Martha begins in verse 21 … “Then said Martha unto Jesus,
Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died.” Her faith in His ability to heal and prevent
death was absolute. But something more
was going on here. Martha must have
sensed it. Perhaps it was a look of love
in His eyes. Perhaps it was His
non-verbal responses, His gestures, His motions, an intention of His that she
could not put a finger on, but spoke volumes about potential still to come
which she could not understand. So she
continues in verse 22 … “But I know, that even now, whatsoever thou wilt ask of
God, God will give it thee.” There it
is. Martha swings the door wide open on
the possibility of resurrection right here and now. What else is there to ask on behalf of her
brother. He is dead and sleeping. But even now, she knows that His Father
listens to His Son, and gives Him what He asks.
Jesus responds to her instinct in verse 23 saying … “Jesus saith unto
her, Thy brother shall rise again.” He
means right here and right now. He
means, the door of possibility you just opened, I have every intention of
walking through. You are about to
witness His restoration from the grave.
But her mind goes instinctively to what she believes from the scriptures
as she responds in verse 24 … “Martha saith unto him, I know that he shall rise
again in the resurrection at the last day.”
She is sure he will be saved in the Kingdom of God, and that on the “last
day” of our world, when calamity is falling on the wicked, Lazarus like all the
rest of the dead who put their faith for Salvation in Jesus Christ will rise
again. Notice, this happens at the end
of time, not throughout it. Lazarus will
sleep until that “day”, not be aware of everything between now and then.
But Jesus has a larger point to make. He wants to assure her that on that great
day, the mechanism by which the dead will rise, is the same mechanism that is
standing before her, he continues in verse 25 … “Jesus said unto her, I am the
resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet
shall he live: [verse 26] And whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never
die. Believest thou this?” Jesus is the
mechanism by which all who sleep will be awakened as He promised. Jesus is the mechanism by which all who
desire Salvation, restoration, and perfection will find it. He will create it within us, raising us from
death unto life, and a more abundant life at that. Jesus asks Martha, the true question that
matters, do you believe it is ME who will do this? It is different to believe that “God” will do
it, than that Jesus is “God” who will do it.
Knowledge of scripture is not the same as knowledge of Christ that is
experienced first-hand as He saves you and does what He promises. Those who have a first-hand testimony of the
saving power of Christ are sure about what He is doing, not just a theoretical
discussion about what He can do if we let Him.
Jesus is making this very personal for Martha. Notice this conversation John records is the
very essence of Salvation between man and God, and it is being held with a
woman. This is the meat-and-potatoes of
the gospel itself, and the question and the faith is between Christ and
Martha. Mary may often get top billing
for her sensitivity and love for Christ, but here is Martha questioning the
very source and origin of life itself.
Here is the faith of Martha being verified, despite the logic and the
history, and the reality of what she “knows”.
In verse 27, Martha makes her stand, her choice, and her
declaration for now and all time. Her
brother is still dead and in the grave.
Nothing has been “proven” to her yet.
But live or die, sickness or health, there will only ever be ONE true
Messiah, and ONE true Son of God, and ONE true hope for her own restoration and
redemption and He is standing in front of her.
She declares … “She saith unto him, Yea, Lord: I believe that thou art
the Christ, the Son of God, which should come into the world.” She has made her choice about what she will
believe – BEFORE – any actions or proof are offered that Christ can do what He
says He can do. And with this
declaration, the “why” question is no longer important. In point of fact, it was never answered. Jesus never told her “why” he delayed, and
did not simply heal her brother. He
never answered why. But he offered so
much more. And now, no matter what, she
was at peace, and returned inside the home.
On arriving back through the grieving crowd of support,
Martha finds Mary and tells her that Jesus has arrived and is asking for
her. Mary immediately gets up and runs
to Jesus. John records that Jesus was
still where Martha had left Him, He had not made much progress to getting to
their home. So when those who were
trying to comfort Mary, saw her get up so quickly and head out of the house,
they just assumed she was running to the grave site in order to continue to
grieve. For Mary was as sad, as sad
gets. Her heart was broken for her
brother to the core. Those who were with
her just assumed she was going to the grave to weep. But Mary, like her sister, wanted to know
“why” as well. She may have come at this
question from a different point of view.
For her it was about love. Her
brother treated her well despite her life and past. He was merciful and loving to her. To lose that kind of love was a loss she
could not bear. Then complicated because
the love of the Master was so great, having restored her life when she should
have lost it; how could a love that great seem apathetic in the time of so
great a need? Love could not do
this. So for her, the “why” was even
more important.
