(Mark 15:41–47; John 19:38–42; Matthew 27:57–66)
Holy Saturday is the day between Jesus’s death and His
resurrection. The only full day in history where the body of the crucified Son
of God lay dead and buried in a grave. On Holy Saturday, we remember how the
disciples mourned, not knowing what would happen now that their Savior was
gone.
On the day following Jesus crucifixion, fearing that the disciples would steal Jesus's body and tell people that He had been raised from the dead, the Pharisees asked Pilate to secure the tomb. So, Pilate ordered for the stone to be sealed and the tomb to be guarded.
After His crucifixion, Jesus was laid in a nearby
tomb, and His body remained there the entirety of Holy Saturday (Matthew
27:59-60; Mark 15:46; Luke
23:53-54; John 19:39-42). Churches that celebrate Holy Saturday
traditionally do so by observing a day of somber reflection as they contemplate
the world of darkness that would exist without the hope of Christ’s
resurrection.
Indeed, without the resurrection of Christ, we would be in dire straits. If
Christ had never been raised, “your faith is futile; you are still in your
sins” (1
Corinthians 15:17). The disciples had scattered when Jesus was arrested (Mark 14:50),
and they spent the first Holy Saturday hiding for fear of also being arrested (John 20:19).
The day between Christ’s crucifixion and His resurrection would have been a
time of grief and shock as the stunned disciples tried to understand the murder
of Jesus, the betrayal of Judas, and the dashing of their hopes.
The only biblical reference to what happened on Holy Saturday is found in Matthew
27:62-66. After sundown on Friday—the day of Preparation—the chief priests
and Pharisees visited Pontius Pilate. This visit was on the Sabbath, since the
Jews reckoned a day as starting at sundown.
They asked Pilate for a guard for Jesus’ tomb. They
remembered Jesus saying that He would rise again in three days (John 2:19-21)
and wanted to do everything they could to prevent that. As we know, the Roman
guards were inadequate to prevent the resurrection, and the women who returned
to the tomb Sunday morning found it empty. The Lord had risen.
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