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  • E03: The Jewish Arrest Warrant
    2026/04/02

    Dr. Tom Zelt, with colleagues Cara and Phil continues a discussion of rising tension in John’s Gospel by examining the “arrest warrant” implied in John 11:57 and a related passage in the Babylonian Talmud that cites he arrest warrant in a discussion about implementing capital punishment.


    Show Notes

    Dr. Tom Zelt, Cara, and Phil continue their discussion of rising tension in the Gospel of John by examining the “arrest warrant” implied in John 11:57 and a related passage in the Babylonian Talmud (Tractate Sanhedrin within the Nezikin division). They explain what the Talmud is—oral law and later discussion (Mishnah and Gemara), compiled after the Babylonian captivity and especially after Jerusalem’s destruction in AD 70—and how Jewish courts were to handle capital cases, including the role of a herald and the four types of capital punishment (stoning, burning, hanging as postmortem display, and slaying by the sword). They quote and analyze a Talmudic comment stating that “on Sabbath Eve, the eve of Passover, Jesus the Nazarene was hanged,” and that for 40 days a herald announced he would be stoned for “sorcery” and for “instigating and seducing Israel to idolatry,” inviting defense testimony. They discuss rabbinic commentary (including Abaye and Rabbi Ula) on why Jesus’ case differed from expected legal procedure, including the claim that as a “mesit” (one who leads others to idolatry) he deserved no compassion, and a note that he was “close to the government,” connected to Pilate’s behavior in the gospel accounts. The hosts connect these accusations to New Testament statements that opponents attributed Jesus’ works to demonic power while the populace acknowledged his miracles, and they argue the Talmud passage functions as a “positive witness from a hostile source” confirming Jesus’ miraculous activity and historicity. They also explore why a Jewish stoning did not occur—Roman control of executions and concern over Jesus’ popularity—leading to Roman crucifixion and “hanging” language linked to Deuteronomy. They address dating language (“Sabbath Eve, eve of Passover”) with Jewish sundown-to-sundown reckoning and Passover-week context, and suggest the warrant would have circulated at least 40 days before Passover, aligning with John’s narrative arc from attempted arrest (John 7), attempted stoning (John 8), escape (John 10), Lazarus (John 11), and the leaders’ decision to arrest and kill Jesus (including Caiaphas’ statement in John 11:49–53). The episode concludes that the Talmudic material corroborates key New Testament themes: escalating conflict, Jewish leadership in initiating Jesus’ death, irregular and rushed proceedings, the shift from Jewish to Roman execution methods, and the Passover timing.


    00:00 Welcome + Why the Arrest Warrant Matters (John’s Rising Tension)

    01:51 What Is the Talmud? Oral Law, Mishnah & Gemara Explained

    03:34 Inside the Sanhedrin Tractate: How Capital Cases Were Supposed to Work

    04:50 The Herald Rule & Four Execution Methods (Stoning, Burning, Hanging, Sword)

    08:50 When the Talmud Names Jesus: The 40-Day Heralding & Charges

    10:34 Rabbi Ula’s Defense: ‘No Compassion’ + ‘Close to the Government’

    12:57 Are These Rules Ancient? Dead Sea Scrolls, Inspiration, and Oral Tradition

    15:15 Breaking Down the Charges: Sorcery, Idolatry, and a ‘Negative Source’ Witness

    19:53 Why ‘Stoning’ Didn’t Happen: Roman Authority Over Executions

    21:23 Why the Jewish leaders needed Rome: legality, popularity, and avoiding a riot

    23:09 From stoning to “hanging”: Deuteronomy 21 and the cross as public curse-display

    24:10 “Hanged on Sabbath eve, the eve of Passover”: reconciling the dating with John

    24:48 Ula the calendar expert: lunar timing, Jerusalem signals, and when festivals begin

    26:52 Two ways to read the date: sundown-to-sundown days and the solar-calendar Essenes

    29:47 Back to the warrant: why Jesus was treated as an exception + Pilate and blame

    31:40 Caiaphas’ prophecy (John 11): ‘better one man die’ and truth from a hostile source

    34:46 When the warrant went out: 40 days before, Lazarus, and Jesus’ ‘here I am’ entry