In verse 32 John records … “Then when Mary was come where
Jesus was, and saw him, she fell down at his feet, saying unto him, Lord, if
thou hadst been here, my brother had not died.”
Having said this Mary began weeping.
She was literally on the ground at the feet of Christ, no pride left, no
hope left, only a sadness that cut her to the core. How could love not have responded to a pain
only Christ might fully understand. The
empathy of Christ was keen. He saw
through human eyes what it was like to lose one who was loved so much. He saw through Mary, how great a loss death
is to us who have no vision beyond the grave.
Love laid on the ground in front Him weeping. And for the first time in John’s record of
the gospel, He records that this sight moved Christ to His own core. John records of this experience in verse 33 …
“When Jesus therefore saw her weeping, and the Jews also weeping which came
with her, he groaned in the spirit, and was troubled, [verse 34] And said,
Where have ye laid him? They said unto him, Lord, come and see.” Those who were with Mary still thought she
was on her way to the grave to weep. Mary
wept because she could not reconcile how love could let this occur. She knew that Christ could have prevented it
and did not understand why He would not.
She knew she had lost a love of her brother and would not see him
again. For Mary the possibility of
resurrection is not something she will be entertaining today.
And so John records in verse 35 the shortest and perhaps
most profound insight into the character of God throughout scripture … “Jesus
wept.” Now keep in mind, that Jesus
knows what He is about to do. He is not
weeping over the loss of Lazarus, because Lazarus is about to be alive
again. He is weeping because the heart
of Mary is SO broken, that her sadness breaks His own heart. Jesus feels and sees the loss of death
through the eyes of Mary, and sees the question she poses of why Love could
allow this to occur. He knows the
answer. But the answer does NOT stop her
pain right now. He knows that in heaven,
there will be an eternity of joy, with a life that Martha, Mary and Lazarus will
never see end. But that does not stop
her pain right now. She weeps right
now. And so, in the most tender sympathies
He weeps with her. He shares her grief,
even though He knows what is about to happen.
He sees her pain and it cuts Him to the core.
Jesus weeps, for all who experience pain, and death. He weeps that pain and death exist at
all. It was NOT His intention. It is why He came; to see removed from our
lives. But we cling to it. We won’t let Him take it away. We hold on to it like it is a prize, instead
of the cancer it truly is. And He weeps,
because He cannot force us to let it go.
Jesus weeps because He is not allowed to end ALL death, all pain, all
sin within us. He wants nothing more
than our joy, and He weeps with heart that is broken, because we will not. He shares her grief, and experiences His own,
on a more profound level than any with a broken heart from a love rejected will
ever understand. For His love for us is
deeper than any we have ever known, and too often, it is rejected by us. And so He weeps.
Those who accompanied Mary see Jesus weeping, and His
profound sadness is rightly interpreted as an indicator of how much Jesus loved
Lazarus. But it is not just for Lazarus
or Mary, that Jesus weeps, He weeps for all of us who reject His perfect
love. He longs that all would be saved
from pain, death, and this thing we have made of ourselves. Then those who are there begin asking the
same question as Mary and Martha have posed. If Jesus healed all these others, why not heal
Lazarus? This question causes Jesus much
pain as well, for while He must act in overall best interest, sometimes the
pain is still something we experience in the short term. John continues his account in verse 38 … “Jesus
therefore again groaning in himself cometh to the grave. It was a cave, and a
stone lay upon it.” But it was time now,
for grief to give way to joy.
Jesus calls for them to take action in verse 39 … “Jesus
said, Take ye away the stone. Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith
unto him, Lord, by this time he stinketh: for he hath been dead four days. [verse
40] Jesus saith unto her, Said I not unto thee, that, if thou wouldest believe,
thou shouldest see the glory of God?” It
does not make sense to do what Jesus is asking of them. How many times did what God asked of His
servants not make sense from our point of view?
Martha responds to Jesus by citing Him the facts as she knows them; she
gives Him the reason why this request is a bad idea. 4-day old dead bodies in a hot desert climate
are not the stuff anyone is going to want to smell. Logic, history, the facts, all support
Martha’s concern. But Jesus is asking
Martha, if she is willing to believe in spite of what she “knows”. It is the same question put to the Pharisees. It is the same question put to us. It was the same question Lucifer walked away from;
trust his own instincts, or the word of God.
Ultimately it is the question that will see evil permanently
extinguished. When we trust God more
than we trust our own wisdom, the facts will be revealed to be something more
than we knew, and evil will be gone forever.
In verse 41, they obeyed the request of Christ, probably due
to the urging of Martha to listen to Him.
