The Good News According to Andrai
of the Resurrection of Yeshua HaMashiach
Mashiach’s Upper Room Appearances
as told by
Andrai bar Yonah
Marcus 16:9-14; Yochanan 20:18-31 (HNV)
Marcus [Mark]
16:9Now when He had risen early on the first day of the week, He appeared first to
Miryam from Magdala, from whom He had cast out seven demons.
10She went and told
those who had been with Him, as they mourned and wept.
11When they heard that
He was alive, and had been seen by her, they disbelieved.
12After these things He
was revealed in another form to two of them, as they walked, on their way into the country.
13They went away and told it to the rest. They didn't believe them, either.
14Afterward
He was revealed to the eleven themselves as they sat at the table, and He rebuked them for
their unbelief and hardness of heart, because they didn't believe those who had seen Him
after He had risen.
Yochanan [John] 20:18Miryam from Magdala came and told the talmidim [disciples] that she had seen the
Lord, and that He had said these things to her. 19When therefore it was evening, on
that day, the first day of the week, and when the doors were locked where the talmidim were
assembled, for fear of the Yehudim, Yeshua came and stood in the midst, and said to them,
"Shalom be to you."
20When He had said
this, He showed them His hands and His side. The talmidim therefore were glad when they saw
the Lord. 21Yeshua therefore said to them again, "Shalom be to you. As
the Father has sent me, even so I send you." 22When He had said this, He breathed on
them, and said to them, "Receive Ruach HaKodesh!
[the Holy Spirit]
23Whoever's sins you forgive, they have been forgiven them. Whoever's sins you
retain, they have been retained."
24But T'oma, one of the
twelve, called Didymus, wasn't with them when Yeshua came.
25The other talmidim
therefore said to him, "We have seen the Lord!"
But
he said to them, "Unless I see in His hands the print of the nails, and put my hand into His
side, I will not believe."
26After eight days
again his talmidim were inside, and T'oma was with them. Yeshua came, the doors being
locked, and stood in the midst, and said, "Shalom be to you."
27Then He said to T'oma, "Reach here your finger, and see my
hands. Reach here your hand, and put it into my side. Don't be unbelieving, but believing."
28T'oma answered him,
"My Lord and my G-d!"
29Yeshua said to him,
"Because you have seen me, you have believed. Blessed are those who
have not seen, and have believed."
30Therefore Yeshua did
many other signs in the presence of his talmidim, which are not written in this book;
31but
these are written, that you may believe that Yeshua is haMashiach, the Son of G-d,
and that believing you may have life in His name.
Most of us here this evening have been Believers in
Mashiach for some time now. Certainly many of us have known Adonai Yeshua for thirty or
forty years or more. Maybe there are some here this evening who have only known Yeshua for a
few months. And possibly there are some here who have not yet met Yeshua of Nazareth in a
personal way.
But surely there is nobody here who does not know that we
have come together in this place to remember and to celebrate the resurrection of the
historical Yeshua of Nazareth. There is probably not one of who has not heard the story of
the resurrection many different times and in many different ways.
Four of Yeshua’s talmidim (disciples) have left historical
records for the Miqra.
First there was Yochanan Marcus, whom we also know as John
Mark. Marcus was a cousin of Yochanan bar Naba, or Barnabas, and a close friend and probably
a talmid of Shim`on Kefa, also known by his Greek name Petros, or Simon Peter. His
mother, Miryam, one of the "Marys" who were closely associated with Yeshua, was a woman of
wealth and position in Yerushalayim, and perhaps the owner of the house in which the Upper
Room was located, maybe an inn or rooming house. At the time of Mashiach’s resurrection,
Marcus was probably a young lad of about twelve or thirteen who sneaked out of his mother’s
house dressed only in his bed sheet and followed the disciples to Gethsemane on the night
Yeshua was arrested. The soldiers seized him, but he slipped out of the sheet and ran away
naked (Mark 14:51-52). Later he was privileged to go on the first missionary journey with
Rav Sha'ul and barNaba. Although he failed on that first mission, about a dozen years later
he was faithfully serving with the great Shaliach (Apostle or Emissary).
The second to write of the life of Yeshua, certainly the
most scholarly of the four accounts, was a Greek physician named Lucas who had become a
convert to Judaism and traveled for years with Rav Sha'ul. In the introduction to his
record, Dr. Lucas states that he alone has attempted to write a chronological account based
on first-person interviews and careful investigative reporting.
The third account of the life of Yeshua was written by a
Jew named Mattityahu Levi (Mattathias or Matthew) a former tax collector for the Roman
government.
