Verse 1
John 20:1
1) The open tomb, a fact. Note the different words of the Gospels.
2) The empty tomb - what happened to the body?
3) The discovered grave clothes
In each of the following [resurrection appearances] we will discover a pattern with the following features: (1) The beneficiaries of the appearance are engulfed in a human emotion (Mary, grief; the disciples, fear; and Thomas, doubt). (2) The risen Christ appears to them in the midst of their condition. (3) As a result, their condition is transformed (Mary, mission; the disciples, gladness; Thomas, faith).”619 619. R. Kysar, John, p. 299.
John omitted the earthquake, the angel rolling away the stone that covered the tomb entrance, and his sitting on the stone (Matthew 28:2-3). He also did not include the appearance of two angels to the women who visited the tomb early Easter morning, before Peter and John did, and the women’s reactions (Matthew 28:5-8; Mark 16:5-8; Luke 24:4–8).
Constable, T. (2003), Constable’s Notes
20:1 “The first day of the week” was Sunday. It is interesting that all the Gospel writers referred to the day of Jesus’ resurrection this way rather than as the third day after His death. The latter description would have connected the Resurrection with Jesus’ predictions of it more directly. Perhaps they did this to associate Easter more clearly with a new beginning.621 John may have mentioned the darkness of the night to associate darkness with Mary’s limited understanding then (cf. John 13:30).622 Alternatively this may simply have been a detail that adds credibility to the narrative.
The other evangelists noted that several women came to the tomb.623
| Women Who Visited the Tomb Easter Morning |
| Matthew 28:1 | Mark 16:1 | Luke 24:10 | John 20:1 |
| Mary Magdalene | Mary Magdalene | Mary Magdalene | Mary Magdalene |
| The other Mary = | Mary the mother of James | Mary the mother of James | |
| Salome | |||
| Joanna | |||
| others |
Mary Magdalene evidently came first with the other women (cf. v. 2). Another possibility is that she came first and the other women followed shortly, but this seems less likely in view of the other evangelists’ descriptions. John wrote that she saw (Gr. blepei) the open tomb of Jesus. He implied that she did not enter it. Perhaps John mentioned Mary Magdalene and none of the other women because of the testimony that she gave after she had seen Jesus (v. 18).
621 621. Carson, The Gospel -- ., p. 635.
622 622. Ibid.
623 623. See Zane C. Hodges, “The Women and the Empty Tomb,” Bibliotheca Sacra 123:492 (October-December 1966):301-9.
Constable, T. (2003). Constable’s Notes,
Mary Magdalene left before dawn to go to Jesus’ tomb to complete the burial preparations (Luke 24:1), which had to be left undone due to the beginning of the Sabbath (see note on John 19:42). The Synoptic parallels indicate that other women were with her, as is also implied by the “we” in 20:2. while it was still dark. Cf. the slightly different points in time of the process depicted in Matt. 28:1; Mark 16:2; and Luke 24:1. Matthew’s Gospel explains that the stone had been “rolled back” by “an angel of the Lord” (Matt. 28:2)
Crossway Bibles. (2008), ESVSB