The stories of Jesus’
Passion echo brilliantly as we move to commemorate that eternity changing three
days in Jerusalem so long ago.
Easter is upon us and
so is the whole of Jesus most resonating story.
All the parts of
those final days of Jesus life move me deeply-- from the meal, to the discourse,
to the trial, to the blood soaked wood of the cross.
And, of course,
Sunday.
Always, Sunday.
This Holy Week,
though, has me especially cringing again through every detail of the garden.
Jesus' arrest.
Jesus' arrest.
The shock. The
betrayal. The confusion.
All the blinding,
silencing fear.
It breathes in me
anew this year.
Stifling and rasping
and true.
My hope for Sunday’s
dawn has never been so acutely pronounced in this one particular way.
And yet, consistently
as my soul wrestles just to read it all through, my gaze is pulled from
Jerusalem, East, to Bethany.
And there it is.
The story that is
saving me right now.
That one, big, deep, restoring breath, just before.
John, Chapter 11.
A very specific
moment with one very specific point.
For the glory of God.
~~~~~
We are told that he
loved them.
Mary. Lazarus.
Martha.
Siblings who each one
drew Jesus near to their heart and home, in belief and friendship.
In adoration.
The story goes, that
this one time, Lazarus was sick.
But not just regular-sick.
He was ‘send-for-Jesus’
sick.
Everyone understood
what this meant.
It wasn’t a quick text
message.
It wasn’t a Facebook post typed quickly and sent with the push of one button.
It was a 'send-a-runner-to-arrive-with-out-of-breath-
words-because-we-have-no-recourse-and-he-may-die' dispatch-ery.
In John 11, the urgent
report is met with Jesus’ diagnosis:
“It won’t end in death.” vs4a
Jesus’ discourse:
“It is for God’s glory so that
God’s Son may be glorified through it.” vs4b
Jesus’ devotion:
“Now Jesus loved Martha and her
sister and Lazarus.” vs5
And Jesus’ delay:
“So when he heard…he stayed where
he was two more days…” vs6
Delay?!
After staying exactly
where he was for two more 24 hour stretches of time, Jesus then makes his way
back to Judea to answer his friends’ desperate call.
“On his arrival, Jesus found that
Lazarus had already been in the tomb for four days.” vs17
Arriving to the
Bethany scene, Jerusalem shadowed only two miles in the distance, Jesus finds
his friends’ community already days into their mourning and grief. The tears
have not stopped, the loss is still raw, and the tomb with the decaying body is
already well-sealed.
For four days.
It seemed that the Healer had not
arrived in time.
They sent word.
But He did not
immediately come.
His belated arrival brought
Martha purposefully to meet him on the road still outside the village.
“Lord, if you had been here, my
brother would not have died...” vs21
Repeated again by
Mary a few moments later:
“Lord, if you had been here, my
brother would not have died.” vs32
Oh, the lingering echo
of that soul crushing lament:
“Lord, if you had been here…”
Why did He delay?
When word had first
reached him, he reasoned:
“…and for your sake I am glad I was not there, so that you may believe.” Vs 15
When Martha first
reached him, he proclaimed:
“I am the resurrection and the life.
The one who believes in
me will live, even though they die,
and whoever lives by
believing in me will never die.
Do you believe this?” vs 25-26
When Mary first reached him, he actively witnessed:
“When Jesus saw her weeping, and the Jews who had come along with her
also weeping, he was deeply moved in spirit and troubled...
Jesus wept.” vs 33&35
In Jesus, even delay accomplished.
Accomplished?
Perhaps this:
When word first reached him, his
disciples came along with him.
“Let us also go that we may die with [Jesus].” vs16
Or this:
When Martha first reached him, she
confessed:
“Yes, Lord,” she replied, “I believe that you are the
Messiah, the Son of God, who is to come into the world.” vs27
Even this:
When Mary first reached him, Jesus stood
weeping with her grieving at his feet:
“See how he loved [Lazarus]!” vs36
Community, confession, love.
