sorry, but wrong again.
He rose on Saturday evening, at sunset.
He arose with a new temporal incorruptible body on Sunday, the dawning of the new age as a era of Sabbaths (plural) the first day of the week to represent the new creation.
Act 20:7 And upon the first day of the week, when the disciples came together to break bread, Paul preached unto them, ready to depart on the morrow; and continued his speech until midnight.
Remember, the word day is not there in the Greek as well as the word week .
For some reason the paraphrasers changed the plural form of Sabbaths into the word week .
First, the Jews of antiquity had no names for the days of the week or did they use the word week ., except for the sixth and seventh days. The seventh day, of course, was called the Sabbath (shabbat or sabbaton in Hebrew and Greek, respectively).
A better paraphrase I believe would have been and upon the order of dawning or the first of the new era of Sabbaths, when the disciples came together to break bread. The word Sabbath is plural.
Christ in respect to the promise came to fulfil the shadows of the ceremonial laws the pointed back to the rest we do have from the standpoint of creation. This is when Christ in God performed the work when he was working.. It in Acts 20 was the time of reformation/restoration. The new orders anticipated the literal rest we will receive in the new heavens and earth. Then there will be no dying .The former things of here will not be remembered or ever come to mind forever and ever.
"The words are “heart of the earth” and not "tomb" even though the tomb was part of it. Heart of the earth represents an invisible affliction of suffering in His Spirit. Knowing God who is eternal Spirit cannot die. He uses an example of Jonah who was alive suffering as a tribulation the Spirit of God named hell .Belly of hell represent the suffering of one living. The tomb those dead.
Jon 2:2 And said, I cried by reason of mine affliction unto the LORD, and he heard me; out of the belly of hell cried I, and thou heardest my voice.
Mat 12:40 For as Jonas was three days and three nights in the whale's belly; so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the “heart of the earth”.
God uses the word three to indicate the end of a matter. The tribulation as an invisible affliction began in the garden as the Son of man cried out His Spirit not seen, as
if it was blood take away the wrath that was intended for the believer.. And out of that tribulation of crying to the father... take the cup of suffering from the Son of man, the father replied and sent him messengers to strengthen Jesus.
The literal tomb came into play after Christ willfully of his own according gave up the Spirit then it became part of the phrase” heart of the earth”. Hell simply means suffering as a tribulation not a literal location but rather a work of faith.