Loving Father, we thank you that your Son, Jesus, our human brother, carried the terrible burden of our sin on his shoulders. But after Jesus, our human brother, offered himself up for us as the perfect sacrifice for all people’s sin, he rested in the tomb, for he was completely exhausted, to the very point of death. As he had always kept your holy law perfectly for our sake, so we thank you that, out of love as our God and brother, he perfectly fulfilled the third commandment, to rest on the Sabbath day.
Refresh us this day as we rest in the peace of your forgiveness. Renew us when we rest in the sleep of death, and fill the deathly silence of the tomb with the promises of your word, especially with the good news of Jesus’ victory over our powerful enemies, Satan, death and sin.
Father, you give us life by your creative Spirit, who is the Lord, the giver of life. You have designed us to rest from each day’s activities in the gentle massage and healing of your precious gift of sleep. Wake us refreshed to live the gift of each new day. Touch our spirits so that we want to please you, as we play out our roles on this earth, even when it means using up our lives for the sake of other people you put near to us, in our families, in the congregation and in our local community.
Marciful God, you have designed us to find peace of mind when we take refuge and rest in your arms of faith. Renew us each day to live as your children. Continue to renew us with your promises, until the day you call us home and we rest in perfect peace, joy and love with you in eternity.
We ask this through Jesus, who entered the tomb of death for us, so that we might live with him forever.
Amen.
Where is this prayer from? Jesus wasn’t tired, he was dead! To imply that he wasn’t dead robs Easter day of its glory.
“…in the gentle massage and healing of your precious gift of sleep.”
The “gentle massage of sleep”? Are you kidding me?
First of all, what WestJ said above. Second, It’s way too wordy. And third, it’s just hoaky. I’m sorry, but that’s what it is. For some nice simple, orthodox Holy Saturday prayers, look at the ones for morning and evening prayer at universalis.com. There’s no avoiding the sting of death there, but a good understanding of what death is and does, and what our Lord’s death did for us. Like this petition:
“Let the dead, who shared your death and your burial, share also your glorious resurrection.”
Agree. Where is this from?