JOHN
CHAPTER
20.
VIEW FOOTNOTES
Easter
Morning.
John 20, 1-18.
Mary Magdalene at the grave: V. 1. The first day of the week cometh Mary Magdalene early, when it was yet dark, unto the sepulcher, and seeth the stone taken away from the sepulcher. V. 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 sepulcher, and we know not where they have laid Him. “The first day of the week,” according to Christian reckoning; for with Christians all days are Sabbaths and none especially holy, excepting inasmuch as they are sanctified and hallowed by the Word of God and prayer. This was on Sunday, the third day after Jesus had been laid into the grave. On this morning several women from the circle of the disciples started out early for the grave of the Lord. Of these the evangelist John mentions Mary Magdalene especially, the story of the others having been narrated by the earlier gospel-writers. It was so early that the shadows of dawn were still lying over the country, though the light was breaking. When Mary Magdalene, in the company of the other women, came within sight of the tomb of the Master and saw that the heavy stone which fitted into the groove before the opening, and served in a way to lock the entrance, had been taken away, she waited for nothing more. The other women stayed and investigated the matter more closely, but Mary ran back to the city as quickly as she could. Whether by design or by accident, she struck Simon Peter and John first of all. Hastily she poured into their ears what she had seen, as well as her deductions therefrom; for she seems to have been certain that the sepulcher had been violated by some one, perhaps even by the authorities, who had reasons of their own for removing the body of the hated Nazarene. Hastily she states her message: They have carried away the Lord out of the tomb, and we know not where they have placed Him. She was not alone in her anxious fears, the other women agreeing with her. We here see the result of following one's own conjectures and surmises instead of paying strict attention to the Word of the Lord. If all the disciples, men and women, had closely remembered the prophecies of the Lord concerning His Passion and resurrection, they would have saved themselves many a bitter heartache. Christians must learn ever better to search the Scriptures, to turn to the Word in all the various vicissitudes of life, instead of following their own ideas and feelings.
Peter
and John at the grave: V. 3. Peter therefore went forth, and that
other
disciple, and came to the sepulcher. V. 4. So they ran both together;
and the
other disciple did outrun Peter, and came first to the sepulcher. V. 5.
And he,
stooping down and looking in, saw the linen clothes lying; yet went he
not in.
V. 6. Then cometh Simon Peter, following him, and went into the
sepulcher, and
seeth the linen clothes lie, V. 7. and the napkin that was about His
head, not
lying with the linen clothes, but wrapped together in a place by
itself. V. 8.
Then went in also that other disciple, which came first to the
sepulcher; and he
saw and believed. V. 9. For as yet they knew not the scripture, that He
must
rise again from the dead. V. 10. Then the disciples went away again
unto their
own home. The message of Mary Magdalene stirred both Peter and John
to quick
action. They immediately made up their minds to find out the truth of
this most
astounding matter. At first the two disciples ran together, side by
side. Soon,
however, the younger and nimbler John outran Peter and arrived at the
tomb
first. But here he hesitated. He may have had some presentiment of the
miracles
which the disciples were soon to witness. He could not quite make up
his mind to
investigate more closely. He merely stooped down and peered into the
semidarkness or the tomb. He could make out the linen grave-cloths with
which
the body had been wound, but nothing more; and he could not make up his
mind to
enter. But when impulsive Peter came along, there was not a moment's
hesitation.
He went into the tomb; he viewed closely the gravecloths, assuring
himself of
their identity; he noted also the sudary, or napkin, which had been
wrapped
about the head of the Master. It struck him that this cloth was lying
apart from
the other linen wrappings, in a place by itself, and that it was folded
or
rolled together. All these significant discoveries he undoubtedly
communicated
to John, until the latter finally was induced also to enter and to see
the
evidence presented in the tomb with his own eyes. It was certainly
surprising
enough to find all the cloths laid aside with such apparent care, with
no sign
of haste, as would have been the case had the sepulcher been violated
and the
body stolen. What John saw drove him to one conclusion: Jesus Himself
had laid
aside these wrappings; He had risen; He had returned to life. And this
conviction forced itself upon John, although he, with the other
apostles, at
that time did not have the proper understanding of the Scriptures
concerning the
resurrection of the Master, namely, that it was a necessary part of the
scheme
of redemption, that it must happen to complete the work for the
salvation of
mankind. And the same facts, as related by these faithful witnesses,
without the
slightest indication of having connived to cheat the world: the empty
tomb, the
careful order in the grave, the absence of any and every indication of
robbery,
should convince any reasonable critic of the resurrection of Jesus.
