GerhardEbersoehn
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Here are some examples from scripture of three days:What is your point insofar as it applies to examples which show that it was common to forecast or say that a daytime or a night time would be involved with an event when no part of a daytime or no part of a night time could occur?
Those scriptures are correct. In the meantime, I'm putting you on my ignore list. If memory serves, part of a day counts as one Onah. An Onah is a whole day.Cooper,
re: "Here are some examples from scripture of three days: 1Sa 30...Gen 42...2 Chr 10....Esther 4 [and] 5...Matt 27..."
There is nothing in the 1 Samuel 30 account which precludes at least a portion of each one of three daytimes and at least a portion of each one of three night times.
Nothing in the Genesis 42 account says anything with regard to the number of daytimes and the number of night times which would be involved.
Likewise, nothing in the 2 Chronicles 10 account says anything with regard to the number of daytimes and the number of night times which would be involved.
In the Esther 4 and 5 account, "three days, night or day" is not necessarily the same thing as "three days and three nights". But even if it is, that would only be one example.
With regard to the Matthew 27 account, when the Messiah said He would rise after three days, any reference to the third day must be referring to the third day after. And this is in line with Luke 24:21.
BTW, when you wrote "assuming he had breakfast on Monday morning and... they found him three days later on Wednesday..." three days later would have been the 5th day of the week and not the 4th day.
Rstrats, We may be on the same page... But let me comment on this list:Cooper,
re: "Here are some examples from scripture of three days: 1Sa 30...Gen 42...2 Chr 10....Esther 4 [and] 5...Matt 27..."
There is nothing in the 1 Samuel 30 account which precludes at least a portion of each one of three daytimes and at least a portion of each one of three night times.
Nothing in the Genesis 42 account says anything with regard to the number of daytimes and the number of night times which would be involved.
Likewise, nothing in the 2 Chronicles 10 account says anything with regard to the number of daytimes and the number of night times which would be involved.
In the Esther 4 and 5 account, "three days, night or day" is not necessarily the same thing as "three days and three nights". But even if it is, that would only be one example.
With regard to the Matthew 27 account, when the Messiah said He would rise after three days, any reference to the third day must be referring to the third day after. And this is in line with Luke 24:21.
BTW, when you wrote "assuming he had breakfast on Monday morning and... they found him three days later on Wednesday..." three days later would have been the 5th day of the week and not the 4th day.
Do you really understand this? Do you know what the context of an Onah was here?Those scriptures are correct. In the meantime, I'm putting you on my ignore list. If memory serves, part of a day counts as one Onah. An Onah is a whole day.
What you say is correct, but it is not limited to the menstrual cycle. “A day and a night make an onah, and a part of an onah is as the whole.” It is a Jewish saying. (Believers Bible)Do you really understand this? Do you know what the context of an Onah was here?
Its dealing with a woman's period. I looked at this long ago, and you can probably find my comments in this very thread... Basically, if memory serves me correctly, a husband cannot have sex with his wife when its that time.... And the context is he must wait until the end of the day before he can go... Poor guy!
Now I may be wrong as its been a while... So you should look into it yourself! But if I am right, I don't really think this is a valid excuse not to believe 3 days and 3 nights is less than 3 days and 3 nights.
I mean...the husband has to wait until sunrise or sunset... So the is no hedging!
I'm sorry, but with all due respect I do not believe that is true.What you say is correct, but it is not limited to the menstrual cycle. “A day and a night make an onah, and a part of an onah is as the whole.” It is a Jewish saying. (Believers Bible)
It was a maxim among the Jews, in calculating time, part of a day was to be received as the whole. There are many instances of this in both sacred and profane history. See 2Ch_10:5, 2Ch_10:12; Gen_42:17-18. Compare Est_4:16 with Est_5:1. (Albert Barnes)
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You can forget the Hebrew word onah in relation to married life, it is a different topic. You even say in your response, "In short, an onah or onat has nothing to do with the resurrection." So why did you bring it up! If you had scrolled lower down the page to where is says In relation to niddah you would have read this : -I'm sorry, but with all due respect I do not believe that is true.
The quote in question was part of a debate which happened 65 to 105 years after Jesus's death. Rabbis were debating if a onah was 12 or 24 hours long (truth is that its 12 hours). Furthermore it was still in the context of a woman's menstrual cycle.
Because of the fact that at the time it was speaking of menstrual cycles, I highly doubt it was a common Jewish saying and I see no evidence that the term applied to other occasions. I read your scriptural references and have already commented on them.
Furthermore, the word occurs only once in the Bible (and some say not at all) and it is speaking of sexual relations.
In short, an onah or onat has nothing to do with the resurrection.
Edit: here is a reference: Prophecy Unveiled
No, you can't, because that is what the word applies to! You can no more disassociate onah from sexual relations then you can with a spoon being an eating utensil! Sure, you can use it to dig dirt, but that is not its intended use.You can forget the Hebrew word onah in relation to married life, it is a different topic.
I didn't, you did! I was responding to post #806, which you made!You even say in your response, "In short, an onah or onat has nothing to do with the resurrection." So why did you bring it up!
Right! More evidence that this should not be applied to the resurrection!"in the context of the laws of niddah, the word onah usually refers to a day or a night. Each 24-hour day thus consists of two onot (plural for onah). The daytime onah begins at sunrise and ends at sunset. The night-time onah lasts from sunset until sunrise." CLICKY
I don't believe that either. I don't believe there is a big difference between how the west and east view or discuss a "day".Turning to the Blue Letter Bible https://www.blueletterbible.org/lexicon/g2250/kjv/tr/0-1/
we read, “The Eastern usage of this term differs from our western usage. Any part of a day is counted as a whole day, hence the expression “three days and three nights” does not mean literally three whole days, but at least one whole day plus part of two other days.” There we have it. We must not impose Western ideas and culture over and above ancient eastern traditions and way of life
Yes, I agree! No you show me where it says Jesus was crucified in Friday and resurrected on Sunday. I can (and have in this thread) shown that he was crucified on Wednesday and was out of the tomb before Saturday was over. So how crystal clear is it?Both the OT and the NT make the days of the crucifixion crystal clear. Why anyone would want to challenge the written Word of God is beyond my comprehension.
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I can (and have in this thread) shown that he was crucified on Wednesday and was out of the tomb before Saturday was over.