
Matthew chapter 27 verses 62 through 66:
Now the next day, that followed the day of the preparation, the chief priests and Pharisees came together unto Pilate, Saying, Sir, we remember that that deceiver said, while he was yet alive, After three days I will rise again. Command therefore that the sepulchre (SEP-ul-ker) be made sure until the third day, lest his disciples come by night, and steal him away, and say unto the people, He is risen from the dead: so the last error shall be worse than the first. Pilate said unto them, Ye have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as ye can. So they went, and made the sepulchre (SEP-ul-ker) sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watch.
VERSE CONTEXT
This passage is the only account in all four Gospels that gives us any record of what happened on the day after the crucifixion—what we now call Holy Saturday. The scene is not focused on the disciples, nor Mary, nor any display of mourning or faith. Instead, we find the enemies of Jesus—the chief priests and Pharisees—gathered before Pilate.
“Now the next day, that followed the day of the preparation…” (verse 62) places this event squarely on Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath. This would have been the day after Jesus’ death, and by Jewish law, a day of complete rest and religious reverence. But while the followers of Christ were hiding, shattered, and silent, His enemies were moving—working on the Sabbath to protect their agenda.
They remembered Jesus’ words: “After three days I will rise again.” This is extraordinary. The Pharisees took Jesus’ resurrection prophecy more seriously than His own disciples did. They feared His influence, even in death, so they begged Pilate to secure the tomb. Their fear of a “staged resurrection” drove them to demand military guards and an official Roman seal.
Pilate replies, “Ye have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as ye can.” (verse 65). The phrase “as sure as ye can” drips with irony. These men did everything humanly possible to stop a resurrection—not realizing they were fulfilling prophecy and helping prove it instead.
“So they went, and made the sepulchre (SEP-ul-ker) sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watch.” (verse 66). They thought sealing a stone could stop the plan of God. But here lies the power of Holy Saturday—God was not finished, even though heaven was silent. Jesus’ body lay in the tomb, but His mission was still unfolding.
Holy Saturday isn’t just a historical pause—it’s a spiritual principle. It represents every moment in a believer’s life when God seems quiet, when promises feel broken, and when the story looks over. And that’s where the real test of faith begins.
Lamentations chapter 3 verses 25 through 26 captures that truth perfectly:
“The Lord is good unto them that wait for him, to the soul that seeketh him. It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord.”
The prophet Jeremiah wrote those words from the rubble of Jerusalem, surrounded by loss. He knew the kind of grief and silence that Holy Saturday represents. But even in devastation, Jeremiah clung to the truth that God is still good, still saving, still present—even when unseen. The silence of Saturday is not the absence of God—it is the testing of our trust. The tomb was closed, the stone sealed, the world quiet—but heaven was not defeated. Waiting is not weakness. It is the ground where resurrection roots are growing.
Broader Context
Matthew chapter 27 begins with the sentencing of Jesus, follows His mocking and crucifixion, and concludes with His burial. Verses 62 through 66—the guard at the tomb—are the final words of the chapter, and that’s significant. Matthew could have ended with verse 61, with the women sitting in sorrow outside the tomb. But he didn’t. He closed the chapter by drawing attention to the schemes of Jesus’ enemies—and that was no accident. Matthew 27:62–66 isn’t a throwaway detail—it’s the tension-building moment where man’s effort to stop God reaches its highest point… and ultimately fails. The tomb is sealed. The watch is set. The enemies of Jesus believe they’ve secured their victory. But the truth is, they’ve secured the evidence. When the stone is rolled away and the tomb is found empty, it won’t be a stolen body—it will be a divine resurrection, with Roman guards and religious elites powerless to deny it. God used the fear of the Pharisees to validate the miracle of the resurrection beyond question. This is a divine irony only God could write.
Holy Saturday occupies a theological space between two extremes: Good Friday – the day of atonement, judgment, blood, and suffering. The wrath of God poured out upon the sinless Son. Resurrection Sunday – the day of triumph, joy, victory, and new life. The empty tomb, the angel’s announcement, and the risen Lord.
But between these days is a tomb sealed with silence. In that silence is a message the Church must never forget: there is a space in the believer’s life where it feels like God is not moving, not speaking, not delivering—and that space tests our faith more than any trial. The disciples were devastated. The women were preparing spices. Their hope was bruised, and they didn’t yet understand that the quiet tomb was part of the plan. This reflects the life of every Christian who has stood at the edge of promise but not yet seen it fulfilled. We live much of our lives in Holy Saturday moments—between prayer and answer, diagnosis and healing, loss and comfort, death and new life.
