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Was Jesus Dead for Three Days?

Discover that the sign of Jonah is not a mathematical error but a cultural bridge to first century thinking.

By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)

Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.

For centuries, skeptics and sincere believers alike have paused at a seemingly simple mathematical problem in the Gospels. Jesus declares, “For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth” (Matt 12:40). Yet the traditional chronology places His crucifixion on Friday afternoon and His resurrection on Sunday dawn. At first glance, that span amounts to about thirty‑six to forty hours, not three full days and nights. The tension, however, is not really a flaw in the text but in our modern expectations. The resolution lies not in precise stopwatches but in first‑century Jewish ways of counting time and in the theological depth behind the language.

The Heart of the Difficulty

The apparent discrepancy arises when we impose a modern, Western, literalistic definition of “day and night” onto a first‑century Jewish text. In contemporary thought, “three days and three nights” suggests three completed 24‑hour cycles, exactly 72 hours. Yet if Jesus was buried at Friday sunset and rose sometime Saturday night or Sunday dawn, the interval is far shorter. The problem is real only if we assume the ancient Israelites shared twenty‑first‑century numerical exactness. They did not. Their culture, laws, and idioms counted time in inclusive, part‑for‑whole patterns that were immediately intelligible to Jesus’ original audience but have since been obscured in translation.

Option One: A Portion of a Day Is a Whole Day

The most historically grounded resolution is the ancient Jewish principle of inclusive reckoning, often summarized by the rabbinic maxim: “A part of a day is the whole day.” This was not a legal loophole but a standard convention in Jewish life and law. The phrase “three days and three nights” functioned idiomatically, not as a stopwatch measurement.

Several biblical examples illustrate this point. In Genesis 42:17–18, Joseph imprisons his brothers for “three days,” yet on the third day he releases them. The interval includes only one full day bracketed by parts of two others, yet the text calls it “three days.” In Esther 4:16, Queen Esther commands the Jews to fast “three days, night or day,” yet in Esther 5:1 she goes to the king “on the third day,” not “after the third day.” The fast ends early, yet the language stands as fulfilled. In 1 Samuel 30:12–13, an Egyptian servant claims he had eaten nothing for “three days and three nights” while also saying he was abandoned “three days ago,” again showing that the phrase does not require seventy‑two continuous hours.

Applied to Jesus’ burial, inclusive reckoning works as follows. Friday (Day 1): Jesus is crucified and buried before sunset (Mark 15:42–46). Though only a few hours of daylight remain, Jewish law counts Friday as a full day.

Friday night (Night 1): The first night begins at sunset.

Saturday (Day 2): The entire Sabbath is spent in the tomb.

Saturday night (Night 2): The second night in the tomb.

Sunday (Day 3): Jesus rises early on the third day (Luke 24:46; 1 Cor 15:4).

The daylight portion of Sunday, even though He is no longer in the tomb, is counted because His resurrection occurs on the third day, and the preceding night (Saturday night) is counted as the third night. In this inclusive scheme, Jesus was buried for parts of Friday, all of Saturday, and a portion of Sunday—three calendar days and their nights—without demanding a strict 72‑hour tomb‑sojourn.

Option Two: The Galilean Tradition and Wednesday Crucifixion

Beyond inclusive reckoning, some traditions propose a different chronological framework altogether: a Wednesday crucifixion. In this model, Jesus dies on Wednesday and is buried that evening, remaining in the tomb through Thursday and Friday, with resurrection on Saturday night—producing a full 72 hours. This satisfies a more literal reading of “three days and three nights” without relying on part‑for‑whole counting.

The key lies in a documented regional difference between Galilean and Judean practice. According to the Mishnah, Galileans suspended work on Nisan 14, while Judeans worked until noon. This led to a Galilean custom of a special final meal, the Seudah Maphsehket (“the discontinuing meal”), eaten at the beginning of Nisan 14. In this view, the Last Supper is that Galilean meal, not the official Judean Passover Seder. The Wednesday-crucifixion reconstruction is a minority position and requires a more elaborate sequence of Sabbaths and meal customs than the ordinary Gospel reading.

Mapping this scheme yields:

  • Tuesday evening (Night 1): The Last Supper (the Galilean Seudah Maphsehket — the “discontinuing meal”). Jesus institutes the New Covenant.

  • Wednesday daytime (Day 1): Trials, crucifixion, and burial before sunset. Jesus dies as the Passover lambs are being slaughtered.

  • Wednesday sunset → Thursday sunset (Night 2 + Day 2): This entire 24‑hour period is the “high Sabbath” of Nisan 15 (Passover). Because a Sabbath (any special holy day) runs from sunset to sunset, the high Sabbath occupies both Wednesday night (Night 2) and Thursday daytime (Day 2). Jesus remains in the tomb throughout.

