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Nothing is written in "Jewish".It's written in Jewish.
What I meant was that after the Jews returned from Babylon, they conflated the Passover and The Feast of Unleavened Bread into a single feast. The writers of the New Testament reinforced this error in their accounts of "the last supper" having been "Judaized" themselves for many years.Nothing is written in "Jewish".
True. Those ritual holy days have been mostly fulfilled anyway, although Trumpets, Tabernacles, and Last Great Day represent future events.
This is essentially, though only totally metaphorically, true.Speak to God... he hears us... he hears you... you don't have to recite some prayer although that's good too... just talk to him...
you assume no variation in calendars.Now if we can just finish the job and finally conclude that Jesus died on (our) Wednesday and rose on (our) Saturday, understanding that the Good Friday/Easter thing is an invention of the Romans, and accepted by most of Christendom since.
What I meant was that after the Jews returned from Babylon, they conflated the Passover and The Feast of Unleavened Bread into a single feast. The writers of the New Testament reinforced this error in their accounts of "the last supper" having been "Judaized" themselves for many years.
You can't fit 3 days and 3 nights between Friday and SundayIf widely revealed in the churches I think the timing of Jesus' death and resurrection would also be examined. This would threaten the "Good Friday/Easter Sunday" narrative.
"Jewish"?It's written in Jewish.
I used to speak a little "Jewish"Conflating the feast days was a Jewish idea, therefore "Jewish".