However, I don't find any coincidence between Isaiah 22: 15-118 and Mark 15:42-47,except the fact that there is a tomb. Even the context and narrated events are absolutely differents. The references in Vridar blog don't explain this.
Isaiah:
15 This is what the Lord, the Lord Almighty, says:
“Go, say to this steward,
to Shebna the palace administrator:
16 What are you doing here and who gave you permission
to cut out a grave for yourself here,
hewing your grave on the height
and chiseling your resting place in the rock?
17 “Beware, the Lord is about to take firm hold of you
and hurl you away, you mighty man.
18 He will roll you up tightly like a ball
and throw you into a large country.
There you will die
and there the chariots you were so proud of
will become a disgrace to your master’s house.
MArk:
"When he learned from the centurion that it was so, he gave the body to Joseph. 46So Joseph bought some linen cloth, took down the body, wrapped it in the linen, and placed it in a tomb cut out of rock. Then he rolled a stone against the entrance of the tomb. 47Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of Joseph saw where he was laid".
I was composing a reply along these lines, which I agree with wholeheartedly. The reference to Shebna is that he will fall from power. The passage is stating: you have built yourself a splendid tomb, but even if you hide in it, you will be thrown out by God. That's not even a bit like Mark's Jesus.
As an interesting matter of archaeological fact, reported in wiki
A royal steward's rock-cut tomb discovered in Siloam is believed to be his, although only the last three letters of the name remain legible on the lintel from the tomb that is now kept in the British Museum The assumption is that Shebna's name may have also been pronounced 'Shevanyahu', which fits the inscription perfectly.
So he may have been known for his splendid tomb, which would be why the allusion is made in Isaiah.
Here is the Isaiah passage. Palace Treasurer Shebna
WP is to be removed from his post, by the will of God.
Because of his pride he was ejected from his office, and replaced by Eliakim the son of Hilkiah as recorded in Book of Isaiah: 22:15-25
Why is this important enough to be noted? Because after Shebna's removal Eliakim became minister to King Hezekiah
WP who
enacted sweeping religious reforms, including a strict mandate for the sole worship of Yahweh and a prohibition on venerating other deities within the Temple in Jerusalem.
2 Kings 18 3 And he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord, according to all that David his father did. 4 He removed the high places, and brake the images, and cut down the groves, and brake in pieces the brasen serpent that Moses had made: for unto those days the children of Israel did burn incense to it: and he called it Nehushtan. 5 He trusted in the Lord God of Israel; so that after him was none like him among all the kings of Judah, nor anythat were before him. 6 For he clave to the Lord, and departed not from following him, but kept his commandments, which the Lord commanded Moses.
Except he's just smashed up Moses' brass snake-God, as stated.
Vridar tells us that he is aware of only one scholar who has made the identification of those two passages; and I can understand the reluctance of other writers to follow Kinghardt's lead here. For I can't make out any clear indication of influence. Both refer to rock cut sepulchres - but in both periods these were the normal places of disposal of human remains.
If fourteenth and twentieth century European sources similarly referred to inhumation in earth, would we think that one had influenced the other, or would we note simply that this custom prevailed equally in both periods? The latter surely, unless there was other substantial reason to connect the two accounts - and in the scriptural cases here in question, there is not.