Verse explainer

What does Matthew 28:6 really mean?

Three words carry everything: 'as he said' — the resurrection wasn't a surprise rescue, it was a kept promise.

KJV

He is not here: for he is risen, as he said. Come, see the place where the Lord lay.

BSB

He is not here; He has risen, just as He said! Come, see the place where He lay.

The angel's announcement at the empty tomb turns on a small phrase almost always skipped in quotation: 'as he said.' Jesus had told his disciples in Galilee that he would be handed over, crucified, and rise on the third day (Matthew 16:21, 17:23, 20:19). The resurrection, on this reading, is not a last-minute reversal but the fulfillment of a specific, prior claim. The invitation — 'Come, see the place where the Lord lay' — is equally deliberate: the angel doesn't merely declare, he offers evidence. The tomb can be inspected. The absence is verifiable. Matthew frames the resurrection not as a mystery to be believed without grounds, but as an event with a location, a prior announcement, and witnesses who were invited to check for themselves.

"He is risen" is an article of blind faith — a claim made with no evidence offered. The verse itself pushes back on this. The angel doesn't just announce the resurrection and ask for belief — he immediately extends an invitation to look: 'Come, see the place where the Lord lay.' The empty tomb is offered as something that can be observed, walked into, and checked. Then there is the detail 'as he said': Matthew has already recorded Jesus predicting this outcome in plain terms (16:21, 17:23, 20:19). The resurrection is presented as the fulfillment of a falsifiable prediction, not a free-floating claim. John Gill notes the phrase anchors the event to prior spoken words, so the women are not hearing something new but seeing something promised. JFB reads the invitation to 'come, see' as evidence the emptiness is meant to be weighed, not merely accepted. None of this resolves every philosophical question about miracles — but it does mean the text itself does not ask for credence without any basis; it points to a place, a prior promise, and witnesses who checked.
John Gill18th c. · PD

Gill underlines that the phrase 'as he said' points back to specific words spoken in Galilee in the hearing of the women themselves — Christ had predicted his own delivery, crucifixion, and third-day rising directly to them as well as to the disciples. The angel is not announcing something unprecedented; he is marking a promise as fulfilled.

Jamieson, Fausset & Brown19th c. · PD

JFB treats the invitation 'Come, see the place' as a deliberate, almost affectionate gesture — the empty grave is open to inspection, and readers are pressed to linger there. The emptiness is not a puzzle to be explained away but a fact to be absorbed. They connect it to the broader resurrection testimony across the Gospels.

ἠγέρθη ēgerthē

'He is risen' — passive aorist of egeirō, meaning to wake, rouse, or raise up. The passive voice matters: it is frequently used in resurrection contexts to indicate God raising Jesus, not merely Jesus reviving himself. It is a completed action ('has been raised'), not a process still underway. This single word is the pivot of the verse and of the entire chapter.