|

He
is Risen!
From
Gethsemane to the Garden Tomb
by Maurine and Scot Proctor
Excerpted
from Source of the Light, A Witness and Testimony of Jesus Christ,
the Savior and Redeemer of All
(Note: All of
the images featured may be clicked on for enlargement.)
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| Christ
and His disciples would have passed by the tomb of Absalom at
night. |
With
the light of a nearly full moon illuminating the way, Jesus Christ
and his apostles climbed the Mount of Olives to the Garden of Gethsemane,
a place where they had often retreated together. This garden was
actually an olive vineyard, its name Gethsemane meaning
"place of the olive press," and in this hour there would be inconceivable,
heartrending pressing for the Lord. Taking only Peter, James, and
John beyond the garden entrance, He "began to be sore amazed, and
to be very heavy," (1) saying to
them, "My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death; tarry ye
here, and watch with me." Then removing Himself about a stone's
throw, in the depths of anguish He "fell on his face, and prayed
saying, O my Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me,"
(2) "nevertheless not my will, but thine be done."
(3) "Abba," (4) He called,
using the intimate personal word for "Father" used particularly
in family circles.
The intense agony Jesus faced in the garden was not from fear of
death of the pain of crucifixion. As the Son of an eternal Father,
no one could take His life from Him. But in these midnight hours,
He would face the ultimate contest with all the powers of darkness
as He took upon Himself the pain, sin, infirmities, and anguish
of a corrupted world. "It was not physical pain, nor mental anguish
alone, that caused Him to suffer such torture as to produce an extrusion
of blood from every pore; but a spiritual agony of soul such as
only God was capable of experiencing. No other man, however great
his powers of physical or mental endurance, could have suffered
so; for his human organism would have succumbed, and...produced
unconsciousness and welcome oblivion. In that hour of anguish, Christ
met and overcame all the horrors that Satan, 'the prince of this
world' could inflict." (5)
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| Gethsemane
means "place of the olive press." |
In
modern revelation, Jesus says of the event, "I, God, have suffered
these things for all, that they might not suffer if they would repent;
but if they would not repent, they must suffer even as I; which
suffering caused myself, even God, the greatest of all, to tremble
because of pain, and to bleed at every pore, and to suffer both
body and spirit-and would that I might not drink the bitter cup
and shrink." (6)
In complete anguish of body and spirit, Christ endured the unendurable,
"and his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down
to the ground." There appeared an angel unto him from heaven, strengthening
him. And being in an agony, he prayed more earnestly."
(7) This obedient Son whose communication with His Father
was so perfect that He could say, "He that hath seen me hath seen
the Father," (8) prayed yet more
earnestly. What words He must have said in that impassioned prayer,
as He in some way incomprehensible to mortal minds took upon Himself
the punishment for all the sins of the world, however loathsome,
paying the price, the incalculable debt for our weakness that we
could not pay. He paid the price, with an infinite atonement, for
all who would repent in His name and be at one again with the Lord.
Since all things past, present, and future are continually before
the Lord, (9) in some way we cannot
understand, even the sins we will yet commit added to the agony
Christ faced in Gethsemane.
Without this bitter cup, the drinking of whose dregs was the weightiest
task in all the universe, we would be spiritually dead. Once having
sinned, we would be unclean, unable to return to our Heavenly Father,
debtors faced with an impossible debt. Without repentance, the day
will come when with absolute clarity we will stand before the bar
of God and "shall have a perfect knowledge of all our guilt, and
our uncleanness, and our nakedness." (10)
With repentance, made possible by a perfect Son, a sacrificial Lamb,
paying a price that was not His, our staggering burdens of sin and
guilt can be lifted, and we can be given new life. Who in this heartbreaking
world of self-disappointment does not need this gift? When in the
sorrow of our hearts we cry out, "O Jesus, thou Son of God, have
mercy on me, who am in the gall of bitterness,"
(11) there is One who hears with mercy because of this
night in Gethsemane.
