BYU Church History Symposium 2022 - Allen Hansen
Concerning the thesis that “The Bl. Virgin Mary participated in accomplishing the work of redemption principally by her virginal consent and by her maternal compassion”:
173. Doctrine of the Church. 1)
Pius VII: “The Christian faithful really owe reverence to the Bl. Virgin Mary,
as the sweet Parent of her Son, so that with careful zeal and benevolence they
may cultivate the memory of the sorrows—those intense sufferings that She,
while standing near the cross of Jesus, endured with singular and invincible
fortitude and constancy and which She offered to the Eternal Father for their
salvation” (In Bover, Soteriologia Mariana 453).
2) Leo XIII: “She took her part in
the laborious expiation made by her Son for the sins of the world. It is
certain, therefore, that she suffered in the very depths of her soul with His
most bitter sufferings and His torments. Moreover it was before the eyes of
Mary that was to be finished the Divine Sacrifice for which she had borne and
brought up the Victim . . . There stood by the Cross of Jesus his Mother, who,
in a miracle of charity, so that she might receive us as her sons, offered generously
to Divine Justice her own Son, and died in her heart with Him, stabbed with the
sword of sorrow” (Encyclical “Iucunda semper”: ASS 27, 178).
3) St. Pius X: “When the extreme
hour of the Son came, beside the Cross of Jesus there stood Mary His Mother,
not merely occupied in contemplating the cruel spectacle, but rejoicing that her
only Son was offered for the salvation of mankind, and so entirely participating
in His Passion, that if it had been possible she would have gladly borne all
the torments that her Son bore. And from this community of will and suffering between
Christ and Mary she merited to become most worthily the Reparatrix of the lost
world and Dispensatrix of all the gifts of our Savior purchased for us by His
Death and by His Blood” (Encyclical “Ad diem illum”: ASS 10 [1918] 182).
4) Benedict XV: “Thus with her
suffering and dying Son she almost died, and she so abandoned her maternal rights
to her Son for the salvation of mankind, and immolated her Son to placate the
Divine Justice as much as she could, that it can rightly be said that She along
with Christ redeemed the human race! (Apostolic Letter ”Inter Sodalicia”: ASS
10 [1918] 182).
5) Pius XI: “The sorrowful Virgin participated
with Christ in the work of redemption . . . “ (Apostolic Letter “Explorata
rest est”: AAS 15 [1921] 104) “O Mother of piety and mercy, who, as
compassionate and corredemptrix stood by your sweet Son as he was accomplishing
on the wood of the Cross the redemption of the human race . . . : preserve in
us, we pray, and daily increase the precious fruits of redemption and of your
compassion” (Prayer at the end of the Jubilee Year: L’Osservatore Romano, 29-30
April 1935)
6) Pius XII: “It was she . . ., always
most intimately united with her Son, offered Him on Golgotha to the Eternal
Father for all the children of Adam, sin-stained by his unhappy fall, and her
mother’s rights and mother’s love were included in the holocaust . . . “ (Encyclical
“Mystici Corporis”: AAS 35 [1943] 247). (Iesu Solano and J. A. de
Aldama, Sacrae Theologiae Summa, 4 vols. [trans. Kenneth Baker; Keep the
Faith, Inc., 2014], 3-A: 454-55)
On the thesis that “The Bl. Virgin Mary truly is the Dispensatrix
of all graces”:
194. Doctrines of the Church. Leo
XIII: We need to obtain the favor of “the great Virgin Mary, the Mother of God,
the guardian of our peace and the minister to us of heavenly grace, who is
placed on the highest summit of power and glory in heaven, in order that she
may bestow the help of her patronage on men who through so many labors and
dangers are striving to read that eternal city” (Encyclical ”Supremi
Apostolatus”: ASD 16,113). “God . . . listens to the prayers of her whom He
wished to be the minister of his heavenly graces” (Encyclical “Superiore
anno”: ASS 17,49). “With equal truth may it be also affirmed that, by the
will of God, Mary is the intermediary through whom is distributed unto us this
immense treasure of mercies gathered by God . . . Thus no man goes to the
Father but by the Son, and no man goes to Christ but by His Mother” (Encyclical
“Octobri mense”: ASS 24,195f.). “The recourse we have to Mary in prayer
follows upon the office she continually fills by the side of the throne of God as
Mediatrix of divine grace; being by worthiness and by merit most acceptable to
Him, and, therefore, surpassing in power all the angels and saints in Heaven .
