Making an Entrance
Introduction to the Passion
Friday
Arrival in Bethany (John 12:1)
Saturday
Mary’s anointing of Jesus (John 12:2–8; cf. Matt 26:6–13 par.)
Sunday
Triumphal entry (Matt 21:1–11 par.), surveying the temple (Mark 11:11), return to Bethany (Matt 21:17; Mark 11:11)
Monday
Cleansing the temple (21:12–13 par.); cursing the fig tree (21:18–22); miracles and challenge in the temple (21:14–16); return to Bethany (Mark 11:19)
Tuesday
Disciples’ questions regarding the fig tree (Mark 11:20–21); debates with the leaders in the temple (Matt 21:23–22:46 par.); Olivet Discourse after return to Bethany (Matt 24–25)
Wednesday
Little recorded in the gospels—Jesus and disciples apparently remain in Bethany; Judas arranges for his betrayal (26:14–16 par.)
Thursday
Preparation for Passover (26:17–19 par.); after sundown, Passover meal and Last Supper (26:20–35); Farewell Discourse (John 13–17); Gethsemane (Matt 26:30–46 par.)
Friday
After midnight, the betrayal and arrest (26:47–56); Jewish trials—Annas (John 18:13–14), Caiaphas and partial Sanhedrin (Matt 26:57–75 par.), full Sanhedrin (27:1–2); Roman trial—Pilate (27:2–14 par.), Herod Antipas (Luke 23:6–12), Pilate (Matt 27:15–26 par.); crucifixion (9 a.m. to 3 p.m., 27:27–56); burial (27:57–61 par.); tomb sealed with guards (27:62–66)
The coming king.
The Disciples
The Galilean Crowd
The Jerusalem Crowd
Jerusalem, a city of about 70,000 (Rev 11:13 says one-tenth of the city was 7,000), swelled to about 250,000 for Passover.
The Real Question
The Cleansing of the Temple
There were shops immediately outside the temple year-round, and they did a thriving trade. However, Jesus’ act was not addressed against them but against the trade inside the temple. It took place in the Court of Gentiles, a large area (twenty-five acres) in the southeast quadrant of the temple mount. The temple itself was the largest structure in the Roman world, measuring 1,590 feet on the west, 1,035 feet on the north, 1,536 feet on the east, and 912 feet on the south, equal to thirty-five football fields in size and covering one-sixth the total area of Jerusalem itself. The need for sacrificial animals and birds, especially at Passover, was immense, and since priests had to certify their purity, people would naturally purchase them at the temple itself rather than walk them through the streets of the city and take the chance of their being rendered impure somehow. All the bargaining in the buying and selling plus the movement of the animals made a lot of noise.
The Confrontation with the Religious
Healing
Children
Thus the use of the familiar “hosanna” shouted to Jesus by pilgrims and children seems to indicate that for them every Jewish messianic expectation had now been fulfilled in Jesus.
