult practices of giving colored Easter eggs, the asso-
ciation of rabbits, and the observance of sunrise services all eventually found
their way into the Phasekh observance.
80
The connection of Easter with eggs is
an excellent example. The Syrian deity Astarte (called Ishtar by the Assyrians
and Babylonians, Venus by the Latins, and Aphrodite by the Greeks)
81
was the
goddess of fertility. According to the ancient myth-teller Hyginus:
Into the Euphrates River an egg of wonderful size
is said to have fallen, which the fish rolled to the
bank. Doves sat on it, and when it was heated, it
hatched Venus (Astarte), who later was called the
Syrian Goddess.
82
The Druids bore an egg as the sacred emblem of their order.
83
The
Egyptians and Greeks used eggs in their religious rites, hanging them up in
their temples for mystic purposes.
84
Ptah\, the Egyptian deity believed to have
created all other deities and the world, is described as the being who turns the
solar and lunar eggs on a potter s wheelthe sun and moon likewise being
manifestations of deities.
85
Therefore, the connection between the spring
fertility goddess Astarte (Ishtar = Eastre = Easter) and the egg of Astarte, as
well as the notion that eggs are somehow connected in pagan thought with
151 What are Phasekh and Unleavened Bread?
78
EB, 1898, vii, p. 613, s.v. EASTER. Also see EB, 1910, viii, p. 828, s.v. EASTER.
79
TTB, p. 103.
80
AAO, pp. 253259, 305310; TTB, pp. 103113.
81
See Sanchoniatho in Eusebius, P.E., 1:10; MAR, 5, p. 19.
82
Hyginus, 197.
83
MRD, p. 208.
84
MCAE, 3, p. 20; Pausanias, 3:16:1.
85
MAR, 12, p p . 144f.
the deities, has produced the Easter egg. The fertility reputation of rabbits
resulted in the Easter bunny. The worship of Astarte (Venus), the goddess of
the morning, and her husband, the sun deity Baal, developed into Easter
sunrise service.
What do these things have to do with Yahwehs sacred festival days?
Yahweh warns us not to celebrate the customs of the nations and the tradi-
tions of men.
86
These celebrations are your khagi and your moadi; they are
not his. Even the perversions of Yahwehs festivals as practiced by the
Israelites were condemned by Yahweh.
My nephesh hates your new moons (months) and
YOUR MOADI. They are a burden upon me. I am
tired of bearing (them).
87
I hate, I reject YOUR KHAGI (FESTIVALS), and I will
not delight in YOUR FESTIVE ASSEMBLIES. For if
you offer up to me burnt offerings, and your food of-
ferings, I will not be pleased; and peace offerings of
your fattened animals I will not look upon. Take
away from me the sound of your songs, and the
melody of your harps I will not hear.
88
These statements do not mean that Yahweh was against the Phasekh and
days of eating unleavened bread. To the contrary, Yahweh lists the Phasekh
and Khag of Unleavened Bread among THE MOADI OF YAHWEH and
refers to them as MY MOAD.
89
It was not Yahwehs festivals that were in
question. Rather, it was mans interpretations and practices that corrupted
Yahwehs festivals. We simply do not have any authority to make up our own
festivals, regardless of how well-intentioned we assume ourselves to be.
Eucharist and Communion
Another corruption of the Phasekh festival, which we shall only mention in
passing, is the later form of the Eucharist, also called Communion, the
Christian sacrament commemorating the messiahs Last Supper. The
Eucharist is called, The Passover Meal of the New Covenant.
90
The term
Eucharist means thanksgiving.
91
Communion is the fellowship ceremony
by which the Eucharist is shared.
92
The Christian Eucharist ceremony takes its lead from the Last Supper,
where the messiah gave a blessing over the unleavened bread, broke it and
gave it to his disciples. He then uttered the words, Take, eat; this is my body,
152 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
86
Jer., 10:13; Mark, 7:613; 1 Tim., 4:110; 2 Tim., 4:3f; Col., 2:8; Titus, 1:1015; 1 Pet., 1:17f.
87
Isa., 1:14.
88
Amos, 5:2123.
89
Lev., 23:14, 37, 44. That yd[wm (moadi) in Lev., 23:2, means my moad, cf. LXX, loc. cit.,
eJ ortaiv mou. Moad is used here as a collective noun, like Torah (Law) when referring to a body
of torath (laws).
90
NCE, 5, p. 595.
91
NCE, 5, p. 599.
92
NBD, pp. 245f.
which is broken on behalf of you; do this in remembrance of me.
93
After di-
viding the bread, Yahushua took a cup of wine (though some would argue
that it was only grape juice) and euj caristhv sa~ (eucharistesas; gave thanks). He
then offered his disciples the wine to share, saying, Drink all of it. He de-
fined the cup of wine by saying, This is my blood, that of the New Covenant,
which is poured out concerning many, and as often as you drink, do this for
the remembrance of me.
94
The mystery of the Eucharist, which was first revealed at the Last Supper,
soon expanded from its original function as a part of the Phasekh supper and
within a few decades was attached to regular services as well. Accordingly,
every time that the Eucharist was offered, it became a type of the blessing and
thanks given by Yahushua at his last Phasekh (i.e., the Last Supper before his
death). In conjunction with this blessing and the giving of thanks, the sharing
of bread and wine is performed in remembrance of the messiahs death,
which was required so that the New Covenant could be established. Even
more to the issue at hand, the symbolism of these rites is directly connected
with Phasekh, for the messiah was himself the Phasekh lamb that has been
sacrificed for us.
95
At Communion (fellowship, sharing), bread and wine are used to recall
the unleavened bread and wine taken during the Last Supper.
96
The Last
Supper was the Phasekh meal eaten by Yahushua and his disciples just prior
to the messiah being delivered up to the chief priests and subsequently suf-
fering execution. This Eucharist ceremony is based upon a statement given by
the apostle Saul to the Corinthians recounting the words of the messiah the
night of his Last Supper, when he told his disciples to share in the bread
and wine.
97
The idea of Communion has degenerated to a point where the original
concept of simulating Phasekh has now almost totally been forgotten. In
many churches communion is taken once a week, in some cases daily, as well
as on special occasions. The idea of partaking of the bread and wine every
week, and not just during the time of Phasekh, arose because of a loose inter-
pretation of 1 Corinthians, 11:26, which reads, For as often as you may eat
this bread, and may drink this cup, the death of the sovereign you announce
until he has come. Because Saul made no specific command concerning the
frequency of the reception of this bread and wine, many found in the term
often an implication of a weekly service, if not daily.
98
As a result, instead of understanding this passage to mean that every time
you observe the festival of Phasekh, and thereby partake of the unleavened
bread and wine, you announce the death of the messiah, many Christian
assemblies derived the meaning that they can partake of the bread and wine
anytime they wish and announce the same purpose. As we shall demonstrate
153 What are Phasekh and Unleavened Bread?
93
1 Cor., 11:23f; Luke, 22:19; Matt., 26:26; Mark, 14:22.
94
Matt., 26:27f; Mark, 14:23f; Luke, 22:20; 1 Cor., 11:25.
95
1 Cor., 5:68; cf., above n. 38.
96
NCE, 4, pp. 3741.
97
1 Cor., 11:2527; cf., Matt., 26:2630; Mark, 14:2226; Luke, 22:1920; NCE, 5, p. 595.
98
NCE, 4, pp. 37f.
with the remainder of our study, this interpretation is not in holding with the
intent of the Scriptures.
Conclusion
The Khag of Phasekh and Unleavened Bread is not properly a Jewish festival.
Neither is it Easter nor the Eucharist at Communion. Rather, it is a khag
belonging to Yahweh, given to us by a tqj (khoquth; statute) from Yahweh,
commanding us to celebrate it during its appointed time of the year. While the
Israelites were in Egypt, and later under the Torah (Law), its celebration was
meant to be a foreshadowing of coming events, including the death and res-
urrection of the messiah. Since the death and resurrection of the messiah, the
questions now stand, Are we to continue this annual celebration or is it a
relic of the past? and, If we are to continue this practice, how and when do
we correctly observe it? Examining the evidence which decides these issues
is the purpose of our study.
154 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
PART TWO
Phasekh and Shabuat h:
Background and Cont roversy
CHART B
MONTH EQUIVALENCY CHART
No. Known Jewish Equivalent Approx.
of Ancient (Babylonian Macedonian Modern
Month Israelite Assyrian) Month-names Day
Month-names Month-names in Josephus Equivalent
1st Abib Nisan Xanthicus March/ April
(Nisnu) (Xanthikos)
2nd Ziu Iyyar Artemisius April/ May
(Aiaru) (Artemisios)
3rd Siwan Daesius May/ June
(Simnu) (Daisios)
4th Tammuz Panemos June/ July
(Duzu) (Panemus)
5th Tsach (?) Ab Lous July/ Aug.
(Abu) (Loos)
6th Elul Gorpiaeus Aug./ Sept.
(Ululu) (Gorpiaios)
7th Ethanim Tishri Hyperberetaeus Sept./ Oct.
(Tashritu) (Hyperberetaios)
8th Bul Marheshuan Dius Oct./ Nov.
(Heshuan (Dios)
Arahsamnu)
9th Khisleu Apellaios Nov./ Dec.
(Kislimu) (Apellaeus)
10th Tebeth Audynaios Dec./ Jan.
(Tebetu) (Audyneus)
11th Shebat Peritios Jan./ Feb.
(Shabatu) (Peritus)
12th Adar Dystros Feb./ March
(Addaru) (Dystrus)
13th Every few years an intercalary month was required. This extra
month was labeled Be-Adar or the Second Adar.
132
PHASEKH AND UNLEAVENED BREAD
EXODUS, 12:320, AND 23:15
Speak to all the congregation of Israel, saying, On the
tenth (day) for this moon (named ha-Abib),
1
they shall
take for themselves a flock animal, each one for a fa-
ther s house, a flock animal for a house. And if the
house is too small for a flock animal, he and his
neighbor next to his house shall take according to the
number of tpn (nepheshth; persons).
2
You shall
count, each one by the mouth of his eating, concern-
ing the flock animal. The flock animal shall be for you
a perfect one, a male, and a son of a year. You shall
take it from the sheep or from the goats. And it shall
be for you to keep until the fourteenth day for the
moon. And all the assembly of the congregation of
Israel shall kill it ybr[h yb (byn ha-arabim; within
the periods of twilight).
3
And they shall take from the
blood and put it upon the two door-posts and upon
the lintel upon the houses within which they eat it.
And they shall eat the flesh in this night, roasted with
fire and unleavened bread; together with bitter herbs
they shall eat it. Do not eat it raw or boiled in water
at all, for it shall be roasted with fire, its head with its
legs and with its innards. And you shall not leave any
of it until morning; and that left from it until morn-
ing you shall burn with fire. And this is the way you
shall eat it: your loins girded, your sandals on your
feet, and your staff in your hand. And you shall eat it
in haste. It is the Phasekh for Yahweh. And I will pass
through, in the land of Egypt, in this night and I will
smite all the first-born in the land of Egypt, from man
and as far as beasts. And on the eloahi
4
of Egypt I will
execute judgments. I am Yahweh. And the blood
133
1
The reference to this moon is to the moon or month named bybah (ha-Abib; the Abib) (see
Exod., 13:4, 23:15, 34:18; Deut., 16:1). During the post-Exile period, this month-name was changed
by the Judahites to the Babylonian form syn (Nisan) (see Neh., 2:1; Esther, 3:7). Also see our Chart B.
For the definition of ha-Abib and how one determines the first moon see FSDY, 3.
2
The Hebrew term pn (nephesh), plural tpn (nepheshth), means, prop. a breathing creature,
i.e. animal or (abstr.) vitality (SEC, Heb. #5315); breath . . . an animal (that which breathes) . . . a
person (HEL, p. 171; CHAL, pp. 242f). Nefesh is the person himself, his need for food, the very
blood in his veins, his being (quoting Dr. H. M. Orlinsky of the Hebrew Union College, in refer-
ence to his translation of the Torah, NYT, Oct. 12, 1962, p. 20).
3
For proof that byn ha-arabim is the period of twilight extending from sunset until dark see
FSDY, 2.
4
For the use of the term eloah (plural eloahi, and collective noun eloahim), the Hebrew generic
term for a deity, see Chap. I, p. 9, n. 25.
134 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
shall be for you a sign upon the houses where you
are. And I will see the blood and ytjsp (phasekh-thy;
I will pass over) you, and the plague shall not be
upon you for destruction when I smite the land of
Egypt. And this day shall be a memorial for you and
you shall celebrate it a festival for Yahweh for your
generations; you shall celebrate it an olam (world-
age)
5
statute. Seven days you shall eat unleavened
bread. Indeed, on the first day you shall cause leaven
to cease from your houses, because anyone eating
anything leavened that pn (nephesh; person)
6
shall be
cut off from Israel, from the first day to the seventh
day. And on the first day shall be a sacred convocation
and on the seventh day shall be a sacred convocation
for you. Not any work shall be done by you. And you
shall observe the unleavened bread, because on this
very day I brought your armies out from the land of
Egypt. And you shall observe this day for your gen-
erations, an olam (world-age) statute. In the first
(moon), on the fourteenth day for the moon, at br[
(arab; twilight),
7
you shall eat unleavened bread until
the twenty-first day for the moon, at arab (twilight).
Seven days no leaven shall be found in your houses,
because anyone eating anything leavened that nephesh
(person) shall be cut off from the congregation of
Israel, among the resident aliens and among the na-
tives of the land. Not anything leavened shall you eat.
In all your dwellings you shall eat unleavened bread.
(Exod., 12:320)
You shall keep the Festival of Unleavened Bread.
Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread, as I have
commanded you, for the moad (appointed time)
8
of
the Abib moon, because in it you came out from
Egypt, and they shall not appear unworthy before
me. (Exod., 23:15)
5
For the translation of the Hebrew term l[ (olam) as a world-age in time see above Intro.
to Part I, p. 26, n. 10.
6
See above n. 2.
7
For proof that arab is the period of twilight just after sunset see FSDY, 2.
8
For the definition of moad see Chap. I, p. 15, n. 70.
135
SHABUATH (PENTECOST)
LEVITICUS, 23:1517, 21, AND
DEUTERONOMY, 16:910
And you shall number for yourself from the day after
the Sabbath, from the day you bring in the rm[ (omer)
wave offering, they shall be seven complete
Sabbaths, until the day after the seventh Sabbath.
You shall number 50 days. And you shall bring near
a new food offering to Yahweh; you shall bring in
bread out of your dwellings for a wave offering, two
(loaves); they shall be of two-tenth parts of flour; they
shall be baked with leavening, firstfruits to Yahweh
. . . And you shall make a proclamation on this same
day, a sacred convocation it is to you. You shall not
do any laborious work. It is an olam statute in all your
dwellings in your generations. (Lev., 23:1517, 21)
You shall number for yourself seven weeks. From the
sickle beginning to cut on the growing stalks of grain
you shall begin to number seven weeks. And you
shall perform the Khag of Shabuath (Weeks) to
Yahweh your eloahi, according to the measure of the
free-will offering of your hand, which you shall give,
accordingly as Yahweh your eloahi has blessed you.
(Deut., 16:910)
Int roduct ion t o Part II
A
t first thought, it would seem that the dates for the Phasekh supper, the
seven days of eating unleavened bread, and the Khag of Shabuath
(Pentecost) should hardly be controversial issues. One would suppose, for in-
stance, that those of the Jewish faith would have been aware of the correct
timing of these festivals from time immemorial. One would also assume that
a quick check of the relevant statements from Scriptures should solve any ap-
parent problems. Unfortunately, this optimistic view is simply not the case.
Few realize that the issues of just how and when to celebrate the Khag of
Phasekh and Unleavened Bread and the Khag of Pentecost have been hotly
debated for centuries. Indeed, as early as the second century B.C.E. strongly
divergent interpretations over exactly what the Scriptures had commanded in
this regard were being voiced within the Jewish community. The Christian as-
semblies began to struggle over these issues in the second century C.E. The
search for the correct Phasekh and Shabuath systems, accordingly, must begin
by laying out these various ancient constructs. At the same time, our study
must remain cognizant of the fact that these different systems can only be un-
derstood within their historical and cultural backdrop.
The Task of Part II
The task of Part II of our first volume is to examine and define the different
Jewish and Christian schools with regard to their observance of Phasekh, with
its seven days of unleavened bread, and Shabuath (Pentecost). We will begin
with two introductory chapters. These chapters shall define relevant terms,
such as Phasekh (Passover), unleavened bread, Shabuath (Weeks), Pentecost,
and the like. The instructions and reasons for keeping these celebrations will
also be examined. The study shall then divide our subject matter into two sec-
tions: one examining the Jewish schools and a second investigating the
Christian schools.
Section I: Different Jewish Schools
Our initial inquiry shall delve into the practices of the Jewish schools. In
this effort, we will explore the history, culture, and origin of three major
Jewish schools of thought regarding the Festival of Phasekh and Unleavened
Bread and the Festival of Pentecost. We will show that the issues separating
each school are derived from their diverse interpretations concerning the time
of day called br[ (arab) and ybr[h yb (byn ha-arabim). The three basic
Jewish systems for observing the Phasekh and the seven days of unleavened
bread were as follows:
The Aristocratic system celebrated both the Phasekh sacrifice and
supper after sunset on the 14th day of the first moon. The seven days of
137
unleavened bread lasted from the beginning of the 14th until the end of
the 20th day (sunset marking the beginning and ending of a legal day).
The Hasidic system celebrated the Phasekh sacrifice on the afternoon of
the 14th day of the first moon while the Phasekh supper was eaten after
sunset during the nighttime portion of the 15th day. The seven days of
unleavened bread continued from the beginning of the 15th until the
end of the 21st day.
The third school was the neo-Aristocratic system. This system used two
parallel reckonings for a day, one ending at sunset (legal) and one end-
ing at dark (common). Its advocates celebrated the Phasekh sacrifice
after sunset, still being part of the 14th day by common-day reckoning
but the first part of the 15th day by legal reckoning. They ate the
Phasekh supper after dark, being the first part of the 15th day (i.e., at a
time falling within both the legal and common-day reckonings).
In the process of this discussion, the competition between the various
Jewish factions will be examined, especially the conflict between the
Aristocratic Sadducees and the Hasidic Pharisees. The eventual victory of the
Pharisees shall be placed in its proper historical context.
Finally, the date for the Khag of Shabuath (Pentecost) was heavily reliant
upon how one calculated Phasekh and the seven days of unleavened bread.
As a result, there developed four competing Jewish systems for counting the
50 days to Pentecost: the Aristocratic, the neo-Aristocratic, the Hasidic, and
the neo-Hasidic. Section I shall investigate and explain each of these views
and place them within their proper historical context.
Section II: Early Christian Schools
Section II is devoted to examining the systems of the early Christian
assemblies, from the first until the early eighth century C.E. Four major
Christian views were practiced: Quartodeciman (= Aristocratic), quasi-
Quartodeciman, Roman (later called Roman Catholic), and the Syrian Hybrid
(which was in part Quartodeciman but largely built upon Roman Catholic
reckoning). Several minor variant views shall also be touched upon when
they become relevant.
It will be demonstrated in this discussion that the most primitive Christian
assemblies followed the Aristocratic system for both the Khag of Phasekh and
Unleavened Bread and for the Khag of Pentecost. These primitive Christian
assemblies were called Quartodecimani (14th keepers) because they kept
Phasekh on the 14th day of the moon of Abib, the first lunar month, just as
some of the Aristocratic Jews did who continued to follow the ancient priestly
system. Like their Aristocratic Jewish counterparts, they also kept the seven
days of unleavened bread from the 14th until the end of the 20th of Abib. The
Quartodecimans differed from the Aristocratic Jews in that they believed in
Yahushua as the messiah and saw no need for animal sacrifices or offerings,
only for the repast and the seven days of eating unleavened bread. With their
Phasekh meal they observed the Eucharist (i.e., the Phasekh Eucharist).
9
138 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
9
We will use the phrase Phasekh Eucharist when referencing the thanksgiving offered
with the bread and wine at Passover.
As time moved on, a large number of the Quartodecimans began altering
their views and strayed from their original doctrines. As a result, several vari-
ations developed, which are all classified as quasi-Quartodeciman. This study
shall demonstrate that in the early part of the second century C.E. an impor-
tant quasi-Quartodeciman view about Phasekh took root among Western
Christians. Under this school, heavily influenced by the joyful celebration of
the resurrection of the messiah and its connection with the first day of the 50-
day Pentecost season, the Phasekh Eucharist celebration, originally per-
formed on the 14th day of the first moon, was moved permanently to the first
day of the week falling within the seven days of unleavened bread (i.e., from
the 14th until the end of the 20th of the month of Abib).
In the last half of the second century C.E., a newer version of this quasi-
Quartodeciman view arose among the Western Christian assemblies who
were led by Rome. The Roman assembly adopted the seven-day system of un-
leavened bread that was advocated by the Hasidic branch of Judaism, i.e.,
from the 15th until the end of the 21st day of the first month. The Phasekh
Eucharist, accordingly, was placed on the first day of the week falling within
those seven days. This became the Roman Catholic system and was subse-
quently followed by the Protestants.
During the years when Roman assembly dominance became increasingly
present throughout the Christian world, a compromise developed in the East
forming a hybrid Syrian system. Under this system, Phasekh was kept on the
14th but the seven days of unleavened bread were observed from the 15th
until the end of the 21st. Its advocates nonetheless followed the Roman
Catholic guide and celebrated the Phasekh of the resurrection on the first day
of the week during these seven days.
This section shall also investigate the history and evidence for the trans-
formation of the Christian Phasekh, as it moved from its original Aristocratic
roots to the Roman assembly system. The key element for this change was the
Christian Pentecost system, which was modeled after the Jewish Aristocratic
Pentecost system. It shall be demonstrated that the first day of the 50-day
Pentecost count, the day of the rm[ (omer) wave offering, was also the an-
niversary of the messiahs resurrection.
In the process of separate development, it was the Western Christian
groups who abandoned their original Aristocratic construct for Phasekh and
replaced it with a Phasekh celebration on the day of the messiahs resurrec-
tion. Resurrection day had become a time of joyous celebration and for many
Western Christians this day was deemed a more appropriate time to celebrate
the Phasekh Eucharist. The 14th of Abib, on the other hand, was now viewed
by many Westerners as far too sad an occasion for celebration due to its re-
membrance of the messiahs death. The Phasekh Eucharist for the Western
Christians, as a result, became the first day of the week (Sunday) that fell dur-
ing the week of unleavened bread.
Essential Christian Differences
The evidence from these chapters will reveal that there are seven basic Jewish
and Christian systems for the celebration of Phasekh that we must consider.
139 Int roduct ion t o Part II
Other minor variations are all ultimately based on one of these seven views.
Separating these systems are some essential differences. In all cases, the 14th
of the moon of Abibcounted as the first month of the yearis recognized as
the day commanded in the written Torah (Old Testament) for the Phasekh
lamb to be slaughtered. The Phasekh supper was then eaten in the night im-
mediately following that sacrifice.
10
Here the agreement ends.
As our investigation shall prove, the advocates of the Christian
Quartodeciman (Aristocratic) system, which view was held by the early as-
semblies who followed Yahushua the messiah, contended that the seven-day
Festival of Unleavened Bread began with the 14th of Abib and ended at the
close of the 20th of Abib. This system recognized that the 14th was not only
the date for the ancient Phasekh sacrifice (an event no longer required) but
was the correct date for both the Phasekh supper and the first high Sabbath
day of that khag. In this construct, Phasekh is the first day of the seven days of
unleavened bread.
This research shall also prove that the early assemblies believed that the
messiah did in fact observe the 14th of Abib as the date of his famous Last
Supper, and that most Christians believed that Yahushua celebrated this din-
ner as the Phasekh repast. In the afternoon of that same day (Hebrew reckon-
ing, sunset-to-sunset), the Pharisees, who dominated the Judaean state
religion in those days, sacrificed their Phasekh lamb. It was at that time that
the messiah was wrongfully executed. The following night, i.e., on the 15th of
Abib, the Pharisees ate their Phasekh supper.
Disregarding whether any particular system believes that the legal
Phasekh supper was held on the 14th or 15th of Abib, there is another essen-
tial difference between the Aristocratic Phasekh system (which includes the
Quartodeciman and some aspect of the quasi-Quartodeciman models) and all
of the other varieties. All of the other systems disassociate the 14th of Abib
from being the high Sabbath which marks the first of the seven days of the
Festival of Unleavened Bread. Indeed, this was at the heart of the ancient de-
bate between the Quartodecimans (14th day keepers) and the Quintodeci-
mans (15th day keepers) in the early Christian assemblies. The debate was
never just about what day one was to eat the Phasekh Eucharist.
Practice of the Aristocratic system, which was followed by Yahushua and
the early assemblies, or anything like it, has been totally suppressed since the
eighth century C.E. Except for the most ardent students of history, few are
even aware that it existed. The Hasidic or Pharisaic model, on the other hand,
which in some way or another serves as the basis for the constructs of almost
all the remaining systems (despite its late appearance relative to the
Aristocratic system), has become so well-entrenched that few pundits have
thought to search beyond its perimeters to solve the several contradictions
presented by its format. This study shall expose these problems.
140 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
10
The basis for this belief is Exod., 12:68; Lev., 23:5; Num., 28:16; Deut., 16:25; and so on.
Chapt er XVII
The Quart odecimans and
Quasi-Quart odecimans
F
ew people today are aware that during the first four centuries C.E.
support was very strong among the early disciples and assemblies
following Yahushua the messiah for the Aristocratic system of keeping
Phasekh (System A). It may also come as a surprise to learn that this view
was in fact the original practice of all orthodox Christians. Its advocates and
supporters were in later centuries referred to as the Quartodecimans (14th
keepers). In this present chapter we shall investigate the antiquity of the Quar-
todeciman practice, demonstrate that they observed the 14th day of
the first moon for the Phasekh supper, and present their claim that they
observed Phasekh according to both Scriptures and the examples set forth
by the messiah and his apostles. As part of this discussion, we will also ex-
amine the quasi-Quartodeciman views, especially the early western innova-
tion (System D).
Keepers of the 14th
Beginning in the third century C.E., those who kept the 14th of the first moon
as the Phasekh supper and festival were referred to as Quartodecimans by
members of the Roman Church and others. Unfortunately, since the view of
the Quartodecimans was eventually suppressed by the Church of Rome,
1
transmission of their original writings was allowed to fall by the wayside.
With only a few exceptionsand there are exceptionsthe evidence we have
for their practices was recorded by their antagonists.
Nevertheless, knowledge of the Quartodecimans was retained by those
Christians of that period who were advocating the western views for Systems
D and E.
2
Sozomenus (mid-fifth century C.E.), for example, writes, The
Quartodecimans are so called because they observe this festival (of Phasekh),
like the Jews, on the 14th day of the moon, and hence their name.
3
John of
Damascus similarly states, The Quartodecimans celebrate Phasekh on a fixed
day of the year, on that day which coincides with the 14th of the moon,
whether it be a Saturday or Sunday.
4
Jerome notes that the bishops of Asia,
275
1
For the suppression of the Quartodecimans and quasi-Quartodecimans by the Roman
Church see FSDY, 2.
2
System D differs from System E in that System D calculates the Phasekh of the resurrection
on the first day of the week that falls from the beginning of the 14th until the end of the 20th day
of the first moon, while System E places the Phasekh of the resurrection on the first day of the
week that falls from the beginning of the 15th until the end of the 21st day of the first moon.
3
Sozomenus, 7:18. He adds that the Quartodecimans of this period kept the Phasekh more
according to the manner of the Jews (Sozomenus, 1:16), implying similarities but not exactness.
4
John Dam., 50.
in accordance with some ancient custom, celebrated the Phasekh with the
Jews on the 14th of the moon.
5
Yet the Quartodeciman Phasekh of the early Christians was markedly dif-
ferent from the Phasekh of the Pharisees and other Hasidic Jews. They directly
opposed the official Jewish practice sponsored by the Pharisees, arguing that
the deity (Yahweh) warned believers about these Jews, that they did always
err in their heart as regards the precept of the Torah concerning the Phasekh.
6
The Hasidic Jews did observe the 14th of Abib as the Phasekh, but for them
this meant only a day of preparation, the removing of leavened bread from
their homes, and observing the rituals for sacrificing the Phasekh lamb. They
did not attend the supper of the lamb until the night of the 15th, which they
generally referred to as the Festival of Unleavened Bread.
The early Christian assemblies, on the other hand, celebrated the 14th of
the first moon as the day of the Phasekh supper, as the time of the Eucharist,
and as a high Sabbath festival. The Quartodecimans also differed from the
Pharisees in that they observed the seven days of unleavened bread like the
early Sadducees, from the 14th until the end of the 20th of the first moon (Sys-
tem A), not from the 15th through the 21st (System B). The only similarity
with the Pharisees was the fact that the Pharisees included the 14th as part of
their overall Phasekh celebration.
7
At the same time, during the first few centuries C.E., there were still some
conservative Sadducees and Samaritans tenaciously holding on to their an-
cient Aristocratic practice. It is very probable that the Phasekh supper ob-
served by these conservative Jews might well have been used as still another
reference point for those charging the Quartodecimans with celebrating their
Phasekh supper on the 14th with the Jews. In either case, all of the Jews,
whether Hasidic or Aristocratic, referred to the 14th as the Phasekh and it was
on this day that the Quartodecimans were found observing their sacred day.
The Quartodecimans differed from the Jews of the earlier Aristocratic
school in that they believed that, with the death of the messiah, Christians
were no longer under the Torah. They also understood the fulfillment of the
Phasekh sacrifice in the death of the messiah. For that reason, the Quartodec-
imans saw no need for the Levitical priesthood and, accordingly, no further
need for any of the commanded sacrifices of the Torah.
8
On the other side of the equation, the Pharisees of this period labeled the
early Christians, especially those living in the East, as minim (heresy) and
Sadducees.
9
This label seems premised upon the fact that the early Chris-
tians (Quartodecimans), like the Sadducees, not only rejected the oral laws
ascribed to by the Pharisees and rabbis but celebrated the observance of the
276 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
5
Jerome, Lives, 45.
6
This Quartodeciman argument is reported by Peter Alex., frag. 5:4.
7
Jos., Antiq., 2:15:1.
8
That the followers of the messiah were not under the written Torah see Rom., 6:14f; Gal.,
3:2225, 5:18. Further, Jer., 7:21f, notes that when the Israelites left Egypt there were no commanded
burnt offerings or sacrifices. Also review our discussion of this issue above in Part I.
9
That the Pharisees referred to the early Christian assemblies as Sadducees see LS, pp.
9799; JE, 10, p. 633; PSSP, p. 226; as minim see JQR, 60, p. 198; CTM, pp. 361397.
seven days of unleavened bread, their Phasekh supper, and Pentecost on the
same days as the conservative Sadducees.
10
The Original Christian View
The suppression of the Quartodecimans by the Roman Church has been so
complete that few in the modern world are even aware that the Quartodeci-
mans represent the original Phasekh practice of all the early orthodox Chris-
tian assemblies: both Jewish Christians as well as those of the nations. This
important discovery was first demonstrated years ago by E. Schwarts, and
later confirmed by K. Holl and B. Lohse.
11
To the voice of these eminent schol-
ars has been added that of the well-respected historian Joachim Jeremias, who
concludes, the passover of the Early Church lived on in that of the Quarto-
decimanians.
12
He also notes that the Quartodecimanian passover celebra-
tion represents, as we know today, the direct continuation of the primitive
Christian passover.
13
Likewise, Alfred Loisy concludes:
At the beginning the festival was held, as was natural
enough, on the same day as the Jewish Passover
which might fall on any day of the week, and with no
difference except that it now commemorated the
Christians salvation, won for him by the death of
Christ, the true pascal lamb, as the fourth Gospel
teaches. The so-called quartodeciman usage, main-
tained by the congregations in Asia at the end of the
second century and condemned by Pope Victor, WAS
THE PRIMITIVE USAGE OF ALL THE CHRISTIAN
CONGREGATIONS and is indeed presupposed by
the Gospel tradition.