. . And later, without measure and without end will she be able to plead our
cause, passing upon a day to life immortal . . . We turn out prayerful voices
to Mary. Thus is confirmed that law is merciful mediation of which We have
spoken, and which St. Bernardine of Siena expressed: ‘Every grace granted to
man has three degrees in order: for by God it is communicated to Christ, from
Christ it passed to the Virgin, and from the Virgin it descends to us” (Encyclical
“Iucunda semper”: ASS 27,178f.). “From her heavenly abode in she began,
by God’s decree, to watch over the Church, to assist and befriend us as our
Mother; so that she who was so intimately associated with the mystery of human
salvation is just as closely associated with the distribution of the graces
which for all time will flow from the Redemption . . . She is the Dispenser of
all heavenly gifts” (Encyclical “Adjutricem populi”: ASS 28,130f.). “From
her, as from an abundant stream, are derived the streams of heavenly graces. In
her hand are the treasures of the mercies of the Lord; God wished her to be the
beginning of all good things” (Encyclical “Diuturni temporis”: ASS
31,146f.). “Thus the most powerful Virgin Mother, who formerly cooperated in
charity that the faithful might be born in the Church, is also now the mediatrix
of our salvation . . .” (Apostolic Letter “Parta humano”: ASS 34,195)
2) St. Pius X: “And from this
communion of will and suffering between Christ and Mary, she merited to become
most worthily the reparatrix of the lost world and Dispensatrix of all the
gifts of Our Savior purchased for us by His Death and by his blood . . . Jesus
sits at the right hand of the majesty on high. Mary sits at the right hand of
her Son—a refuge to secure and so a help so trusty against all dangers that we
have nothing to fear or to despair of under her guidance, her patronage, her
protection” (Encyclical “Ad diem illum”: ASS 36,453f.). The Virgin is “the
Mediatrix of all graces” (Apostolic Letter ”Manilensium Archiepiscopus”: AAS
2 [1920] 901). For through her, who is the mirror of justice and seat of
wisdom, the Omnipotent willed us to have all things” (Sermo ad PP
Franciscales”: AAS 2 [1910] 909). This is the time of the feast and Mass
for B.M.V. Mediatrix.
3) Benedict XV: “But if for this
reason all of us have received these graces from the treasury of redemption,
they are administered as it were by the hands of the Sorrowful Virgin herself”
(Apostolic Letter “Inter Sodalicia”: AAS 10 [1918] 182). “Since the most
holy Virgin Mary was chosen with so many and such great merits to be the Mother
of God and at the same time was divinely constituted the mediatrix of graces
for all mankind” (Apostolic Letter “Cum Sanctissima Virgo Maria”: AAS 9
[1917] 324). “She is the most blessed Mother of God and has the power of
mediatrix of graces with the Lord” (Apostolic Letter “Locarni, intra fines”:
AAS 11 [1919] 67). “Whatever graces he [Christ] confers on men, she has
their distribution and appointment” (Encyclical “Fausto appetente die”: AAS
13 [1921] 334)
Pius XI: “Christ “since he is the
one Mediator of God and men, wished to join his Mother to Himself as the
advocate of sinners, the minister and mediatrix of grace” (Encyclical “Miserentissimus
Redemptor”: AAS 20 [1928] 178) “We know that everything is given to us by
the Excellent and Supreme God through the hands of the Mother of God” (Encyclical
“Ingravescentibus malis”: AAS 29 [1937] 380)
“The Virgin Mother herself, the
Mediatrix with God of all graces” (Apostolic Letter “Galliam Ecclesiae
filiam”: AAS 14 [1922] 186). “The Virgin Mary . . ., the Mediatrix with God
of all the charisms” (Apostolic Letter “Extat in civitate”: AAS 16
[1924] 152) “To the Virgin, the Mediatrix with God of all graces” (Apostolic
Letter “Cognitum sane”: ASS 18 [1924] 213). “For she is the Mother of God,
the administrator of heavenly graces . . .” (Letter “Sollemne semper”:
AAS 24 [1932] 376)
Pius XII: “For the Bl. Virgin has
so much grace with God, she enjoys such power with her Only-begotten Son, that
whoever in need of help does not run to her, is attempting to fly without
wings, as Dante sings” (Letter “Superiore anno”: AAS 32 [1940] 145). “May
she never cease to beg from him that copious streams of grace may flow from its
exalted Head into all the members of the Mystical Body (Encyclical “Mystici
Corporis”: AAS 35 [1943] 248).
