The Resurrection.
1 The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when it
was yet dark, unto the sepulchre, and seeth the stone taken away from the
sepulchre. 2 Then she runneth, and cometh to Simon Peter, and to the other
disciple, whom Jesus loved, and saith unto them, They have taken away the
Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where they have laid him. 3
Peter therefore went forth, and that other disciple, and came to the sepulchre.
4 So they ran both together: and the other disciple did outrun Peter, and
came first to the sepulchre. 5 And he stooping down, and looking in, saw
the linen clothes lying; yet went he not in. 6 Then cometh Simon Peter
following him, and went into the sepulchre, and seeth the linen clothes
lie, 7 And the napkin, that was about his head, not lying with the linen
clothes, but wrapped together in a place by itself. 8 Then went in also
that other disciple, which came first to the sepulchre, and he saw, and
believed. 9 For as yet they knew not the scripture, that he must rise again
from the dead. 10 Then the disciples went away again unto their own home.
There was no one thing of which the apostles were more concerned to
produce substantial proof than the resurrection of their Master, 1. Because
it was that which he himself appealed to as the last and most cogent proof
of his being the Messiah. Those that would not believe other signs were
referred to this sign of the prophet Jonas. And therefore enemies were
most solicitous to stifle the notice of this, because it was put on this
issue, and, if he be risen, they are not only murderers, but murderers
of the Messiah. 2. Because it was upon this the performance of his undertaking
for our redemption and salvation did depend. If he give his life a ransom,
and do not resume it, it does not appear that his giving it was accepted
as a satisfaction. If he be imprisoned for our debt, and lie by it, we
are undone, 1 Cor. xv. 17. 3. Because he never showed himself alive after
his resurrection to all the people, Acts x. 40, 41. We should have said,
"Let his ignominious death be private, and his glorious resurrection public."
But God's thoughts are not as ours; and he ordered it that his death should
be public before the sun, by the same token that the sun blushed and hid
his face upon it. But the demonstrations of his resurrection should be
reserved as a favour for his particular friends, and by them be published
to the world, that those might be blessed who have not seen, and yet have
believed. The method of proof is such as gives abundant satisfaction to
those who are piously disposed to receive the doctrine and law of Christ,
and yet leaves room for those to object who are willingly ignorant and
obstinate in their unbelief. And this is a fair trial, suited to the case
of those who are probationers.
In these verses we have the first step towards the proof of Christ's
resurrection, which is, that the sepulchre was found empty. He is not here,
and, if so, they must tell us where he is or we conclude him risen.
I. Mary Magdalene, coming to the sepulchre, finds the stone taken away.
This evangelist does not mention the other women that went with Mary Magdalene,
but here only, because she was the most active and forward in this visit
to the sepulchre, and in her appeared the most affection; and it was an
affection kindled by a good cause, in consideration of the great things
Christ had done for her. Much was forgiven her, therefore she loved much.
She had shown her affection to him while he lived, attended his doctrine,
ministered to him of her substance, Luke viii. 2, 3. It does not appear
that she had any business now at Jerusalem, but to wait upon him for the
women were not bound to go up to the feast, and probably she and others
followed him the closer, as Elisha did Elijah, now that they knew their
Master would shortly be taken from their head, 2 Kings ii. 1-6. The continued
instances of her respect to him at and after his death prove the sincerity
of her love. Note, Love to Christ, if it be cordial, will be constant.
Her love to Christ was strong as death, the death of the cross, for it
stood by that; cruel as the grave, for it made a visit to that, and was
not deterred by its terrors.
1. She came to the sepulchre, to wash the dead body with her tears,
for she went to the grave, to weep there, and to anoint it with the ointment
she had prepared. The grave is a house that people do not care for making
visits to. They that are free among the dead are separated from the living;
and it must be an extraordinary affection to the person which will endear
his grave to us. It is especially frightful to the weak and timourous sex.
