Filled with hate, ignorant of truth, lacking in faith, and void of righteousness the Jews had plotted to kill Jesus. Rome took ownership of their plot and made a statement of their authority in the act of crucifixion. In the course of less than twenty-four hours Jesus was arrested, accused, lied about, endured six mock trials, cursed, beaten, and in humiliation crucified naked before the viewing world. As the sun made its downward turn, he breathed his last and hung dead on the cross. As the dark of evening approached there emerged from the shadows a servant named Joseph who was from the town of Arimathea.
Some refer to Joseph as a secret disciple of Jesus. But his
thoughts regarding Jesus were not that secret. The gospel writers tell us that
he was a member of the council, “a good and righteous man” who was himself
“searching for the kingdom of God”. If his attitude regarding Jesus was private
it lost its privacy when in a council meeting, he refused to consent to the
majority opinion to work toward the demise of Jesus.
Joseph did not have the power to stop the violent death of
Jesus. He lacked adequate information about the meaning of the event. But he
had enough theological understanding of the significance of Jesus and enough
admiration for Jesus to serve him by administering proper burial.
We think of servants being poor but Joseph of Arimathea was
a rich man. One does not need to be rich to be of service to the Lord. But we
are to use whatever means we have to serve the Lord and His cause. If we have great
means we are called upon to use those means to advance the kingdom and minister
unto people. “To whom much is given, much is expected”.
Joseph was a servant with courage. He went to Pilate and
asked for the body of Jesus. Pilate was a weak ruler, so we might think that
did not take much courage. Under Roman law the body of someone who had been
executed was considered state property. Pilate could grant that body to anyone
he so desired. Or he could refuse to relinquish the body to anyone. In such
cases the bodies might be thrown into the nearby garbage dump and burned or at
best buried as a pauper in the local potter’s field. Joseph took the risk of
requesting the body from Pilate. But his real act of courage was that he, a
member of the council, was identifying himself with Jesus. He risked being
ostracized by his faith community. He risked trouble with the government. He
risked losing business and position.
Joseph was a rich man but he was not afraid of difficult
work. He engaged in the gruesome task of taking the tortured body of Jesus down
from the cross. He purchased a new linen shroud and with the help of Nicodemus
prepared the mangled body of Jesus for burial. Joseph had a heart willing to
sacrifice. He took Jesus and laid him in his own tomb that had been freshly cut
of the rock nearby. This was the tomb Joseph of had built for his own burial. It
had never been used. But now it had been defiled with the body of one who had
been executed as a criminal.
In reality Joseph’s tomb was occupied by the one who bore
the richness of heaven, the richest of the rich. But Paul reminds us that for
the sake of our salvation Jesus “became poor, so that you by his poverty might
become rich” (II Cor. 8:9). At the time of his burial Jesus had become the
poorest of the poor, stripped of all his wealth by the weight of our sins. Yet
by the sovereignty of God and because of Joseph’s servant heart he lay in a
rich man’s tomb awaiting the day of resurrection when all the richness of
heaven would be restored to him.
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