14
Especially noted for advocating this Quartodeciman view are those mem-
bers from the regions of the famous seven assemblies of Asia listed in the book
of Revelation, namely, Ephesus, Smyrna, Pergamum, Thyatira, Sardis, Phila-
delphia, and Laodicea.
15
Surrounding communities concurred, including the
assemblies of Cilicia, Mesopotamia, and Syria.
16
We must also not forget
that in the days of Emperors Nero and Hadrian, the Christian population was
far more numerous in Asia Minor and Syria,
17
the heart of Quartodeciman
277 The Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
10
As with the Sadducees (DBS, 7, pp. 861864; EEC, p. 119f, 1b, n. a), the Christians always
observed the Festival of Pentecost (the 50th day) on the first day of the week, counting the 50 days
from the day after the weekly Sabbath falling within the seven days of unleavened bread (e.g.,
Eusebius, Pas., 4; Athanasius, Fest. Let., 1:10; Apost. Constit., 5:20:2; Theophilus Alex., 20:4
(Jerome, Epist., 96, 20:4); Egeria, 43; ACC, 2, pp. 11571161.
11
ZNW, 7, 10f; GAK, 2, p. 214; DPDQ, pp. 7493.
12
EWJ, p. 122.
13
EWJ, p. 19.
14
BCR, pp. 226f.
15
Rev., 1:11. Some of the most famous Quartodecimans, for example, were Polycrates (bishop
of Ephesus), Melito (bishop of Sardis), Polycarp (bishop of Smyrna), Apollinarius (bishop of Hi-
erapolis, near Laodicea), and Sagaris of Laodicea.
16
Athanasius, Epist. Afros, 2, and Epist. Syn., 1:5.
17
EPC, pp. 63, 87, 103; CRG, p. 108. One is mindful of the statement of the newly installed
Roman governor named Pliny to Emperor Trajan in 112 C.E. with reference to the country of
country, than other parts of the Roman empire. The 14th was even observed
in the Christian assemblies as far away as the British Isles, where it continued
under the System D (early western) form until the end of the seventh
century C.E.
18
Likewise, the Quartodeciman practice originally prospered in Rome,
Egypt, Ethiopia, as well as other western countries, until the early part of the
second century C.E.
19
Due to an accumulation of Roman and Jewish persecu-
tion against the Christians, their own anti-Jewish sentiments, and a strong de-
sire by some of the assemblies to separate themselves from the stigma of being
classified as a Jewish sect, the Christians at Rome and Alexandria, as well as
a few other western cities, began to turn to a modified Quartodeciman inter-
pretation for the observance of Phasekh, System D.
20
Next, we must divide the Quartodecimans into two general camps: the
original and the quasi (those sects which developed in later years who gave
variant traditions to the Quartodeciman practice). Cyril Richardson calls the
original Quartodecimans the conservatives among the early assemblies.
21
F. E. Brightman refers to them as the original Quartodecimans and to those
of later practices as quasi-Quartodecimans.
22
Among the later quasi-Quarto-
decimans we must include the Montanists
23
and the Sabbatians,
24
who are one
branch of the Novatians,
25
and are also called Proto-Paschitaes.
26
One difference between the two camps of Quartodecimans was the fact
that the original Quartodecimans did not fast on the 14th at Phasekh,
27
while
some of the quasi-Quartodecimans fast and celebrate the vigil and the festival
278 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
Bithynia, Asia Minor. Bithynia was one of the several countries of Asia Minor, listed along with
Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, and Asia proper, as having Christian assemblies to whom the apos-
tle Keph wrote (1 Pet., 1:1). Pliny the Younger notes of the Christians in his region that, It is not
only the towns but villages and rural districts also which are infected through contact with this
wretched cult (Pliny Young., Epist., 10:96). Tertullian reports that Pliny was disturbed by their
very number (Apol., 2:6). Eusebius similarly writes that Pliny was disburbed by the great num-
ber of martyrs (Eusebius, H.E., 3:33:1; also see Eusebius, Arm., Oly. 221). Paul Allard interprets
these and the other words from Plinys letter to mean that Pliny had arrived in a Christian state
(HDP, p. 154).
18
Bede, Hist., 2:2, 4, 3:3f, 3:17, 35, 7:21,
19
Evidence of the Quartodeciman practices in Rome, Egypt, and Ethiopia comes from copies
of the Quartodeciman text entitled Epistula Apostolorum discovered in those regions: a Latin text
in a Vienna palimpsest, a Coptic version found in Cairo, and an Ethiopic translation (see SACE).
Also see our discussion of how and when the western Christian Phasekh (Systems D and E) orig-
inated below in Chap. XXXXI and in FSDY, 2.
20
For the development of System D and its cognate form System E see below Chap. XXXXI.
21
JTS, (NS) 24, pp. 81, 83, 84.
22
JTS, 25, pp. 262f.
23
Sozomenus, 7:18. Montanism was an early form of Pentecostalism which came into exis-
tence during the mid-second century C.E. (NCE, 9, pp. 1078f). Sozomenus (7:18) notes that the
Montanist counted the festivals according to the cycles of the sun and not the moon. The first day
of the year was always the first day after the vernal equinox, which according to Roman reckon-
ing was the ninth day before the calends of April (i.e., March 24). They kept Phasekh on the 14th
day of that cycle (April 6), when it falls on the day of the resurrection; otherwise they celebrate
it on the following Sovereigns day; for it is written according to their assertion that the festival
may be held on any day between the 14th and 21st (days). Also see the comments in BCal,
pp. 162f.
24
Sozomenus, 7:18; Socrates Schol., 5:21.
25
Socrates Schol., 4:28.
26
ACC, 2, pp. 1150f; EEC, p. 163.
simultaneously on the 14th.
28
Other quasi-Quartodecimans only kept the
Phasekh on a fixed day of the year, March 25, which according to the Acts of
Pilate was the date of the messiahs death, and consequently, by this interpre-
tation, the day of the solar year on which the 14th of the moon happened to
fall in the year of his death.
29
Because many of the quasi-Quartodeciman views
only provide later traditions and interpretations built up during the Christian
period, they offer little to our research. Therefore, we shall concentrate mainly
on the original assemblies and the common themes and premises that held
these Quartodeciman views together.
Another quasi-Quartodeciman outgrowth of the original Quartodeciman
view was System D (the early western variation). Like the Quartodecimans,
those following System D counted the seven days of unleavened bread from
the 14th until the end of the 20th. Yet they differed from the other Quarto-
decimans in that they observed the Phasekh supper and Eucharist only on
the first day of the weekthe day of the week on which the messiah was
resurrectedwhen that day fell during those seven days of unleavened
bread. If the first day of the week happened to fall on the 14th then they
would observe the 14th as the Phasekh.
30
This system was continued in
some parts of the British Isles until the end of the seventh century C.E.
31
A
variation of this view was used by the Audians during the time of the Roman
emperor Constantine.
32
Phasekh Supper on the 14th
The Quartodeciman assemblies followed the Aristocratic understanding of
ybr[h yb (byn ha-arabim; within the periods of twilight) and kept the 14th
of the first moon both as the time of the Phasekh supper and as a high Sab-
bath. To begin with, it was widely believed among the early assemblies (a be-
lief that continued for a considerable period of time among those of the
eastern assemblies) that, at the Exodus from Egypt, the Phasekh sacrifice oc-
curred after sunset, followed that same night by the Phasekh supper, and that
both events occurred on the 14th day of the first moon (sunset-to-sunset reck-
oning). The Christian writer Ephraem the Syrian (mid-fourth century C.E.), to
demonstrate, reports that the book of Exodus includes the story about the
lamb of Phasekh, noting that:
. . . on the 14th day (of the moon) they slaughtered
AND ate it.
33
In another place he states:
And on the 10th of this moon, (each) man will pro-
cure a lamb for his household, and will keep it until
the 14th; then he will slaughter it at sunset, and
279 The Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
27
JTS, 25, pp. 260f.
28
John Dam., 50.
29
Epiphanius, Pan., 50:1:58, 50:15; JTS, 25, p. 262f.
30
E.g., Anatolius, 1012; Bede, Hist., 2:2, 4, 3:3.
31
See below Chap. XIX, pp. 307ff.
32
ACC, 2, p. 1150; EEC, pp. 169f.
33
Ephraem, Exod., prooem., 14, et de agno, die decima quarta immolando et edendo.
sprinkle some of its blood on the door-posts and the
lintels of the house where they will eat it.
34
In turn, the Quartodecimans and others, including the advocates of Sys-
tem E,
35
all believed that the messiah both ate his last Phasekh supper and
died on the 14th of Abib. Defining this issue, Ephraem continues:
And on the 14th (day), when (the lamb) was
slaughtered, its type (the messiah) was killed on
a (torture-)stake.
36
Aphraates similarly writes:
Our saviour ate the Phasekh with his disciples in the
sacred night of the 14th . . . And he was taken in the
night of the 14th, and his trial lasted until the sixth
hour, and at the time of the sixth hour they sentenced
him and lifted him up on the (torture-)stake.
37
Scholars have noticed this important difference between the Quarto-
deciman view and the Hasidic practice of the Pharisees. Raniero Cantalamessa,
for example, contrasts this eastern Quartodeciman premise as expressed by
Aphraates with that of the Jews (Pharisees), writing:
The Jewish Passover was eaten in the night after the
fourteenth of Nisan, but Aphraates puts Jesus
Passover meal in the night leading to the fourteenth,
which his tradition held as the day of Jesuss death.
38
Following this logic, the Quartodecimans and those agreeing with them
claimed that the 14th was the correct day in the Torah for keeping the Phasekh
supper as well as the Phasekh sacrifice. The African Christian writer Pseudo-
Cyprian (c.243 C.E.), for example, attempts to correct Hippolytusan advo-
cate of System E who believed that the Pharisees were correct in keeping the
Phasekh on the 15thwith quotations from Scriptures. He writes that Yahweh
commanded the whole assembly of Israel through Moses to wear certain
clothes when they ATE THE PHASEKH ON THE 14TH.
39
The quasi-Quar-
todeciman, Columbanus of Luxovium, similarly argues that the 14th day of
the moon was chosen by Yahweh as the night for the first Phasekh supper
and the beginning of the Exodus.
40
280 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
34
Ephraem, Exod., 12:1.
35
For examples of those following System E who believed that the messiah kept the Phasekh
on the 14th, as against the Pharisees who kept it on the 15th, see Peter Alex., frag. 5:17; Clement,
Pas., frag. 28; Irenaeus, Ag. Her., 2:23:3, 4:10:1, cf., EEC, p. 145, 28, n. b; Eusebius, Pas., 810; Euty-
chius, 2. Those of System E depart from the other systems in that they believe that the messiahs
Phasekh supper was not the legal Phasekh of the written Torah but an innovation.
36
Ephraem, Exod., 12:3.
37
Aphraates, Dem., 12:6.
38
EEC, p. 183, 87, n. b.
39
Ps.-Cyprian, 2. The mention of clothes by Ps.-Cyprian is a reference to Exod., 12:11, And
you shall eat it (the Phasekh) this way; (with) your loins girded, your sandals on your feet, and
your staff in your hand.
40
Gregory, Epist., 127.
Pseudo-Cyprian then argues that the events which occurred and special
rules which were required in Egypt during the night of the Phasekhfrom
the sacrifice of the lamb, the conditions by which the children of Israel should
eat the lamb and other foods, the protection of the houses by means of the
lambs blood, followed by the arrival of the angel of death, and the burning of
the remains of the lamb at dawnwere prophetic signatures for the day of the
messiahs capture and murder. Not only was the lamb sacrificed but, by pun-
ishing the Egyptians, Yahweh had indicated the villainy of those in Egypt
(a type of Jerusalem)
41
up until that evening. This villainy, Pseudo-Cyprian ar-
gues, was symbolic of the acts of those Jews who came out with swords and
clubs against the messiah on the first day of unleavened bread ad vesperam
(at twilight),
42
i.e., the events which took place during the night that the mes-
siah ate his Phasekh supper and then was seized by the servants of the chief
priests on the Mount of Olives.
43
In another place this writer adds that the
messiah ate the Phasekh . . . and suffered the next day (i.e., in the daylight
portion of the 14th).
44
With this construct in mind, Pseudo-Cyprian in effect
charges the Pharisaic method, followed by the advocates of System E, with
error because they continued to keep the Phasekh supper on the 15th day. He
concludes:
And then we shall find that the Phasekh should not
be observed by the Jews themselves before or after
the 14th of the moon.
45
Anatolius of Alexandria (c.270 C.E.) writes of the Quartodecimans:
But nothing was difficult to them with whom it
was lawful to celebrate the Phasekh on any day when
the 14th of the moon happened after the equinox.
281 The Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
41
Cf. Rev., 11:8.
42
Ps.-Cyprian, 2. Those who were coming against the messiah with swords and clubs cap-
tured him after his Last Supper Phasekh (Matt., 26:4657; Mark, 14:4350; Luke, 22:4754),
which meal took place on the first day of unleavened bread, when they kill the Phasekh (lamb)
(Mark, 14:12; Luke, 22:7; Matt., 26:17) and at night (Mark, 14:2730; 1 Cor., 11:1728, esp. v. 23; cf.,
John, 18:3). It was after this meal that Judas went out to lead the Jewish leaders to Yahushua.
Therefore, since the reference of Ps.-Cyprian is to the time when the enemies of the messiah
came out against Yahushua and not just to the events that occurred after they actually captured
him, it is clear that Ps.-Cyprian uses the Latin term ad vesperam to include the late evening before
midnight, about which time the messiah was captured.
43
1 Cor., 11:2327; cf., Matt., 26:2175; Mark, 14:1872; Luke, 21:1462; John, 18:127.
44
Ps.-Cyprian, 9. In an effort to uphold a Friday crucifixion against the fact that the messiah
spent three days and nights in death (Matt., 12:40; cf., Jon., 1:7), Aphraates and some others held
to the unique definition that the three hours of darkness that preceded Yahushuas death (from
the sixth until the ninth hour of the 14th day; Matt., 27:45f; Mark, 15:33f; Luke, 23:4446) and the
three hours of daylight remaining in that day (the 9th until the 12th hour of the 14th of Abib) rep-
resent the 15th day and the first day of Yahushuas death (e.g., Aphraates, Dem., 12:68, 12f).
Therefore, the death of the messiah is counted as part of the next day, though in reality it was the
afternoon of the 14th (EEC, p. 186, n. i). This arrangement explains Ephraems statements that
Yahushua ate the Phasekh on the 14th but was slain on the 15th (Ephraem, Hymns, 3:1). This sys-
tem of counting must not be confused with the Roman and Alexandrian method (midnight-to-
midnight reckoning) which counts the night of the Last Supper as part of the 13th and the death
of the messiah as falling within the Roman day of the 14th (e.g., Clement, Pas., frag. 28; Irenaeus,
Ag. Her., 2:22:3).
45
Ps.-Cyprian, 2.
Following their example up to the present time all
the bishops of Asiaas themselves also receiving
the rule from an unimpeachable authority, to wit, the
evangelist John, who learnt it on the breast of the sov-
ereign (Yahushua), and drank in spiritual instruc-
tions without doubtwere in the way of celebrating
the Phasekh festival, without question, every year,
whenever the 14th day of the moon had come, and
the lamb was sacrificed by the Jews after the equinox
was past.
46
With regard to the Quartodeciman practice of the apostle John, the priest
Wilfrid, at the Synod of Whitby (640 C.E.), admitted:
And John, according to the custom of the Torah, on
the 14th day of the first moon ad vesperam (= byn ha-
arabim) began to celebrate the Phasekh Festival, not
regarding whether it fell on the Sabbath day or any
other day of the week.
47
Wilfrid then adds clarification when he remarks that both the apostles
John and Keph (Peter) looked for the rising of the moon ad vesperam (= byn
ha-arabim)
48
on the 14th day of its age, in the first moon.
49
This admission ver-
ifies that the period of byn ha-arabim was counted by the Quartodecimans
from just after sunset, for while the moon was rising toward the middle of the
night sky they ate their Phasekh meal.
50
Therefore, unlike the practice of the
Pharisees (who began the festival at noon on the 14th), the apostles observed
Phasekh from the beginning of the 14th, which is required if one is to eat the
Phasekh supper at night during the 14th.
The famous Quartodeciman writer Melito of Sardis (c.161169 C.E.), as an-
other example, is specifically said to have observed Phasekh on the 14th.
51
In
282 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
46
Anatolius, 10.
47
Bede, Hist., 3:25.
48
See above Chap. XIII, pp. 215f, n. 36.
49
Bede, Hist., 3:25.
50
During the Phasekh season, the moon of the 14th actually makes its appearance on the 13th
day, about an hour to one and one-half hours prior to sunset. Since Wilfrids reference is to those
who observed the night of the 14th for their Phasekh meal, the rising of the moon on the 14th can
only refer to its rising during twilight while moving toward the middle of the night sky.
51
In the letter from Polycrates to Pope Victor of Rome (written about 196 C.E.), Polycrates
refers to Melito the eunuch, who lived entirely in the sacred ruach (spirit), who lies in Sardis,
waiting for the visitation from heaven when he will rise from the dead. He adds that Melito was
one who kept the fourteenth day of the Phasekh according to the good news (i.e., the Synoptic
Texts), never swerving, but following according to the rule of trust(Eusebius, H.E., 4:24).
Melito, bishop of Sardis, wrote in the time of Emperor Verus (161169 B.C.E.) (Jerome, Lives, 24;
Eusebius, H.E., 4:13:8). Not long after the controversy between Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna, (Sys-
tem A) and Anicetus, bishop of Rome, (System D), about 159 or 160 C.E., the dispute was revived
again at Laodicea, upon which occasion Melito wrote his two books On the Phasekh. These works
are dated, in the time of Servillius Paulus, proconsul of Asia, at the time when Sagaris was mar-
tyred (i.e., c.164167 C.E.). In these works Melito defends the opinion of the Asiatics (Eusebius,
H.E., 4:26). More precisely, Melito of Sardis (frag. 4) writes, Under Servillius Paulus, proconsul of
Asia, at the time when Sagaris bore witness, there was a great dispute at Laodicea about the
Phasekh, which had coincided according to season in those days. The most likely date, as
quoting Exodus, 12:6, which discusses the sacrifice of the 14th, he translates
the Hebrew ybr[h yb (byn ha-arabim) by the Greek apo r oar pov (pros
esperan; at twilight), just as found in the LXX. Melito then connects both the
Phasekh sacrifice performed at twilight (a time which Greek writers identified
as a part of night)
52
and the Phasekh supper with the same night, the 14th:
For behold, he (Yahweh) says, you will take a lamb
without flaw or blemish, and apo r oar pov (pros
esperan; at twilight) you will slaughter it in the midst
of the sons of Israel, and at night you will eat it in
haste, and not a bone of it will you break. These things,
he said, you will do IN A SINGLE NIGHT. You will
eat it according to families and tribes, with loins girt
and staff in hand. For this is the Phasekh of the sov-
ereign, an eternal memorial for the sons of Israel.
53
No Animal Sacrifice
The Quartodecimans also believed that there was no longer a need to sacrifice
a Phasekh lamb, for the messiah our Phasekh was sacrificed for us.
54
Yet
they continued with the Phasekh supper and the eating of unleavened bread,
per the instructions of Saul, Let us keep the festival, not with old leaven, nei-
ther with the leaven of malice and wickedness; but with the unleavened bread
of sincerity and truth.
55
The yearly slaughter of the Phasekh lamb came only by means of the writ-
ten Torah. Therefore, its practice was seen merely as a foreshadowing of the
messiahs death. The Quartodeciman writer Melito of Sardis, for example,
states of the mystery of the Phasekh, It is old according to the Torah, but new
according to the oyov (logon; word).
56
He adds:
When the thing modeled has been realized, then the
model itself is destroyed; it has outlived its use. Its
image has passed over to reality. What was useful
becomes useless when the object of true value
emerges. . . . For the sacrifice of the sheep was
once of value, but now it is valueless through the life
of the sovereign. The death of the sheep was once of
value, but now it is valueless through the salvation
of the sovereign.
57
283 The Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
discussed by Stuart G. Hall (Hall, Melito, pp. xxixxii) is the year 166/ 167 C.E. (May reckoning).
Since this event coincided with the Phasekh season in those days, we would understand that the
debate took place in the spring of 167 C.E. Also see Eusebius, H.E., 4:26:3; cf., EEC, p.141, 26. n. b;
BCal, p. 160.
52
See above Chap. XIII, pp. 215f, n. 36.
53
Melito, Pas., 12f.
54
The reference is to Sauls comment in 1 Cor., 5:7.
55
1 Cor., 5:7f.
56
Melito, Pas., 3. The o yov (logon), i.e., the word of Yahweh, is a reference to the messiah
(John, 1:118).
57
Melito, Pas., 37, 44.
Melito continues by stating that the messiah is the Phasekh lamb that was
foreshadowed by the sacrifice of the lamb under the Torah of Moses: This is
he who is the Phasekh of our salvation.
58
Apollinarius of Hierapolis (a city in
Asia located near Laodicea), a Quartodeciman who flourished in the reign of
Marcus Antoninus Verus (161169 C.E.),
59
emphasized that the 14th is the sov-
ereigns true Phasekh, since on that day the servant of the deity took the
place of the lamb.
60
The lamb was killed at twilight at the beginning of the 14th and eaten that
night, just as Yahushua observed his Last Supper Phasekh. But the lamb
symbolized the death of the true lamb later that same day. Therefore, Melito
speaks of the messiahs death in the middle of the day for all to see, not at
apo r oar pov (pros esperan = byn ha-arabim).
61
Besides the Phasekh lamb as a type of the messiah, and therefore con-
nected with the sacrifice and supper of the lamb on the 14th, Melito connects
other fixtures of the Phasekh supper with the 14th. For instance, he identifies
the events that occurred on the day of the messiahs death (the 14th) with the
bitter herbs and unleavened bread of the Phasekh supper and the Festival of
Unleavened Bread.
That is why the Festival of Unleavened Bread is bitter,
as your scripture says: You shall eat unleavened bread
with bitter herbs. Bitter for you the nails which you
sharpened. Bitter for you the tongue which you whet-
ted. Bitter for you the false witnesses you presented.
Bitter for you the scourges you prepared. Bitter for
you the lashes you inflicted. Bitter for you Judas
whom you hired. Bitter for you Herod (Antipas,
tetrarch of Galilee) whom you obeyed. Bitter for you
Caiaphas whom you believed. Bitter for you the gall
you prepared. Bitter for you the vinegar you culti-
vated. Bitter for you the thorns which you gathered.
Bitter for you the hands which you bloodied. For you
have slain your sovereign in the midst of Jerusalem.
62
284 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
58
Melito, Pas., 69.
59
Jerome, Lives, 26; Eusebius, H.E., 4:26.
60
Chron. Paschale, 1, p. 14.
61
Stuart G. Hall also recognized this apparent contradiction (Hall, Melito, p. 53, n. 56). It is
true that Melito makes the analogy that the messiah, as the lamb of the flock, was dragged to
slaughter and was an r oar po (esperas; twilight) sacrifice; a nighttime burial (Melito, Pas., 71).
Hall thinks the analogy is forced (Hall, Melito, p. 39, n. 38), but this phrase conforms to the para-
ble of the Phasekh lamb used in this same section. For example, we know that the messiah was
not buried at night but buried in the daytime before the arrival of sunset and the new day (Mark,
15:4247; Luke, 23:5054; John, 19:31; cf., Deut., 21:22f). The mentioning of a nighttime burial,
therefore, is merely a reference to the parable allowed for by the command to eat the Phasekh at
night (Exod., 12:8). It is an analogy pointing to the messiahs death, for night and darkness are a
metaphor for death. Also see Matt., 27:4551; Mark, 15:3337; Luke, 23:4447, where darkness
covered the land at the time of the messiahs death. The imposition of darkness in mid-afternoon
on the day that the messiah died was a demonstration of divine twilight meant for the sacrifice
of the divine Phasekh. This divine Phasekh was itself symbolized by the natural twilight after
sunset wherein the natural Phasekh lamb was sacrificed.
62
Melito, Pas., 93.
Accordingly, the things of the Phasekh supper, which they held to have
taken place during the night of the 14th, expressed the events for that day. In
the same manner, the sacrifice of the Phasekh lamb at the beginning of the
14th foretold the death of the messiah later that same day.
According to Messiah and Scriptures
The Quartodecimans claimed scriptural authority for their practice of
Phasekh and, though they considered themselves not to be under the written
Torah, they followed the guides of the Torah with regard to all the festivals.
Chrysostom (347407 C.E.), a strong advocate of the Roman Catholic System
E, for example, demonstrates this point in his work entitled Adversus Judaeos,
where he condemns the Quartodeciman Christians because of their practice of
celebrating such scriptural high Sabbath days as the Day of Trumpets, the Day
of Atonement, and the Festival of Tabernacles.
63
Chrysostom could not con-
demn Pentecost (the Festival of Weeks) because all of the assemblies, including
the Roman Catholic Church, continued to observe that day as a high Sabbath.
64
In reference to Phasekh, the Quartodecimans claimed that they had based
their practice upon the custom followed by the messiah and his disciples as
well as upon the commandments found both in the Old and New Testaments.
To demonstrate, Eusebius records that the 14th (the night of the Phasekh full
moon)
65
was observed as Phasekh by the Asian assemblies.
66
Meanwhile, the
Quartodeciman from Asia named Apollinarius of Hierapolis writes:
The 14th is the true Phasekh of the sovereign, the
great sacrifice: the son (the messiah) of the deity in
the place of the lamb . . . who was buried on the day
of the Phasekh with the stone placed over the tomb.
67
The 14th (Hebrew reckoning), accordingly, was not only the day when the
messiah ate the Phasekh lamb; it was also the day on which his murder took
place. Peter of Alexandria, with a specific reference to the 14th of Abib, notes
that the Quartodecimans affirm that after he (Yahushua) had eaten the
Phasekh, he was betrayed.
68
Within this context, a Quartodeciman told Hip-
polytus (c.200236 C.E.):
The messiah kept the Phasekh ON THAT DAY (the
14th) and he suffered; whence it is needful that I, too,
should keep it (the Phasekh supper) in the same
manner AS THE SOVEREIGN DID.
69
285 The Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
63
Chrysostom, Adver. Jud., 1 (PG, 48, p. 848).
64
For example see Tertullian, de Orat., 23:12, de Bapt., 19:2; Origen, Celsus, 8:22; Eusebius,
Pas., 4; Athanasius, Fest. Let., 1:10, Fest. Let., 14:6; Didymus, 5:88; Syn. Elvira, Can., 43; Ambrose,
Exp. Luc, 10:34; Apost. Constit., 5:20:2; Theophilus Alex., 20:4; Egeria, 43; ACC, 2, pp. 11571161.
Pentecost also went through a transition among Christians. By the beginning of the 4th century
C.E., Pentecost has lost its ancient christological content and it is seen as the feast of the descent
of the Holy Spirit (EEC, p. 208, 123, n. c; cf., Paulinus, Poem, 27; Augustine, Serm. Mai, 158:4).
65
Philo, Exod., 1:9, Spec., 2:27.
66
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24.
67
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 13f.
68
Peter Alex., frag. 5:7.
69
Hippolytus, frag. 1; Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 12f, r yri yo p ou te r aoi por to ao oo o pioto
to tr tp p r po xoi r ao0rv.
As F. E. Brightman observes, this statement implies that the speaker
reckoned the day as from sunset to sunset for the reasons that only so
would the Last Supper and the Passion fall on the same day.
70
Following
Sauls words to the Corinthians, the assemblies ate the sovereigns sup-
per, i.e., the Phasekh supper, in the night in which he was delivered up.
71
The Quartodeciman Epistula Apostolorum (140170 C.E.) shows that this
Phasekh meal and its night of remembrance continued until the cockcrow
(3 A.M.) on the 14th, the time of Kephs denial.
72
This data also proves that
the Quartodecimans understood the scriptural day as beginning with sun-
set and byn ha-arabim.
The Quartodecimans also based their practice upon the writings of the New
Testament. In the second century C.E., for example, the leader of the Quartodeci-
mans of Asia was Polycrates, bishop of the diocese of Ephesus.
73
In a letter from
Polycrates to Victor, bishop of Rome, he gave a long list of famous people from
the Asian assemblies who supported their stand.
74
Polycrates then adds:
ALL THESE KEPT THE 14TH DAY OF THE
PHASEKH ACCORDING TO THE GOOD NEWS
(New Testament), NEVER SWERVING, BUT FOL-
LOWED ACCORDING TO THE RULE OF THE
TRUST. And I also, Polycrates, the least of you all,
live according to the tradition of my kinsmen, and
some of them have I followed. For seven of my
family were bishops and I am the eighth, AND
MY KINSMEN ALWAYS KEPT THE DAY WHEN
THE PEOPLE PUT AWAY THE LEAVEN. Therefore,
brothers, I who have lived sixty-five years in the
sovereign and conversed with brothers from every
country, and have studied all sacred Scripture, am
not afraid of threats, for they have said who were
greater than I, It is better to obey the deity rather
than men.
75
286 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
70
JTS, 25, p. 262.
71
1 Cor., 11:2027, esp. v. 23; cf., Mark, 13:1730; Matt., 26:2035.
72
Epist. Apost., 15. The section intends to foretell the imprisonment of Keph during the days
of unleavened bread in the story of Acts, 12:119. In this passage of the Epistula Apostolorum
the Quartodecimans were advised to celebrate the remembrance of my death, celebrate the
Phasekh, and the Agape (Love Feast). Phasekh was to be spent as a night of watching
and remembrance that ended at the cockcrow, i.e., 3 A.M. Cockcrow was the time of Kephs
third denial of the messiah on the night of the Last Supper (Matt., 26:34, 74f; Mark, 14:30, 6872;
Luke, 22:34, 60f; John, 13:38, 18:27). Unfortunately, the above passage from the Epistula Apostolo-
rum has been construed by some to mean that the Quartodecimans were fasting until 3 A.M. (e.g.,
EWJ, p. 123). This view is a matter of overinterpretation; nothing of the sort is even suggested in
the text. To the contrary, the Agape or Love Feast and the celebration of the Phasekh are refer-
ences to the Eucharist (the ritual of the bread and wine) and Phasekh supper. To superimpose a
fast is totally unwarranted.
73
Eusebius, H.E., 5:22; Jerome, Lives, 45.
74
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:15.
75
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:6f; cf., Jerome, Lives, 45.
287 The Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
Anatolius likewise states that the Quartodecimans kept the Phasekh day
on the 14th of the first moon, according to the good news (New Testament), as
they thought, adding nothing of an extraneous kind, but keeping through all
things the rule of trust.
76
In turn, the Quartodecimans maintained that the New Testament followed
the guide of the written Torah, that Phasekh should be kept on the 14th day
of the first moon, according to the commandment of the Torah, on whatever
day (of the week) it should occur.
77
Melito of Sardis, in reference to the
Phasekh, states, the teachings of the good news (New Testament) have been
proclaimed in the Torah.
78
In the early third century C.E., a Quartodeciman
named Blastus was keeping the festival and supper on the 14th in Rome. In
Pseudo-Tertullians epitome of Hippolytus lost work entitled Syntagma, we
read that Blastus says that the Phasekh is not to be kept otherwise than
according to the Torah of Moses on the 14th of the moon.
79
These statements are vitally important in that they express the Quarto-
deciman understanding that the written Torah, and not just the messiah and
his apostles, taught that the Phasekh supper was to be kept on the 14th.
Another important example comes from the records retained from the de-
bate in 196 C.E. between the Quartodecimans of Asia and the leadership of the
Roman Church,
80
then headed by Victor. Eusebius (who supported the Roman
side of this argument) records the history of this conflict, stating:
At that time no small controversy arose because ALL
THE DIOCESES OF ASIA thought it right, oi
aopoi xioi e r x aopooo ore o poiotr po (ai paroikiai
os ek paradoseos arkhaioteras; since sojourning in that
manner from a more ancient tradition), to observe for
the festival of the saviour s Phasekh the 14th day of
the moon, on which the Jews had been commanded
to kill the lamb.