The last to write of the life of Mashiach was Yochanan, or
John, the Elder, a fisherman who was the son of Zevdai and Salome and the younger brother of
Ya`akov, whom we also know as James. Yochanan and Ya`akov were partners with Shim`on and his
brother Andrai (Andrew) in a successful fishing business based in Capernaum on the northern
shore of the Sea of Galilee. The stormy personalities of the two sons of Zevdai earned them
the nickname, "sons of thunder." Written probably fifty years after the resurrection,
Yochanan's account was intended not as a detailed biography of Yeshua HaMashiach, but rather
as a theology of the Son of G-d.
These four accounts have been left for the Miqra and have
been carefully guarded and preserved for our understanding by Ruach HaKodesh, and are
available in your Bibles for review at your convenience.
This evening, however, I would like to introduce to you a
man of whom you have surely read if you have read any of the four inspired accounts of the
life of Yeshua of Nazareth. His name is Andrai bar Yonah, or Andrew the Son of Jonah. In
modern English we would call him Andrew Johnson.
The Beloved Shaliach Yochanan (Apostle John) tells us that
Andrai bar Yonah was a talmid (disciple or student) of Yochanan the Immerser (John the
Baptist). Immediately following Yeshua’s return from His temptation in the wilderness, He
passed by where Yochanan was administering the rite of mikvah (baptizing), and Yochanan
introduced Andrai to Yeshuah. Andrai became the first talmid of Yeshua ha Mashiach. Andrai
spent the rest of that day with Yeshua listening to Him teach. On the following morning he
became the very first Messianic evangelist when he went to find his brother Shim`on and told
him, "We have found haMashiach (the Messiah)!" It was Shim`on bar Yonah whom Yeshua would
later name Kefa, the Rock (Petros in Greek).
So this is the Shaliach Andrai bar Yonah, and this is his
account of the events of Resurrection Day.
That evening of the first day of the first resurrection
week will burn forever in my heart and my mind, not just in this life, but also in the life
to come.
We had come up to Yerushalayim, the City of Peace, for the
celebration of the Pesach that year. I have to chuckle every time I say that phrase, “up
to Yerushalayim,” for up is exactly what it is. The Holy City of HaShem sits high
atop Mount Zion, towering some four thousand feet straight up above the level of the Salt
Sea. Of course the city lies in ruins now, destroyed by General Titus only some 35 years
after our Lord’s resurrection. But while it was still standing you could see the Temple for
hundreds of miles, especially when approached from the east at sunrise or from the west at
sunset. The rays of the sun would strike the white stone and the gold overlays, and for a
few brief moments it would shine atop the mountain as if illuminated by the glory of the
Holy One Himself, blessed be He.
On the first day of Pesach week we had entered
Yerushalayim with Adonai Yeshua riding on a donkey as a peace-bringing king entering a
conquered city. The crowds were shouting, “Hashanah bar David,” “Hosanna to the Son of
David!” — using the title that the prophets had used for the Mashiach. “Baruch haba b'shem
Adonai ... Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord!” Everyone was cheering and
waving palm branches, and lying their cloaks in His path, as Yeshayahu (Isaiah) had said,
“Make straight the path of the Lord!”
We were sure then, as was much of Yerushalayim, that the
Mashiach had finally come to set us free from the yoke of Roman oppression and to establish
the Holy One’s Kingdom on Earth. After all, both Yeshua and Yochanan the Immerser before Him
had preached to all of Yisrael, “Repent, for the Kingdom of G-d is now here!”
Looking back on it now, it all seems so strange, how the
mood of the crowd can change so drastically in only four short days. I remember it like it
was only yesterday, though it has been, what, nearly forty years now? Pesach came on the
first day before Shabbat (Friday) that year, and all the sacrificial lambs had been taken
into homes all throughout the nation of Yisrael as Moshe required. There was a little-known
provision in the Torah which allowed the Pesach Seder to be celebrated on the Day of
Preparation if for some reason it would be impossible to observe the meal on the Pesach
Shabbat itself.
So we were a little surprised when Yeshua told us to go to
the home of Miryam and her cousin Yosef, whom we also called barNabas, and arrange for us to
observe the Pesach a day early, on the first day of Unleavened Bread. Miryam was a righteous
and very wealthy lady who ran an inn, what you would probably call a boarding house in your
time, and we met together there rather often. Her young son, Yochanan Marcus, was really a
delightful young man, and we had all attended his Bar Mitzvah just the year before. On the
other hand, he was full of life, and a real handful for his mother from time to time. But
the young man loved to sit with us and listen to Yeshua as he taught us from the Scriptures.
