Holy Monday 2026

Holy Monday 2026

Today is Holy Monday. The events of this Week are at the very heart of our faith. Of course, there are the three astonishing spheres of opposition that our Lord would face: (1) satanic opposition at Gethsemane (Matthew 26:36-46), (2) human and institutional opposition at Gabbatha (John 19:13), and (3) Divine opposition at Golgotha (Matthew 27:46). I’ve taught through each of these in previous years.

But beyond these there are the teachings, the confrontations, the miracles, etc of Jesus’ final days.

All salvific history and prophetic anticipation find their fulfillment in this earth-shattering Week. I hope these blogs will help you to put yourself in the picture and to walk through it with Jesus.

HOLY MONDAY (in the Jewish reckoning, Sunday evening to Monday evening)

Event Location Matthew Mark Luke John
Jesus curses the barren fig tree Mount of Olives Matt 21:18-19a Mk 11:11-18
Jesus cleanses the temple Jerusalem Matt 21:12-13 Mk 11:15-18 Luke 19:45-48
Certain Greeks ask to see Jesus Jerusalem Jn 12:20-36
Jesus rebukes unbelief Jerusalem Jn 12:37-50
Jesus returns to Bethany Bethany Mk 11:19

(Chart by William Stewart)

The key readings for today are found in sections of Matthew 21, Mark 11 and Luke 19.

After spending the evening in Bethany (a few miles away), Jesus awakes and returns to Jerusalem with His disciples.

He’s bothered by what He witnessed in the Temple the day before. He’s angry that the practices allowed in the Temple were actually keeping people (especially the Gentiles) from meeting God there. All of the exchanging of money and the sale of sacrificial animals all took place in the “court of the Gentiles” – the only place where Gentiles could worship YHWH.

So, Jesus “cleansed the Temple” on Holy Monday morning. At the Temple, He “was teaching them and saying to them, “Is it not written, ‘My house shall be called a house of prayer for all the nations’? (Mark 11:17)

This event signified Jesus’ authority as the Messiah. Malachi 3:1b prophesied that “the Lord whom you seek will suddenly come to his temple . . .”

Our Lord also performed the only DESTRUCTIVE miracle of his entire ministry on this day – look for it in Mark 11.

Mark 11:19 records that He returned to Bethany that evening.

PRAYER POINT 

Jesus cleansed the Temple on Holy Monday. But, “do you not know that you are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit dwells in you?” (1 Cor 3:16). Pray that Jesus might do whatever “cleansing” He needs to do in us that we might truly experience His presence and manifest His goodness to the godless world around us.

ASIDE: A WORD ABOUT CHRONOLOGY

The following is a bit tedious and is not for everyone. If it’s not for you, feel free to skip it! For those who venture on, I warned you!

Piecing together this chronology is not easy. It’s incredibly time consuming too! Some scholars argue that constructing an absolute itinerary of Jesus’ last days is impossible. Some of the Gospels are unclear as to when (on which day) a certain event occurred. In some cases, the chronology is very sure. Some gaps in the timeline do exist, so this is the best I can do with what Scripture records.

There are also some seeming contradictions in a few instances. Some of these can be satisfactorily answered by assuming that the Gospel writers may have used different time references. For instance, the Romans and the Jews differed as to when a day began and ended. This may account for some of the difficulties (especially between the Synoptic Gospels [Matthew, Mark, Luke] and John’s Gospel.

That being said, in piecing together the chronology of the week leading up to our Lord’s crucifixion, the Gospel of Mark is a tremendous help. Marcus J. Borg and John Dominic Crossan use Mark to establish the chronology in their book, The Last Week: What the Gospels Really Teach About Jesus’s Final Days in Jerusalem (HarperCollins, 2009), from which we draw the following points:

First of all, Mark is most likely the earliest gospel, and so the first narrative account of Jesus’ final week. It was written around A.D. 57–59, during the early part of Emperor Nero’s reign (A.D. 54–68).

Secondly, Mark went out of his way to give us certain time markers which record Jesus’ last week day-by-day; the others give some, but not all of these.

Look at how Mark “marks” (yuk yuk) time in the day-by-day story as rendered by the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV):

Sunday: “When they were approaching Jerusalem” (Mark 11:1)

Monday: “On the following day” (Mark 11:12)

Tuesday: “In the morning” (Mark 11:20)

Wednesday: “It was two days before the Passover” (Mark 14:1)

Thursday: “On the first day of Unleavened Bread” (Mark 14:12)

Friday: “As soon as it was morning” (Mark 15:1)

Saturday: “The Sabbath” (Mark 15:42; 16:1)

Sunday: “Very early on the first day of the week” (Mark 16:2)

Mark even gives us “morning” and “evening” tags for three of those days:

Sunday: (Mark 11:1, 11),

Monday: (Mark 11:12, 19), and

Thursday: (Mark 14:12, 17).

Finally, only Mark records the events of Good Friday in three-hour intervals. The audience of Mark’s Gospel are the Romans and these three-hour intervals are consistent with Roman military watch times. This is the way they are rendered by the New Revised Standard Version:

6am: “As soon as it was morning” (Mark 15:1);

9am: “It was nine o’clock in the morning” (Mark 15:25);

12 noon: “When it was noon” (Mark 15:33);

3pm: “At three o’clock” (Mark 15:34);

6pm: “When evening had come” (Mark 15:42).

Still, harmonizing the four Gospels is not without problems. Have a headache yet?

Anyway, these blogs will reflect the best I can do with the chronology. But, after all, a perfect chronology is not really the point here. Considering these events in a fresh way is.

Hopefully, the Lord will use these markers to draw us to a place of deeper reflection and appreciation. I think, with the Lord’s help, we’ll be able to do that.

2 Comments

  1. Jeff Jaquith

    Heal my heart and make it clean
    Open up my eyes to the things unseen
    Show me how to love like You have loved me
    Break my heart for what breaks Yours
    Everything I am for Your Kingdom’s cause
    As I walk from earth into eternity

    Hosanna in the highest!

  2. James Albanese

    It is with an open heart, a renewal of my mind and taking up my cross daily knowing that I don’t carry it by myself. That I could never carry it along. I walk with the Lord in His righteousness, the righteous path that Jesus is walking on Holy Week that has made me the man that I am today. Without The Spirit guiding me, my walk is like filthy rags. A sinner saved by Grace. I thank my Heavenly Father for this gift I’ve received. The gift of Salvation By The Blood Of The Lamb Jesus Christ!!!
    Thank you Pastor Gene for being a true messager of The Word Of God.🙏🙏🙏

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