Sabbath
Service
Saturday, April 7, 2007
“Lessons from Two Resurrections”

Sabbath Service — Saturday, April 7, 2007
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Copyright © 2007. All rights reserved.

(If
you are meeting in a small group, select a leader for the day. The
leader reads
the text printed in regular face. The rest of the group reads the
text printed in
bold face and wherever it states “In Unison.” If you
are worshipping as a single
individual, read all the parts.)
CALL TO WORSHIP
The
stone that the builders rejected
Has become the chief cornerstone.
Through the power of Jesus’ resurrection,
We are made alive in Christ.
This is the Lord’s doing.
It is marvelous in our eyes.
This is the day that the Lord has made.
Let us rejoice and be glad in it.
INVITATION
(In Unison)
God
of infinite wisdom, we come into your presence with open arms.
As we repeat the ancient stories, we mark our hearts with the
blood of the lamb. Bless us with your protection, as we reflect
on the salvation that Christ offers us. Through his powerful name,
Amen.
OPENING
HYMN #12
“I Know That My Redeemer
Liveth”
Job
19:25
Words, Jessie Brown Pounds, 1893
Tune HANNAH, James H. Fillmore, 1893
I
know that my Redeemer liveth, And on the earth again shall stand;
I know eternal life He giveth, That grace and power are in His
hand.
I know, I know (I know, I know) that Jesus liveth,
And on the earth (And on the earth) again shall stand;
I know, I know (I know, I know) that life He giveth,
That grace and power (That grace and power) are in His hand.
I
know His promise never faileth, The word He speaks, it cannot
die;
Though cruel death my flesh assaileth, Yet I shall see Him by
and by.
I know, I know (I know, I know) that Jesus liveth,
And on the earth (And on the earth) again shall stand;
I know, I know (I know, I know) that life He giveth,
That grace and power (That grace and power) are in His hand.
OPENING
PRAYER (In Unison)
What
an awe-inspiring thing it is, O God, to fall into your hands:
to be shaped like clay, to be forged through the fire of suffering
and conflict. Grant that we might rejoice in your work within
and among us, and that we might find our home in the hollow of
your hand, through Jesus our Risen Christ, to whom be praise and
honor and glory forever. Amen.
MOMENTS
OF SILENCE
PERSONAL
PRAYER
(In Silence)
HYMN
#44
“My Faith Looks Up
to Thee”
Ray
Palmer, 1830, alt.
Lowell Mason, 1832
My
faith looks up to Thee, Thou Lamb of Calvary,
Savior divine.
Now hear me while I pray; take all my guilt away.
O let me from this day be wholly thine!
May
Thy rich grace impart strength to my fainting heart,
My zeal in spire.
As Thou has died for me, O may my love to Thee
pure, warm and changeless be, a living fire!
While
life’s dark maze I tread and griefs around me spread,
Be Thou my Guide.
Bid darkness turn to day; wipe sorrow’s tears away,
nor let me ever stray from Thee aside.
When
ends life’s transient dream, When death’s cold, sullen
stream
Shall o’er me roll,
Blest Savior, then, in love, fear and distrust remove.
O bear me save in love, a ransomed soul!
PRESENTATIONS
BEFORE GOD (Not monetary offerings)
Time
for any in attendance to offer a musical or instrumental piece,
a reading, comments, or anything they would like to present before
God.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Time
for groups to make any necessary announcements relating to their
own group.
COLLECT
(Preparing for the lesson. In Unison)
Holy
and powerful God, as far beyond our comprehension as is the grand
design of your universe, we seek to know you through the poor
vehicle of words. May we go beyond hearing to doing. Grant that
we may feel your presence as we study the lesson on resurrection
today. May we experience the fire within that sent the followers
of Jesus out into the world to share the good news. In Christ
Jesus’ name. Amen.
THE
LESSON
(Use
the lesson provided here, or conduct a study of your own selection.)
Lessons
From Two Resurrections
John’s
Gospel details two instances in which individuals were resurrected
from the dead. The first astonished its witnesses, but the second
transformed Jesus’ disciples’ lives, giving them power
and conviction to face trials, persecution and even martyrdom for
an astounding truth.
by
Bruce Gore
Lazarus
lived with his two sisters in the little village of Bethany. They
were close friends of Jesus of Nazareth, who often stayed with them
when He visited Jerusalem.
But
one day Lazarus became ill. “Now a certain man was sick, Lazarus
of Bethany, the town of Mary and her sister Martha ... Therefore
the sisters sent to [Jesus], saying, ‘Lord, behold, he whom
You love is sick’“ (John 11:1-3).
