IT remained for Joseph to do the last office of this piety to the memory of his father; and he does it, we need scarcely say, in all grace and faithfulness. He buries his father as his father had willed it, in the land of Canaan. But the whole is conducted with much solemnity, and the occasion is such, that we must wait upon it for a little moment.
In other days worship was a magnificent ceremonial. Temples, altars, feasts, holy days, sacrifices and the like furnished it, and officers of different orders in appropriate vestments conducted it. Because in those days worship pointed onward to certain great mysteries which had then to be realized. But now these mysteries have been accomplished in the manifestation of Christ, His person, work, sufferings, and victories, so that gorgeous worship is now but a reproach on all that which is found in Him in its full substance and efficacy.
So as to funerals as well as worship. In other days they were to be gorgeous. Because resurrection was then only in prospect, and funerals then were a kind of pledge of the expected resurrection; and it was fitting that the pledge should be magnificent according to the glory of that which it pledged. But now, since resurrection has been realized in the person of the Lord Jesus, the Son of God, the gorgeous funeral, like the ceremonious worship, is rather a reproach, as though the great mystery itself had not been yet realized in its substance and efficacy. For it is not funereal pomp which is now the pledge of our coming resurrection—the resurrection of the Lord is that, the first-fruits of a promised harvest.
Accordingly, worship and funerals are now, in like simplicity, to bespeak the Church’s faith in accomplished mysteries. We are now in sight of the victory of the Lord Jesus. We no longer give or receive pledges of it as in ordinances, but we celebrate it. Joseph of Arimathea gave His body a gorgeous funeral, as Joseph, the son of Jacob, here gives the body of his loved and honored father. We read of Jesus “He made His grave with the wicked, and with the rich in His death.” In that day of Joseph of Arimathea, the grave had not been spoiled, and pledges therefore―like pledges with these in the day of the Patriarch―might still be given. But in the burial of the Lord Jesus, we properly see the last of these pledges; because in Him we see the first of the fruit of hell’s destruction. Jesus rose. The grave clothes and the napkins lie in the empty sepulcher as spoils of a glorious war, and trophies which tell of glorious victory. Death was overthrown, and faith now celebrates what offices and usages, as well as ordinances and ceremonies, had once only pledged and foreshadowed. And let me add that faith did learn this lesson; for the funeral which followed that of Jesus had neither its embalming nor its magnificence. It was shortly disposed of, reverently withal, and lovingly. But it was no solemnity. “Devout men carried Stephen to his burial, and made great lamentation over him.”
Had we faith, deeply should we prize all this. Our privileges are great indeed. In the services of the house of God now, the table has succeeded the altar, and instead of a sacrifice we have a feast upon a sacrifice. And so have we to see death and burial too, in the light of the resurrection of Jesus. J. G. B.