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As we continue in our journey through prophecies that Jesus fulfilled, we turn our attention back onto a portion of a longer prophecy about the Messiah’s life, death, and mission. While we have touched briefly on this prophecy a number of times earlier during our year podcasting through Jesus’ life, this prophecy includes a fascinating detail about the company Jesus would keep while He was buried.
Let’s read this excerpt from Isaiah’s prophecy, and discover what we can about Jesus’ time in the grave. Our prophecy and passage are found in the book of Isaiah, chapter 53, and we will read from the New American Standard Bible translation. In verse 9, Isaiah writes:
9 His grave was assigned with wicked men,
Yet He was with a rich man in His death,
Because He had done no violence,
Nor was there any deceit in His mouth.
In this verse, Isaiah, draws our attention to two interesting details. First, the grave of the Messiah would be assigned with wicked men. On one hand, this is not surprising, because, aside from Jesus who lived a perfect life, everyone else who could have been buried with Jesus or assigning a grave to Him would be sin-stained – or perhaps described using the word wicked.
However, it is interesting that even with this designation, Isaiah, draws attention to Jesus being with a rich man, and the reason for this is because He had done no violence and no deceit was in His mouth.
Before diving in to how amazing these lines are in this verse, let’s move forward and read what happened to Jesus’ body after He had given His last breath.
Reading from Matthew, chapter 27, and starting in verse 57, we learn that:
57 When it was evening, there came a rich man from Arimathea, named Joseph, who himself had also become a disciple of Jesus. 58 This man went to Pilate and asked for the body of Jesus. Then Pilate ordered it to be given to him. 59 And Joseph took the body and wrapped it in a clean linen cloth, 60 and laid it in his own new tomb, which he had hewn out in the rock; and he rolled a large stone against the entrance of the tomb and went away.
One thing I find amazing in this short description of Joseph from Arimathea is that we know almost nothing about Him from Matthew’s gospel. However, even with the minimal knowledge that we do have, we can see some amazing details framing how God stepped into the picture in what many might call the darkest part of history.
First off, if we imagine for a minute that Joseph had not shown up, or that he had not requested Jesus’ body, the likely outcome for Jesus’ corpse was that He would be tossed with all the other criminals into a common ditch grave with many other corpses. It is also possible, though I don’t recall how common it was at the time for the corpses of political enemies to have been tossed into a fire to be cremated. Either way, without Joseph from Arimathea stepping in to request Jesus’ body, the first line of Isaiah’s prophecy would have been the end of his description: “His grave was assigned with wicked men”. Because of the death Jesus faced, His body did not warrant any special treatment from those who were wicked.
However, because Joseph stepped in requesting Jesus’ body, we see a direct fulfillment of the second statement in Isaiah’s prophecy: “Yet He was with a rich man in His death”. I find it amazing that no details are given about the rich man Jesus would be with in His death, but it is amazing that every description of Joseph from Arimathea we read describes him as a rich man. Either Joseph was ridiculously wealthy, or all the gospels want to draw our attention to how his presence in Jesus’ burial directly fulfills Isaiah’s prophecy.
Moving to the last two lines of Isaiah’s prophecy, we discover something amazing when looking closely at these details. Isaiah frames the last idea in this prophetic verse by saying: “He was with a rich man in His death, Because He had done no violence, Nor was there any deceit in His mouth.”
In the last two phrases of this verse, we see a powerful idea hinted at regarding Jesus’ sacrifice. With the way this prophecy is written, the simple fact that Joseph stepped in with the gift of a tomb, validated Jesus’ sacrifice as being accepted by God. Isaiah writes that because the Messiah had done no violence, and because He had never said anything deceitful, He would be buried with the rich. In a subtle way, God the Father validates Jesus’ sacrifice immediately following His death by directing the details of this event to allow for a rich man to ultimately bury Jesus and fulfill this prophecy. By bringing Joseph into the picture, God the Father validated Jesus’ ministry as one that did no violence, and as one that was not deceitful in any way.
This is incredible to think about. While the disciples were hiding for their lives, and while the religious leaders were plotting what to do next, God the Father was validating Jesus’ sacrifice leading into the opening of that year’s Passover celebration.
While many people didn’t realize it at the time, Joseph from Arimathea also stepped in with the perfect gift at the perfect time. Through Joseph’s gift of a tomb, the stage was set for the resurrection, and everyone who was interested in paying attention would have a clear place to look. While the religious leaders were interested because they wanted to keep the disciples from stealing the body, and while Satan was interested because he wanted to keep Jesus in the tomb, everything about crucifixion weekend pointed forward to Jesus’ sacrifice being accepted, and an impossible-to-stop resurrection on the third day.
Joseph from Arimathea shows up at exactly the right time with the perfect gift for the occasion. This detail tells us that God knows the future, and with whatever happens in this life, we can know that God has orchestrated all the details towards saving you and me for eternity.
As we come to the end of another podcast episode, here are the challenges I will leave you with:
As I always open by challenging you, intentionally seek God first in your life and purposefully trust God with whatever the future holds. Know and believe that God knows the future and that with whatever tomorrow holds, God has prepared the best possible outcome. God’s ultimate goal is saving you, me, and as many people as possible for eternity.
Also, continue to pray and study the Bible for yourself to grow your personal relationship with God. While pastors, speakers, authors, or even podcasters have ideas to share, take everything you read, hear, and see and compare it with the truth found in the Bible. The Bible has stood the test of time, and it has tucked within it everything we need to know to grow a personal relationship with God.
And as I end every set of challenges by saying in one way or another, never stop short of, back away from, chicken out of, or ignore where God wants to lead you to in your life with Him!
Year of Prophecy – Episode 40: Through a strange sounding verse pulled out of a longer Messianic prophecy, discover how God validates Jesus’ sacrifice before the Sabbath had even begun on crucifixion weekend.
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