Mark 15:42-47 · The Burial of Jesus
Joey and Nicky at Skull Mountain
Mark 15:42-47
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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Prop: Anointing oil (preferably frankincense or myrrh)

Joey and Nicky at Skull Mountain --

It sounds like a mystery like Nancy Drew or the Hardy Boys, doesn’t it? Or for those with a slightly more sinister flair, a story by E. L. Stine.

Intrigue, Mystery, Mayhem, and a good dose of the gruesome. And slightly Spooky. The events surrounding Jesus’ death were certainly strange and unusual.

The High Priest and his family of former and future high priests had been pushing to get something done about Jesus before the Passover celebration. He had ridden in on a donkey during the Procession of the Lambs, and the people had laid down their cloaks for him just like they had for Jehu. They really thought he was a King . . . .King of the Jews! They had waved palms not for the high priest and his paschal lamb, but for this man, who went to a lot of trouble to signify his “kingship.”

What if the Romans found out, and thought they were supporting him. What if the people actually revolted! He was trouble this guy. The Procession proved it! And not only that!

Then he spent the entire day embarrassing them all in the Temple courtyard itself, teaching the people, huge numbers who had gathered around to hear him, that the high priests were wrong. Even insulted them to their faces in front of everyone. He was garnering more and more attention. The people were gaining power –and courage. Something had to be done. And done quickly.

They had gotten their break when Judas, Jesus’ right-hand man and treasurer (greedy little man, but who cared if they got what they wanted?), had come directly to them, asking how he could help. He had gotten angry with his mentor. It seemed to Judas that Jesus had gone off the deep end when he allowed “that woman” to bathe him in an entire jar of nard. That was the last straw. He would put a stop to it. And he’d get on the good side of the priests in the process. Jesus was going down. No doubt about it. Time to save his own skin. Look out for himself! Surely they’d only arrest Jesus. Keep him quiet for a while. Maybe then he’d see reason. Maybe then Jesus would calm down. Be sensible. Do what had to be done. Not this silly talk about dying and coming back from the grave.

Caiaphas would play the game. Sure. We’ll just arrest him, he told Judas. We won’t hurt him. But we need to keep him off the streets for the Passover Festival. Meanwhile, Caiaphas and his cronies were planning Jesus’ death. They’d keep him off the streets alright. Off the streets for good!

So, before Judas, or Jesus’ disciples, or any of his huge following who were attending the festival in Jerusalem could step in to protest, Caiaphas called a secret meeting of the partial “Sanhedrin.” He held the meeting in his father in law’s own house. There, they did a secret trial, sentenced Jesus, and carried him off to Pilate, waking the Roman Prefect in the early morning hours.

Pilate, not wanting to be bothered with what he considered trivial religious matters, sent Jesus to Herod. Herod however, perhaps still grieving for John, whom had had admired and feared, was morbidly curious about Jesus. Far from wanting to kill him, Herod spent an hour trying to quiz him on all kinds of religious matters.

But Jesus wasn’t talking. Herod wouldn’t make the same mistake again. This guy spooked him. Who knew? Maybe he was John come back to haunt him. Herod wouldn’t touch Jesus with a ten-foot pole. He sent him back to Pilate. But not until he had a little bit of fun. Adorning him with a purple robe and crown of thorns….he poked some fun at this guy who dared declare himself ‘king.’ Only Herod was king after all. Just below Caesar! He knew where HIS bread was buttered after all! Back to Pilate you go….”King” Herod mocked.

Pilate must have sighed. Ok, he thought. I just wanted to be done with these slimy, self-serving priests. What a major annoyance with their groveling and butt-kissing of Caesar. Did they have no dignity? Why did they want this guy dead so badly anyway? Pilate couldn’t care less if Jesus lived or died. But they were asking him a big favor. If he’s going to give it, he’s not making it easy.

Pilate finally gave in. He signed the decree, handed Jesus over, then washed his hands of the whole matter. More like he washed those pesky priests right out of his hair! And went back to bed!

It wasn’t quite dawn when Jesus was scourged, beaten, mocked, and prepped to carry a cross to Golgotha, the place where criminals were crucified.

His disciples would find out only in the morning when word spread. Except for Peter, who surreptitiously hung out in the High Priest Ananus’ courtyard trying to listen in. He followed from a distance, careful to keep out of view. But when he saw Jesus had been set for crucifixion, in horror, he ran to tell the others.

Two of Jesus’ secret disciples were members of the Sanhedrin. They had conveniently been left out of the illegal trial, and only found out later what had gone on. Having more access and power than Peter, James, or John, or any of the others, they went immediately to Pilate to request Jesus’ body after he had been killed.