81
The problem with the Quartodeciman view for those living during the lat-
ter half of the second century C.E. in the West and under Western and Roman
guidance was that the Quartodeciman Phasekh too closely resembled the
dominant practice of the Jews. True, these Jews did not eat their Phasekh sup-
per until the 15th, while the Quartodecimans held their festival and supper on
the 14th. Nevertheless, the Jews did celebrate the 14th as Phasekh, for it was
on that day that they had been commanded to kill the lamb. This common
point of reference, as we shall demonstrate in our second volume of this se-
ries, gave the opponents of the Quartodecimans a weapon that enabled them
to discourage and suppress the use of the Christian form of System A.
76
Anatolius, 10.
77
A Quartodeciman quoted by Hippolytus, Ref. Her., 8:11.
78
Melito, Pas., 39.
79
Ps.-Tertullian, 8. This work is an epitome of Hippolytus lost Syntagma. Chap. 8 deals with
the Quartodeciman named Blastus (JTS, [NS] 24, p. 83, n. 2).
80
Jerome associates this debate with the fourth year of Emperor Severus (196/ 197 C.E., May
reckoning) (Jerome, Euseb., year 2212).
81
Eusebius, H.E., 5:23:1. Cf., translations in Lake, Euseb., i, p. 503; EEC, p. 33.
Conclusion
The Quartodeciman practice was the earliest known for the original Christian
assemblies. For the Quartodecimans, System A established the correct method
of observing the Phasekh supper as instructed by the written Torah. It was in
the nighttime portion of the 14th day of the moon of Abib (Hebrew reckoning)
that the messiah kept the Phasekh. Since this Phasekh occurred on the date of
his death, it was his Last Supper. After that dinner Yahushua was betrayed;
and during the remaining parts of that same 14th day (Hebrew reckoning), he
suffered and died.
In the opinion of the Quartodecimans, the state religion practiced by the
Jews (i.e., the Pharisaic form of the Hasidic religion), which observed the
Phasekh supper on the night of the 15th of Abib, was a false system. There-
fore, when the Scriptures speak of those Jews who on the morning of the mes-
siahs death were still waiting to observe their Phasekh supper and great
Sabbath,
82
the Quartodecimans believed it was based upon a Pharisaic misin-
terpretation of Scriptures. Yet it was also necessary for Scriptures to mention
this Phasekh of the Pharisees, since it was the historical occasion and back-
drop for the messiahs martyrdom.
288 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
82
John, 18:28, 19:31.
Chapt er XVIII
The Seven Days of
t he Quart odecimans and
Quasi-Quart odecimans
T
he seven days of unleavened bread remained an important period for all
the early Christian assemblies. It was by means of these seven days that
they determined when to observe Phasekh. For the Quartodeciman practice
(System A), being the original view of the early Christian assemblies, and its
quasi-Quartodeciman offshoot System D (the early western view), these seven
days began with the 14th and extended until the end of the 20th day of the
first lunar month. We begin to uncover this important detail by demonstrat-
ing three facts:
The Quartodecimans observed the 14th of Abib as a high Sabbath (great
festival day) and as the first of the seven days of unleavened bread.
The quasi-Quartodecimans kept the same seven days of unleavened
bread as observed by the early Quartodecimans.
Both the early Quartodecimans of System A and the quasi-
Quartodecimans of System D deferred to the apostle John as their ul-
timate authority for establishing which days were to be observed for
the seven days of unleavened bread.
The Quartodeciman High Sabbath
The first indication that the Quartodecimans kept the 14th until the end of the
20th as the seven days of unleavened bread comes from the fact that they
observed the 14th as a sacred convocation (high Sabbath).
1
During the seven
days of unleavened bread, Scriptures command the following:
On the first day shall be a sacred convocation, and on
the seventh day shall be a sacred convocation for
you; not any work shall be done on them, only what
must be eaten by each person, that alone shall be
done by you.
2
289
1
Lev., 16:31, 23:24, 2632, 39, all demonstrate that sacred gatherings are also called sabbathon
days (i.e., high Sabbaths).
2
Exod., 12:16; cf., Lev., 23:58; Num., 28:1625.
For the Quartodecimans, the 14th was the first high Sabbath and the first
and great day of unleavened bread. To demonstrate, Apollinarius of Hiera-
polis argued that he observed the 14th:
The 14th is the true Phasekh of the sovereign, the
great sacrifice: the son of the deity in the place of the
lamb . . . who was buried on the day of the Phasekh
with the stone placed over the tomb.
3
Meanwhile, Melito, who likewise kept the 14th as the Phasekh,
4
speaks of
this high Sabbath status when he accuses the Jewish leaders, stating, you
killed your sovereign r v tp ryo p r optp (en te megale heorte; on the great
festival [day]).
5
Similarly, Heracleon, in a discussion about the 14th as the
date of the messiahs death, states:
6
This (14th) is the great festival; for it was the figure of
the saviour s suffering, when the sheep was not only
slain, but by being eaten, brought repose.
7
The reference to the great festival day is to a khag and high Sabbath.
8
These statements have been misunderstood by some historians who unfortu-
nately have failed to recognize any system other than the Hasidic practice of
the 15th as the Phasekh high Sabbath. Joachim Jeremias, O. Perler, and Wolf-
gang Huber, for example, take the passages from Apollinarius of Hierapolis
and Melito of Sardis to indicate that there were Quartodecimans who were
confused about the sequence of events.
9
They reason that these men, though
admittedly well-versed Quartodeciman writers, ignored the clear statements
found in the Synoptic texts that the messiah died on the same day that he ate
his Last Supper. As a result, these scholars believe that some of the
Quartodecimans have mistakenly dated the murder of the messiah to the 15th
of Nisan rather than to the 14th and that the 15th was the Quartodeciman
great festival day (high Sabbath) of unleavened bread.
The context for the above statements from Apollinarius of Hierapolis and
Melito of Sardis proves just the opposite. To begin with, both kept the 14th
and ardently defended the Quartodeciman view held by the Asiatics.
10
The
290 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
3
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 13f.
4
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:5f.
5
Melito, Pas., 79.
6
Heracleon was a disciple of Valentinus in the second half of the second century C.E. The
Valentinians were Gnostics, explaining everything as symbols of some Gnostic doctrine. Yet their
observance of Phasekh was, as with the earliest Christian practice, Quartodeciman-based.
7
Heracleon, frag. 12; Origen, Com. John, 10:116f.
8
Cf., John, 19:31, where John makes reference to the Jewish (Pharisaic) day for the Phasekh
supper as, that Sabbath was a great day (cf., John, 18:28, 19:31, 42); and see John, 7:37, where
the last day of the Festival of Tabernacles, which is also a high Sabbath (Lev., 23:3436; Num.,
29:1235), is called, the great day of the festival. Eusebius, H.E., 7:30:10, refers to the Christian
high Sabbath day of the observance of the Phasekh supper as the great day of Phasekh. Socrates
Schol., 5:2, meanwhile, refers to this day as the Sabbath of Phasekh.
9
For example, see EWJ, p. 19; MSSP, pp. 181183; PUO, pp. 43f.
10
Melito, bishop of Sardis, wrote two books entitled On the Phasekh (Jerome, Lives, 24;
Eusebius, H.E., 4:26:2). Two fragments from the works of Apollinarius of Hierapolis remain in the
Chron. Paschale (1, pp. 13f). Each man addressed apologetic arguments of their own to Emperor
Marcus Aurelius Verus (161180 C.E.) (Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:1f). Both men are lauded as leaders of
Asian assemblies who kept the 14th as the Phasekh supper (Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:5f).
Asiatics believed that the messiah died on the same day that he ate the
Phasekh, i.e., the 14th, and not on the 15th (Hebrew reckoning).
Meanwhile, in a reference to the great controversy that raged in Laodicea
during the spring of 167 C.E.,
11
Apollinarius of Hierapolis, rather than sup-
porting, actually chastises those who held to the notion that the 15th was both
the great festival day (high Sabbath) of unleavened bread and the day on
which the messiah was murdered. He describes them as ignorant people who
had stirred up disputes about these things and were in need of instruction. He
then comments about those advocating this view:
They (the advocates) say, then, that the sovereign ate
the lamb with his disciples on the 14th and suffered
on the great day of unleavened bread (i.e., the 15th),
and they explain Matthews words (Matt., 26:17)
according to their interpretation. Wherefore their
opinion is contrary to the Torah and the good news
(New Testament) seems to disagree.
12
Apollinarius of Hierapolis instead argues that it was on the 14th that the
messiah ate the Phasekh. He also claims that the 14th was the true date of the
Phasekh of the sovereign (Yahweh), the great sacrifice, thereby connecting
the messiahs death with the 12th chapter of Exodus, describing the Phasekh
sacrifice of the lamb and Phasekh supper during the Israelite Exodus out of
Egypt.
13
For Apollinarius, the New Testament seems to disagree with the
advocates of this view because the day that the messiah ate his Phasekh meal
is defined in Matthew and other Synoptic texts as the first day of unleavened
bread,
14
and therefore a high Sabbath, being the first day of the seven days of
unleavened bread. He adds that it was on this same day (the Phasekh of the
14th) that the messiah was buried.
15
As another example, a Quartodeciman told Hippolytus (c.200236 C.E.):
The messiah kept the Phasekh ON THAT DAY (the
14th) and
16
he suffered; whence it is needful that I,
too, should keep it (the Phasekh supper) in the same
manner as the sovereign did.
17
291 The Seven Days of t he Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
11
Melito, frag. 4, writes, Under Servillius Paulus, proconsul of Asia, at the time when
Sagaris bore witness, there was a great dispute at Laodicea about the Phasekh, which had coin-
cided according to season in those days. The most likely date, as discussed by Stuart G. Hall
(Hall, Melito, pp. xxixxii), is the year 166/ 167 C.E. (May reckoning). Since this event coincided
with the season in those days, we would understand that the debate took place in the spring of
167 C.E. Also see Eusebius, H.E., 4:26:3; cf., EEC, p. 141, 26. n. b; JTS (NS), 24, p. 76; JTS, 25, p. 254;
BCal, p. 160.
12
Quoted in Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 13f.
13
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 13f, cf., LXX Exod., 12:11, 26f, 48.
14
Matt., 26:1721; Mark, 14:1218; Luke, 22:716.
15
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 13f.
16
The surviving text has xoi (kai; and). Louis Duchesne proposes that the original had p (hi;
on which), i.e., on which (day) he suffered (RQH, 28, p. 10, n. 4).
17
Hippolytus, frag. 1; Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 12f, r yri yo p ou te r aoi por to ao oo o pioto
to tr tp p r po xoi r ao0rv.
As already noted, this statement implies that the speaker reckoned the
day as from sunset to sunset, and not as from midnight to midnight, since
only so would the Last Supper and the Passion fall on the same day.
18
Interesting confirmation of this construct comes in the ancient Syriac text of
the Sinaitic Palimpsest, which reflects the eastern view. In its version of the
book of Mark, the messiahs death on the 14th of Abib is said to have taken
place on the Sabbath.
19
The only Sabbath possible for the day of the mes-
siahs death, since he was only buried for three days and was raised immedi-
ately after a weekly Sabbath day,
20
is a high Sabbath.
The noted scholar Stuart G. Hall recognized the contradiction created
when one tries to identify the 15th with the great festival day (high Sabbath)
of unleavened bread adhered to by these Quartodecimans. He footnoted the
relevant verse about this high Sabbath in his translation of Melito with the
following comment:
But the influence of John and Evagelium Petri on
Melito would make him likely to follow their dating
on 14 Nisan, and the festivities described in the lines
following appear to refer to the Passover meal itself.
21
Once we realize that the Quartodecimans kept the seven days of unleav-
ened bread from the 14th until the end of the 20th of Abib, as we shall more
fully demonstrate in our next chapter, it becomes obvious that the first of
these seven days, per the instructions from Scriptures, was a high Sabbath.
22
Therefore, the Quartodeciman great festival day of unleavened bread, re-
ferred to as the day of the messiahs death, was the 14th.
Scriptures command that the last day of the seven days of unleavened
bread is also a high Sabbath.
23
There is no direct record discussing the Quarto-
deciman obligation to keep this high Sabbath. Yet the fact that they observed
the other high Sabbaths, kept the first day of the seven days as a high Sabbath,
and their insistence on following the commands to observe the entire seven
days, would strongly indicate that principle.
24
The Early Western View
Early in the second century C.E., a variation of the Quartodeciman view was
created among some of the assemblies in the West (System D). It was fully ac-
cepted in Alexandria and Rome. The Christians supporting this construct, not
surprisingly, retained the Aristocratic view that the seven days of unleavened
bread extended from the beginning of the 14th until the end of the 20th day of
292 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
18
JTS, 25, p. 262.
19
Sin. Pal., at Mark, 15:43.
20
Matt., 28:1; Mark, 16:9; Luke, 24:1. For a complete discussion on the number of days and
which days of the week the messiah lay in the grave see FSDY, 2.
21
Hall, Melito, p. 43, n. 45.
22
See above n. 2.
23
Ibid.
24
Chrysostom, Adver. Jud., 1 (PG, 48, p. 848); and see comments above Chap. XVII, pp. 285ff.
For evidence that the Quartodecimans observed the last day of unleavened bread as a great or
high Sabbath see App. F and G.
the first moon. Yet, for reasons we shall deal with in a later chapter, they dif-
fered from their Quartodeciman brothers in that they observed the first day of
the week within these seven days, the day of the messiahs resurrection, as the
Eucharist, Phasekh supper, and high Sabbath (great festival day).
Important for our research is the fact that not only did the Quartodecimans
disavow the Pharisaic practice of Phasekh and seven days of unleavened
bread but so did the early western advocates of System D.
25
What has
been continuously overlooked is the fact that both of these groups (the
Quartodecimans of System A and the quasi-Quartodecimans of System D)
observed the seven-day festival of unleavened bread from the beginning of
the 14th until the end of the 20th of the first moon. The source for this
seven-day view was the common fountain of the teachings of the apostles and
the New Testament.
System D differed from the conservative Quartodecimans (System A) in
that its advocates observed only the first day of the week, the day of the mes-
siahs resurrection, as the Phasekh festival. On this date and day of the week
there occurred annually the omer wave offering; and it was from this date that
one would begin to count the 50 days to Pentecost, a high Sabbath (great fes-
tival day) honored by the early Christians.
26
It is also upon this date that the
Christians commemorated the resurrection of the messiah.
27
Those following
System D ignored the Aristocratic practice of observing the 14th and 20th days
of Abib as high Sabbaths.
Yet the western method for calculating the day of the Phasekh of the res-
urrection still required the use of the seven days of unleavened bread as prac-
ticed by the original assemblies following Yahushua. The resurrection day
would always be placed in conjunction with the seven days of unleavened
bread. Therefore, whenever the first day of the week fell during that seven-
day period of unleavened bread it became the Phasekh of the resurrection for
these western assemblies.
The Seven Days
That both the Quartodecimans (System A) and the western advocates of the
quasi-Quartodeciman practice (System D) adhered to the same days for the
seven days of unleavened bread is demonstrated in the records dealing with
the visit of Polycarp of Smyrna (the leading Quartodeciman of his day) with
Anicetus (bishop of Rome) either in 158 C.E. or shortly thereafter.
28
Irenaeus
293 The Seven Days of t he Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
25
See below Chap. XIX.
26
Lev., 23:421; Num., 28:1631; Deut., 16:610. For the Christian celebration of Pentecost see
below Chap. XXII.
27
This view is based upon Matt., 28:110; Mark, 16:19; Luke, 24:17; John, 20:119.
28
Eusebius, H.E., 4:14:1, 5, 5:24:16f; Irenaeus, Ag. Her., 3:3:4; Jerome, Lives, 17. Also see Chart
K. Jerome, Euseb., yr. 2173 (Oly. CCXXXIIII) attributes Anicetus a position of leadership for 11
years. He then places the beginning of the next bishop, Soter, to the ninth year of Verus (Jerome,
Euseb., yr. 2185 [Oly. CCXXXVII]). Eusebius supports this with the statement, Now by this time,
ri o yooov r ouvou op r to (eis ogdoon elaunouses etos; at the driving out of the eighth year) of (em-
peror Verus) showing forth his leadership, Soter succeeded Anicetus in the bishopric of Rome,
who had served in all eleven years. (Eusebius, H.E., 4:19). That r ouvou op (elaunouses) means
to drive away, expel . . . to drive to extremities, see GEL, p. 248. The eighth year of Verus was
168/ 169 C.E., March reckoning. Counting the eighth year of Verus as the 11th year of Anicetus,
relates how Polycarp came to Rome and conversed with Anicetus about
some difficulty as to the day of the Phasekh.
29
He does not say difficulties
in the plural, but as to a singular difficulty.
Eusebius mentions that there was only one major issue that divided
Anicetus (representing Rome) and Polycarp (representing the Asian assem-
blies)the issue regarding which day one was to celebrate the Phasekh
Eucharist, which was interpreted by those in the West as not only the thanks-
giving but the mystery of the cup and bread.
30
It was either to be observed
always on the 14th or always on the first day of the week during the seven
days of unleavened bread.
31
He adds, though they disagreed a little about
some other things as well, there was nothing that prevented them from
making peace.
32
There is not even a suggestion in these records that the bishops disagreed
with regard to chronology over which days represent the seven days of un-
leavened bread. Just the opposite is true. Although carefully glossed over by
later writers, it is clear that on this particular issue they both agreed. Proof of
this agreement, for example, is found in Eusebius. He writes:
And in this state of affairs they held fellowship to-
gether and in the assembly Anicetus conceded to
Polycarp the celebration of the Eucharist, by way of
showing him respect; so that they parted in peace one
from the other, maintaining peace with all the assem-
blies, both those who did observe (the 14th only) and
those who did not.
33
The only way that Anicetus could peaceably yield the Eucharist, which for
Eusebius meant the mystery of the cup and bread, to Polycarp, who utterly re-
fused to celebrate it on any other day but the 14th, is if the assembly at Rome
was observing the 14th as one of the seven days of unleavened bread. It is also
294 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
we are brought back to the 20th year of Antoninus Pius (157/ 158 C.E., July reckoning). This de-
tail is supported by the statement that Soter, who ended his life within the eighth year of his
leadership, was succeeded by Eleutherus in the 17th year of Emperor Antoninus Verus
(Eusebius, H.E., 5:1:1; cf., Jerome, Euseb., yr. 2193 [Oly. CCXXXVIII], i.e., in 177/ 178 C.E., March
reckoning). Once again, this places the first year of Soter in the ninth year of Emperor Verus, in
turn placing the first year of Anicetus in the 20th year of Emperor Pius.
Irenaeus relates that Polycarp came to Rome to converse with Anicetus about some difficulty
as to the day of the Phasekh (Eusebius, H.E., 4:14:1). They discussed the matter fully but were
unable to change one another s opinion (Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:16). The most appropriate time for
this visit from the leader of the eastern assemblies to Rome would have been shortly after
Anicetus obtained his post. We also know that they partook of the Eucharist together, which
demonstrates that Polycarp was in Rome during the spring Phasekh season (Eusebius, H.E.,
5:24:17). These details indicate that Polycarp could not have been in Rome any earlier than the
spring of 158 C.E., not long after Anicetus became sole bishop and leader of the Roman assembly.
29
Eusebius, H.E., 4:14:1.
30
That the Eucharist, the cup and bread, and Phasekh supper all became the same thing to
Eusebius and those following System E, see Eusebius, Pas., 711. Also see below Chap. XXIII. The
Quartodecimans, on the other hand, as demonstrated by the Didache, followed the original
meaning of Eucharist, which is the Jewish berakah or giving of a blessing and thanks before a meal
(SNT, 6, p. 276; LD, pp. 377, 399).
31
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24.
32
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24.16.
33
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24; Irenaeus, frag. 3.
important to notice that there was no objection based upon fasting, which be-
came a major issue a few decades later, or any other such hindrance to either
party taking the Eucharist.
The debate between the Audians (fourth century C.E. advocates of System
D)
34
and Emperor Constantine adds further proof that System D was the orig-
inal western view. In reference to the calculation of the seven days of unleav-
ened bread and Phasekh, the Audians argued that Christians were under
instructions from the apostles to celebrate the festival whenever your broth-
ers from the Circumcision do. Keep it together with them.
35
The Christian
Judaeans of the early assemblies (those from the Circumcision), as with all
members of the early assemblies, were Quartodeciman-based. The Audians
interpreted this to mean that they should observe Phasekh Sunday during the
seven days of unleavened bread being observed by their Quartodeciman
Christian brothers converted from among the Jews.
Further, that those in the West during the second century C.E. followed
System D is directly asserted by the Audians. We are told that the Audians
kept their Phasekh during the period when the Jews were keeping their days
of unleavened bread (i.e., the Jewish eight days of unleavened bread, which
starts with the 14th day of the first moon). They give as their reason the fact
that this was the (early) usage of the Assembly.
36
The Audians in turn
charged those following System E (the Roman Catholic System) of a sell-out
and abandoning the system they originally observed, arguing:
From the time of Constantine, because of special con-
sideration for the emperor, you have abandoned the
observance of the fathers concerning the festival of
Phasekh and you have changed the day to one de-
creed by the emperor.
37
Common Apostolic Source
For both the Quartodeciman view (System A) and the quasi-Quartodeciman
(System D), the apostles are the common source for their understanding of the
14th as the first of the seven days of unleavened bread. To demonstrate, the
Quartodeciman named Polycrates reports that the apostles Philip and John
taught the assemblies in Asia how to observe the Phasekh. After providing a
list of other famous men in the East who followed these apostles, he writes,
All these kept the 14th day of the Phasekh according to the good news (New
Testament), never swerving.
38
Likewise, Socrates Scholasticus reports:
Moreover the Quartodecimans affirm that the ob-
servance of the 14th was delivered to them by the
apostle John.
39
295 The Seven Days of t he Quart odecimans and Quasi-Quart odecimans
34
RAC, 1, pp. 910915; EEC, pp. 169f, 64, n. a.
35
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:10:2.
36
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:9:2.
37
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:9:3.
38
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24; Jerome, Lives, 45.
39
Socrates Schol., 5:22.
Meanwhile, Coleman, bishop of the Scots of Ireland, who defended the
System D practice of keeping the 14th through 20th for the seven days of un-
leavened bread, argued at the Synod of Whitby (664 C.E.):
The Phasekh which I am accustomed to observe I
have received of my elders of whom I was sent hither
bishop, and this all our fathers, men beloved of the
deity, are known to have solemnized after the same
manner. And this observation, that none may think it
a light matter or to be rejected, is the selfsame which
THE BLESSED EVANGELIST JOHN, the disciple
whom the sovereign (Yahushua) especially loved,
kept, as we read, with all the assemblies over which
he was head.
40
Conclusion
Three facts are now established. The Quartodecimans observed the 14th of
Abib as their great festival day (high Sabbath) of Phasekh and the first day of
unleavened bread. It is also understood that the quasi-Quartodecimans kept
the same seven days of unleavened bread that were observed by the early
Quartodecimans. Finally, both the early Quartodecimans and the quasi-
Quartodecimans of System D deferred to the apostle John as their ultimate au-
thority for when one was to observe the seven days of unleavened bread. To
fully establish beyond any doubt that the seven days of unleavened bread for
both the Quartodecimans and quasi-Quartodecimans extended from the 14th
to the 20th, our next chapter shall examine the records from several important
quasi-Quartodeciman sources, including their most notable advocate,
Anatolius of Alexandria.
296 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
40
Bede, Hist., 3:25.
CHART K
297
CHART K
EUSEBIUS LIST OF EARLY ROMAN BISHOPS
C.E. Eusebius H.E. First Year Last Year
Linus 67/ 6880/ 81 12 years 3:2, 13 yr. 14 Nero
1
yr. 2 Titus
Anencletus 80/ 8192/ 93 12 years 3:1315 yr. 2 Titus yr. 12 Domitian
Clement 92/ 93101/ 102 9 years 3:15, 34 yr. 12 Domitian yr. 3 Trajan
Euarestos 101/ 102110/ 111 8 years 3:34, 4:1 yr. 3 Trajan yr. 12 Trajan
Alexander 110/ 111119/ 120 10 years 4:1, 4 yr. 12 Trajan yr. 3 Hadrian
Xystus 119/ 120128/ 129 10 years 4:4, 4:5:5 yr. 3 Hadrian yr. 12 Hadrian
Telesphorus 128/ 129138/ 139 11 years 4:5:5, 4:10 yr. 12 Hadrian yr. 1 Pius
Hyginus 138/ 139142/ 143 4 years 4:10, 4:11:6 yr. 1 Pius yr. 5 Pius
2
Pius 142/ 143157/ 158 15 years 4:11:67 yr. 5 Pius
3
yr. 20 Pius
4
Anicetus 157/ 158169/ 170 11 years 4:11:7, 4:19 yr. 20 Pius
5
yr. 9 Verus
6
Soter 169/ 170177/ 178 8 years 4:18:2, 4:19, yr. 9 Verus
7
yr. 17 Verus
4:30:3, 5:intro
Eleutherus 177/ 178189/ 190 13 years
8
5:intro, 5:22 yr. 17 Verus yr. 10 Commodus
177/ 178early 193 15 years
9
yr. 17 Verus reign of Pertinax
10
Victor early 193201/ 202 10 years
11
5:22, 5:28:7 reign of Pertinaz
12
yr. 9 Severus
189/ 190201/ 202 12 years
13
yr. 10 Commodus
14
yr. 9 Severus
15
Zephyrianus 201/ 202218/ 219 18 years 5:28:7, 6:21 yr. 9 Severus yr. 1 Avitus
16
201/ 202219/ 220 yr. 9 Severus
17
yr. 2 Avitus
18
Dates of relevant
Roman Emperors:
Nero 0864 to 0668
Titus 0679 to 0981
Domitian 0981 to 0996
Trajan 0198 to 08117
Hadrian 08117 to 07138
Pius 07138 to 03161
Verus 03161 to 03180
Commodus 03180 to 12192
Pertinax 01193 to 05193
Severus 05193 to 02211
Avitus 06218 to 03222
1
Jerome, Euseb., 267F; Jerome, Lives, 1.
2
Jerome, Euseb., 284F.
3
Ibid.
4
Jerome, Euseb., 285F.
5
Ibid.
6
Eusebius, H.E., 4:19, when Verus was leaving the
8th year; Jerome, Euseb., 287F, places his death in the
9th year (cf. ECC, p. 171).
7
Jerome, Euseb., 287F.
8
Eusebius, H.E., only counts Eleutherus 13 sole
years, to the 10th year of Commodus. Jerome, Euseb.,
289F292F, counts the full 15 years.
9
Jerome, Euseb., 289F.
10
Jerome, Euseb., 292F
11
Eusebius, H.E., 2:28:7, only counts Victor s 10 sole
years. Eusebius, Arm., yr. 2202, counts his full 12 years.
12
Jerome, Euseb., 292F
13
See above n. 11.
14
See above n. 8.
15
Jerome, Euseb., 294F.
16
Eusebius here refers only to the year Zephyrianus
retired from his duties. As Jerome proves, he subsequently
died in the second year of Avitus (Jerome, Euseb., 296F).
17
See above n. 15.
18
Jerome, Euseb., 296F.
298
13th Egyptian Reckoning
(dawn to dawn)
13th Roman Reckoning
(midnight to midnight)
13th Scriptural Reckoning
(sunset to sunset)
14th Egyptian Reckoning
14th Roman Reckoning
14th Scriptural Reckoning
15th Egyptian Reckoning
15th Roman Reckoning
15th Scriptural Reckoning
Legend
24 Hours
CHART L
COMPARISON OF DAY SYSTEMS BY ANATOLIUS
But they who are deceived with this error maintain
this adjectionem (additional one), because they do not
know that the 13th and 14th, the 14th and 15th, the
15th and 16th, the 16th and 17th, the 17th and 18th,
the 18th and 19th, the 19th and 20th, the 20th and 21st
days of the moon are, as may be most surely proved,
each found within a single day. For every day in the
reckoning of the moon does not end ad vesperum (at
twilight) as the same day in respect of number, as it
is at its beginning in the morning. For the day which
in the morning, that is up to the six and one-half
hour, is numbered the 13th of the moon is found ad
vesperum (at twilight) to be the 14th. (Anatolius, 8)
Sunset
Midnight
Dawn
Legend
24 Hours
Chapt er XIX
More Evidence of t he
Quasi-Quart odeciman
Seven Days
P
roof that the seven days of unleavened bread for the Quartodecimans
extended from the 14th until the end of the 20th day of the first lunar
month is established from records provided by their offshoots, the quasi-
Quartodecimans of System D. The most important source for their view is
found in the records of Anatolius of Alexandria. To his words we can add the
statements provided by the Audians and several bishops representing assem-
blies located in different parts of Europe.
Anatolius of Alexandria
Like the Quartodecimans, those who kept System D observed the 14th until
the end of the 20th for the seven days of unleavened bread. The most famous
advocate of this system was Anatolius of Alexandria (c.230283 C.E.).
1
Anatolius was originally from Alexandria but later became bishop of
Laodicea in Asia Minor (c.270 C.E.).
2
He flourished under the emperors Probus
and Carus (276283 C.E.).
3
His well-known work on the Phasekh not only de-
fends the System D method but notes that this view was premised upon the
practice of the ancient Jewish priests, like Aristobulus of Paneas of the third
century B.C.E. (System A).
4
He further argues that this was also the method
held by the Quartodeciman bishops of Asia, who in turn had received the rule
from an unimpeachable authority, to wit, the evangelist John, who learned it
on the sovereigns breast, and drank in instructions spiritual without doubt.
5
In presenting this view, as A. Yarbro Collins notes, Anatolius defended
the position of the Quartodecimans.
6
At the same time, Anatolius always
kept the first day of the week during the seven days of unleavened bread as
Phasekh.
7
Anatolius even admitted that System D was a more recent innova-
tion. He reminds his readers that originally those Christians who advocated
the proper system always kept the Phasekh supper on the 14th.
8
299
1
He is also commonly called Anatolius of Laodicea.
2
Eusebius, H.E., 7:32:612; Jerome, Lives, 73.
3
Jerome, Lives, 73.
4
Anatolius, 3. Socrates Schol., 5:22, (writing about 439 C.E.) points out that even in his day
the practices of the modern Jews, that is, the Jews of his day, were at odds with those of the an-
cient Jews, including the first century C.E. Pharisees like Josephus.
5
Anatolius, 10.
6
OTP, 2, p. 837, n. a.
7
Anatolius, 1, 7, 11, 12, 15.
8
Anatolius, 10.
The 14th20th, Not 15th21st
In his discussion, Anatolius writes that the day of Phasekh is fixed from
the 14th day of the moon.
9
Then, after quoting both Exodus, 12:18f and
12:15,
10
as proof, he challenges some of the more recent innovations. He specif-
ically mentions certain views derived from the assemblies of Gaul (from
which region Irenaeus, an important participant in the creation of System E,
had earlier been bishop).
11
He also criticizes the methods used by Roman
Christians, like Hippolytus, all advocates of different forms of System E, who
began the seven days of unleavened bread with the 15th of Abib.
12
Some in
part permitted the Phasekh celebration prior to the spring equinox and others
erred in the matter of the 21st day of the moon, in that they allowed that the
Phasekh of the resurrection could be celebrated on that date.
13
Anatolius, though he believed that System D was the proper observance
for Christians of his day, clearly did not argue against the accuracy of the
seven-day count for unleavened bread as promoted by the Quartodecimans of
Asia, whom he points out had kept the day of Phasekh on the 14th day of the
first moon, according to the good news (New Testament).
14
By referencing
the New Testament, Anatolius can only mean that the early Quartodecimans
observed the festival in accordance with the way Yahushua and his disciples
observed Phasekh on the night of his betrayal and deliverance into the hands
of the Jewish leaders.
15
On the other hand, those in the West who kept the fes-
tival from the 15th to the 21st day of the first moon, he chastised, not only with
regard to their allowing that Phasekh could be celebrated as late as the 21st
day of the first moon but in the manner in which they calculated the seven
days of unleavened bread.
