What actually happened in Holy Week?

Have you ever sat and read through the gospel accounts of Passion Week, and tried to work out chronologically what is happening? And have you done that with the four gospels? (It is easiest to do that latter using a synopsis, either in print or using this one online.) If you do, you might notice several things.

  1. Though there are variations in wording and in some details, there is a striking agreement between all four gospels in the order of the main events during the week.
  2. The events at the beginning of the week around Palm Sunday, and at the end of the week around the crucifixion seem very busy, yet the middle seems very quiet—the issue of the ‘silent Wednesday’.
  3. The main issue on which the gospel accounts disagree on the order of events is in relation to the denials of Peter by Jesus, which come earlier in Luke’s gospel, and are spread out in John’s gospel.
  4. Jesus’ trial is more detailed, with more people involved in different phases in John than in the Matthew and Mark, the latter two treating it in quite a compressed way as more or less a single event.
  5. The synoptics claim explicitly that the last supper was some form of Passover meal (which must happen after the lambs are sacrificed), whilst John makes no mention of this, and appears to have Jesus crucified at the moment that the Passover lambs are sacrificed.

These anomalies have made the question of the Passion Week chronology ‘the most intractable problem in the New Testament’, and it causes many readers to wonder whether the accounts are reliable at all. For some, they are happy to inhabit the narratives in each gospel as they are, and not worry about reconciling each account with the others, or any of the accounts with what might have actually happened. But I am not sure it is quite so easy to leave it there. After all, the word ‘gospel’ means ‘announcement of good news about something that has happened’; a central part of the Christian claim is that, in the death and resurrection of Jesus, God has done something, and so we cannot evade question of what exactly happened and when. Sceptics (both popular and academic) make much of these apparent inconsistencies, so there is an apologetic task to engage in. And understanding how these issues might be resolved could potentially shed new light on the meaning of the texts themselves.


Last Easter, I caught up with Sir Colin Humphreys’ book The Mystery of the Last Supper, in which he attempts to solve this problem. Humphreys is an academic, and a distinguished one at that, though in materials science. He has written on biblical questions before, though is not a biblical studies professional, but he does engage thoroughly with some key parts of the literature. He identifies the main elements of the puzzle under four headings:

  1. The lost day of Jesus, noticing the lull in activity in the middle of the week.
  2. The problem of the last supper; what kind of meal was it, when did it happen, and can we harmonise John’s account with the synoptics?
  3. No time for the trials of Jesus. If we include all the different elements, they cannot fit within the half night from Thursday to Friday morning.
  4. The legality of the trials. Here, Humphreys notes that later Jewish sources prohibit the conduct of a capital trial during the night, and require that any decision is ratified on the morning following the first trial.

The book is set out very clearly and logically (as you might expect) and includes a good number of tables. Early on Humphreys helpfully tabulates the events in the gospels, showing their relationship.

Having started by looking at the biblical texts, in the middle of the book Humphreys goes on a long scientific exploration, delving into the astronomical issues behind the construction of Jewish calendars, and using this to argue for a particular date for the crucifixion. The key issue here is identifying the dates of the calendar from what we know of the moon phases, and then finding the years when the Passover falls on a Friday, which it will do on average only one year in seven.

Humphreys then uses other well-established data to eliminate outlying dates, and argues for Jesus’ death at 3 pm on Friday, April 3rd, AD 33. He is not alone in this, though the style of his argumentation will have lost many mainstream New Testament specialists. He assumes that the gospels are historically accurate, and takes them as his basic data, when most scholars would want him to be much more provisional. If the case was expressed more in terms of ‘were the gospels accurate, it would lead to this conclusion’ might have been more persuasive for the guild—but then Humphreys is primarily writing for a popular and not a professional audience.

I was much more interested, though, in the later chapters, where Humphreys explores the gospel texts in detail in the light of the calendrical background. Although his proposals about the different calendars in use at the time of Jesus are speculative (even if plausible), there can be no doubt that different calendars were in use, and that it is quite likely that different gospel writers are making reference to different calendar schedules which could give rise to apparent anomalies in the gospel chronologies. In particular, some calendars worked sunset to sunset (as Jewish calculation works today), others counted from sunrise to sunrise, and the Roman calendar counted from midnight to midnight, as we do now. It is not hard to see how the phrase ‘on the next day’ can now have three different possible meanings.

