Abstract

In his book, Grammars of Resurrection (Robinette 2009: 7), Brian D. Robinette uses ‘grammar’ as that term refers to the resurrection of Jesus as providing ‘the framework and ambience for all Christian discourse and imagination’. In this article, I adopt his use of ‘grammars’ with reference to the empty tomb. Grammar is the substructural level of language providing structure, meaning and system to language. So, the question to be addressed here is this: What does the empty tomb speak? Or, what message may be elicited from the various texts about the empty tomb in the New Testament? This is, of course, a theological and constructive task, as we look at what these texts together bring to our topic.

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