בָּרוּךְ אַתָּה יְיָ אֱלֹהֵֽינוּ מֶֽלֶךְ הָעוֹלָם שֶׁהֶחֱיָנוּ וְקִיְּמָנוּ וְהִגִּיעָנוּ לזְּמַן הַזֶּה.

Bārūch atāh Adonai Elohênū melekh ha`ôlām šeheḥeyānû veqîmānû vehigî`ānû lazman hazeh

Blessed art thou, O Lord our God, king of the universe, who hast given us life and sustained us and brought us to this season

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Prelude 2: The Raising of Lazarus


Carl Bloch, "The Raising of Lazarus"

The raising of Lazarus is an appropriate prelude to a celebration of Holy Week, both because it foreshadowed Jesus’ own coming resurrection and because it seems to have been a major cause in the series of events that led to his arrest and death. While the cleansing of the temple appears to be one of the triggering factors that led to the arrestand eventually the crucifixionof Jesus in the Synoptic gospels, the gospel of John presents the raising of Lazarus as the proximate cause of Jewish leadership’s decision to try to put Jesus to death:
But some of them went their ways to the Pharisees, and told them what things Jesus had done.  Then gathered the chief priests and the Pharisees a council, and said, “What do we? for this man doeth many miracles.  If we let him thus alone, all men will believe on him: and the Romans shall come and take away both our place and nation.”

And one of them, named Caiaphas, being the high priest that same year, said unto them, “Ye know nothing at all, Nor consider that it is expedient for us, that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not.”  And this spake he not of himself: but being high priest that year, he prophesied that Jesus should die for that nation. (John 11:46–51)
Similarly, the next scene, The Supper at Bethany, sees Mary, the sister of Martha and Lazarus, anoint Jesus' feet in an act that anticipates the anointing of his head by an unnamed woman midway through Holy Week. Jesus explicitly connects both anointings to his coming death, proclaiming that the women are doing this to prepare him for his burial. This indicates that they are women of great faith and testimony who not only know who Jesus istheir promised king and priestbut also what he has come to do, which is to suffer and die for us.

Ideas for Families

  • Perhaps set a festive tone by making lazarakia as a family. Making these spicy rolls provides a good opportunity for talking about the raising of Lazarus and how it anticipated Jesus' resurrection (see below).
  • If you have been reading a single gospel between Christmas and Easter, hopefully you have read up to where Jesus is about to enter Jerusalem if you are reading a Synoptic Gospel or up through chapter 10 if you are reading John.
  • Read portions of John 11, at least Jesus' dialogue with Martha about how he was "the resurrection and the life" and the story of his raising Lazarus from the dead. Discuss how many began to believe in Jesus because of this miracle but how it hardened the Jerusalem leadership still further, leading them to actively plan Jesus' arrest and death.
  • If you want to make this a full-fledged devotional, consider singing a hymn of comfort regarding death such as those often sung at funerals. 
    • Sing as a family "My Redeemer Lives" (hymn no. 135 with a beautiful text by Gordon B. Hinckley
    • Listen to recordings of beautiful music. My favorites include "Be Still My Soul" and "Oh, What Songs of the Heart." You can also listen to the beautiful Tabernacle Choir's recording of "Death Shall Not Destroy My Comfort" from the Come Thou Fount CD.  
Death shall not destroy my comfort,
Christ shall guide me through the gloom;
Down He'll send some heav'nly convoy,
To escort my spirit home.
See the happy spirits waiting,
On the banks beyond the stream!
Sweet responses still repeating,
"Jesus! Jesus!" is their theme.

Oh, hallelujah! How I love my Savior!
Oh, hallelujah! That I do;
Hallelujah! How I love my Savior!
Mourners, you may love Him too.
  • Perhaps use this music to lead into a discussion of how very few are raised from the dead as Lazarus was and how the resurrection still lies in the future. But just as miraculous is how our faith in Christ takes the fear out of death and hold out the promise of a peaceful and joyful passing to paradise. 
  • Prepare for the kingly portion of Holy Week (Palm Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday) by reading John 12:1-9, noting Mary's anointing of Jesus' feet, and discussing how "Messiah" and "Christ" mean "anointed one."   


