The Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ According to John
Now a certain man named Lazarus was sick. He was from Bethany, the village where Mary and her sister Martha lived.[a] (Now it was Mary who anointed the Lord with perfumed oil[b] and wiped his feet dry with her hair, whose brother Lazarus was sick.)[c] So the sisters sent a message[d] to Jesus,[e] “Lord, look, the one you love is sick.” When Jesus heard this, he said, “This sickness will not lead to death,[f] but to God’s glory,[g] so that the Son of God may be glorified through it.”[h] (Now Jesus loved Martha and her sister and Lazarus.)[i]
So when he heard that Lazarus[j] was sick, he remained in the place where he was for two more days. Then after this, he said to his disciples, “Let us go to Judea again.”[k] The disciples replied,[l] “Rabbi, the Jewish leaders[m] were just now trying[n] to stone you to death! Are[o] you going there again?” Jesus replied,[p] “Are there not twelve hours in a day? If anyone walks around in the daytime, he does not stumble,[q] because he sees the light of this world.[r] But if anyone walks around at night,[s] he stumbles,[t] because the light is not in him.”
After he said this, he added,[u] “Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep.[v] But I am going there to awaken him.” Then the disciples replied,[w] “Lord, if he has fallen asleep, he will recover.” (Now Jesus had been talking about[x] his death, but they[y] thought he had been talking about real sleep.)[z]
Then Jesus told them plainly, “Lazarus has died, and I am glad[aa] for your sake that I was not there, so that you may believe.[ab] But let us go to him.” So Thomas (called Didymus[ac])[ad] said to his fellow disciples, “Let us go too, so that we may die with him.”[ae]
When[af] Jesus arrived,[ag] he found that Lazarus[ah] had been in the tomb four days already.[ai] (Now Bethany was less than two miles[aj] from Jerusalem, so many of the Jewish people of the region[ak] had come to Martha and Mary to console them[al] over the loss of their brother.)[am] So when Martha heard that Jesus was coming, she went out to meet him, but Mary was sitting in the house.[an] Martha[ao] said to Jesus, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. But even now I know that whatever you ask from God, God will grant[ap] you.”[aq]
Jesus replied,[ar] “Your brother will come back to life again.”[as] Martha said,[at] “I know that he will come back to life again[au] in the resurrection at the last day.” Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live[av] even if he dies, and the one who lives and believes in me will never die.[aw] Do you believe this?” She replied,[ax] “Yes, Lord, I believe[ay] that you are the Christ,[az] the Son of God who comes into the world.”[ba]
And when she had said this, Martha[bb] went and called her sister Mary, saying privately,[bc] “The Teacher is here and is asking for you.”[bd] So when Mary[be] heard this, she got up quickly and went to him. (Now Jesus had not yet entered the village, but was still in the place where Martha had come out to meet him.) Then the people[bf] who were with Mary[bg] in the house consoling her saw her[bh] get up quickly and go out. They followed her, because they thought she was going to the tomb to weep[bi] there.
Now when Mary came to the place where Jesus was and saw him, she fell at his feet and said to him, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.” When Jesus saw her weeping, and the people[bj] who had come with her weeping, he was intensely moved[bk] in spirit and greatly distressed.[bl] He asked,[bm] “Where have you laid him?”[bn] They replied,[bo] “Lord, come and see.” Jesus wept.[bp] Thus the people who had come to mourn[bq] said, “Look how much he loved him!” But some of them said, “This is the man who caused the blind man to see![br] Couldn’t he have done something to keep Lazarus[bs] from dying?”