This day fits into a larger biblical pattern: Noah waited 7 days in the ark after the door closed, before the flood came (Genesis chapter 7 verse 10). Abraham waited decades between promise and Isaac. Joseph waited in prison between prophecy and promotion. Israel waited 400 years of silence between the prophets and Christ. Believers today wait between the first coming of Christ and His return. Holy Saturday is part of that rhythm. It teaches us not only how to rejoice in resurrection, but how to remain faithful in silence.
APPLICATION
Appreciating God’s Greatness
The greatness of God is seen most profoundly in moments when we feel like He is absent. Holy Saturday is a testimony to the truth that God’s power is not diminished by silence. In fact, it is in the quiet places of redemptive history that some of His most decisive work takes place. The very day when the world thought Jesus was dead and forgotten—when His disciples were scattered and His enemies triumphant—was the day when the plan of salvation was resting in divine certainty. While Rome set a watch and the Pharisees sealed the sepulchre (SEP-ul-ker), the God of heaven was not worried. His plan needed no earthly defense. What appeared to be the end was simply the waiting hour before the greatest victory the world would ever know. The power of God is not only displayed in signs and wonders, but in His unstoppable purpose even when all seems still. Holy Saturday is a day of divine silence—but not divine inactivity. The resurrection was already certain. That is the greatness of our God.
For the Believer
Believers must not rush past this day too quickly. In the space between the agony of the cross and the triumph of the empty tomb is a sacred reminder that the Christian life is filled with seasons of silence. There will be times when God appears quiet, when the promise seems to delay, and when our hearts feel broken beyond repair. But Holy Saturday teaches that the silence of God is never the absence of God. His plan is still unfolding. The women who loved Jesus still prepared spices. The disciples, confused and shaken, still obeyed the Sabbath. They didn’t feel victorious, but they remained faithful in what they knew to do. This is the call for us today: to trust God in the quiet, to wait with hope, to believe that the sealed tomb is not the final word. The enemy may appear to have the upper hand, and the darkness may seem to linger longer than we can bear—but God is never late. The waiting is part of the story. The silence is part of the plan. And the tomb is about to open.
Call to Action
Do not despise the waiting. Obey when it’s hard. Worship when you don’t feel it. Read God’s Word even when you feel numb. Trust when there’s no visible sign of breakthrough. This is what it means to quietly wait for the salvation of the Lord. Be faithful in the Holy Saturday moments of your life—the places between pain and promise, between the grave and the glory. For those who wait for Him, the Lord is good.
For the Unbeliever
If you do not yet belong to Christ, this day is a mirror into the state of your soul. You may not be actively opposing God like the Pharisees, but the effect is the same if you choose not to believe. They remembered Jesus’ words and tried to shut the tomb. You may remember the words of Scripture, the preaching you’ve heard, the invitation you’ve received—but choose to seal your heart in unbelief. But no guard and no stone can stop the truth. The resurrection is coming. The King will rise. You still live in Saturday, in the space before the judgment appears. That space is a gift—a place to repent, to believe, to surrender. Tomorrow, the tomb will be empty. The stone will roll away. But for you to be saved, your heart must open now. Don’t waste the silence. Let this be the day you believe before the glory of Sunday arrives.
FINAL ENCOURAGEMENT
Holy Saturday is the quiet classroom of faith. It teaches us that God’s plan does not require constant activity, noise, or even visible movement to be perfectly on track. When Jesus’ body lay in the sepulchre (SEP-ul-ker), the world thought the story had ended. The disciples mourned. The women waited. The Pharisees schemed. But heaven did not panic. The plan of redemption was not behind schedule. What looked like delay was divine timing. What sounded like silence was the sovereign stillness before resurrection.
Let today remind us that when God appears silent in your life, He is not absent. When your prayers seem unanswered, it may be because the answer is already set and the appointed time is simply not yet here. Wait on the Lord. Trust in the quiet. Stand beside the tomb knowing the stone will move—not because of your strength, but because nothing can stop the will of God. You may be living in a Saturday season, but Sunday is already written into your story.
PRAYER
Father, we come to You in the stillness of this day, knowing that even when our hearts are heavy and heaven feels silent, You are still at work. Thank You for reminding us that waiting is not weakness. You do not abandon Your promises, and You are never late. Teach us to trust You in the quiet places, to worship You in the dark seasons, and to obey even when we don’t yet see the answer. Help us to remember that Your silence does not mean absence, and Your plan is always moving forward—just like it was on this day, so long ago, when the world thought the tomb had won. Strengthen the believer who waits, and awaken the heart of the one who still doubts. Let today be a sacred reminder that the story is not over. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
CLOSING
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Shalom Shalom.

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