38-40. Joseph of Arimathea--"a rich man"
(Mt 27:57),
thus fulfilling
Isa 53:9;
"an honorable counsellor," a member of the Sanhedrim, and of good
condition, "which also waited for the kingdom of God"
(Mr 15:43),
a devout expectant of Messiah's kingdom; "a good man and a just, the
same had not consented to the counsel and deed of them"
(Lu 23:50, 51
--he had gone the length, perhaps, of dissenting and protesting in open
council against the condemnation of our Lord); "who also himself was
Jesus' disciple,"
(Mt 27:57).
being a disciple of Jesus, but secretly, for fear of the Jews--"He
went in boldly unto Pilate"
(Mr 15:43)
--literally, "having taken courage went in," or "had the boldness to go
in." Mark alone, as his manner is, notices the boldness which
this required. The act would without doubt identify him for the
first time with the disciples of Christ. Marvellous it certainly
is, that one who while Jesus was yet alive merely refrained from
condemning Him, not having the courage to espouse His cause by one
positive act, should, now that He was dead, and His cause apparently
dead with Him, summon up courage to go in personally to the Roman
governor and ask permission to take down and inter the body. But if
this be the first instance, it is not the last, that a seemingly
dead Christ has wakened a sympathy which a living one had failed to
evoke. The heroism of faith is usually kindled by desperate
circumstances, and is not seldom displayed by those who before were the
most timid, and scarce known as disciples at all. "And Pilate
marvelled if he were already dead"
(Mr 15:44)
--rather "wondered that he was already dead." "And calling the
centurion, he asked him whether He had been any while dead"
(Mr 15:44)
--Pilate could hardly credit what Joseph had told him, that He had been
dead "some time," and, before giving up the body to His friends, would
learn how the fact stood from the centurion, whose business it was to
oversee the execution. "And when he knew it of the centurion"
(Mr 15:45),
that it was as Joseph had said, "he gave"--rather "made a gift of"--"the
body to Joseph"; struck, possibly, with the rank of the petitioner and
the dignified boldness of the petition, in contrast with the spirit of
the other party and the low rank to which he had been led to believe all
the followers of Christ belonged. Nor would he be unwilling to Show that
he was not going to carry this black affair any farther. But, whatever
were Pilate's motives, two most blessed objects were thus secured: (1)
The reality of our Lords death was attested by the party of all
others most competent to decide on it, and certainly free from all
bias--the officer in attendance--in full reliance on whose testimony
Pilate surrendered the body: (2) The dead Redeemer, thus delivered out
of the hands of His enemies, and committed by the supreme political
authority to the care of His friends, was thereby protected from all
further indignities; a thing most befitting indeed, now that His work
was done, but impossible, so far as we can see, if His enemies had been
at liberty to do with Him as they pleased. How wonderful are even the
minutest features of this matchless History!
JFB.
Picture Study Bible