Could she, that had not strength enough to roll away the stone, pretend
to such a presence of mind as to enter the grave? The Jews' religion forbade
them to meddle any more than needs must with graves and dead bodies. In
visiting Christ's sepulchre she exposed herself, and perhaps the disciples,
to the suspicion of a design to steal him away; and what real service could
she do him by it? But her love answers these, and a thousand such objections.
Note, (1.) We must study to do honour to Christ in those things wherein
yet we cannot be profitable to him. (2.) Love to Christ will take off the
terror of death and the grave. If we cannot come to Christ but through
that darksome valley, even in that, if we love him, we shall fear no evil.
2. She came as soon as she could, for she came, (1.) Upon the first
day of the week, as soon as ever the sabbath was gone, longing, not to
sell corn and to set forth wheat (as Amos viii. 5), but to be at the sepulchre.
Those that love Christ will take the first opportunity of testifying their
respect to him. This was the first Christian sabbath, and she begins it
accordingly with enquiries after Christ. She had spent the day before in
commemorating the work of creation, and therefore rested; but now she is
upon search into the work of redemption, and therefore makes a visit to
Christ and him crucified. (2.) She came early, while it was yet dark; so
early did she set out. Note, Those who would seek Christ so as to find
him must seek him early; that is, [1.] Seek him solicitously, with such
a care as even breaks the sleep; be up early for fear of missing him. [2.]
Seek him industriously; we must deny ourselves and our own repose in pursuit
of Christ. [3.] Seek him betimes, early in our days, early every day. My
voice shalt thou hear in the morning. That day is in a fair way to be well
ended that is thus begun. Those that diligently enquire after Christ while
it is yet dark shall have such light given them concerning him as shall
shine more and more.
3. She found the stone taken away, which she had seen rolled to the
door of the sepulchre. Now this was, (1.) A surprise to her, for she little
expected it. Christ crucified is the fountain of life. His grave is one
of the wells of salvation; if we come to it in faith; though to a carnal
heart it be a spring shut up, we shall find the stone rolled away (as Gen.
xxix. 10) and free access to the comforts of it. Surprising comforts are
the frequent encouragements of early seekers. (2.) It was the beginning
of a glorious discovery; the Lord was risen, though she did not at first
apprehend it so. Note, [1.] Those that are most constant in their adherence
to Christ, and most diligent in their enquiries after him, have commonly
the first and sweetest notices of the divine grace. Mary Magdalene, who
followed Christ to the last in his humiliation, met him with the first
in his exaltation. [2.] God ordinarily reveals himself and his comforts
to us by degrees; to raise our expectations and quicken our enquiries.
II. Finding the stone taken away, she hastens back to Peter and John,
who probably lodged together at that end of the town, not far off, and
acquaints them with it: "They have taken the Lord out of the sepulchre,
envying him the honour of such a decent burying-place, and we know not
where they have laid him, nor where to find him, that we may pay him the
remainder of our last respects." Observe here, 1. What a notion Mary had
of the thing as it now appeared; she found the stone gone, looked into
the grave, and saw it empty. Now one would expect that the first thought
that offered itself would have been, Surely the Lord is risen; for whenever
he had told them that he should be crucified, which she had now lately
seen accomplished, he still subjoined in the same breath that the third
day he should rise again. Could she feel the great earthquake that happened
as she was coming to the sepulchre, or getting ready to come, and now see
the grave empty, and yet have no thought of the resurrection enter into
her mind? what, no conjecture, no suspicion of it? So it seems by the odd
construction she puts upon the removing of the stone, which was very far
fetched. Note, When we come to reflect upon our own conduct in a cloudy
and dark day, we shall stand amazed at our dulness and forgetfulness, that
we could miss of such thoughts as afterwards appear obvious, and how they
could be so far out of the way when we had occasion for them. She suggested,
They have taken away the Lord; either the chief priests have taken him
away, to put him in a worse place, or Joseph and Nicodemus have, upon second
thoughts, taken him away, to avoid the ill-will of the Jews. Whatever was
her suspicion, it seems it was a great vexation and disturbance to her
that the body was gone; whereas, if she had understood it rightly, nothing
could be more happy. Note, Weak believers often make that the matter of
their complaint which is really just ground of hope, and matter of joy.
