Empty tomb
In the Gospels, the empty tomb is the first sign of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. When certain of Christ's female followers go to the tomb in which his body was laid after the crucifixion, they discover his body gone and young men or angels waiting within to tell them that he is risen from the dead. In the Gospel of Mark the discovery of the empty tomb is described like this:
There may be a play on words here. Christ came from Galilee (Hebrew גליל), a hilly region of northern Palestine that took its name from the Hebrew גלל, gaalal, "to roll, to go round". At the end of his life, he is crucified at Golgotha, the Aramaic form of the Hebrew גלגלת, gulgoleth, "a round, rolling thing or skull", also from gaalal.
In Greek, "the stone was rolled away" is αποκεκυλισται ο λιθος ην, apokekylistai ho lithos en. The same verb is used here in the Septuagint, an ancient Jewish translation of the Old Testament into Greek:
In the original Hebrew, the verb in both cases is gaalal, and in the New Testament there may be a play on Galilee, Golgotha, and gaalal.
See also: