Why Tisha B’Av Is the Day Yeshua Wept — And Why Every Believer Should Know It
Episode Type: Messianic-Hebraic Teaching | Series: Part 1 of 2 | Topic: Tisha B’Av, Yeshua’s lament over Yerushalayim, the destruction of the Temples, and the recovered discipline of covenant lament.
Episode Summary
Beloved, in this installment we take up a Gospel moment that most believers have read, but precious few have stopped long enough to understand. Yeshua draws near to Yerushalayim during that charged final week of His earthly ministry. The crowds are rejoicing. The palm branches are waving. The cries of Hosanna are filling the streets. But the Master is not swept up in the excitement of the moment. He sees the city, He beholds the Temple Mount, He looks upon the people of covenant promise, and Luke tells us that He wept over it.
And this was no sentimental tear. This was not a quiet emotional pause. The word Luke uses points us toward audible grief — the kind of lament that takes hold of the whole person. Master Yeshua was not simply reacting to rejection. He was looking ahead to the Roman siege, the leveling of Yerushalayim, the destruction of the Temple, and the covenant consequences that would fall upon a people who did not recognize the time of their visitation.
That grief brings us to Tisha B’Av — the ninth of Av — the day on the Jewish calendar set apart for mourning the destruction of the First and Second Temples, the fall of Betar, the plowing of the city, and other calamities that have marked Jewish history. This teaching argues that Tisha B’Av is not merely a Jewish memorial day for our cousins to observe at a distance from us. It is a day that every covenant believer should understand, because the grief of this day is bound up with the grief of our Master.
Why This Teaching Matters
The broader Body of Messiah has become very good at celebration, but not always faithful in lament. We know how to sing. We know how to clap. We know how to declare victory. But we often do not know how to sit with sacred loss, covenant failure, historical judgment, and grief that has not yet reached its appointed comfort. Tisha B’Av helps us recover that missing discipline.
This is not a call to empty tradition. This is not a call to bind upon the saints a man-made requirement. Rather, it is an invitation to consider whether the tears of Yeshua over Yerushalayim should shape the way we look at the ninth of Av, the destruction of the Temple, the Book of Lamentations, and the grief of our Jewish cousins.
Key Themes Covered
- Yeshua’s lament over Yerushalayim was connected to the coming destruction of the city and Temple.
- Tisha B’Av means “the ninth of Av” and is treated in Jewish tradition as the most grief-saturated day of the year.
- The Mishnah records five national calamities associated with the ninth of Av.
- The destruction of the First and Second Temples is central to the meaning of the day.
- Lamentations, or Sefer Eka, gives covenant language to sacred grief.
- Lament is not a failure of faith; it is faith telling the truth before Yehovah.
- Messianic and Netsari believers should not approach Tisha B’Av as tourists in Jewish history.
- The sorrow of Tisha B’Av prepares the heart to receive the comfort of Shabbat Nachamu.
Primary Scripture Passages for Study
- Luke 19:41–44 — Yeshua draws near to Yerushalayim and weeps over the city, prophesying the siege, destruction, and covenant blindness connected to the failure to recognize the time of visitation.
- Matthew 23:37–39 — Yeshua laments over Yerushalayim, mourns the city that kills the prophets, and declares that her House is left desolate.
- Lamentations 1:1–3 — The opening grief of Sefer Eka: “How desolate the city sits that was once full of people.”
- Lamentations 5:20–22 — The unresolved closing plea: “Turn thou us unto thee, O YHVH, and we shall be turned; renew our days as of old.”
- Zechariah 7:2–3 — The question concerning mourning and fasting in the fifth month, pointing toward the fast associated with the destruction of Yerushalayim.
- Zechariah 8:19 — The promise that the fast of the fifth month will one day become joy, gladness, and appointed seasons of blessing for the House of Judah.
- Numbers 14:26–38 — The wilderness generation’s unbelief after the report of the spies, traditionally associated with the beginning of weeping on the ninth of Av.
- 2 Kings 25:8–11 — The burning of the House of Yehovah, the king’s house, and the houses of Yerushalayim by the Babylonians.
- Jeremiah 52:12–16 — Jeremiah’s account of the Babylonian destruction and deportation connected to the fall of Yerushalayim.