Notice that Mary is still too overcome with grief to be functional in
this story. She is there, but the
interactions are largely between Christ and Martha. Each of us are different. Yet each of us are loved by Christ for who we
are, not just as a part of a larger group.
Christ interacts with Martha differently than Mary or Lazarus, but loves
all three of them. Jesus was moved to
tears with Mary, not so with Martha. And
it will be the faith of Martha, to trust in Christ, in spite of what she
“knows” that will see what transpires next.
Verse 41 reveals … “Then they took away the stone from the place where
the dead was laid. And Jesus lifted up his eyes, and said, Father, I thank thee
that thou hast heard me. [verse 42] And I knew that thou hearest me always: but
because of the people which stand by I said it, that they may believe that thou
hast sent me.” This prayer is a
revelation. It had already been answered
to Christ, but He said it aloud so that those standing near Him could hear Him
give His Father the glory of what was about to happen.
This was why Christ was here this day. This was “why” He had delayed returning to
Lazarus, and “why” He had not simply just healed him like He did for so many
others. He was here to establish once
and for all definitive proof that He was the author of life and of our
resurrection both from evil and from death.
He was more than just a prophet.
He was more than just a “good man” with good ideas. He was and remains the only Son of God, able
alone to do, what no other man will ever be able to do. Christ alone would be our salvation. Verse 43 continues ... "And when he thus
had spoken, he cried with a loud voice, Lazarus, come forth.” An old professor of mine once told me, and I
agree, that had He not called Lazarus by name, He might have called forth every
dead person who had ever walked the earth.
In point of fact, this is what He will do at the last day that Martha
described. He was loud enough for
Lazarus to hear, but more so, for the crowd thereabouts to clearly know what
was going on. John continues with the
immediate results in verse 44 … “And he that was dead came forth, bound hand
and foot with graveclothes: and his face was bound about with a napkin. Jesus
saith unto them, Loose him, and let him go.”
What might have appeared like insanity at Jesus’ loud command, is now
revealed to be a miracle ONLY God could perform. He had now fulfilled His promise to Martha,
and the crop would be a harvest of souls much greater than just her, his
disciples, and the family and friends of Lazarus gathered there that day.
John records in verse 45 the two responses we have to the
miraculous love of Christ … “Then many of the Jews which came to Mary, and had
seen the things which Jesus did, believed on him. [verse 46] But some of them
went their ways to the Pharisees, and told them what things Jesus had done.” Some of the Jewish leadership there that day
were willing to accept the proof and fight no longer against the Son of
God. Others only saw the conversions as
a continued threat to their power and went to discuss the matter with the
Pharisees who would not believe. Verses
47 through 54 record the epitaph of this story among those who refuse to
believe. They acknowledged that
something must be done about Him, or else “all” might believe in Him. Then in a twist of fate that defied even
their own expectations, they reasoned that if these conversions continued, the
Romans would come and take away their place, and their nation. So the high priest, rationalized that it was
better for one man to die than for a nation to be destroyed. All along they had looked for a Messiah who
could undo the Roman occupation, now that they thought this might actually
happen, they grew afraid, and decided it was better to kill Christ, than take
the chance He might fail in that effort.
Hypocrites. They could not even
keep their motives of hate straightened out where it came to preserving their
own power. But when no proof will ever
be enough, there is only one response to love – kill it, or be converted by
it. So John records that Jesus walked no
more openly among the Jews, and went to a city called Ephraim.
Jesus had now done something that could not be ignored, or
pushed off as merely being a prophet, or good man of God. He had resurrected the dead. This was done in front of a great many
witnesses. The story was not even argued
by His enemies. They knew it was
true. They knew it would something they
could not refute. So they opted to kill
Him. But for those who were watching a
bit more closely, there was another hope revealed in the story of Lazarus. It is not ONLY our physical restoration that
Christ is capable of performing. It is
our spiritual one as well. Though we are
dead in our sins, and unable to call ourselves back to life – our Savior is
more than capable of doing just that. He
is able to fulfill His promise to bring us back to life in the here and now,
NOT just in the last great day. This was
a message in the story of Lazarus. Hope
does not need to be deferred to see life in the here and now. We can be saved today. We can have a new life that He is the author
of. It is a life without pain and death,
and will never see an end. This is the
life He refers to as having no ending, and the only one that matters from the
perspective of God. This is what His
mission was that day, and remains today.
The sleep of death is a mere nap, a moment of time we cannot
recall. The life He offers starts today,
and lasts forever in His kingdom. We can
be resurrected from sin today, and from death at the last great day, and know
life both now and then without the pain we embrace for ourselves. That is His gift to us.
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