The Passover Seder
Jesus' Passover Meal
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The
last communal act accomplished by
Jesus before being arrested in Gethsemane
was a particularly solemn meal. Some
call it “a farewell meal”, others
“a Passover meal”. However, we wonder
if it would not be right to keep both
aspects, since at that meeting the
Passover assumed the nature of a farewell
meal, Jesus purposely wishing to use
the Passover meal for his farewell.
It seems to me that the rather problematic
testimonies of the Gospels allow us
to reach this conclusion.
The ‘Passover” in the New Testament
All the evangelists [i] set the account of Jesus' passion
against the background of the celebration
of the Passover to explain how the
chief priests and scribes sought to
arrest Jesus (Mk. 14:1 and Lk. 22:1
- “It was the Passover...and the chief
preists and the scribes were looking
for a way to arrest Jesus by some
trick”) or to suggest the motivation
for what was to happen (Mt. 26:1 and
especially Jn. 13:1 - “It was before
the festival of the Passover, and
Jesus knew that the hour had come
for him to pass from this world to
the Father. Having loved his own
who were in the world, he loved them
to the end.”). For the final event
of Jesus' life the feast of the Passover
is undoubtedly a most significant
hermeneutic criterion. We cannot
understand Jesus' life, and even less
his passion, without the Passover
which is an essential component of
both. [ii]
The New Testament use of the
term “Passover” is the first proof
of this. Present only in the passion
account of Matthew and Mark, it is
alluded to in Luke (2:41) which tells
of the twelve-year-old Jesus' pilgrimage
to Jerusalem. In John it is one
of the mechanisms marking the cadence.
John's two references in chapter 2
(Jn. 3:13 and 23) probably are to
the same feast; 6:4 makes us think
of the following year with the multiplication
of the loaves and the discourse that
followed; from 11:55 to 19:14 John
speaks of the same Passover feast
which sees the conclusion of Jesus'
earthly life. In the four gospels
we meet the expression “the Passover
of the Jews” twice (Jn. 2:13 and Jn.
11:55), but I do not think it can
be explained with the intention of
contrasting it with the Passover of
Jesus or - even less - of Christians.
It simply refers to the Passover customs
(in particular to the pilgrimage to
Jerusalem) that Jesus observed along
with his co-religionists.
In Acts 2:4, the reference
is still to the traditional Passover
feasts, as also in Heb. 11:28 which
recalls the institution of the Passover
by Moses, the fruit of Moses' faith.
It is only in 1 Cor. 5:7 that the
term is applied to Christ, “our Passover”,
who was immolated. But here also
there is no contrast between “our”
Passover and another, except the affirmation
that Christ has a unique relation
with the Passover, achieving to the
highest degree the economy of salvation. [iii]
In this climate of organic
continuity it is understandable that
the supreme moment of the achievement
of Jesus' mission is described as
a paschal moment. But all this still
does not allow precise conclusions
about the last supper. [iv]
Complementary Data in the Gospel Accounts [v]
The meal which marks the high
point of the close relationship between
Jesus and his disciples is chosen,
according to the synoptics, to be
a Passover supper: “Where do you
want us to prepare the Passover?”
(Mt. 26:17ff, same as Mk. 14:12-16
and Lk. 22:11, 13,15). [vi] Thus, when in a brief “eucharistic”
intervention Jesus calls the wine
“my blood, the blood of the covenant”
(Mt. 26:28, same as Mk. 14:24; somewhat
different in Lk. 22:20 and 1 Cor.
11:28), thought may turn to the moment
of the establishment of the Sinai
covenant (Ex. 24:8: “This is the
blood of the Covenant”), and also
to the blood of the Passover lamb
which preserved the children of Israel
from extermination and which was to
become “the sacrifice of the Passover
of the Lord” (Ex. 12:22-27).
In this setting, the blessing
or thanksgiving during which Jesus
pronounced the words of his body and
blood as well as the “memorial” that
he asks those present to make when
they repeat his act (Mt. 26:26ff,
same as Lk. 22:19, same as 1 Cor.
11:24), have a paschal resonance.
The blessing, containing the thanksgiving,
certainly has a broad meaning and
application, but it refers particularly
to the prayer of the most worthy personage
of the paschal supper over the unleavened
bread and the wine. The order to
“do this in memory” covers the whole
concept of the Passover as the “memorial”
of the exodus, the great event when
God revealed himself as the liberator
and savior.
