I agree with the bold, somewhat, (I disagree that it was "the widow's son who followed Jesus," per your previous post
)... I actually believe it was the one who ran with Peter to the [Jesus' empty] sepulchre (I realize the common belief is that that was John, the unnamed disciple and supposed writer of the book of John etc [yes, I'm aware of all the arguments regarding this
]), so where it says (in bold, below):
6 Then cometh
Simon Peter following him, and went into the sepulchre,
and seeth the linen clothes lie,
7 And the napkin, that was about his head, not lying with the linen clothes, but wrapped together in a place by itself.
8
Then went in also
that other disciple, which came first to the sepulchre,
and he saw, and believed.
9 For as yet they knew not the scripture, that he must rise again from the dead.
... the "and HE SAW, AND BELIEVED" refers only to "that other disciple," and
is not said of "Peter"... so in this way, I believe [being the same one with the "linen [grave] cloths" around himself in the earlier Mark 14:51-52 scene] he understood death in an experiential way... and when you trace back through all the places regarding this person [the one who "that other disciple" correlates with], he'd be the same person to whom Jesus had answered Peter's Q of "what about him??" (in the John 21:21 scene, "Peter, seeing him [that same guy] saith to Jesus, Lord, and what [
shall] this man [
do]?" Recall, the subject being discussed was Peter's own "death," and "by what" death he should glorify God--so Peter is asking about the one who'd already had "linen [grave] cloths" about him...).
Here is where Jesus responds with, "IF I WILL THAT
he should tarry till I come, what
is that to thee? Follow thou me." (Said to Peter alone, as I see it.) Then as a result of this convo, "went this [incorrect] saying abroad among the brethren, that that disciple should not die: yet JESUS SAID NOT unto him [unto Peter], He [that other disciple] shall not die; but, IF I WILL THAT he should tarry till I come, what
is that to thee?" This, showing that it didn't concern Peter (he was to "follow thou me" regardless of the other guy's fate)... but understanding "why" Peter would have even asked such a question, helps (IMO), as they were talking about "death" (by means of "persecution, on account of Him/Jesus") and he grasped that this one had already [experientially] died (the "linen cloths" about him, in the Mk14 scene) so wondered if he would also be put to death (again), this time by means of this "persecution, on account of Jesus").
I believe he
only "fled" because he was "
naked" (when "
the young men laid hold on him"), meaning, he was
more bold than the others who'd fled (and THEY fled
not on account of being "naked" or even "laid hold on"), and all this led to his
"saw the linen cloths [of Jesus' sepulchre],
AND BELIEVED"... [again,
not said of Peter] (and that he likely represents those of Israel [like in Dan12:1-4, regarding "
still-living persons"/i.e.
Israel coming up out of the graveyard of nations,
where scattered] in the future trib period, who will do the same [per Olivet Discourse], and also who will "endure to the end" of the trib [having heeded the Lk21:36 instruction], so to enter the MK-age in mortal bodies [capable of reproducing/bearing children],
like that to which Dan12:12 refers ["BLESSED"... correlating with the "BLESSED" of Rev16:
15-16 [speaks of "thy nakedness"]/ Rev19:
9 (re: the wedding
FEAST/SUPPER/MK-age, commencing upon His "RETURN"
to the earth)]).
I wrote all that too quickly (so excuse the flaws), I'm on a deadline I need to get back to...