The Background of "Lazarus Saturday"


Ruins of the Byzantine church at Bethany
In the Eastern Orthodox tradition, the Saturday before Palm Sunday is celebrated as “Lazarus Saturday” (although because most Eastern churches follow the Julian calendar, the events from Lazarus Saturday up through and including Easter usually fall on a later date than they do in the West). This feast celebrates Jesus’ power over death as it was so powerfully demonstrated in his calling Lazarus forth alive from his grave in Bethany.  In actuality, it is not clear how many days before the Triumphal Entry the raising of Lazarus actually took place: the gospel of John records that Jesus withdrew from the public eye to a village called Ephraim for some time before Passover (John 11:54), after which occurred the dinner at which Mary of Bethany anointed Jesus’ feet.   Still, the story of the raising of Lazarus serves as a fitting starting point to our celebration of Holy Week.
Sign to the traditional tomb of Lazarus at Bethany
The revival of Lazarus is the third example of Jesus raising the dead in the gospels, and it is also the most powerful.  When Jesus raised the daughter of Jairus, she had just died, having passed away as Jesus was making his way to heal her of her sickness (see Mark 5:21–24, 35–43; par Matthew 9:18–19, 23–26; Luke 8:40–42, 49–56).  The son of the widow of Nain had been dead longer; Jesus intervened in this case while the young man’s body was being carried to burial (see Luke 7:11–17).  But Lazarus had been dead and in his tomb for four days when Jesus arrived to revive him.  This miracle thus conclusively displays Jesus’ absolute power over death.

Rachel in the traditional tomb
While all three of these cases certainly anticipate Jesus’ own coming forth from the tomb Easter morning, they are only examples of Jesus’ restoring people to mortal life, not of actual resurrection.  This is perhaps most vividly demonstrated by the fact that Lazarus comes out of the tomb “bound hand and foot with graveclothes: and his face was bound about with a napkin” (John 11:44).  The Greek word soudarion, meaning “handkerchief” or in this case “facecloth” (KJV “napkin”), is the same word used in the case of the Jesus’ grave clothes left in the empty tomb on Easter morning (see John 20:6–7).  Lazarus brought his grave clothes out of the tomb with him because, as a mortal, he would still need them for one day he would die again.  Jesus left his grave clothes in the tomb, however, because he had risen to immortal, eternal life.

A first century tomb in nearby Bethphage
In addition to the stunning miracle itself, the story of Lazarus also occasions an important Johannine dialogue, in which Jesus taught Martha how he was the Resurrection and the Life (John 11:20–27).  Regarding this discourse, I have written the following in my forthcoming book on miracles:
"I am the Resurrection and the Life," Franciscan church at Bethany
Jesus’ famous proclamation that he was the resurrection and the life that followed anticipated more than just the miracle that he was about to perform in raising Lazarus from the dead.  It also looked forward to the glorious resurrection that his own conquest of death would make possible: “He that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live” (John 11:25).  Lazarus, a disciple who had died, would soon live again.  Yet all who believe in Jesus will also live again, and more than that, they will live forever.  But when Jesus taught Martha that those who believed in him would live again, he was not just referring to the general resurrection.  All who die will be restored to their bodies.  In his Discourse on the Divine Son soon after the healing of the man at the Pool of Bethesda (John 5:17–47), Jesus had taught that all would come forth from their graves, “they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation” (John 5:29, emphasis added). Thus when Jesus referred to believers living again, he probably meant that they would rise in “the resurrection of life,” receiving glorified bodies and eternal life, usually defined as the kind of life that God and Christ have in their presence. 

With that in mind, however, the next verse presents somewhat of a conundrum: “And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die” (John 11:26).  Lazarus had believed in Jesus, yet he had died, as countless of believers in Christ have died since.  Clearly when Jesus spoke of believers never dying, he must have been referring to more than just physical death.  Indeed, in the gospel of John “life” is defined very broadly as the kind of spiritual life that one enjoys, in this life or the next, when one has been reborn in Jesus and enjoys his spirit.   Death, then, represents living without God’s spirit, which death believers lastingly overcome with their faith in Jesus even before the general resurrection.  In other words, even if we temporarily die in regard to our physical bodies, those of us who are alive in Christ never spiritually die. (The Miracles of Jesus, 115–16)
The story of raising of Lazarus thus not only points us towards the resurrection by which Jesus conquered physical death, it also symbolizes his conquest of spiritual death, or our separation from God in this life and the next.