195. Please
note concerning these texts: it is said in them: a) that in general we
have grace through Mary, that graces come to us from Her, that graces are in
Her hands; b) that in particular Mary procures graces for us from God, that she
is the Mediatrix of graces; c) that the graces, about which we are concerned,
are all graces of redemption, whatever Christ confers on men, or form a
negative point of view that Christ grants us nothing except through Mary. (Ibid.,
468-70)
Although the Roman Pontiffs in
these texts speak mainly about the Bl. Virgin as she is now in heaven, still
there are some texts in which tye speak about the graces granted by Christ
through Mary while she was on the earth. Thus Leo III: “During His private life
on earth He associated her with Himself in each of His first two miracles: the
miracle of grace, when at the salutation of Mary, the infant leaped in the womb
of Elizabeth: the miracle of nature when He turned water into wine at the
marriage-feast of Cana. And, at the supreme moment of His public life . . . “
(Encyclical “Augustissimae Virginis”: ASS 30,129). Thus Pius XII: “Furthermore,
her only Son, condescending to His prayer at Cana of Galilee, performed the
miracle by which His disciples believed in Him” (Encyclical “Mystici
Corporis”: AAS 35,247). (Ibid., 470 n. 26)
On Gen 3:15:
N. B. On the Proto-gospel.
The traditional opinion of Catholics, which, intended and expressed by the Holy
Spirit as the true and genuine meaning of that text, is taught by the Supreme
Pontiffs Pius IX and Pius XII and maintains the Mariological meaning of the
Proto-Gospel, although not just in one way. For some find Mary in that text
only in an eminent sense, some in a typical sense, some in a fuller sense, and
others in a literal sense. To make a theological argument these views are
accidental; for the meanings either typical or literal or fuller are truly
biblical meanings. It is more probable that the typical meaning is excluded,
and it concerns the meaning which the Holy Spirit wished to express with those
words of the hagiographer and so expressed, whether it is found from the words
alone, or from the work of tradition, of the Magisterium, of the analogy of
faith. But it is possible to dispute whether this meaning should be called
simply literal or a fuller sense.
It is also accidental to the argument
whether Mary is included in “woman” or in “seed,” although the prior hypothesis
seems to be more probable. (Iesu Solano and J. A. de Aldama, Sacrae Theologiae
Summa, 4 vols. [trans. Kenneth Baker; Keep the Faith, Inc., 2014], 3-A: 361-62)
On John 19:25-27 as a “proof-text” for Mary’s “spiritual maternity”:
The entire strength of this argument
depends on the question whether in the text John acts only as his own private
person, or he represents in person the whole human race, and this not in some
accommodated sense, but in a true sense. Of course, there are many exegetes who
hold for the accommodated sense only. However this often repeated teaching of
the Holy Pontiffs seems to demand something more than a mere sense of accommodation.
Moreover, because from Benedict XIV the Church accepts it as “instructed by the
teaching of the Holy Spirit,” and from Leo XIII that “the Church has constantly
taught” that John was designated the person of the human race . . . it is
necessary to investigate how actually such a meaning is found in the text.
Surely after Rupert Tuitiensis
(before Gregory of Nicomedia and perhaps also Origen), this interpretation was
quite common. This interpretation, from an analysis of the context, whether the
immediate context (because everything that immediately precedes or follows has
a more universal meaning), or the mediate context (because the whole Gospel of
John abounds in narrations, which, beside the historical sense, also have
another symbolic meaning), seems to be much more probable.
However, these words of Christ do
not formally constitute the spiritual maternity itself, but declare it as
already fully constituted. (Ibid., 431-32)
On the veneration of relics and
images. Relics in the strict sense are what is left over from the bodies
of the Saints. In the broad sense they are also things that they used during
their lifetime and that their bodies, even dead bodies, have touched. The
veneration which is given to relics, is a relative cult, since it is directed
to them because of the connection they have with the person of the Saints. The
solemn veneration of relics is found in the whole ecclesiastical tradition, as
even the Acts of the Martyrs give abundant witness to. The magisterium of the Church
has often approved of this. Thus the Council of Nicaea II condemned those who
throw away the relics of the martyrs (D 603); the Council of Rome in 993 (D
675) approved the veneration of them; the Council of Constance (D 1269) did the
same against the Wycliffites and the Hussites; and especially the Council of
Trent in session 25 (d 1821) against the Protestants, and in its Profession of
Faith (d 1867).
The cult of images is also
relative. The defense of this cult against the iconoclasts was made principally
by the Council of Nicaea II (d 600-601, 603). The Council of Constantinople IV
(D 653-656) and the Council of Trent in session 25 (D 1823, 1867) proposed the
same doctrine. (Iesu Solano and J. A. de Aldama, Sacrae Theologiae Summa,
4 vols. [trans. Kenneth Baker; Keep the Faith, Inc., 2014], 3-A: 505)
Further Reading:
Answering Fundamentalist Protestants and Roman Catholic/Eastern Orthodox on Images/Icons
Scholium 2. On
ignorance and error. The question here is about ignorance in the proper
sense or denoting a privation, that is, of those things that
according to his status the soul of Christ needed to know. For it is
clear that the knowledge of Christ suffered some ignorance in the improper
sense, in a negative way, or better, simply not knowing, since, as
finite, he did not know everything that is contained in the power of God. . . . There were not lacking important
Fathers who attributed some ignorance to Christ the man, especially
because of Mark 13:32 But of that day or that hour no one knows, not even
the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father. Some of these
Fathers held only the progress of the human knowledge of Christ up
to his resurrection. But many of the Fathers, especially after the
Agnoetists, who following the leadership of Themistius attributed ignorance to
Christ, strongly affirmed that it is unworthy of Christ to think that he was
burdened with any ignorance.
