Reflection: (Today’s reflection is given by Justin Moffatt)
God is the God of life, not of death! In Matthew 27:50, we read: “And when Jesus had cried out again in a loud voice, he gave up his spirit.” And when he did, three things happened AT THAT MOMENT.
First: ‘At that moment the curtain of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom.’ The way into the Holy of Holies is now open to all who go in by faith. You can know God. The thing separating us is sin, and God has now fully dealt with it. The Lamb has been sacrificed. It is finished. And the curtain torn. How? From top to bottom. In other words, by God (from above) rather than from our effort (from below).
Second: ‘The earth
shook, the rocks split and the tombs broke open.’ This is difficult for some. But on one level, no more difficult than any other miracle. And like most, if not all the miracles, it points higher to a grander truth: something was happening cosmically that touched the earth. And the result of this sacrifice is that life is being offered. Beyond death. And for some at that moment – these few in verse 52 – they experienced in the middle of history what we will experience at the end of history: by his death, we live!
And third: “When the centurion and those with him who were guarding Jesus saw the earthquake and all that had happened, they were terrified, and exclaimed, ‘Surely he was the Son of God!'” (vs 54). Not just the centurion, but also
those who witnessed it yielded their life in that moment. They recognised who Jesus is: the King.
Question: What does it mean to you that Jesus has defeated death (and all that goes with it: decay, injustice, suffering and most of all, sin) to give us life? For further reading, have a look at these promises from God to defeat death: Isaiah 26:19, Psalm 16:9-10, Daniel 12:2, and famously in Ezekiel 37:12-13.
Prayer: Dear Father God, thank you that we who are ‘in Christ’ have access to you, and the promise of resurrection. Amen.
We are reading the Bible with Paul White (with contributions from Justin Moffatt) until 7th April.