Because the miraculous resuscitation of Lazarus probably occurred several days before the Triumphal Entry, and the Bethany dinner and anointing by Mary preceded it as well, my friend Maxine Hanks has suggested that another possible sequence for individuals or families desiring a "head start" to Holy Week could be to observe a "Lazarus Friday" followed by a "Bethany Saturday" before Palm Sunday

 

Treats for Lazarus Saturday


File:Lazarakia On Plate.jpg
Wikimedia Commons
2020 Note: Because of hoarding during the Corona virus pandemic, we were not able to buy any years this year, so all the pictures are from previous years.

One of the fun Eastern Orthodox customs associated with with Lazarus Saturday is the baking and eating of Lazarakia, small holiday rolls in the shape of a shrouded figure. Here is a recipe and directions for making your own lazarakia: http://www.orthodoxmom.com/2009/04/10/lazarakia-recipe/

 Our first attempts at making this holiday roll:



2014 Lazarakia



Easter Quicklinks

Prelude to the Passion 2: Readings for The Raising of Lazarus and the Supper at Bethany

Carl Bloch, "The Raising of Lazarus"
Just as the passion predictions in Mark precede and anticipate Jesus’s final week, in John, the story of the death and miraculous raising of Lazarus, together with a celebratory dinner afterward in which Mary of Bethany anoints Jesus, provides both the proximate cause of the Jerusalem leadership’s resolve to have Jesus killed even as it provides anticipations of Jesus’s coming death and resurrection.

Christian tradition produced customs and observances that helped believers prepare for the Passion in a similar way. One of the better known of these observances is Lent, a liturgical period common throughout much of traditional Christendom that is a time of fasting and spiritual preparation based on Jesus’s own forty-day preparation in the wilderness. Perhaps less well known is the custom of “Lazarus Saturday,” common in Eastern Orthodoxy. With or without borrowing from any of these traditions, reading and reflecting upon Mark 8:22‒10:52 and John 11:1‒12:11 can help Latter-day Saints prepare themselves and their families for a more meaningful experience during Holy Week.

  • For a discussion of these episodes, see my original post Prelude: The Raising of Lazarus
  •  Lazarus Saturday: read John 11:1‒12:11; discuss the raising of Lazarus and why Mary anointed Jesus; sing “My Redeemer Lives” (Hymns, no. 135); make Lazarakia
    • See also the suggestions of Emily Belle Freeman, Celebrating a Christ-Centered Easter, 11‒19
  • Inspiring art includes Carl Bloch, Healing the Blind Man and The Raising of Lazarus; vignettes from James Tissot’s The Life of Christ such as The First Shall Be LastJesus and the Little ChildGet Thee Behind Me, SatanThe Two Blind Men at JerichoThe Resurrection of Lazarus; Harry Anderson, Christ and the Children; Michael Coleman, Road to Jerusalem; and J. Kirk Richards, Sight Restored. 

 


Text: John 11:1–12:11

The Bethany episodes, consisting of the story of the death and miraculous raising of Lazarus followed by a feast that Martha and Mary held for Jesus and their brother afterward, occupy a pivotal position in the Gospel of John, overlapping with and serving as a bridge between “The Book of Signs,” which narrates the miraculous signs and the doctrinal discourses of Jesus’s ministry (John 2:1‒11:57), and “The Book of Glory,” which chronicles Jesus’s final days and resurrection (12:1‒20:31). Just as these “bridge episodes” prepare the reader for the coming passion narrative, they can help us in our preparation for Holy Week. The problematic Johannine expression “the Jews” (Greek, hoi Ioudaioi) appears several times in this selection. As we discuss further in our exegesis below, we have placed it in quotations to signal to readers that John seems to be using it to refer to a specific group and not to all Jewish people. 

Sickness, Death, and Raising of Lazarus (11:1‒46)

11

1There was a certain man, Lazarus of Bethany, the village of Mary and her sister Martha, who was sick. 2Now Mary was the one who anointed the Lord with ointment and wiped his feet with her hair whose brother was sick. 3So the sisters sent to him, saying, “Lord, see, the one whom you love is sick!” 4Yet when Jesus heard this, he said, “This sickness is not to the point of death; rather it is for the glory of God, that the Son of God may be glorified through it,” 5for Jesus loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus. 6Therefore, when he heard that Lazarus was sick, he still stayed in the place where he was for two days. 7After this he said to his disciples, “Let us go back to Judea.” 8His disciples said to him, “Master, recently the ‘the Jews’ were seeking to stone you, and they still are! Are going back there again?” 9Jesus answered,

 

“Are there not twelve hours in the day?