- John 2:14–21 — Yeshua’s declaration concerning the Temple and His body: “Destroy this Temple, and in three days I will raise it up.”
- John 10:22–23 — Yeshua in Yerushalayim during the Feast of Dedication, showing His presence within Jewish communal and calendar life.
- Matthew 5:3–12 — The Beatitudes, especially “Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted.”
- Isaiah 40:1 — “Comfort ye, comfort ye my people,” the prophetic opening that stands behind Shabbat Nachamu, the Sabbath of Comfort following Tisha B’Av.
- Deuteronomy 28 — The covenant blessings and curses that frame Israel’s national consequences for obedience and disobedience.
Historical and Rabbinic References Mentioned
- Mishnah Ta’anit 4:6 — Records five calamities connected with the ninth of Av: the decree that the wilderness generation would not enter the Land, the destruction of the First Temple, the destruction of the Second Temple, the capture of Betar, and the plowing of the city.
- Babylonian Talmud, Ta’anit 29a — Expands the tradition around the ninth of Av, including the idea of a night of weeping for generations and the discussion of the Temple burning.
- Midrash Tanchuma, Shelach — Preserves the tradition that Israel’s unnecessary weeping after the spies’ report became a day of weeping for generations.
- Josephus, The Jewish War — Describes the Roman siege and destruction of Yerushalayim and dates the burning of the Second Temple in relation to the fifth month.
- 2 Baruch 10 — A Second Temple-era Jewish witness to the grief surrounding the destruction of Yerushalayim and the sanctuary.
- Rood’s Chronology — Used in the teaching for Gospel chronology and harmonized renderings connected to Luke 19 and Matthew 23.
- The Lexham English Bible — Used for cited renderings of several biblical passages, including Lamentations and the Kings/Jeremiah destruction accounts.
- Complete Word Study Dictionary of the New Testament, Spiros Zodhiates — Referenced for the meaning and force of the Greek term connected with Yeshua’s weeping in Luke 19.
- New Interpreter’s Bible, Kathleen M. O’Connor on Lamentations — Referenced for the meaning of Eka as the Hebrew opening word of Lamentations, conveying “how” or “alas.”
Historical Events Connected to Tisha B’Av
- The decree against the wilderness generation — Rabbinic tradition connects Israel’s unbelief after the spies’ report to the ninth of Av.
- Destruction of the First Temple — The Babylonian destruction of Shlomo’s Temple is dated in the biblical record to the fifth month, with 2 Kings and Jeremiah preserving closely related but not identical date details.
- Destruction of the Second Temple — Roman forces under Titus destroyed the Second Temple in 70 CE, an event central to Jewish mourning on Tisha B’Av.
- Fall of Betar — The final stronghold of the Bar Kochba revolt fell to Rome, traditionally associated with the ninth of Av.
- Plowing of Yerushalayim — The city and Temple area were desecrated and reconfigured under Roman power after the crushing of Jewish resistance.
- Expulsion from England, 1290 — King Edward I issued the Edict of Expulsion against the Jews of England, a tragedy later associated with Tisha B’Av.
- Expulsion from Spain, 1492 — The Alhambra Decree ordered unconverted Jews to leave the kingdoms of Castile and Aragon, with the deadline falling in the season of Tisha B’Av.
- World War I, 1914 — Jewish tradition commonly notes the war’s outbreak in connection with the ninth of Av and sees in it a prelude to later devastation in Jewish history.
Terms and Concepts for Listeners to Know
- Tisha B’Av — Hebrew for “the ninth of Av,” the fast and mourning day associated with the destruction of the Temples and other Jewish calamities.
- Av — The fifth month of the Jewish calendar, a name adopted during or after the Babylonian exile.
- Yerushalayim — Jerusalem, the covenant city over which Yeshua wept.
- Sefer Eka — The Book of Lamentations; Eka means “how” or “alas,” the stunned opening cry of sacred grief.
- Eklausen — The Greek term connected to Yeshua’s weeping in Luke 19, carrying the force of audible grief or wailing.
- Beit HaMikdash — The Holy House, or Temple.
- Shabbat Nachamu — The Sabbath of Comfort following Tisha B’Av, anchored in Isaiah 40:1.