It is also clear that the gospel writers vary in the emphasis that they give to chronological issues. So, whilst Luke offers some very specific markers in his narrative to locate the gospel story to wider world events, and John includes frequent temporal markers in relation both to Jewish feasts and successive days of Jesus’ ministry, Matthew is happy to group Jesus’ teaching and ministry into non-chronological blocks, and Mark has long been recognised as linking events in Jesus’ ministry thematically rather than chronologically. Humphreys uses an everyday example to illustrate this: if I cut the lawn and do some weeding, and someone asks my wife what I have been doing, and she says ‘He has been doing some weeding and cut the lawn’ then we would not describe our two accounts as ‘contradictory’. Chronology just hasn’t been an important issue here.


Humphreys’ solution rests on proposing that, in celebrating the Passover with his disciples, Jesus used pre-Exile calendar which ran sunrise to sunrise and was at least a day ahead of the official Jerusalem calendar, so that there could be up to two days’ difference in calculation. This means that, if the Jerusalem Passover took place on the Friday, following the sacrifice of the lambs on Friday afternoon, it would be possible for Jesus to celebrate his own Passover (and not merely a ‘Passover-like meal’ as some scholars have suggested) as early as the Wednesday. Humphreys believes that the man carrying the water jar (in Luke 22.10 and parallels) is a signal that the Upper Room was in the Essene quarter of Jerusalem, where there would not have been any women to undertake such roles. And the calendar differences account for Mark’s statement that the lambs were sacrificed on the ‘first day of the feast of Unleavened Bread’, (Mark 14.12) which is a contradiction that scholars have in the past attributed either to Mark’s error or his careless writing.

At some points, I think Humphreys’ case is actually slightly stronger than he claims. For example, John’s phrase ‘the Passover of the Jews’ in John 11.55 could arguably be translated as ‘the Passover of the Judeans’, thus emphasising communal and calendrical differences, and Matthew highlights the differences between the crowds of pilgrims and the local Jerusalemites in their response to Jesus. Richard Bauckham has argued that John is writing on the assumption that his readers know Mark, so there is no need for him to recount the details of the Passover meal in John 13 and following. And in the latest edition of Bauckham’s Jesus and the Eyewitnesses, he argues (in an additional chapter) that the ‘Beloved Disciple’ is the author of the gospel but is not John son of Zebedee, and so not one of the Twelve, but a Jerusalemite. This explains some of the distinctive perspectives of John’s gospel with its Judean and Jerusalem focus in contrast to Mark’s focus on Galilee—but would also account for calendrical differences.


There are some points of strain in Humphreys’ argument—for me, the most testing one was Humphreys’ account of the cock crowing three times, the first of which was (he argues) the Roman horn blown to signal the approach of dawn, the gallicinium which is Latin for ‘cock crow’. But there are also some interesting ways in which his reading makes better sense of some details of the text, such as the dream of Pilate’s wife—which she could not have had time to have under the traditional chronology. Moreover, one of our earliest testimonies to the last supper, in 1 Cor 11.23, does not say (as much Anglican liturgy) ‘on the night before he died’ but ‘on the night that he was betrayed’. I will be sticking with the latter phrase in my future use of Eucharistic Prayers! And when Paul says that Christ our Passover has been sacrificed for us (1 Cor 5.7), and that he is the first fruits of those who sleep (1 Cor 15.20), he is reflecting his death on Passover (as per John) and his resurrection on the celebration of First Fruits two days later.

Humphreys is certainly bold in taking on key scholars, including Dick France (with whom I would always hesitate to disagree), but in every case he gives citations and explains where the disagreement lies. When the book was first published, Mark Goodacre wrote a brief blog on why he disagrees, and the debate in comments—including from Humphreys himself—are worth reading. Goodacre’s main concern is Humphreys’ anxiety about demonstrating the reliability of the gospel accounts, and the need to eliminate contradictions.

One of Humphreys’s primary concerns is to avoid the idea that the Gospels “contradict themselves”.  The concern is one that characterizes apologetic works and it is not a concern that I share.

But I wonder whether concern about this aim has led many scholars to dismiss the detail too quickly; much of academic scholarship is ideologically committed to the notion that the gospels are irredeemably contradictory.