That is the
faith of the Christians; upon the miracle of Christ's resurrection they
place
their own hope of salvation. The grave had to give up its prey. The
victory of
the grave is turned into defeat; the sting of death is taken away. Ours
is the
victory through Jesus Christ, our Lord. For the time being, at least,
John was
satisfied in his own mind that his Master had returned to life. And the
time was
coming when the last remnant of spiritual darkness was to be removed
from his
mind. Meanwhile the two disciples went away more slowly and
thoughtfully from
the grave than they had come. They returned home or to their place of
lodging in
Jerusalem. Note: Reasonable proofs of the resurrection of Christ can
never give
the heart the firm faith which is necessary for salvation. Under
circumstances
it is a good thing to be able to stop the mouths of the gainsayers by
showing
them the foolishness of their position; but the most convincing
arguments are
the statements of Scriptures themselves.
Mary
Magdalene and the two angels: V. 11. But Mary stood without at the
sepulcher,
weeping; and as she wept, she stooped down, and looked into the
sepulcher, V.
12. and seeth two angels in white, sitting, the one at the head and the
other at
the feet, where the body of Jesus had lain. V. 13. And they say unto
her, Woman,
why weepest thou? She saith unto them, Because they have taken away my
Lord, and
I know not where they have laid Him. When Peter and John had run to
the tomb
in such great haste, Mary had followed more slowly, arriving in the
garden only
after Peter and John had again left. Her mind was still filled with her
first
conclusion, namely, that the removal of her Lord's body was due to
graverobbery.
And she had given way to a fit of unrestrained weeping. She still
remained
outside the tomb in helpless and hopeless despair. Incidentally,
however, she is
prompted to look whether the body of the Lord is really gone from the
sepulcher,
or whether the whole matter is only a kind of bad dream. So she stoops
forward
to look at the place where the men had laid the Lord in her own
presence, with
her tears still flowing freely. The love which Mary Magdalene had for
the Master
is a fitting example for the believers of all times. “This Mary is a
fine,
beautiful type and an excellent example of all those that cling to
Christ, that
their hearts should burn in pure and true love toward Christ. For she
forgets
everything, both her feminine modesty and person, is not bothered by
the fact
that she sees the two angels before her, does not remember that Hannas
and
Caiaphas are filled with hostile wrath. In brief, she sees nothing, she
hears
nothing but Christ only. If she could only find the dead Christ; then
she would
be perfectly satisfied. And the evangelist for that reason has
described it so
diligently in order that we, who preach and hear it, may also,
according to this
example, gain desire, love, and eagerness toward Christ the Lord.” 98)
When
Mary stooped forward to look into the grave, she saw two angels in
white
garments sitting there, the one at the head, the other at the feet,
where the
body of the Lord had been lying. They were sitting there with a
purpose; they
were ready to give information concerning the truth of the resurrection
to all
that sought it. They may have been the same angels that had been
present at the
earlier hour, or they may have been new messengers of the Lord, become
visible
for the occasion. It seems that there must have been almost a friendly
rivalry
in heaven for the privilege of being the guardians of the grave of the
Lord,
just as at the birth of Christ the multitude of the heavenly host came
down to
the fields of Bethlehem to sing their anthem of praise. Sympathetically
the
angels asked Mary: Woman, why weepest thou? Their purpose was to open
her eyes
that she might see and hear the truth. But Mary's grief is too deep to
notice
the presence of glorious comfort. She was surrounded with evidences of
her
Lord's resurrection which should have caused her to leap and shout with
joy, and
here she gives the angels the hopeless answer: Because they have taken
away my
Lord, and I know not where they have placed Him. The case of Mary is
repeated in
the experience of Christians the world over. If they are visited with
any real
or supposed trouble, they are immediately so engrossed with their grief
that
they fail to see the multitude of evidences all about them that Jesus
lives, and
that therefore nothing can really matter. To trust unfailingly in the
resurrected Savior, that must be the aim and the steady endeavor of the
believers in the Lord.
