The following question/comment is something that I didnt want to remain buried in comments when I answered it, it’s an important issue that comes up from time to time, so I am glad that Robert raised it:Mat 12:40 states clearly (in every translation I have looked at) that Yeshua would be in the grave for 3 days and 3 nights. You noted that Messiah Yeshua was crucified on the eve of the Sabbath. The Sabbath as defined on the Tanakh (Old Testament) is from Sunset Friday to Sunset Saturday. Simple math would then put the day of resurrection on Monday.”); ?>
The concept of an exclusive counting system is a relatively new invention - the “simple math” that would place the resurrection on Monday has only been around since about the 19th century. Since ancient times, and even today in many parts of the world, an inclusive counting system is used particularly when talking about dates/calendars.
The early Roman calendar (that would have been in use in the 1st century) was lunar based, with 8-day divisions much like we have weeks. These 8-day divisions were called “Nones” (from the Latin nonus for ninth) derived from the inclusive counting method of starting on the current day inclusive of the first day of the next division.
Today, in England, it’s common to hear the term “fortnight” (from the Old English feowertiene niht, meaning “fourteen nights”) used of a 2-week period. The French would call this same division of time “quinze jours” (fifteen days), and the Spanish “quincena”. This nicely highlights the difference of inclusive verses exclusive counting.
Inclusive counting derives, primarily, from the idea of counting things off on your fingers (”today, tomorrow, the day after” - either 2 or 3 days, depending on the counting system in use). Another way to look at it is to ask “how many gallon buckets would I need, if I have 2.5 gallons of milk to carry?” In computer science the ceil() (”ceiling”) method implements this rounding/counting pattern where any fraction causes the number to be rounded up to the next whole number.
All this is a long preamble to get to the point of saying that ancient Greek, Roman and Hebrew cultures have been shown via archeological evidence to use inclusive counting systems. Within that system the fraction of the day represented by the minutes/hours before sundown on the eve of the Sabbath - when Jesus was crucified - is the 1st day, until sundown on Sabbath would be the 2nd, and the 3rd would be “the first day of the week”:On the first day of the week, very early in the morning, the women took the spices they had prepared and went to the tomb. They found the stone rolled away from the tomb, but when they entered, they did not find the body of the Lord Jesus.
Luke 24:1-3
Or, in more modern terms: Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Am I saying that Matthew 12:40 is wrong? No, but we have to apply good hermeneutics to how we approach understanding it. At face value we interpret it with a modern-day, exclusive counting, literal meaning approach. What we fail to do, as we apply such a literalist method, is to take into account the possibilities of ancient cultural idiom. I am sure that in many years time people will look back at writings that use the term “quinze jours” and wonder what’s going on, and how it knocks out counting of events that appear to be 14 days apart. I’ve read online (so not going to say it’s entirely authoritative) that the term “3 days and 3 nights” was a cultural turn of phrase just like “fortnight” that had taken on a more general meaning (ie, three days time) as opposed to it’s literal face value. Its also important to note that there are many passages that say “on the third day” to refer to the resurrection. The body of circumstantial evidence points, therefore, to a cultural idiom rather than a literal 72-hour period which (when coupled with the correct counting system) yields a Sunday resurrection.
Thanks for the question though - it made for some fascinating research! Questions relating to this topic, or any other, would be more than welcome - drop me an email or leave me a comment!