John
describes this family as close, filled with love and peace. No doubt
Christ enjoyed visiting these friends’ home and relaxing after
arduous journeys. Notice the sisters didn’t even ask for Him
to come. They knew that once He heard of Lazarus’ illness
He would journey to see His sick friend.
But
Jesus didn’t do what they expected. He deliberately waited
(verses 6-7).
In
the meantime, the illness claimed Lazarus’ life. By the time
Jesus arrived Lazarus had been dead at least four days. Martha,
in her anguish, met Christ as He arrived. “Lord, if You had
been here, my brother would not have died.” Christ responded
to her in her grief by urging her to have faith and believe in Him.
He even told her, “Your brother will rise again” (verses
21, 23). Martha responded that she knew Lazarus would “rise
again in the resurrection at the last day” (verse 24). She
was aware of God’s promises of a resurrection at the end of
this age.
However,
she did not understand that God would use her brother’s death
to glorify His Son, Jesus the Messiah. She did not believe she would
ever see her brother again in this life.
Jesus
again offered her encouragement. “I am the resurrection and
the life” He told her. “He who believes in Me, though
he may die, he shall live. And whoever lives and believes in Me
shall never die. Do you believe this?” (verses 25-26).
Martha
responded positively to some of what Jesus said: “Yes, Lord,
I believe that You are the Christ, the Son of God, who is to come
into the world” (verse 27). She may have been unsure about
the rest of His meaning or what He was driving at. Regardless, she
summoned her sister Mary, who was still mourning in their house.
When
Mary came, “Jesus saw her weeping, and the Jews who came with
her weeping.” He “groaned in the spirit and was troubled.
And He said, ‘Where have you laid him?’“ (verses
33-34).
As
was a common practice at the time, Lazarus’ friends and family
interred him in a cave. Then they covered its entrance with a large
rock to keep out predators. Christ told those present to remove
the stone that covered the mouth of the cave. Martha objected that
Lazarus’ body would have already begun to decay.
Jesus
persisted, so “they took away the stone from the place where
the dead man was lying” (verse 41). After a short prayer to
His Father, Christ, in a loud voice, shouted, “Lazarus, come
forth!” (verse 43).
From
within the dark cave came the sounds of movement, and shortly the
figure of a man struggling to walk appeared at the entrance. He
was struggling because his body was still wrapped in the strips
of linen cloths in which he had been interred!
“And
he who had died came out bound hand and foot with graveclothes,
and his face was wrapped with a cloth. Jesus said to them, ‘Loose
him, and let him go.’ Then many of the Jews who had come to
Mary, and had seen the things Jesus did, believed in Him”
(verses 44-45).
Word
of this remarkable event quickly reached the religious authorities
in Jerusalem. Perceiving Jesus to be a threat to their positions
and the stability of the Roman-dominated province, they plotted
to do away with Him. Little did anyone realize the stage was being
set for another death and resurrection, one far more significant
than that of Lazarus.
An
innocent man crucified
Around
3 o’clock on the afternoon of Passover day, the demands of
the hostile crowd were fulfilled. Shortly after Jesus breathed His
last, Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus, two less-well-known followers
of Jesus, quickly went into action. Both men believed Jesus’
teachings, yet they kept their belief secret out of fear of what
their fellow Jews might do to them.
Perhaps
they were ashamed of their earlier reticence. But now they showed
the courage to step forward and claim Jesus’ body and begin
preparing it for proper, but hasty, entombment. It was Joseph of
Arimathea who went to Pilate and asked for Christ’s body and
offered his own new tomb as a place of burial. Nicodemus assisted
Joseph and contributed a vast amount of costly spices for His burial.
Since
it was already around 3 o’clock in the afternoon, there was
not much time before the “high day” (John 19:31), one
of seven biblical annual sabbaths (Leviticus 23), began. They had
much to do before sunset, at which time they would cease work to
honor that Sabbath.
“Then
they took the body of Jesus, and bound it in strips of linen with
the spices, as the custom of the Jews is to bury. Now in the place
where He was crucified there was a garden, and in the garden a new
tomb in which no one had yet been laid. So there they laid Jesus,
because of the Jews’ Preparation Day [for the Sabbath], for
the tomb was nearby” (John 19:40-42).
Jewish
burial practices
Because
of the hot climate and religious customs, the Jews of that day would
bury their dead quickly. They practiced neither cremation nor the
Egyptian custom of embalming.
The
poor would simply bury their dead in the ground, covering the grave
with earth and stones. Others would use caves as a place of entombment,
as happened with Lazarus. Those who could afford to would carve
tombs in the sides of some of the many hills and mountains of the
area. Such tombs would typically have several shelves carved in
the stone on which the bodies of family members would be laid.