Not many details are given
about the last supper as the Passover,
but that is because the account is
very selective. Here also, as usual,
the evangelists narrate only what
relates to their obvjective and systematically
renounce any concern for an exhaustive
account. The synoptic supper highlights
the relation between the past and
the future of Jesus and the believers,
giving an overview of the episodic
completeness. But it is narrated
and qualified in the setting of the
Passover. The eschatological perspective
is not an exception (present in all
the evangelists and particularly in
Luke). The Passover of Jesus, in continuity
with that of his people, celebrates
a salvation which is cause and anticipation
of the final salvation. “The waiting
to drink wine in the Kingdom of God
is linked to the idea of the banquet
of the fulfillment.” [vii]
A different perspective is
encountered when attention focuses
on John's account. We can accept
the fact that the fourth evangelist
was familiar with a “long” account
of the passion, including the events
he reports in chapters 12 and 13.
The macro structure of this sequence,
which continues in chapters 18 ff,
is also based on a reference to the
Passover, but only as an anticipation
of the “great Sabbath” that will follow
the crucifixion. Therefore the account
of the supper begins with the temporal
indication: “before the feast of
the Passover” (13:1) and it never
speaks of the preparation for the
Passover nor of eating the Passover.
Moreover, it mentions two specific
details: those who led Jesus from
the house of Caiaphas to the Praetorium
“did not go into the Praetorium themselves
or they would be defiled and unable
to eat the Passover” (18:28); his
discussion of “preparation of the
Passover” at the conclusion of Pilate's
interrogation (“toward midday”: 19:14)
as well as confirmation of the time
of the death of Jesus (a particularly
solemn preparation day for the Sabbath:
19:31). Therefore, for John the Passover
begins only on the evening of the
day when Jesus was crucified and so
the last supper could not have been
the Passover supper.
However, in John there also
emerge details which do not seem to
agree with the previous setting,
at least according to many commentators:
the participants are reclining for
the banquet (18:25); Jesus dips a
piece of bread and offers it to Judas
(18:26); the disciples think that
Judas has to “give something to the
poor” (18:29). It would seem that
such a festive and solemn arrangement
for a meal was reserved for the Passover.
The piece of bread can be explained
as the bitter herbs of the Passover,
dipped in the sauce by the presider
and offered to the others; the giving
of alms is one of the works of mercy
that Jewish piety recommended during
Passover.
The synoptics also do not
seem to be totally free of apparently
contradictory aspects, because a number
of actions were imposed - or forbidden
- by the religious leaders of Israel.
They wanted to avoid any violation
of the great feast day, but failed
completely: they undertook a whole
judicial process, a capital execution,
a deposition from the cross and a
burial during a sacred time which
would have forbidden such actions.
Discussion on the Date of the Last
Supper [viii]
The specifics are easily outlined:
there is no doubt that the Passover
was celebrated on the 15 of Nisan; [ix] there is no doubt that Jesus died
on a Friday and was buried hastily
before the Sabbath, that is, shortly
before sunset of the same day. But
what day was that Friday: 15 or 14
of Nisan? And on what day was the
last supper with his disciples eaten:
Tuesday or Thursday? If it was Thursday,
was it the conclusion of 13 or 14
Nisan?
Apparently the texts would
lead us to say: for John as well
as for the Synoptics, Jesus ate the
last supper on Thursday, was crucified
and buried on Friday, and rose on
the first day after the Sabbath.
But for John the supper occurred on
13 (or better, at the beginning of
14) Nisan and was not the Passover;
it was still in the pre-Passover time
that everything that put an end to
Jesus' earthly existence occurred.
In the Synoptics, howver, the supper
was Passover and the crucifixion occurred
on 15 Nisan. To what is this difference
attributed? To the difference in
tradition or to a different editorial
tendency? Are the different traditions
incompatible?
Summarized (and simplified)
answers can be presented as follows:
a) The synoptics anticipate the Passover
because they want to make the institution
of the Eucharist, the seal of the
new covenant, coincide with the feast
of the old covenant; b) John postpones
the Passover because he wants to show
that Jesus dies as the new Passover
lamb at the time when the lambs of
his people were immolated. [x] Both of these answers imply the notion
of “tendency” (and basically it is
the same tendency even if the aspectr
that is interpreted in a “paschal”
manner varies.) This does not affect
the historical evaluation. In fact,
the study continues to be divided
between two perceptions: one holds
that the New Testament clearly attests
to two parallel readings of the circumstances
of the supper in the setting of the
final events of Jesus' life, without
allowing a precise reconstruction
of those circumstances; the other
maintains that in the information
it provides, the New Testament also
gives the circumstances, and that
with adequate research, it should
not be impossible to discover them.