As we shall show later on, those holding to the innovation of System E,
beginning in the latter part of the second century C.E., held that the seven-day
Festival of Unleavened Bread should be counted by the Jewish Hasidic
method.
16
The Phasekh of the resurrection, accordingly, was always placed by
them on the first day of the week which fell on one of the seven days of un-
leavened bread, a period calculated from the beginning of the 15th until the
end of the 21st day of the first moon. Anatolius responds:
Seven days you shall eat unleavened bread. Unless
perchance the 14th day is not reckoned by them
among the days of unleavened bread with the cele-
bration of the festival; which, however, is contrary to
the word of the good news (New Testament) which
says: And on the first day of unleavened bread the
disciples came to Yahushua (Mark, 14:12). And there
is no doubt as to its being the 14th day on which the
300 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
9
Anatolius, 6.
10
Anatolius, 8; cf., Lev., 23:6.
11
See our discussion below, Chap. XX, pp. 317ff.
12
Anatolius, 1, 8.
13
Anatolius, 8, 9.
14
Anatolius, 10.
15
Matt., 26:1727:61; Mark, 14:1215:47; 22:723:54; 1 Cor., 5:68, 11:1727.
16
See below Chaps. XXXXI.
disciples asked the sovereign, in accordance with the
custom established for them of old, Where do you
desire that we prepare for you to eat the Phasekh
(Mark, 14:12).
17
In his calculation, Anatolius refers to the 14th as both the first day of un-
leavened bread and as the day on which the messiah ate the Phasekh. His point
of reference, therefore, is a scripturally-based method. He goes on to oppose the
view that the seven days of unleavened bread were to be counted from the 15th
to the 21st. Instead, he reports, if the 14th day of the first moon fell after the
equinox, and proves to be both dominica (the Sovereigns dayi.e., first day of
the week) and the moons 14th, Phasekh is to be celebrated on the 14th.
18
At the same time, the last possible day for the celebration of the
Sovereigns day during Phasekh week cannot pass beyond the close of their
festival, that is to say, the moons 20th.
19
In another place he states that we
should keep the solemn festival of Phasekh on the Sovereigns day, and after
the equinox, and yet not beyond the limit of the moons 20th day.
20
In sup-
port of the System Aunderstanding of the Torah that the 14th and 20th of Abib
were high Sabbaths, he adds, For the sovereign ascribes no less praise to the
20th day than to the 14th.
21
A Further Misunderstanding
Anatolius not only accuses the advocates of the Roman System E with ig-
norance of the truth and with not understanding the meaning behind those
scriptural passages which state that the seven days of unleavened bread con-
tinue from ad vesperum (at twilight) of the 14th day of the first moon usque
(until) (the beginning of) the 21st day of the first moon ad vesperum (at twi-
light),
22
but he criticizes the calculators from Gaul and other regions with a
further misunderstanding. Anatolius points to their confusion about how one
determines the beginning of a scriptural day for observing the festival:
But they who are deceived with this error maintain
this adjectionem (additional one), because they do not
know that the 13th and 14th, the 14th and 15th, the
15th and 16th, the 16th and 17th, the 17th and 18th,
the 18th and 19th, the 19th and 20th, the 20th and 21st
days of the moon are, as may be most surely proved,
each found within a single day. For every day in the
reckoning of the moon does not end ad vesperum (at
twilight)
23
as the same day in respect of number, as it
is at its beginning in the morning. For the day which
301 More Evidence of t he Quasi-Quart odeciman Seven Days
17
Anatolius, 8.
18
Anatolius, 16.
19
Ibid.
20
Anatolius, 11.
21
Ibid.
22
Anatolius, 7, 9, 11, 16; cf., his use of ad vesperum in translating Exod., 12:15, 18f (Anatolius, 8).
That Anatolius counts the seven days of unleavened bread by this method is confirmed when he
writes that these seven days continue from the end of the 13th day of the moon, which marks the
beginning of the 14th, on to the end of the 20th, at which the 21st day also begins (Anatolius, 8).
23
Macrobius, Saturn., 3:14f, vespera follows sunset. See above Chap. XIII, pp. 215f, n. 36.
in the morning, that is up to the six and one-half
hour, is numbered the 13th of the moon is found ad
vesperum (at twilight) to be the 14th.
24
What Anatolius meant when he argued that two days, such as the 13th and
14th, contain a single day is brought into focus by Wilfrid at the Synod of
Whitby.
25
Wilfrid points out that the context of Anatolius was his attempt to
explain the problem after the manner of the Egyptians.
26
Both the Egyptians
and the Romans (i.e., those at Alexandria and at Rome) officially determined
their day from midnight to midnight.
27
Meanwhile, the Egyptians and many
other common people in the Roman world, including those of Gaul, also ob-
served dawn as the beginning of their day.
28
Anatolius challenged both sys-
tems for beginning a day and makes it a point to explain that one does not
calculate scriptural days by the beginnings of the (Egyptian) day, but by
those (days) of the moon (i.e., the scriptural reckoning).
29
To understand Anatolius, we must realize that the Christians of Gaul,
Rome, and Egypt who practiced System E were at that time calculating the
days of the moon by the Roman system, which spoke of luna tertia, quarta,
quinta, etc. (the third, fourth, fifth, and so forth, day AFTER the new moon).
30
This system was used by the pagans and was based upon the fact that the
Roman civil day began at midnight. Since the new moon both rose and set
after sunset and prior to midnight, they calculated the days of the moon as the
first, second, and so forth, day AFTER the day (midnight reckoning) of the ap-
pearance of the new moon. Therefore, since the new moon appeared after sun-
set and the civil day did not end until midnight nor the common day until
dawn, for the purposes of counting to Phasekh, the first day of the new moon
was actually the day after the Roman day on which the new moon had
made its appearance.
As a result, the days of the moon, as reckoned by the Egyptians, Romans, and
people of Gaul, were not the same as the days of the moon as reckoned by
Scriptures. The Quartodecimans of Asia Minor, by the way, were not troubled
with this problem, since the Greeks and their Asian colonies, like the Hebrews
and others of the Near East, began their day at sunset.
31
For this reason, Anatolius
had to explain to the Egyptian Christians and others that the 14th day of the
moon should be calculated not by the beginnings of the day (i.e., by a midnight
or sunrise reckoning), but by those of the moon (i.e., sunset-to-sunset reckon-
ing).
32
The first day of the moon in Scriptures begins with the rising of the
302 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
24
Anatolius, 8.
25
Wilfrid tries to confuse the issue by interpreting the words of Anatolius in such a way as
to include the 21st, stating, Anatolius also assigned the 20th day to the sovereigns Phasekh in
such a way that he held it for the 21st when the sun had set. Of course, this was not the intent
of Anatolius. Anatolius was trying to show that those keeping the Egyptian method for deter-
mining a day erred in that they should not be observing Phasekh beyond sunset of the Egyptian
20th day, because in that case it had become the 21st scriptural day.
26
Bede, Hist., 3:25.
27
Pliny, 2:79.
28
Pliny, 2:79; PCAE, p. 10; HBC, p. 8.
29
Anatolius, 15.
30
Columella, 2:10; HLD, p. 1085.
31
Pliny, 2:79; CGS, p. 589.
32
Anatolius, 15.
new moon just after sunset. It does not begin a few hours later at midnight or
with the next morning following the appearance of the new moon.
Therefore, to correctly calculate Phasekh, one must determine the days by
the scriptural reckoning of the moon (i.e., counting the days from sunset to
sunset) against the reckoning of the days of the Egyptians and Romans or
many of the common people (i.e., counting the days from midnight to mid-
night or from sunrise to sunrise). Those following the midnight reckoning of
the Romans or the sunrise reckoning of the common people did not take this
factor into consideration. Unaware of the correct scriptural sunset-to-sunset
reckoning, they do not know that the 13th and 14th i.e., the last hours of
the 13th Egyptian day (between sunset and midnight or sunset and dawn)
and the following period between that same midnight or dawn and the next
sunset of their 14th daycombine to form a single (scriptural) day,
33
that
day being the 14th of Abib (sunset-to-sunset reckoning).
34
The same is true for
each of the following days, the 14th and 15th, the 15th and 16th, the 16th and
17th, the 17th and 18th, the 18th and 19th, the 19th and 20th, the 20th and 21st
days of the moon.
35
Counting from Sunset to Sunset
Anatolius calculates the seven days of unleavened bread by the scriptural
sunset-to-sunset reckoning. He writes:
For the (Egyptian) day which in the morning, that is
up to the six and one-half hour, is numbered the 13th
of the moon is found ad vesperum (at twilight) to be
the 14th (scriptural day).
36
Put another way, when the morning of the Egyptian and Roman day
(which follows midnight by six and one-half hours) is the 13th day of the moon,
the following ad vesperum (at twilight), i.e., at sunset,
37
becomes the 14th day
under the scriptural system. Anatolius continues:
Wherefore, also, (according to the scriptural method)
the Phasekh is enjoined to be extended up until the
21st day ad vesperum (at twilight); which day, without
doubt, in the morning, this is, up to that term of
hours which we have mentioned (i.e., the six and
one-half hour), was reckoned the 20th (in the
Egyptian system).
38
This evidence proves that Anatolius, as articulated in System A, believed
that the correct scriptural system makes the day of the moon begin ad vespe-
rum (at twilight), which as we have already demonstrated in our earlier chap-
ters commences at sunset. Accordingly, the seventh and final day of
unleavened bread comes on the day when the morning is counted as the 20th
303 More Evidence of t he Quasi-Quart odeciman Seven Days
33
Anatolius, 8.
34
See Chart L.
35
Ibid.
36
Ibid.
37
See above Chap. XIII, pp. 215f, n. 36.
38
Anatolius, 8.
of the moon under the Egyptian system, ending at sunset, when the 21st
(scriptural) day arrives.
In turn, Anatolius reasoned that the seven days of unleavened bread ex-
tended from the beginning of the 14th scriptural day, i.e., at sunset, ad vespe-
rum (at twilight), on the 13th Egyptian day, UNTIL (as far as the beginning of)
the 21st scriptural day. The 21st scriptural day begins at sunset, ad vesperum (at
twilight), on the 20th Egyptian day. Therefore, with the arrival of sunset on the
20th Egyptian day, the 20th scriptural day ends and the 21st scriptural day be-
gins. He explains the System D count for the seven days of unleavened bread
by writing:
Calculate, then, from the end of the 13th
39
(scriptural)
day of the moon, which marks the beginning of the
14th (scriptural day), on to the end of the 20th (scrip-
tural day), at which the 21st (scriptural day) also be-
gins, and you will have only seven days of
unleavened bread, in which, by the guidance of the
sovereign, it has been determined before that the
most true festival of Phasekh ought to be celebrated.
40
Final Points
What makes the record from Anatolius so important is that he admits that
the Quartodeciman practice was the original system of the early Jewish
priests, such as Aristobulus of Paneas (System A), and of the early disciples of
the messiah. His argument is also premised on the fact that System D was the
practice of the western Christian assemblies after abandoning System A,
while System E was an even more recent innovation.
Three premises provided by Anatolius were subsequently adopted by the
Alexandrian assembly and then, at the Council of Nicaea in 325 C.E., by the
Roman Church: how the Church would calculate the beginning of the days of
the moon (i.e., from sunset to sunset), that the 14th of Abib should always fol-
low the vernal equinox, and the use of the 19-year cycle (though slightly mod-
ified) designed by Anatolius for determining the dates of Phasekh.
41
Nevertheless, the Alexandrian and Roman Catholics held fast to their belief
that the seven days of unleavened bread, by which the festival of Phasekh
should be determined, was to be celebrated on the first day of the week falling
within the period from the 15th to the 21st day of the first moon. They utterly
rejected the seven days of System D. System D was branded a heresy and
condemned as a Quartodeciman practice.
304 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
39
The early Latin text reads xii but clearly, as all translators agree, is a scribes error for xiii.
40
Anatolius, 8.
41
HCC, pp. 298332; NCE, 5, p. 8. For the acceptance of Anatolius by the Roman Catholics
also see the comments in Bede, 3:25. As a result of the acceptance of several important parts of
Anatolius conclusions, the Roman theologian, Jerome, applauds him, writing, We can get an
idea of the greatness of his genius from the volume which he wrote On Phasekh and his ten books
On the Institutes of Arithmetic (Jerome, Lives, 73). Eusebius, in his Historia Ecclesiastica, also praises
Anatolius and even records a long quote from a portion of his book on the Phasekh.
The Audians
The Audians represented an early fourth century C.E. adherence to a form of
the System D format which, along with the Quartodeciman view, was
actively being suppressed by the Roman emperor Constantine at the Council
of Nicaea in 325 C.E. The advocates of System E condemned the Audians
because they kept the Phasekh during the period when the Jews are keeping
their (days of) unleavened bread, and give as their reason the fact that this
was the usage of the assembly.
42
In other words, the Audians allowed for
the 14th as a day of unleavened bread and as the Phasekh, for they did not
observe the same seven days as the Pharisees.
In their defense, the Audians made reference to the second century C.E.
Quartodeciman version of the Diataxis,
43
where it is claimed that the apostles
decreed that one was to celebrate the festival (of Phasekh) whenever your
brethren from the circumcision do. Keep it together with them.
44
Their
brethren, of course, were Christian Judaeans (not those of the Jewish faith), a
clear reference to the early Quartodecimans and their keeping of the 14th.
Because of the Quartodeciman-like views followed by the advocates of
System D, the Audians were at first believed by modern-day historians to be
Quartodecimans.
45
Raniero Cantalamessa rectifies this problem when he writes:
Contrary to B. Lohse, Passafest, 1618, the followers of
Audius were not Quartodecimans, for they always
celebrated the Pascha on Sunday. But this had to be
the first Sunday after the Pesach of their Jewish con-
temporarieswhose manner of computing the date
was rejected at Nicaea. . . . This rejection was the basis
of their grievance against Constantine.
46
The advocates of System E accused the Audians of Judaizing and ridiculed
their view as antithetical to unity. The effort of the Roman Catholic assembly
was to eliminate the differing opinions of the various assemblies and the
Audians were standing in the way. For example, Epiphanius, writing about
375378 C.E., chastised the Audians by noting that their view was at one time
appropriate when there were Christian Judaeans acting as bishops in
Jerusalem (i.e., until 133 C.E.), for it was necessary at that time that the whole
world follow them and celebrate with them, so that there should be a single
confession, with all singing in unison, as it were, and celebrating one festi-
val.
47
Yet after these Christian bishops of Judaean ancestry disappeared in the
days of Emperor Hadrian, and the Jewish population was replaced by non-
Jewish Roman citizens (beginning in 135 C.E.), there developed too much dis-
unity.
48
Epiphanius continues:
305 More Evidence of t he Quasi-Quart odeciman Seven Days
42
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:9:2.
43
CJO, pp. 108f.
44
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:10:2.
45
DPDQ, pp. 1618; ACC, 2, p. 1150.
46
EEC, pp. 169f.
47
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:10:4.
48
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:10:5; cf., Eusebius, H.E., 5:12:1f.
Wherefore came their concern to bring the mind of
men together into the unity of the Assembly. It hav-
ing been impossible for such a long time to celebrate
(with them), with the deitys approbation, under
Constantine (a correction) was made for the sake of
concord. It was for the sake of concord that the apos-
tles made that decree, as they attest when they say,
Even if they err, do not be concerned. The answer
(to the Audians) becomes clear from the very things
said there. For they (the apostles) tell (us) to hold the
vigil during the (days of) unleavened bread, but,
given the Assemblys way of computing (the dates),
this cannot always be done.
49
It is interesting that even Epiphanius considers the observation of the 14th
the original Christian position, thereby making the Roman Catholic System E
(which regards the 15th as the legal day of the Phasekh supper) a later
Christian innovation. In response, the Audians laid two charges against the
Roman assembly and Emperor Constantine:
From the time of Constantine, because of special con-
sideration for the emperor, you have abandoned the
observance of the fathers concerning the festival of
the Phasekh, and you have changed the day to one
decreed by the emperor.
50
What the Audians were claiming was that, prior to Constantines decrees
given at the Council of Nicaea (325 C.E.), the 14th was permitted as the first
day of unleavened bread and was used by different assemblies in their calcu-
lation of the day of Phasekh. This mutual respect had remained in the assem-
blies since the time of the great debate between Anicetus of Rome and
Polycarp of Asia (c.158 C.E.). These leaders had agreed to disagree as to which
day the Phasekh Eucharist was to be celebrated and the Roman assembly
agreed to live in peace with those who kept the 14th.
The Roman Church was now whitewashing its original position, which
held its right to differ because of the tolerance of the fathers. This view al-
lowed Rome to deviate from the conservative Quartodecimans.
51
With the
support of Constantine, the Roman assembly had changed to a stand of intol-
erance in the name of unity. What Constantine and his allies at Rome accom-
plished was to dismiss the 14th as part of the seven days of unleavened bread
and the Phasekh festival and to introduce the 15th as its only beginning date
for Christians.
52
306 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
49
Epiphanius, Pan,, 70:10:5.
50
Epiphanius, Pan., 70:9:3.
51
E.g., see Socrates Schol., 5:22; Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:16f.
52
See below Chaps. XXXXI.
Other Records
Further proof of the System D arrangement, which reflected the Quarto-
deciman view for the seven days of unleavened bread, was also retained in
records from assemblies who continued until the eighth century C.E. but were
stationed in outlying areas of the Roman empire. For instance, in 598 C.E.
Columbanus, representing the monastery founded by him at Luxovium in
Burgundy, wrote to Pope Gregory the Great about the seven days sanctioned
by the sovereigns command in the Torah, during which only it is enjoined
that the sovereigns Phasekh could lawfully be eaten. He adds that these
seven days are to be numbered from the 14th day of the moon to the 20th
and that they should not be exceeded.
53
The famous Saxon historian Bede (673735 C.E.)himself a Roman
Catholic who opposed System D and followed System Ealso makes refer-
ence to the Quartodeciman-based view of System D used in Britain.
Referencing the events around the year 601 C.E., Bede writes, For they (the
Britons) kept not the Phasekh on the Sovereigns day in its due time, but from
the 14th to the 20th of the moon.
54
And of the Scots he writes, they cele-
brated not the solemnity of Phasekh in due time, butas we have showed be-
forethought that they must observe the day of our sovereigns resurrection
from the 14th of the moon to the 20th.
55
Speaking of the Scots (northern
Ireland) in the period of 623-634 C.E., Bede reports of the Scottish bishop
named Aidan:
For he (Aidan) was wont to keep the Sovereigns day
Phasekh from the 14th day after the change of the
moon to the 20th according to the custom of his na-
tion, whereof we have diverse times made mention.
For the north province of the Scots (northern Ireland)
and all the nation of the Picts (Scotland) did at that
time still solemnize the sovereigns Phasekh celebra-
tion, thinking that in this observation they had fol-
lowed the advertisement written by the holy and
praiseworthy father Anatolius.
56
Pope John of Rome (consecrated December 25, 640 C.E.) sent a letter to the
Scots of Ireland, which in part states:
We find therein that certain of your province, con-
trary to the sound orthodoxy, endeavor to renew in-
terest in renewing out of AN OLD HERESY,
57
rejecting through the mist of darkness our Phasekh
307 More Evidence of t he Quasi-Quart odeciman Seven Days
53
Gregory, Epist., 127.
54
Bede, Hist., 2:2. If the 14th of the moon after the spring equinox fell on Sunday the Britons
would keep Phasekh on that day, the Roman Catholics would defer it to the following Sunday.
55
Bede, Hist., 2:4.
56
Bede, Hist., 3:3.
57
The Latin reads, novam ex veteri haeresim renovare conantes.
in which Christ was sacrificed, and striving to cele-
brate the same with the Hebrews on the 14th moon.
58
In 664 C.E. Coleman, bishop of the Scots of Ireland,making reference
back to both the apostle John and Anatolius of Alexandria (who relied on the
apostle John)claims that Phasekh ought to be celebrated from the 14th
unto the 20th day of the moon.
59
Interestingly, Wilfrid (an advocate of System
E) tried to discredit Colemans position by admitting that John did in fact keep
the 14th, but did not observe the first day of the week as the Phasekh (as
required under System D):
For John (the apostle) observed the time of Phasekh
according to the decrees of the Mosaic law and had
no regard to the first day after the (weekly) Sabbath;
and this you do not follow, who keep Phasekh only
on the first day after the (weekly) Sabbath.
60
Wilfrids attempt was to separate those following System D from the apos-
tle John and the early Quartodecimans (System A). Yet by doing so, he actu-
ally reaffirmed that the only difference between these two camps, with regard
to counting the seven days of unleavened bread, was to point out that the
early Christians always kept the 14th as the Phasekh. Since John observed the
week of Phasekh according to the Mosaic law, it is also clear that he kept both
the first and last day of the week of unleavened bread as a high Sabbath. This
fact is yet another indication that the Quartodecimans did likewise and that
they based their view upon the Aristocratic interpretation for the week of
unleavened bread.
Similarly, abbot Ceolfrid (an advocate of System E), in about 710 C.E.,
wrote to King Naitan of the Picts of Scotland about the people in that district
holding on to the System D view, stating, For they which think that the
Sovereigns Phasekh day must be kept from the 14th of the first moon to the
20th anticipate the time commanded in the Torah.
61
Holding to the Hasidic
view that the 21st was a high Sabbath, Ceolfrid later adds:
And whereas they refuse to keep the sovereigns
Phasekh on the 21st day of the moon, it is surely plain
that they exclude utterly from their solemnity that the
day which the Torah oftentimes commendeth to be
had in memory above all other with a greater festival.
62
Those of System D refused the 21st because they believed that the seventh
day spoken of in the Torah was the 20th. Though they themselves did not ob-
serve the first and last day of unleavened bread as a high Sabbath, unless the
Phasekh of the resurrection happened to fall on one of these days, this detail
does indicate that the Quartodecimans, upon whom the System D construct
was built, did observe these days.
308 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
58
Bede, Hist., 2:19.
59
Bede, Hist., 3:25.
60
Ibid.
61
Bede, Hist., 5:21.
62
Ibid.
The evidence reveals that as late as the eighth century C.E. there were still
many who followed the System D practice by arguing authority from the
apostle John, exactly as the Quartodecimans did. Those of System D also
based their belief on the research done by Anatolius of Alexandria, i.e., that
the Phasekh of the resurrection should be observed only on the first day of the
week during the Festival of Unleavened Bread, which falls from the 14th to
the 20th (as in System A). Those following System E charged these people
with renewing the old System D heresy (at least a heresy in the eyes of the
advocates of System E).
Conclusion
The evidence proves that the original view of the seven days of unleavened
bread used by the early Christian assemblies was the Quartodeciman (Aristo-
cratic) System A practice. In this system the seven days of unleavened bread
continued from the beginning of the 14th until the end of the 20th day of the
first moon. The first day, the 14th, was the Phasekh supper and a high Sabbath.
System D, developed by the orthodox Christians of the West during the early
second century C.E., was built upon the same premise as System A, i.e., that
the seven days of unleavened bread extended from the beginning of the 14th
until the end of the 20th day of the first moon. It differed in that its advocates
preferred to celebrate the joyful event of the messiahs resurrection and not the
sad occasion of his death. Therefore, those following System D moved the cel-
ebration of the Phasekh supper up to the first day of the week that fell within
the seven days of unleavened bread. Yet the key to System D is that it was born
from the Quartodeciman construct for the seven days of unleavened bread.
As we shall demonstrate in our subsequent chapters, both the
Quartodeciman System A and quasi-Quartodeciman System D practices were
eventually suppressed by the Hasidic-based System E, developed and advo-
cated by the Roman assembly toward the end of the second century C.E.
309 More Evidence of t he Quasi-Quart odeciman Seven Days
Chapt er XX
The Roman Syst em
(Syst em E)
D
espite the fact that the quasi-Quartodeciman System D, the early form of
the western view, had made some important inroads during the first
half of the second century C.E., its advocates still met with strong resistance.
The Quartodecimans argued that Christians should observe only the 14th as
the Phasekh supper and Eucharist mystery (cup and bread) because the mes-
siah and his disciples kept that same day. This belief was deeply entrenched.
It was made more difficult to overcome by the fact that System D was based
upon the same apostolic authority (the apostle John) as was the Quartodeci-
man construct.
1
It soon became obvious that if the Roman assembly was to
gain political dominance in the West, as well as over many of the eastern as-
semblies, a new strategy was required. In response, during the last decade of
the second century C.E., the western leaders and theologians developed a
new approach, the Roman assembly Phasekh and, after the Council of Nicaea
in 325 C.E., canonized as the Roman Catholic Phasekh (System E).
Countering the Quartodecimans
In an effort to counter the Quartodeciman threat, which many in the West con-
sidered a form of Judaizing, those under Roman leadership modified System
D, which observed the 14th through 20th days of the first moon for the seven
days of unleavened bread. Under their new system (System E), as with
System D, they retained the Sovereigns daythe first day of the week during
the seven days of unleavened breadas the time to celebrate the mystery of
the Eucharist.
Yet major changes came in three areas. First, they advanced the Roman as-
sembly view that the period which began with the Friday preceding the
Sovereigns day until Saturday night was the time to fast.
2
Second, the advo-
cates of System E made a decision to adopt the Hasidic construct for the seven
days of unleavened bread (i.e., counting from the 15th until the end of the 21st
day of Abib). However, they discarded the Hasidic interpretation to always ob-
serve the 15th and 21st of Abib as high Sabbaths. Third, they adopted the
Hasidic interpretation that the 15th of Abib was the correct day for the legal
311
1
See above Chap. XVIII, pp. 295f.
2
The observance of this fast was at the heart of the differences between Polycrates, bishop
of Ephesus and leader of the Asian assemblies, and Victor, bishop of Rome, in 196 C.E. (Irenaeus,
frag. 3; Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:1116).
Phasekh supper found in the written Torah. The ramifications of these changes
were far-reaching.
In our present chapter, we shall open our examination of those Christian
systems that adopted the Hasidic view of the seven days of unleavened bread
with a discussion of (1) the time frame and (2) the originators of the System E
construct. Then in our next chapter, we shall document the mechanics of
System E and examine other Hasidic-based Christian systems that followed.
Time of the Change
The time of change, when the western assemblies moved from System D to
System E, occurred in the second half of the first century C.E. As we have
already noted, the earliest advocates of the western view (System D) calcu-
lated the seven days of unleavened bread from the 14th day until the end of
the 20th day of the first moon, a view that was itself Quartodeciman-based.
Yet, unlike the Quartodecimans, they observed a Sunday-only celebration of
the Phasekh Eucharist. As Raniero Cantalamessa observed:
Naturally the choice of the anniversary of the passion
rather than the anniversary of the resurrection as the
date of the feast meant emphasizing one of the events
more than the other.
3
The heart of the attempt to persuade other western and the eastern
assemblies to leave the Quartodeciman system rested entirely upon very
strong anti-Jewish rhetoric and the claim that the day of the resurrection
was a much happier occasion to celebrate the mystery of the Eucharist. To
solidify this view, the Roman bishops converted the Friday and Saturday
preceding Phasekh Sunday into fast days. Yet these arguments were simply
not strong enough to bring the Quartodecimans into the western camp. In the
latter half of the second century C.E., the East still remained strongly
Quartodeciman. In the eyes of the leaders of the Roman assembly, it became a
time for change.
The leadership of the Roman assembly realized that they could only gain
political dominance over all of these other assemblies if the greater Assembly
4
was unified in its doctrines. Therefore, it was necessary for them to find a
stronger basis for dismissing the 14th as the day of the Phasekh. The result of
this activity was the development of a newer construct for keeping the sover-
eigns Phasekh of the resurrectionSystem E, which argued that the Phasekh
could only be kept from the 15th to the 21st days of the first month. To further
dismiss the Quartodeciman practice for celebrating Phasekh on the 14th, the
accusation was made that those observing the 14th were committing an act of
Judaizing.
The leader of this new movement is uncovered in the following way.
Columbanus of Luxovium, who advocated System D, bitterly testified in a
letter to Pope Gregory, dated to the year 598 C.E., that the culprit behind this
312 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
3
EEC, p. 9.
4
See above Intro.: Sect. II, p. 265, n. 2.
innovation to dismiss the 14th as a day to observe Phasekh and charge it as
being an act of Judaizing was Pope Victor of Rome (192202 C.E.).
Columbanus of Luxovium writes (and we quote him at some length to gain
the flavor of the dispute):
. . . after so many authors whom I have read, I am not
satisfied with that one sentence of those bishops who
say only, We ought not to keep Phasekh with the
Jews (i.e., on the 14th). FOR THIS IS WHAT BISHOP
VICTOR FORMERLYSAID; but none of the Easterns
accepted his figment. But this, the benumbing back-
bone of Dagon; this, the dotage of error drinks in. Of
what worth, I ask, is this sentence, so frivolous and so
rude, and resting as it does, on no testimonies from
sacred Scripture: We ought not to keep the Phasekh
with the Jews? What has it to do with the question?
Are the reprobate Jews to be supposed to keep the
Phasekh now, seeing that they are without a temple,
outside Jerusalem, and the messiah, who was for-
merly prefigured, having been crucified by them?
Can it be rightly supposed that the 14th day of the
moon for the Phasekh was of their own (i.e., a Jewish)
appointment? Or, is it not rather to be acknowledged
that it is from the deity, who alone knew clearly with
what mysterious meaning the 14th day of the moon
was chosen for the passage (out of Egypt).
5
Under the guiding hand of theoreticians Victor of Rome and Irenaeus of
Gaul, and with the agreement of others like Clement of Alexandria, the west-
ern assemblies did an about-face and accepted what had previously been
shunnedi.e., the Hasidic premise that the seven days of unleavened bread
extended from the beginning of the 15th until the end of the 21st day of the
first moon.
The System E concept was developed as a result of the controversy which
followed the visit of the Quartodeciman Polycarp of Smyrna, leader of the
eastern assemblies, with Anicetus, the bishop of Rome and leader over several
of the western assemblies. It was with this dispute that we hear for the first
time of a difference between the observance of the 14th as the historical
Phasekh and the western observance of Phasekh Sunday (System D) being
practiced at Rome. It was no earlier than 158 C.E.,
6
and probably shortly there-
after, that these two bishops tried to resolve their differences over the Phasekh
issue. Little was accomplished. They only agreed to disagree. Polycarp,
already a very old man and unwilling to cause a schism in the Assembly,
7
quietly returned home and peace continued between the two sides.
8
313 The Roman Syst em (Syst em E)
5
Gregory, Epist., 127.
6
Anicetus did not obtain the bishopric of Rome until early in 158 C.E. (see Chart K).
7
Polycarp died after living as a Christian for 86 years (Polycarp, 9; Eusebius, H.E., 4:14:3f,
4:15:20). He was converted as a young boy (Pionius, Poly., 3) and, based on various other factors
(see App. F and G), he was at least 99 years old at his death.
8
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:1417; Irenaeus, frag. 3; Socrates Schol., 5:22.
At the same time, members of the Roman assembly saw Polycarps unwill-
ingness to censure or excommunicate Anicetus as a sign of weakness.
Polycarps inability to convince Anicetus, allowing Anicetus to retain his own
view, and then departing Rome on friendly terms actually represented proof in
the minds of many members of the western assemblies that the western view
was at least equal in authority to the older Quartodeciman view.
9
Polycarps in-
ability to convince the leadership of Rome, therefore, became the first major step
on the road to political dominance for the leadership of the Roman assembly.
Perceiving that they were now unfettered and justified in their approach,
the Roman assembly began a major campaign to expand their power. During
the latter half of the second century C.E., using a series of conferences, epis-
tles, and meetings, they rapidly increased their dominance over many of the
other western assemblies, extending their influence even over the Roman
province around Jerusalem.
10
Meanwhile, shortly before the death of Polycarp (about the spring of 170
C.E.),
11
the western doctrine of Phasekh was making its way into Asia. As a re-
sult, the Asian assemblies revived the Phasekh debate at Laodicea (in the
spring of 167 C.E.).
