The Bible Recap - Day 318 (Matthew 28, Mark 16) - Year 7
Episode Date: November 14, 2025FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - Podcast: Reconciling Accounts of the Resurrection - TBR Bookshelf Graphics - Finishers Page Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the ent...ire website, author, organization, etc. Their views may not represent our own. SHOW NOTES: - Follow The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | TikTok | YouTube - Follow Tara-Leigh Cobble: Instagram - Read/listen on the Bible App or Dwell App - Learn more at our Start Page - Become a RECAPtain - Shop the TBR Store - Credits PARTNER MINISTRIES: D-Group International Israelux The God Shot TLC Writing & Speaking DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
If you're doing our New Testament plan, today we finished our first and second books,
and if you're doing the whole Bible, we finished our 40th and 41st books. Congratulations.
It's also kind of a big day in Bible reading plans regardless because it's resurrection day.
In 1 Corinthians 15, when Paul writes about this moment,
30 years after the fact, he says, if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain
and your faith is in vain. The death and resurrection of Christ is the hinge point of history
and the foundation of our faith. Roughly three days have passed since Jesus was crucified,
and it's now the pre-dawn hours of Sunday morning. While it's still dark, there's another
earthquake that happens concurrent with the appearance of an angel, and it seems they may be
working in tandem to roll the stone away. We've talked about this before, but angels always appear
as human males, which is one reason why Mark's gospel may refer to the angel as a young man.
Angels are often dressed in white, and while scripture never shows them with wings or
halos, their appearance is usually described as radiant or like lightning.
There are some scripture-based theories that they may be very large, like bigger than shack big,
and when they encounter humans, they often open with the phrase, fear not, probably because
of their size and because it seems like they can travel at the speed of thought and manifest
out of thin air. Angels are maybe terrifying. So when the guard,
see the angel, they basically become catatonic. But here come Mary Magdalene and Bonus Mary,
we're not sure exactly which Mary she is or if we've even met her before, and Joanna and
Salome. Here's something worth pointing out before we get too deep into this. Some Gospels record
two angels, and some Gospels record only one Mary. But as we've seen, the authors tell the part
of the story that shines a light on the point they're trying to make. It doesn't mean there's
any kind of contradiction or manipulation, just a different focus. When the women arrive, the angel
speaks to them and tells them not to be afraid. I kind of love that he didn't tell that to the guards.
He's not there for them. He's there to give a message to the followers of Jesus. It's fine and
fitting for his enemies to be afraid. You may have a note in your Bible that this is where the oldest
manuscripts of Mark's Gospel end, at the raising of Christ in verse 8. A lot of what's said in
verses 9 through 20 can be found elsewhere in Scripture, so we'll address those parts when we get
to them. But for the parts that only appear here, since they're questionable, we'll just let
scripture whisper. The angel tells the women that Jesus has been raised from the dead. He invites
them to see the empty tomb, then tells them to spread the word to the others. So they go and spread
the word, but even then it seems like maybe Mary Magdalene still doesn't quite understand,
at least according to John's gospel. Since we're covering the resurrection in today's recap,
I have to spill a few of the beans from tomorrow's reading in order to cover all four gospel accounts.
So forgive me. The timeline isn't given clearly here, but it seems like a lot of people keep
returning to the scene and having different encounters each time.
The best sense I can make of the order of events is that the women show up and see the angel
in the empty tomb, the women leave and tell the disciples, Peter and John run back to check things
out, and Mary goes back as well, and maybe some of the other women join her too.
Meanwhile, the guards have shaken off their shock and they go back into the city to tell the
authorities what they just saw. The elders bribed the soldiers to lie about what happened and say
that his body was stolen by his disciples during the night. The soldiers realize they can be in big
trouble for leaving the tomb, so they agree to the conspiracy. When Peter and John come to see for
themselves, John stoops to look in, but Peter, ever the daredevil, goes all the way into the tomb,
then John follows. John's account says they both saw the linen grave clothes bolded up and placed aside.
One reason this is noteworthy is because they may have still wondered at this point if his body
had been stolen by grave robbers, but thieves don't fold laundry. They never would have taken the time
to unbind him, fold the clothes up, and place them to the side. They'd just take the body, mummy rag,
and all. So this is one of the disciples' first clues that Jesus has risen from the dead.
Meanwhile, Mary is outside sobbing, probably dealing with a whole mixture of emotions that include
feeling confused and elated and hopeful and fearful. She stoops to look back into the tomb,
maybe trying to make sense of it all or just double check that she's not going crazy,
and she sees two angels sitting at each end of where Jesus' body had been, one at the head
and one at the foot. What's significant about this is that it resembles the description of the
mercy seat. The mercy seat is the cover for the ark of the covenant, and it's the very spot where
God's presence would come to dwell with his people in the temple. The mercy seat had two cherubim,
one on each end. In Exodus 25-22, God told the Israelites, I will meet with you there above the
mercy seat between the two cherubim that are over the ark of the testimony. Granted, cherubim and angels
are two different types of created being, but they're both agents of God sent to mark out his plan.
And there, between those two angels, God's presence had been made manifest, not only in the death of his son, but in the raising of his son.
When Mary turns around, she's in the darkness of the tomb, and it's probably still dark outside, or maybe the sun is starting to breach the horizon.
And she sees a man outside the tomb. She assumes he's the gardener.
Remember from yesterday how the soldiers took Jesus clothes and cast lots for them?
In this day, most men had only one tunic.
It was usually made for them by their mother, and they wore it every day.
Scholars say you could probably recognize a person at a distance just by the cut and color of their tunic.
But Jesus doesn't have his tunic anymore.
We don't know what new clothes he's wearing or where he got them, and it's dark outside,
and maybe he's even backlit by the rising sun, and Mary still has tears in her eyes,
and she has no way of knowing that the man she thinks is a gardener is actually the risen Christ standing in front of her.
But he speaks her name, Mary, and suddenly she knows.
She weeps and falls at his feet and grabs on to him and worships him.
There are a few things worth pointing out here.
First, Jesus receives worship.
This serves as evidence of his deity.
Second, Matthew 28-9 tells us she grabbed his feet.
He's not an apparition or a ghost.
He's a real risen body.
Third, in this day, women could not be witnesses in court.
They were considered unreliable.
If someone were making this whole story up,
they would have chosen a more reliable witness in that culture,
to help give this story more validity.
But Jesus has always gone to the rejected, to the outcasts, to those considered less than.
It's such a Jesus move to have his first resurrected revealing be to a woman,
much less a woman who was once possessed by seven demons.
I love that about him.
It's one of my favorite moments in scripture.
You'll get to read all about it tomorrow.
As for today, my Godshot was in Matthew 2810,
where Jesus tells Mary to let his brothers, the disciples, know he's alive.
The last time we saw them all together, he told them they would all fall away on account of him.
And they did, and it was in the moment of his deepest need.
But despite their betrayals, he still calls them his brothers and he still can't wait to see them.
I love his heart. I'm in awe of it. He's where the joy is.
You guys, we are officially halfway through the New Testament reading plan.
And what better way to celebrate that than with getting to read about our Savior's resurrection?
The story is far from over, and we don't want you to miss any of it, so keep going.
I'm praying for your time in the word, even in the busyness of this season, to be a peaceful
spot in your day. I'm praying you'll continue to see God more and more in these chapters
you're reading, because he's where the peace is, and he's where the joy is.
