There Was Darkness over the Whole Land
												
												Text: 
												Matthew 27:45
												
												Theme: The Father 
												marked the crucifixion with 
												mighty signs—darkness, the torn 
												veil, the quaking earth, and 
												opened graves—declaring judgment 
												on sin, access to His presence, 
												and the firstfruits of 
												resurrection hope.
												
												Introduction
												“Now from the sixth hour until 
												the ninth hour there was 
												darkness over all the land” 
												(Matthew 27:45, NKJV). With 
												these words the Gospel writers 
												begin an astonishing series of 
												divine acts at Calvary. Heaven 
												drew the world’s attention to 
												the cross, and Scripture records 
												what those signs mean for faith, 
												worship, and hope. This lesson 
												considers the three hours of 
												darkness, the tearing of the 
												veil, the great earthquake, and 
												the opening of certain graves, 
												so that our hearts may approach 
												God with reverence and 
												confidence through Jesus Christ.
												
												Three Hours of 
												Darkness
												The darkness stretched from noon 
												until three in the afternoon and 
												covered “all the land” (Matthew 
												27:45). Passover occurs at the 
												full moon, which rules out a 
												solar eclipse; eclipses are 
												brief, while this darkness 
												endured three hours. Luke adds 
												that “the sun was darkened” and, 
												in the same breath, reports the 
												tearing of the veil (Luke 
												23:44–45). The Creator who spoke 
												light into being withheld it in 
												judgment and sign. The psalmist 
												had sung, “He bowed the heavens 
												also, and came down; with 
												darkness under His feet” (Psalm 
												18:9), and the prophet had 
												warned, “I will make the sun go 
												down at noon, and I will darken 
												the earth in broad daylight” 
												(Amos 8:9). Ancient witnesses 
												even remarked upon a midday 
												withdrawal of light; yet 
												Scripture’s purpose is plain: 
												God compelled a watching world 
												to reckon with the crucifixion 
												of His Son.
												
												The Tearing of 
												the Veil
												When Jesus cried out and yielded 
												up His spirit, “the veil of the 
												temple was torn in two from top 
												to bottom” (Matthew 27:50–51a). 
												That moment coincided with the 
												preparations for the evening 
												sacrifice, and the word “behold” 
												signals awe. The veil that 
												guarded the Most Holy 
												Place—entered by the high priest 
												once a year on the Day of 
												Atonement—stood as a continual 
												reminder of man’s distance from 
												the Holy One. Its rending 
												signified that through the death 
												of Christ the way into God’s 
												presence stands open. Our hope 
												now “enters the Presence behind 
												the veil, where the forerunner 
												has entered for us, even Jesus” 
												(Hebrews 6:19–20). Therefore 
												believers “draw near with a true 
												heart in full assurance of 
												faith,” consciences cleansed and 
												bodies washed (Hebrews 10:22), 
												enjoying “boldness and access 
												with confidence through faith in 
												Him” (Ephesians 3:11–12). The 
												cross fulfilled and superseded 
												the priestly system: Christ’s 
												once-for-all offering put away 
												sin (Hebrews 9:24–28; 9:26b), 
												and those redeemed in Him are 
												now “a royal priesthood” to 
												proclaim His praises (1 Peter 
												2:9). The purpose of the veil 
												had reached its end.
												
												The Earthquake
												“The earth quaked, and the rocks 
												were split” (Matthew 27:51b). 
												The violence of that shaking 
												announced a covenantal turning 
												point. When the Lord descended 
												upon Sinai to give the Law, “the 
												whole mountain quaked greatly” 
												(Exodus 19:18). At Calvary, 
												heaven signaled that the era of 
												types and shadows was passing 
												and that a kingdom “which cannot 
												be shaken” was at hand. The 
												Hebrew writer exhorts hearers to 
												receive the word from heaven, 
												for the divine promise says, 
												“Yet once more I shake not only 
												the earth, but also heaven,” 
												indicating the removal of things 
												that can be shaken so that what 
												is unshakable may remain 
												(Hebrews 12:25–28). The cross 
												and its tremors declare the 
												stability of Christ’s reign and 
												summon worship “with reverence 
												and godly fear.”
												
												The Opening of 
												Certain Graves
												“Many bodies of the saints who 
												had fallen asleep were raised; 
												and coming out of the graves 
												after His resurrection, they 
												went into the holy city and 
												appeared to many” (Matthew 
												27:52–53). The evangelist is 
												careful: graves of the saints 
												opened, and their appearing 
												followed the Lord’s own 
												resurrection. These holy ones 
												served as a sign and 
												comfort—that death’s dominion 
												was being broken and that Jesus 
												is “the firstfruits of those who 
												have fallen asleep” (1 
												Corinthians 15:20). Their rising 
												pointed forward to the general 
												resurrection and testified in 
												Jerusalem that the crucified 
												Jesus is the living Christ.
												