When Judas found out, horrified at what he he’d done, he tried to return the silver, but the priests wouldn’t take it. Blood money, they said. Unable to seek forgiveness, Judas took his own life.

John accompanied several brave women to the crucifixion site. But there was nothing they could do but provide company in Jesus’ dying, the company they failed to give him in the Garden of Gethsemane the night before. They hadn’t really believed him. How did he know? But the master was right. Everything he said had come true.

The mission in which they had invested their life would die with him, they feared. Shock set in. Some remained out of sight. Most tried to blend in with the crowd.

Two others had been on the cross far longer than Jesus. Their skin was already rotting and blood dripping from their legs. They would soon be gone, extinguished. But Jesus would not die by sundown. And the priests insisted that a Jew couldn’t remain hanging during the Passover. Again, the Romans agreed, both sides appeasing the other, in order to maintain peace. Already those who followed him were waking, and in shock were feeling ill at what was happening.

One of the guards, ensuring Jesus’ death, took a sword, and struck Jesus in the side, spilling water and blood. Sure he had died, they took him down.

Nicodemus and Joseph were waiting in the wings. Nickey and Joey. Waiting in the dusk. They had gotten Pilate’s permission to take the body, and move it to Joseph’s own burial cave. At least they could honor their dead. The others stayed away, afraid to come too near. As members of the Sanhedrin, only Nicky and Joey had enough authority to make sure they could care for the body in the Jewish proper way. No one else was allowed near. The guards were under strict orders not to let any of his followers come near, for fear, they’d steal the body, and claim Jesus had risen from the dead. They wanted to thwart the rumors before they even started!

So, Nicky brought the burial oils and wrappings, as Joey moved the body to the cave. There, the two anointed and wrapped Jesus’ body –the usual job of the women in his family—and laid him in the tomb. Satisfied, they stood back, as the guards sealed the tomb with the boulder door.

As secret as Jesus’ trial was by the priests of the Sanhedrin, so too were these two members silently and carefully secretive about Jesus’ burial. The priests were corrupt. They knew it. Many of their Pharisee friends knew it. But there was nothing to be done. The Sadducees ruled. And the Shammai Pharisees sided with them in this matter. Those remaining of the Great Hillel were few and far between. Joey, Nicky, Gamaliel….just a few others. They would do what they could, even risk kickback from the priests at least to ensure his proper burial, their master, their Jesus.

They couldn’t stop them from killing him. At least they could stop them from degrading him in his death, and help answer one of Jesus’ last requests, as sung in Psalm 22---“save me from the dogs.” The feral dogs feasted on the bones that fell from the crucified, once the vultures had picked the bones dry.  

In the early morning hours, the women, not having known what had gone on the night before, came to the tomb with their own oils and spices to anoint the body, who they assumed had not been fully anointed. Or perhaps they wanted to do their own honors. They had also heard through the secret grapevine that Jesus had been put into Joey’s own mausoleum.

Perhaps they could beg the guards to allow them to enter. Or perhaps they could at least see where he lay. Would the guards open the boulder for them? They didn’t know. They knew the guards wouldn’t for the men. But maybe for the women….what harm could they do?

But when they arrived….the stone had been moved. But Jesus wasn’t there….. Had Joey and Nicky moved him again? That Peter and John and James….they never told them anything!

Where was Jesus?

The story pauses there…..at least until Resurrection Sunday. And this week, we are left pondering that strange question: “Where is Jesus?” Here was a mystery to end all mysteries.

Everything about Jesus’ trial, sentencing, death, and burial was swathed in mystery –much like it still is today. Think about it.

Here we are two thousand some years later, and the story of Jesus’ death and burial –and his resurrection—reads like an unsolved mystery. We know very little about what happened. We know even less about some of Jesus’ “secret” disciples –like Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus, except that we know they learned from Jesus, admired him, made sure they used their clout to honor him in death.

Some thought later that they must have stolen him somehow and whisked him off somewhere else, where no one could deface him. Some even thought that perhaps the sword-piercing was staged, or that he wasn’t really dead, that Joey and Nicky forged a plan of their own to put Jesus into some kind of “witness protection” status in another country.

They were good, those two. But that good?

For some, it was more believable that the guards fell asleep, and Nicky and Joey came by cover of night –after all Nicky was known for doing that!—and stole the body (or the man!), and drove him over the border, than it was for them to believe that he’d truly been resurrected!

Some thought the story of Jesus’ disappearance read kind of like the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa! Was he alive? Was he dead? Was he buried elsewhere? Where? Where was Jesus?