I think there are some further things to explore, but it seems to me that Humphreys’ case is worth taking seriously. (First published in 2017.)


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8 thoughts on “What actually happened in Holy Week?”

  1. “in celebrating the Passover with his disciples, Jesus used pre-Exile calendar which ran sunrise to sunrise and was at least a day ahead of the official Jerusalem calendar, so that there could be up to two days’ difference in calculation” – I wonder how this links in with Margaret Barker’s work on there being a community centred on preserving a pre-Exilic understanding of the Temple?

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  2. Helpful work – thank you. We are used to the idea that different parts of the Christian world (East and West) follow different calendars. I wonder if Bauckham’s latest edition of ‘Jesus and the Eyewitnesses’ interacts with Brian Capper’s 1999 JTS article, ‘With the oldest monk’, as Humphreys may also be doing (on the Essene Quarter in Jerusalem and the location of the Cenacle). Of course the question of the Qumran sectaries following a different calendar has also long been considered in the chronology of John.

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  3. I read the book about a year ago and found it very convincing. I’ve just got it out again to re-read parts of it. His argument that the Last Supper took place on Wednesday evening, using a different calendar, seems to make sense of lots of potential problems – but does confound some of our liturgical structures for Holy Week…

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  4. When we talk about Holy Week, is there any reason for supposing that the entrance to Jerusalem took place on a Sunday? Surely “Holy Week” up till the Thursday is a church convenience anyway?
    Isn’t the biggest difference that either Jesus cleansed the Temple twice, or John differs from the Synoptics by about two years?

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    • A comparison of John’s account of the cleansing of the temple (at the beginning of Jesus’ ministry) and the Synoptics doesn’t show much in common. It is a ‘given’ of most NT criticism that John ‘dischronologised’ the tradition and it rejects a priori the idea that Jesus could have done this twice. But why not? I read John and the Synoptics independently supporting each other, and the charge in Mark 14.58 only makes sense as an allusion to John 2.19.

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  5. “What actually happened in Holy Week?” you begin this blog and, I wonder, what makes you think anyone actually knows? Is it because, like Sir Colin Humphreys, the truth of the gospels is not so much argued for as assumed? It seems to me that unless you can demonstrate, not just internal but externally, that the gospels are true and concerned to be so that this is all so much opinion-giving about undemonstrated events. Better, in my view, Goodacre’s approach which does not fret about inconsistency and the need for compatibility across gospels. Concern for these things only demonstrates the influence of hermeneutical needs in the reader rather than the concerns of gospel writers. Fundamentally, I do not see how any scholarship can be honest if one option, that people got things wrong, that the text is factually mistaken, is ruled out due to dogmas and faith-based shibboleths. Such reading indicates a pre-existing narrative to be bolstered with argumentation rather than a genuine search for truth.

    And how would a gospel writer know that Pilate’s wife had a dream anyway? This is not because “much of academic scholarship is ideologically committed to the notion that the gospels are irredeemably contradictory”. It is perhaps because when read without the fictive gauze of belief over the text that is plainly what it appears to be. The best comment on the whole of this “Holy Week” narrative has been given by Crossan in perhaps the best selling historical Jesus book of the last half century: “Those who knew (what happened) didn’t care, those who cared didn’t know.”

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  6. Great posting Ian. Sir Colin is a fellow engineer and member of “Christians in Science”, where we are few and far between! Engineers are particularly good at listening to and bringing together people of different disciplines. By way of scrupulous research over many years, with input from astronomers, astrophysicists, calendrical historians and bible scholars, all internationally peer reviewed, Sir Colin has demonstrated beyond all reasonable doubt that these apparent inconsistencies between the Synoptics and John’s Gospel can be resolved.

    The astronomical and calendrical implications are amazing, eg. the fixing of Easter to April. 3rd. AD 33 on the Julian calendar , the blood moon on the day of the crucifixion, the coincidence of the death of Christ with Passover lambs and his resurrection with the Jewish feast of the first fruits, linking into Paul’s account in 1 Cor. 15.

    For many decades the inconsistencies have ineffectually explained away by biblical scholars in commentary after commentary, and have been the root cause of cynicism and disbelief in the biblical account. “The Mystery of the Last Supper” is perhaps the most important biblical apologetics publication of my lifetime and I commend it to all who have an interest in this area.

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