358.
Already at the beginning of scholastic theology the exclusion of all ignorance
in Christ was almost unanimous. St. Thomas deduces from the fullness of
Christ’s knowledge that there was no ignorance in him (III, q. 15, a 3 c)
The magisterium itself of the
Church, both formerly and recently, has rejected the opinion that places
some ignorance in Christ. See D 474-476, 3432-3434, 3645f..
359. Regarding
a positive explanation of Mark 13:32: Christ said that he did not know
the day and hour, because it was not part of his mission to reveal this.
This saying of Christ agrees with not a few others in which Christ hides
himself, so that the father may be more apparent.
Moreover, concerning the
knowledge acquired by his own acts it can truly be said that Christ did not
know the day of judgment . . . he truly asked questions and experienced true
admiration. However since Christ did not know the day of judgment by his human
knowledge both beatific and infused, it would be false to say that the Lord simply
did not know it by his human knowledge. (Iesu Solano and J. A. de Aldama, Sacrae
Theologiae Summa, 4 vols. [trans. Kenneth Baker; Keep the Faith, Inc.,
2014], 3-A: 164)
365. Scholium 4. An
explanation of Christ’s sadness. There is a big difficulty from
the beatific vision of the soul of Christ . . . Since it seems that joy
necessarily follows from this vision, but it is not apparent how such joy can
be together with sadness, there have not been lacking theologians who,
because of Christ’s sadness, denied is blessed joy during the time of the
passion. But if you make an exception for these few authors, the common opinion
of theologians refuses to admit such a limitation of joy in Christ.
From the treatise on the last
things it is certain that the impassibility of a glorified body is derived from
the blessed soul, and in such a way that it is something intrinsic to
the body, as the almost common opinion holds against Scotus and some others. Likewise,
most theologians holds that the impassibility overflows into the body not physically
and effectively from the beatific vision, but only morally or by a
certain fitting ordination of God that in its own way is connatural to
the beatific state.
366.
The sensible sadness of Christ is explained more easily. For on the
part of the object, the beatifying joy of the soul and the sensible sadness
do not exclude each other, because they are not related to the same object;
for the object of joy is the possession of the divine goodness, while the
object of sadness is some injury, both one’s own and that of someone else. And
there is no repugnance on the part of the overflowing: “That the glory
of His soul did not overflow into His body from the first moment of Christ’s conception
was due to a certain Divine dispensation, that He might fulfill the
mysteries of our redemption in a passible body.”
367. Spiritual
sadness or sadness in the will itself is more difficult to
understand, if indeed it is the will itself that is affected by
beatifying joy. But it is possible to understand it from the difference of
the formal object. For the same material object, v.gr., the partial
frustration of his passion and death with the consequent damnation of many men,
which Christ saw in God by his knowledge of vision, as permitted by God
and therefore lovable, by his infused and acquired knowledge he could
apprehend the same thing as something evil in itself.
368.
The possibility of spiritual sadness is not excluded on the part of the
subject or from the opposite way in which joy and sadness affect the
subject, especially when the greatest joy affects some subject. Namely,
it would seem that there is no place in a soul that is already totally beatified
for a contrary affection, that is, sadness. A solution may be found in the fact
that joy and sadness do not have their own contrariness, unless in a particular
cause they are concerned with absolutely the same thing both materially
and formally. However although they do not have a strict contrariety, still
there is great diversity between them and a certain repugnance,
so that without a miracle they could not coexist in the same subject. (Iesu
Solano and J. A. de Aldama, Sacrae Theologiae Summa, 4 vols. [trans.
Kenneth Baker; Keep the Faith, Inc., 2014], 3-A: 166-68)
Further Reading:
"Jesus Wept": Obvious and Needs no Interpretation to Understand?
I was asked by a missionary I am facebook friends with if I would have a discussion with a Protestant in Utah, James Hazleton. A friend, Travis Anderson had some interactions with him on Sola Scriptura, and it did not go well for Hazleton, proving himself to be, to be blunt, a disingenuous hack.