Jesus
appears to Mary: V. 14. And when she had thus said, she turned
herself back,
and saw Jesus standing, and knew not that it was Jesus. V. 15. Jesus
saith unto
her, Woman, why weepest thou? Whom seekest thou? She, supposing Him to
be the
gardener, saith unto Him, Sir, if Thou have borne Him hence, tell me
where Thou
hast laid Him, and I will take Him away, V. 16. Jesus saith unto her,
Mary. She
turned herself, and saith unto Him, Rabboni; which is to say, Master.
V. 17.
Jesus saith unto her, Touch Me not; for I am not yet ascended to My
Father; but
go to My brethren and say unto them, I ascend unto My Father and your
Father,
and to My God and your God. V. 18. Mary Magdalene came and told the
disciples
that she had seen the Lord, and that He had spoken these things unto
her.
While Mary was still in the midst of her bitter complaint to the
angels, she may
have heard some noise behind her, a footstep or a rustling, which
caused her to
turn around quickly. She noticed that there was a man standing there,
but
somehow she did not associate this man with her Lord. It was not merely
that her
eyes were dim with tears, but that Jesus now appeared in a form from
which all
lowliness had vanished, and which was also glorified, spiritualized. As
Jesus
chose, He could make Himself visible and invisible, be present now in
one place,
now in another; He could either assume the old familiar aspect in which
His
disciples knew Him, or He could appear before them as a stranger whom
they in no
way associated with their former Master. So it was in this instance.
Even His
voice He had changed. His sympathetic question, therefore, couched in
the same
words as that of the angels, only causes a new outburst of resentment
and grief.
She took Jesus for the gardener, the man that certainly should know
something
about the disappearance of her Lord. If he was responsible for the
removal of
the body, he was to give her the necessary information at once, in
order that
she might go and carry Him away. The idea may have struck Mary that the
gardener
had seen fit to take the body to some other grave near by, because this
tomb was
to be used for another body. Note the love of Mary: Weak woman that she
is, she
will undertake single-handed to carry the body of her beloved Lord
away. But
Jesus felt that the time had now come for Him to reveal Himself. In the
old
familiar voice which all the disciples knew and loved, He spoke only
that one
word: Mary! The form of the speaker might have been unfamiliar, His
body might
have been glorified. but by that voice Mary would have known Him
anywhere. From
the depths of a heart transported with joy her shout broke forth:
Rabboni; my
Master! He was there, alive and well; and nothing else mattered. And
she may
have thought that the old, familiar intercourse would again be resumed,
that she
could touch Him, assure herself definitely as to His identity. But the
time of
intimate companionship between Master and pupils had now gone by. Jesus
warns
her not to touch Him; this was not His permanent return to visible
fellowship
with His disciples. He gives her the reason for this prohibition:
Because I have
not yet ascended to My Father. After His glorification had been fully
accomplished, His disciples might enter into closer communion with Him
than ever
before, in the manner which He had explained to the apostles in the
last
discourses on the evening before His death. By His ascension, Jesus
entered into
the full and unlimited use of His divine majesty, and thus also of His
omnipresence. And therefore He is now closer to His disciples than ever
before.
