
Teaching Summary: Matthew 27–28
🌄 Overall Themes
- The innocence of Jesus and the guilt of humanity — betrayal, injustice, mockery, and substitution.
- Jesus as the true Passover Lamb — His death fulfills Scripture and inaugurates the new covenant.
- The kingship of Jesus — mocked by men, vindicated by God.
- The cosmic significance of the crucifixion — darkness, torn veil, earthquake, resurrection of saints.
- The resurrection as the turning point of history — victory over death, fear turned to joy.
- The mission of the church — making disciples of all nations under the authority of the risen Christ.
- The faithfulness of women disciples — first at the cross, first at the tomb, first to proclaim the resurrection.
- The failure of earthly powers — Pilate, soldiers, and religious leaders cannot stop God’s plan.
Matthew 27 — The Crucifixion of the King
⚖️ Jesus Before Pilate (27:1–14)
- Religious leaders hand Jesus over to Pilate.
- Judas regrets his betrayal, returns the money, and hangs himself.
- The chief priests use the money to buy the “Field of Blood,” fulfilling prophecy.
- Jesus remains largely silent before Pilate — fulfilling Isaiah 53.
- Pilate marvels at His composure.
👑 Jesus or Barabbas? (27:15–26)
- Pilate offers to release Jesus or Barabbas.
- The crowd chooses Barabbas, stirred by the leaders.
- Pilate washes his hands but still condemns Jesus.
- Jesus is scourged and handed over for crucifixion.
🪖 Mocking the King (27:27–31)
- Soldiers mock Jesus with:
- A scarlet robe
- A crown of thorns
- A reed as a scepter
- They kneel in fake worship, spit on Him, and beat Him.
- The irony: they mock Him as king, but He truly is King.
✝️ The Crucifixion (27:32–44)
- Simon of Cyrene carries the cross.
- Jesus is crucified at Golgotha.
- He is offered wine mixed with gall but refuses.
- Soldiers cast lots for His clothing — fulfilling Psalm 22.
- The charge above His head: “This is Jesus, the King of the Jews.”
- Passersby, leaders, and criminals mock Him.
- They demand He save Himself — not realizing He is saving others by not doing so.
🌑 The Death of Jesus (27:45–56)
- Darkness covers the land for three hours.
- Jesus cries out, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
- He yields His spirit.
- Cosmic signs accompany His death:
- The temple veil tears from top to bottom — access to God is opened.
- Earthquake and rocks split.
- Tombs open and saints are raised.
- The centurion declares, “Truly this was the Son of God.”
- Women disciples watch from a distance — faithful even when the men fled.
⚰️ The Burial of Jesus (27:57–61)
- Joseph of Arimathea, a wealthy disciple, buries Jesus in his own tomb.
- Mary Magdalene and the other Mary watch the burial.
🪨 The Guard at the Tomb (27:62–66)
- Religious leaders fear the disciples will steal the body.
- Pilate grants a guard and a sealed stone.
- Human attempts to prevent resurrection only highlight God’s power.
Matthew 28 — The Resurrection and the Great Commission
🌅 The Empty Tomb (28:1–10)
- Mary Magdalene and the other Mary visit the tomb at dawn.
- A great earthquake occurs; an angel rolls back the stone.
- The guards shake with fear and become like dead men.
- The angel announces:
- “He is not here; He has risen.”
- “Come and see… go and tell.”
- Jesus meets the women:
- They take hold of His feet and worship Him.
- He sends them to tell the disciples to meet Him in Galilee.
💰 The Guards’ Report (28:11–15)
- Guards report the resurrection to the chief priests.
- Leaders bribe them to spread a false story: “The disciples stole the body.”
- The lie circulates widely — human denial in the face of divine truth.
🌍 The Great Commission (28:16–20)
- The disciples meet Jesus on a mountain in Galilee.
- Some worship; some hesitate — a realistic picture of early faith.
- Jesus declares:
- All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Him.
- Go and make disciples of all nations.
- Baptize them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
- Teach them to obey everything He commanded.
- He is with His people always, to the end of the age.
Matthew 27–28 in One Sentence
Jesus, the innocent King, is betrayed, condemned, crucified, buried, and raised, and now sends His disciples to proclaim His victory and make disciples of all nations under His everlasting authority.