JTF.ORG Forum
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: Trumpeldor on March 27, 2007, 09:31:00 PM
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I had a non-Jewish neighbor who celebrated this. He ate matzo (unleavened bread) at the meal, presumably because Jesus' last meal was a Passover seder. Yet there was also bread at the meal. Can someone explain to me more about this holiday? Do you tell the passover story?
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I had a non-Jewish neighbor who celebrated this. He ate matzo (unleavened bread) at the meal, presumably because Jesus' last meal was a Passover seder. Yet there was also bread at the meal. Can someone explain to me more about this holiday? Do you tell the passover story?
I'M not a Christian but many Evangelicals have incoparated parts of the seder
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I'm Jewish but I do know that Evangelical Christians have been trying to dig into the Jewish roots of their faith. Some get it far better than others do.
But yeah, the Last Supper was supposed to have been a Seder. (The Christian family you are talking about probably doesn't know that you aren't supposed to have regular bread during Pesach.)
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Jesus had his seder according to the Essene calendar, which was solar. The Essenes were heritcal Jews. The solar date came a few days before the real Passover. So his "Last Supper" was I think a Wednesday but he was executed on the real Passover which started Friday Night (Maybe Thursday Night. It could be because we didn't have a fixed calendar then.).
How do you know this? I'm not arguing the point...just curious.
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Essenes were'nt heretic they were mainly Cohanim who fleed the maccabian kings who were not at that time halachicly Jewish i.e. Herod
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How much of passover do they incorporate? Do they pervert any of it?
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How much of passover do they incorporate? Do they pervert any of it?
It depends from church to church and from family to family. As I said, I've known some that do things pretty much right on, while others leave a great deal out. And some get things wrong...like the family that you talked about that had Matzah AND regular bread.
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Essenes were'nt heretic they were mainly Cohanim who fleed the maccabian kings who were not at that time halachicly Jewish i.e. Herod
Not according to Our Sages.
Ask Chaim
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All you want to know about the Essenes and more http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=478&letter=E&search=Essenes
A branch of the Pharisees who conformed to the most rigid rules of Levitical purity while aspiring to the highest degree of holiness. They lived solely by the work of their hands and in a state of communism, devoted their time to study and devotion and to the practise of benevolence, and refrained as far as feasible from conjugal intercourse and sensual pleasures, in order to be initiated into the highest mysteries of heaven and cause the expected Messianic time to come ('Ab. Zarah ix. 15; Luke ii. 25, 38; xxiii. 51). The strangest reports were spread about this mysterious class of Jews. Pliny (l.c.), speaking of the Essene community in the neighborhood of the Dead Sea, calls it the marvel of the world, and characterizes it as a race continuing its existence for thousands of centuries without either wives and children, or money for support, and with only the palm-trees for companions in its retreat from the storms of the world. Philo, who calls the Essenes "the holy ones," after the Greek ὅσιοι, says in one place (as quoted by Eusebius, "Præparatio Evangelica," viii. 11) that ten thousand of them had been initiated by Moses into the mysteries of the sect, which, consisting of men of advanced years having neither wives nor children, practised the virtues of love and holiness and inhabited many cities and villages of Judea, living in communism as tillers of the soil or as mechanics according to common rules of simplicity and abstinence. In another passage ("Quod Omnis Probus Liber," 12 et seq.) he speaks of only four thousand Essenes, who lived as farmers and artisans apart from the cities and in a perfect state of communism, and who condemned slavery, avoided sacrifice, abstained from swearing, strove for holiness, and were particularly scrupulous regarding the Sabbath, which day was devoted to the reading and allegorical interpretation of the Law. Josephus ("Ant." xv. 10, § 4; xviii. 1, § 5; "B. J." ii. 8, §§ 2-13) describes them partly as a philosophical school like the Pythagoreans, and mystifies the reader by representing them as a kind of monastic order with semi-pagan rites. Accordingly, the strangest theories have been advanced by non-Jewish writers, men like Zeller, Hilgenfeld, and Schürer, who found in Essenism a mixture of Jewish and pagan ideas and customs, taking it for granted that a class of Jews of this kind could have existed for centuries without leaving a trace in rabbinical literature, and, besides, ignoring the fact that Josephus describes the Pharisees and Sadducees also as philosophical schools after Greek models.
So much more in link
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My church has a Passover celebration every year, but I have never attended. My Pastor's father was Jewish.