All spun expansively within the space
of a delay.
Also doubt.
“But some of them said, “Could not he who opened the eyes
of the blind man have kept this man from dying?” vs 37
Delay can reveal a whole entire heart.
Still, he comes.
In front of Lazarus' tomb,
at Jesus bidding, the stone is moved, death decay expectant.
Jesus prays, looking up:
“Father, I thank you that you
have heard me.” vs41
What did he just say?
God heard him?
“I knew that you always hear me,
but I said this for the benefit of the people
standing here,
that they may believe that you sent me.” vs42
He connects publicly
to His Father in front of an opened and reeking tomb,while a bewildered gathering turns their eyes to witness what in the world the Healer meant to do.
Raising his voice, his loud cry echoes:
“Lazarus, come out!” vs43
After the delaying.
After the confessing.
After the weeping.
In the midst of all
the love.
Every breath halted.
Every eye opened and
raised up to see.
Hearts pounding, minds racing...
“Come out?!”
And they beheld,
“The dead man came out…” vs44
“Jesus said to them, “Take off
the grave clothes and let him go.” vs44
Can you imagine the
sounds?
The gasps?
The cries of Martha
and Mary as they heard their brother’s voice speak again.
Felt his heart beat.
Smelled his breath as they stepped into his hug.
So very, so
pungently, Alive.
Another wake quickly follows, but this was one is different from the last.
The weeping ceases as believers multiply and a community rejoices Lazarus' raising.
Unfortunately, the jealousy of Jesus' enemies looms too.
Thus, the Easter story marched just before them.
Jesus would also die and rise again.
Another wake quickly follows, but this was one is different from the last.
The weeping ceases as believers multiply and a community rejoices Lazarus' raising.
Unfortunately, the jealousy of Jesus' enemies looms too.
Thus, the Easter story marched just before them.
Jesus would also die and rise again.
It’s always coming.
The Glory of that Easter Son.
But this year...this
one.
With Jesus' powerful Passion story repeating around me, I remain sequestered in that definitive delay of chapter 11.
With Jesus' powerful Passion story repeating around me, I remain sequestered in that definitive delay of chapter 11.
I am sure I am not
alone.
A time of waiting often feels so deceptively abandoned.
It rarely is.
Others wait too.
We are a scattered gathering each suspended in our specific 'send-for-Jesus' crisis; maybe, also, simultaneously enduring the crushing loss of a delay.
A time of waiting often feels so deceptively abandoned.
It rarely is.
Others wait too.
We are a scattered gathering each suspended in our specific 'send-for-Jesus' crisis; maybe, also, simultaneously enduring the crushing loss of a delay.
“If you had been here, this thing
would not have happened!”
A celebration may reverberate in the world around us while we feel what we have lost.
Grief enshrouds.
Questions loom.
Questions loom.
Nevertheless, John 11 reminds us…
He is always arriving.
In His own exactly
specific, Right Now.
Never, not for one
second, veering off a carefully chosen course.
Purposed.
For God’s glory.
So that many may
believe.
“I Am the resurrection…”
Right now,
Yesterday,
Tomorrow.
I Am.
We serve the present
tense, always coming, right-on-time God.
No matter what
mourning engulfs his delay in appearing,
we can be confident
that he will come.
In the waiting of
John 11:
*Lazarus slept.
*Martha directed:
“But I know that even now God
will give you whatever you ask.” vs22
*Mary cratered to
Jesus’ feet in tears.
We are told that
Jesus loved them.
Every single one,
received.
And in the process of
his own redemptive timing, God’s Son is:
Revealed (I Am).
Released (Jesus Wept).
Restored (Lazarus,
come forth!)
May I be found in the
wake of crisis, eyes uplifted, testimony praising from my lips:
“Father, I thank you that you
have heard me!”
“…for the benefit of the people
standing here,”
“that they may believe that you
sent me…”
“For the glory of the Lord.”
Let it be so, Holy
Father, let it be so.