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This Sabbath was Different
We have all heard it said, and perhaps even said it ourselves: ‘If God doesn’t act soon, He will owe Sodom and Gomorrah an apology.’
The world does get stranger day by day.
What passes for normal now to our parents and grandparents would have been unmentionable.
And yet...
There is recorded a time prior to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah when God “saw that man’s wickedness was widespread on the earth and that every scheme his mind thought of was nothing but evil all the time, the Lord regretted that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved in His heart.”
(Genesis 6:5–6, HCSB).
One writer sheds some light on this passage by noting:
One could hardly express the depravity of the people in stronger terms, or in terms that contrast more with the design of creation.
God had formed (yatsar “form by design”; 2:7) man from the ground and given him the spiritual and intellectual capacity to serve God on earth, but mankind used that intelligence (yetser) to devise evil continually.
Allen Ross and John N. Oswalt, Cornerstone Biblical Commentary: Genesis, Exodus, vol. 1 (Carol Stream, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 2008), 69.
And the Biblical record indicates that God did destroy all but 8 people and pairs of animals by a massive flood that completely changed the landscape of the earth and the atmosphere that surrounds the earth.
Before the flood enveloped the earth, God set an upper limit on all who would be born after the flood of 120 years (see Gen 6:3).
As Noah and his family began again - with the same mandate God had given to Adam and Eve - God instituted a sign that never again would He destroy the world by a flood - Gen 9:12-17
Genesis 9:12–17 (HCSB)
And God said, “This is the sign of the covenant I am making between Me and you and every living creature with you, a covenant for all future generations: I have placed My bow in the clouds, and it will be a sign of the covenant between Me and the earth.
Whenever I form clouds over the earth and the bow appears in the clouds, I will remember My covenant between Me and you and all the living creatures: water will never again become a flood to destroy every creature.
The bow will be in the clouds, and I will look at it and remember the everlasting covenant between God and all the living creatures on earth.”
God said to Noah, “This is the sign of the covenant that I have confirmed between Me and every creature on earth.”
God also covenanted with Himself:
Genesis 8:21–22 (HCSB)
... “I will never again curse the ground because of man, even though man’s inclination is evil from his youth.
And I will never again strike down every living thing as I have done.
As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, and day and night will not cease.”
It wasn’t that many generations later when again humans had wandered far from the original purpose of God.
None of the gospel writers (Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John) were the first to write about this event.
Paul, a Pharisee by training and education, was the first to write about the resurrection.
You can read his account in his letter, First Corinthians, the 15th chapter.
Of those who wrote only one - John - was actually nearby when the events unfolded.
All we have to rely on is the testimony of several women.
In the first century, women across the Roman Empire were regarded as unreliable, often hysterical witnesses and were almost always disallowed in any kind of legal matters.
Yet, all of those who wrote about the resurrection include testimony of women as evidence of Christ’s victory over death.
Today is Easter - the day our entire Western culture sets aside as a celebration of Jesus’ resurrection from the dead by the power of God.
Does it matter if Jesus was really raised from the dead?
Or maybe you would rather ask, so what difference does Jesus really make in anyone’s life?
Many of us in the sound of my voice have prayed, faithfully and persistently only to have our requests ignored or at times even denied.
We have watched as family and friends die.
Those we love and care about often suffer - in ways we can barely describe.
Does the resurrection really change anything?
As we have noted, it wasn’t many generations between Adam and Eve and God’s grief at having created humans at all.
Even after a massive, world-changing flood, just a few generations removed from Noah’s sons and their wives found themselves scattered by divine action.
It has now been many generations since God has acted in such a massive demonstration of His purpose.
Or has it?
The Jews observe Sabbath still - which we call Saturday - by an almost total cessation of activity.
Attending Sabbath services, eating a meal as a family and using the day to rest and relax are the priorities - even 2,000 years ago.
THIS SABBATH WAS UNUSUAL
But this Sabbath had been different.
Friday, the day before the Sabbath, Jesus had died.
No, let’s be honest: Jesus was executed by the Romans because the Jewish religious leaders had prodded them to do so.
The male disciples had scattered and gone into hiding (with the exception of John).
Judas Iscariot, the one who had arranged for Jesus’ arrest by the Temple authorities had taken his own life.
The women who had been following Jesus had done what they could to prepare Jesus’ body for burial.
Joseph of Arimathea, a member of the Sanhedrin which had prodded Pilate to put Jesus to death, took charge of Jesus’ body, and laid the body in his own family tomb.
The Sabbath began at sundown.
All work was to cease.
THIS SABBATH WAS DIFFERENT
But this Sabbath was different.
As the women - and perhaps a few of the followers of Jesus - spent the Sabbath as they had been raised they must have wondered:
WHAT’S NEXT?
Now that Jesus was dead, what were they to do?
Should hey go back to their homes, their old patterns and habits of life?
Had these past several years of following Jesus - watching Him heal, raise the dead, set free many who were oppressed and overwhelmed by Satan - was it simply over.
All that Jesus had said, His verbal skirmishes in which He bested the teachers of the Law over and over, All that Jesus had taught about the ‘kingdom of God,’ well, so what?
AT DAWN ON MONDAY
As Monday dawned several of the women went to the tomb.
Perhaps they wanted to try to finish preparing Jesus’ body, perhaps just to sit and grieve....
Walking in the silence that only those who have lost loved ones can experience, these women neared the tomb.
Matthew describes the next few moments:
An Earthquake
Again!
As Jesus died the earth had quaked and tombs had opened and the curtain separating the Holy Place in the Temple from the outer courtyard had torn from top to bottom.
Was this merely an aftershock - which are quite common after earth changing events?
An Angel
Matthew clearly ties the earthquake to the arrival of an angel.
At this, the Roman guards - seasoned, trained, military men are incapacitated by fear - they lose all ability to move - “they became like dead men.”
This angel rolls away the stone!
Breaking the seal the Jewish priests had asked for and the Romans had applied, the stone - which may have taken two or more men to move - was rolled away by this angel!
The appearance of the angel played a part in the fear that paralyzed those guards -
Certainly, this was no mere mortal!
An Empty Tomb
We might expect Matthew to record how Jesus came out of the tomb.
Weeks prior these events these women had watched as Jesus approached the tomb of his friend, Lazarus.
They heard Jesus call Lazarus out of the tomb.
They had watched as Lazarus - still wrapped in burial garments - stumbled out of the place his dead body had been laid four days previously.
But no one comes out of the tomb.
Come and see the place where He lay...
Jesus was already gone!
The grave cloths were folded and placed
RIGHT WHERE HIS BODY HAD BEEN LAID!
The stone wasn’t moved to let Jesus out.
No, the stone was moved by the angel
SO THAT OTHERS COULD SEE HE WAS NO LONGER THERE!
The angel wasn’t done.
He had specific instructions for the women:
Matthew 28:7 (HCSB)
Then go quickly and tell His disciples, ‘He has been raised from the dead.
In fact, He is going ahead of you to Galilee; you will see Him there.’
Listen, I have told you.”
Does it really matter?
Most of us are very familiar with the account of Jesus’ resurrection.
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