I suggested Sola Scriptura and shared my personal email address with the missionary to pass on to Hazleton. Here is the exchange. Note that he tried to chicken out of discussing Sola Scriptura, and when I said I would allow the topic to be changed if he would provide just one person in the first 1,000 years of Christianity who held to his theology of justification, baptism, ecclesiology, and the formal sufficiency of the Bible, I would discuss his tract (click to enlarge):
Here is my final response to his nonsense:
Here is the thing many Evangelical Protestant critics do not seem to get: Even if "Mormonism" is false, Protestantism is not, ipso facto, true. And simply saying, as one Protestant did, "but the early Christians had the Bible!" as evidence of there being proto-Protestants in the first Chrisitan millennium is sheer nonsense: they all believed in baptismal regeneration, for e.g., a heresy according to many Protestants who are not Lutherans or many Anglicans, and none held to the formal sufficiency of the 66 books of the Protestant canon.
Latter-day Saints are intellectually honest in our belief in a Great Apostasy; Protestants like that hack Hazleton may claim they do not believe in a Great Apostasy, but functionally act as if there was one when (or in the case of Hazleton, if--I seriously doubt he has read 1 Clement, the Ignatian Epistles, the Didache, Epistle of Barnabas, or other early works such as those of Justin Martyr and Irenaeus, for e.g.) they read the patristic literature. Speaking of patristic literature, for those wondering about deification in their writings, see:
Responding to Christina Darlington on Early Christians and Deification (see also the reference to the Jewish text Midrash Alpha beta diRabbi Akiba BhM 3:32):
Responding to Christina Darlington on Early Christians and Deification
Update:
Hazelton is misrepresenting our exchange. The guy is, as one bookstore owner in Utah would put it, a human mattress stain:
Moroni left the land of his birth some
time after beginning to engrave these last chapters. His journey took him from
central Mexico to the hill in New York where he was to bury the abridgement in
a stone box near the top of a glacial mound. One would suppose that the Lord
had shown him the need for placing the record in that particular place. We do
not know how much time was spent in traveling that distance but we do know that
he did not have to walk all the way, carrying the record. We should remember that
shipping in the Gulf had been a way of life from long before Christ’s appearance.
Certainly the people did not lose the art during the peaceful years of the
kingdom period. It was undoubtedly still going on, with some possible
disruptions due to the long-drawn-out war. Settlement up the Mississippi and
Ohio rivers from Mesoamerica is attested to by archaeological evidence. In
fact, travel by water was the one feasible way for Moroni to have reached the
area where he buried the abridgment. (Verneil W. Simmons, Peoples, Places
and Prophecies: A Study of the Book of Mormon [rev ed.; Independence,
Miss.: Zarahemla Research Foundation, Inc., 1986], 232-33)
“The south was much nearer to the
Ohio-Scioto country three thousand years ago then it is now, . . . . because
the Ohio River did not flow directly west and enter the Mississippi at its
present entrance point, at Cairo, Illinois. It turned south much sooner—just before
Louisville—and, using the bed of the present Yazoo River, entered the Mississippi
in the present state of Mississippi, at the already mentioned Poverty Pont
culture settlement at Jaketown. The north-south route was thus more direct,
shorter and a more natural one to follow, an aqueous camino real. The
circumstance is what makes Willey’s view of diffusion of traits out of Mexico
into the Hopewell territory both attractive and convincing.”—Louis A. Brennan, No
Stone Unturned, pp. 288, 289.
Moroni would have found
settlements all the way up the Ohio, He could have traveled by water to within
a very short distance of the hill in western New York. (Ibid., 281 n. 2)
CHRIST
IS CRUCIFIED
Mormon takes note that if Nephi had made no mistake in keeping
their calendar, then Christ’s crucifixion took place on the fourth day of the
first month of the thirty-four year after the sign of His birth. If we can identify
a date for the crucifixion, then we also know the date of His birth—four days
earlier.
Catholic tradition has set the crucifixion on a Friday, and
certain theologians have claimed the date to be April 7, in the year 30 A.D.
Due to changes in our calendar, over the centuries, we are not sure of the date
of our Lord’s birth, but we do know that the time of His death was the month Nisan,
the equivalent of our modern April (The Interpreter’s Dictionary of the
Bible, Vol. 1, “Calendars,” p. 486). The Christian world has long accepted
the tradition that the crucifixion took place on the Jewish holy day of
Passover.
Scholars have raised questions not only about the date, but as to
the possibility that such a thing could have been done on the day of the
Passover celebration. If Christ died on a Friday, then He made a statement which
can not be applied to His death.
For as Jonas was three days and three nights in the whale’s belly;
so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the
earth.—Matthew 12:40.
