When does a day begin and end? Some have said that society decides when a day begins and ends, so for the U.S. that would be midnight. Others like the Jews hold the Talmud’s position that a day begins and ends at sunset. Some have said that it really does not matter.
When considering the day that God raised Christ, many have wondered on what day the Romans crucified Christ, what day did God raise Him, and at what time of the day was Jesus resurrected. The day of assembly is the day of Christ’s resurrection. However. some infer that Saturday night is the beginning of the first day of the week reasoning that a day begins and ends at sunset. This infers that those assembling and partaking of the Lord’s Supper on Sunday evening are actually meeting on the second day of the week. Luke reported, “And upon the first day of the week, when we were gathered together to break bread, Paul discoursed with them, intending to depart on the morrow; and prolonged his speech until midnight” (Acts 20:7 ASV). Which evening is the first day of the week? This study will examine these inferences made upon Scripture.
The following Scriptures present that a day begins at sunrise:
- Matthew 28:1 reveals, “Now late on the sabbath day, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary to see the sepulchre” (ASV 1901, emp. added).
- Mark 16:1–2 depicts, “And when the sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome, bought spices, that they might come and anoint him. And very early on the first day of the week, they come to the tomb when the sun was risen.”
- How could it be “very early” if the day started at sunset or midnight?
Genesis 1 shows that the day consisting of day and night is one that starts at sunrise.
- Genesis 1:5 reports, “And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night. And there was evening and there was morning, one day” (cf. Gen 1:8, 13, 19, 23, 31).
- The Hebrew word for morning is boqer, which means “sunrise,” “end of night,” “coming of daylight,” and “beginning of day.” Therefore, the order of the day consists of sunset and sunrise as the scripture says, “And there was evening (sunset) and there was morning (sunrise), one day.” Sunrise started a new day. Each day consisted of an evening and then a morning. The complete day does not end at sunset or midnight, but the day started at dawn in the beginning. That is the biblical day from Genesis.
These passages confirm the day starts before sunset when a day goes on through sunset into the evening:
- Matthew 26:17 notes, “Now on the first day of unleavened bread the disciples came to Jesus, saying, ‘Where will you that we make ready for you to eat the Passover?’” (cf. Mark 14:12).
- This is the first day of unleavened bread when Jesus sent Peter and John to prepare for the Passover although Israel roasted the Passover lamb at twilight and ate it in the night. As in the Old Testament, the first day of the Passover Feast included the day and the preceding evening as the disciples came to the guest room on the first day of Passover before twilight — that is before sunset.
- Mark 4:35 depicts, “And on that day, when evening was come, he said unto them, ‘Let us go over unto the other side.'”
- Again, the evening followed daylight of that day.
- John 20:19 tells, “When therefore it was evening [nightfall, Greek: opsios], on that day, the first day of the week, and when thedoorswere shut where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in the midst, and said unto them, ‘Peace be unto you.'”
- “On that day” is referring to the day when Christ rose on the morning of the first day of the week and now it is the same day called “evening.” According to this passage, the first day of the week was the day and then the night.
Did not Mary Magdalene come unto Jesus’s tomb on the first day of the week when it was dark according to John 20:1?
- John 20:1 states, “Now on the first day of the week comes Mary Magdalene early, while it was yet dark, unto the tomb, and sees the stone taken away from the tomb.”
- If it was dark without the sun raised, then John 20:1 would disprove or present another understanding that a day starts on another time other than sunrise in contradiction to the scriptures above. However, John 20:19 states, “When therefore it was evening, on that day, the first day of the week, and when the doors were shut where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in the midst, and said unto them, ‘Peace be unto you.'” How could it be evening on the first day of the week, the very day that Jesus rose, if a day started at sunset and the day would have changed? Furthermore, Luke 24:1 depicted that the women came at early dawn, so though it was dark though it was not night. In mountainous areas, the sun can dawn and there is still darkness in the vales where the elevations block the sun’s light in some places. This is especially true where people have carved a tomb from rock. Darkness after dawn is evidently possible, and reasonable to those of who go out early.
Did not all Jews at this time believe that day was from sunset to sunset?
- No. The idea that a day was sunset to sunset came from man’s tradition and thinking based upon Leviticus 23:32 where the Day of Atonement was held on the tenth day of the seventh month, but the Sabbath began on the ninth because the Sabbath was kept on this occasion from evening unto evening. Even in this passage from Leviticus, one can easily notice the reference to two different days, the ninth day and the tenth day of the month. Leviticus 23:32 speaks of the sunset of the ninth day being the time to start the Sabbath for the tenth day. Evidently, a day did not start at sunset and this was a special occasion of simply keeping the high sabbath for the Day of Atonement. The regular Mosaic day began with the rise of day through the setting of the evening (Gen 1: Exod 12:18; 18:13: Lev 6:20).
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Copy/paste – http://biblelight.net/feasts.htm for research on the First Fruits…which was proceeded by Unleavens…which was proceeded by? Answer – Passover. Joshua 5:10-15 makes this 3 day period crystal clear.
See 1 Corinthians 15:20-23 & then skip over to chapter 5:6-8 to see how Jesus fulfilled this 3 day time span, while fulfilling the transfer from Old to new Testament. Let me know, was this clear?
I did not intend to dominate the post with long msgs, but your response are filled with loaded questions, some of them are full lessons in themselves. However, I will try to be short, I want to answer every question, but if my previous comment wasn’t enough, my question is…what will do it for you?