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| Christ
came to a garden where He and His disciples had often come
before. |
Orson
F. Whitney's Vision
Orson F. Whitney
saw this scene in vision and recorded, "I seemed to be in the Garden
of Gethsemane, a witness of the Savior's agony. I saw Him as plainly
as ever I have seen anyone. Standing behind a tree in the foreground,
I beheld Jesus, with Peter,
James and John, as they came through a little wicket gate at my
right...As He prayed, the tears streamed down his face, which was
toward me. I was so moved at the sight that I also wept, out of
pure sympathy. My whole heart went out to him: I loved him with
all my soul, and longed to be with him as I longed for nothing else...The
Savior, with the three Apostles,...were about to depart...I could
endure it no longer. I ran from behind the tree, fell at his feet,
clasped Him around the knees, and begged him to take me with him.
I shall never forget the kind and gentle manner in which He stopped,
raised me up, and embraced me...I felt the very warmth of his body,
as he held me in his arms and said in tenderest tones: 'No my son,
these have finished their work; they can go with me; but you must
stay and finish yours.' Still I clung to him. Gazing up into his
face-for he was taller than I-I besought him fervently: 'Well, promise
me that I will come to you at the last.' Smiling sweetly, He said,
'That will depend entire upon yourself.'"
(12)
The
Meaning of Olive Oil
As all things
were created to bear record of the Savior, so Gethsemane, the oil
press, bears silent testimony of that grueling night. Olive oil
was the very essence of life for Israel. Light came in a dark night
because olive oil filled the lamps. Balm and healing came because
olive oil was poured into wounds. Olive mash was fuel. But olive
oil was obtained from the olives only by subjecting them to extraordinary
pressure, crushing them under a stone press. Under this relentless
weight, the olive, which is bitter, produced oil, which is sweet.
So it is with the atonement. >From the bitterness of that night
came all that is precious and sweet about life, all that gives light
in the darkness. When we are anointed with consecrated oil, it is
through Christ's sacrifice that we are healed, given balm from the
olive press He faced for our wounds.
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| Ancient
trees on the Mount of Olives are twisted and gnarled and racked
with the ravages of time. |
He
had asked His apostles, Peter, James, and John to watch with Him,
but twice when He arose from prayer He found them "sleeping for
sorrow." (13) Jesus said, "What,
could ye not watch with me one hour?" Then He added in sympathy,
"The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak."
(14) Finally, the third He came and found them asleep,
He said, "Sleep on now, and take your rest: it is enough...behold,
the Son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners."
(15)
The
Betrayal
Perhaps even
at that minute He could already see the string of torchlights coming
up the mount, a multitude of armed soldiers led by Judas. "Mine
own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, which did eat of my bread,
hath lifted up his heel against me." (16)
Approaching Jesus, Judas greeted Him and "not only kissed [him],
but covered Him with kisses, kissed Him repeatedly, loudly, effusively."
(17) Defending Jesus against the arrest, Peter raised
his sword and cut off the right ear of Malchus, the high priest's
servant. Touching the ear, Jesus healed it, saying, "Thinkest thou
that I cannot now pray to my Father, and he shall presently give
me more than twelve legions of angels?" (18)
But now was the time for divine restrains as He allowed Himself
to be taken captive that the scripture might be fulfilled.
A
Night of Inquisition
As the soldiers
took Jesus, "they saw before them nothing but a weary unarmed man,
whom one of His own most intimate followers had betrayed, and whose
arrest was simply watched in helpless agony by a few terrified Galileans"
(19) who
finally fled in panic. This was the beginning of a long and terrible
night of inquisition. First, He was led to degenerate Annas, the
former High Priest for seven years, the money-hungry usurper of
Jewish power. One of the abominable men of the earth, He appointed
and controlled the High Priest, who would have slavishly followed
his word.
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| Actual
steps where Christ would have walked after the tremendous pain
and suffering in Gethsemane. Steps lead to Palace of Caiaphas.
|
Next,
in exhaustion, He was led bound to Caiaphas, the legal High Priest
in whose palace at least a quorum of the Sanhedrin was gathered.
They had before them a prisoner innocent of any crime. "Their dilemma
was real, for themselves were sharply divided on all major issues
save one-that the man Jesus must die." However, since they needed
to find a charge, they sought false witnesses. Many were eager to
bare false witness, but "their testimony was so false, so shadowy,
so self-congratulatory, that it all melted to nothing." Through
all their hopeless argument, Jesus listened in majestic silence,
which only confounded them more and Caiaphas, enraged, hurled this
question: "Answerest thou nothing?...I adjure thee by the living
God, that thou tell us whether thou be the Christ, the Son of God."