By faith all the believers have Jesus in their own hearts, a much more
intimate,
a much closer communion than ever that was which obtained between
Christ and His
disciples in the state of His humiliation. 99) It is a wonderfully
beautiful
message which Jesus incidentally entrusts to Mary, which she should
commit to
His brethren: I ascend to My Father and to your Father, to My God and
to your
God. There is a world of comfort in the word “brethren.” “These words
should fittingly be written with great and golden letters, not simply
on paper
nor into a book, but on our hearts, that they might live therein: Go,
and tell
My brethren. That surely should be a word to make a Christian joyful,
and to
awaken and stimulate love to. ward Christ. ...If one would consider
rightly how
rich and comforting these words are, he would become intoxicated for
joy and
desire, as Mary Magdalene was intoxicated with devotion and love toward
the
Lord. Who of us would believe certainly and firmly in his heart that
Christ is
his Brother, he would come along with leaps and say: Who am I to be
honored thus
and to be, and be called, the son of God? For I surely am not worthy
that such a
great King and Lord of all creatures should call me His creature. But
now He is
not satisfied to call me His creature, but wants me to be and be called
His
brother. Should I, then, not be happy, since that Man calls me His
brother who
is the Lord over heaven and earth, over sin and death, over devil and
hell, and
all that may be named, not only in this world, but also in that to
comet” 100)
The words of Jesus are unmistakable: He gives to His believers the high
and
great honor, placing them absolutely on the same level with Himself.
That is the
glorious fruit and result of His work of redemption. Mary Magdalene,
for her
part, now believed. She was convinced that the resurrection of Jesus
was the
seal of the completed redemption. And she brought her message to the
disciples.
She stated, without doubt or hesitation, that she had seen the Lord,
and that
these were His words to them. A true believer will always testify of
the faith
in his heart. And if, in addition, such a person is commissioned and
called by
the Lord to make known the fact of the resurrection to others, the
testimony
should be made with all gladness and with the assurance that carries
conviction.
Two
Appearances to the Assembled Disciples.
John 20, 19-31.
On
the evening of Easter Day: V. 19. Then the same day at evening,
being the
first day of the week, when the doors were shut where the disciples
were
assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and
saith
unto them, Peace be unto you. V. 20. And when He had so said, He showed
unto
them His hands and His side. Then were the disciples glad when they saw
the
Lord. V. 21. Then said Jesus to them again, Peace be unto you; as My
Father hath
sent Me, even so send I you. V. 22. And when He had said this, He
breathed on
them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost; V. 23.
whosesoever sins ye
remit, they are remitted unto them; and whosesoever sins ye retain,
they are
retained. Jesus gave His disciples sufficient evidence of His
resurrection.
On that very same day, in the evening, after He had appeared to various
individuals and small groups, He showed Himself alive to ten of the
apostles.
They were assembled together in some house in Jerusalem and had
carefully locked
the doors, lest a sudden attack of the Jews make them, too, victims of
their
hatred. But for the glorified body of the resurrected Lord neither
locked doors
nor heavy walls were a hindrance. His being was no longer circumscribed
by the
confines of space and time. They had been alone but a moment ago, and
now Jesus
stood in their midst. And His was the greeting of the resurrected
Savior: Peace
to you! The purpose of His coming was now realized, the enmity between
God and
man had been removed. God was reconciled to His wayward and erring
children. The
peace of the risen Lord is the comfort and joy of all believers. “For
that
reason Christ became man, for that reason He died on the cross and
arose on the
third day, in order that, wherever our hearts, the devil, and the whole
world
cry about and against us because of our sins as though we were not at
peace,
that God did not want us, -that He might say to us: No, dear man, not
thus, but
peace with thee, God is not angry; on that account do not fear, for thy
sins I
have paid, death I have killed. In this be comforted, that I have done
it; then
all warfare must have an end and peace must come.” 101) When the
disciples
were surprised at the risen Lord's coming and filled with superstitious
fear, as
though they were seeing a ghost, Jesus showed them His hands, where the
marks of
the nails were still plainly visible; and His side, where the soldier's
lance-head had left a deep gash. This demonstration convinced the
disciples;
they were glad that they actually saw the Lord. It was the same body
which had
hung on the cross and thus earned and merited redemption for all men.
