Passover in Early Judaism

1st–6th Centuries
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Passover, which commemorates the Israelite exodus from Egypt, combines two biblical observances: the offering of a lamb (called the pesaḥ, or Passover, sacrifice) by each household and the seven-day Festival of Unleavened Bread, during which no leavened grain products are eaten (see Exodus 12:43–49, Leviticus 23:5–8, and Deuteronomy 16:1–8). Early rabbinic literature expands the consumption of the Passover sacrifice into a ritualized symposium-like meal including four cups of wine (see “The Rabbinic Passover-Eve Ritual”).

While the Temple stood, Passover was one of the three major pilgrimage festivals that brought a massive influx of Jews to Jerusalem. In Josephus’ writings, these festival gatherings are often occasions for mass expressions of political unrest. It is, therefore, hardly accidental that early Christian literature recalls the Passover pilgrimage as the occasion of Jesus’ execution in Jerusalem—although this specific occasion also comes to be invested with theological meaning, as Jesus’ death is construed as the ultimate redemptive Passover sacrifice.

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Philo’s Explanation of Passover

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After the New Moon comes the fourth feast, called the Crossing-feast, which the Hebrews in their native tongue call Pascha. In this festival many myriads of victims from noon till eventide are offered…

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Passover Pilgrims

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As the Festival of Unleavened Bread was at hand in the first month, which the Macedonians call Xanthicus and we call Nisan, all the people flowed together out of the villages to the city and…

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Passover Observance

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Now, the appointed time had drawn near for the festival during which the Jews have as their ancestral law to serve unleavened bread, whose feast is called Passover and is a memorial of their…

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Pilgrim Numbers on Passover

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As long as Cestius Gallus was busy in Syria with the administration of his province, no one dared to approach him with a formal complaint against Florus. But when he visited Jerusalem at the start of…

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Pilgrims Swell Jerusalem’s Population

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The total number of prisoners taken in the whole course of the war amounted to 97,000: and the number of those who died in the siege from beginning to end was 1,100,000. The majority of these were of…

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Passover in the Stories of Jesus’ Execution

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It was two days before the Passover and the…