Jesus answered, for it had never been a secret, "Thou hast said."...
(20)
More
Trials
After the Savior's
interview with Caiaphas, Christ's captors spit in His face and buffeted
Him and made up a cruel game. Blindfolding Him, they slapped Him
with the palms of their hands and then taunted, "Prophesy, who is
it that smote thee?" When, at last, the lingering hours of the night
had passed, Jesus was brought before the Sanhedrin for the sham
of a trial, which would be a flagrant violation of their own laws.
The charge was blasphemy against the only one who could not commit
blasphemy-the Lord Himself. "What need we any further witness?"
(21)
They were, however, bent on His death, and being subject to Roman
overlords, they could not impose it themselves. So, followed by
a riotous mob, they led Him bound to Herod's magnificent palace,
where Pilate, the Roman procurator, was keeping a wary watch over
the Passover rabble. This being a Gentile house with leavened bread,
the fastidious Jewish leaders would not defile themselves and enter,
though ironically then found no defilement in seeking to kill the
innocent. Thus it was that Pilate came out to them asking, "What
accusation bring ye against this man?" It was a hard question from
a practical politician, and they had searched for and found the
charge-not blasphemy, which would mean nothing to a Roman. No, this
time they charged Him with sedition. He is a traitor to Caesar.
He calls Himself the king of the Jews! Of all those who examined
Jesus, Pilate was the least guilty of malice towards Him. Something
about the Lord touched the man, and after questioning Him he said
frankly, "I find in him no fault at all."
(22) To this the chief priests responded in a clamor of
accusations, among which a single word stood out: out ".Galilee"
Pilate thought he saw a way out. With relief, he sent the Savior
on to Herod, whose jurisdiction included the green hills of Galilee.
Herod had killed John the Baptist, so before the cruel and insolent
questioning of the despot, Jesus said not a word. For the weak,
the sick, the child, the sinner, Christ had soothing, loving tones,
but for the tyrant He had only silence, all the more infuriating
to Herod, for he longed to see a miracle performed.
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| Though
Pilate had been warned by his wife to let Jesus go, and though
he wanted to free him, yet, because of the throng of people,
he let Him be crucified. |
Before
Pilate
The chief priests
and rulers of the people were assembled, and the mocked, spat-upon,
exhausted Jesus was once again brought before Pilate. Word of His
arrest had spread through the streets of the city, and a mob of
onlookers had gathered. To these Pilate made his pronouncement:
"Ye have brought this man unto me, as one that perverteth the people:
and behold I, having examined him before you, have found no fault
in this man." (23) This could have
been enough; the Roman leader had spoken. But the pack of fanatics
before him thirsted for blood. Pilate's pity for the Lord was crushed
under his cowardice, for Pilate had that most inconvenient of burdens,
a guilty past. Several times before, he had ignited Jewish fury
against Him. One time, for instance, he had confiscated money from
the sacred treasury to build an aqueduct and then had sent soldiers
in Jewish costume among the people carrying hidden daggers to punish
those who had opposed him. Now he was caught; for past sins, he
would sin again, violating his own best instincts.
So he tried another kind of appeasement. It was the custom of the
Passover to release a criminal. Here were two men, perhaps even
standing before the mob as Pilate spoke. One was Barabbas, the leader
of an insurrection, a murderer. The other was Jesus, the proclaimer
of peace, who raised the dead. "Whom will ye that I release unto
you? Barabbas, or Jesus which is called Christ?"
(24) Some in that crowd had been healed by the Lord; some
had heard His healing words, but the chief priests moved among the
people stirring them up until they shouted, "Barabbas. Release Barrabas."
Pilate
would have released Jesus, and his feelings were even more stirred
when his wife came to him pleading, "Have thou nothing to do with
that just man; for I have suffered many things this day in a dream
because of him." (25) Whatever these
flickerings of conscience, Pilate sent Jesus to be scourged. The
soldiers wove a crown of thorns and jammed it on that tired head;
they placed a purple robe on His shoulders and then, gloating and
leering, they smote Him and spit upon Him saying, "Hail, king of
the Jews." (26) Consider this humiliation,
this stinging injustice, and know that He who has suffered all things
can succor us in every hour.