12
Some were, for the first time, pleading an interpretation
of the story of the messiahs suffering that reflected a strong Hasidic influence.
The Quartodeciman Apollinarius of Hierapolis, for example, mentions the
fact that at that time some, on account of ignorance, had stirred up a dis-
pute, arguing that Yahushua had eaten the Phasekh lamb with his disciples on
the 14th but did not suffer death until the 15th, on the great day of
Unleavened Bread.
13
The context of this debate is reflected in Apollinarius of
Hierapolis response, the 14th is the true Phasekh of the sovereign.
14
This
disagreement reveals the beginning of an effort by those who were trying to
introduce the Hasidic construct, which makes the 15th the first day of un-
leavened bread and a high Sabbath, into the Christian Phasekh debate.
At that time, Melito, bishop of Sardis, wrote his two books entitled On the
Phasekh.
15
In this work Melito defended the view of the Asiatic assemblies.
16
Shortly thereafter, in approximately 170 C.E.,
17
Apollinarius, who was from
the city of Hierapolis (located near Laodicea in Asia Minor), also wrote in de-
fense of the Quartodeciman view. The Quartodecimans were now striking
back hard. Indeed, their premise was extremely difficult to argue against. As
one Quartodeciman pointed out in his debate with Hippolytus:
314 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
9
This attitude is clearly expressed by later writers such as Irenaeus, frag. 3; Eusebius, H.E.,
5:24:1418; and Socrates Schol., 5:22.
10
Roman assembly influence over the bishops of Palestine is clearly expressed by the will-
ingness of Theophilus, bishop of Caesarea, and Narcissus, bishop of Jerusalem, to join with Victor
in the Phasekh controversy.
11
For the date of Polycarps death see App. F and G.
12
See above Chap. XVIII, p. 291, n. 11, for the date of this synod.
13
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 13f; cf., EEC, p. 141, #26, n. b.
14
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 13f.
15
Eusebius, H.E., 4:26:13, which dates the work, In the time of Servillius Paulus, procon-
sul, of Asia, at the time when Sagaris was martyred (i.e., c.164167 C.E.; see Lake, Euseb., i., p.
387, n. 7).
16
That Melito supported the Quartodeciman view see Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:5.
17
JTS (NS), 24, p. 76.
The messiah kept the Phasekh ON THAT DAY (the
14th) and he suffered; whence it is needful that I, too,
should keep it (the Phasekh supper) in the same
manner as the sovereign did.
18
As a result of the Quartodeciman counter-attack, those holding to the early
western view (System D) sought for a stronger argument. Under the leader-
ship of Victor, bishop of Rome (192202 C.E.), a major effort was made by the
Roman assembly to gain doctrinal supremacy in reference to the Phasekh.
Many meetings and conferences with other bishops
were held on this point, and all unanimously formu-
lated in their letters the doctrine of the assembly for
those in every country that the mystery of the sover-
eigns resurrection from the dead should be cele-
brated on no day save the Sovereigns day (Sunday),
and that on that day alone they should celebrate the
end of the Phasekh fast.
19
The results were proclaimed in 196 C.E.
20
Victor, who held the leadership
in the West, subsequently published a work entitled On the Phasekh
Controversy.
21
At that moment, the Roman assembly system of fasting for the
two days before Phasekh Sunday had attained supremacy among the western
assemblies. At the same time, the agreement to observe the Friday and
Saturday fast before Phasekh Sunday was also an acceptance of a very differ-
ent way of celebrating the suffering and resurrection of Yahushua. Instead of
annually celebrating the Phasekh on the 14th and the following Sunday as the
Sovereigns day, this new system always celebrated the same three-day se-
quence: Good Friday represented the day of the messiahs death, Saturday his
time in the grave, and Sunday was the day of his resurrection.
The annual observance of the day of the messiahs death and his time
spent buried in the grave was no longer based upon the exact day of the
month, regardless of which day of the week they fell upon. This was the
Quartodeciman system and it was controlled by the 14th of Abib. Instead, the
new annual observance was based upon the exact day of the week, regardless
of which day of the month it fell upon. Under this formulation, since the mes-
siah was raised on the Sunday following Phasekh (the 14th), the messiahs
death should annually be observed on the previous Friday and his resurrec-
tion on its proper Sunday. Under this Roman system, the days of Phasekh
were controlled by the anniversary of the Sunday resurrection.
Conversion to the Hasidic System
The most important change instituted by the new Roman system of Phasekh
was the introduction of the Hasidic system for the seven days of unleavened
315 The Roman Syst em (Syst em E)
18
Hippolytus, frag. 1.
19
Eusebius, H.E., 5:23:2. With regard to the importance of the fast see above n. 2.
20
Jerome (Euseb., year 2212) associates this debate with the fourth year of Emperor Severus
(196/ 197 C.E., May reckoning).
21
Jerome, Lives, 34.
bread, i.e., from the 15th to the 21st day of the first moon. The 14th was re-
tained only for the purpose of determining when the first month of the year
should be fixed (i.e., the vernal equinox must fall on or before the 14th day of
the first moon). Therefore, the first Christians to fully adopt the Hasidic view
of eight days of Phasekh were those following the approach of the Roman
assembly (System E).
22
In a broken passage, the Liber Pontificalis reports this
change under Victor:
After sacerdotes (a priestly gathering) had been ques-
tioned concerning the cycle of Phasekh [var. text
reads, He also summoned a council and an inquiry
was made of Theophilus, bishop of Alexandria, con-
cerning Phasekh and the first day of the week and the
moon],
23
he (Victor) issued a decree that the Lords
day of Phasekh . . . a discussion with priests and bish-
ops and after holding a council to which Theophilus,
bishop of Alexandria, had been invited, (they deter-
mined that) the sacred Phasekh should be kept on the
Lords day from the 14th to the 21st day of the first
lunar month.
24
The leaders who created System E were Victor of Rome, Irenaeus of Gaul,
and several others. All expressed one and the same opinion and judgment,
and gave the same vote.
25
Due to the many conferences held on the matter,
several bishops of the important Christian center at Alexandria, Egypt, such
as Clement of Alexandria and Origen, quickly agreed. Included in this deci-
sion with Victor was Theophilus, bishop of Caesarea, and Narcissus, bishop
of Jerusalem. These assemblies were governed by non-Judahite Roman-style
Christians, the Jews and Christians of Jewish descent having been banned
from even coming near the old city.
26
The political shift in the days of Victor was now fully evident. This time,
instead of the leader of Asia coming to correct the Roman bishop for his sep-
aration from the orthodoxy, the Roman leader of the western assemblies noti-
fied those in the East that they were to change to the new Roman assembly
orthodoxy or face excommunication.
27
This episode reflects the changing position of the Roman assembly leader-
ship toward intolerance. When Polycarp of Smyrna, leader of the eastern
assemblies, visited with Anicetus, the bishop of Rome, in about 158 C.E. and
argued that the Roman assembly should change its position in the name of
unity, Anicetus utterly refused. Both sides agreed to disagree and toleration
316 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
22
See below Chap. XXXXI.
23
BTP, p. 18.
24
Lib. Pont., 15. Cf. BPLP, p. 6.
25
Eusebius, H.E., 5:23:3f.
26
Eusebius, H.E., 5:22:15:23:4, 5:25:1, which shows that Narcissus and Theophilus were in
communication with the assembly in Alexandria, Egypt and established agreement between
them on how to observe the Phasekh. For Hadrians ban against ethnic Judaeans in or near
Jerusalem see Eusebius, H.E., 4:6; cf., Dio, 69:1214; Orosius, 7:13.
27
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:9.
of each others view of Phasekh was encouraged. With Victor and the events
of 196 C.E., on the other hand, the Roman assembly saw its chance to suppress
the older Quartodeciman view. Instead of toleration they moved toward an
act of excommunication. This new attitude of the Roman leadership would
eventually win the day. When Emperor Constantine, in support of the Roman
assembly, held the Council of Nicaea in 325 C.E., the suppression of all other
Christian Phasekh systems became the official Roman Catholic policy.
Irenaeus
Irenaeus (c.140202 C.E.), presbyter and bishop of the diocese of Lyons, Gaul
(France),
28
was a vital player in the formulation of this new Roman assembly
view. Though early in his life he lived in Asia among the Quartodecimans and
personally knew Polycarp, in his adult life he helped direct the western
assemblies toward their new path.
29
Irenaeus was a strong and close ally of
both Eleutherus (177192 C.E.) and Victor, bishops of Rome.
30
He is noted for
his participation in the conferences that created Victor s decrees to celebrate
Phasekh according to the System E scenario.
31
Irenaeus also wrote a book
entitled On Phasekh, which also discussed Pentecost.
32
It is clear that the System E construct for Phasekh, if it was not actually
invented jointly by Irenaeus and Victor, was brought to the forefront and
advocated by them. This detail is indicated by the following statement made
by Wilfrid at the Synod of Whitby in 664 C.E.:
The Phasekh which we follow we have seen to be
kept by all at Rome where the blessed apostles Peter
and Paul lived, taught, suffered and were buried: this
manner we have noted to be PRACTICED OF ALL
IN ITALY, AND IN GAUL, countries which we have
passed through in pursuit of knowledge or desire to
pray: This manner we have found to be performed in
Africa, Asia, Egypt, Greece and all the world, wher-
ever the assembly HAS BEEN SPREAD, throughout
different nations and tongues, after one order of time
and that without variableness.
33
Notice that the original regions of this new view were Italy and Gaul,
where Victor and Irenaeus were head bishops. The practice is then assumed
to have spread throughout other countries, with the implication that it came
from Italy and Gaul, where it was originally observed. Further, Eusebius
(an advocate of System E) notes that Irenaeus represents the orthodoxy of
the Assembly.
34
317 The Roman Syst em (Syst em E)
28
Eusebius, H.E., 5:4:1, 5:23:4, 5:24:11; Jerome, Lives, 35.
29
For more details regarding the life of Irenaeus, and his education in Rome before he mi-
grated to Gaul, see App. G, pp. 453ff.
30
Eusebius, H.E., 5:4:1, 5:23:4, 5:24:918; Jerome, Lives, 35.
31
Eusebius, H.E., 5:23:14, 5:24:11.
32
Irenaeus, frag. 7; Ps.-Justin, 115.
33
Bede, Hist., 3:25.
34
Eusebius, H.E., 3:23:2.
And Eij rhnai` o~ (Eirenaios; Irenaeus), who deserved
his name, eij rhnopoiov ~ (eirenopoios; peace maker),
gave exhortations of this kind for the peace of the
Assembly and served as its ambassador, for in letters
he discussed the various views on the issue which
had been raised (i.e. Phasekh), not only with Victor
but also with many other rulers of the assemblies.
35
That Irenaeus was a major contributor is further demonstrated by his
influence over Victor in the events that followed the series of conferences we
have mentioned above. The bishop of Rome had already demonstrated his
authority in the West by his ability to bring together the other western assem-
blies into doctrinal agreement with Roman leadership. This influence, in
turn, gave him a great sense of power. As a result, Victor moved to eliminate
his opposition.
Based upon the agreements he had reached with the other western assem-
blies, Victor issued a decree that all Christians must keep the Phasekh accord-
ing to the Roman assembly system. Yet the Quartodecimans remained
undaunted. In a formal letter to Victor from Polycrates, leader of the assem-
blies of Asia, they utterly refused.
36
Upon their rebuff, Victor immediately
tried to cut off the dioceses of all Asia and the adjacent regions from the com-
mon unity. He indited letters announcing that all the Christians there were
absolutely excommunicated.
37
At this point Irenaeus stepped in.
But by no means were all pleased by this, so they is-
sued counter-requests to him to consider the cause of
peace and unity and love toward his neighbors. Their
words are extant, sharply rebuking Victor. Among
them too Irenaeus, writing in the name of the
Christians in Gaul, whose leader he (Irenaeus) was,
though HE HAD RECOMMENDED that the mystery
of the sovereigns resurrection be observed only on
the Sovereigns day, yet nevertheless exhorted Victor
suitably and at length not to excommunicate whole
assemblies of the deity for following a tradition of
ancient custom.
38
Due to the request of Irenaeus and the others, Victor recanted.
39
The
special mention of Irenaeus, who had recommended the new view, demon-
strates that he had important influence over Victor. Victor saw his chastise-
ment as instruction from one who had been important in the development of
the System E construct. Indeed, the works of Irenaeus prove him to be, as
318 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
35
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:18.
36
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:18.
37
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:9; Socrates Schol., 5:22.
38
Eusebius, H.E., 5:24:911.
39
Ibid.
Johnannes Quasten calls him, the founder of Christian theology as it is
known today.
40
The View of Irenaeus
Further evidence that Irenaeus was one of the original builders of the System
E construct comes from the remnants of his works, composed between
180189 C.E.
41
It is in these letters that we first piece together the ideas form-
ing the System E Phasekh. At first Irenaeus, mimicking the Quartodecimans,
states that the messiah ate the Phasekh, and suffered on the next day,
42
that
is, he died during the next daylight period. Yet he also adds elsewhere:
Of the day of his suffering, too, he (Moses) was not
ignorant; but foretold him, after a figurative manner,
by the name given to the Phasekh; and at the very
festival, which had been proclaimed such a long time
previously by Moses, did our sovereign suffer, thus
fulfilling the Phasekh. And he did not describe the
day only, but the place also, AND THE TIME OF DAY
AT WHICH THE SUFFERINGS CEASED, and the
sign of the setting of the sun, saying: You may not
sacrifice the Phasekh within any other of your cities
which the sovereign deity gives you; but in the place
which the sovereign your deity shall choose that
his name be called on there, you shall sacrifice the
Phasekh at vespere (even), toward the setting of
the sun.
43
The writings of Irenaeus reflect the earliest Christian interpretation which
held to the prescript that Moses had commanded the Phasekh lamb to be
killed prior to the setting of the sun (i.e., at the end of the 14th day), being also
the same time that the messiah died. Therefore, he interprets the day of the
messiahs death along Hasidic lines, while fully acknowledging that the mes-
siah ate the Phasekh the night before (at the beginning of the 14th day). How
the advocates of System E dealt with the dilemma of two Phasekh suppers
(one eaten by the messiah on the 14th and one by the Jewish leaders on the
15th) shall be discussed as we proceed.
Clement of Alexandria
An important convert to System E was Clement of Alexandria (writing
c.193212 C.E.). When the bishops of Alexandria came over to the System E
side, it tipped the scale strongly in favor of Rome. Eusebius classes Clement
with Irenaeus as one of the two great men who represent the orthodoxy of
the assembly.
44
In his own work on the Phasekh, Clement sets down
Irenaeus account of the Phasekh debate, thereby showing that Irenaeus had
319 The Roman Syst em (Syst em E)
40
Patrol., 1, p. 294.
41
E.g., EEC, p. 145, #28, Written between 180 and 185. Sections were probably composed
in the first years of Victor, when he was co-bishop with Eleutherus (189193 C.E.), cf., Chart K.
42
Irenaeus, Ag. Her., 2:22:3.
43
Irenaeus, Ag. Her., 4:10:1.
44
Eusebius, H.E., 3:23:2.
important influence upon Clement.
45
Bringing the Alexandrian Christians
over to the Roman side would prove to be an important political victory.
Clement was the product of an Alexandrian school taught by a man
named Pantaenus. It was in the year that Commodus received the sovereignty
(180 C.E.) that a man very famous for his learning named Pantaenus had
charge of the life of the faithful in Alexandria, for from ancient custom a
school of sacred learning existed among them.
46
Eusebius tells us of this man:
Pantaenus, after many achievements, was at the
head of the school in Alexandria until his death, and
orally and in writing expounded the treasures of the
divine doctrine.
47
Eusebius also informs us that, tradition says that at that time Pantaenus
was especially eminent, and that he had been influenced by the philosophic
system of those called Stoics.
48
This Greek Stoic philosophy was also strong
among the large Pharisaic community of Jews living in Alexandria, for
the Pharisees were a sect having points of resemblance to that which the
Greeks call the Stoic school.
49
In this regard, Pantaenus and the Jews held
common ground.
Clement of Alexandria was a student of Pantaenus.
50
Indeed, Clement
was famous in Alexandria for his study of the sacred Scriptures with
Pantaenus.
51
He even succeeded Pantaenus as head of the school at
Alexandria.
52
Clements activity in Alexandria is dated by his work entitled
Stromateis. This book uses the death of Emperor Commodus (December of 192
C.E.) as a terminus, showing that Clement was writing early in the reign of
Severus (193211 C.E.).
53
At the outbreak of persecution under Severus in 202
C.E., Clement left Alexandria, never to return. He had served more than 20
years as a presbyter of the assembly in Alexandria.
54
In the many works attributed to Clement of Alexandria, two are relevant
for our discussion. One is entitled To the Judaizers. It was dedicated to
Alexander, bishop of Jerusalem (211 C.E.).
55
Though this book is now lost, its
very title reflects his anti-Jewish sentiment. Clement also wrote an important
book discussing the Phasekh. Eusebius informs us:
And in his (Clements) book On the Phasekh he pro-
fesses that he was compelled by his companions to
commit to writing traditions that he had heard from
the elders of olden time, for the benefit of those that
320 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
45
Clement, Pas., frag. 25.
46
Eusebius, H.E., 5:10.
47
Ibid.
48
Ibid.
49
Jos., Life, 1:2.
50
Eusebius, H.E., 5:11, 6:13.
51
Eusebius, H.E., 5:11.
52
Eusebius, H.E., 6:6.
53
Eusebius, H.E., 6:6.
54
Butterworth, Clement, p. xii.
55
Eusebius, H.E., 6:13:3, cf., 6:8:7, 6:11, the year Antoninus Caracalla succeeded Severus (i.e.,
211 C.E.), at the time when Alexander became bishop of Jerusalem.
should come after; and he mentions in it Melito and
Irenaeus and some others, whose accounts also of the
matter he has set down.
56
In another place he similarly states:
Clement of Alexandria quotes this treatise in his own
On the Phasekh, which he says that he compiled in
consequence of the writing of Melito.
57
This evidence proves that Clement of Alexandria composed his own work
with regard to the Phasekh based upon his studies of arguments given by
Irenaeus and Melito. Clement favored the views of Irenaeus and opposed the
Quartodeciman views of Melito. He demonstrates his pro-System E bias when
he writes:
Accordingly, in the years gone by, Yahushua went to
eat the Phasekh sacrificed by the Jews, keeping the
festival. . . . Suitably, therefore, to the 14th day, on
which he also suffered, in the morning, the chief
priests and the scribes, who brought him to Pilate,
did not enter the Praetorium, that they might not be
defiled, but might freely eat the Phasekh at eJ spev ra~
(esperas; twilight). With this precise determination of
the days both the whole Scriptures agree, and the
good news (New Testament) harmonizes. The resur-
rection also attests to it. He certainly rose on the third
day, which fell on the first day of the Weeks of
Harvest, on which the Torah prescribed that the
priest should offer up the sheaf.
58
By claiming that the messiah always ate the Phasekh sacrificed by the
Jews, and then tying it to the fact that on the morning of the 14th the Jewish
leaders had not yet partaken of the Phasekh, Clement of Alexandria reflects
the view that the messiah did not partake of the legal Phasekh supper for his
Last Supper. The coupling of the omer wave offering on the first day of the
week with the resurrection of the messiah, of course, reflects his intent on cel-
ebrating the Phasekh of the resurrection.
What is interesting about Clement of Alexandrias work on the Phasekh is
that he also demonstrates the transition period from System D to System E.
This detail is reflected in his thoughts about John 13:112. In a fragment from
this work, where he uses an Egyptian (midnight to midnight) reckoning for a
day,
59
we read:
321 The Roman Syst em (Syst em E)
56
Eusebius, H.E., 6:13:9.
57
Eusebius, H.E., 4:26:4.
58
Clement, Pas., frag. 28.
59
The Egyptians and Romans reckoned a midnight-to-midnight day (Pliny, 2:79).
But when he (the messiah) had preached he who was
the Phasekh, the lamb of the deity, led as a sheep to
the slaughter, presently taught his disciples the mys-
tery of the type on the 13th day, on which also they
inquired, Where will you that we prepare for you to
eat the Phasekh (Matt., 26:17). It was on this day (the
Egyptian 13th = the evening before midnight) then,
that both the consecration of the unleavened bread
and the preparation for the festival took place.
Whence John naturally describes the disciples as al-
ready previously prepared to have their feet washed
by the sovereign. AND ON THE FOLLOWING DAY
(the Egyptian 14th) our saviour suffered, he who was
the Phasekh, propitiously sacrificed by the Jews.
60
The interpretation of John, 13:112, which mentions a meal that took place
on the day before the Festival of the Phasekh and during which the messiah
washed the feet of his disciples,
61
is for the first time found associated with the
Last Supper.
62
This shows Clement of Alexandrias belief that the Phasekh
supper of the messiah was held on the day before the legal Phasekh of the Jews.
As Cyril Richardson states, Clement of Alexandria makes the Last Supper
a pre-Passover enacted parable.
63
No doubt the Egyptian work attributed to
the Gospel of the Hebrews, as indirectly quoted by Jerome (c.348420 C.E.),
comes from the time of Pantaenus and Clement. It reads, The eight days of
the Phasekh, on which the messiah the son of the deity rose.
64
This statement
reflects the transition from the earlier Quartodeciman view of a seven-day
Festival of Unleavened Bread to the Pharisaic eight days.
Origen
The System E interpretation is also reflected in the works of Origen (c.185254
C.E.), the pupil of Clement of Alexandria.
65
Origen was young as a student, for
he was a teacher himself by the age of 20.
66
He was trained by Clement at the
very time of Victor s decree. Origen was originally from Alexandria but later
left Egypt (234 C.E.) and was ordained in Caesarea in Palestine, where he
began writing (between 234251 C.E.).
67
Origen accepted the Pharisaic interpretation for the week of Phasekh. In
his work On Phasekh, he recounts the commands given in Exodus, 12:35,
where the Israelites are told to take the lamb on the 10th day of the moon and
keep it until the 14th for sacrificing. Origen then explains this statement by
322 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
60
Clement, Pas., frag. 28.
61
John, 13:1f.
62
That the supper and feet washing of John, 13:112, actually occurred on the night of the
13th of Abib see FSDY, 2.
63
JTS (NS), 24, p. 77.
64
EEC, p. 38.
65
Eusebius, H.E., 6:6.
66
Daly, Origen, p. 2.
67
Daly, Origen, p. 3.
saying, but he does not sacrifice or eat him before five days have gone by.
68
The fifth day after the tenth is the 15th, thereby placing the Phasekh supper
on the 15th. He even connects the time for killing the lamb, pro~ esperan
(pros esperan, at twilight), with the last hour of the day, on the 14th.
69
Origen also interprets that it is on the 15th that the moon reaches its
fullest plenitude.
70
Origen once more connects the eating of the Phasekh
with the 15th by concluding from this typology, And for our part, unless the
perfect, true light rises over us and we see how it perfectly illumines our guid-
ing intellect, we will not be able to sacrifice and eat the true lamb.
71
Like
Clement of Alexandria, Origen places the incidents of the supper and feet
washing found in John, 13:112, with the events during the day of the Last
Supper,
72
thereby connecting the Phasekh meal eaten by the messiah with the
day before the Phasekh.
73
Conclusion
The evidence demonstrates that an important movement toward the Christian
Hasidic system got under way around 165 C.E. and blossomed in the days of
Irenaeus, bishop of Gaul, and Victor, bishop of Rome, and their important
proclamation of 196 C.E. The result was System E, which follows the Hasidic
System of observing the seven days of unleavened bread, i.e., from the begin-
ning of the 15th until the end of the 21st day of the first month of the scrip-
tural calendar. Its advocates did not allow that the 14th day of that month was
the legal Phasekh supper. Instead, they interpreted the data so that the mes-
siah and his disciples kept the Phasekh sacrifice and supper on the night of
the 14th as a pre-Phasekh enacted parable. The Last Supper, therefore, was
merely a foretype of the future Phasekh that was to be kept only on the first
day of the week when it fell on any of the days extending from the 15th to 21st
of Abib.
323 The Roman Syst em (Syst em E)
68
Origen, Pas., 18.
69
Origen, Pas., 25, cf., 16, 17, 20.
70
Origen, Pas., 20.
71
Origen, Pas., 21.
72
Origen, Com. John, 32.
73
As stated in John, 13:1f.
Chapt er XXI
The Seven Days of
Syst ems E, F, and G
O
ur attention shall now turn to the evidence demonstrating the mechan-
ics of the Christian Hasidic construct as represented by Roman assem-
bly System E. This construct eventually resulted in another form, the Syrian
hybrid System F, which was an attempt to merge the Quartodeciman System
A with System E. To this discussion we shall also attach a description of the
more recent innovation, System G.
We shall first examine the evidence for the Roman assembly System E con-
struct. The evidence shall demonstrate the change by the western assemblies
to the Hasidic method for the seven days of unleavened bread. To justify this
change, System E advocates were also obliged to apply a new interpretation
to the Last Supper, explaining why the messiah and his disciples observed the
14th of Abib as the Phasekh supper if the 15th was deemed the proper time
under the Torah of Moses.
In the region of Syria, meanwhile, theologians, who had supported
Systems A and D and were influenced by the Council of Nicaea to adopt
System E, developed a hybrid solution in order to overcome the strong
Quartodeciman leanings of that region. They adopted System F. The Syrian
hybrid System F kept the 14th as the Phasekh (the Last Supper) but then uti-
lized the Hasidic System B for the seven days of unleavened bread (i.e., from
the 15th until the end of the 21st). In this fashion, they were able to observe,
along with the West, the Friday and Saturday fast and to celebrate the first day
of the week within the seven days of unleavened bread as the Phasekh of the
resurrection. In effect, System F actually served as a transitional phase. As
time progressed, the East, for the most part, dropped System F and fully
adopted System E.
Finally, we shall also add a few comments about System G, a more recent
invention that is also built upon the Hasidic construct for the seven days of
unleavened bread. Like her sister systems, System G observes the seven days
of unleavened bread from the 15th until the end of the 21st of Abib and, like
System F, keeps Phasekh on the 14th of Abib.
System E
To counter the Quartodecimans, the western assemblies, under the leadership
of Irenaeus, bishop of Gaul, and Victor, bishop of Rome, abandoned System
D, which observed the 14th through 20th days of the first moon for the seven
days of unleavened bread, and adopted in its place System E, which utilized
325
the Hasidic construct for these seven days (i.e., counting from the 15th until
the end of the 21st day).
The advocates of System E advanced their formula by making the claim
that the Pharisees had been correct all along in observing the 15th as the legal
Phasekh and as the first day of the seven days of unleavened bread. Indeed,
the Jewish Talmud records that on the arab of the Phasekh Yahushua was
hanged, i.e., on the afternoon before the Phasekh supper.
1
Mimicking this
view, The Good News According to Peter, a Roman Christian work composed
no earlier than about 180 C.E., states that Yahushua was delivered to the peo-
ple on the day before the unleavened bread, their feast,
2
this despite the
plain statements from the New Testament that the messiah both ate his Last
Supper and died on the first day of unleavened bread.
3
Armed with this Pharisaic view, the advocates of System E denounced any
celebration of the 14th as a day of Phasekh. Instead, they advanced the doc-
trine that, at the messiahs Last Supper, he never actually kept the legal
Phasekh of the written Torah. Rather, they claimed that he merely kept the
14th as a typology for a new Christian Phasekh which took the place of the old
Jewish Phasekh.
Though Good Friday (which they calculated as the day of the week when
the messiah suffered death) and the following Saturday were also observed in
remembrance, these days were treated as a time of fasting. The celebration of
the new Christian Phasekh as a feast, on the other hand, was kept only on the
first day of the week, the day of the resurrection, called the Sovereigns day
(the Lords day in popular English culture), when that day fell during the
seven days of unleavened bread (i.e., from the 15th through the 21st days of
the first moon).
The Last Supper: Not the Legal Phasekh?
One of the key elements in the System E scenario is the view that the Last
Supper of the messiah was not the dinner of the legal Phasekh, this despite three
Synoptic texts explicitly mentioning the preparations for it as the Phasekh
4
and
the reference in Luke, 22:1518, to eating the Phasekh (lamb) at this meal.
5
They do agree that the Last Supper took place on the 14th of Abib, within the
night prior to the afternoon of the Jewish sacrifice of the Phasekh lamb
6
and in
the 24-hour day before the Jewish leaders kept their Phasekh supper.
7
The
System E view is clearly set forth by three important and early supporters of
that interpretation: Hippolytus, Peter of Alexandria, and Chrysostom.
326 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
1
B. Sanh., 43a, And it is tradition: jsph br[b (On the arab of the Phasekh) they hung
Yeshua (Yahushua the Nazarene). And the crier went forth before him 40 days, (saying), (Yeshua)
goes forth to be stoned, because he has practiced magic and deceived and led astray Israel. The
terms Arab and the Phasekh are used here in the Pharisaical sense, i.e., to refer to the after-
noon of the day of the Phasekh sacrifice (Abib 14).
2
GN Peter, 3.
3
Matt., 26:17; Mark, 14;12; Luke, 22:7.
4
Mark, 14:1217; Matt., 26:1720; Luke, 22:714.
5
JTS, 9, pp. 305307; EWJ, p. 1619, p. 16, n. 2, p. 19, n. 2; CSJBO, pp. 119f.
6
Mark, 14:12; Luke, 22:7.
7
John, 18:28.
Hippolytus
Hippolytus (died 235 C.E.) was a strong advocate of the System E (Roman
assembly) interpretation. Due to his beliefs, he found it important in his writ-
ings to address the Quartodeciman argument that the Phasekh should be
kept on the 14th day of the first moon, according to the commandment of
the Torah, on whatever day (of the week) it should occur. Hippolytus retorts
that these Quartodecimans only regard what has been written in the Torah,
that he will be accursed who does not so keep (the Torah) as it is enjoined.
8
He then condemns the Quartodecimans as coming under the written
Torah, arguing:
They do not, however, attend to this (fact), that the
legal enactment was made for the Jews, who in times
to come should kill the real Phasekh. And this (sacri-
fice) has spread unto the nations, and is discerned by
trust, and not now observed in the letter (of the law).
They attend to this one commandment, and do not
look unto what has been spoken by the apostle: For
I testify to every man that is circumcised, that he is a
debtor to keep the whole Torah. In other respects,
however, these consent to all the traditions delivered
to the assembly by the apostles.
9
The first detail noticed, as already demonstrated in the first part of our
study, is that the western assemblies had lost touch with the difference be-
tween the dogmasin of the Mosaic Torah and the earlier statutes followed by
Abraham. The fact that the Mosaic dogmasin, such as fleshly circumcision, had
been set aside has nothing to do with whether or not the festival and sacred
days of Yahweh are to be kept.
To this doctrine, the proponents of System E added the legal interpretation
of the Phasekh advocated by the Hasidic Jews. Hippolytus, for example,
claims that the Quartodecimans have fallen into error by not perceiving that
at the time when the messiah suffered HE DID NOT EAT THE PHASEKH OF
THE TORAH.
10
In another place, he similarly states, for he who said of old,
I will not any more eat the Phasekh, probably partook of a supper before the
Phasekh. BUT THE PHASEKH HE DID NOT EAT, but he suffered; for it was
not the time for him to eat (it).
11
Peter of Alexandria
The case for the Hasidic view and against the Aristocratic view is also
made by Peter of Alexandria (300311 C.E.). Though he accepts Abib 14 as the
327 The Seven Days of Syst ems E, F, and G
8
Hippolytus, Ref. Her., 6:11.
9
Hippolytus, Ref. Her., 6:11. Hippolytus misses the intent of Sauls comment. Saul also com-
mands men to keep the Phasekh festival (1 Cor., 5:7f). Circumcision was a dogmasin (public decree)
and was never a pre-Torah olam (age-lasting) statute. As we have already shown in our Part I, the
Festival of Phasekh and Unleavened Bread differs from circumcision in that it is an olam statute at-
tached to the Covenants of Promise and does not find its origin as a dogmasin of the Torah of Moses.
10
Hippolytus, frag. 1.