We all knew he would grow into a fine man some day, maybe even a Rabbi — who could know?
As we were eating the Pesach Seder that night, Yeshua did
something very strange! As he gave the brachah, the blessing, over the second matzah, the
Bread if Affliction, he said to us, “Take, eat; this is my body.” And after the meal, when
He gave the brachah over the third cup, the Cup of Blessing and Redemption, He said to us,
“Drink from it, all of you; for this is My blood of the b'rit chadasha (renewed covenant),
which is poured out for many for forgiveness of sins.” And then He told us that He would not
drink of the Cup of Blessing and Redemption again until His Father’s Kingdom has been
established.
When we heard that, our hearts leapt for joy, for surely
He meant that He was going to establish the Kingdom any day now! Then we all sang the Pesach
Hallel, the 136th in our Scroll of Psalms, and went across the Kidron Valley to pray
together in the olive garden that He enjoyed so much. It was, next to the mountaintop, His
favorite place to pray.
The events of the rest of that night and the next day are
horrible beyond all imagination, and I do not wish to spoil your celebration of this Holy
Day be recounting them to you now. It is enough to say that He was arrested by the Temple
Guard that night and, after a mockery the Sanhedrin had the audacity to call a “trial,” they
turned Him over to the Romans to be crucified. We were all
frightened to death; now that Yeshua had been declared a criminal and a blasphemer by the
Council, all our lives were in serious jeopardy as well. We all ran for our lives, just as
the prophets had said we would, though most of us had regained some little courage and had
come back to be with Him as He died.
All day long He suffered, hanging there between heaven and
earth. And yet, true to the prophecy as illustrated in the Pesach Seder, just as the Kohen
haGodal (High Priest) cut the throat of the chosen lamb in the Temple, Yeshua cried out with
a loud voice, “It is finished.” And then He slumped over against the nails in death. At that
very moment there was a terrible earthquake, and the veil in the Temple was torn from top to
bottom by the very hand of the Holy One Himself, blessed be He. People began screaming all
over the city, and we heard the Roman centurion cry out in terror, “Surely this was the Son
of G-d.” And again we all fled, agreeing to meet later back at Miryam’s house.
We had two friends on the Council, however, secretly His
talmidim (disciples): Nicodemus and Yoseph of Arimathea. It was Yoseph who went to Pilate
after Yeshua died, and took His body and placed Him in a new tomb that Yoseph had just had
carved out of the rock in the beautiful garden behind his
house. What a beautiful house, and what a beautiful garden;
such a shame that it was only a few hundred feet from the crossroads
where the Roman oppressors carried out most of their public executions.
But what I really want to tell you about was the events of
that Resurrection Day.
We had concluded our Shabbat evening Havdala
service (the service in which we bid a fond farewell to Queen Shabbat for the week and
“differentiate” … for that is what havdala means … between the sacred Shabbat and the
secular days of the week) in the upstairs dining room Miryam’s boarding house, and were all
reclining around the table discussing the events of the previous week.
It was only an hour or so after sunset that
evening when Miryam Magdala came running in all out of breath and crying, saying that the
body of Yeshua had been stolen. She had said something about seeing angels in the garden who
had said that Yeshua had been raised from the dead, but she had been so upset that nobody
had paid much attention to her ramblings. And besides, everybody knows that nobody really
sees angels much these days.
Kefa and Yochanan left the table and ran to the tomb in
Yosef’s back yard. It was only about a mile away through the twisted streets of the city.
Less than a half hour later, Kefa and Yochanan came running back saying that they had found
His grave clothes undisturbed in the tomb, as though He had simply vanished right through
them. They also had found his tallit folded in the prescribed manner, as only a Jew would
have folded it, lying at the foot of the stone bench on which His body had been laid to
rest. If someone had stolen the body, they said, surely the grave clothes would either have
been unwrapped or taken with Him, and certainly no thief would have taken the time to
properly fold his tallit. They had looked for the soldiers who had been assigned to watch
the tomb, but they were nowhere to be found.
Yochanan told us that he and Kefa had gone around to the
front door of Yosef’s house and disturbed Yoseph and Nicodemus, but neither of them had
noticed any unusual activity in the garden. They both said that they did remember feeling a
rather strong earthquake, though, just after sunset, probably another aftershock from
Friday’s big quake, but neither of them had left the house in the past few hours. Then Kefa
said he remembered that Yeshua had said one time that it was necessary for Him to die and to
be raised up again. And another time He had said, “Destroy this temple,” speaking of His own
body, “and in three days I will raise it up.”