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| Golgatha,
or place of the skull. It is likely that Jesus was crucified
along the road, not high on the hill, so that passers by could
further humiliate and mock him. |
Now
Pilate brought the bleeding wounded Jesus again before the crowd.
"Behold the man!" he said. Was there even now no stirrings of pity
for Him? Where was the man or woman who would speak up? Where were
all those who were waving palms just five days before? Their hosannas
had vanished on a fickle wind. No, there was only Pilate's corrupt
voice repeating, "I find no fault in Him." It was still early morning
when Pilate gave in: "Shall I crucify your King?" and the people
answered "Away with him, crucify him...We have no king but Caesar."
(27)
"When
Pilate saw that he could prevail nothing, but that rather a tumult
was made, he took water, and washed his hands before the multitude,
saying, I am innocent of the blood of this just person." And the
people shouted, "His blood be on us, and on our children."
(28) So Jesus, numbered with the transgressors, carried
His cross to the place of the skull, Golgatha, until He collapsed
under the weight and mounting misery. The men along the road were
silent; some women wept. The cross was raised between two thieves,
and at noon the earth turned dark in shame.
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|
The sky turned dark and there was a great earthquake as Jesus
died upon the cross. |
The
Crucifixion
For capital punishment,
the Jews stoned, burned, beheaded, or strangled, but the Romans
chose the cruelest punishment of all-crucifixion. It was a lingering
death for its tortured victims. "The unnatural position made every
moment painful; the lacerated veins and crushed tendons throbbed
with incessant anguish; the wounds, inflamed by exposure, gradually
gangrened;...there was added to them the intolerable pang of a burning
and raging thirst," (29) dizziness,
cramp, starvation, sleeplessness, and shame. In Jerusalem, a charitable
women's group administered a mixture of wine and drugs to dull the
pain as the victim was stretched on the ground and nailed to the
crossbeam, but this Jesus refused.
Stripped,
He was raised on the cross with a mocking sign over His head: "JESUS
OF NAZARETH THE KING OF THE JEWS." (30)
As the soldiers beneath Him cast lots for what was probably His
only material possession, a coat without seam, He asked in their
behalf, "Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do."
As He hung in anguish, the rulers and people gaped and cursed and
condemned Him, taunting, "He saved others; let him save himself."
(31) Through the anguish, He had only loving words. To
His mother, Mary, who must have felt the pangs of near-death in
her own body, it was concern that she be cared for. To the beloved
John, He said, "Behold thy mother," (32)
and from that hour John took her into his own home. To the thief
who would repent, He gave hope. At noon the heavens grew black for
three hours, as if the universe itself were weeping for the agony
of the Creator. In that time all the infinite agonies and merciless
pains of Gethsemane returned, and His Father's spirit itself withdrew
that the victory might be His. At the ninth hour, 3:00 p.m., "Jesus
cried with a loud voice, saying...My God, my God, why hast thou
forsaken me?" In that eerie midafternoon darkness, someone ran and
filled a sponge with vinegar. Having received the vinegar, Jesus
said, "Father, it is finished. Thy will is done." As He died, the
veil of the temple was rent, and the earth quaked and rocks were
rent as it to say with a nearby centurion, "Truly this man was the
Son of God." (33)
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| Track
for a large stone still remains in front on an empty tomb outside
the walls of Jerusalem. |
Joyous
Resurrection
While it was
yet dark on the morning of Sunday after the crucifixion, Mary Magdalene
and other women arrived at the tomb of Jesus to mourn and anoint
with spices the hastily entombed body. To their utter surprise and
sadness, when they looked in the tomb Jesus' body was not there.
Mary immediately ran to tell Peter and John of their findings: "They
have taken the Lord out of the sepulchre, and we know not where
they have laid him." This news caused the disciples to run speedily
to the tomb to see for themselves, "for as yet they knew not the
scripture that he must rise again from the dead." As they looked
in the tomb, something in John leaped with joy, and he "believed."
