Lynne Baab • Thursday April 17 2025
Holy Saturday is the day of hushed stillness between Good Friday and Easter. The disciples mourn because this powerful and loving One, who promised to bring life, is dead. The angels weep that the beloved Son of God has been forcibly, but willingly, separated from his Father in the cruelest imaginable way.
Where was Jesus on Holy Saturday?
Was he lying quietly in the tomb, truly dead, while his Father planned the Resurrection?
Was he in hell? In the Apostle’s Creed we say that we believe in Jesus Christ, God’s “only Son Our Lord, Who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died, and was buried. He descended into Hell; the third day He rose again from the dead.” Some theologians argue that Jesus broke open the power of hell by invading it as a Righteous One.
Was he in the realm of the dead but not in hell? On Pentecost, Peter says to the crowds, “Foreseeing this, David spoke of the Resurrection of the Messiah, saying, ‘He was not abandoned to Hades, nor did his flesh experience corruption’” (Acts 2:31).Biblical scholars argue that Hades is not the same as hell, but instead means some sort of realm of the dead, and this verse may indicate that Jesus went there after his death but, of course, did not stay there.
Was he preaching the gospel to the dead or to angels, powers, and principalities? 1 Peter 3:18-19 reads, “He was put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit,in which also he went and made a proclamation to the spirits in prison.” Some commentators argue Jesus was in hell or Hades, preaching to souls there. Others say that “spirits” in the New Testament only refers to angels or demons, so if he was announcing something to spirits, he was probably communicating to angels and demons that he had conquered death through his own death.
My friend Kimberlee Conway Ireton, in her excellent book on the church year, Circle of the Seasons, describes an Eastern Orthodox icon showing Jesus “striding victoriously into hell and reaching out in love even to the dead and the damned.” [1] She notes that this image reminds us that there is no place where God is not present. And in the Eastern Orthodox tradition, even on Holy Saturday, when Jesus’ body lay in the tomb, he was bringing freedom to captives and prisoners.
Kimberlee summarizes the paradoxes of this day:
Holy Saturday, then, is a day of contrasts. We mourn our dead Lord even as we prepare for the celebration of his Resurrection. We grieve his broken body lying in the tomb even as we celebrate his triumphant march against the gates of hell. We sorrow at the foot of the empty cross even as we anticipate the true and glorious meaning of its emptiness. [2]
Kimberlee writes about one year when she ate only cold food between the Maunday Thursday service at her church and Easter morning. Cold food, she says, means that no electricity has been used in preparing it, mirroring in a small way that the Light has gone out of the world. [3]
Holy Saturday is an excellent day for any kind of fasting, perhaps from a favorite food item, a form of technology, coffee drinks, entertainment media, or shopping. The Light has gone out of the world, and on this sad day, we are invited to enter into the sadness and emptiness of that reality.
On Holy Saturday, where was Jesus? In the tomb? In hell or Hades freeing prisoners and captives? Somewhere in the universe proclaiming to angels and demons his victory? Whichever it was, he was cruelly separated from his Father for our sakes, waiting for the Resurrection. Praise God for his great gift to us in Jesus. May we pause on this day and remember.
Jesus, sometimes we ask questions for which there are no answers, so we rest in you and release our questions because we know you are good. We rest in you because you loved us so much you were willing to become human and face death for our sakes. We rest in you during this Holy Week when we remember the events that led you to the cross, and we keep resting in you on the day between your death and your amazing, wonderful, life-giving Resurrection. We love you, and we thank you.
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[1] Kimberlee Conway Ireton, Circle of the Seasons: Meeting God in the Church Year (Downer’s Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2008), 82.
[2] Ibid., 83.
[3] Ibid., 85-86.
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Lynne M. Baab, Ph.D., is an author and adjunct professor. She has written numerous books, Bible study guides, and articles for magazines and journals. Lynne is passionate about prayer and other ways to draw near to God, and her writing conveys encouragement for readers to be their authentic selves before God. She encourages experimentation and lightness in Christian spiritual practices. Read more »
Lynne is pleased to announce the release of her two 2024 books, both of them illustrated with her talented husband Dave's watercolors. She is thrilled at how good the watercolors look in the printed books, and in the kindle versions, if read on a phone, the watercolors glow. Friendship, Listening and Empathy: A Prayer Guide guides the reader into new ways to pray about the topics in the title. Draw Near: A Lenten Devotional guides the reader to a psalm for each day of Lent and offers insightful reflection/discussion questions that can be used alone or in groups.
Another recent book is Two Hands: Grief and Gratitude in the Christian Life, available in paperback, audiobook, and for kindle. Lynne's 2018 book is Nurturing Hope: Christian Pastoral Care for the Twenty-First Century, and her most popular book is Sabbath-Keeping: Finding Freedom in the Rhythms of Rest (now available as an audiobook as well as paperback and kindle). You can see her many other book titles here, along with her Bible study guides.
You can listen to Lynne talk about these topics: empathy, bringing spiritual practices to life. Sabbath keeping for recent grads., and Sabbath keeping for families and children.
Lynne was interviewed for the podcast "As the Crow Flies". The first episode focuses on why listening matters and the second one on listening skills.
Here are two talks Lynne gave on listening (recorded in audio form on YouTube): Listening for Mission and Ministry and Why Listening Matters for Mission and Ministry.
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