His
resurrection is not only a guarantee of our resurrection, but also of
the fact
that our vile bodies will be changed to conform to His glorified body,
and that
we shall be able to recognize our loved ones in heaven. Thus there is
great,
overwhelming joy for all Christians in the appearances of the risen
Lord. Jesus
now repeats His greeting as an introduction to a commission which He is
about to
give to them as His representatives. As the Father had sent Him into
the world,
so He now transferred the authority and the power of His calling to
them. They
were to carry the message of the peace of Easter into all the world. He
sent
them forth to preach the Gospel. For that is the summary and content of
the
Gospel, peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. And having named
them thus
as His messengers, as His ambassadors, the Lord formally inducts them
into this
office. He breathed on them, thus symbolizing the transmission of, and
actually
conveying to them, the Spirit who lived in Him, and whom He
had the authority to bestow. The power of the Spirit was to be with
them in the
Word: If you remit the sins of any, they are remitted to them; if you
retain
those of any, they are retained. Thus they received the power to
pronounce
forgiveness of sins; thus was the Office of the Keys instituted. The
forgiveness
of sins which Jesus earned by His suffering and death should be
imparted and
given to men through the announcement of the Gospel, publicly and
privately, to
single persons and to large congregations. This is the absolution of
sins. That
is Christ's will and commission: His disciples should pronounce
forgiveness,
should take away sins, and then everyone should know and believe that
by such
absolution his sins are actually forgiven and taken away. The Gospel is
not only
a report of the salvation earned by Jesus, but it is the application of
this
message, the imparting of the forgiveness of sins. Only he that will
not accept
this forgiveness, this mercy, this salvation, thereby excludes himself
from the
grace of God. If such a one is told this fact, his sins are thereby
retained.
This power and authority was not the sole prerogative of the apostles,
nor is it
now in the hands of any hierarchy, but it accompanies the Gospel, it is
contained in the commission of Christ to all His disciples to preach
the Gospel
to all nations. To the believers in general, to the Christian
congregation that
proclaims the message of the Gospel, the keys are given. The pastors
that
exercise this authority do so in the name of the congregation.
The
unbelief of Thomas and the second appearance to the Eleven: V. 24.
But
Thomas, one of the Twelve, called Didymus, was not with them when Jesus
came. V.
25. The other disciples, therefore, said unto him, We have seen the
Lord. But he
said unto them, Except I shall see in His hands the print of the nails,
and put
my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into His
side, I will
not believe. V. 26. And after eight days again His disciples were
within and
Thomas with them; then came Jesus, the doors being shut, and stood in
the midst,
and said, Peace be unto you. V. 27. Then saith He to Thomas, Reach
hither thy
finger, and behold My hands; and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it
into My
side; and be not faithless, but believing. V. 28. And Thomas answered
and said
unto Him, My Lord and my God. V. 29. Jesus saith unto him, Thomas,
because thou
hast seen Me, thou hast believed; blessed are they that have not seen,
and yet
have believed. Thomas, called Didymus, the Twin, loved his Lord
with true
devotion, as his words on the occasion of the death of Lazarus had
shown, John
11, 16. But he seems to have been of a rather sanguine temperament,
with some
leanings toward melancholy. He must be either in the highest realms of
bliss or
in a state of lowest dejection.
For some reason he had not been present with the other disciples on
Easter
evening, and therefore had not seen the Lord. The other disciples were
eager
with their news: We have seen the Lord. They were convinced of His
resurrection,
they knew that their Master was living, they had received His
commission. But
Thomas shook his head in unbelief and voiced his doubt in most emphatic
words.
The proof which he demanded for the resurrection of the Lord was of a
most
inclusive and conclusive nature. He not only wanted to see the risen
Master, he
was not satisfied with merely looking at the impressions or prints in
His hands
where the nails had been driven through the flesh; he also wanted to
back up the
evidence of the one sense by that of another, he wanted to feel the
wound, lest
he be led astray by an illusion. And he wanted to place his hand into
the gaping
wound of His side where the lance-head of the soldier had entered.
Those were
the conditions under which he proposed to believe the fact of the
resurrection,
and they certainly show the extent and depth of his doubt. Jesus, of
course, in
His omniscience, was fully aware of this attitude of Thomas, and He
arranged a
second appearance before the apostles, apparently for the express
purpose of
convincing Thomas and making him a proper witness of the resurrection.