Jesus, intensely moved[bt] again, came to the tomb. (Now it was a cave, and a stone was placed across it.)[bu] Jesus said, “Take away the stone.”[bv] Martha, the sister of the deceased,[bw] replied, “Lord, by this time the body will have a bad smell,[bx] because he has been buried[by] four days.”[bz] Jesus responded,[ca] “Didn’t I tell you that if you believe, you would see the glory of God?” So they took away[cb] the stone. Jesus looked upward[cc] and said, “Father, I thank you that you have listened to me.[cd] I knew that you always listen to me,[ce] but I said this[cf] for the sake of the crowd standing around here, that they may believe that you sent me.” When[cg] he had said this, he shouted in a loud voice,[ch] “Lazarus, come out!” The one who had died came out, his feet and hands tied up with strips of cloth,[ci] and a cloth wrapped around his face.[cj] Jesus said to them, “Unwrap him[ck] and let him go.” (John 11:1-45)
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That is some story in the Gospel today. A man dead four days is brought back to life!
Just imagine it. A group of men roll the large circular stone away from the opening of a cave that has been turned into a tomb. Then they stand back. Jesus calls out in a loud voice, “ Lazarus come out!” and out comes a figure, its face and hands wrapped in bandage-like cloths, and wearing the simple funeral nightgown.
Kinda scary. Kinda wonderful.
Martha and Mary are going to take Lazarus home from the tomb. He is alive, and well, and lives for some time afterward – he is mentioned again in the New Testament.
It’s bizarre, isn’t it?
Why? Why does Jesus do this?
He loved Mary and Martha and Lazarus, and came to help his friends. That’s what friends do, isn’t it? They help each other.
There’s a wonderful story about two friends who served together in the First World War. One of them was wounded and left lying helpless and in pain in no-man’s land. The other, at peril to his own life, crawled out to help his friend; and when he reached him, the wounded man looked at him and said, “I knew you would come.”
Martha and Mary knew Jesus would come.
The simple fact of human need brings Jesus to our side.
When you need him, he is there.
It was dangerous for Jesus to go to Bethany. The authorities were looking to kill him. His disciples warned against it. And Jesus well knew that going there would be a first step towards the cross.
He went anyway.
But in the accounts of Jesus’ life, everything happens for a reason. We are told in Jesus’ words that God will be glorified, and so He is.
Because the great proof of Christianity is seeing what God does in Jesus Christ. Words may fail to convince, but there is no argument when we see God in action. Simply stated, the power of Jesus Christ has made the coward into a hero, the doubter into a person of certainty, the selfish man into a willing servant. The power of Christ has made the bad person good throughout history.
When you think about it, that puts a tremendous responsibility on the shoulders of today’s Christians doesn’t it? . It’s God’s design that every one of us should be living proof of his power. [1]
Glory to God whose power working in us can do infinitely more than we can ask or imagine.
Through his power, we can do much more than we can ever imagine we can do.
Through his power we are able to do things we could never even think of doing before.
Are we empowered?
How do we know if we have been empowered?
Have you ever tested it?
We used to have wooden bird houses in the trees at the front of the house. Every year sparrows moved in. They would bring in grass, and feathers, and other mysterious stuff to build nests in there. The entrance was only a small hole and there was just a small peg for them to rest on before entering.
I have wondered how the baby birds are ever going to learn to fly. How are they going to be able to get on that little peg, and how is the mother going to show them what to do.
They will sit there, feet firmly wrapped around that peg, hanging on for dear life, equipped magnificently for flying, and yet scared to take off. The mother bird will somehow have to convince them that they can actually fly. She will have to push them off, I imagine, and when they feel themselves falling, they will flap their wings and find out that indeed they aren’t going to crash to the ground (where the cat from across the road will be waiting for them) but indeed they will be able to fly.
To soar heavenwards.
That’s us. We are empowered Christians. We have been given our wings. We have the spirit of God within us and we are equipped to do his work. We just have to be convinced of that.
And try using it!
And we will be rewarded. We will live forever.
Jesus says, “I am the one who raises the dead to life. And everyone who has faith in me will live, even though they die. And everyone who lives because of faith in me will never die.”
Live for ever! Never die!