11
Hippolytus, frag. 2.
day of the Phasekh,
12
he does so along the lines of the Pharisees. That is, he
considers the Phasekh of the 14th as only including the sacrifice, while the
15th was the feast meal.
13
Therefore, as is the case with the Pharisees, Peter of
Alexandria makes the festival of Phasekh, as found in the Torah of Moses, a
celebration lasting eight days.
14
For example, Peter agrees that the 14th was the day upon which the
Phasekh was sacrificed and the messiah died.
15
Nevertheless, Peter only ac-
cepts the Pharisaic view that, under the written Torah, the high Sabbath was
the 15th, the first day of the seven days of unleavened bread, and the correct
time of the Phasekh supper. Like Hippolytus, Peter of Alexandria states that
the messiah, while in the flesh, with the people, in the years before his pub-
lic ministry and during his public ministry, did celebrate the legal and shad-
owy Phasekh, eating the typical lamb, for he came not to destroy the Torah,
or the prophets, but to fulfill them.
16
Peter of Alexandria then adds:
But after his public ministry, he (Yahushua) DID
NOT EAT OF THE LAMB, but himself suffered as the
true Lamb in the Phasekh festival, as John, the divine
and evangelist, teaches us in the good news written
by him.
17
Peter of Alexandria then makes reference to the events of John, 18:28, that,
while Yahushua was in the praitwv rion (praitorion, hall of judgment), the Jews
would not enter, lest they should be defiled, but that they might eat the
Phasekh. He adds, On that day, therefore, on which the Jews were about to
eat the Phasekh pro; ~ eJ spev ran (pros esperan; at twilight), our sovereign and sav-
iour Yahushua the messiah was crucified.
18
The point of this argument is that
the messiah ate his Last Supper on the 14th, the day of his execution. Yet, after
the Jewish leaders had delivered Yahushua to Pilate, they were still waiting to
celebrate their Phasekh meal (i.e., with the arrival of the 15th).
The Quartodecimans actually agreed with this understanding of the
events surrounding the Last Supper. The difference between the two positions
was the insistence by the advocates of System E that the Jewish leaders (who
utilized the Hasidic calculations for the week of Phasekh) were correctly ob-
serving the legal Phasekh of the written Torah. The Quartodecimans claimed
the Jewish leaders of that time were mistaken. Peter of Alexandria, therefore,
finds it fitting to defend the position of the Pharisees against the Quarto-
decimans. He writes:
For the deity does not say that they (the Jewish lead-
ers) did always err in their heart as regards the pre-
cept of the Torah concerning the Phasekh, as you (the
328 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
12
Peter Alex., frag. 5:1.
13
Peter Alex., frag. 5:17.
14
Cf., Jos., Antiq., 2:15:1.
15
Peter Alex., frag. 5:1, 2, 7.
16
Peter Alex., frag. 5:7.
17
Ibid.
18
Ibid.
Quartodecimans) have written, but on account of all
their other disobedience, and on account of their evil
and unseemly deeds, when, indeed, he perceived them
turning to idolatry and to porneia (sexual misconduct).
19
Accepting the fact that the Jewish religious leaders had not yet eaten their
Phasekh on the 14th, Peter continues:
On that day, therefore, on which the Jews were about
to eat the Phasekh pro; ~ eJ spev ran (pros esperan; at twi-
light), our sovereign and saviour Yahushua the mes-
siah was killed on a (torture-)stake, being made the
victim to those who were about to partake by trust of
the mystery concerning him, according to what is
written by the blessed Paul: For even the messiah
our Phasekh is sacrificed for us; and not as some
(the Quartodecimans) who, carried along by igno-
rance, confidently affirm that after he had eaten the
Phasekh, he was betrayed.
20
Peter sums up the matter, stating:
At the time, therefore, in which our sovereign suf-
fered for us, according to the flesh, HE DID NOT
EAT OF THE LEGAL PHASEKH; but, as I have said,
he himself, as the true Lamb, was sacrificed for us in
the festival of the typical Phasekh, on the day of the
preparation, the 14th of the first lunar month. The
typical Phasekh, therefore, then ceased, the true
Phasekh being present.
21
Chrysostom
Chrysostom, patriarch of Constantinople (born 347 C.E., died Sept. 14, 407
C.E.), was appointed bishop of Constantinople in 398 C.E.
22
As with the other
advocates of System E, he makes the 14th, the day that the messiah ate his Last
Supper and suffered death, the first day of unleavened bread. He then clar-
ifies his view by calling it the day BEFORE the festival; for they (the Jews) are
accustomed always to reckon the day from eJ spev ra~ (esperas; twilight).
23
In
this way, Chrysostom counts eight days of unleavened bread yet makes the
first day of unleavened bread come before the seven-day Festival of
Unleavened Bread.
Chrysostom also shows that many of the Christian Quintodecimans (15th
day observers) had trouble explaining away the evidence that the Last Supper
was the legal Phasekh. He was forced to face the following question:
329 The Seven Days of Syst ems E, F, and G
19
Peter Alex., frag. 5:4.
20
Peter Alex., frag. 5:7.
21
Ibid.
22
JE, 4, p. 75.
23
Chrysostom, Hom., 81:1.
But how, if they (the disciples of Yahushua) were eat-
ing the Phasekh, could they eat it contrary to the
Torah? For they should not have eaten it, sitting
down to their food. What then can be said? That after
eating it (on the 14th), they then sat down to the ban-
quet (on the 15th)?
24
His response, in agreement with other advocates of System E, was to allow
that the Last Supper on the night of the 14th was indeed a Phasekh meal but
not the legal one kept by the Jews. Rather, it was the ordainment of a new
sacrament, at the time of Phasekh.
25
As Eutychius (late sixth century C.E.)
comments, Therefore, before he suffered he did eat the Phasekhthe mysti-
cal Phasekh, of course.
26
This new Phasekh, Chrysostom reports, was kept by
the messiah and his disciples the day before the new Christian schedule to
deliver to you the new rites, and to give a Phasekh by which the messiah
could make us spiritual.
27
According to this view, the new sacrament was not
appointed previously to the day of the messiahs Last Supper, but was given
at that time because the written Torah was to cease. Chrysostom adds, And
thus the very chief of the festivals (Phasekh) he (Yahushua) brings to an end,
removing them to another most awful table.
28
Thus began a new table from
which we are to eat a new Phasekh with new rituals and meanings.
The advocates of System E proposed that this new Phasekh was kept for the
first time on the 14th of the first moon with the messiahs Last Supper. Because
the messiahs Last Supper was observed on the 14th, it was also reasoned that
it could not be the legal Phasekh of the Torah of Moses, which was observed
by the Jewish state on the 15th. The interpretation was then advanced that,
since the messiahs Phasekh was held on the 14th, it was a typology for
Christians, meant to be expressed in the future only on the joyful celebration
of the day of the resurrection (the Sovereigns day), which fell on the first day
of the week during the seven days of unleavened bread. It was therefore ad-
vanced that the Last Supper actually allowed Christians to keep the Phasekh
annually on the first day of the week during any one of the seven days of un-
leavened bread (i.e., from the 15th through the 21st day of the first moon).
The dispute was bitter and the schism was inevitable. The Quartodeci-
mans agreed with the Roman assembly that the old Phasekh of the Torah,
which required each household to sacrifice a lamb, had indeed come to an end
with the death of the messiah, the true lamb.
29
They also agreed that the un-
leavened bread and wine consumed at the Phasekh meal revealed a higher
meaning as symbols of the messiah. Yet they ardently disagreed with the
System E premise that the Phasekh supper kept by the messiah just prior to
his death, falling as it did on the 14th of Abib, was not the legal Phasekh.
Neither would they admit to the idea that the messiah observed the Phasekh
only this once on the 14th, and that this one-time celebration set an example
which gave Christians permission to change the official reckoning for the date
of the Phasekh supper and mystery of the cup and bread.
330 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
24
Chrysostom, Hom., 81:3.
25
Chrysostom, Hom., 82:1.
The Seven Days
For System E the seven days of unleavened bread followed the Hasidic
practice (System B), extending from the beginning of the 15th until the end
of the 21st day of the first moon. Nevertheless, the first moon of the year was
still determined by the 14th day of the moon falling either on or after the
spring equinox.
30
Wilfrid, at the Synod of Whitby (664 C.E.), for example, notes that it came
to pass that the dominica (Sovereigns day) Phasekh was kept only between the
15th day of the change of the moon to the 21st and no day else.
31
The System
E argument is also fully expressed in a letter from the abbot Ceolfrid to
Naitan, king of the Picts of Scotland, trying to convince the latter to keep the
Phasekh established by the Roman Church. He gives three rules for the ob-
servance of Phasekh:
There are then three rules given in sacred Scripture
by which the time of solemnizing Phasekh is ap-
pointed for us, which by no authority at all of many
may be changed; of which rules two are established
by the deity in the Torah of Moses, and the third was
joined in the good news (New Testament) by the
means of the sovereigns suffering and resurrection.
For the Torah commanded that in the first month of
the year, and in the third week of the same month,
that is from the 15th day to the 21st, the Phasekh
should be kept: it was added by the institution of the
apostles out of the good news (New Testament) that
in the selfsame third week we should tarry for the
Sovereigns day (Sunday) and in it keep the begin-
ning of the time of Phasekh.
32
In reference to the commands of Exodus, 12:13, Ceolfrid also takes the
Hasidic interpretation:
By the words which it is most plainly seen, that in the
observation of the Phasekh the 14th day is men-
tioned, yet it is not so mentioned that on that very
14th day it is commanded the Phasekh (lamb) should
be kept, but that, when at length vespera (twilight) of
the 14th day approaches, that is, when the 15th
moon, which making the beginning of the third
week, comes forth into the face of the heaven (i.e.
very late afternoon of the 14th), the lamb is bidden to
331 The Seven Days of Syst ems E, F, and G
26
Eutychius, 2.
27
Chrysostom, Hom., 82:1.
28
Ibid.
29
For example, this theme is expressed throughout the work on the Phasekh by Melito of
Sardis. Also see Ps.-Hippolytus, 13; Pas. Proclam., Exsult., 4.
30
E.g., Eusebius, H.E., 7:32:1417; Ps.-Chrysostom, 7:4, 35; Bede, Hist., 5:21.
31
Bede, Hist., 3:25.
32
Bede, Hist., 5:21.
be killed: and it is plain that it is the selfsame night of
the 15th day of the moon in which the Egyptians
were smitten and Israel redeemed from the long
slavery. Seven days, he says, shall you eat unleav-
ened bread. With which words likewise all the third
week of the said first month it is decreed should be
solemn. But that we should not think the same 7 days
to be counted from the 14th to the 20th, he added
straightway: The first day there shall be no leaven in
your houses. Whosoever eats leavened bread from
the first day to the seventh, that life shall be cut off
from Israel, and so forth, till he says: For in this
selfsame day will I bring your army out of the land
of Egypt.
33
Abbot Ceolfrid goes on to deny that the 14th was one of the seven days of
unleavened bread by identifying the night that Israel was brought out of
Egypt with the 15th, being the day after the Phasekh (sacrifice), according to
the Hasidic interpretation of Numbers, 33:3.
He (Moses) then calls the first day of unleavened
bread the one in which he was to bring their army
out of Egypt. But it is manifest that they were not
brought out on the 14th day, in the vespera whereof
the lamb was slain, and which is properly called the
Phasekh or Phase; but in the 15th day they were
brought out of Egypt, as it is evidently written in the
book of Numbers.
34
Ceolfrid thereby makes the seven days last from the beginning of the
third week, that is, from the 15th day of the first moon to the 21st day of the
same month fully complete.
35
His argument continues:
Further, the 14th day is noted down separately out-
side this number under the name of the Phasekh, as
that which follows in Exodus does evidently declare;
where, after it was said: For in this selfsame day will
I bring your armies out of the land of Egypt; it was
added straightway: And you shall observe this day
in your generations by an ordinance for ever. In the
first month, on the 14th day of the month, you shall
eat unleavened bread to the 21st day of the month ad
vesperam (at twilight).
36
Seven days shall there be no
leaven found in your homes. For who cannot see,
332 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
33
Ibid.
34
Ibid.
35
Ibid.
36
The term ad vesperam (at twilight) is here a translation of the Hebrew term br[b (be-arab),
but is interpreted in the Pharisee fashion as late afternoon.
that from the 14th to the 21st be not only 7 days but
rather 8, if the 14th be itself also reckoned in? But if
we will count from the vespera of the 14th day until
the ad vesperam of the 21stas the verity of sacred
Scripture diligently search out does declarewe
shall well perceive that the 14th day continues its ves-
peram to the beginning of the Phasekh festival in such
a manner that the whole sacred solemnity contains
only 7 nights with as many days.
37
Authority from Constantine
What had begun in c.196 C.E. as a challenge to the Quartodeciman position by
Victor, bishop of Rome, was finally granted full authority throughout the
Roman empire at the behest of Emperor Constantine. Constantine convened
the Council of Nicaea in 325 C.E. One of the results of this conference was the
declaration by Constantine that the Hasidic view for the seven days of un-
leavened bread, as instituted by Pope Victor, was the correct system under the
Torah. Proof of this detail is demonstrated in a letter sent by Pope John IV
(consecrated in December of 640 C.E.) to the Scots for the sake of persuading
them to amend their System D position. As part of this letter the pope is found
plainly asserting therein that the sovereigns Phasekh ought to be sought for
from the 15th of the moon up to the 21st, AS WAS APPROVED IN THE
COUNCIL OF NICAEA.
38
Wilfrid at the Synod of Whitby similarly states:
Neither does this tradition of the good news (New
Testament) and of the apostles break the Torah but
rather fulfill it, for in the Torah it is commanded that
the Phasekh should be solemnized from ad vesperam
(at twilight = be-arab, interpreted as late afternoon) of
the 14th day of the change of the moon of the first
month until the 21st day of the same moon ad
vesperam (at twilight = be-arab, interpreted as late af-
ternoon): to the following of which observation all
the successors of blessed John in Asia after his death
and all the assembly throughout the world were con-
verted. And it was BY THE NICAEAN COUNCIL
not newly decreed but confirmed, as the ecclesiastical
history witnesses, that this is the true Phasekh. This
only is to be celebrated by believing men.
39
With the force of the Christian emperor of Rome behind the decision, the
western assemblies moved to force all other Christian assemblies to unify
under just one common system for celebrating Phasekh.
333 The Seven Days of Syst ems E, F, and G
37
Bede, Hist., 5:21.
38
Bede, Hist., 2:19.
39
Bede, Hist., 3:25.
Hybrid Syrian System F
Another form of Phasekh among the ancient assemblies was System F, which
was practiced for a time in Syria. The Syrian Phasekh celebration of the third
and fourth century C.E. was the direct heir of the Asiatic tradition of the
Quartodecimans.
40
At the same time, during this period the eastern regions
came evermore under the increasing pressure from the western assemblies,
especially after the Council of Nicaea (325 C.E.), to convert to System E. This
heavy western influence eventually resulted in the adoption of System E
throughout the East, but not right away.
Jerome, in a letter to Pope Damasus written in about 377 C.E., mentions the
troubles found among the Christian assemblies of the East (Syria) during this
period.
41
He speaks of the East (Syria) as being shattered as it is by the long-
standing feuds, subsisting between its peoples. He continues by observing
that this problem is bit by bit tearing into shreds the seamless vest of the sov-
ereign.
42
During this time of upheaval in Syria, and as a transitional phase,
some of the Syrian Christians created a hybrid form of the Phasekh celebra-
tion that incorporated aspects of both Systems A and E.
On the one hand, the Syrian Christians were strongly allied with the
Quartodecimans on the issue of which day should represent Phasekh. The his-
torian A. Hamman writes of this transition period:
Syria, close to the usage of the Jewish-Christian com-
munity, continued to celebrate the Pasch, like the
Jews, on the fourteenth Nisan, the anniversary of the
night when Jesus was delivered on whatever day of
the week it might occur.
43
The Didascalia Apostolorum, composed in the first decades of the third cen-
tury C.E., reflects the Ante-Nicaean portion of this transitional phase for those
of Syria following the Quartodeciman System A premise.
Wherever, then, the 14th of the Phasekh falls, so
keep it; for neither the month nor the day squares
with the same season every year, but is variable.
When therefore that people (the Jews) keep the
Phasekh (i.e. the 15th), do you fast; and be careful to
perform your vigil within their (days of) unleavened
bread. But on the first day of the week make good
cheer at all times.
44
Aphraates (writing c.344 C.E.) demonstrates the continued Quartodeci-
man proclivity of the Syrians after the Council of Nicaea when he writes:
334 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
40
EEC, p. 15.
41
Jerome, Epist., 15, cf., 16.
42
Jerome, Epist., 15.
43
TPM, p. 11.
44
Didas. Apost., 21, 5:20:10.
For at the dawn of the 14th day he (Yahushua) ate the
Phasekh with his disciples ACCORDING TO THE
TORAH OF ISRAEL, and on this day of the
Parasceve (Preparation), the 14th day, he was judged
until the sixth hour and was killed on a (torture-)
stake for three hours. . . . Hence the one who has dif-
ficulties about these days will understand that at the
dawn of the 14th (day) our sovereign celebrated the
Phasekh and ate and drank with his disciples, but
from the time when the cock crowed (about 3 A.M.) he
ate and drank no more, because they took him cap-
tive and began to judge him.
45
Again he writes:
Our saviour ate the Phasekh with his disciples in the
sacred night of the 14th, and he performed the sign of
the Phasekh (i.e., the Eucharist mystery) in truth for
his disciples. . . . And he was taken in the night of the
14th, and his trial lasted until the sixth hour (noon),
and at the time of the sixth hour they sentenced him
and lifted him up on the (torture-)stake.
46
Ephraem the Syrian (mid-fourth century C.E.) claims the messiah ate the
legal Phasekh. He tells his Jewish adversaries:
In your time our sovereign ate the little Phasekh and
became himself the great Phasekh. Phasekh was
mingled with Phasekh, festival joined to festival; a
temporary Phasekh, and another that abides; type
and fulfillment.
47
In this same vein, the Syrian writer Cyrillonas (end of the fourth century
C.E.) equates the night that the messiah prepared and ate the Phasekh in
the upper room on the 14th of Abib with the night of the Israelite Phasekh
in Egypt:
Moses went down and prepared a Phasekh for the
earthly ones in the depths, that is, in Egypt, the grave
of the Hebrews. Our sovereign, however, went up to
the bright and airy height (of the upper room) and
there prepared his Phasekh, in order to lift us up into
his kingdom. The lamb was sacrificed in Egypt, and
our sovereign in the upper room; the lamb in the
depths and the first-born on the height. Our sovereign
335 The Seven Days of Syst ems E, F, and G
45
Aphraates, Dem., 12:12.
46
Aphraates, Dem., 12:6.
47
Ephraem, Hymns, 3:2.
led his group and reclined in the dining room. He
went up and was the first to recline, and his disciples
(reclined) after him. There they lay with him at the
table and watched him, how he ate and was changed.
The Lamb ate the lamb, the Phasekh consumed the
Phasekh.
48
Meanwhile, some of the Syrian Christians were influenced by the Roman
model for the celebration of Sovereigns day (= the day of the resurrection),
which was more fully developed in the latter half of the second century C.E.
under Pope Victor. While still keeping the Phasekh on the 14th, they began to
observe the following Friday and Saturday as a commemoration of the death
and burial (time in the grave) of the messiah and the first day of the week as
a commemoration of Yahushuas resurrection. That they observed the first
day of the week, for example, is already attested to in the Didascalia
Apostolorum.
49
Their observance of Friday and Saturday is reflected in their
days of fasting during the time of Phasekh. The Didascalia Apostolorum, for
instance, states:
But on the Friday and on the Sabbath fast wholly, and
taste nothing. . . . Especially incumbent on you there-
fore is the fast of the Friday and of the Sabbath.
50
Raniero Cantalamessa comments of this period:
The observance of the week of Unleavened Bread, be-
ginning with the Jewish Pascha on the 14th Nisan, on
whatever weekday this happened to fall, together
with the beginning of the paschal fast, is also pre-
scribed in the Didascalia . . . . Thus, and with the title
Day of the Pascha of Passion for the fourteenth, the
Syrian Church honored the Quartodeciman tradition.
But, by having the solemnity of the Lords death al-
ways on the following Friday and Saturday, it was
able to keep the Pascha with the other Churches and
still preserve its content as a feast which emphasized
the death of Christ more than the resurrection. In this
arrangement, the Syrian Church of the early fourth
century agreed with the Audians.
51
A major alteration came after the Council of Nicaea (325 C.E.). In order to
accommodate Rome, yet in an effort to maintain their original Quartodeciman
336 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
48
Cyrillonas, 5, . 101103.
49
Didas. Apost., 21, 5:20:10, 5:20:10. But on the first day of the week make good cheer at all
times; he is guilty of sin, whosoever afflicts his self on the first (day) of the week. And hence it is
not lawful, apart from the Phasekh, for any one to fast during those three hours of the night be-
tween the Sabbath and the first (day) of the week, because that night belongs to the first (day) of
the week.
50
Didas. Apost., 21, 5:18, 5:19:6.
51
EEC, p. 187, n. n.
premise of observing the 14th as the day of Phasekh, many of the Syrian
Christians adopted the Hasidic System B for the seven days of unleavened
bread (though, like Rome, they disregarded the 15th and 21st days of Abib as
always being high Sabbaths). Nevertheless, they continued to observe the
Phasekh on the 14th day, thereby increasing the celebration of the festival to
eight days. In doing so, they developed a Quartodeciman hybrid we call
System F.
The newer arrangement (System F) appears for the first time in the works
of Aphraates (writing in c.344 C.E.). In his work, the 14th is still lauded as
the day of the Phasekh and the sovereigns suffering.
52
Yet now, to this cele-
bration is attached the Hasidic construct for the seven days of unleavened
bread. He writes:
After the Phasekh, Israel eats unleavened bread for
seven days, to the 21st of the month; we too observe
the unleavened breadas a festival of our saviour.
53
Aphraates further argues that we should observe the whole week in his
(the messiahs) suffering and in his Unleavened Bread, because AFTER the
Phasekh come the seven days of unleavened bread, to the 21st (day).
54
With the acceptance of System F, the Syrians eventually accepted the
Roman Catholic construct (System E) in its entirety. Indeed, by the end of the
eighth century C.E., the whole Christian world, including the East, was es-
tablished in that camp.
Modern Hybrid System G
Finally, a few present-day Christian groups have formulated a Phasekh con-
struct that is similar to the old Syrian hybrid System F.
55
This practice we
have labeled System G. It is not a system known to have been argued by any
of the early Jewish or Christian assemblies but, because of its similarity to
System F, the claim by its advocates that it was the correct and earliest prac-
tice, and due to its popularity in some groups, we shall not fail to mention
it as a possibility.
As with the old Syrian system, the Passover supper is observed on the
night of the 14th. The 14th is itself considered a memorial day. Meanwhile, as
with the neo-Aristocratic System C and the Christian System F, the advocates
of this view imitate the Hasidic method for counting the seven days of un-
leavened bread, i.e., from the 15th until the end of the 21st of Abib. In most
variations of this system, the 14th is a day to eat unleavened bread. Neverthe-
less, the 14th is neither kept as a high Sabbath nor is counted as one of the
seven days of unleavened bread. Rather, the honor of a high Sabbath is given
only to the 15th and the 21st of Abib. The 15th is also kept as a supper and is
called the Feast of Unleavened Bread.
337 The Seven Days of Syst ems E, F, and G
52
Aphraates, Dem., 12:68, 1213.
53
Aphraates, Dem., 12:8.
54
Aphraates, Dem., 12:12.
55
Some notable Christian groups to use this Syrian-like format are the older branch of the
Worldwide Church of God, the Assemblies of Yahweh, and Yahwehs New Covenant Assembly.
Conclusion
When System D failed to have a major impact on the conservative
Quartodeciman groups, tactics in the West were changed and System E was
adopted, being roughly the present practice of the Roman Catholics and
Protestants. This innovation followed the Hasidic construct for observing
the seven days of unleavened bread, i.e., from the beginning of the 15th until
the end of the 21st day of the first moon. Emphasis is placed on the day of the
messiahs resurrection, being the first day of the week falling within the seven
days of unleavened bread.
The advocates of System E do not allow that the 14th of the first moon is
the day of the legal Phasekh supper mentioned in the Torah of Moses. Instead,
the evidence that the messiah and his disciples kept the Phasekh sacrifice and
supper on the night of the 14th, therefore before Yahushuas death, is inter-
preted as a pre-Phasekh enacted parable. The Last Supper, accordingly, was
merely a foretype of the Christian Phasekh that was to be kept on the first day
of the week that fell from the 15th to 21st days of the first moon, being the cel-
ebration of the messiahs resurrection.
System F, meanwhile, was a Syrian development that sought to breach the
differences between System E and the opposition forces from System A.
Nevertheless, it actually served as a transitional phase in Syria and other parts
of the East, leading them from Systems A and D to System E. Once the East
had come to the understanding that the seven-day period for unleavened
bread actually extended from the 15th until the end of the 21st, it opened the
door to the full acceptance of the Hasidic premises for the System E construct.
When this transition period was over, the East had adopted System E.
The present-day incarnation, so-to-speak, of System F is System G. Like its
antecedent, System G observes the 14th as Phasekh and keeps the 15th until
the end of the 21st as the seven days of unleavened bread. It differs in that it
does not observe the first day of the week following the 14th as the Phasekh
of the resurrection, though it does count that day as the first of the 50-day
count to Pentecost. Rather, System G keeps the 15th as the Feast of Unleavened
Bread and observes both the 15th and the 21st as high Sabbaths.
338 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
Chapt er XXII
The Christ ian Pent ecost
I
n the first centuries of our common era, the 50-day Christian festival of
Pentecost, like its Jewish counterpart, was inseparably connected with
Phasekh. Epiphanius sums up the orthodox Christian position by referring to
Acts, 20:16, which speaks of how the apostle Saul (Paul) hastened to keep the
Festival of Pentecost at Jerusalem. He then comments, But what Pentecost
was Paul keeping if he had not kept the Phasekh?
1
Christians observed not only the first and last days of this period with spe-
cial reverence but actually considered the entire 50 days to be significant. The
day of the omer wave offering, being the first of the 50 days, was considered
the day of the messiahs resurrection, also known as the Sovereigns day. The
observation of the Sovereigns day and its connection with the Pentecost sea-
son provided the foundation for the development of the western Christian
Phasekh systems.
The Early Assembly
The 50 days of Pentecost were very important to the early Christian assem-
blies. As J. Van Goudoever so poignantly observes:
The primitive Christian Church kept not only Pass-
over, but also the period of seven weeks or fifty days
called Pentecost.
2
The entire 50 days were celebrated with special emphasis being placed
upon the first and last days. The early assemblies, therefore, celebrated three
aspects of Pentecost:
(1) The 50th day, being the Festival of Weeks (Pentecost), upon which day
the sacred ruach came down upon the gathered assembly in the year of
the messiahs resurrection.
(2) The day of the omer wave offering, being the first day of the 50 days.
Upon this day the messiah rose from the dead and breathed the sacred
ruach upon his disciples.
(3) The entire 50-day period, which was seen as a joyful time, reflecting
the dwelling of mankind with the messiah in the kingdom of Yahweh.
339
1
Epiphanius, Pan., 75:6:1.
2
BCal, p. 164.
The 50th Day
The observance of the 50th day, which day is properly called Pentecost and
the Festival of Weeks, gained its authority from the fact that, in the year of the
messiahs death, his disciples kept this celebration with one accord during
their stay at Jerusalem.
3
It was while they were gathered at this event, as told
in the book of Acts, that the sacred ruach suddenly came down out of heaven
as a rushing, violent wind, filling the whole house where the disciples were
sitting.
4
This ruach, appearing in the form of divided tongues of flame, then
proceeded to set upon each of those in the gathered assembly.
5
The sacred
ruach allowed those upon whom it rested to prophesy in foreign languages, so
as to be understood by visitors from various nations.
6
It was a sign that the
word of the messiah was being sent out to all the nations of the world.
With the descent of the sacred ruach also came a new revelation to the
apostles. Inspired by the ruach, Keph (Peter) delivered his famous Pentecost
speech: it is by the messiahs death and resurrection that there shall come a
resurrection of the dead. It is also by his death and resurrection that salvation
shall come to all mankind, all who call upon the name Yahweh.
7
Upon hear-
ing these words, about 3000 people were baptized and added to the ranks of
the assembly. Many more joined in the following days.
8
For these reasons, many early Christians considered Pentecost day as the
first day of the Christian community. It was the beginning of a new era, the
era of the Christian Assembly.
9
Authority for the continued observance of
Pentecost was reinforced by Saul (Paul), the apostle to the nations,
10
when
he was recorded in the New Testament as having recognized Pentecost dur-
ing his ministry.
11
Pentecost, accordingly, became the festival of the
New Covenant.
12
Subsequently, due to its strong scriptural authority, all of the early assem-
blies, regardless of their respective Phasekh system, kept the festival of
Pentecost. The early second century C.E. Quartodeciman Epistula Apostolorum,
for example, speaks of both Pentecost and Phasekh as festivals that would
continue far into the future.
13
The early western assemblies likewise kept
340 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
3
Acts, 2:1.
4
Acts, 2:2.
5
Acts, 2:3.
6
Acts, 2:412. The Greek word glwv ssai~ (glosssais) means, tongue, as the organ of speech
. . . language or dialect (GEL, 1968, p. 353); the tongue; by impl. a language (SEC, Gk. #1100). That
the passage refers to foreign languages and not some meaningless babbling is confirmed by the
response of those coming from other nations who were hearing the disciples speak. They ques-
tioned, and how do we hear them each in his own dialect? (Acts, 2:8) For this reason the NJB
translates Acts, 2:4, as to speak different languages; and the AB renders it, to speak in other
(different, foreign) languages; and NTB gives, to speak in foreign tongues.
7
Acts, 2:1340. In v. 21, Keph quotes Joel, 2:32, All who shall call upon the name of Yahweh
shall be saved (cf. SRB, loc. cit., p. 1151, n. g; AB, loc. cit., p. 174; REB, loc. cit., p. 121, n. a, and at
Rom., 10:13, p. 159, n. f).
8
Acts, 2:4147.
9
BCal, pp. 228, 233.
10
Rom., 11:13; 1 Tim., 2:7; 2 Tim., 1:11.
11
Acts, 20:16 (Saul at Jerusalem); 1 Cor., 16:8 (Saul at Ephesus).
12
BCal, p. 233.
13
Epist. Apost., 17.
Pentecost. It is mentioned, for instance, in the Acts of Paul (c.180 C.E.),
14
and
shortly thereafter by Irenaeus,
15
Tertullian,
16
and Origen. Origen even notes
that Christians of his day were often criticized for keeping Pentecost.
17
Eusebius writes:
For when we have well and duly passed the Passage
(Phasekh), another, greater festival awaits us there.
The children of the Hebrews call it by the name of
Pentecost, and it bears the likeness of the kingdom
of heaven.
18
Didymus of Alexandria (c.387 C.E.) similarly reports:
After this solemnity (Phasekh) we shall also celebrate
the Feast of Weeks, called Pentecost, on which we
shall reap as perfect sheaves and fullest ears that
which flowered in the spring.
19
Ambrose of Milan (c.389 C.E.) states:
In spring we have the Phasekh, when I am saved; in
summer we have the Pentecost, when we celebrate
the glory of the resurrection after the manner of the
age to come.
20
Athanasius, after telling his Christian readers, Let us keep the sacred fes-
tival (of Phasekh), advises:
. . . adding day by day the sacred Pentecost, which
we regard as festival upon festival, we shall keep the
festival of the ruach who is already near (us) through
the messiah Yahushua.
21
Support for the observance of Pentecost was so strong that any Christian
who failed to keep Pentecost was condemned as a heretic at the Council of
Elvira (c.303306 C.E.):
It has been decided to correct a bad custom according
to the authority of the Scriptures, so that we all
celebrate the day of Pentecost; and that anyone who
does not should be marked as having brought in a
new heresy.