Whoever walks around in the daytime does not stumble,

because he sees the light of the world.

10                   But whoever walks around in the nighttime stumbles,

because there is no light in him.”

 11He said these things, and after this he told them, “Our friend Lazarus is sleeping, but I am going to wake him up.” 12His disciples said to him, “Lord, if he is sleeping, he will recover.” 13Now Jesus had spoken about Lazarus’s death, but they thought that he was speaking about getting rest through sleep. 14So Jesus spoke openly to them, “Lazarus has died. 15Yet I am glad for your sakes that I was not there, that you may believe. Now let us go to him.” 16Then Thomas, who is called “the Twin,” said to his fellow disciples, “Let us also go, that we may die with him!”

 17When Jesus arrived, he found that Lazarus had already been in the tomb for four days. 18Now Bethany was close to Jerusalem, about two miles away, 19and many of the “the Jews” had come to Martha and Mary to console them about their brother. 20When Martha heard that Jesus had come, she went out to meet him, but Mary stayed sitting at home. 21Then Martha said to Jesus, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died! 22Yet even now I know that whatever you ask God, God will grant it to you.” 23Jesus said to her, “Your brother will rise again.” 24Martha said to him, “I know that he will rise again in the resurrection on the last day.” 25Jesus said to her,

“I am the resurrection and the life.

Whoever believes in me,

even if he dies,

he will live.

26                   And whoever lives and believes in me

will not die forever. 

Do you believe this?” 27She said to him, “Yes indeed, Lord, I have come to believe that you are the Christ, the Son of God who is coming into the world.”

28After she had said this, she went back and secretly called her sister Mary, saying, “The teacher has arrived and is calling you.” 29Now when Mary had heard this, she quickly got up and went to him. 30Now Jesus had not yet come into the village but was still in the place where Martha had met him. 31Therefore when the “the Jews” who were in the house with Mary and had been consoling her saw her quickly get up and go out, they followed her, thinking that she was going to the tomb to mourn there.

32So after Mary came to where Jesus was, when she saw him, she fell at his feet, saying to him, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died!” 33Now when Jesus saw her mourning deeply and the “the Jews” who had come with her also mourning, he was greatly distressed in his spirit and troubled, 34and he asked, “Where have you laid him?” They said to him, “Lord, come and see.” 35Jesus wept. 36Therefore “the Jews” said, “Look how much he loved him!” 37But some of them said, “Could not the one who opened the eyes of the blind man bring it about that this man would not have died?”

38Then Jesus, again deeply upset within himself, came to the tomb. It was a cave, and a stone was set upon it. 39Jesus said, “Remove the stone.” Martha, the sister of the one who had died, said, “Lord, he already smells, for it is the fourth day.” 40Jesus said to her, “Did I not say to you that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?” 41So they removed the stone, and Jesus raised his eyes and said,

“Father, I give thanks to you,

because you have heard me.

42                   And I know that you always hear me,

but I have said this for the sake of the crowd standing around,

that they may believe that you sent me.” 

43After he had said these things, he cried out with a loud voice, “Lazarus, come out!” 44He who had been dead came forth, bound hand and foot with strips of graveclothes and his face wrapped in a face cloth. Jesus said to them, “Unbind him and let him go.”

45Therefore, many of the “the Jews” who had come to Mary and had seen what he had done believed in him. 46Yet some of them went to the Pharisees and told them what Jesus had done.


Conspiracy of the Jewish Leaders and the “Prophecy” of Caiaphas (11:47‒53)

47Then the chief priests and the Pharisees called the Sanhedrin into session and said, “What are we doing? This man is performing many miraculous signs! 48If we let him go on like this, everyone will believe in him, and the Romans will come and remove both our place and our nation. 49But one of their number, Caiaphas, who was high priest that year, said to them, “You do not know anything! 50You do not understand that it is advantageous for you that one man die for the people and the whole nation not be destroyed.” 51This he did not say of himself, but because he was high priest, he prophesied that Jesus was about to die for the nation, 52and not for the nation only but also to gather together all the scattered children of God. 53And so, from that day they planned to put him to death.