This second orientation is often concretized
in the preference given to the Synoptic
version (that the supper was really
the Passover). But there are other
possible hypotheses: c) What is
important in the gospel account of
the supper is not the interpretation
but the fact, which is followed by
interpretation. Then the fact can
be perceived in either of the versions,
or d) The fact is portrayed accurately
in both versions because it is read
in the setting of two different calendars.
Concluding Suggestions
My preference is to link my
reading to this series of hypotheses
since I seek to start from the basic
source of the events. Jesus and his
disciples lived the event of the last
meal aware of the moment in which
it was happening: near the Passover
or during the Passover itself. Jesus'
awareness extended to the meaning
that the events were assuming (and
which he attributed to them) at that
precise moment; the disiciples' awareness
was more limited, but it grew as they
remembered the events. There is no
reason to think that with time (not
too long a time before the establishment
of the specific traditions) they preserved
only the memory of the interpretations
rather than that of the circumstances
such as the date. There are not enough
signs to lead us to think that, in
the span of time between the account
of the synoptics and that of John,.there
was an interpretative alteration of
memory.
If these premises are justified,
a concordant reading is no longer
just an option but an obligation. [xi] There is a suggestion that John's
account follows the calendar of the
Sadducees for whom, in the year of
Jesus' death, the Passover fell on
the day after that of the calendar
of the Pharisees and to which the
synoptics hold. This leaves open
the problem of the calendar followed
by Jesus himself. We hear more often
that it was the calendar of the Pharisees
and therefore he really wanted to
insert his “Eucharistic” intervention
in the ritual of the Hebrew Passover. [xii] This reading is confirmed by the details
in John which are explained as vestiges
of Passover recollections.
In the recent past the suggestion
of Annie Jaubert has been found of
interest. It holds that Jesus' meal
was the Passover, but that he anticipated
it on Tuesday evening, according to
the indications of the ancient calendar
found in the documents of Qumran. [xiii] The first month of the year always
began in mid-week, on Wednesday..
Consequently, the events of the passion
would have unfolded in a span of three
days: Wednesday, Jesus' first hearing
in the Hebrew tribunal; Thursday,
the second hearing and condemnation
(and perhaps the beginning of the
Roman trial); Friday, sentence by
the Roman tribunal and capital execution.
This last hypothesis which
has been set aside in recent years
would need to be studied, given the
difficulty in making it agree with
the “concentrated” schemas of the
gospel narrations which make some
think of a shortened trial. The hypothesis
which contrasts the usages of the
Pharisees with those of the Sadducees
would be simpler, but it is not based
on authentic documentation and does
not explain how Jesus could have taken
initiatives which were prohibited
on a feast day. Nevertheless, the
testimonial value of the narration
is so univocally concentrated on the
Passover that there is no sense in
trying to cast doubt on it. More
simply, we recognize that in this
account there are many particulars
that escape us which are passed over
in silence.
[i] All the commentaries, in some manner, make reference to
this fact.
[ii]
Very enlightening
on this topic is the work of N. Fuglister,
Il valore salifico della pasqua
(Suppl. GLNT, 2), Paideia, Brescia
1976 (tran slated from the German
Die Heilsbedeutung des Pascha,
Kosel, Munchen, 1963).
[iii] A well-known illustration
of this meaning is found in A. Schenker,
Das Abendmahl Jesu als Brennpunkt
des Alten Testaments. Begegnung Zwischen
den beiden Testamenten - eine bibeltheologische
Skizze (Biblische Beiträge 13),
Schweizerisches Katholisches Bibelwerk,
Freiburg 1977.
[iv] A different position
seems to be that of X. Leon-Dufour,
Le partage du pain eucharistique
selon le Nouveau Testament, Du
Seuil, Paris 1982, 186-187 and 292,
which insists on the tendency of the
New Testament authors, especially
of the synoptics, to show that the
last events of Jesus' life “highlight
the Passover of Jesus” and therefore
that we are passing from “the rites
of the person to the ritual of the
personal” (187). The confirmation
of this is seen in the absence of
allusion to the paschal lamb, the
bitter herbs, or other particulars
of the Hebrew Passover. But I think
that this reading - however enlightening
- does not respect enough the intentional
continuity of Jesus' work with that
of the Hebrew rite.
[v] The most abundant discussion
and documentation is offered by J.
Jeremias, Le parole dell'ultima
cena (Bibliotea di cultura religiosa,
23), Paideia, Brescia 1973 (translation
from the fourth German edition Die
Abendmahlsword Jesu, Vandenhoeck
& Ruprecht, Gottingen 1967).
