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Different Samaritan Sects

The Hasidic System (System B) 221

Now, when the Festival of Unleavened Bread came round, they sacrificed the Phasekh, as it is called, but then they offered the other sacrifices for seven days.51

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Josephus also notes that the entire eight-day Pharisaic observance (actually seven and one-quarter days) was called Phasekh. In the events of the year 65 B.C.E., he reports: But as this action took place at the time of observing the Festival of Unleavened Bread, WHICH WE CALL PHASEKH, the Jews of best repute left the country and fled to Egypt.52

Josephus also comments, “While the priests and Aristobulus (II) were being besieged, there happened to come round the festival called Phasekh, at which it is our custom to offer numerous sacrifices to the deity.”53 These numerous sacrifices refer to the entire festival period. Similarly, in his history of the death of King Herod the Great during the spring of 4 B.C.E., Josephus writes: At this time there came round the festival during which it is THE ANCESTRAL CUSTOM OF THE JEWS TO SERVE UNLEAVENED BREAD. IT IS CALLED PHASEKH, being a commemoration of their departure from Egypt. They celebrate it with gladness, and IT IS THEIR CUSTOM TO SLAUGHTER A GREATER NUMBER OF SACRIFICES AT THIS FESTIVAL than at any other, and an innumerable multitude of people come down from the country and even from abroad to worship the deity.54

In another book, while discussing the same event, he writes: And now THE FESTIVAL OF UNLEAVENED BREAD, WHICH THE JEWS CALL PHASEKH, came round; it is an occasion for the contribution of a multitude of sacrifices, and a vast crowd streamed in from the country for the ceremony.55

Mishnah

The Mishnah (about 200 C.E.), being a written record of the Pharisaic oral laws and traditions, confirms that during the time of the second Temple the lamb was sacrificed shortly after the eighth and one-half hour (i.e., after 2:30 P.M.) on the “arab of Phasekh” (i.e., according to Pharisaic interpretation, the afternoon arab before the night of the Phasekh supper). It states:

51 Jos., Antiq., 9:13:2–3. 52 Jos., Antiq., 14:2:1. 53 Jos., Antiq., 14:2:2. 54 Jos., Antiq., 17:9:3. 55 Jos., Wars, 2:1:3.

222 The Festivals and Sacred Days of Yahweh

The Daily Whole-offering was slaughtered at a half after the eighth hour, and offered up at a half after the ninth hour; (but) on the arab of Phasekh it was slaughtered at a half after the seventh hour and offered up at a half after the eighth hour, whether it was a weekday or the Sabbath. If the arab of Phasekh fell on the arab of a Sabbath, it was slaughtered at a half after the sixth hour and offered up a half after the seventh hour. AND, AFTER THIS, THE PHASEKH OFFERING (WAS SLAUGHTERED).56

The difference between the Phasekh of the Exodus from Egypt and those that followed are explained in this way: Wherein does the Phasekh of Egypt differ from the Phasekh of the generations (that followed thereafter)? At the Phasekh of Egypt the lamb was obtained on the 10th (of Abib), sprinkling (of the blood) with a bunch of hyssop was required on the lintel and on the two side-posts, and it was eaten in haste and during one night [. . .]57 whereas the Phasekh of the generations continued throughout seven days.58

Conclusion

The heart of System B is the belief that the seven days of unleavened bread begin with the 15th of the first moon and last until the end of the 21st day. It is also obvious from this evidence that, for the adherents to the Hasidic view (System B), the expression μybr[ (arabim) represents two periods of the day: the afternoon and the evening twilight, with mid-afternoon or sunset at the end of a day dividing the two. Another way of looking at this view is to make the early afternoon the first arab and the late afternoon, either ending at sunset (a legal day) or ending at dark (a common day), the second arab. Sacrificing the Phasekh lamb at about 3 P.M., accordingly, accommodates all three Hasidic understandings.

Since the destruction of the Temple of Yahweh at Jerusalem by the Romans in 70 C.E., sacrifices required under the Torah of Moses, including the Phasekh sacrifice, have been dispensed with by the Jews. Yet, many of the Jewish faithful look forward to the reintroduction of these sacrifices when a future third Temple is built in Jerusalem. When these sacrifices are reinstituted, it is their belief that a Phasekh lamb should once again be sacrificed in the afternoon of the 14th of Abib and eaten during the night of the 15th.

56 Pes., 5:1. 57 The Gemara points out that there is a lacuna here in the Mishnah. In its place, the Gemara claims, it should state that the prohibition against leavened bread during the Phasekh of Egypt “lasted but one day,” and then the text continues as above (Gem., 96b). 58 Pes., 9:5.