Luke 23:50-56 is today’s BDBD. Jesus’s burial.

What is a Christian burial? I have been to several funerals, most of which can be considered Christian. Yet, none have been like Jesus’s burial. None of the services have read any of the gospel accounts of Jesus’s burial (Luke 23:50-56; Matthew 27:57-66; Mark 15:42-47; John 19:31-42) for enough sorrow is contained the the death of someone we personally interacted with. Rather, the funeral messages I have heard focus on the person’s past and/or their “resting place” in heaven.

When I look back at the funerals I attended, I can remember many details. So, I have no doubt that the woman (55; Matthew 27:61; Mark 15:40-41, 47), Joseph of Arimathea, a member of the Council (Sanhedrin), and Nicodemus, also a member of the Sanhedrin (John 19:39), remembered all the details of Jesus’s burial. Overwhelming sorrow fills the soul upon remembering the death and burial of the loved one.

Jesus died as the sun touched the horizon, the end of modern Friday’s light and the Hebrew day. Sabbath was about to begin. Because of the Laws given through Moses, no one could work on the Sabbath, which started at twilight. So, the small group of bold followers quickly lowered Jesus’ body, wrapped it in linen cloth, and placed it in a tomb cut in rock, one in which no one had yet been laid (53). Tombs in the ancient Middle East contained family members. This tomb was new and therefore empty. Jesus’s body was alone through the Sabbath’s night, the next day’s morning and day, through sunset, and the next day’s night (per Hebrew calendar). His body was alone. But his being was escorting past deceased soul’s including one of the criminals crucified with him, into paradise.

Those who loved Jesus are one with him in his burial (Romans 6:4; Colossians 2:12).