    36:02 How close is Ula to the events? Rabbinic transmission and the Lincoln analogy

    38:51 What we learn: miracles affirmed, rushed trial admitted, and NT story corroborated

    41:01 Wrap-up and where to find more resources

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    42 分
  • E02: In Your Face Holy Week
    2026/03/27

    This first full episode of "Connecting the Dots" from Impact Biblical Resources, hosted by Dr. Tom Zelt with colleagues Phil and Kara, introduces the theme "In Your Face Holy Week," arguing that Jesus intentionally intensified conflict with Jewish religious leaders in Jerusalem, making his execution culturally and politically inevitable. The hosts describe the Temple Mount’s geography and how it impacts the conflict with Jesus leading to his execution, including Herod’s massive expansion and major structures (the Royal Colonnade, the Temple, and Fortress Antonia), and how the platform functioned as an agora separated from the holy areas by a barricade warning Gentiles of death if they crossed. They trace John’s escalating conflict scenes. The episode culminates in Jesus’ deliberate return for Passover, his orchestrated triumphal entry, daily Temple confrontations including cleansing the courts again and harsh public denunciations of leaders, and the leaders’ plan to avoid arrest during the feast until Judas offers a secret handover. The hosts conclude that Jesus forces a decisive response about his identity and promotes a personal, non-ritual-based relationship with God.


    Show Notes

    Dr. Tom Zelt hosts the first full “Connecting the Dots” podcast episode with colleagues Phil and Kara introducing “In Your Face Holy Week,” focused on how Jesus intentionally intensifies conflict with Jewish religious leaders in Jerusalem. Using the Gospel of John (which provides extensive Jerusalem context compared to the Synoptics), they discuss John’s familiarity with the city’s topography and leadership. The episode explains first-century Jerusalem’s small size, festival crowds, water scarcity, purification needs, extensive cisterns, and aqueducts, then describes the Temple Mount’s massive Herodian expansion, key structures (Royal Colonnade, the Temple, and Fortress Antonia), the marketplace-like atmosphere, and the “barricade of hostility” separating Gentiles from holy areas. They trace escalating confrontations in John: Jesus cleansing the temple, healing on the Sabbath near Bethesda, provoking authorities during the Feast of Tabernacles with the “living water” proclamation, near-stoning in John 8, healing the man born blind in John 9, and attempted arrest at Hanukkah. Jesus withdraws across the Jordan to Perea/Betabara, then returns to Bethany to raise Lazarus, prompting an official order to report Jesus’ whereabouts so he can be arrested. Despite the danger, Jesus returns for Passover, stays in Bethany, orchestrates the triumphal entry, and repeatedly teaches and confronts leaders in the temple, including strong denunciations and parables. They note leaders avoided arresting him during the feast due to his popularity until Judas enables a secret arrest, and they conclude Jesus’ actions force a decision about his messianic identity and present a personal, non-ritual-based relationship with God, connecting his rejection and crucifixion to bearing humanity’s rejection.


    00:00 Welcome to Connecting the Dots + What “In Your Face Holy Week” Means

    01:42 Why John? The Gospel That Maps Jerusalem’s Conflict

    03:24 Jerusalem 101: A Tiny Walled City Flooded by Festival Crowds

    05:04 Water, Cisterns, and Aqueducts: How the City Survived

    08:53 Temple Mount Topography + Herod’s Massive Expansion

    12:04 Marketplace vs Holy Space: The “Barricade of Hostility”

    13:10 First Shots Fired: Jesus Cleanses the Temple (John 2)

    15:48 Sabbath Showdown: Healing at Bethesda (John 5)

    18:16 Tabernacles Tension: Arrest Attempts + “Living Water” Claim (John 7)

    21:48 Escalation in John 8: “Not Children of Abraham”

    22:02 Healing on the Sabbath & the Bold Testimony of the Man Born Blind

    23:26 Hanukkah Showdown: “I Told You” and Another Arrest Attempt

    24:08 Jesus Escapes to Perea: Crossing the Jordan & Why They Don’t Chase Him

    28:19 Bethany on the Edge: Lazarus Dies, Jesus Returns, and the Arrest Warrant

    31:27 “Game On”: Triumphal Entry, Passover Crowds, and Scouting the Temple

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    42 分