22
341 The Christ ian Pent ecost
14
Acta Pauli, 1:3032.
15
Irenaeus, frag. 7; Ps.-Justin, 115.
16
Tertullian, de Cor., 3, de Bapt., 19.
17
Origen, Celsus, 8:22.
18
Eusebius, Pas., 4.
19
Didymus, 5:88.
20
Ambrose, Exp. Luc., 10:34.
21
Athanasius, Fest. Let., 14:6.
22
Syn. Elvira, Can., 43. This edict was written against those who abandoned the 50th day of
Pentecost and kept only the 40th day, the day of Ascension (cf., Acts, 1:112). In the Codex
Toletanus I, this clause reads, so that after the Phasekh we should all celebrate not the 40th but
Early Christian lectionaries demonstrate the various features of Pentecost,
which included its role as a festival of covenant, as a festival of revelation, as
a festival of Law-giving, and as the gathering around Mount Sinai.
23
The
Christians often compared the events that occurred at Mount Sinai immedi-
ately after the Exodus, the great assembly gathered there and the giving of
the Torah of Moses, with the experience of the disciples on Pentecost day
during the year of the messiahs death and resurrection. Augustine, for
example, writes:
In former times Moses received the Torah on Mount
Sinai and he proclaimed the commandments of the
sovereign before the people. There the deity came
down to the mountain, here the sacred ruach came to
be visible in tongues of fire.
24
Chrysostom similarly states that, the ruach which had Moses render the
Torah to the Hebrews now came down for the salvation of all people.
25
In an-
other place he writes:
On that day the Torah was given according to the Old
Covenant, on the same day the sacred ruach came ac-
cording to the new grace; on that day Moses received
the Tablets of the Torah, on the same day the choir of
the apostles received the ruach coming down, instead
of the Tablets which were given to Moses.
26
The Christian Pentecost of the second century C.E. was imbued with the
theme of representing the future day on which the messiah would offer his
followers to father Yahweh. It was connected with the establishment of
Yahwehs kingdom on earth and the time when the saved would dwell in the
kingdom of Yahweh. By the fourth century C.E. the Christian meaning for
Pentecost began to shift in emphasis. In the writings of Athanasius of
Alexandria (342 C.E.), to demonstrate, he refers to Pentecost as the festival of
the ruach, which is already near through messiah Yahushua.
27
As Raniero
Cantalamessa points out, Pentecost becomes more and more clearly the feast
of the Spirit, and is thought of as the spiritual presence of Christ among
his disciples.
28
Day of the Omer Wave Offering
The first day of the 50 days of Pentecost, being the day of the omer wave
offering, was observed by the early Christian assemblies as the anniversary of
the messiahs resurrection. The well-known Christian theologian and writer
342 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
the 50th as the day of Pentecost (EEC, p. 195, n. a). An ancient epitome of these canons summa-
rizes Canon 43 thusly: After the Phasekh let the 50th, not the 40th (day), be kept.
23
BCal, pp. 188190.
24
Augustine, Serm., 186.
25
PG, 64, p. 420.
26
PG, 63, p. 933.
27
Athanasius, Fest. Let., 14:6.
28
EEC, p. 168, #61, n. b.
Clement of Alexandria (end of the second century C.E.), as one example, em-
phasized the connection between the omer wave offering and the resurrection.
He writes that Yahushua arose from the dead on the first day of the weeks of
harvest, on which the priest offered the first drav gma (dragma = omer) according
to the Torah.
29
Epiphanius, after quoting Deuteronomy, 16:9, and in reference
to the messiahs death, states that the omer wave offering came on the third
day after the slaughter of the Phasekh lamb because it foreshadowed that
blessed omer who has been raised from the dead and is offered from the earth
on the third day.
30
It was on this same day that the messiah appeared to his disciples, who
had hidden themselves in a locked house for fear of the Jews. After showing
the nail holes in his hands and the wound on his side, Yahushua said to them,
Peace to you; as the father has sent me forth, I send you. Having said these
things, he breathed on (them), and said to them, Receive the sacred ruach.
31
This day, therefore, was the beginning of their apostolic mission to go out
among the nations, taking the sacred ruach with them.
The ramifications of observing the day of the omer wave offering as the an-
niversary of the messiahs resurrection and its effects on the western Christian
Phasekh systems will be examined in some detail in our next chapter. For now
it is only necessary to point out that the first day of the 50-day count to
Pentecost was designated as the Sovereigns day, an important appellation
for the day of the Phasekh Eucharist celebration for the western systems.
The 50-Day Period
Finally, because the ruach was given by the resurrected messiah to the
apostles on the day of the omer wave offering, and then the sacred ruach came
down upon the gathered assembly on the 50th day (the Festival of Weeks), the
entire 50-day period of Pentecost was celebrated with rejoicing.
32
According to
Tertullian, who followed the western Phasekh system, we rejoice from
Phasekh (the day of the resurrection) to Pentecost day.
33
He further notes
that, for the Christians of his day, the period from resurrection day to
Pentecost was one long festal day,
34
50 days of pure exultation.
35
Hippolytus, after writing that the messiah is prefigured in the Phasekh and
was sacrificed as our Phasekh, then connects this 50-day period with the heav-
enly kingdom. He writes that the messiah was prefigured in both the Phasekh
and the Pentecost, so that he might fulfill the mysteries prophesied about him:
In the Pentecost, that he might make an advance
sign of the kingdom of heaven, (by) going up into
heaven first himself and offering humanity as a gift
to the deity.
36
343 The Christ ian Pent ecost
29
Chron. Paschale, 1, p. 15.
30
Epiphanius, Pan., 51:31.
31
John, 20:22f.
32
BCal, p. 229; EEC, p. 168, #61, n. a.
33
Tertullian, de Cor., 3. Tertullian followed the western system for Phasekh, which observed
the first day of the week after the 14th of Abib as the Phasekh of the resurrection.
34
Tertullian, de Bapt., 19.
35
Tertullian, de Jejun., 14.
36
Hippolytus, Elk. and Han. (frag. 5); quoted by Theodoret, Dial., 2:11. The messiah went to
heaven both on the first and several days after (Mark, 16:919; John, 20:15f, cf., John, 20:1929
Origen refers to this period as the time of leaving the affairs of this life and
hastening toward the city of Yahweh. It is a prophetic period, a type of our
being risen from death with the messiah and made to sit with him in the heav-
enly places, at which time, one is always living in the days of the
Pentecost.
37
Therefore, it is a period of supplication and prayer, so as to be-
come worthy of the mighty rushing wind from heaven, which compels the
evil in mortals and its consequences to disappear, and so that one becomes
worthy also of some share in the fiery tongue given by the deity.
38
Eusebius,
meanwhile, makes the following point:
. . . after the Phasekh, we celebrate the Pentecost for
seven complete weeks, having soldiered through the
previous 40-day period of asceticism (Lent) in the six
weeks before the Phasekh. . . . The labors of that ob-
servance are fittingly succeeded by the second festi-
val, seven weeks long, with an increase of repose for
us, symbolized by the number seven. But the number
of the Pentecost is not constituted by these seven
weeks: going one day beyond, it seals them on the
first day (of the week) with the solemnity of Christs
assumption. In these days of the sacred Pentecost,
therefore, we are right to represent our future re-
freshment by rejoicing our lives and resting the body
as though we were already united to the Bridegroom
and incapable of fasting . . .
39
Aristocratic Christian Pentecost
Vitally important for our discussion is the fact that the early Christians deter-
mined Pentecost by the Aristocratic method, i.e., its 50 days were counted
from the first day of the week, which is the day after the weekly Sabbath, that
followed the 14th of Abib.
40
This detail is certainly not surprising, since the
original Christian assemblies were all Quartodeciman and all subsequent as-
semblies acquired their first views from that Aristocratic-based group.
Though this date was ascribed in the Torah to the time when the high priest
was to provide the omer wave offering, the New Testament makes it the date
of the messiahs resurrection.
For the Christians, the 50th day of Pentecost always fell on the first day of
the week (Sunday).
41
As shown above, Eusebius makes the 50th day fall on the
first day of the week, being a seal on the seven weeks.
42
Egeria (c.383 C.E.), as
344 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
with Luke, 24:3640) and on the 40th day (Acts, 1:19) of these 50 days. On the offering of re-
deemed humanity to father Yahweh, seen as the meaning behind the offering of the firstfruits
(Lev., 23:1014, 1620), also see Hippolytus, Noetus, 4; Irenaeus, Ag. Her., 3:17:2.
37
Origen, Celsus, 8:22.
38
Ibid.
39
Eusebius, Pas., 5.
40
See above Chap. XVI, pp. 247250.
41
ACC, 2, pp. 11571161.
42
Eusebius, Pas., 6.
another example, reports that in her day, for the Christians living in
Jerusalem, The 50th day is a Sunday.
43
The Syriac Teaching of the Apostles sim-
ilarly connects the first day of the week and the end of Pentecost.
44
This
same work goes on to comment that, by the same gift of the ruach which was
given to them on that day, they appointed ordinances and laws.
45
It is manifest that if the 50th day always fell on the first day of the week
then the first day of that same 50-day periodthe day of the omer wave of-
feringdid likewise. As already demonstrated, eminent early Christian writ-
ers, such as Clement of Alexandria and Epiphanius,
46
identified the day of
Yahushuas resurrection with the day of the omer wave offering. In accordance
with this view, the New Testament records that the messiah both rose from the
dead and breathed the ruach on his disciples during the first day of the week
that followed the day of the Phasekh sacrifice (Abib 14).
47
Conforming to this understanding, Justin Martyr writes that Yahushua
rose from the dead on the day after Saturns day (i.e., the Sabbath day),
48
on
the first day of the week which is also called the day of the hliv ou (heliou;
sun),
49
i.e., Sunday. On this point, there was near unanimity among all of the
early Christian assemblies, whether Quartodeciman, Roman, quasi-Quarto-
deciman, or gnostic.
50
As a result, it was from the first day of the week
(Phasekh Sunday) following the 14th of Abib that the early Christians began
to count Pentecost. Athanasius, for instance, states:
From this day (the first day of the week, the day of
the resurrection) we count one by one seven more
weeks and celebrate the sacred day of Pentecost. This
was formerly foreshadowed among the Jews under
the name of the Feast of Weeks; it was the time for
freeing (those in bondage) and forgiving debts, in
sum, it was a day of all kinds of freedom. Since that
time is for us a symbol of the world to come, we shall
celebrate the great Sunday (Pentecost Sunday), en-
joying here the first installment of that eternal life.
But when we shall depart hence, then we shall cele-
brate the full festival with the messiah.
51
With particular reference to the Pentecost day reported in Acts, 2:13, the
Constitutiones Apostolicae calculates:
345 The Christ ian Pent ecost
43
Egeria, 43:1.
44
ANCL, 20, pp. 36f; BCal, p. 187.
45
ANCL, 20, p. 38.
46
Chron. Paschale, 1, p. 15; Epiphanius, Pan., 51:31.
47
Matt., 26:1721, 27:62, 28:17; Mark, 14:1218, 15:4244, 16:16; Luke, 22:716, 23:44, 5056,
24:16; John, 18:28, 19:13f, 3842, 20:1f, 1923.
48
That Saturns day (= Saturday) is the Sabbath day see, for example, Tacitus, Hist., 5:4; Dio,
37:1519, 49:22:3f. Also see HBC, pp. 15f; ACC, 2, pp. 11371141.
49
Justin Mart., 1 Apol., 67.
50
On a small number of variant views of the three days and nights of the messiahs stay in
the grave see FSDY, 2.
51
Athanasius, Fest. Let., 1:10. That Great Sunday is Pentecost see ECC, p. 167, #58, n. e.
And again, from the first Sunday (Phasekh Sunday)
count 40 days, and on Thursday celebrate the
Festival of Assumption of the sovereign (Acts, 1:19).
. . . When the 50th day from the first Sunday arrives,
you are to have a great festival; for on it, at the third
hour, the sovereign Yahushua sent us the gift of the
sacred ruach (Acts, 2:13).
52
Theophilus of Alexandria (401 C.E.) likewise counts to Pentecost using this
method. He reports:
. . . on the next day (after the Sabbath day fast, i.e., on
Sunday), which is the symbol of the sovereigns
resurrection, let us celebrate the true Phasekh. Then
let us add to these seven more weeks, which com-
pose the festivity of Pentecost, and present ourselves
worthy of the communion of the body and blood of
the messiah.
53
A poem of Paulinus of Nola similarly counts to Pentecost from resurrec-
tion Sunday (Phasekh Sunday). He writes:
Yet the whole world with equal devotion everywhere
venerates this lofty mystery of great love toward
humankind in a particular month each year, when it
celebrates the eternal king risen with a restored body.
After this solemn festival (Phasekh Sunday)we cal-
culate seven weeks before this sacred day comes
around for mortalscomes the day on which the
sacred ruach was of old sent down from the heights of
heaven in parted tongues of fiery light.
54
Origen makes the number 50 sacred and directly points to Pentecost as
his prime example. He becomes even more specific and reports that each of
the seven weeks of Pentecost ends with a Sabbath day:
The number 50 moreover contains seven Sabbaths,
a Sabbath of Sabbaths and also above these full
Sabbaths a new beginning in the eighth of a really
new rest that remains above the Sabbath.
55
It is therefore manifest that the early Christians calculated the day of the
omer wave offering and Pentecost by the Aristocratic method. Neither has this
fact escaped the eyes of present day scholars. J. Van Goudoever, for example,
346 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
52
Apost. Constit., 5:20:2, 4.
53
Theophilus Alex., 20:4.
54
Paulinus, Poem, 27.
55
Origen, 150 Ps., frag. on Ps. 3; GCS, 1, pp. 138f; BCal, p. 185.
several times concludes that the Christian system is based upon the old
Israelite priestly calendar.
56
He writes:
When we read that the stone was rolled from the sep-
ulcher and that Jesus arose from the dead on the Sun-
day after Passover, we must realize that the earliest
Christians followed the old priestly calendar in which
the 50 days were counted from the Sunday after
Passover. So the Christians among the listeners in the
synagogue could immediately infer that the Gospels
teach that Jesus arose from the dead on the first day
of the 50 days; just as Jesus was crucified on a special
day, Passover, because he was the true Passover
according to John, so he arose from the dead on a
special liturgical day, the first day of harvest.
57
It is also recognized that, just because the Christians used the Aristocratic sys-
tem for determining Pentecost, it does not mean that they followed the Saddu-
cees. Rather, as Goudoever states, they were merely following the more ancient
system used by the original Zadok (Tsadoq) priests of Israel. He concludes:
The early Christians perhaps did not favour the
Sadducees, but rather the old Zadokite tradition to
which the Sadducees were one of the heirs.
58
The Sovereigns Resurrection Day
For the early Christians, whether their Phasekh system was Quartodeciman
or one of the later western views, the day of the omer wave offering was the
anniversary of the messiahs resurrection.
59
In turn, because the title kuv rio~
(kurios; sovereign)
60
was applied to Yahushua the messiah, we find that from
347 The Christ ian Pent ecost
56
BCal, pp. 174f, Since the Jews of the second century of our era did not count the fifty days
from Sunday to Sunday, the early Christians in that century did not recognise their way of count-
ing as an originally Israelite counting; p. 175, Since, however, we know that the Israelites, be-
fore our era, counted their fifty days from Sunday to Sunday, at least in one important (priestly)
tradition, we are able to recognize that the Christian liturgical calendar is also in this point allied
with the Israelite calendar; we recognize in the celebration of Easter in continuation of the first
day (viz. Sunday) of the fifty days of harvest; p. 221, The first of the 50 days, being a Sunday in
the priestly Israelite calendar, was the day on which the first sheaf was brought to the Temple; for
the Christians it was the day on which Jesus arose from the dead. The 50th day was, like the 50th
year, a time appropriate for Revelation to both the Israelite and the Christians, although in
Judaism this day is not developed until the second century A.D.; p. 226, If in all four Gospels
the Sunday after Passover is the first day of harvest, then it is clear that the Synoptic Gospels use
the old priestly calendar in which the 50 days are counted from Sunday to Sunday. . . . The use
by the earliest Christians of the old priestly calendar does not seem remarkable when we re-
member that between 24 B.C. to 65 A.D. the high priests in the Temple of Jerusalem were mem-
bers of the family of Boethus. These Boethusians are explicitly mentioned by the Mishnah as those
who counted the 50 days from Sunday to Sunday (cf., Men., 10:3).
57
BCal, p. 225.
58
BCal, p. 226.
59
E.g., Epiphanius, Pan., 51:31; Chron. Paschale, 1, p. 15.
60
SEC, Gk. #2962, supreme in authority, i.e. (as noun) controller; by impl. Mr. (as a respectful
title); GEL, 1968, p. 1013, of persons, having power or authority over.
the time of the Quartodeciman writer John the divine (c.96 C.E.)
61
this annual
celebration was identified as th/ kuriakh/ ` hJ mev ra/ (te kuriake hemera; the
Sovereigns day), th` ~ kuriakh` ` ~ (tes kuriakes; the Sovereigns [day]), and th` ~
kuriakh` ` ~ hJ mev ra/ (tes kuriakes hemera; the Sovereigns day),
62
commonly known
in the English vernacular as the Lords day. By the final decade of the sec-
ond century C.E., the western assemblies gave a far greater latitude to this
expression so as to extend it to every Sunday.
63
348 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
61
John the divine is said to have had his vision on the island of Patmos in the 15th year of
Domitian (i.e., 96 C.E.) (Eusebius, H.E., 3:18:13:23:4; cf., Irenaeus, Ag. Her., 5:30:3, toward the
end of Domitians reign). For the confusion between the apostle John, one of the twelve disci-
ples, and John the divine, the student of the apostle John, see the appropriate Appendix in
FSDY, 2. John, one of the twelve, authored the book of John and the epistles 1 through 3 of John.
John the divine authored the book of Revelation.
62
Rev., 1:10, John the divine states, I became in the ruach on th` / kuriakh/ ` hJ mev ra/ (te kuriake
hemera; the Sovereigns day). There is absolutely no indication whatsoever in this book or from
this period that the Sovereigns day is a weekly Sunday. That construct does not appear for an-
other full century. As C. W. Dugmore correctly argues, why should we doubt that this expression,
like others of its class, refers to anything else than resurrection Sunday? (SNT, 6, p. 277). Frank H.
Yost, on the other side, argues that this expression should better refer to the weekly Sabbath day
(ECS, pp. 27f). Yet his reasoning seems unlikely, since in this form this expression is found
nowhere else in Scriptures, let alone in reference to the Sabbath day. Further, if the Sabbath day
had been the date intended, John would more likely have said on the Sabbath day. Similarly, if
John had meant the Phasekh he would have said, on the day of the Phasekh.
On the other hand, the expression hJ hJ mev ra kuv rio~ (he hemera kurios; the day of the sovereign)
mentioned in 2 Pet., 3:10, as demonstrated by its context (2 Pet., 3:313, cf., Rev., 20:115), and in
1 Thess., 5:2, is a clear reference to the day of Yahweh, i.e., the Judgment Day, as found in Isa.,
2:122, 13:615; Jer., 30:7ff, 46:10ff; Joel, 2:113, 3:1217; Obad., 1:15f; Zeph., 1:718; Zech., 14:121;
Mal., 3:14:5; (cf., LXX of these verses). At the same time, as we shall demonstrate in our second vol-
ume, there is a connection made later in the western Christian assemblies between the day of Yahweh
(the Judgment Day), being the eighth 1,000-year period (= the eighth day) in human history, and the
development of their construct of the Sovereigns day to reflect a weekly Sunday observance.
The next Quartodeciman reference to the resurrection day as the Sovereigns day comes in the
Didache, 14:1 (early second century C.E.). Later, the Quartodeciman Melito of Sardis wrote a book
on the subject (Eusebius, H.E., 4:26:2). Among the western assemblies, Dionysius of Corinth,
about the year 170 C.E., reports that they read Clement of Romes letter to them on the sacred
Sovereigns day (Eusebius, H.E., 4:23:11). They obviously did not read it every week but annually
on the resurrection day. The spurious GN Peter (c.180 C.E.) similarly refers to the day that Mary
Magdalene came to the tomb of the messiah and found him gone as the Sovereigns day (12).
Even Irenaeus (c.185 C.E.) refers to the Sovereigns day as the annual celebration of the resurrec-
tion (Ps.-Justin, 115). In none of these or any other comparable record from the time before the last
decade of the second century C.E. is there any indication that a weekly Sovereigns day was
observed, only an annual celebration.
63
Some try to superimpose the concept of a weekly Sovereigns day (Sunday) observance
back to the sixth decade of the first century C.E. (e.g., ECY, pp. 13, 22). As we shall prove in our
third volume of this series, there is no New Testament evidence of this whatsoever. The method
used by those who improperly claim this connection is to superimpose a later definition back
upon earlier documents or statements. Early Church fathers, likewise, give no such definition.
Ignatius, Mag., 9, for example, contrary to the assertion of some, says nothing of the kind (ECS,
pp. 30f; SNT, 6, pp. 279f) and Justin Martyr (mid-second century C.E.) never once defined the
weekly Sunday observance practiced at Rome as the weekly Sovereigns day (Justin Mart.,
1 Apol., 67). The first actual references to the Sovereigns day as every Sunday occurs after the es-
tablishment of the System E Phasekh in 196 C.E. Tertullian, de Jejun., 1415, written about 208 C.E.,
for example, places the weekly Sabbaths together with the Sovereigns days as those days on
which one was not to fast. Origen, Celsus, 8:22, writing about 248 C.E., also speaks of keeping the
plural Sovereigns days (cf., EEC, p. 155, #43, n. a). It was at this time that the weekly Sunday wor-
ship (the eighth day), as developed in the Roman assembly, was merged with the identity of the
Sovereigns day. This transformation also occasioned the expansion of the Eucharist into a weekly
(if not daily) occurrence. For more information see our discussion in FSDY, 3.
Rupert of Deutz (12th century C.E.), as an example, notes that many
Christians believed that on the first day of the week the sovereign rose and
that this is why it is called the day of the sovereigns resurrection.
64
Gaudentius of Brescia (died 406 C.E.) likewise states that the messiah rose on
the Sovereigns day, which the Scriptures call the first day of the week.
65
Archaeus (late second century C.E.), meanwhile, in a discussion about the
Sovereigns day, comments:
For on that day (the Sovereigns day), the mystery of
the resurrection, of unchangeable hope, and of inher-
iting the kingdom was established. At this time, the
sovereign (Yahushua) triumphed over humanitys
enemydeathhis body having been revived,
which will never die any more but with the ruach
continues on unchangeable. This is the body, en-
veloped with glory, which he offered to the father,
when the gates of heaven opened to him.
66
We also have an indirect report of a statement made in the original works
of Irenaeus. This report mentions an early Christian tradition of not kneeling
in prayer on the Sovereigns day,
67
which began during so-called apostolic
times (i.e., before 133 C.E.).
68
This custom was based upon the connection be-
tween the Sovereigns day and the messiahs resurrection. We read:
Not kneeling on the Sovereigns day is a symbol of
the resurrection through which by the messiahs
grace we have been freed from our sins and from the
death they made us die. The aforesaid custom had its
beginning from apostolic times, says the blessed
Irenaeus, the martyr and bishop of Lyons, in his
book On Phasekh. In it he also mentions the Pentecost,
during which we do not kneel, since it is the equiva-
lent of the Sovereigns day, for the aforementioned
reason.
69
Just how early the Sovereigns day was recognized by Christians is
demonstrated by the Quartodecimans, who as we have already demonstrated
represent the earliest Christian practices. From their records one discovers
that the conservative Quartodeciman assemblies not only observed the
Phasekh on the 14th of Abib but acknowledged the Sovereigns day as the day
349 The Christ ian Pent ecost
64
Rupert, 6:26.
65
Gaudentius, Tract., 1, on 3:10:13.
66
Archaeus, frag. (PG, 5, p. 1490). In the Arabic version, the fragment is attributed to
Archaeus but in the Syriac version it was composed by Irenaeus (see EEC, p. 147, #31).
67
This custom is mentioned in the Acta Pauli, 1 (c.180 C.E.), by Tertullian, de Orat., 23:1f;
Origen, 150 Ps. (GCS, 1, p. 138; EEC, p. 147); Conc. Nicaea, Can., 20; Eusebius, Pas., 5; and
Epiphanius, Expos. Faith, 22:5ff.
68
The early Christian expression apostolic times refers to the age of the circumcised bishops
of Jerusalem, i.e., until 133 C.E., see FSDY, 2.
69
Quoted by Ps.-Justin, 115.
of the messiahs resurrection. To demonstrate, the Coptic text of the Quarto-
deciman Epistula Apostolorum mentions the Sovereigns day as the first day of
the week, the day on which the messiah came into being by means of the
resurrection.
70
The prominent Quartodeciman writer Melito of Sardis of the
mid-second century C.E. wrote a treatise entitled On the Sovereigns (Day).
71
The Didache (early second century C.E.) instructs those in the assembly, On
the Sovereigns (day) of the sovereign, assemble in common to break bread
and offer thanks.
72
In the corresponding passage of the Constitutiones
Apostolicae, we find the words, the day of the resurrection of the sovereign,
that is, the Sovereigns day. This document also refers to the resurrection day
as the first Sovereigns day.
73
Until the end of the first century C.E., the Sovereigns day was still only a
once-a-year event serving as the anniversary of the messiahs resurrection.
74
Yet as time progressed, and as various Christian assemblies pressed to differ-
entiate themselves from the Jews, a tradition built up that every Sunday
should be the Sovereigns day.
75
This transition took place under the guidance
of the Roman and Alexandrian assemblies. It became part of their general
effort to expand the Eucharist mystery from strictly a Phasekh practice to an
every Sunday event.
76
350 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
70
Epist. Apost., 17f. The conclusion that the messiah was raised early on the first day of the
week is based upon the statements made in Matt., 28:19; Mark, 16:16; Luke, 24:17, cf., v. 1324;
John, 20:1f.
71
Eusebius, H.E., 4:26:2; Hall, Melito, frag. 16b. The book itself is now lost to us.
72
Didache, 14:1. The unique expression, the Sovereigns (day) of the sovereign, used in this
passage, clearly refers to the resurrection day connected with the Phasekh season and not, as some
have glossed, to the weekly Sovereigns day. In the early centuries C.E. Christians still utilized the sa-
cred name Yahweh, which name was expunged from later copies of these early documents because it
was considered too sacred to utter. Returned to its original form, the statement would read, the
Sovereigns (day) of Yahweh.
73
Apost. Constit., 5:20.
74
The idea that the Sovereigns day for early Christians was originally every Sunday is a
popular but common misnomer built out of theological wishful thinking. The expression
th` / kuriakh` / hJ mev ra/ (te kuriake hemera; the Sovereigns day) is found in that form only once in all of
Scriptures (Rev., 1:10). In this single passage it is clear that John the divine is speaking only of the
day of the omer wave offering or resurrection day and not the first day of any particular week.
The association with the first day of the week comes when the Scriptures claim that a day with
Yahweh is as a thousand years and the Judgment Day is to be determined in this fashion (Ps.,
84:10, 90:4; 1 Pet., 2:9, 3:713, esp. v. 8). In turn, the Judgment Day follows the great thousand-year
long Sabbath reign of the messiah (Heb., 3:74:13, esp. 4:9; cf., Rev., 20:48). Since the great thou-
sand-year Sabbath reign of the messiah was equated with the seventh day of the week (Heb.,
3:74:13, esp. 4:47), the Judgment Day was the eighth day. The connection between the
Sovereigns day and the eighth day, accordingly, was emphasized by early Christian writers (see
FSDY, 3). The Epistula Apostolorum, for example, in reference to the resurrection day, quotes the
messiah as saying, I have come into being on the eighth (day) which is the Sovereigns day
(Epist. Apost., 18).
At the end of the second century C.E., the definition for the Sovereigns day was expanded to
every Sunday under the guise that it represented the eighth day. This idea was built upon an ear-
lier Roman Christian innovation of worshiping on Sunday. Justin Martyr, for instance, writes,
For the first day after the Sabbath, remaining the first of all days, is called however the eighth,
according to the number of all the days of the cycle, and yet it remains the first (Justin Mart.,
Trypho, 41:4). This interpretation was then utilized by the Roman and Alexandrian assemblies as
a reason to drop the Sabbath day and replace it with the Sovereigns day for a weekly celebration.
See FSDY, 3, for more details.
75
See FSDY, 3.
76
See FSDY, 2.
Conclusion
The evidence presented so far reveals conclusively that the early Christian
assemblies not only continued the observance of Pentecost but calculated it
based upon the Aristocratic method. This detail advances the knowledge that
the first Christian assemblies observed the Aristocratic systems for both the
Phasekh and Pentecost. This fact is our first indication that the earliest
Christians believed that the ancient Zadokite or Aristocratic observances of
the Khag of Phasekh and Unleavened Bread and the Khag of Pentecost were
the original and intended observances of the Torah of Moses.
At the same time, another most revealing factor has been brought to light.
The day of the omer wave offering, being the day of the messiahs resurrection
and identified as the Sovereigns day, was one and the same with the day cel-
ebrated by the western Christian assemblies for their Phasekh Eucharist. This
fact compels us to explore the influence of the Christian Pentecost and the day
of the omer wave offering upon the development of the western Christian sys-
tems for the Phasekh of the resurrection (Phasekh Sunday).
351 The Christ ian Pent ecost
Chapt er XXIII
The Role of Pent ecost on
t he Christ ian Phasekh
W
hat has gone almost unnoticed in the discussion of the observance of
the Christian Phasekh is the vital role that the 50-day celebration of
Pentecost has played in its transformation. The interpretation that the seven
weeks of Pentecost were a time of rejoicing, the Aristocratic calculation for
that period, and the connection between the day of the resurrection and the
day of the omer wave offering were all combined together and served as
the mechanism for altering the original Quartodeciman Phasekh practice. The
West merely shifted their emphasis from the Phasekh of the suffering to
the Phasekh of the resurrection and in doing so moved the observance of the
mystery of the Eucharist celebration from the 14th of Abib to the following
first day of the week.
At the same time, the breaking of unleavened bread and the giving of
thanks on the Sovereigns day were already a well-established practice by the
Quartodecimans when the Christians at Rome and other western cities aban-
doned that system and began to form System D. Accordingly, it was the orig-
inal Quartodeciman practice to offer Eucharist with unleavened bread on the
day of the resurrection (omer wave offering) and their taking special notice of
the Sovereigns day that served as the justification for the subsequent diversi-
fication of the Phasekh celebration. Within a century after Yahushuas resur-
rection, the Sovereigns day had been transformed in importance far beyond
that which had originally been contemplated by the earlier Quartodeciman
members. It had become so popular in parts of Egypt, Rome, and other dis-
tricts of the West that it became the day of the Phasekh Eucharist rather than
the 14th of Abib.
A Shift in Emphasis
By the end of the first century C.E., as Raniero Cantalamessa points out, the
paschalization of the story of Yahushua remained incomplete in the eyes of
many Christians, for none of the evangelists applies it to the event of his res-
urrection.
1
In the eyes of many westerners, the day of the resurrection and its
importance simply required more attention. To them it was not only a mo-
mentous event during the week of Phasekh but a turning point in history as
well. As a result, some of the western assemblies began to shift their empha-
sis to the Sovereigns day, making it the primary focus point for the Phasekh
week and the Eucharist mystery.
353
1
EEC, p. 7.
This shift was aided by the common usage of the name Phasekh to en-
compass the entire seven days of unleavened bread. It was surmised that the
Eucharist mystery of Phasekh, therefore, could fall on any one of those days.
The Phasekh of the resurrection (observed only on the Sovereigns day),
meanwhile, could also fall on any one of these seven days of unleavened
bread. By making all seven days equally the Phasekh, the Sovereigns day was
raised to an importance above the singular day of the Phasekh celebration on
the 14th (the day of the messiahs suffering). The Chronicon Paschale (mid-
seventh century C.E.) expresses this view when it states:
Necessarily, therefore, the Assembly of the deity
gives the name Phasekh not only to the suffering of
the sovereign but also to his resurrection.