You know, today I think we still ask that same question. We are still asking ourselves many times, especially at life’s hardest moments, “Where is Jesus?”

And we say to ourselves, “well, if Jesus were really here, this wouldn’t happen!” [Think of those 13 senior adults in the church van who lost their life to a 20 year-old texter this past week]. Or, “If Jesus were alive, the world would be beautiful and perfect.” Or, “If Jesus were alive, I’d know it!”

How many of you have thought when your life was in turmoil, or when you lost your job, or when someone did something nasty to you or your friends, …how many of you have looked around and asked…. “Where is Jesus in all of this?” “Where is Jesus now when I need him the most?”

Jesus’ disciples were thinking that very thing. The women too. For them, it was all for naught. They had dedicated years to following this guy…for what? Things had not gotten any better. In fact, they’d gotten a whole lot worse!   Now THEIR lives were in danger too. And where was Jesus now? Where…was Jesus when they needed him the most?

We find that out on Easter Sunday, don’t we? From now until then, we liturgically revel and roll about in doubt, and in questioning, and in befuddlement and confusion. And it’s okay to do that. Let’s hear that.

It’s okay to take the time to do that. They all did! No one really believed Jesus would be resurrected. Sure, he told them that. Sure, they listened. Sure, they kind of believed that they’d see the kingdom in their death…or in the last days. But would this man, whom they just saw killed, just come back from the grave, all good as new?

It was hard to swallow. Wouldn’t it be for you?

This week…..I want you to allow yourself to think about those questions that plague you in your sleep…..that haunt you in your doubt….that nibble at the edges of your mind. I want you to allow yourself to feel the reticence to believe the unbelievable, and embrace the supernatural.

God can withstand your doubts. God allows us the time and the space sometimes to hover and pause in that place where things just doesn’t make sense.

Nowhere space.

Look up into the stars at night. Ponder the vastness of the universe. Have you ever tried to wrap your head around the idea of more stars in the sky than grains of sand on the sea shores? That you are such a tiny speck in the vastness of everything? It’s mind-blowing, isn’t it? Ever tried to rationalize black holes, or hear the sounds of the universe that are out of our hearing range? Ever experience something weird or impossible? Ever come to that place where the rational makes no sense, and what you experienced just can’t be explained in any sensible way?

Allow yourself to take a moment in that place. Because, that’s the first step to true faith. Doubt….that place when sense fails to make sense…..that traumatic kind of shock when you realize that you can’t find an answer to something that happened to you. That doubt that can’t be fixed or rationalized away….that’s your first step into a kind of faith that will lead you to Jesus.

Take some time in that uneasy space. For when Easter arrives –your mind will need to be broken before your faith is revealed.

Something extraordinary is about to happen. Not two thousand years ago. But to you. In your life.

If you let Him.

For the anointed one is not just anointed in death, but his anointing is the scent of Life that moves you in ways and into places you can never imagine unless you let him take you there.

Let that scent carry you there now…..prepare you for the week to come……as you come forward this morning to be anointed in the Spirit of Truth, the Spirit of Jesus, the sweet scent of faith.

[End with an altar call and anoint with frankincense and myrrh.]


Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

The Stories of the Secrets of the Sanhedrin: Secret Disciples Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus Anoint Jesus for Burial (Mark 15:16-47)

Minor Text

The Crushing of the Serpent’s Head and the Striking of the Heel of Man (Genesis 3)

The Census of Israel (Numbers 1)

A Woman Crushes the Head of Abimelech Saving the People (Judges 9)

David Strikes the Head of Goliath of Gath (1 Samuel 17)

King David Brings the Ark of the Covenant Back to Jerusalem (1 Chronicles 15 and 2 Samuel 6)

David’s Prayer (2 Samuel 7:18-29)

The Stones of Gilgal (Joshua 4)

Joshua Assigns Territories to All of Israel’s Tribes and Reaffirms the Covenant (Joshua 17-24)

The Death of Jezebel and Ahab and the Declaration of King Jehu With Cloaks Strewn (2 Kings 9)

Mourning in Death (Lamentations 3)

Psalm 22: It is Finished; the Lord Has Done It!

