Here's a review of the op taken line by line...
As we approach another season celebrating the Resurrection of Messiah, we should remind ourselves of all the false traditions and information that surrounds this season.
I completely agree.
However, what,
exactly is a "
false" tradition?
False information that the Church has believed in ignorance for almost 2 millennia.
If that is supposed to be the definition of a "
false tradition" then I disagree. Just because something is different does not mean it is false. The word "
false" means "
not according to truth or fact."
The false belief that Good Friday points to the day of the week of the crucifixion is one of the greatest evidences that Christians do not care to or refuse to understand the culture of the Jewish people and by extension the design that God has created throughout history.
The problem with that statement is very few Christians believe Friday is the day Jesus was crucified. We're not uneducated illiterate believers who do not own Bible and have only the teachings of institutional religion upon which to base our views. None of the Protestants are beholding to Roman Catholic teaching. Sadly, it is true that a Google search of "
on what day did Jesus die" will erroneously lead to hordes of websites incorrectly stating Jesus died on Good Friday about 3 in the afternoon. I have no reservations whatsoever acknowledging that fact.
That does not mean all of Christendom literally believes it.
I, for one, stand as proof all of Christendom does not believe that way. This very week I have had this very conversation with four other ministers and ALL of them agreed with me: I've also shared these views with extended family and countless others online with uniform receipt and expressions of affirmation and gratitude. Christians are not inherently opposed to the facts of scripture and history. Jesus did not die on a Saturday. I learned of quatrodecimanism from other Christians and have heard it taught on many occasions in many congregations. The Naval Observatory used to provide an online service where anyone could plug in a date and discover on what day of the week that date fell. The crucifixion can be objectively verified not to have fallen on Friday

. A person does not have to understand "
the culture of the Jewish people" to know and understand that fact.
The appeal to "
Jewish people" is a red herring.
It does help, immensely, to know Judaism holds to a lunar calendar (as prescribed in the OT) and that the special Sabbaths (like the various festivals and Passover) therefore do not always fall on what we call Saturday, or the seventh day sabbath. All that information is evidentiarily useful, but not necessary. The same holds true in regard to the Jewish view of the Passover, but the simple fact of whole scripture is that what was revealed in the OT about Passover was incomplete. The completed view is found in the NT and Judaism denies the veracity and efficacy of the New Testament. Most importantly, one of the most egregious mistakes to make is the Judaization of Christianity. Jews who deny Jesus are dead. Does that mean the OT should be discarded? NO! Does it mean Judaism necessarily informs Passover, or Christianity? That depends on what you mean by "informed" because a lot of views held in Judaism are wrong. As I have often posted,
Tanakh is always correct, but Judaism is often wrong.
Lots of Christians understand the facts of Jesus' last earthly week AND still practice a liturgical calendar consciously knowing the two are not identical AND they do so in good faith and good conscience. The two (the Hebrew Calendar and the liturgical calendar) are not wholly mutually exclusive conditions.
That being said, I completely agree with the op as it pertains to those who follow any tradition blindly, especially to the point of an unwillingness to accommodate the facts of scripture and history. Those people are ideologues and ideology risks idolatry. Christians in that group do not constitute the entirety of Christendom. The op is, therefore, wrong to indict all of Christianity, and wrong do do so in ignorance of the facts of Christianity, and wrong to do so in the face of proof presented by me (and eventually the others who will weigh in on this). Lots of Christians know about Nissan 14.
The op is a mixture of fact, truth and nonsense. The facts and truth can and should be affirmed and commended. Jesus died on Wednesday and the gospels inform the "schedule" or "calendar" of his last days. That record is firmly rooted and filled with meaning and significance first revealed in the OT. The nonsense should be repudiated.
The Crucifixion happened on Wednesday, April 25, 31 AD.
Yep. Post 2 plainly states Jesus died on a Wednesday and lays out a summary of Christ's last week - all of which could be discussed with goodwill. Despite that indisputable evidence, the post was called, "...
full of nonsense and misinterpretation," even though it agrees with the op.
That is simply, plainly, self-evidently irrational.
This can be proven using the text of the Bible, evidences from geology, from biology, from historical records and mathematically.
Yep.
Nope.
Why haven't you heard this before?
I and millions of other have heard it before and it was a gross error to think it hasn't been heard before.
Here are some videos that go through the evidences in detail.
Date Hidden From History
I'll take up the videos in separate posts when I have the time.
The fact is this op took a bad approach to the facts of scripture and history and does not accurately reflect the diversity of knowledge and understanding held by Christians. In that neglect
the entirety of Christianity is judged uncaring, refusing to understand Jewish culture, and ignorant of God's design! What evidence is provided to prove those judgments?
NONE.
And then, when a knowing Christian shows up explicitly agreeing Jesus was crucified on Wednesday, offering a more conciliatory alternative to the op, his replies are called ignorant, and threats are made in a fruitless attempt to control others - thereby betraying any sincere intent to discuss the truths and faults of the op and avoiding the alternative of cogent discourse.