“And behold, there was a great earthquake, for an angel of the Lord descended from heaven and came and rolled back the stone and sat on it.”
The angel's appearance — like lightning, clothing white as snow — echoes the Transfiguration's radiant whiteness (Matthew 17:2) and Daniel's angelic visions (Daniel 10:6), placing the resurrection within the same order of divine self-disclosure. The earthquake is Matthew's third in close succession: the earthquake at the crucifixion (Matthew 27:51), the earthquake at the resurrection, and now the rolling of the stone — each a seismic sign that the age is turning. The guards' collapse communicates the resurrection's cosmic power: the Roman soldiers commissioned to keep the tomb sealed are undone by the divine act that unseals it. The stone is rolled away not so Jesus can exit but so witnesses can enter and see the empty space where he lay — a visible invitation to examine the evidence.
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Matthew 28:2
“And behold, there was a great earthquake, for an angel of the Lord descended from heaven and came and rolled back the stone and sat on it.”
The angel's appearance — like lightning, clothing white as snow — echoes the Transfiguration's radiant whiteness (Matthew 17:2) and Daniel's angelic visions (Daniel 10:6), placing the resurrection within the same order of divine self-disclosure. The earthquake is Matthew's third in close succession: the earthquake at the crucifixion (Matthew 27:51), the earthquake at the resurrection, and now the rolling of the stone — each a seismic sign that the age is turning. The guards' collapse communicates the resurrection's cosmic power: the Roman soldiers commissioned to keep the tomb sealed are undone by the divine act that unseals it. The stone is rolled away not so Jesus can exit but so witnesses can enter and see the empty space where he lay — a visible invitation to examine the evidence.
The angel's appearance — like lightning, clothing white as snow — echoes the Transfiguration's radiant whiteness (Matthew 17:2) and Daniel's angelic visions (Daniel 10:6), placing the resurrection within the same order of divine self-disclosure. The earthquake is Matthew's third in close succession: the earthquake at the crucifixion (Matthew 27:51), the earthquake at the resurrection, and now the rolling of the stone — each a seismic sign that the age is turning. The guards' collapse communicates the resurrection's cosmic power: the Roman soldiers commissioned to keep the tomb sealed are undone by the divine act that unseals it. The stone is rolled away not so Jesus can exit but so witnesses can enter and see the empty space where he lay — a visible invitation to examine the evidence.