What Happened that Week?
========================

  Six days before the Passover (the seder meal of 14 Aviv/Nisan), using
  inclusive counting (Acts 10), on Friday 9 Aviv, Yeshua came to Bethany
  (John 12:1). That evening, the eve of the Shabbat (Sabbath), Yeshua
  (Jesus) was anointed as the Lamb of God (John 12:2--8, Exodus
  12:3--5). This was 10 Aviv by Shabbat sunset reckoning, the day the
  sacrificial lamb was selected in Egypt.

  The next day (Matthew 21:1--11; Mark 11:1--11; Luke 19:29--44; John
  12:2--36), Shabbat 10 Aviv, was the triumphal entry into Yerushalayim
  (Jerusalem). At the end of the Shabbat, he went back to Bethany with
  the twelve (Mark 11:11).

  The following day was Sunday, on which he cursed the fig tree (Mark
  11:12--14). Arriving at the Temple, Yeshua cast out the money changers
  (Matthew 21:1--17; Mark 11:15--18; Luke 19:45--46). At the end of the
  day, Yeshua and the twelve passed by the fig tree in the dark, so it
  was not noticed.

  Monday morning, they passed the fig tree again, and Peter noticed it
  and remarked on it (Mark 11:21). Yeshua then taught in the Temple and
  answered questions put to him. After this, he went to the Mount of
  Olives and prophesied the future of Yerushalayim and the Temple.

  On Monday afternoon, 12 Aviv, Yeshua says, "You know that after two
  days is the Passover, and the Son of man is betrayed to be crucified."
  (Matthew 26:2; Mark 14:1) After one day is Tuesday and after two days
  is Wednesday, the evening of which is the (first) Passover seder
  (meal), and the afternoon of which the lambs were slaughtered.

  Monday evening, Yeshua ate supper at Simon's house, and was anointed
  the second time (Mark 14:3--11).

  The next day, Tuesday 13 Aviv, just after sunset, Yeshua's disciples
  asked him about Passover preparations. This was the, "head day of
  Unleavened Bread" (Matthew 26:17; Mark 14:12; Luke 22:7; Exodus
  12:15). The "headmost day" referred to in Exodus 12:15 is 14 Aviv.
  (Note that the phrase itself, taken out of context, is ambiguous and
  can also refer to 15 Aviv.) The Galileans reckoned the headmost day
  from sunset to sunset.

  That evening (Tuesday evening), Yeshua ate the last supper with his
  disciples. This was not the Passover seder. Yeshua himself was the
  Passover lamb. "I will by no means eat thereof until it be fulfilled
  in the kingdom of God," (Luke 22:16) refers to the Passover meal.

  After midnight, Yeshua and his disciples went to the Mount of Olives.
  He was arrested that night and put on trial in the morning. He was
  flogged later in the morning and crucified in the middle of the day
  (third and ninth hours---which are not necessarily exactly six hours
  apart, because of the inexact nature of these terms).

  Darkness covered the land from noon until about 3 P.M. (Matthew 26:45;
  Mark 15:33; Luke 23:44) at which time Yeshua died and there was an
  earthquake. The lintel stone over the outer Temple porch cracked, and
  tore the outer veil covering the doors of the Temple.

  Joseph acquired the body and quickly placed it in the tomb before
  sunset on Wednesday 14 Aviv.

  Thursday 15 Aviv was the annual Passover Shabbat beginning the days of
  unleavened bread.

  Friday morning, 16 Aviv, the wave offering was made, and the offering
  was burned from the morning to the following sunrise, on the weekly
  Shabbat, 17 Aviv.

  Yeshua rose from the dead before dawn on the Shabbat, 17 Aviv, at the
  last ascending of the First Fruits (Wave) offering. This Shabbat was
  the first of the seven Shabbats counted to Shavuot.

  - Information sourced from [Daniel Gregg], /The Scroll of Biblical
    Chronology/, Sixth Edition, 2014.
  - Note: This is my summary and paraphrase of Daniel Gregg's
    information. Any errors are mine.


[Daniel Gregg] <http://torahtimes.org/>