@Ragman,
Quote: You have proven repeatedly that you know nothing about Judaism. You’re wrong. Passover is 7 or 8-day holiday, depending on particular religious faction. Typically, the first 2 days and last 2 days will be emphasized, depending on Orthodox, Conservative or Reform followers.
Stick to your Bible-thumping but don’t declare any knowledge of Judaism.
Reveal to all where I have ever been wrong about Judaism?
I am here referring to the Passover Festival according to the scriptures and not the erroneous Passover Festival according to the Jews.
The Jewish day began at sunset and consists of 12 hours of darkness followed by 12 hours of daylight.
In reference to the day of Passover Exodus 12: 14; You must celebrate
THIS DAY as a religious festival to remind you of what I, the Lord, have done. Celebrate it for all time to come.”
From the Hebrew - English Bible / Mechon-Mamre. In the Hebrew” Exodus 12: 6; the English word ‘DUSK’ is taken from the Hebrew - בין הערבים beyn haarbayim, which means "between the two evenings, and which is translated in English bibles as evening or twilight, but the Hebrew ben ha-'arbayim literally means "between the two settings."
Rabbinic sources take this to mean "from noon on." According to Radak, the first "setting" occurs when the sun passes its zenith just after noon and the shadows begin to lengthen, and the second "setting" is the actual sunset. (p. 55, vol. 2, The Jewish Publication Society Torah Commentary, "Exodus")
Between mid-day and sunset of the thirteenth day of Nisan, is the day of preparation to the Passover, the day when the Pacal lambs were to be killed.
Exodus 12: 22-23; The Israelites are commanded by the Lord, through Moses, that on the night of the Passover, the 14 day of Abib/Nisan, the night that the Lord killed all the firstborn males of Egypt who were not protected by the sacrificial blood, they were not to leave their houses until ‘
MORNING.
During the 12 daylight hours of the 14th day of Nisan the Israelites prepared for their departure from Egypt. Numbers 33: 3; reveals that the people of Israel left Egypt on the day ‘
AFTER’ the first Passover, Let me repeat that, it was on the
‘DAY AFTER’ the first Passover, as the sun set on the 14th Day of Nisan, they left Egypt '
BY NIGHT' (the 15th) in full view of the Egyptians who were burying their firstborn sons, who the Lord had killed in the darkness of the previous night, wherein the beginning of that night, the Israelites had eaten the Passover lambs that had been killed between the two evenings that preceded their Passover meal, which was between noon of the 13th of Nissan and sunset, the beginning of the 14th of Nisan.
Leviticus 23: 5-6; The Passover, celebrated to honour the LORD, begins at evening on the fourteenth day of the first month.
6 On the fifteenth day the Festival of Unleavened Bread begins, and for seven days you must not eat any bread made with yeast.
Now, you can attempt to prove your Holy Scriptures wrong if you wish to try.