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  • Thursday sunset → Friday sunset (Night 3 + Day 3): An ordinary workday (not a Sabbath). Jesus remains in the tomb. The women purchase spices (Mark 16:1) on Friday daytime, since Friday is a normal preparation day before the weekly Sabbath.

  • Friday sunset → Saturday sunset: The weekly Sabbath begins. Jesus rises during the night after this Sabbath ends — that is, sometime Saturday night, exactly 72 hours after burial.

  • Sunday dawn: The tomb is found empty.

This model is internally consistent and has been defended by some traditions, and it neatly explains John’s reference to a “high Sabbath” on Thursday alongside the weekly Saturday Sabbath, with Friday as an ordinary workday. Nonetheless, it requires a complex reconstruction of Sabbaths and Passover timing and is not widely accepted in mainstream scholarship. Most historians still favor a Friday crucifixion, harmonized with Matt 12:40 through inclusive reckoning and the recurring New Testament formula of rising “on the third day” (Luke 24:46; 1 Cor 15:4).

Option Three: The Count Begins at the Last Supper

While inclusive reckoning resolves the chronological difficulty, a third interpretive tradition offers a deeper theological lens. Preserved most clearly by the fourth‑century Persian, Aramaic‑speaking church father Aphrahat, it argues that the “three days and three nights” begin not at the tomb but at the night of the Last Supper (Matt 26:26–28). When Jesus lifts the cup and breaks the bread, declaring them His body and blood, He signifies His death in advance. In Syriac and similar traditions, the sacrifice is counted as begun when the covenant is proclaimed, not merely when the last breath is taken.

Thus the period “in the heart of the earth”—which can mean not just the grave but the whole state of suffering, death, and burial—is traced from Thursday evening to Sunday morning:

  • Thursday night (Night 1): The Last Supper, institution of the Eucharist, agony in Gethsemane, and arrest.

  • Friday (Day 1): Trials, crucifixion, and burial before sunset.

  • Friday night (Night 2): The first full night in the tomb.

  • Saturday (Day 2): Sabbath rest in the tomb.

  • Saturday night (Night 3): The second night in the tomb, ending before dawn on Sunday. Possibly the time of resurrection.

  • Sunday (Day 3): Traditional resurrection dawn.

Aphrahat pushes the symbolism further, treating the three hours of darkness at midday on Friday (from the sixth to the ninth hour) as a kind of “night” inserted into the daytime. In his view, Thursday night, the supernatural darkness at the cross, and the following normal night together form three “nights,” while the surrounding daylight periods constitute the three “days.” Thus, the sign of Jonah is fulfilled not only in duration but also in the alternation of light and darkness in the passion narrative (Aphrahat, Demonstration VI). Rather than forcing a strict 72‑hour clock, he reads the wording typologically: from the supper and agony, through the cross and its midday eclipse, into the tomb and toward the dawn. The focus shifts from calendar cells to covenantal meaning. Jesus’ redemptive act begins at the table; the “three days and three nights” are not a prison sentence in the grave but a liturgical journey from fellowship through suffering into resurrection.

Conclusion

The real power of Matthew 12:40 is not in making us count hours, but in making us confront the faithfulness of God. What looks like a contradiction at first becomes a witness to a larger truth: Scripture speaks in the language of its own world, and redemption unfolds on God’s timetable, not ours.

Jesus was not trapped by the grave, and the story was never held together by arithmetic alone. Whether one reads the prophecy through inclusive Jewish reckoning or through a more debated chronological model, the message remains the same: the crucified Christ rose, the promise stood, and death was defeated.

That is why this text still matters. It calls skeptical minds to humility, wounded hearts to hope, and believing souls to worship. In the end, Jonah’s sign is not a puzzle to solve but a victory to proclaim: the tomb was real, the darkness was deep, and the risen Lord is greater than every shadow.

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Comments (23)

Neville Newman
Neville Newman US May 6, 2026 at 2:24 PM

While there is unquestionably support for these options, they are not unquestionable :-) . It is possible that the fundamental desire to "honor Good Friday" is hiding other timeline options that are also possible and also solve other vexing problems in the "passion week" narrative.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 6, 2026 at 2:56 PM

Please, recommend to us other good options.

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Mpekos Nikolaos
Mpekos Nikolaos GR May 7, 2026 at 8:38 AM

https://youtu.be/EmtyYqq11Qc?si=mP1muPrj2GjKQP6U

Another point of view

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 7, 2026 at 3:01 PM

thank you

Reply
Ian Worby
Ian Worby AU May 7, 2026 at 3:20 AM

Another possibility to consider is that It is a widely discussed theory among scholars and teachers like Dr. Missler and others ;that Galileans observed a special tradition called the Seudah Maphsehket (or "Last Supper") at the beginning of Nisan 14.