He doesn’t mean that we will live for ever in this world. What he does mean is that we will have new life in this world, and eternal life in the next.
And one depends on the other!
The few years we are in this world, and everyone over fifty knows that the years we are here are few indeed, are our preparation for the next world.
If we live right, then we are promised eternal life, and a life that is infinitely better than this one. It had better be hadn’t it, if it’s to last for eternity!
If we live wrongly, then we will be judged accordingly.
If that is so, then what fools we are to live this measly three-score-years-and-ten completely for ourselves, never caring about others, or indeed about God, when it’s going to directly affect how we spend eternity.
You would have to be spiritually dead, wouldn’t you, not to care?
Tokichi Ishii was hanged in Tokyo for murder, in 1918.
He was a man with an almost unparalleled criminal record. He was way worse than Clifford Olson. He had murdered men, women and children in the most brutal way. Anyone who stood in his way was pitilessly eliminated. Now he was in prison awaiting death.
As it happened, he was visited by two Canadian women. They were allowed to talk to him only through the bars of his cell. They tried to communicate with this monster, but he only glowered at them like a caged and savage animal. In the end they abandoned the attempt but they gave him a Bible, hoping that it might succeed where they had failed.
Strangely enough, he began to read it, and having started, he could not stop. He read on until he came to the story of the Crucifixion. He came to the words, ‘ Father forgive them, for they know not what they do,’ and these words broke him.
“I stopped,” he said, “I was stabbed to the heart as if pierced by a five inch nail. Shall I call it the love of Christ? Shall I call it his compassion? I do not know what to call it. I only know that I believed and the hardness of my heart was changed.”
Later when the condemned man went to the scaffold, he was no longer the hardened, surly brute he once had been, but a smiling radiant man.
Christ had brought Tokichi Ishii to life, and life to Tokichi Ishi. And this unlikely man, formerly ‘dead,’ but now ‘alive’ – ironically just when his earthly body is to be put to death – will inherit eternal life.
We are told that when he learned about his friend Lazarus, Jesus wept.
Seeing that………… we know that God too weeps for us, his children, even for those of us who have become dead to him. Even for Tokichi Ishii.
Incidentally, the Greeks, for whom John’s Gospel was written, were astounded to hear of a God who actually cared for people.
Note that when Lazarus received new life, it was through Jesus’ prayer to his Father. Jesus does nothing by himself.
In everything Jesus did, he acted for his Father, was obedient to his Father, and allowed his Father to work through him.
How would it be in this world if we set God in his proper place in our lives, and instead of acting for ourselves, we acted for God?
How would it be if we took the new life he has given to us, the empowerment with which we have been gifted, and did something wonderful for God?
……….if .. like a baby bird which has never flown before, we can step out into the world, trusting that the wings he has given us will hold us up, and do something that we have been scared to do before …………
………because if we don’t use what we have been given, we will lose it.
We can stick with the bird metaphor – I hate to change metaphors mid-stream, and I hate clichés like the plague – A bird when flying has to keep flying. Oh, it may find a thermal current somewhere that it can ride for a little while, but they don’t last long. If the bird doesn’t keep flapping its wings, it will fall to the ground.
Likewise, we have to keep using the power we have been given. We have to continue to grow in Christ – otherwise, we will fall back………..fall into spiritual decline….become like everyone else……….stop coming to church….. stop caring so much….become….spiritually dead.
What a shame if that came to be, after the magnificent sacrifice that Jesus made on our behalf.
What a shame to have wasted our time here.
Far better, to be alive, and vibrant – noisy for Christ – if you like – and to let the world see his triumph – in the world, and in us:
Lord, make us pure; enrich our life
With heavenly love for evermore;
Give us thy strength to face the strife,
And serve thee better than before.
[1] The Daily Study Bible, William Barclay, G.R.Welch Co. Ltd., Burlington, Ontario. Vol 2 1975 pp86-87