I’ll start with the question, “When Does a day begin and end in Scripture?” All through Genesis 1, a day is a combination of evening and morning, and it is simple to count, “evening, morning…day 1″…”evening, morning…day 2”. And again, what is the name of the 7th Day? All other days are simply numbered…this is GOD made.
So, the days divided at evening. Exodus 12 commanded the Passover to be killed in the evening, and Jesus died in the 9th hour in Luke 23. Verse 54, “And that day was the preparation, and the sabbath drew on”. What time of day was this? Come on folks. They then rested according to the commandment, but do verses 54-56 describe the morning?
Clearly, this was evening, and it marks the end of the Preparation, and the start of the Sabbath Day…at even…to even. Mark 15:42 says, “And now when the even was come, because it was the preparation, that is, the day before the sabbath”, meaning, evening marks the division between this day before the Sabbath.
Please note that not 1 of the texts you gave mention a new Sabbath of any kind.
Barnett,
We must all be reminded to deal that is rightly handle God’s Word. I think you’d agree with that. Since you keep the Sabbath of the Old Law, then you may assume like many by the tradition that a day begins and ends at sunset, but the Scriptures teach otherwise above.
I do not understand your position and belief regarding the Sabbath. Please explain these things to me that I may show my love to God and keep all His commands. I keep no Sabbath or even man-made Sabbath except that I will only keep the Sabbath in my death (Heb. 4:1-10).
Why did the Spirit say that the Sabbaths are a shadow the substance of Christ (Col. 2:17)?
Why do you follow the Old Testament that includes the Ten Commandments (Exo. 34:28, Deut. 4:13, 9:9, 11)? Is not the first covenant obsolete (Heb. 8:13)?
Do you only keep the weekly Sabbath of all Sabbaths? Do you keep all the Sabbaths including the first, the tenth, the fifteenth, and the twenty first days of the 7th month (Lev. 23:24)?
I find the first day of the week to be the day of the Resurrection (John 20:1, 19), the day of the Lord’s Supper (Luke 24:30, 35, Acts 20:7), and the day of the Assembly (Acts 20:7, Rev. 1:10, 13).
Do you follow the words of prophets not found in the Bible? Do you observe the words of Ellen White?
The Lord’s Day is the day of the Assembly, the Day of the Lord’s Supper. Do you keep the Lord’s Supper in every Assembly?
The “3 nights” angle is a good point, and I need not to be reminded “you must deal with them”, and while “it may upsetting to those who follow the traditions of men”…who exactly are we talking about?
There is ample proof that the Sabbath is the Lord’s Day, and I don’t need to debate Jesus’ Death to make that point. Biblegateway.com gives easy access to a “word search”, and a keyword search will prove what the Sabbath was after Jesus’ Death as THE Sabbath was observe by Paul and the early Saints. It is clear that the Bible made 1 day the Sabbath, then man made another.
Barnett,
Friend, you missed or ignore then Scriptures above. You must deal with them. Second, this is only a matter of discussion and should not divide any Christians from one another unless one tries to observe Friday as the day of Jesus’ death for which no one is commanded to do.
With a good heart and a light spirit about this matter, I agree that Friday, Saturday and Sunday would be three days, but Jesus said “so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth” (Matt. 12:40). Notice the three nights. The days are not the concern in understanding the day that Jesus died, but it is the three nights that show that Jesus died on Thursday, which was before a high sabbath (John 19:31). Count the nights and you’ll see that Jesus’ death being on Friday only allows two nights and makes Him a liar. For Jesus to have been buried for three nights, then He must have died and been buried on Thursday. I understand that this may be upsetting to those who follow traditions of men.
God bless.
Jesus Himself said, “…I do cures to day and to morrow, and the third day I shall be perfected. Nevertheless I must walk to day, and to morrow, and the day following…Luke 13:32, 33. Meaning, if today was Friday, tomorrow is Saturday, and the third day is Sunday. Meaning, the way we speak is simply just different compared to ancient times.
Also, in Mark 15:42, Preparation Day started at even, “the day before the Sabbath”.
Even Acts 20:7 refers to Paul preaching between the sunset that closes the Sabbath, upon the 1st day &… until mid night.
Your references to Scripture are great in showing that day comes before night. Genesis 19:34 is your best. Clearly, the day began at morning.
God bless.
dear sirs it is refreshing to see someone intensely read the bible on when a day starts.I read literally 10 months on this.These a out of all the scriptures stick out the most since you know already I’ll shorten it.Genesis 7:12,Genesis 8:22 goes with jeremiah 33 pretty good.Genesis 19:34,exodus 16:21,Numbers 11:32 is a definite definition.But out of all the chapters and verses this is when I closed the book and thanked The almighty.2 Samuel 24:15 now notice the punishment was a 3days pestilence notice the starting point FROM THE MORNING TO THE TIME APPOINTED. I just want to say we are very rear in finding when a day starts you got it its comforting im not alone.
Certainly, we know that the Jewish Sabbath is Saturday. The Jewish day ended at sunset by tradition affirmed in the Talmud written centuries after the Old Testament. The Bible affirms that a day according to the Jews in the Scriptures began and ended at sunrise.
You are absolutely right about the year. The biblical year and religious year started at the first new moon of Spring. Jews later changed this to some time in January.