Scripture Reading: Matthew 27:57-66 (NRSVUE)
On this Holy Saturday, we ponder the burial of Jesus. Matthew's Gospel is the only one of the four that includes the details of the religious leaders' collusion with Pilate to place soldiers guarding the tomb of Jesus. This likely was to refute one of the claims with which the early church had to contend: that disciples of Jesus simply took his body which created an empty tomb.
While this would be the simplest explanation in that is requires nothing miraculous, it wouldn't explain the devotion unto death of each of his disciples who attest to the resurrection.
But prior to that we have the somewhat mysterious figure of Joseph of Arimathea. Luke names this as a Jewish town but scholars are conflicted over the exact location. Matthew names Joseph as a wealthy disciple of Jesus. Mark and Luke name him as a member of the council while John declares that he was a disciple in secret for fear of the Jewish leadership.
A disciple of Jesus would have been more afraid of the Romans at this point since Jesus was crucified as "King of the Jews" which would brand him as a revolutionary. He goes to the Roman governor Pilate and asks for the body. The earliest Gospel, Mark, states that he went boldly to Pilate. This adverb may be understated. While it was dangerous, Joseph's wealth may have been an influencing factor as classes weren't fluid in the first century.
All of the Gospels agree that Joseph of Arimathea was the one to bury Jesus in a rock-hewn tomb. Only Mark (the earliest) omits the detail that it was unused. This was important in that the dead were considered unclean and we see Jesus isn't placed with other corpses.
As a disciple, Joseph likely heard the death and resurrection predictions of Jesus before the crucifixion. After being a witness to the former, was he hoping for the latter? He may be no different from modern disciples who bury their loved ones and hope. I believe it was this faith that helped Joseph to risk confronting Pilate after his Rabbi was crucified as a rebel.
As we wait for Easter, we are all but assured of a celebration on Sunday. We know what's coming and we expect to hear the resurrection preached! But it may help us to revisit the surprise if we linger a little longer at the tomb. The reality of death can overwhelm us just as surely as it did the first disciples. But the rituals such as proper burial help us to cope.
The fear of our own mortality is still present in the world today. But as we linger at the tomb, we may discover that it doesn't hold the power that we sometimes give it.
Prayer for the day:
God, whose eternal love for our weak and struggling race was most perfectly shown forth in the blessed life and death of Jesus Christ our Lord, enable me now so to meditate upon my Lord's tomb that, having fellowship with him in his sorrow, I may also learn the secret of his strength and peace. Amen.
Prayer adapted from John Baillie, Church of Scotland, 20th Century
Photo by Rob Hurson via Flickr.com. Used under the Creative Commons license.