A
body would normally be washed and then wrapped in a clean linen
cloth or strips of cloth, similar to the way Egyptians wrapped their
mummies. Families that were better off financially would put perfumes,
ointment and spices on the body and between the wrappings of cloth.
In some cases the spices and ointments would be thick enough to
cause the outer cloths in time to harden somewhat like a cocoon.
Myrrh
is specifically mentioned as used in the preparation of Christ’s
body. Myrrh is a pleasant-smelling resinous substance from several
types of trees in Arabia and North Africa. Usually a separate piece
of cloth would be wrapped around the head of the deceased. If the
death occurred just before a Sabbath, it was especially important
that the body be taken to its resting place before the Sabbath began.
The dead were not to be buried on the Sabbath.
Some
of the women who followed Jesus also made plans to buy spices for
the preparation of His body. They took note of His burial place
and went to their homes to rest on the Sabbath. Again, this Sabbath
was a high day (John 19:31), in this case the first day of Unleavened
Bread, which fell on a Thursday that year. When the annual Sabbath
was over, on the next day, Friday, they went into the city to purchase
the spices and oils.
“And
Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of Joses observed where He was
laid. Now when the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother
of James, and Salome bought spices, that they might come and anoint
Him” (Mark 15:47; 16:1).
The
women spent the remaining time on this Friday preparing the spices
for the anointing of Christ’s body. “Then they returned
and prepared spices and fragrant oils. And they rested on the Sabbath
according to the commandment” (Luke 23:56).
Notice
that Mark mentions the women buying the spices after the
Sabbath, and Luke states they prepared the spices before the Sabbath.
There is no contradiction when we realize that two Sabbaths are
involved in this three-day period. After resting on the weekly Sabbath,
which ended Saturday at sunset, they went to the tomb the next morning
to be there at first light.
An
astounding discovery
When
the women arrived at the tomb, they discovered the stone cover had
been rolled back and the tomb was empty! They rushed to inform the
other disciples. When they returned and saw the evidence of what
had happened, they realized God had indeed raised Jesus Christ to
a new life exactly as He had said would happen.
But
what was the evidence? The most astounding discovery was not the
empty tomb, nor the announcement of an angelic being proclaiming
that “He is not here, He has risen!” It was something
else. Among the Gospel writers, only John records what that was.
Let’s read it in John 20.
“Early
on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary of Magdala
came to the tomb. She saw that the stone had been moved away from
the entrance, and ran to Simon Peter, and the other disciple [John],
the one whom Jesus loved. ‘They have taken the Lord out of
the tomb,’ she said, ‘and we do not know where they
have laid him.’
“So
Peter and the other disciple set out and made their way to the tomb.
They ran together, but the other disciple ran faster than Peter
and reached the tomb first. He peered in and saw the linen wrappings
lying there, but he did not enter. Then Simon Peter caught up with
him and went into the tomb. He saw the linen wrappings lying there,
and the napkin which had been round His head, not with the wrappings,
but rolled up in a place by itself. Then the disciple who had reached
the tomb first also went in, and he saw and believed” (verses
1-8, Revised English Bible).
What
did the disciples see that made them believe? It wasn’t simply
an empty tomb. If the body had been stolen, as Mary of Magdala had
assumed, all they would have seen was an empty tomb.
But
there was more. Christ had told them several times He would die
and rise again, but that prophecy hadn’t sunk in. What Peter
and John saw instantly convinced them not only that His body had
not been stolen, but that God the Father had raised Jesus to glory
and immortality! (Acts 3:13-15).
Powerful
evidence left behind
Christ’s
wrapped body had lain on a rock shelf in the tomb. Yards of linen
cloths had been wrapped around His body. Spices and thick myrrh
were placed inside those wrappings, essentially pasting them together.
What
Peter and John saw as they peered into the dimness of the man-made
cave was a neat, collapsed cloth form. If thieves had removed Jesus’
body, if grave robbers had been at work, why should they leave these
wrappings?
No
tomb robber would have taken the time to unwrap the body and leave
the burial cloths there, especially since they would have been in
danger of being discovered by the guards the Roman authorities had
posted there to prevent that very thing from happening (Matthew
27:62-66; 28:11-15).
But
there was more. The cloths were not scattered; they were still
wrapped. This resurrection was not like Lazarus’, in
which he was restored to live a few more years and would eventually
die again. This was the resurrection of a spirit body (see
1 Corinthians 15:44).
What
John saw made a profound impression on him. The grave clothes were
not disheveled and disarranged, as would have been the case if someone
had removed them or someone had struggled to free himself from the
wrappings. The original Greek wording means they were lying there
still in their folds, the clothes for the body where the body had
been and the “napkin,” a smaller, separate piece of
cloth, where the head had lain.