We cry out that this and the other creature-comfort are taken away, and
we know not how to retrieve them, when indeed the removal of our temporal
comforts, which we lament, is in order to the resurrection of our spiritual
comforts, which we should rejoice in too. 2. What a narrative she made
of it to Peter and John. She did not stand poring upon the grief herself,
but acquaints her friends with it. Note, The communication of sorrows is
one good improvement of the communion of saints. Observe, Peter, though
he had denied his Master, had not deserted his Master's friends; by this
appears the sincerity of his repentance, that he associated with the disciple
whom Jesus loved. And the disciples' keeping up their intimacy with him
as formerly, notwithstanding his fall, teaches us to restore those with
a spirit of meekness that have been faulty. If God has received them upon
their repentance, why should not we?
III. Peter and John go with all speed to the sepulchre, to satisfy themselves
of the truth of what was told them, and to see if they could make any further
discoveries, v. 3, 4. Some think that the other disciples were with Peter
and John when the news came; for they told these things to the eleven,
Luke xxiv. 9. Others think that Mary Magdalene told her story only to Peter
and John, and that the other women told theirs to the other disciples;
yet none of them went to the sepulchre but Peter and John, who were two
of the first three of Christ's disciples, often distinguished from the
rest by special favours. Note, It is well when those that are more honoured
than others with the privileges of disciples are more active than others
in the duty of disciples, more willing to take pains and run hazards in
a good work. 1. See here what use we should make of the experience and
observations of others. When Mary told them what she had seen, they would
not in this sense take her word, but would go and see with their own eyes.
Do others tell us of the comfort and benefit of ordinances? Let us be engaged
thereby to make trial of them. Come and see how good it is to draw near
to God. 2. See how ready we should be to share with our friends in their
cares and fears. Peter and John hastened to the sepulchre, that they might
be able to give Mary a satisfactory answer to her jealousies. We should
not grudge any pains we take for the succouring and comforting of the weak
and timorous followers of Christ. 3. See what haste we should make in a
good work, and when we are going on a good errand. Peter and John consulted
neither their ease nor their gravity, but ran to the sepulchre, that they
might show the strength of their zeal and affection, and might lose no
time. If we are in the way of God's commandments, we should run in that
way. 4. See what a good thing it is to have good company in a good work.
Perhaps neither of these disciples would have ventured to the sepulchre
alone, but, being both together, they made no difficulty of it. See Eccl.
iv. 9. 5. See what a laudable emulation it is among disciples to strive
which shall excel, which shall exceed, in that which is good. It was no
breach of ill manners for John, though the younger, to outrun Peter, and
get before him. We must do our best, and neither envy those that can do
better, nor despise those that do as they can, though they come behind.
(1.) He that got foremost in this race as the disciple whom Jesus loved
in a special manner, and who therefore in a special manner loved Jesus.
Note, Sense of Christ's love to us, kindling love in us to him again, will
make us to excel in virtue. The love of Christ will constrain us more than
any thing to abound in duty. (2.) He that was cast behind was Peter, who
had denied his Master, and was in sorrow and shame for it, and this clogged
him as a weight; sense of guilt cramps us, and hinders our enlargement
in the service of God. When conscience is offended we lose ground.
IV. Peter and John, having come to the sepulchre, prosecute the enquiry,
yet improve little in the discovery.
1. John went no further than Mary Magdalene had done. (1.) He had the
curiosity to look into the sepulchre, and saw it was empty. He stooped
down, and looked in. Those that would find the knowledge of Christ must
stoop down, and look in, must with a humble heart submit to the authority
of divine revelation, and must look wistly. (2.) Yet he had not courage
to go into the sepulchre. The warmest affections are not always accompanied
with the boldest resolutions; many are swift to run religion's race that
are not stout to fight her battles.
