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enough to make a pen”—and so on endlessly. So they spent endless hours arguing whether a man could
               or could not lift a lamp from one place to another on the Sabbath, whether a tailor committed a sin if he
               went out with a needle in his robe, whether a woman might wear a brooch or false hair, even if a man
               might go out on the Sabbath with artificial teeth or an artificial limb, if a man might lift his child on the
               Sabbath Day. These things to them were the essence of religion. Their religion was a legalism of petty
               rules and regulations. 163

               High Sabbath Days

                 Therefore, because it was the Preparation Day, that the bodies should not remain on the cross
                 on the Sabbath (for that Sabbath was a high day), the Jews asked Pilate that their legs might
                                 be broken, and that they might be taken away. (John 19:31)

               This Sabbath was NOT the same as the weekly Sabbath.  A high day is technically an annual holy day, or
               annual Sabbath, as commanded in Leviticus 23. Certainly, the weekly Sabbath is a day to keep holy, but
               these annual holy days take precedence if they occur on the seventh-day Sabbath.
               The annual Sabbaths are seven: the first and seventh days of Unleavened Bread, Pentecost, Trumpets
               (Rosh Hashanah in Hebrew), Atonement (Yom Kippur), the first day of Tabernacles (Succoth), and the
               Last Great Day. The first three occur in the spring, and the last four in the fall. Thus, the high day of
               which John was speaking was one of the three spring holy days, and since Jesus crucifixion took place on
               the day of Passover (Nisan 14 on the Hebrew calendar), the high day of which he speaks must be the
               first day of Unleavened Bread, which falls the day after the Passover (Nisan 15).
               This verse also provides some very interesting and definitive proof of when Jesus died, and thus when
               He was resurrected. Jesus Himself said several times that His time in the tomb would be three days and
               three nights, just as the prophet Jonah had spent three days and nights in the fish's belly (see Matthew
               12:38-40; 27:63; Mark 8:31; John 2:18-22). This in itself rules out a Friday crucifixion-Sunday
               resurrection because there is no way to cram three days and three nights between sunset on Friday and
               sunrise on Sunday.
               If Jesus rose exactly three days and three nights after His burial (just before sunset; see Matthew
               27:46; Mark 15:34), the only candidate for His resurrection is the very end of the Sabbath at sunset.
               Counting back three full days, then, Jesus must have died on the previous Wednesday, which would
               have been the day of the Passover (Jesus and His disciples had observed the Passover the evening
               before). The first day of Unleavened Bread began just minutes after Joseph of Arimathea and
               Nicodemus sealed His tomb.
               The gospel account says that, after this, His disciples and the women kept the holy day on Thursday
               (Mark 16:1). On Friday, the preparation day for the weekly Sabbath, the women prepared spices for His
               embalming (this was a normal workday; see Luke 23:56), then kept the weekly Sabbath. When they
               came to the tomb early Sunday morning, He had already risen some time before. He rose exactly three
               days and three nights from His interment (a full 72 hours) at sunset as the weekly Sabbath ended. This
               shows that there were two Sabbaths—a high day and a weekly Sabbath—during the time of His burial,
               not one! 164




               163  https://bible.org/seriespage/16-sabbath-controversy-gospels
               164  http://www.sabbath.org/index.cfm/fuseaction/Basics.FAQ/ID/169/Is-high-day-weekly-Sabbath.htm

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