Easter Morning: Mary of Magdala’s Experience

Diego Delso's photo: Easter eggs in front of the Zagreb cathedral, Croatia. (April 13, 2014)

William D. Edwards et al.'s Figure 2: 'Scourging. Left, Short whip (flagrum) with lead balls and sheep bones tied into leather thongs. Center left, Naked victim tied to flogging post. Deep stripelike lacerations were usually associated with considerable blood loss. Center right, View from above, showing position of lictors. Right, Inferomedial direction of wounds.' From 'On the Physical Death of Jesus Christ'. JAMA (March 21, 1986) used w/o permission.Recapping Friday's post: whether Jesus died from cardiac rupture, cardiorespiratory failure or something else, the main point is that he died.

Then Jesus was buried.

Again, let's remember that he was, in the words of the Munckin coroner in "Wizard of Oz", sincerely dead:

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(Jesus was dead and buried. Saturday passed. Sunday morning, some women came to finish what had been a rushed interment. What happened next still matters.)

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