This tradition helps resolve the "Passover discrepancy" between the Synoptic Gospels (which describe a Passover meal) and the Gospel of John (which places the crucifixion before the Passover Seder).

The Galilean Tradition Theory

The Special Meal: According to the Mishnah, Galileans did not work at all on Nisan 14, whereas Judeans worked until noon. This led to a tradition where Galileans ate a special final meal (the Seudah Maphsehket) at the beginning of Nisan 14 to mark the start of a Fast of the Firstborn.

Timing of the Seder: In this view, the "Last Supper" Jesus shared with his disciples was this special Galilean meal held on Tuesday evening (beginning of Nisan 14). The formal Judean Passover Seder would not have occurred until the following evening, as Nisan 15 began.

Day of Preparation: This allows Jesus to have celebrated a meaningful, ritual meal with His disciples and then be crucified on the [Day of Preparation of the Passover]

(https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/people-cultures-in-the-bible/jesus-historical-jesus/was-jesus-last-supper-a-seder/)

Wednesday afternoon, precisely when the Passover lambs were being slaughtered in the Temple.

Why This Matters

This distinction explains why the Last Supper has many Seder-like elements (bread, wine, hymns) but took place before the official Judean feast.

Tuesday night: Jesus eats the Galilean meal (Last Supper).

Wednesday afternoon: Jesus dies as the "Passover Lamb" on the Day of Preparation

Wednesday evening: The High Sabbath (Nisan 15) begins.
Anyway thanks for allowing me to share some
Alternative ideas about this fascinating account as to what happened and why we can trust the scriptures to be accurate on all matters .

Blessings in Yeshua

Ian Worby Australia

Reply
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 7, 2026 at 3:01 PM

I updated the article, Ian. Thank you.

Reply
Neville Newman
Neville Newman US May 7, 2026 at 12:32 AM

"Good option" is always subject to opinion I suppose. :-)

Three proposals come immediately to mind as *possibilities*

A) [Calendrical] Dr. Thomas Tribelhorn et al. propose that John, Jesus, and the disciples were tight with the Essenes (per Matthew/Luke/Acts) and followed that calendar, creating a time shift w.r.t. the calendar of the Sanhedrin thus inserting an extra day into the overall timeline.

B) [also Calendrical] Colin J. Humphreys et al. have proposed that some "Jews" followed a pre-exilic calendar that differed from the Sanhedrin, creating a time shift inserting an extra day.

C) [Mishnaic] Your colleague Julia Blum has written, as have David H. Stern, Joseph Shulam, Hyman Goldin, and others re. the idea of Jesus celebrating a se'udat-mitzvah prior to Passover (known in Mishnaic times, theorized for Gospel times as well). This avoids the Last Supper needing to be a Passover meal on any calendar.

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Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 7, 2026 at 3:09 PM

I have updated the article and will be improving it further.

Reply
Sylvia Ewerts
Sylvia Ewerts ZA May 6, 2026 at 1:16 PM

Wow! Dr.Eli both arguments bear weight. It make so much sense. YHVH'S ways and thoughts are higher than ours. HE is out of space and time. What matters the most is the salvation of our souls. Yeshua paid it all and I am so thankful for our Redeemer lives! Thank you so much for this article - it is thought provoking! Blessings!

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Ian Worby
Ian Worby AU May 7, 2026 at 3:04 AM

I forgot to add this link of Dr Missler’s article on Thai hot topic thank you for your consideration

https://www.khouse.org/personal_update/articles/1995/friday-or-wednesday

Kind regards and God bless

Ian Worby Australia

Reply
Ian Worby
Ian Worby AU May 7, 2026 at 3:01 AM

I was also a student of the late Dr Chuck Missler

Dr. Chuck Missler famously advocated that Jesus was crucified on a Wednesday, rather than Friday, to fit the "three days and three nights" prophecy in Matthew 12:40. Missler argued that a Wednesday crucifixion allows for a full 72-hour period before a Sunday morning resurrection, incorporating the "high Sabbath" of Passover.Key Arguments for Wednesday Crucifixion (Missler's View):The Sign of Jonah: Matthew 12:40 states Jesus would be "three days and three nights" in the heart of the earth. A Friday to Sunday timeline is considered by this view to be only one day and two nights, or part thereof.Two Sabbaths: A Wednesday crucifixion (24th/25th of March or similar) allows for the Passover "High Sabbath" on Thursday, followed by the regular weekly Sabbath on Saturday.Timing of Events: Jesus was in Bethany on Friday, entered Jerusalem on Saturday, and the crucifixion occurred Wednesday afternoon, fitting within the prophetic timeline for Passover.This view contrasts with the traditional Good Friday observance. See

Reply
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel
Dr. Eli (Eliyahu) Lizorkin-Girzhel May 6, 2026 at 1:18 PM

Sylvia, so good to hear! Glory be to God for His wisdom and light!

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