It was
eight days afterward, on the following Sunday evening, that the
disciples were
again assembled, Thomas in this case being in their midst. And Jesus
repeated
the methods of the previous occasion, stepping into the circle of the
apostles
while they were sitting behind locked doors, and giving them the
greeting of
peace. And now the Lord, turning directly to Thomas, complied with, all
the
conditions as the doubting disciple had made them, inviting him to
extend his
finger and investigate both His hands, and to reach forth his hand and
put it
into His side. But Jesus adds, in the form of an impressive warning: Be
not
unbelieving, but believing. His faith, which was wavering badly and was
having a
hard battle with doubt, should not succumb altogether. The Lord was
willing
enough to have the test made if there were but chances of upholding a
disciple
in his trust in Him. Thomas, however, had no need of a test now that he
saw his
Master before him and heard His loving voice. His wavering faith
returned to its
full strength with one joyful strengthening by the word of the Lord,
giving
utterance to a wonderful confession concerning Jesus. In the tone of
the firmest
conviction Thomas exclaimed: My Lord and my God. His faith not only
knows that
his Lord and Master is alive, is risen from the dead, but he knows this
Man to
be the true God. By His resurrection from the dead, Jesus was declared
to be the
Son of God with power. His resurrection is a seal of the completed
redemption
and reconciliation of the world, by which also His deity is established
beyond a
doubt. It is a. miracle which only God can perform, to take His own
life out of
death. Jesus Christ is not only divine, but He is God Himself, true God
with the
Father and the Spirit. If this man, our Brother according to the flesh,
were not
true God, there would be no comfort for us in His death. But now there
can be no
doubt as to the complete and perfect redemption; for God in Christ,
Christ as
true God, was able to conquer all enemies, and to rise from the dead,
and will
live and reign through all eternity. But to gain the blessings of the
resurrection of Jesus, it is necessary that every believer learn to say
with
Thomas: My Lord and my God. That is the nature of
saving faith,
that it clings to Jesus, the Savior, and appropriates all His
redemption with a
certain, joyful trust. Jesus now gently reproves Thomas for his foolish
and
dangerous doubt. Since he had seen his risen Lord, he believed and thus
was
satisfied and happy. But it is true at all times that the bliss and
happiness of
perfect faith does not rest upon the evidences of the senses nor upon
feelings
and reason, but upon the Word of the Gospel. The apostles, the
witnesses of the
resurrection of Christ, 1 John 1, 1-3, have recorded the facts
concerning Jesus,
His person and His work, and the salvation which we have in His name.
Through
this Word we have communion with our Lord; in the Word He comes to us
and lives
in us. Thus we have His full blessing. “He that wishes to know what we
should
believe, let him hear what Thomas believes, namely, that Jesus is the
Son of God
and the Lord of life, who will help us out of sins and death unto life
and
righteousness. Such trust and hope is the true faith, not only to know
it, but
also to accept it and to comfort one's self over against death and sin.
Where
there is such faith and trust, there is salvation, and our sins should
not
hinder us; for by faith they are forgiven.” 102)
The
purpose of the Gospel of John: V. 30. And many other signs truly
did Jesus in
the presence of His disciples which are not written in this book; V.
31. but
these are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the
Son of
God, and that, believing, ye might have life through His name.
After
recording the indisputable evidences for the greatest miracle of all
and the
reception of the miracle by the disciples, John here summarizes and
states the
purpose of his gospel. He expressly writes that he has not nearly
exhausted the
recital of Christ's miracles, but has given an account of only so many
as are
necessary to convince the readers of the gospel and work faith in Jesus
the
Christ, the Savior, the Son of God, in their hearts. For; this is his
thesis, as
he distinctly asserts. His aim was to prove the deity of Christ and to
work
conviction in the hearts of men by such; proof, in. order that they
might
believe and by faith have the everlasting life which is in
Christ and is given by Christ to them that believe in His name.
That
name, Jesus Christ, is not a mere appellation, a meaningless sound, but
is
itself glorious, beautiful Gospel which gives to the believers eternal
life.
Summary. After Mary Magdalene and then Peter and John have inspected the empty grave, Jesus appears to Mary, on the evening of Easter Day to the disciples without Thomas, and eigh days later to them all, with the comforting evidence and message of the resurrection.