Withdrawal of Jesus to Ephraim (11:54‒57)

54Therefore, Jesus no longer walked around openly among the “the Jews,” but he went from there to a region near the wilderness, into a city called Ephraim, and he stayed there with his disciples.

55Now it was almost the Jewish Passover, and many went up to Jerusalem from the countryside for the Passover, that they might purify themselves. 56Then they were looking for Jesus and kept saying to each other as they stood in the temple, “What do you think? He won’t come to the festival, will he?” 57But the chief priests and Pharisees had given orders that if anyone knew where he was, they should report it, that they might arrest him.

 

The Supper at Bethany, Mary anoints Jesus (12:1‒11)

12

1Six days before Passover, Jesus came to Bethany where Lazarus was, whom Jesus had raised from the dead. 2Then they made a feast for him there. Martha served, but Lazarus was among those who reclined with him at the table.

3Then Mary, having brought a pound of very expensive, pure nard ointment, anointed the feet of Jesus and wiped them with her hair, and the house was filled with the fragrance of the ointment. 4Judas Iscariot, one of his disciples, who was about to betray him, said, 5“Why was this ointment not sold for three hundred denarii and given to the poor?” 6He did not say this because the poor mattered to him but because he was a thief and, being the one who held the moneybag, used to pilfer from what was put in it. 7And so Jesus said, “Leave her alone so she may keep it for the day of my burial, 8for you always have the poor with you, but you do not always have me.”

9A great crowd of “the Jews” came to know that he was there, and they came not only on account of Jesus but also to see Lazarus, whom he had raised from the dead. 10But the chief priests deliberated how they might put Lazarus to death also, 11because on account of him many of “the Jews” were changing sides and beginning to believe in Jesus.

Sunday, April 6, 2025

A Working Chronology of the Savior's Final Days


For most traditional Christians, the basic chronology of Jesus’ last week is fairly clear: he entered Jerusalem on Palm Sunday; taught and prophesied for two or more days; held the Last Supper and was arrested on Thursday evening; died on Good Friday; and rose from the dead the morning of Easter Sunday.  To make a devotional study of the Savior’s Final Week simpler, in past years and in my 2009 Ensign article,[1] I avoided detailed chronological discussions.  Here, however, I have drawn upon some of the conclusions that I drew in God So Loved the World (pp. 129-133) to propose a basic, working chronology that can be used for devotional purposes.

Three basic considerations that I have used in creating this working chronology are the following:
  • To what extent can the historical timing, or at least order, of events be recreated?
  • When there are historical uncertainties or conflicts, it there a theological or symbolic reason for an event's timing, addition, or omission?
  • What is the utility in accepting, or observing, the traditional timing or liturgical observance of events commemorated by Christian communities?
The only securely established day is the day of the resurrection, which is explicitly identified as “the first day of the week” in all four gospels (Mark 16:2; parallels Matt 28:1 and Luke 24:1; John 20:1).  The gospel of Mark, widely assumed to be the earliest of the written gospel accounts, provides relative time markers, which, calculating back from the resurrection on the first day of the week, place Jesus’ triumphal entry on the previous Sunday.[2]

  • Sunday:          “And when they came nigh unto Jerusalem” (11:1)
  • Monday:         “And on the morrow, when they were come back from Bethany” (11:12)
  • Tuesday:        “And in the morning, as they passed by, they saw the fig tree” (11:20)
  • Wednesday:  “After two days was the feast of the Passover” (14:1)
  • Thursday:      “And the first day of unleavened bread, when they killed the Passover” (14:12)
  • Friday:            “And straightway in the morning” (15:1)
  • Saturday         the “Sabbath’” (15:42; 16:1; more below)
  • Sunday:          “and very early in the morning the first day of the week” (16:2)

In reality, establishing a secure chronology is a little more complex.  Other day markers beyond resurrection on Sunday morning, such as Passover and the Sabbath, are not as clear as they might at first appear.  As will be discussed later in some detail on Thursday, although the Synoptics make the Last Supper a Passover meal, traditionally placed on Thursday, John suggests that Passover began the evening after Jesus was crucified.  Likewise, Mark’s references to the Passover are sometimes obscure.  Should the “two days before the Passover” (14:1) be counted inclusively or exclusively?  The day that the Passover lamb was killed (14:12) was in fact the afternoon before the Passover, which was also the first day of the feast of unleavened bread.