Yochanan and Kefa then returned to the Upper Room (as we
called it) at Miryam’s house, and had sent Miriam’s son Marcus (that was the name his Greek
father had given him, though most of us called him called him Yochanan, his Hebrew name) to
summon all of Yeshua’s talmidim together for an emergency meeting as soon as it became
light. The traitor Yehudah had hanged himself the night Yeshua was arrested, and they had
not been able to find T'oma anywhere, but the other ten of us, along with some of the others
who had been with Yeshua, met back in the room just after sunrise.
When Kefa arrived for that early-morning meeting, he was
so excited he was actually jumping up and down like a little boy. He said that Yeshua had
appeared to him! It was true! He was alive, and He had said that He had forgiven Kefa for
denying Him those three times. Of course everyone knew that old impetuous Kefa was always
going off half-cocked about something or other — like the time when he and Ya'acov (you
would probably know him by his English name of James) — the time when Kefa and Ya'acov and
Yochanan had gone up on the mountain with Yeshua, and Moshe and Eliyahu had appeared to
them. Yeshua had been mysteriously covered in the shekinah glory, and the Holy One Himself,
blessed be He, had actually spoken to them out of the clouds. And Kefa had shot off his
mouth and said something really dumb, like, “Gosh, shouldn’t we build some sukkot (you
probably call them tabernacles) for Moshe and Eliyahu!” People will probably be talking
about that blunder for maybe even the next hundred years! Kefa had been so
embarrassed that he thought he should die!
So we had taken Kefa’s reputation into account when he
told us that he had seen Yeshua, and nobody really got very excited about it. In fact,
Kefa’s excitement had just seemed to make our grief worse, and many of us were weeping
openly.
But then just a few minutes later Miryam Magdala, Miriam
the mother of Ya'acov, barNabas’s wife Salome, Yohanna, and some of the other women came
bursting into the room saying that they had also seen Yeshua in the garden, and that they
had actually touched Him, so they knew they weren’t seeing a vision or having an
hallucination.
Maybe there was something to these resurrection stories
after all. Maybe our hopes for the Messianic Kingdom hadn’t died with Yeshua. Maybe He was
really alive, and was going to drive out the Roman oppressors and set up His kingdom here in
Yerushalayim. If that were so, we knew that were going to have to get organized and spread
the word.
We set a time for an organizational meeting to be held
later that evening, and we all left to go about our business.
Soon it was evening, and we had started our meeting with
dinner. After all, what better way to discuss business than with a full stomach? We had to
be very careful though, because rumors had started flying through Yerushalayim that the body
of Yeshua had been stolen. And Yosef and Nicodemus had secretly sent us a message to be on
the lookout for the temple guard. They had overheard some of the
Kohanim Gedolim (Chief
Priests) saying that they had bribed the Roman soldiers who had been guarding the tomb. They
had given the soldiers a large amount of money to say that some of us had come during the
night and stolen our Lord’s body.
How ridiculous! Nobody would ever believe that a handful
of fishermen would dare take on a squad of Roman Legionnaires over the body of a dead Rabbi.
But then, hadn’t those same priests just convicted Yeshua of heresy based on the testimony
of false witnesses they had bribed? And the Romans just loved any excuse to crucify a Jew
whenever they could! We just couldn’t be careful enough, especially for the next few days.
So here we were, sitting around in the dining room of our
friend’s rooming house, waiting for the meeting to get started. Miryam’s staff hadn’t come
in to clear away the dinner dishes and the leftovers yet. Suddenly there was a knock at the
door, and I went to see who it was.
Klofah and his wife, Miryam, were standing at the head of
the stairs, all out of breath. I let them in the room and quickly locked the door so that
there would be no chance that the spies of the Council would see us meeting together.
Klofa and Miryam told us that they had just run almost all
the way from Amma'us, about sixty stadia (nearly seven miles), to bring us some wonderful
news! When the lunch meeting had broken up, they said, they had gone up to Amma'us to visit
Miryam’s sister, and on the way they had been talking over the events of that morning. A
stranger had joined them on the road, and had told them things about the Mashiach that they
had never considered before. This stranger really knew the Scriptures — especially the
Scriptures that were about Mashiach!
They told us that when they had arrived at Amma'us, the
stranger had started to continue on up the road, but they had offered to buy Him dinner so
they could listen to some more of His wonderful teaching. And then, as He had said the
Brachah haMatzi, the blessing over the bread, they had gotten a good look at His hands!
