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Yeshua’s Passover Visit to Bountiful

Yeshua’s Passover Visit to Bountiful

Yeshua’s Passover Visit to Bountiful

March 19, 2020 Posted by Yaakov ben Yhudah Holy Days, Text Analysis 5 Comments

It is well known that Yeshua was crucified and resurrected during Passover, but did you know that he did not visit the Nefites in Bountiful until the following Passover?

The Tekufa

According to The Stick of Joseph, the destruction at the death of Messiah occurred “in the thirty and fourth year, in the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month” (3 Nefi 4:2), which was, of course, Passover (see Exodus 12). The Stick of Joseph text then remains silent for a period of about a year, and picks up again “in the ending of the thirty and fourth year” (3 Nefi 4:11). 

The wording is very similar to a passage in the Tanakh, where we read “And it came to pass at the end of the year,” (2 Chron. 24:23) where the underlying Hebrew word for “end” is TEKUFA (תְּקוּפָה). This word TEKUFA is a key word in understanding the regulation of the year in the Hebrew calendar. The word TEKUFA literally means “cycle” or “circuit,” leading some translations of 2 Chron. 24:23 to render it “the turning of the year.” This word is also used to refer to the two solar equinoxes. The Fall equinox is tied to Sukkot (Tabernacles) and the Spring equinox is tied to Passover. 

As we read in Targum Jonathan:

Be mindful to keep the times of the festivals,
with the intercalations of the year,
and to observe the TEKUFA thereof in the month of Aviv
to perform the Passover before YHWH your Elohim,
because in the month of Aviv
YHWH your Elohim brought you out of Egypt;
you shall eat thereof by night.
(Targum Jonathan on Deut. 16:1)

The “turning of the year” or “end of the year” is clearly associated with the month of Aviv and Passover. Thus, Yeshua first appeared to the Nefites at the time of the TEKUFA, which was at Passover.

The Stick of Joseph says, “And now it came to pass that there was a great multitude gathered together of the people of Nefi, round about the Temple which was in the land Bountiful” (3 Nefi 5:1), which would absolutely have been the case at Passover—an occasion traditionally requiring a temple pilgramage! Further, the text implies the multitude consisted of travelers from elsewhere who had not been to Bountiful in quite some time, as evidenced by their “marveling and wondering one with another, and…showing one to another the great and marvelous change which had taken place” (3 Nefi 5:1). Thus, we see that this multitude had come from a distance to gather at the temple for a significant religious event at the turning of the year. The Passover fits the narrative in every respect!

The Two Seders

Further evidence that Yeshua first appeared to the Nephites at Passover is that Yeshua held abbreviated Passover seders on each of the first two days after he appeared. Let’s look at the text. 

After spending some time teaching the Nephites on the first day of Passover, Yeshua “commanded his talmidim that they should bring forth some matzah and wine unto him” (3 Nefi 8:6). He then held what seems to be a brief, possibly abbreviated, Passover seder (or perhaps the Stick of Joseph gives us an abbreviated account of a complete seder. See 3 Nefi 8:6-9).

Then “the next day” (3 Nefi 9:2) Yeshua again held a brief Passover seder:

“…And it came to pass that he broke matzah again, and blessed it, and gave to the talmidim to eat. And when they had eaten, he commanded them that they should break matzah and give unto the multitude. And when they had given unto the multitude, he also gave them wine to drink, and commanded them that they should give unto the multitude…” (3 Nefi 9:6).

Notice that Yeshua held two, back-to-back Passover seders on two consecutive days! This is important because within the Land of Israel, one seder is held on the first day of Passover, while outside of the land of Israel, the custom is to have two seders—one on each of the first two days of the Feast!  

It seems unlikely that Yosef ben Yosef would have been aware this was a Passover event, or that these were Passover seders; and it seems even less likely that he would have been aware of the custom of holding two seders on each of the first two days of Passover when outside of the Land of Israel!

Once again, the Stick of Joseph gets all of these details correct, establishing that it is, in fact, an authentically ancient Jewish document! 

Tags: bountifulpassoverpesachpilgrimagesedertemple
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5 Comments

Leave your reply.
  • Clifford M Dubery
    · Reply

    March 19, 2020 at 2:39 AM

    I agree with you an waiting for that book

  • Joshua
    · Reply

    March 19, 2020 at 1:06 PM

    I like the shift in the wording. The Book of Mormon says it was on the 4th day of the first month (as does the Stick of Joseph), but I have been of the opinion that this is an error in the text, and I see you have picked up on that as well. Different biblical calendars can be misaligned by a month (depending on when the new year begins and whether an intercalating month is used or not) like the rabbinical and Karaite calendars are sometimes misaligned, and they can be off by a day or two (depending on the sighting of the new crescent moon, vs astronomical new moon), but there is no way for the calendars to be off by 10 days – unless the Nefites were not keeping the Torah – i.e. unless they were not linking the months to the moon cycles (i.e. there were using some sort of fixed-day solar calendar that was loosing time because of leap year problems). Therefore, the text must be in error, and, going from 14th to 4th is a very easy error to make, especially if you are unfamiliar with the biblical calendar (as Oliver Cowdery probably was). So, bravo for that.
    On another note, I disagree with the Passover date for Yeshua’s visit. I believe a closer reading of the text will show that great favors and blessings were the things that visited the people at the end of the year, but that Yeshua visited them, “soon after his ascension”. At what time frame does this put us at? Shavuot, of course – the next pilgrimage feast. Of course, big happenings at the temple back in Jerusalem are happening at this time as well (Pentecost). Your point about the people marveling at the destruction fails in this regard, because there were at least two more pilgrimages in between Passovers (Shavuot and Sukkot) – thus, there would have been no “marveling”. It would be old news. But Shavuot (Pentecost) was the next Feast, and the surprise was real. There are many other parallels that fit Shavuot better than Passover, but this comment is long enough.
    Hopefully, we will like the people of Nefi at this time, repent, and return to the TORAH! Return to his feasts! and Return to his commandments!
    Shalom.

  • Clifford M Dubery
    · Reply

    March 26, 2020 at 12:23 AM

    I know, Nefi new that James the Just was set apart as the leader amongst the twelve and he continued to follow the Tanak and he was inspired by the the Lord Yeshuah who moved to a Sacrament service by water and flat bread, he also did vegan just like me

    • Joshua
      · Reply

      March 26, 2020 at 8:00 PM

      By vegan, do you mean eating fish and honeycomb? 😉

  • Jay Ball
    · Reply

    June 14, 2020 at 9:45 PM

    Why do we count from Rosh Hashanah as the new year, to arrive at a Passover setting for the time of the angel’s visit to Amulek, “fourth day of the seventh month” (see footnote 64, Alma 8:2), but this article arrives at a Passover setting for 3 Nefi 4:2 from the “first month on the fourteenth day of the month”?

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