The three days will fit if one accepts the early Hebrew dating
practice of counting a part of a day as a full day. But there is no way to fit
three nights into a Friday crucifixion, when the resurrection occurred early
Sunday (“As is well known, a reign of three years in the earlier Hebrew
antedating practice may mean only one full year and parts of two others. Three
days may also imply one full day and parts of two others.”—William Foxwell
Albright, Archaeology and the Religion of Israel, p. 213, Note 17). Due
to this discrepancy, scholars have usually ignored this scripture as pertaining
to His death.
If we had been good students of our Book of Mormon, we would have
shown the world long ago that the crucifixion had to have occurred on a
Thursday and Christ’s statement did refer to His death and the time in the
tomb. There is the prophecy of Samuel, given about 6 B.C.:
But behold, as I said unto you concerning another sign, a sign of
his death, behold, in that day that he shall suffer death, the sun shall be
darkened and refuse to give his light unto you; and also the moon, and the
stars; And there shall be no light upon the face of this land, even from the
time that he shall suffer death, for the space of three days, to the time that
he shall rise again from the dead;--Helaman 5:75, 76
If Jesus died on the cross at midafternoon in Jerusalem, as
recorded in the Gospels, and we allow for the eight hours difference in time
for this hemisphere, the hour of His death would have been 7:00 a.m. in Zarahemla.
Samuel had said the darkness would last from the moment of His death until He
arose three days later. This would require darkness for all of Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday, with light returning on Sunday morning.
The accounts given in Mark and Luke state that darkness covered
Jerusalem from the sixth to the ninth hour—12:00 noon until 3:00 in the
afternoon. The apocryphal gospel of Peter declares:
And it was noon and darkness came over all Judea; and they were
troubled and distressed, lest the sun had set . . . And many went about with
lamps, supposing it was night, and fell down. Then the sun arose and it was found
the ninth hour . . .(“The Lost Gospel According to Peter,” pp. 283-284. Found in The
Lost Books of the Bible and the Forgotten Books of Eden [World Publishing Co.,
New York])
The climax came at the ninth hour, when Christ gave up His life,
for then the earth shook and the veil of the temple was rent. Recently some
scientists have proposed that the darkening of the city in Jerusalem was due to
an eclipse. This is not possible as there can not be a solar eclipse when the
moon is full, and the 15th of Nisan is always the full moon. Note in the
statement from Samuel that the “moon” would also refuse to give its light.
In Zarahemla, those three hours would correspond to 4:00 a.m.-7:00
a.m. During these hours the winds and earthquakes devastated the land. Cities were
set on fire, which was quenched by the “mists of darkness” wherein no fire
could be lit. Mormon gives us the times:
And it came to pass when the thunderings, and the lightning, and
the storm, and the tempest, and the quakings of the earth did cease—for behold,
they did last for about the space of three hours; and it was said by some that
the time was greater; Nevertheless, all these great and terrible things were
done in about the space of three hours; and then behold, there was darkness
upon the face of the land. And it came to pass that it did last for the space
of three days, and there was no light seen; and there was great mourning, and
howling, and weeping among all the people continually;--III Nephi 4:16, 17, 21
At the end of that period, Mormon records:
And it came to pass that thus did the three days pass away. And it
was in the morning, and the darkness dispersed from off the face of the land .
. . and the wailing of the people who were spared alive, did cease;--III Nephi 4:61-63.
The Book of Mormon demands a Thursday crucifixion. And when we
know this, it is possible to find verification in the Gospels, even though the
contradictions found there created the problems in the first place. The first
question is whether Christ died on the day of the Passover of (the 15th of
Nisan) or on the 14th, “the day of preparation.” The accounts given in Matthew,
Mark, and Luke appear to place it on the Passover, although there are
contradictory statements present, but the gospel of John states plainly that it
was the day before. The Interpreter’s Bible makes this comment:
In this instance John is almost certainly correct . . . since the
Passover was a sacred day, it is almost inconceivable that Jesus could have
been arrested, examined before the Sanhedrin, tried before Pilate, crucified,
and buried during the course of it.—Volume 8, p. 378.
John’s account of this event is quite different from the other
Gospels and it appears to be more complete. We shall attempt a reconstruction
of that last week as taken from the Gospels.
Let us begin by examining a statement made by Paul:
Purge out therefore the old leaven, that ye may be a new lump, as
ye are unleavened. For even Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us.—1 Corinthians
5:7.