The
whole point of John’s description is that the grave clothes
did not look as if they had been discarded or taken off. They were
lying in their regular folds as if the body of Jesus had simply
evaporated out of them.
The
sight instantly penetrated John’s mind. He realized what had
happened-and he believed. It was not what Jesus had said so often
that convinced John that Christ had risen. It was what he saw with
his own eyes!
John’s
convincing details
Notice
this comment from Vine’s Expository Dictionary of Old
and New Testament Words about Jesus’ head covering being
“wrapped together in a place by itself” there in the
tomb (John 20:7, King James Version): “... ‘Wrapped
together’ might suggest that this cloth had been ‘rolled’
or wrapped up and put in a certain part of the tomb at the Lord’s
resurrection, whereas, as with the body wrappings, the head cloth
was lying as it had been ‘rolled’ round His head, an
evidence, to those who looked into the tomb, of the fact of His
resurrection without any disturbance of the wrappings either by
friend or foe or when the change took place” (W.E. Vine, 1985,
“Roll”). Jesus’ glorified body had passed right
through the cloth!
The
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, in its article “Resurrection
of Jesus Christ,” states: “Significantly, the grave
clothes were undisturbed ... Long ago, Chrysostom pointed out that
the grave robbers would not have stolen the body naked because of
time restraints and other difficulties (‘it was buried with
much myrrh, which glues linen to the body not less firmly than lead’
[Hom. (homily) 85 on Jn. 4]). The Gospels describe an orderly scene,
not one of confusion that would have resulted had the grave clothes
been torn from the body. That something extraordinary had taken
place is shown by the fact that the beloved disciple ‘saw
and believed’ ...” (1988, Vol. 4, p. 151).
In
a footnote on John 20:7, the Companion Bible explains that John’s
original wording “implies that the cloth had been folded round
the head as a turban is folded, and that it lay still in the form
of a turban. The linen clothes also lay exactly as they were when
swathed round the body. The Lord had passed out of them, not needing
as Lazarus ([John] 11:44), to be loosed. It was this sight that
convinced John (v. 8).”
We
can share in Christ’s resurrection
The
apostle John recorded significant and crucial differences in these
two resurrections. In the first, the stone covering of the tomb
was removed so Lazarus could get out. The stone covering of the
other was rolled back, not so Jesus could get out, but so the disciples
could see inside and then draw the inescapable conclusion that Jesus
had already gotten out!
Of
the two who were entombed, the first had to have others remove the
wrappings so he could walk about. The other did not, for He had
passed through His wrappings in a body of spirit.
Later
John made it clear that Christ’s true followers will likewise
be resurrected, that they will be like Him in a glorious resurrection
to immortal spirit life: “Behold what manner of love the Father
has bestowed on us, that we should be called children of God! ...
Beloved, now we are children of God; and it has not yet been revealed
what we shall be, but we know that when He is revealed, we shall
be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is. And everyone who has
this hope in Him purifies himself, just as He is pure” (1
John 3:1-3).
See
original
CLOSING HYMN #130
“Wherever He Leads
I’ll Go”
FALLS
CREEK
B.B. McKinney, 1936
“Take
up thy cross and follow Me,” I heard my Master say;
“I gave My life to ransom thee, Surrender your all today.”
Wherever He leads I’ll go, Wherever He leads I’ll
go,
I’ll follow my Christ who loves me so, Wherever He leads
I’ll go.
He
drew me closer to His side, I sought His will to know,
And in that will I now abide, Wherever He leads I’ll go.
Wherever He leads I’ll go, Wherever He leads I’ll
go,
I’ll follow my Christ who loves me so, Wherever He leads
I’ll go.
It
may be thro’ the shadows dim, Or o’er the stormy sea,
I take my cross and follow Him, Wherever He leadeth me.
Wherever He leads I’ll go, Wherever He leads I’ll
go,
I’ll follow my Christ who loves me so, Wherever He leads
I’ll go.
My
heart, my life, my all I bring To Christ who loves me so;
he is my Master, Lord, and King, Wherever He leads I’ll
go.
Wherever He leads I’ll go, Wherever He leads I’ll
go,
I’ll follow my Christ who loves me so, Wherever He leads
I’ll go.
CLOSING
WORDS (In Unison)
Burst
forth from the cocoons which enslave you!
Fly free as the butterfly.
Shine bright as the rainbow.
Christ has risen!
Go in peace.
Go in joy.
Amen.