There were gaping holes that the nails of the cross had left in His wrists. Then they had
looked more closely at His face and had seen the puncture marks on His forehead from the
crown of thorns! It was Yeshua! And He was alive! And as suddenly as they had recognized
Him, He had simply vanished! Disappeared without a trace!
And they had run almost all the way back to Yerushalayim
to tell us. Yeshua was alive and they had seen Him. Most of us were so excited would could
hardly contain ourselves. But, on the other hand, some of us were very skeptical. And, on
the other hand, some of us just could not make up our minds.
And then, all of a sudden, Yeshua was standing there in
the middle of the room. Just like that! One minute He wasn’t there. The next minute He was
standing there! I must tell you, that’s something that you don't see every day! And I must
tell you something else; that’s something you don’t forget — not ever, let me tell you!
We stood there staring with our mouths hanging open. We
didn’t know what to say. What do you say to your best friend who was alive, and then He was
dead, and all of a sudden He is alive again? I want to tell you, you don’t just say, “Hello,
Yeshua, and how was dinner in Amma'us, and would you like some dessert, Yeshua?!”
All of a sudden Yeshua just smiled that wonderful smile of
His that we remembered so well, and He said to us, “Shalom alaychem! Peace to you!” And then
he pulled up His sleeves, and he took off His sandals, and He opened His robe like a mother
about to feed her hungry baby, and He showed us the deep wounds the nails had made in His
wrists and in His heels, and the terrible gash in His breast where the Roman spear had
pierced His heart. As happy as we were to see Him, His mother was ten times that happy, I
want to tell you. And she hugged His neck and she kissed Him. And then we were all hugging
Him and kissing Him and hugging each other and kissing each other. And some of us began
singing psalms of praise to Abba HaShem, blessed be He. And many of us were praying, and
many of us were shouting with joy, and many of us were overcome with tears of happiness. It
was such a night as I shall never forget, not in this life or in the next!
As we slowly began to regain our composure, Yeshua smiled
at us again, and swept His arms around as if to embrace the whole room as a mother hen
gathers her chicks to her. And again he said to us, “Shalom alaychem. As Abba has sent Me, I
also send you.” And then he went up to each of us and breathed on us. And as He breathed on
us he said to each one of us, “Receive Ruach HaKodesh.” And suddenly we felt ourselves being
filled with joy and a feeling of great power.
And then He said to us, “If you forgive the sins of
anyone, their sins will already have been forgiven in heaven; if you retain the sins of
anyone, their sins will already have been retained in heaven.” And so saying, he gave us the
authority to announce the Kingdom of G-d and salvation to all men who would
receive Him as their Lord and Redeemer, the Holy One of Yisrael.
The next day when we finally located T'oma and told him
that Yeshua had spent the evening with us, he told us “Unless I see and touch the nail
prints in His hands and put my hand into the wound in His side, I will not believe that He
is alive.”
The following week we were again celebrating Havdala in
Miriam’ “Upper Room” again, and T'oma was with us, Yeshua again appeared inside the locked
room. “Shalom alaychem,” He said. Then He looked straight into T'oma’s face, and said to
him, “Reach here your finger, and see My hands; and reach here with your hand, and put it
into My side; and stop being an unbeliever, and be a believer.”
As soon as Yeshua had said that to him, T'oma fell to His
knees and said to Yeshua, “Yahweh `Eli!” addressing Him with that holiest of all Names that
we Yehudim had always reserved for the Holy One Himself, blessed be He.
And Yeshua reached down and took T'oma’s hand and helped
him to his feet, and said to him, “Have you now believed because you have seen Me? Blessed
are they who have not seen, and still believe.”
Yeshua did and said many things and worked many wonders
there among us in the next forty days before He returned home to Abba. And as Yochanan has
said in his scroll of the Good News, I suppose that if all the other things that Yeshua did
were written down, the world itself could not contain all the scrolls that would be written.
But I have come here to speak with you today so that you
may believe that Yeshua is HaMashiach, Yisrael’s Messiah, the Son of G-d; and
that by believing you may have eternal life in His Name.
And so here ends the testimony of Andrai bar Yonah,
brother of Shim`on Kefa, and bond-servant of the Adonai Yeshua HaMashiach. And it is in
Yeshua’s name that all the Believers gathered together here in this place invite you to
receive Yeshua HaMashiach as your Lord and Savior, and to share with Him and with us the
grace of G-d and the free gift of eternal life.
This message was first delivered by Dr. Sawyer at the
evening service at
First Baptist Church, Mineral Wells, West Virginia, on Resurrection Day 1995.

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Last revised
Friday, October 24, 2008 07:51 AM |