												Conclusion
												The Father wrote the meaning of 
												the cross across sky, sanctuary, 
												soil, and sepulchres: judgment 
												on sin, access to His presence, 
												the unshakable kingdom, and 
												resurrection hope. Through the 
												crucified and risen Lord we 
												“come boldly to the throne of 
												grace” to receive mercy and help 
												in time of need (Hebrews 4:16). 
												Let hearts approach with faith, 
												gratitude, and steadfast 
												obedience.
There Was Darkness over the Whole Land Sermon Outline:
												
												Text: 
												Matthew 27:45
												
												Theme: At Calvary the 
												Father marked the crucifixion 
												with four signs—midday darkness, 
												the torn veil, the quaking 
												earth, and opened 
												graves—declaring judgment on 
												sin, open access to His 
												presence, the shaking away of 
												the old order, and the 
												firstfruits of resurrection 
												hope.
I. Introduction: Setting the Scene
- 
													Read Matthew 27:45; parallel: Luke 23:44–45. 
- 
													Explain Jewish timekeeping: sixth hour ≈ noon; ninth hour ≈ 3 p.m. (Mark 15:33). 
- 
													Passover context: full moon season frames the event’s public visibility. 
- 
													Aim of the lesson: observe the signs, understand their meaning, and respond in faith (Hebrews 4:16). 
II. Three Hours of Darkness (Matthew 27:45; Luke 23:44–45; Psalm 18:9; Amos 8:9)
- 
													Duration and scope - 
														Noon to 3 p.m.; “over all the land” (Matthew 27:45; Luke 23:44). 
- 
														Luke notes “the sun was darkened” (Luke 23:45). 
 
- 
														
- 
													Why this was no natural eclipse - 
														Passover at full moon precludes a solar eclipse. 
- 
														Solar eclipses last minutes, not three hours. 
 
- 
														
- 
													Prophetic anticipation - 
														The Lord bows the heavens; darkness under His feet (Psalm 18:9). 
- 
														Promise to darken the earth at noon (Amos 8:9). 
 
- 
														
- 
													Theological significance - 
														A sign of divine judgment and solemn witness to the cross. 
- 
														Heaven calls a watching world to reckon with the crucifixion of the Son. 
 
- 
														
III. The Tearing of the Veil (Matthew 27:50–51a; Hebrews 6:19–20; Hebrews 10:19–22; Ephesians 3:11–12; Hebrews 9:24–28; 1 Peter 2:9)
- 
													Moment and manner - 
														Immediately after Jesus “yielded up His spirit” the veil was torn “from top to bottom” (Matthew 27:50–51a). 
- 
														Time aligned with preparations for the evening sacrifice; “Behold” signals awe. 
 
- 
														
- 
													What the veil signified - 
														Separated the Holy Place from the Most Holy; entered yearly by the high priest. 
- 
														Described as massive and humanly untearable, underscoring divine action. 
 
- 
														
- 
													Meanings of the tearing - 
														Access: our hope enters “behind the veil”; Jesus is our forerunner and High Priest (Hebrews 6:19–20). 
- 
														Assurance: we “draw near” with cleansed conscience and full assurance (Hebrews 10:19–22). 
- 
														Boldness: “access with confidence through faith in Him” (Ephesians 3:11–12). 
- 
														Fulfillment: Christ’s once-for-all offering puts away sin; no recurring sacrifices (Hebrews 9:24–28, esp. 9:26b). 
- 
														Priesthood redefined: Christians are “a royal priesthood” to proclaim His praises (1 Peter 2:9). 
 
- 
														
- 
													Pastoral application - 
														Worship with reverence and confidence; live as a priestly people with cleansed hearts. 
 
- 
														
IV. The Earthquake (Matthew 27:51b; Exodus 19:18; Hebrews 12:25–28)
- 
													Description - 
														“The earth quaked, and the rocks were split” (Matthew 27:51b). 
- 
														A violent, targeted sign that announced Heaven’s verdict at the cross. 
 
- 
														
- 
													Sinai recalled - 
														The mountain quaked greatly when the Law was given (Exodus 19:18). 
 
- 
														
- 
													Covenant transition - 
														“Yet once more I shake not only the earth, but also heaven” signals the removal of the shakable and the abiding of the kingdom (Hebrews 12:25–28). 
 
- 
														
- 
													Pastoral application - 
														Receive the unshakable kingdom with gratitude; serve with reverence and godly fear (Hebrews 12:28). 
 
