John 11:1-53
May 10
David A. Davis
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You will note the length of today’s lesson from the Gospel of John. We are finishing up a four-week series in our preaching life that has looked at long conversations with Jesus in the Gospel of John. Nicodemus. The Samaritan woman at the well. The man born blind. And this morning, Mary and Martha and the death of their brother Lazarus. The reason to read this lengthy encounter is that the power of the long conversation comes with the gospel writer’s slow, deliberate description of grief. More than the words spoken, it is the emotions named and actions described, and the questions that never get answered. Love. Heartbreak. Anger. Weeping. Spreading the word about one who is dying. Surrounding those who grieve to console them. Following them here and there to make sure they’re okay. Questioning. Blaming. Weeping. Someone is saying the wrong thing. Others are trying to make sense of it all. A whole lot that will never be understood. And weeping. The passage begins with Jesus being told of Lazarus’ death and ends with the authorities hatching the plans to put Jesus to death.
Jesus is remembered in this encounter with Mary and Martha not for what he said, but for what he did. Jesus wept. Even more than his raising Lazarus from the dead, Jesus is remembered here for his tears. Jesus wept. But the infamous brevity of the verse (the shortest verse in the bible, right), the brevity cannot take away from the way John describes the Lord’s profound encounter with death. John works hard to let the reader know how greatly and deeply Jesus was disturbed. His tears alone can’t sum up the emotion.
Mary came and fell at the feet of Jesus, repeating Martha’s claim, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.” Mary was weeping. The friends surrounding her were weeping. When Jesus saw it, John tells us “he was greatly disturbed in spirit and deeply moved.” Greatly disturbed in spirit and deeply moved. It is a redundant expression clearly intended to express magnitude. A magnitude of emotion, like multiplying to the “nth degree, that’s what frames his tears. Some suggest that Jesus is crying because he was mad at himself for his delay. Others argue that he was really upset with Mary and the crowds; that somehow their tears conveyed a lack of belief in what he was about to do. Some even conclude his pre-tear irritation was akin to being annoyed that he had to do another miracle. None of that is very compelling.
After “Jesus wept” and before he heads to the tomb, John again reports that Jesus was “greatly disturbed.” The piling on of descriptors implies that there is more going on here than Jesus’ own grief over the death of one whom he loved. St. John of Chrysostom argues that this depth of emotion that surrounds Jesus’ tears is the same emotion Jesus displayed in the Garden of Gethsemane as he was “deeply grieved, even to death.” This profound, raw emotion that leaves him shouting there outside the tomb of Lazarus, “greatly disturbed in spirit and deeply moved, it rises up in Jesus as he faces off with the power of death and darkness. It is another round in a cosmic battle. This soul-wrenching reaction of Jesus, it comes in response to death’s constant and cold reality that tears again and again at the human heart. Jesus’ confrontation with death; it took him to the cross, to his own tomb, to the depths of hell. Yes, he was “greatly disturbed in spirit and deeply moved.”
Weeping wasn’t even the strongest response that came from Jesus. It was that shout. When he stood outside the tomb and cried with a loud voice. When he looked up to heaven, he prayed to the God of life and then let loose with a shout. When all that deep-seated existential staring down death emotion came bursting from within him, “he cried out with a loud voice.” He shouted. It was a whole lot more than a shout to Lazarus, a whole lot more than a one dead man rising shout. This was a resurrection shout for the ages. Just like Christ is Risen!
This story of Jesus, Mary, Martha, and Lazarus, it doesn’t just drip with his tears; it drips with our humanity. It’s that deliberate, slow description of life when confronted by the constant and cold reality of death. The only thing John misses is a description of Mary and Martha’s friends bringing food to the house. Tears. Questions. Everything is sort of slowing down. And even that shout.
Jesus said to Martha, “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.” I think I have repeated that verse at every funeral or memorial service that I have led since the first one in July of 1986. I haven’t kept count, but there were six in my first two months of ministry right out of seminary. So I have repeated it a lot. And no one, no one in all these years, has ever said to me, “What on earth does that mean?” No one ever asks because it’s not something you explain. It’s not a verse you parse. It’s not a sentence you diagram. No, you just sort of let it wash over you. The verse, it doesn’t stay in the ear or land in the brain; it resonates somewhere deep within where words don’t work so well. You can read biblical commentaries that try to unpack it, but frankly, they don’t do it very well. Because what you and I have come to know about this resurrection promise of Jesus is that it is all about when and where you hear it.
When death calls Easter people together, when we gather together here or at the cemetery or in a funeral home, when we fall on our knees hoping the resurrection promise of Jesus will once again wash over us, there is always an echo of Jesus’ shout. With each and every death, with each and every grieving heart, comes the tears of Christ himself and a cosmic, death-shattering shout. I can’t explain it, and I cannot really describe it. But I have seen it. Again and again and again. The people of God are taking that slow journey so full of grief, emotion, questions, routines, and seeking a comfort that can’t be parsed. The followers of Jesus dared to stare down the reality of death and then live every day in the power of the resurrection promise of God. Here in the body of Christ, living into the psalmist’s affirmation that “weeping may linger for the night, but joy comes with the morning”. God’s Beloved, gathered in and sent out, testifying and living into a resurrection shout so much bigger than one dead man rising. A resurrection shout that shall rise above all that the darkness brings, until that day when all the blind will see, and all who are thirsty will be satisfied, and we shall see the kingdom of God. A kingdom where swords are plowshares, and dividing walls are shattered, and the hungry are fed, and hatred is squashed, and love forever reigns and the beauty and artistry of God is unadulterated and radiantly on display; where no one shall hurt or destroy on all of God’s holy mountain, and justice and righteousness flow like and everlasting stream, and where death shall be no more. And God will wipe away every tear.
“Lazarus, Come Out!” Jesus and his resurrection shout. It is not a secret that here at Nassau Church, we have had more than our share of memorial services this spring. As I said to my peer group of pastors at our gathering earlier this week, I am really tired of death. But I have also received the holy gift of hearing these resurrection shouts. “I’m not afraid to die, I’m just not sure about getting there,” one person said to me. That’s a resurrection shout. From another, “Long ago I accepted Jesus as my Lord and Savior, and my relationship with him is safe and secure.” A resurrection shout. “I told my family it is time”. Resurrection shout. “I am eager to see my Creator and my Savior”. A resurrection shout. I told someone in my office weeks ago about the person years ago who said to me, “I just want to have some awareness of my grandchildren growing up when I am gone.” “That sounds like heaven to me”, I responded. The person in my office smiled and said softly, “Me too!” It was said in a whisper, but it was a resurrection shout.
Our granddaughter Frances Aubrey is named after her two maternal great-grandmothers, and they both were a piece of work. I have told you before that my mother, Jane Aubrey Davis, was the greatest theologian in my life. That mostly has to do with living with her all the years after my brother’s death at the age of 21 in a car accident when I was in second or third grade in 1973. Observing her grief and her faith amid a death she never got over. When my father was dying in 1998, and the cardiologist kept trying and trying and trying various procedures, I stood next to my mother when she told the doctor it was time to stop, “I know for you death is failure,” my mother said, “ But we are a family of faith. For us, death is not a failure.” She wasn’t preaching. She wasn’t wearing her faith on her sleeve. She wasn’t being rude to the doctor. But there in a hospital hallway of Mercy Hospital, there in PGH, it was a resurrection shout like so many others I have heard these forty years of ministry.
“Jesus said to Martha, ‘I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.’”
“Lazarus, come out!”
