John 11:1-45
The Gospel of John is not like the other three gospels. It is put together to tell us the meaning of Jesus -- it’s more theology than history. The last few Sundays we’ve been seeing some of Jesus’ miracles described by John. Today’s is the last one he describes. John calls the miracles “signs” beginning with the miracle at the wedding feast of Cana. In addition to the seven miracles, John also describes seven statements that Jesus makes beginning with “I am”. Today’s statement is probably the most profound when Jesus tells Martha that he is the resurrection and the life.
As I read this gospel, I notice something else. Jesus’ conversation with Martha is sort of an intellectual one. It begins with Martha saying “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.” And then there is a dialogue about resurrection; Jesus promises that her brother will rise, and she replies that, yes, she believes that it will happen on the last day. Jesus replies that he is the resurrection and the life, and asks Martha whether she believes this. She sort of does, agreeing that he is the Messiah but not affirming Jesus’ claim in so many words.
Mary’s conversation is very different. It also begins with the words, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.” but Jesus does not enter into a dialogue with her. Instead, he becomes “perturbed and deeply troubled” and asks the mourners to show him where the tomb is. And that’s when Jesus wept, bringing some of the bystanders to remark, “See how he loved him” and others to find fault with Jesus. And John again emphasizes that Jesus was visibly disturbed as he commands that the tomb be opened.
Martha protests, pointing out that by now the body of Lazarus would stink; but the stone is rolled back, Jesus says a prayer and calls Lazarus, who comes out of the tomb, and as the gospel says, “now many of the Jews who were with Mary believed.”
So this is a spectacular miracle. Four days was long enough to be sure that the soul had left the body and gone to the underworld. No power other than God could reunite it with the body. And everyone expected that rolling back the stone would release a stench, because by now the body would have entered into a state of decay.
But there are some other points in this story. Lazarus and Jesus were friends -- not like the apostles were friends. Lazarus was an ordinary guy, probably worked with his hands like Jesus did, and took care of his sisters. I suspect Lazarus wasn't perfect. Probably got upset with Martha who seems pretty bossy. Probably would get upset with Mary in the near future, when she took the only valuable thing they had, a jar of fine perfume meant to be used on the bride at her wedding, and broke it and used it to anoint Jesus. Lazarus was ordinary. He would go to bed at night wishing he had used his day better; he’d be upset with himself for losing his temper now and then. He would wonder if God could really love someone as unpromising and unaccomplished as he was.
When Jesus hears about Lazarus, he is relatively safe. He’s outside the part of Palestine that the Jewish authorities had the most control. When he proposes to go to rescue his friend, Thomas voices what they all fear -- to go to Bethany, a couple of miles from Jerusalem, was to put themselves in severe danger. But Jesus goes anyway. And I think he knows that this act will initiate the events that lead to his own crucifixion and death. After all, John will tell us later, that the authorities decided to kill Jesus and Lazarus too, because so many people were coming to believe in him.
As Jesus meets Mary the weight of what he is about to do descends on him. He's going to confront death itself, and in doing so will initiate the events which will end in his crucifixion. And this is the point, Jesus is doing this so that his friend Lazarus might live. Jesus is trading his one life for that of Lazarus. He is going to ask his Father to call the soul back from the underworld into this decaying body, and the authorities will hesitate no longer, and within a few days he will be arrested.
And perhaps that is the point that John is making -- not the raising of Lazarus from the dead -- we marvel at that, of course -- but that Jesus exchanges his life for that of his friend. During these last few days of Lent, let us remember that what Jesus did for Lazarus he does for each of us. He lays down his life in exchange for ours, not because we deserve it, but because he has chosen to be my friend and yours.