- 
														
V. The Opening of Certain Graves (Matthew 27:52–53; 1 Corinthians 15:20)
- 
													Sequence and scope - 
														Tombs of “many saints” opened at Jesus’ death; those saints “after His resurrection” entered Jerusalem and appeared to many (Matthew 27:52–53). 
 
- 
														
- 
													Purpose of the sign - 
														Testimony in the holy city that death’s hold is breaking. 
- 
														Christ as “firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep” anchors the church’s hope (1 Corinthians 15:20). 
 
- 
														
- 
													Pastoral application - 
														Comfort one another with resurrection hope; live in holiness as heirs of life. 
 
- 
														
VI. Integrated Meaning of the Four Signs
- 
													Darkness: the moral weight of sin and Heaven’s witness to the cross (Matthew 27:45; Amos 8:9). 
- 
													Torn veil: open access to God through the crucified High Priest (Matthew 27:51a; Hebrews 6:19–20; 10:19–22). 
- 
													Earthquake: the end of the shadow system and the arrival of the unshakable kingdom (Matthew 27:51b; Hebrews 12:25–28). 
- 
													Opened graves: firstfruits of resurrection and public testimony to Christ’s victory (Matthew 27:52–53; 1 Corinthians 15:20). 
VII. Conclusion and Preparation for Invitation (Hebrews 4:16)
- 
													Summation - 
														The Father inscribed the meaning of Calvary across sky, sanctuary, soil, and sepulchres. 
- 
														Through Jesus we “come boldly to the throne of grace” for mercy and help (Hebrews 4:16). 
 
- 
														
- 
													Transition to response - 
														Urge hearers to draw near in faith, anchor life in the unshakable kingdom, and hold fast the hope of resurrection. 
 
- 
														
												
												Call to Action
												Consider the signs of Calvary 
												and respond in faith. Draw near 
												to God with assurance through 
												Jesus, confessing sin and 
												embracing the access His blood 
												provides. Anchor your life in 
												the unshakable kingdom, practice 
												reverent worship, and hold fast 
												the hope of resurrection. If you 
												have not obeyed the gospel, turn 
												to Christ today in repentance, 
												confession, and baptism, walking 
												in newness of life.
Key Takeaways
- 
													Calvary’s darkness fulfilled prophetic expectation and summoned the world’s attention (Matthew 27:45; Luke 23:44–45; Psalm 18:9; Amos 8:9). 
- 
													The torn veil proclaims free access to God through Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice (Matthew 27:50–51a; Hebrews 6:19–20; Hebrews 9:24–28; Hebrews 10:22; Ephesians 3:11–12). 
- 
													The earthquake signaled a covenantal change and the arrival of what cannot be shaken (Matthew 27:51b; Exodus 19:18; Hebrews 12:25–28). 
- 
													Opened graves bore witness to Jesus as firstfruits of the resurrection and pledge our future hope (Matthew 27:52–53; 1 Corinthians 15:20). 
- 
													Because of Christ’s work, believers approach the throne of grace with confidence and reverence (Hebrews 4:16). 
Scripture Reference List
- 
													Matthew 27:45 — Darkness from the sixth to the ninth hour. 
- 
													Luke 23:44–45 — Darkness described; veil torn. 
- 
													Psalm 18:9 — The Lord descends with darkness under His feet. 
- 
													Amos 8:9 — The sun darkened at noon by divine act. 
- 
													Matthew 27:50–51a — Jesus yields His spirit; the temple veil torn from top to bottom. 
- 
													Hebrews 6:19–20 — Hope enters behind the veil; Jesus our forerunner and High Priest. 
- 
													Hebrews 10:22 — Exhortation to draw near with full assurance of faith. 
- 
													Ephesians 3:11–12 — Boldness and access through faith in Christ. 
- 
													Hebrews 9:24–28 (esp. 9:26b) — Christ’s once-for-all sacrifice puts away sin. 
- 
													1 Peter 2:9 — Christians as a royal priesthood. 
- 
													Matthew 27:51b — The earth quakes; rocks split. 
- 
													Exodus 19:18 — Sinai quakes at the giving of the Law. 
- 
													Hebrews 12:25–28 — Divine shaking removes the shakable; the kingdom remains. 
- 
													Matthew 27:52–53 — Saints raised and seen after Jesus’ resurrection. 
- 
													1 Corinthians 15:20 — Christ the firstfruits of those asleep. 
- 
													Hebrews 4:16 — Bold approach to the throne of grace for mercy and help. 
Prepared by Bobby Stafford of the church of Christ at Granby, MO
 The 
		church of Christ
The 
		church of Christ