Paul is pointing out that Christ had fulfilled the role of the
paschal lamb, as the sacrifice for the Passover. If Christ was the symbol of
the Passover lamb, then He should have carried out all of the symbolism
inherent in the celebration of the Passover. We find the instructions
concerning the Passover in the twelfth chapter of Exodus. The lamb was to be chosen on the 10th day of
the first month (determined by the new moon), “kept up” until the 14th day,
when it was to be killed, with no bones broken, and then cooked and eaten after
sunset, which was the beginning of the 15th day of Nisan. As practiced by the
Jews in the days of Christ, the lambs so chosen were taken to the Temple and
were killed by the priests on the afternoon of the 14th of Nisan, between the hours
of three and five. The meal was eaten shortly after sunset. Because the Jewish
day began at sunset, the Passover meal would be eaten in the early hours of the
15th of Nisan (Passover). This was a holy day and was called a sabbath,
although it could fall on any day of the week (4). The 14th of Nisan was the “day
of preparation” when the homes were thoroughly cleansed and all leaven removed
from the house. It was the beginning of the week of unleavened bread.
If Christ was to fulfill the symbolism, then He had to be “chosen”
on the 10th day, “kept up” until the 14th, and killed between the ninth and
eleventh hour of the 14th of Nisan—“the day of preparation.” A careful study of
the four gospels clearly portrays Christ’s fulfillment of this role. Let’s
outline the chronology:
Friday |
Jesus arrived in Bethany six days before the Passover (John
12:1). A Friday arrival at the house of Lazarus is necessary as he was
coming from Ephraim “near to the wilderness” and could not make no long
journey on the Saturday sabbath. |
Saturday |
The sabbath probably spent quietly with the family in Bethany
until evening. But then, after sunset, Martha prepared a supper for Him and
friends came out from Jerusalem to visit with Him and with Lazarus (John
12:9).
The Book of Mormon account indicates that these were the early
hours of His birthday—perhaps that is why Martha prepared a meal and invited
friends. |
Sunday |
On this day, the 10th of Nisan, Christ entered Jerusalem and was
acclaimed by the multitude. This would fulfill the “choosing” of the lamb on
the tenth day. We call this Palm Sunday. It was four days to Passover. |
Monday and Tuesday |
Christ stayed in the environs of Bethany and Jerusalem, visiting
the Temple, teaching the Twelve on the Mount of Olives and being confronted
by the Pharisees who hoped to catch Him in a statement that would justify
them in arresting Him. Both mark and Matthew record His activities on those
two days and the plot to take Him and have Him killed. John indicates that
the plot included the killing of Lazarus, but all three writers make it clear
that the priests did not want it to happen on the feast day “lest
there be an uproar of the people.” (Matthew. Chapters 21-25; Mark, Chapters 11-13;
John 12:10, 11) |
Wednesday |
Mark (14:1-3) says it is still two days until the Passover when
the chief priests and the scribes were still discussing how they could
arrange for this Jesus to be killed. This is apparently the day when Judas
went to them with the offer to betray Him. Obviously it was the intention
that it should be done before the feast day—” in the absence of the
multitude” as Luke writes (Luke 22:6).
If Christ was to die on the 14th, then this was the day He sent
the two disciples to arrange for a place where He could have supper with the
Twelve. Matthew, Mark, and Luke imply this was the Passover feast. John
simply refers to it as “supper” and indicates it was before the feast
of Passover (John 13:1-2) |
Thursday
|
The meal was eaten after sunset, so this was the beginning of
the 14th of Nisan. John’s description of that evening is much more complete
than the other Gospels. Almost immediately be records Christ’s statement made
when He gave the sop to Judas:
And after the stop Satan entered into him. Then said Jesus unto
him, that thou doest, do quickly. Now no man at the table knew for what
intent he spake this unto him. For
some of them thought, because Judas had the beg, that Jesus had said unto
him, Buy those things that we have need of again the feast; or that he
should give something to the poor.—John 13:27-29
If they thought he was being sent to buy necessary things for
the feat, then they had not just eaten the Passover meal. There is no mention
of the paschal lamb, the bitter herbs, or any of the ceremony observed during
that meal. A blessing of bread and wine had no part in a “seder” meal.
Jesus ate the supper with the Twelve, sent Judas away, instructed
the others following Judas’s departure, then went to the garden where Judas
found Him and betrayed Him to the soldiers. From there He was taken to Annas,
who had Him bound and sent to his son-in-law, Caiaphas, the high priest. From
the Temple mount He was taken across the city to Herod’s palace, where Pilate
met Him in the hall of judgment. Today we know that Herod’s palace was
located against the present west call of the Old City.
It was now well into Thursday morning as the cock had crowed
announcing the dawn while they were still at the court of Caiaphas. Mark says
it was “in the morning” when they took Him to Pilate. John’s account confirms
that it was not Nisan 15, the day of the Passover.
Then led they Jesus from Caiaphas unto the hall of judgment; and
it was early; and they themselves went not into the judgment hall, lest they
should be defiled; but that they might eat the Passover.—John 18:28.