- Covenant lament — Grief that is brought before Yehovah in truth, repentance, remembrance, and hope.
Suggested Study Path for This Week
- Read Luke 19:41–44 slowly. Do not rush past the tears of the Master. Ask what He saw when He looked upon Yerushalayim.
- Read Matthew 23:37–39 beside Luke 19. Listen for the shared language of rejected visitation, desolation, and grief.
- Read Lamentations one chapter at a time. Let Sefer Eka do what it was preserved to do. Do not explain it away. Sit with it.
- Read Zechariah 7 and 8 together. Notice that Yah does not merely address the act of fasting; He addresses the heart and covenant intent behind the fasting.
- Read 2 Kings 25 and Jeremiah 52. Compare the destruction accounts and allow the historical weight of the fifth month to settle upon you.
- Read Isaiah 40:1 after Lamentations. Do not reach for comfort too quickly, but when the time comes, receive it as a word from the God who restores.
Questions for Reflection and Fellowship Discussion
- Why do you think Yeshua wept while others were celebrating His entry into Yerushalayim?
- What does Luke 19 teach us about recognizing the time of visitation?
- How has modern worship culture trained believers to avoid lament?
- What is the difference between religious performance and covenant remembrance?
- How does Lamentations help believers grieve without losing faith?
- Why should Messianic and Netsari believers care about Jewish grief connected to the Temple?
- What might it look like to stand in solidarity with our Jewish cousins without pretending to be what we are not?
- How does Shabbat Nachamu help us understand the biblical movement from sorrow to comfort?
Listener Takeaway
Beloved, the great takeaway from this teaching is not simply that Tisha B’Av exists, nor that terrible things have happened to our Jewish cousins on or around the ninth of Av. The takeaway is that our Master wept over the very grief this day remembers. And if Yeshua wept over Yerushalayim, then we who follow Him should not be indifferent to the ruins, the exile, the covenant warnings, and the sacred sorrow tied to that city.
Lament does not cancel hope. Lament prepares the heart to receive hope rightly. We do not mourn as those who have no promise. But neither do we rush past the ashes to get to the comfort. Tisha B’Av teaches us to sit where Scripture sits, to weep where the prophets wept, and to let the tears of Yeshua correct the shallow places in our faith.
Recommended Call to Action
If this teaching informed, challenged, or blessed you, share it with someone who has never considered why Tisha B’Av matters to followers of Yeshua. Then, before the fast begins, take time to read through the Book of Lamentations. Read it prayerfully. Read it slowly. Let it trouble you where it needs to trouble you. And then, when the Sabbath of Comfort comes, may you hear the voice of Yehovah say, “Comfort ye, comfort ye My people.”
Cited Reference List for Further Study
- The Holy Scriptures: Luke 19:41–44; Matthew 23:37–39; Lamentations 1:1–3; Lamentations 5:20–22; Zechariah 7:2–3; Zechariah 8:19; Numbers 14:26–38; 2 Kings 25:8–11; Jeremiah 52:12–16; John 2:14–21; John 10:22–23; Matthew 5:3–12; Isaiah 40:1; Deuteronomy 28.
- Mishnah Ta’anit 4:6.
- Babylonian Talmud, Ta’anit 29a.
- Midrash Tanchuma, Shelach.
- Flavius Josephus, The Jewish War, especially material concerning the siege and destruction of Yerushalayim in 70 CE.
- 2 Baruch, chapter 10.
- Spiros Zodhiates, The Complete Word Study Dictionary: New Testament.
- Kathleen M. O’Connor, “The Book of Lamentations,” in The New Interpreter’s Bible, edited by Leander E. Keck.
- Hall Harris III et al., eds., The Lexham English Bible.
- Michael Rood, The Chronological Gospels / Rood’s Chronology references used in the teaching.
- Sefaria Library, Mishnah Ta’anit 4:6 and related rabbinic texts.
- org, Tisha B’Av 2026 date and historical overview.
- Judaism 101, Tisha B’Av overview and historical notes.
- com, discussion of the dating of the First and Second Temple destructions.
- The National Archives, resources on Jews in England and the 1290 expulsion.
- Historical materials on the Alhambra Decree and the 1492 expulsion from Spain.
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