2
The Sovereigns day was to the resurrection of the messiah what the day
of Phasekh was to the suffering of the messiah. In time, under System E, the
two events (the suffering and the resurrection) both came to be celebrated on
Phasekh Sunday. Theodoret of Cyrrhus (c.425 C.E.), for instance, explains that
in his time, on the very day of the saving suffering, i.e., Phasekh Sunday,
Christians solemnize the memory both of the suffering and of the resurrec-
tion of the sovereign.
3
By making both the suffering and the resurrection part
of the same event, Christians in the West felt justified in moving the joyous
celebration of the Eucharist mystery to the day of the resurrection.
To demonstrate this change with System E, Epiphanius (c.377 C.E.) refers
to the day of resurrection and great festive day of the Phasekh.
4
Augustine
(fl. 396430 C.E.) remarks that our yearly festival (of Phasekh) renews the
memory of his resurrection.
5
Pseudo-Cyril of Alexandria similarly writes
about the Phasekh of the sovereign, which is the Festival of the Resurrec-
tion.
6
The Chronicon Paschale concludes that the sacred Assembly of the deity
designates the august festival of the resurrection from the dead of the mes-
siah, our deity, as the Phasekh.
7
The day representing the true Phasekh also shifted. At first, as the mid-
second century C.E. Quartodeciman writer Apollinarius of Hierapolis shows,
the 14th was considered the true Phasekh. He writes:
THE 14TH IS THE TRUE PHASEKH of the sovereign,
the great sacrifice: the son (the messiah) of the deity in
the place of the lamb . . . who was buried on the day
of the Phasekh with the stone placed over the tomb.
8
Though by no means left unopposed even in the West, by the fifth century
C.E. we find that the Phasekh of the resurrection, generally speaking, became
354 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
2
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 424f.
3
Theodoret, Cure, 9:24.
4
Epiphanius, Expos. Faith, 22:14.
5
Augustine, Serm. Wil., 4:3.
6
Ps.-Cyril, Prologus Pascha, 5 (SCMC, p. 338; FTC, 77, Let. 87, p. 123).
7
Chron. Paschale, 1, pp. 424.
8
Chron. Paschale, 1, p. 13.
the only true Phasekh for those in the West.
9
For example, in 401 C.E.
Theophilus of Alexandria comments that the next day after that Sabbath
daythe Sabbath day representing the anniversary of the messiah lying in the
graveis the symbol of the sovereigns resurrection, let us celebrate THE
TRUE PHASEKH.
10
The Eucharist Phasekh
The effort by western Christian assemblies to move the celebration of the
Phasekh from the 14th of Abib to the day of the omer wave offering was fur-
ther facilitated by three changes in the use of the term Eucharist: (1) the ex-
pansion of the meaning of the term Eucharist (thanksgiving) to include the
mystery of the bread and wine (though some would argue it was unfer-
mented grape juice) of the Last Supper, (2) the extension of the Christian
Eucharist mystery to days other than just the Phasekh supper, and (3) the
identification of the Eucharist bread and wine with the Phasekh victim.
First, the term euj caristev w (eucharisteo), euj caristiv a (eucharistia), etc., i.e.,
Eucharist, properly means to offer thanks.
11
The Greek word was derived
from the Jewish term berakah, the act of giving thanks and a blessing at the be-
ginning of every meal.
12
The expression to break bread, meanwhile, was a
common Jewish idiom meaning to partake of an ordinary meal, including
its meat and drink.
13
Since the first Christians were Judaeans, there is little
doubt that, when this expression is used in the New Testament, it only refers
to eating a meal and not to the special act of breaking bread and sharing it at
the Phasekh supper.
14
It only took on this newer meaning much later among
the non-Jewish Christians, who gave to the expression an intent beyond its
original use.
355 The Role of Pent ecost on t he Christ ian Phasekh
9
EEC, p. 180, #84, n. a, pp. 203f, #116a, n. s, p. 216, #140, n. a.
10
Theophilus Alex., 20:4.
11
GEL, 1968, p. 738; SEC, Gk. #21682170; YAC, pp. 969, 970.
12
SNT, 6, pp. 275f; LD, pp. 377, 399.
13
SNT, 6, pp. 274f. Among the Jews of this period, the breaking of bread and the giving of
thanks was part of the normal routine for their partaking of an ordinary meal (ELS, p. 10). The
Jews were in the custom of beginning a meal by breaking the bread and then asking grace (e.g.,
B. Ber., 46:ab). Even the Roman Catholics admit, The Jews were accustomed to begin their com-
mon meals with a prayer of grateful praise to God (the Semitic idea behind eujcaristiva, eujlogiva)
spoken over a loaf of bread, which was then divided among the participants (NCE, 2, pp. 779f).
Also see below n. 14.
14
For example, in Acts, 2:42 and 46, the disciples were each day steadfastly continuing with
one accord in the temple, and breaking bread in their houses. This statement simply means that
they were going to the Temple by day and eating their meals at home at night. In another in-
stance, Saul broke bread with pagans after a 14-day fast for their health (Acts, 27:3336). Breaking
bread with pagans can hardly be defined as keeping the Eucharist.
Yet, because the bread eaten the night of the messiahs Last Supper was described as broken
(1 Cor., 10:16f, 11:2328), the western assemblies, especially non-Jewish Christians unfamiliar
with Jewish customs, latched on to two statements indicating that bread was broken on the first
day of the week (Luke, 24:35, Acts, 20:511). Connecting the first day of the week with the break-
ing of bread, these western Christians interpreted them as a reenactment of the Eucharist. In both
instances, this interpretation is strained, being no more than an interpretation overlaid atop a mis-
interpretation.
In Luke, 24:35, for example, on the day of his resurrection the messiah broke bread with two
disciples who at the time did not know he was the messiah. These two men were Judaeans who
had stopped at a village late in the afternoon to eat dinner. There is no suggestion whatsoever that
At the same time, the Christian Eucharist mystery celebrated in the shar-
ing of the bread and cup of wine has its roots in the original act of the apos-
tles sharing in the wine and broken unleavened bread in the night of the
messiahs Last Supper on the 14th of Abib. For the earliest Quartodeciman
Christians the Eucharist, the breaking of bread, and the mystery of sharing
the cup of wine and the unleavened bread were three different things, though
by the second century C.E. all three came together in the Eucharist of the
Phasekh celebration.
Following scriptural practice, unleavened bread was originally eaten by
the earliest Christians during all seven days of the Phasekh festival. The giv-
ing of the Eucharist for every meal during the seven-day festival of Phasekh,
therefore, was in due time joined with the celebration of the mystery of the
unleavened bread and cup. The system was evolving. In the Quartodeciman
Didache (early second century C.E.), to demonstrate, on the Sovereigns (day)
of the sovereign, Christians were instructed to come together and break
bread and give Eucharist.
15
The command to break bread and give Eucharist
clearly separates the concept of breaking bread from the Eucharist itself. Here
breaking bread clearly means only to have a meal. Perhaps in this instance the
giving of Eucharist may also only mean to merely give a blessing.
Nevertheless, with the scriptural seven days of unleavened bread, only the
first and last days of the Phasekh festival were required convocations. The re-
maining days, except for the weekly Sabbath day, could be celebrated at
home. What had developed by the beginning of the second century C.E.
among the Quartodeciman assemblies was the added practice of gathering on
the Sovereigns day to commemorate the resurrection. This gathering for a
meal on the Sovereigns day became the vehicle by which the entire celebra-
tion of Phasekh was altered.
As a result, at the beginning of the second century C.E., when all the or-
thodox Christian assemblies were still Quartodeciman, the Eucharist of the
Phasekh was kept on the 14th of Abib. At the same time, these Christians also
assembled on the Sovereigns daybeing the first day of the 50-day Pentecost
356 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
they believed that they were participating in the mystery of the Eucharist. It was late in the day
and they had been traveling (Luke, 24:28f). Their breaking of bread was merely the act of men
partaking in an afternoon meal. In the passage found in Acts, 20:511, it is true that Saul broke
bread on the first day of the week, but saying this without any context is misleading. His break-
ing of bread cannot be the Eucharist because this particular first day of the week occurred 12 days
after the Festival of Unleavened Bread had already passed (Acts, 20:57). Also, Saul was setting
out in the morning on a journey (Acts, 20:7, 1113), it being the day after the Sabbath day. Further,
Saul unceremoniously broke bread twice that same night, i.e., he ate two different meals (Acts,
20:7, 11). These meals were never defined as the Eucharist and there is no suggestion that his dis-
course to those assembled on that night was anything more than parting words to those who had
continued with him after the Sabbath days meeting, which day had ended with the previous sun-
set. That Saul was merely held over to continue his discourse on the messiah and Scriptures is
demonstrated by the fact that he walked cross-country to Assos to meet up with those journey-
ing with him, who, at Sauls instructions, had set sail earlier than Sauls leaving (Acts, 20:13f).
15
Didache, 14:1. It has been popular to force the words of the Didache to refer to a weekly
observance of the Sovereigns day, but to do so it requires the substitution kaq hJ mev ran de; kuriv ou
for the MS reading of Hierosolymitanus 54, which gives kata; kuriakh; n de; kuriv ou (SP, 4, p. 419;
LD, p. 240). The form found in the original text proves that Didache, 14:1, refers to the annual cel-
ebration of the Sovereigns day of the resurrection. This point has been more than amply demon-
strated by C. W. Dugmore (SNT, 6, pp. 272281). Also see comments in AUSS, 3, pp. 8791.
countto break bread (i.e., take a meal) and to offer thanks (or Eucharist) in
order to commemorate the resurrection of the messiah. The belief that a
Eucharist could be partaken on any of the seven days of unleavened bread, es-
pecially when they gathered on the Sovereigns day, opened the door to the
Sunday-only celebration of Phasekh. Since one could give thanks with any
meal and break unleavened bread and share wine during all seven days of the
festival, the logic followed that the ceremony and mystery of the Eucharist
could be re-enacted by zealous Christians on these other days as well. It
merely became a matter of which day of convocation one should emphasize,
and the West chose to elevate the day of the messiahs resurrection.
Subsequently, there developed a vital distinction between the early con-
servative Quartodeciman observance of an annual Sovereigns day and the
later practice of the western Christians. Though the early conservative
Quartodecimans observed the first day of the week after the 14th as the
Sovereigns day, they nowhere ascribe to it the significance of a high festival
or make it a day on which one should celebrate the Eucharist mystery of the
Phasekh. However, they did observe that day by gathering for a meal and
Eucharist. It was the first day in the 50-day count to the Festival of Pentecost
and marked the anniversary of the messiahs resurrection. For these reasons,
the apostles, guided by Scriptures, had instructed the assemblies to continue
its observance.
The New Symbolism
The change in Phasekh for those in the West was assisted by the fact that
the Eucharist bread and wine had become the new Christian symbol of
the Phasekh victim, which in turn represented the messiah. As already
demonstrated, for early Christians, while under Judaism, the messiah
was represented by the Phasekh lamb; under the New Testament, he was
also represented by the unleavened bread and wine of the Last Supper.
16
Gregory of Elvira, accordingly, states, Thus the mystery of the Phasekh . . .
which is now celebrated in the bread of the sovereigns body.
17
Augustine
similarly writes of the Phasekh, . . . which we receive in the body and blood
of the sovereign.
18
Hilary of Poitiers remarks, Without him (that is, Judas)
the Phasekh is accomplished, when the chalice has been taken and the
bread broken.
19
The Phasekh, as a result, was realized in the western Christian Eucharist.
20
Following this line of reasoning, the Eucharist quickly became the new
Phasekh meal rather than the dinner with the lamb. It therefore followed that
the sacrifice and suffering of the messiah (now seen by those in the West as
both his death and resurrection) could be associated with the Eucharist given
357 The Role of Pent ecost on t he Christ ian Phasekh
16
Matt., 26:1720, 2629; Mark, 14:1218, 2225; Luke, 22:723; 1 Cor., 11:2328.
17
Gregory Elv., 9:1.
18
Augustine, Let. Pet., 2:37.
19
Hilary, 30.
20
EEC, p. 205, #117, n. d, in reference to Gregory of Elviras statement about receiving the
Phasekh of his (the messiahs) sacred body, Raniero Cantalamessa comments, If Christs Pascha
was his passion on the historical plane, then on the liturgical plane the Churchs Pascha is realized
in the Eucharist.
on the Sovereigns day. Athanasius of Alexandria, for example, who along
with his brothers in the West observed the day of the resurrection for the
celebration of the Phasekh Eucharist, identifies the heavenly supper with the
Phasekh and the sacrifice of the messiah.
21
As Raniero Cantalamessa notes, for
these Christians, the Christian Pascha is essentially the commemoration of
the sacrifice of Christ that is celebrated in the Eucharist.
22
What then of the Phasekh of the 14th of Abib? As Origen comments, for
those holding to the western views, the original Eucharist celebrated by the
messiah and his disciples served merely as a symbol (foreshadowing) of
which we keep the Phasekh.
23
It only established a type for a new Phasekh
celebration and pointed to the triumph of the resurrection. Because of the con-
nection made between the Eucharist, the seven days of unleavened bread, and
the Phasekh, Paulinus of Nola (following System E) associates the mystery of
the Eucharist with the Sovereigns day resurrection. He writes:
Yet the whole world with equal devotion every-
where venerates this lofty mystery of great love
toward humankind in a particular month each year,
when it celebrates the eternal king risen with a
restored body.
24
The Dividing Line
As Raniero Cantalamessa so poignantly observed, Phasekh and Pentecost
designate the same mystery, but as seen from opposite sides: that of the pas-
sion and that of the glorification.
25
For the early Christians, the Phasekh of the
14th defined the time of the suffering and burial of the messiah. For those in
the West it was only a time of great sadness and reflection. On the other hand,
the day of the omer wave offering, being the first day of the 50-day Pentecost
celebration, was also the day of the messiahs resurrection. A dividing line
was thus formed between the Phasekh of the suffering and the Phasekh of the
joyous resurrection.
There can be no doubt that Pauls statement that the messiah has been
raised from out of the dead, firstfruit of those fallen asleep,
26
was connected
by western Christians with the omer wave offering of firstfruits.
27
In Scriptures,
Pentecost is a time of rejoicing.
28
In turn, the anniversary of the resurrection
brought with it a message of joy and triumph. Augustine divides the Phasekh
week, stating:
358 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
21
Athanasius, Fest. Let., 42, excerpt from Cosmas, 10:8.
22
EEC, p. 169, #62.
23
Origen, Hom. Jer., 19:13. EEC, p. 154, #42, n. a. In saying that the Churchs Pascha is a sym-
bol of Christs Pascha, or of the Jewish Pascha which Christ observed, Origen certainly does not
mean that it is a type of figure. Rather Origen would say that the Churchs Eucharistic Pascha is
Christs Pascha, foreshadowed by the Jewish Pascha and in turn a foreshadowing of the heavenly
Pascha.
24
Paulinus, Poem, 27. In Paulinus, Epist., 31, the Phasekh is presented as the day in which the
mystery of the torture-stake of the messiah is celebrated.
25
EEC, p. 21.
26
1 Cor., 15:20.
27
AUSS, 3, p. 86; FEPC, p. 238; BCal, pp. 225f.
28
Deut., 16:11.
The day that our sovereign Yahushua the messiah
made sorrowful by dying he also made glorious
by rising.
29
For this reason the first day of the Pentecost celebration became the divid-
ing line in the Phasekh celebration of the western assemblies. In this regard,
we should take note that Origen (c.245 C.E.) is the first Christian writer
known to call the first day of the 50-day Pentecost count the Phasekh.
30
This
new usage indicates the emphasis placed upon the first day of the Pentecost
count for the celebration of Phasekh following the development of the System
E construct under Victor, bishop of Rome, in 196 C.E.
The Latin assemblies became even more precise with regard to the time that
the joyous celebration of Pentecost and the Phasekh of the resurrection would
begin. For them the vigil on Saturday night is the end of the Pascha and the
beginning of Pentecost.
31
Zeno of Verona (fl. 362371 C.E.), for instance, makes
the Phasekh of the resurrection the great day,
32
the day of salvation which
bears the image of the mystery of the sovereign.
33
It is the turning point of the
year when one celebrates both the suffering and the resurrection.
34
He writes,
for at sunset it celebrates the suffering and at sunrise the resurrection.
35
Lactantius comments that during the nighttime portion of the Sovereigns
day they celebrate by watching until morning on account of the coming of
our king and deity.
36
It is clear by such evidence that the dividing line be-
tween the sadness of the suffering and the joy of the resurrection was at sun-
rise, the time when the announcement was made that the messiah had risen.
37
This concept eventually led to the observance of Easter sunrise services.
38
According to the Synoptic texts, the messiah was raised on the first day of
the week during the days of unleavened bread.
39
Therefore, from this day of
resurrection, the advocates of the western views argued, the new Phasekh
celebration must take its beginning. Gregory of Nazianzus (362 C.E.), for ex-
ample, writes, The day of resurrection, an auspicious beginning. Radiantly
let us celebrate this festival, giving one another the kiss of peace.
40
The connection between the 50 days of Pentecost and the western calcula-
tion of Phasekh is undeniable. The noted historian J. Van Goudoever several
times emphasizes this point in his study on biblical calendars. Identifying the
Phasekh of the 14th as the Christian Passover and the Sunday Phasekh of the
resurrection as Easter, he makes the following comments:
359 The Role of Pent ecost on t he Christ ian Phasekh
29
Augustine, Serm. Morin, 5:1.
30
Origen, Celsus, 8:22.
31
EEC, p. 17.
32
Zeno, 1:58.
33
Zeno, 1:57.
34
See comment in EEC, p. 196, #105.
35
Zeno, 1:57.
36
Lactantius, Div. Instit., 7:19:3.
37
Matt., 28:17; Mark, 16:19; Luke, 24:17.
38
The paganization of Phasekh was in part accomplished by identifying the messiah with
the sun and then making his day the day of the sun, i.e., Sunday. See FSDY, 3.
39
Matt., 26:17, 27:5728:7; Mark, 14:12, 15:4216:9; Luke, 22:7, 23:5024:7; John, 19:14f, 31,
3842, 20:1, 1922.
40
Gregory Naz., Orat., 1:1; PG, 35, p. 396.
The festival of the Western Church is Sunday being
the first day of the fifty days.
41
For Rome, Easter seems to be a continuation of this
first day of the fifty days of harvest.
42
The Christian Easter is a continuation of the celebra-
tion of the first day of the fifty days, and the Christian
Passover is a continuation of the Israelite Passover.
43
The Sunday of the Resurrection is the Christian con-
tinuation of the first day of the fifty days.
44
C. W. Dugmore supports J. Van Goudoever s conclusion, writing:
The connection between the Lords resurrection
and the first day of the fifty days is clear in
Clement of Alexandria, and in Epiphanius. Thus,
the Christian Easter was a continuation of the cele-
bration of the first day of the fifty days, just as the
Quartodeciman Christian Passover was a continua-
tion of the Israelite Passover.
45
Death Versus Resurrection
Merely having a technique for establishing a new Phasekh celebration does
not explain the philosophy of those in the West who desired to keep the
Sovereigns day to the exclusion of the 14th of Abib. The philosophical rea-
soning for moving Phasekh to the first day of the 50 days of Pentecost was the
sadness associated with the death of the messiah versus the joy associated
with the time of Pentecost and the resurrection of the messiah.
To begin with, an important difference between the conservative
Quartodeciman understanding of the Phasekh week and that which devel-
oped among the western assemblies had to do with the form of the annual
celebration. The Quartodecimans continued to follow the Torahs instruction
to observe the 14th of Abib as the anniversary of the messiahs death. They
also celebrated the Sovereigns day (the day of the omer wave offering) on the
following Sunday.
The western assemblies, on the other hand, decided on a different ap-
proach. As a remembrance of the messiahs death, they chose to observe the
day of the week upon which that suffering originally occurred, which they
deemed to be Friday, regardless of which day of the month Friday fell. The
reason for this western choice was a desire to retain their interpretation of the
flow of the three days events between the death of the messiah and the day
360 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
41
BCal, p. 165.
42
BCal, p. 170.
43
BCal, p. 174.
44
BCal, p. 182.
45
SP, 4, p. 419.
of his resurrection, which was always celebrated on Sunday. Charles Joseph
Hefele points out:
When the 14th Nisan fell upon a Friday, the two par-
ties were agreed about the time of the festival, because
the day of the week and of the month coincided. But
if, for example, the idV 14th fell upon a Tuesday, the
Asiatics celebrated the death of Christ upon the
Tuesday, and the Westerns on the following Friday;
and if the idV fell upon a Saturday, the Asiatics cele-
brated the death festival upon that Saturday, whilst
the Westerns kept it still on the Friday following.
46
Yet even if the 14th fell upon a Friday, the doctrinal differences of how one
was to treat the celebration of that day continued to separate the two groups.
The conservative Quartodecimans followed the commands of the messiah
and the Apostle Saul to keep the celebration of the unleavened bread and
wine (the Eucharist) of the Last Supper in order to remember the messiahs
broken body and spilled blood, therefore, to remember his death. At the
heart of their understanding was 1 Corinthians, 11:26, which reads, For as
often as you may eat this bread, and may drink this cup, the DEATH of the
sovereign you announce until he has come. For the Quartodecimans, as with
the Jews, the sacrifice of the lamb was not a cause for mourning, but a time for
rejoicing, because by the blood of the sacrifice their lives were saved.
47
In the
same sense, the Quartodecimans did not mourn over Yahushuas death, be-
cause, his death was for them the cause of their salvation.
48
Charles Joseph
Hefele, in reference to their observance of the 14th of Abib, notes:
The Orientals, on the contrary, rather considered this
day, from its dogmatic or doctrinal side, as the day of
redemption; and for this reason it was to them, not a
day of mourning, but of joy, dating from the moment
when Christ died, and had thus accomplished the
work of redemption.
49
The Occidentals, on the contrary, considering the whole day as conse-
crated to mourning, continued the fast, a sign of mourning, and did not end
it until the joyful morning of the resurrection.
50
Since the date that the messiah and his disciples kept the Eucharist was on
the 14th of Abib, the same date that the messiah died, it was on that day that
the Quartodecimans celebrated their Eucharist. As an example, in the Epistula
Apostolorum (later half of second century C.E.), one of the few documents
remaining that expresses a Quartodeciman view, one finds some statements
attributed to the messiah and supposedly given to his apostles. These
361 The Role of Pent ecost on t he Christ ian Phasekh
46
HCC, p. 301.
47
BCal, p. 158.
48
Ibid.
49
HCC, p. 302.
50
Ibid.
instructions included the command to celebrate the Phasekh as a remem-
brance of my death.
51
On the other hand, in the eyes of those following the western systems, de-
spite the fact that there was no scriptural commandment or instruction for
their view, the most important event of the story of Yahushuas suffering was
not the death but the resurrection of the messiah. Those following this newer
concept, accordingly, believed in a celebration of the resurrection of the
messiah and rejected the 14th as a joyous celebration of his death. They
premised their view on the idea that the messiahs death was too sad an
occasion to be celebrated with the joy of the Eucharist. Anatolius, contrasting
the Quartodecimans with the western view, explains:
And the other party (the western), passing the day
of the sovereigns suffering as one replete with sad-
ness and grief, hold that it should not be lawful to
celebrate the sovereigns mystery of the Phasekh at
any other time but on the Sovereigns day, on which
the resurrection of the sovereign from death took
place, and on which rose also for us the cause of
everlasting joy.
52
The importance of Pentecost and its connection with the day of the resur-
rection demanded, for the western views, that Christians annually celebrate
the mysteries, i.e., the Eucharist, on the day of the messiahs resurrection.
It was always to be celebrated on the same day of the week (Sunday) and
never on the 14th, the occasion of his death, and represented the cumulation
of the events from his death until his resurrection.
53
By the late second century, the western assemblies, by means of meetings
and conferences with bishops, had established the doctrine that the
mystery of the sovereigns resurrection from the dead could be celebrated
on no day except the Sovereigns day (Sunday), and that on that day alone
we should celebrate the end of the Phasekh fast.
54
To do otherwise by
celebrating the 14th day was to be accused of Judaizing and of keeping the
Mosaic Law. This new interpretation soon gained momentum and at
the Council of Arles in 314 C.E. the charge was given that the Phasekh of the
sovereigns resurrection should be observed at one time and on one and
the same day throughout all the world.
55
Shortly thereafter, this principle
was sanctioned as the official practice of the Roman Church at the Council
of Nicaea in 325 C.E.
56
At the Council of Antioch (341 C.E.) the added
punishment of excommunication was sanctioned against anyone who held a
contrary custom.
57
362 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
51
Epist. Apost., 15. Also cf., the Ethiopic and Coptic versions (GJJA).
52
Anatolius, 10.
53
JTS, 25, pp. 268f. Cf., Leo, Serm., 70:1; Theodore Petra (DHT, p. 24).
54
Eusebius, H.E., 5:23.
55
Syn. Areles., 1, Can., 1.
56
Eusebius, Const., 3:14, 1819; Theodoret, E.H., 1:9; Socrates Schol., 1:9; Sozomenus, 1:21;
ACC, 2, p. 1150.
57
Conc. Antioch, Can., 1.
Accordingly, the Sovereigns day, being the day of the omer wave offering,
was a dividing line in the Phasekh week. It marked the division between a
time of sorrow and a time of rejoicing.
A Time of Rejoicing
In Scriptures, Pentecost was to be kept with rejoicing.
58
Therefore, the days of
Pentecost, from the day of the resurrection to the 50th day, were seen as a time
of great rejoicing for western Christians.
59
Resurrection day, as a result,
became the first day of this joy and exultation, a day of celebration, the
anniversary of Yahushuas triumph over death. Tertullian (c.200 C.E.), for
example, tells us that the 50-day season of Pentecost is marked by a joyous
celebration.
60
In another place he writes that Christians spend these 50 days
in exultation.
61
Eusebius makes it as a time of refreshment:
Wherefore we are not allowed to toil during this fes-
tival; rather we are instructed to bear the likeness of
the refreshment we hope for in heaven.
62
Beginning with the Sovereigns day, it was forbidden to mourn, to fast,
or to kneel in worship during the Pentecost season.
63
In the Constitutiones
Apostolicae, one is guilty of sin who fasts on the Sovereigns day, being the
day of the resurrection, or during the time of Pentecost, or, in general, who is
sad on a festival day to the sovereign. For on them we ought to rejoice, and
not to mourn.
64
The Didascalia similarly states, It is not lawful for you to fast
on the first (day) of the week, because it is my resurrection.
65
We find the
same concept in the Apostolic Tradition by Hippolytus (c.215 C.E.).
66
Eusebius
similarly writes:
Consequently, we neither bend the knee at prayers
nor afflict ourselves with fasting. For those deemed
worthy of the resurrection according to the deity
should never again fall to the ground, nor should
those who have been freed from their passions suffer
the same things as those still enslaved.
67
The Sovereigns day, being the first of the 50 days and the occasion of the
resurrection, was a particularly special time of rejoicing. As such, it was deemed
the appropriate time to celebrate Phasekh. Archaeus, for instance, states:
363 The Role of Pent ecost on t he Christ ian Phasekh
58
Deut., 16:11.
59
BCal, pp. 182191.
60
Tertullian, de Orat., 23:12.
61
Tertullian, de Jejun., 14:2.
62
Eusebius, Pas., 6.
63
E.g., Tertullian, de Orat., 23:12; Epiphanius, Expos. Faith, 22 (PG 42, 828A); Basil, Spir. Sanc.,
27:66; Coptic Lectionary (see DCA, p. 960); Gregorian Kanonarion (see OC [NS], 6, p. 224; BCal,
p. 183).
64
Apost. Constit., 5:20.
65
Didas. Apost., 21:5:13.
66
Hippolytus, Apost. Trad., 29:3.
67
Eusebius, Pas., 6.
The Phasekh should be celebrated on the Sovereigns
day; for it was then that the joy of the Catholic
Assembly was accomplished and everyone was des-
tined to eternal life. For on that day, the mystery of
the resurrection, of unchangeable hope, and of inher-
iting the kingdom was established.
68
Augustine similarly states, we embrace his resurrection, let us rejoice.
This is our yearly festival, and our Phasekh.
69
Rupert describes the Phasekh
of the resurrection as obviously a great cause for a festival and for joy in our
hearts.
70
Abbot Ceolfrid (c.710 C.E.) writes:
But at the dawn of the morning, being the
Sovereigns day, they should celebrate the first
day of the Phasekh festival. For that is the day
wherein the sovereign opened the glory of his resur-
rection to the disciples to their manifold joy at the
merciful revelation.
71
As part of this rejoicing, the day of the resurrection became an important
time for many Christians to baptize new members. Water baptism represented
the death and resurrection of the messiah.
72
Therefore, since the resurrection
and the season of Pentecost, especially the day of the resurrection, were
considered a time of joy, it was deemed an appropriate time to perform
baptisms. Hippolytus and Gregory of Nazianzus both connect the time of
baptism with Phasekh Sunday and the Pentecost season.
73
Augustine speaks
of the time from Phasekh Sunday to the following Sunday inclusively as
octo dies neophytorum (the eight days of the newly-baptized).
74
The Christians
of Thessaly went so far as to only baptize during Phasekh. It became an un-
fortunate circumstance for some who died before they could receive their
baptism.
75
Basil (fl. 370379 C.E.) writes of the Sovereigns day:
The day is a memorial of the resurrection, and bap-
tism is a power for resurrection. Therefore we shall
receive the grace of the resurrection on the day of
the resurrection.
76
Zeno (fl. 362371 C.E.) states that many were baptized at the dawn of the
day of the Phasekh of the resurrection:
Through it (the day of the resurrection) the gift of
future bliss is promised us, and it will confer the
364 The Fest ivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh
68
Archaeus, Frag. (PG, 5, p. 1490).
69
Augustine, Serm. Morin, 5:1. The yearly festival is named as opposed to the daily Eucharist.
70
Rupert, 6:26.
71
Bede, Hist., 3:21.
72
See for example Rom., 6:36; Col., 2:12; Matt., 20:2023; Mark, 10:3540.
73
Hippolytus, Apost. Trad., 21; Gregory Naz., Orat., 40:24.
74
Augustine, Epist., 55:17 32.
75
Socrates Schol., 5:22.
76
Basil, Hom., 13:1.
same upon our candidates for baptismthose whom
the happy evening now invites to plunge into the
milky depth of the sacred ocean, and from it to arise
rejuvenated with the new day, and with us to attain
to the glory of immortality.
77
Tertullian notes that the Phasekh of the resurrection affords a more solemn
day for baptism, since the suffering of the sovereign, in which we are bap-
tized, was accomplished (then).
78
He adds:
After this, the Pentecost is AN EXTREMELYHAPPY
PERIOD for conferring baptisms, because the
sovereigns resurrection was celebrated among the
disciples and the grace of the sacred ruach was inau-
gurated and the hope in the sovereigns coming indi-
cated, because it was then, when he had been taken
back into heaven, that the angels told the apostles
that he would come exactly as he had gone up to
heavenmeaning, of course, during the Pentecost.
79
Conclusion
As we have seen, what had begun in the early Quartodeciman assemblies
as a celebration of the Phasekh and Eucharist in observance of the 14th day
of the first moon had later developed in the West into an observation of the
14th as the Phasekh of death and sorrow. The West chose in its place to
observe the following first day of the week as a Phasekh of joy and rejoicing.
This transformation was accomplished by utilizing the expanded meaning of
Phasekh and then stressing the Eucharist of the Sovereigns day. For those in
the West, the suffering of the messiah was interpreted as a sad occasion, while
the Pentecost season was a time of rejoicing. It became merely a matter of di-
viding the seven days of unleavened bread at the first day of the joyful
Pentecost season, being the day of the omer wave offering as well as the day
of the resurrection.
365 The Role of Pent ecost on t he Christ ian Phasekh
77
Zeno, 1:57.
78
Tertullian, de Bapt., 19:1.
79
Tertullian, de Bapt., 19:2.

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