These were the chief priests, scribes, and the elders of the
council who were His accusers—good Jews. They dared not defile themselves by
entering the Roman tribunal, or they couldn’t neat the Passover Pilate had to
go outside to find out what the charges were against this man.
Here in the hall of judgment when Christ was sentenced,
scourged, crowned with thorns, mocked and then turned over to the Jews for
crucifixion—Mark’s account says at about the third hour (9:00 a.m.). By the
sixth hour (12:00 noon) He was on the cross and at the ninth hour (3:00 p.m.),
He was dead (mark 15:25-34).
Christ has fulfilled all the symbolism of the paschal lamb, even
dying at the hour set for the killing of the paschal lamb. |
Again John assures us that the hasty burial by Joseph and
Nicodemus was on the “day of preparation” (John 19:14, 38-42). Mark and Luke
agree that it was on the “day of preparation” but they add an extra phrase, “the
day before the sabbath” (Mark 15:22-27; Luke 23:50-56). From this came the idea
that the death had to be on Friday, just before the weekly sabbath. However,
the holy feat days were called sabbaths, as we have noted, and John tells us
that this sabbath was such a “high day”:
The Jews therefore, because it was the preparation, that the
bodies would not remain upon the cross on the sabbath day was an high day)
besought Pilate that their legs might be broken, and that they might be taken away.—John
19:31.
The regular Saturday sabbath would not have been termed a “high
day” and the phrase, “day of preparation,” applies only to the celebration of
the Passover. It is not used in connection with the regular weekly sabbath. So
the question is: On what day of the week was Nisan 14—“the day of preparation?”
Matthew is helpful on this point:
Now the next day [Passover], that followed the day of preparation,
the chief priests and Pharisees came together unto Pilate, Saying, Sir, we
remember that that deceiver said, while he was yet alive, After three days I
will rise again. Command therefore that the sepulchre be made sure until the
third ay . . . –Matthew 27:62-64.
Obviously the Jewish leaders met with Pilate on the morning of the
Passover. They wanted the tomb guarded for three days. Pilate tells them to
take care of it themselves, so they go to the tomb, seal it and set a watch.
This raises the question whether this would have been possible on the weekly sabbath
when no work was to be done, activities were restricted, and they were to spend
the day in worship. Too, a Friday crucifixion would mean this was a Saturday
morning and yet they asked for a three day watch over the tomb. A Thursday
burial would mean that they wanted the tomb watched from Friday morning through
Sunday, to cover the three days of prophecy.
One more reference to the three days—we know that the Lord rose on
the first day of the week, early in the morning—our Sunday. Luke records an
event that happened later on that same day. He tells of the two disciples who
walked to Emmaus and met the Lod on the way, but knew Him not. When asked, they
told of the recent events and supplied a time—“today is the third day since these
things were done” (Luke 24:21). This was Sunday. Three days had passed since
the action taken against Jesus of Nazareth. He had to have died on Thursday—the
14th of Nisan, the “day of preparation,” not the Passover. This fulfills all of
the requirements for the paschal lamb and makes Paul’s statement have real
meaning when he says that Christ was the sacrifice for us. It confirms Christ’s
own prophecy about the three days and nights He would be in the tomb. And our
Book of Mormon is vindicated.
If the crucifixion took place on Thursday, then it had to occur in
a year when the Passover celebration was back-to-back with the weekly sabbath—two
holy days in a row. Recent computer studies have given us tables of the exact
times of all the new and full moons for centuries before and following the
birth of Christ. In 1974 an article was published in Christianity Today
by Roger Rusk, emeritus professor of physics at the University of Tennessee, in
which he demonstrated that the moon tables indicate that such an event did
occur in the year 30 A.D. He also proposed that the crucifixion took place on Thursday—without
the extra knowledge given in our Book of Mormon. His charge gives this date:
April 6, 30 A.D. if this year is accurate, then the Catholic church’s traditional
date of April 7, 30 A.D. is only off the one day, due to their insistence on a
Friday crucifixion. Also, if this year is correct, then we should place the
beginning of the Christian era at 3 B.C. to accommodate the thirty-three years
of his life which had been completed.
The date of April 6 has special meaning for the Restoration
church. Joseph Smith was given a commandment to affect the organization of the
new church on April 6, 1830 (Doctrine and Covenants 17:1). (Verneil W. Simmons,
Peoples, Places and Prophecies: A Study of the Book of Mormon [rev ed.;
Independence, Miss.: Zarahemla Research Foundation, Inc., 1986], 205-10; Book
of Mormon and D&C references in the above follow the RLDS versification
system)
Further Reading:
David Butler Cumming, "Three Days and Three
Nights: Reassessing Jesus's Entombment," Journal of Book of Mormon
Studies 16, no. 1 (2007): 56-63, 86