Psalm 41: The Lord Rescues Those Whom the Lord’s Enemies Persecute

Psalm 57: My Heart is Steadfast in the Midst of Distress

Psalm 73: It is Good to be Near God

Psalm 88: You are the God Who Saves Me as My Life Draws Near Death

God’s Suffering Servant (Isaiah 53)

The Shepherd Will Deliver (Micah 2:12-13)

The Death and Martyrdom of Eleazar (2 Maccabees 6:18-31)

The Martyrdom of the 7 Sons (4 Maccabees 18:6-24)

Ezra Sees a Vision of the Son of God and Palms (2 Esdras 2:42-48)

The Stories of the Secrets of the Sanhedrin: Secret Disciples Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus Anoint Jesus for Burial (Matthew 27:27-61; Mark 15:16-47; Luke 23:26-56; John 19:17-42)

James, Brother of John is Killed With a Sword, and Peter is Arrested (Acts 12:1-5)

Image Exegesis: Secret Disciples

When I first read this scripture again for this sermon, I found it odd that Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea (Joey and Nicky), two members of the Council of the Sanhedrin, and secret disciples of Jesus, come to anoint and wrap Jesus’ body for burial. Oddly, the women must not know this, because they come the next morning to do just that. Or did they know, but wanted to do it twice? Or their own way? Maybe they thought that the men laid him in there without going through the appropriate burial rites.

But no, the two men had done it. Not only is it odd that they did it so quickly. But these men did a job normally assigned to women.

I assume, it’s because they were perhaps at the time the only ones allowed near the body. We know that the priests suspected, with all of the talk of resurrection (which the Sadducees poo-pooed), that some of Jesus’ disciples might come to try to move the body, and claim he had been resurrected. They wanted to make sure that didn’t happen. They ordered the guards to stay awake. In fact, later, they would have the guards lie and say they fell asleep –to their own peril—rather than admit that something strange had happened Easter morning.

But Nicky and Joey –they were respected members of the Sanhedrin. Pharisees. Trustworthy. They could prepare the body.

They after all were the only ones with the clout to actually get permission to do so.

We have to remember how divisive even the Pharisees were at that time. Divisions between Shammai and Hillel were huge. We have to assume that Nicodemus, Joseph, and those few others like Gamaliel who would train Paul –were Hillel. They would have sympathized with Jesus, would have agreed with his theology, would have loved his teachings, his healings, his inclusiveness. Not all of Jesus’ disciples were fishermen! Some were prominent in the Temple.

Were they there when Jesus’ later made one of his post resurrection appearances on the mountain? Perhaps. We don’t know. We do know that later Gamaliel saves some of the apostles from execution. And some say, Joseph went on to head up a church sometime later in his career.

That perfumed oil. Oils were used along with strips of linen to wrap a Jewish body. The entire body was wrapped in a large cloth. Then strips were wrapped around it to hold it secure. The head had a separate piece of cloth, wrapped at forehead and chin with more strips. The body was first washed, then anointed with the oils and spices that would preserve and honor the dead.

Jesus’ skin may still have had the scent of nard from Mary’s anointing, combined with blood and sweat. After he rose, his linens must still have held the scent of myrrh and aloes, wafting from the tomb, where his head dressing lay and his body linens discarded.

Did the same angels who later rescued Peter from prison come to roll away the stone for Jesus? Did they lift off his head wrapping, rolling it neatly, then lift him out of the other linens?

Did he speak his own rising after his mouth was freed, perfume issuing from his mouth? The words sliding from the tongue of the great “I AM”?

That perfume haunts me as a metaphor…..did Mary recognize the scent of the gardener after hearing his voice? Did the “anointed one” appear in a cloud of sweet scent when he visited the disciples in the upper room?

I fully believe in the “memory” of smells. I can still remember smells that take me home to my grandparent’s house or to places from my youth. Memories are stored in sensory experiences.

And in cloth…..in the clothing of those we love.

But there are so many other metaphors too in these glorious scriptures of Jesus’ last day:

  • Crossings Over
  • Stones
  • Skull and Crushing of Skull and Gulgoleth
  • Wrappings
  • Oil and Anointing
  • Cave / Tomb
  • Cross
  • Storm
  • Curtain
  • Crown of Thorns
  • King of Jews

One that strikes home too is inherent in Golgotha. The word golgolth or gulgoleth in Hebrew means skull, head, everyman, even census.* In Latin the word was calvaria, and in Greek kranion.

When David crushes the skull of Goliath, when a woman crushes the skull of Abimelech, when it is predicted that one day a son of Eve will crush the skull of the “serpent,” these all seem to point to the crushing of sin by the vast power of God, the crushing of waywardness by the enduring rock of faith.

The mind is crushed and broken, so that the human heart can be made whole, made new. The heart of stone is crushed. And the heart of flesh is born. Isn’t this the “rebirth” that Jesus tried so hard to explain to Nicodemus?

And in the end, it is Nicky and Joey who help him through his final “act” of burial, so that he can be resurrected.

*Strongs

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner