The Wellspring. No.40a
Our website address
is www.oxleigh.freeserve.co.uk
“Understanding is a Wellspring of Life to him that has
it.”
(Proverbs. 16:22)
Occasional papers by Arthur & Rosalind Eedle
Friday's Man was nailed upon a Cross
Today is another anniversary, one that is far more
important than my own, as related in a previous Wellspring. For today is the
traditional anniversary of our Lord's death in AD 33, some 1971 years ago. That
Friday afternoon, just outside the city walls, near the Damascus Gate, at about
A short way away, in the outer courts of the
A team of horses would be needed to cause that rent. And, it had started at the
top!
During the three hours of remaining daylight, Joseph and
Nicodemus hurried about making preparations. They knew there was no time to
deal with Jesus' body according to the usual burial customs. A length of very
expensive linen cloth was bought, and about a hundred pounds weight of unguents
obtained, and these two men, together with their servants, made for the cross,
and carefully lowered the bloodstained corpse from the wooden beams that held
it; the patibulum, or
cross-beam, that Jesus had carried on His shoulders, and the stipes, or upright plinth
that was lowered into a prepared slot in the rock. As the women watched, they
then carried the body to Joseph's new tomb. The linen cloth was spread out
along one of the ledges within the tomb, and the body placed on it. Then a
smaller cloth was bound round His head to prevent the jaw from falling open. It
was called a soudarion. According
to custom, two small coins, denarii,
were placed over the closed eyes, and the linen cloth, or sindona, was drawn down over His head to
the feet. Nicodemus then instructed his servants to place the unguents on the
ledge on either side of the body to restrain it from rapid decomposition until
the women could return on Sunday morning to wash the body and bind it in grave
clothes according to custom.
All being completed, a heavy circular stone was
rolled over the entrance to the tomb before everyone hastily returned home to
partake of the traditional Passover meal, that had to be eaten during the
evening, the beginning of the 15th day of Nisan, according to the law of Moses.
This was far from being a joyful occasion for all Jesus' followers. Everything
had fallen apart. All their expectations had been dashed to pieces. The One who
had taught them, inspired them, given them powers to heal and exorcise, who had
produced a sense of wonder and expectancy of the manifestation of the
And so it was that for the 38 hours that Jesus remained
dead, the prince of this world believed that he had achieved his objective. The
one major obstacle to all his plans had now been removed, and for that short
period of time, he sat back and enjoyed the sense of his own achievement.wel.
Thursday's Man was
in
Pleading with His God to set Him free;
"For this very moment I have come,
Thy will, and not my own, be done."
Friday's Man was
nailed upon a cross,
Adam's gain was all of this Man's loss;
The sun was darkened in a clear blue sky,
"All is now finished," was His cry.
Saturday's Man was
sealed with the tomb,
Stunned were all His friends and full of gloom;
All their joyful hopes had vaporised,
Nothing was left save tear-stained eyes.