
What if the most sacred meal in Christian history didn't happen in a Jewish home, but in a Samaritan one?
For two thousand years, Christians have read the Gospel accounts of the Last Supper assuming one thing: that Jesus held His final Passover in the house of Judah. But what if that Upper Room was actually in the house of Israel, among the Samaritans?
In The Samaritan Upper Room, Dr. Boaz Kok unveils a groundbreaking theory rooted in Scripture, Second Temple history, and prophetic symbolism. With bold scholarship and prophetic clarity, this book explores how Jesus may have used a Samaritan safe-house to host the New Covenant meal, outmaneuvering the Sanhedrin, fulfilling two calendars, and enacting Ezekiel's vision of national reconciliation.
Inside, you'll discover:
Why the man with the water jar in Mark 14 was a cultural anomaly, and a coded signal How Jesus fulfilled both the Samaritan and Jewish Passovers with divine precision Why the betrayal had to happen outside the house, and what that reveals about jurisdiction and prophecy How the Last Supper fulfilled Ezekiel's "two sticks" prophecy, reuniting Judah and Joseph What the Samaritan concept of the Taheb ("Restorer") reveals about Jesus' mission Why the Church must recover forgotten voices to become a table of reconciliation againThis is not revisionist theology. It's restorative theology. It doesn't tear down tradition, it widens the frame. It doesn't erase the Temple, it honors the mountain. And it doesn't just retell the Gospel, it repositions it in the margins, where it began.
Whether you're a scholar, pastor, or seeker, The Samaritan Upper Room will challenge your assumptions, deepen your understanding of the Gospels, and invite you to set the table again, for the forgotten, the excluded, and the reconciled.
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