Also, while it is true that Luke 23:53 says that “the Sabbath drew on” at sunset after Jesus was buried, John and Mark present potentially conflicting data.  John 19:31 refers to the Sabbath as a high day, connecting it with the “preparation day” of the Passover (see also 19:42), suggesting that perhaps it was a festal sabbath and not necessarily the weekly Sabbath (contra the explanatory LDS KJV note for 19:31c, it is just as likely that the “high day” was the Passover and not the day after the Passover meal).  Mark 15:42 also speaks of a preparation day in connection with Jesus’ death, which was “the day before the Sabbath.”  The Greek here is unclear on whether the day before the Sabbath was the day on which Jesus had just died or whether it was the day which, in accordance with Jewish tradition, had just begun with sunset.  Finally, and perhaps significantly, Matthew 28:1, which reads "In the end of the sabbath" in the KJV, actually has "sabbaths" (sabbatōn, genitive plural form) in Greek.  While some argue that the weekly Sabbath could be referred to in the plural, the form leaves open the possibility that there had been both a festal and a weekly Sabbath that week.

This ambiguity has led some to propose that Jesus actually died on a Thursday, sundown Thursday to sundown Friday being a festal Sabbath, the first day of Passover, and sundown Friday to sundown Saturday being the weekly Sabbath.  This proposal is attractive to some, particularly to a few in evangelical circles, because it preserves more completely Jesus' prophecy of being in the tomb for three days and three nights (Matt 12:40) better than the standard explanation that Jesus’ body was in the tomb for only parts of three different days.  While this chronology may also be attractive to some Latter-day Saints because of its apparent correlation with the Book of Mormon’s account of three days of darkness (Helaman 14:20, 27 and 3 Nephi 8:19–23), early Christian tradition nevertheless placed Jesus’ death on Friday from a very early time.

These rather complex chronological discussions are matters of detailed study or a scholarly investigation, not of a devotional (and hopefully inspirational), approach to the Easter season.  I mention them only because the symbolic potential of the events of the last week is sometimes greater if one is not too rigidly attached to a specific chronology.  However, in order to foster greater solidarity with other Christians who are observing Holy Week, and for purely practical reasons of convenience, my approach to the week before Easter this year follows a more-or-less traditional sequence of events.  Links are provided below for each of this year’s Easter posts:   

 
Two final notes.  First, most treatments of the anointing of Jesus assume that the versions portrayed in John 12:1–8 on the one hand and in Mark 14:2–9 (par Matt 26:6–13) on the other represent the same event.  I feel, however, that the details are different enough that they warrant separate treatment.  Even if historically there was only one anointing, the fact that John places it before the Triumphal Entry, and Mark and Matthew place it after the Olivet Discourse,[3] suggests that the evangelists were using its symbolism to stress different theological and symbolic points (see The Symbolism of Jesus as Anointed King and Priest in God So Loved the World, 133-135). 

Second, many Latter-day Saint harmonies of the final week list “No Events Recorded” for Wednesday,[4] but the sequence in Mark strongly suggests that the plot to kill Jesus, the unnamed woman’s anointing of Jesus, and Judas’ decision to betray Jesus happened on this day.  This is also in accordance with Christian tradition, which has since the Medieval period referred to Wednesday as “Spy Wednesday” because of Judas’ actions.


Easter Quicklinks




[1]Eric D. Huntsman, “Reflections on the Savior’s Last Week,” Ensign, Apr 2009, 52–60
[2]See Marcus Borg and john Dominic Crossan, The Last Week: A Day-by-Day Account of Jesus’ Final Week in Jerusalem (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 2006), ix–xi.
[3]Compare this with the traditional harmonization of the Cleansing of the Temple, which John places at the beginning of Jesus’ ministry and all three Synoptics place at the end.  Even if one assumes that there was only one cleansing, most recognize that John and the Synoptics provide different emphases about the nature of Jesus’ public career and the timing and nature of the opposition that it inspired.
[4]See President J. Reuben Clark, Jr. Our Lord of the Gospels: A Harmony of the Gospels (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1957), which was, in turn, based upon late nineteenth century Protestant commentaries