2. Peter, though he came last, went in first, and made a more exact
discovery than John had done, v. 6, 7. Though John outran him, he did not
therefore turn back, nor stand still, but made after him as fast as he
could; and, while John was with much caution looking in, he came, and with
great courage went into the sepulchre.
(1.) Observe here the boldness of Peter, and how God dispenses his gifts
variously. John could out-run Peter, but Peter could out-dare John. It
is seldom true of the same persons, what David says poetically of Saul
and Jonathan, that they were swifter than eagles, and yet stronger than
lions, 2 Sam. i. 23. Some disciples are quick, and they are useful to quicken
those that are slow; others are bold, and they are useful to embolden those
that are timorous; diversity of gifts, but one Spirit. Peter's venturing
into the sepulchre may teach us, [1.] That those who in good earnest seek
after Christ must not frighten themselves with bugbears and foolish fancies:
"There is a lion in the way, a ghost in the grave." [2.] That good Christians
need not be afraid of the grave, since Christ has lain in it; for to them
there is nothing in it frightful; it is not the pit of destruction, nor
are the worms in it never-dying worms. Let us therefore not indulge, but
conquer, the fear we are apt to conceive upon the sight of a dead body,
or being alone among the graves; and, since we must be dead and in the
grave shortly, let us make death and the grave familiar to us, as our near
kindred, Job xvii. 14. [3.] We must be willing to go through the grave
to Christ; that way he went to his glory, and so must we. If we cannot
see God's face and live, better die than never see it. See Job xix. 25,
&c.
(2.) Observe the posture in which he found things in the sepulchre.
[1.] Christ had left his grave-clothes behind him there; what clothes he
appeared in to his disciples we are not told, but he never appeared in
his grave-clothes, as ghosts are supposed to do; no, he laid them aside,
First, Because he arose to die no more; death was to have no more dominion
over him, Rom. vi. 9. Lazarus came out with his grave-clothes on, for he
was to use them again; but Christ, rising to an immortal life, came out
free from those incumbrances. Secondly, because he was going to be clothed
with the robes of glory, therefore he lays aside these rags; in the heavenly
paradise there will be no more occasion for clothes than there was in the
earthly. The ascending prophet dropped his mantle. Thirdly, When we arise
from the death of sin to the life of righteousness, we must leave our grave-clothes
behind us, must put off all our corruptions. Fourthly, Christ left those
in the grave, as it were, for our use if the grave be a bed to the saints,
thus he hath sheeted that bed, and made it ready for them; and the napkin
by itself is of use for the mourning survivors to wipe away their tears.
[2.] The grave-clothes were found in very good order, which serves for
an evidence that his body was not stolen away while men slept. Robbers
of tombs have been known to take away the clothes and leave the body; but
none [prior to the practices of modern resurrectionists] ever took away
the body and left the clothes, especially when it was fine linen and new,
Mark xv. 46. Any one would rather choose to carry a dead body in its clothes
than naked. Or, if those that were supposed to have stolen it would have
left the grave-clothes behind, yet it cannot be supposed they should find
leisure to fold up the linen.
(3.) See how Peter's boldness encouraged John; now he took heart and
ventured in (v. 8), and he saw and believed; not barely believed what Mary
said, that the body was gone (no thanks to him to believe what he saw),
but he began to believe that Jesus was risen to life again, though his
faith, as yet, was weak and wavering.
[1.] John followed Peter in venturing. It should seem, he durst not
have gone into the sepulchre if Peter had not gone in first. Note, It is
good to be emboldened in a good work by the boldness of others. The dread
of difficulty and danger will be taken off by observing the resolution
and courage of others. Perhaps John's quickness had made Peter run faster,
and now Peter's boldness makes John venture further, than otherwise either
the one or the other would have done; though Peter had lately fallen under
the disgrace of being a deserter, and John had been advanced to the honour
of a confidant (Christ having committed his mother to him), yet John not
only associated with Peter, but thought it no disparagement to follow him.