See also, Die Chronologie des Letzten
Mahles und des Leidens Jesu (Schweizerische
Katholische Bibelbewegung, 4)
Benziger, Einsiedeln 1963. We begin
this presentation with the conviction
that “the tradition of a supper taken
by Jesus with his disciples the evening
before his passion has historical
value.” The matter is less obvious
than we might think, given the discussion
of X. Leon-Dufour, op. cit., 160 (the
source of the quotation - 162).
[vi] For Luke in particular
cf. the three great volumes by H.
Schurmann on the account of the last
supper in Lk. 22:7-38 (Munster 1952,
1955, 1957); W. Bosen, Jesusmahl,
Eucharistisches Mahl, Endzeitmahl.
Ein Beitrag zur Theologie des Lukas
(Stuttgarter Bibelstudien, 97)
Katholisches Bibelwerk, Stuttgart
1980 (especially 26-29).
[vii] R. Pesch, Il vangelo
di Marco (Theological Commentary
on the New Testament), II, Paideia,
Brescia 1982, 534, a comment on Mk.
14:25 (translated from the German
Das Markusevangelium, II. Teil,
Herder, Freiburg 1980).
[viii] X. Leon-Dufour, op.
cit., 290-292, summarizes the history
of the discussion (starting in 1720)
and the orientations of the present
exegetical schools, with a summary
of the argument by J. Jeremias and
his reserves concerning them.
[ix] The question deals only
with the day and month. It does not
consider the year, which does not
directly affect the question of the
Passover even if, knowing the exact
year of Jesus' death, it would be
possible to establish the day of the
week on which the 14 and 15 of Nisan
fell. J. Jeremias, op. cit., 37-43,
and J. Blinzler deal with this question
in Il processo di Gesu (Biblioteca
di cultura religiosa, 6), Paidia,
Brescia 1966 (translated from the
German Der Prozess Jesu, Pusted,
Regensburt 1960). According to Jeremias
(p. 43), the 14 and 15 of Nisan could
certainly not fall on Friday in the
years 28, 29 and 32 (which therefore
cannot be held as the years of Jesus'
death), while the years 30 and 31
seem more favorable to John's chronology
(Friday, April 7 or 27 fell on the
14 of Nisan), even if we cannot exclude
totally the synoptic chronolgy (that
that Friday was the 15). Thus Jeremias
concludes: “The astronomic chronology
does not lead to a sure conclusion”
(p. 42). Blinzler leans toward the
14 of Nisan (p. 95).
[x] Cf. A.J.B. Higgins,
The Lord's Supper in the New Testament
(Studies in Biblical Theology),
SCM Press, London 1964, 13-23. “While
the fourth evangelist, for theological
reasons, antedates the chronology
by twenty-four hours, he depends on
a tradition (or traditions) which
agrees with the Synoptics regarding
the Last Supper as a Passover, and
in placing the crucifixion on Nisan
15th” (p. 22-23).
[xi] A simple and well directed
explanation of the whole problem is
offered by E. Galbiati, L'Eucaristia
nella Bibbia, I.P.L., Milano 1982,
46-48. He adds the hypothesis that
“Jesus may have anticipated the Passover
supper, following the ancient rites,
but without the lamb immolated in
the temple...Jesus would have acted
on his own authority, replacing the
lamb with the Eucharist” (p. 47).
But he admits that there are no sure
testimonies of cases when the Passover
was celebrated without the lamb at
that time.
[xii] The existence of several
calendars is attested to in writings
found in Qumran. How they were differentiated
among themselves is less clear; it
will be seen in the proposals of A.
Jaubert.
[xiii] La date de la Cene, Gabalda, Paris 1957; A. Giglioli, Il giorno dell'ultima Cena e l'anno della
morte di Gesu, in R. Biblt 10
(1962) 156-181; E. Ruckstuhl, op.
cit.; A. Moda, La date de la Cene:
sur la these de Mlle Annie Jaubert,
in Nicolaus 3 (1975) 53-116.
*
Don Giuseppe Ghiberti is a member
of the Pontifical Commission and President
of the Turin section of the theological
faculty of Northern Italy where he
also teaches New Testament Exegesis.
He also teaches New Testament Philology
at the Catholic University A. Gemelli
in Milan. His publications include: La sepoltura di Gesu,
ed. Piemme 1982; La risurrezione
di Gesu, ed. Paideia 1982; Spirito
e vita in Giovanni, ed. Paideia
1989. This article has been
translated from the Italian.
For a general view of the discussion,
cf. H. Feld, Das Verständnis des
Abendmahls (Erträge der Forschung,
50), Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft,
Darmstadt 1976. I highly recommend
the readings referred to in this working
document.
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*Dr.
J. Frank Henderson is professor of fiturgy
in Edmonton, A1óerta, Canada, and
is editor of the Canadian National Bulletin
on Liturgy.
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