(34) Yet he and Peter returned to their residences. As
Mary and other women lingered by the tomb, "behold two men stood
by them in shining garments," and "they said unto them, Why seek
ye the living among the dead?" (35)
Fear not ye; for we know that ye seek Jesus who was crucified. He
is not here for he is risen, as he said; "Come, see the place where
the Lord lay." (36)
Mary's
Moment
As yet, Mary
Magdalene did not understand the words of the angels, for her sorrow
at the loss of her beloved Lord was so stinging. Mary turned herself
away from the tomb and saw someone in the garden whom she did not
recognize. He asked her, "Woman, why weepest thou? Whom seekest
thou?" Supposing Him to be the gardener, she boldly said, "Sir,
if thou have borne him hence, tell me where thou hast laid him,
and I will take him away." Mary's love for the Lord was so powerful
that she offered to physically take the body by herself and see
to his proper burial. Now came one of the greatest moments in all
of history, for this man was not the gardener-it was Jesus Christ
with a resurrected body of flesh and bone. And He made Himself known
by simply calling her by name in tones so familiar: "Mary." Now
she saw, becoming the first witness of the risen Lord. Her tears
of sorrow turned to joy as she exclaimed, "Rabboni,"
(37) which means "My beloved master."
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| Near
this very spot Christ gently called out to a weeping woman by
simply saying, "Mary." |
What
joy to this woman and to all humanity! "But now is Christ risen
from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept...For
as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive."
(38) Mary Magdalene reached forward to worship and love
the Lord. Jesus said to her, "Hold me not; for I am not yet ascended
to my Father." Whether this meant for her not to keep Him long or
whether she was not to physically touch the Lord is unknown. Perhaps
the Lord was reserving His first embrace as a glorified and perfected
being for His own Father in Heaven, also a glorified and perfected
being.
When Mary told the apostles that she had seen the living Lord, her
"words seemed to them as idle tales, and they believed them not."
Later Jesus appeared to Peter, His chief apostle, who perhaps may
have wondered that the Master would ever again call him His servant.
This was a day never to be forgotten. Ancient witnesses declare
its truth in the holy records, and witnesses today have it borne
to their souls by the power of the Holy Ghost. "He is risen! He
is risen! Tell it out with joyful voice. He has burst his three
days' prison; Let the whole wide earth rejoice. Death is conquered;
man is free. Christ has won the victory."
(39)
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| "He
is not here, for He is risen." |
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| An
empty garden tomb further testifies of the resurrection of the
Savior and Redeemer, Jesus Christ. |
Notes
1.
Mark 14:33
2.
Matthew 26:38,39
3.
Luke 22:42
4.
Mark 14:36
5.
James E. Talmage, Jesus the Christ (Salt Lake City:
Deseret Book Co., 1982) p. 568-69.
6.
D&C 19:16-18
7.
Luke 22:43-44
8.
John 14:9
9.
See D&C 130:7
10.
2 Nephi 9:14
11.
Alma 36:18
12.
Orson F. Whitney, Through Memory's Halls. (Independence,
Mo.; Zion's Printing and Publishing Co. 1930), pp. 82-83.)
13.
Luke 22:45
14.
Matthew 26:40-41
15.
Mark 14:41
16.
Psalm 41:9
17.
Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah
(Iowan Falls, Iowa: World Bible Publishers, 1971) 1:132.
18.
Matthew 26:53
19.
Frederic W. Farrar, The Life of Christ (Portland:
Fountain Publications, 1964), p. 61
20.
Matthew 26:62-63,64
21.
Luke 22:64,71
22.
John 18:29,38
23.
Luke 23:14
24.
Matthew 27:17
25.
Matthew 27:19
26.
John 19:3
27.
John 19: 5, 4,15
28.
Matthew 27:24-25
29.
Farrar, Life of Christ, p. 619
30.
John 19:19
31.
Luke 23: 34,35, Matthew 27:43
32.
John 19:27
33.
Mark 15:39
34.
John 20, 2,9,8
35.
Luke 24: 4,5
36.
JST Matthew 28:4-5
37.
John 20: 15,16
38.
1 Corinthians 15: 20,22
39.
Hymns, No. 199
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