[2.] Yet, it should seem, John got the start of Peter in believing.
Peter saw and wondered (Luke xxiv. 12), but John saw and believed. A mind
disposed to contemplation may perhaps sooner receive the evidence of divine
truth than a mind disposed to action. But what was the reason that they
were so slow of heart to believe? The evangelist tells us (v. 9), as yet
they knew not the scripture, that is, they did not consider, and apply,
and duly improve, what they knew of the scripture, that he must rise again
from the dead. The Old Testament spoke of the resurrection of the Messiah;
they believed him to be the Messiah; he himself had often told them that,
according to the scriptures of the Old Testament, he should rise again;
but they had not presence of mind sufficient by these to explain the present
appearances. Observe here, First, How unapt the disciples themselves were,
at first, to believe the resurrection of Christ, which confirms the testimony
they afterwards gave with so much assurance concerning it; for, by their
backwardness to believe it, it appears that they were not credulous concerning
it, nor of those simple ones that believe every word. If they had had any
design to advance their own interest by it, they would greedily have caught
at the first spark of its evidence, would have raised and supported one
another's expectations of it, and have prepared the minds of those that
followed them to receive the notices of it; but we find, on the contrary,
that their hopes were frustrated, it was to them as a strange thing, and
one of the furthest things from their thoughts. Peter and John were so
shy of believing it at first that nothing less than the most convincing
proof the thing was capable of could bring them to testify it afterwards
with so much assurance. Hereby it appears that they were not only honest
men, who would not deceive others, but cautious men, who would not themselves
be imposed upon. Secondly, What was the reason of their slowness to believe;
because as yet they knew not the scripture. This seems to be the evangelist's
acknowledgment of his own fault among the rest; he does not say, "For as
yet Jesus had not appeared to them, had not shown them his hands and his
side," but, "As yet he had not opened their understandings to understand
the scripture" (Luke xxiv. 44, 45), for that is the most sure word of prophecy.
3. Peter and John pursued their enquiry no further, but desisted, hovering
between faith and unbelief (v. 10): The disciples went away, not much the
wiser, to their own home, pros heautous--to their own friends and companions,
the rest of the disciples to their own lodgings, for homes they had none
at Jerusalem. They went away, (1.) For fear of being taken up upon suspicion
of a design to steal away the body, or of being charged with it now that
it was gone Instead of improving their faith, their care is to secure themselves,
to shift for their own safety. In difficult dangerous times it is hard
even for good men to go on in their work with the resolution that becomes
them. (2.) Because they were at a loss, and knew not what to do next, nor
what to make of what they had seen; and therefore, not having courage to
stay at the grave, they resolve to go home, and wait till God shall reveal
even this unto them, which is an instance of their weakness as yet. (3.)
It is probable that the rest of the disciples were together; to them they
return, to make report of what they had discovered and to consult with
them what was to be done; and, probably, now they appointed their meeting
in the evening, when Christ came to them. It is observable that before
Peter and John came to the sepulchre an angel had appeared there, rolled
away the stone, frightened the guard, and comforted the women; as soon
as they were gone from the sepulchre, Mary Magdalene here sees two angels
in the sepulchre (v. 12), and yet Peter and John come to the sepulchre,
and go into it, and see none. What shall we make of this? Where were the
angels when Peter and John were at the sepulchre, who appeared there before
and after? [1.] Angels appear and disappear at pleasure, according to the
orders and instructions given them. They may be, and are really, where
they are not visibly; nay, it should seem, may be visible to one and not
to another, at the same time, Num. xxii. 23; 2 Kings vi. 17. How they make
themselves visible, then invisible, and then visible again, it is presumption
for us to enquire; but that they do so is plain from this story. [2.] This
favour was shown to those who were early and constant in their enquiries
after Christ, and was the reward of those that came first and staid last,
but denied to those that made a transient visit. [3.] The apostles were
not to receive their instructions from the angels, but from the Spirit
of grace. See Heb. ii. 5.