In the Gospel of John, we read about Jesus
performing a miracle that proves we never have
to worry about dying.
D.L. Moody was often heard to say during the
closing days of his life, “Some fine morning,
you will read in the newspapers that D.L. Moody
is dead. But do not believe it, for I shall
be more alive that morning than ever before!”
If you have Christ in your life as your personal
Savior, you will be like D.L. Moody. If you
do not know Christ, all you have to look forward
to is fear and despair.
The miracle we will learn about in this study
shows us that Jesus has power over death...the
power to bring a dead person back to life. Jesus
can bring you from spiritual death into life.
And the life Jesus gives is eternal life.
Here in chapter 11, is the last miracle recorded
in the Book of John. It happened just one week
before Jesus Himself was put to death, and then
rose again. It is almost a preview of the death
and resurrection of Jesus. This story is told
in great detail by John and is recorded only
by him among the four Gospel writers. The end
result of this miracle is that Jesus is put
to death Himself. Raising someone from the dead
was more than the religious leaders could stand.
They felt that Jesus had to be killed or else
He was going to influence everyone and take
away the power the Pharisees had. Unknown to
them, death would not be able to hold Jesus
any more than it had held down Lazarus, as we
will learn in this story.
This story is recorded in John 11:1-46. Here
is how it is told in the New Living Translation:
A man named Lazarus
was sick. He lived in Bethany with his sisters,
Mary and Martha. This is the Mary who poured
the expensive perfume in the Lord’s feet
and wiped them with her hair. Her brother, Lazarus,
was sick. So the two sisters sent a message
to Jesus telling Him, “Lord, the one you
love is very sick.”
But when Jesus heard
about it He said, “Lazarus’s sickness
will not end in death. No, it is for the glory
of God. I, the Son of God, will receive glory
from this.” Although Jesus loved Martha,
Mary, and Lazarus, He stayed where He was for
the next two days and did not go to them. Finally
after two days, He said to his disciples, “Let
us go to Judea again.”
But His disciples
objected. “Teacher,” they said,
“Only a few days ago the Jewish leaders
in Judea were trying to kill you. Are you going
there again?”
Jesus replied, “There
are twelve hours of daylight every day. As long
as it is light, people can walk safely. They
can see because they have the light of this
world. Only at night is there danger of stumbling
because there is no light.” Then He said,
“Our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep,
but now I will go and wake him up.”
The disciples said,
“Lord, if he is sleeping, that means he
is getting better.” They thought Jesus
meant Lazarus was having a good night’s
rest, but Jesus meant Lazarus had died.
Then He told them
plainly, “Lazarus is dead. And for your
sake, I am glad I was not there, because this
will give you another opportunity to believe
in me. Come, let us go see him.”
Thomas, nicknamed
the Twin, said to his fellow disciples, “Let
us go, too - and die with Jesus.”
When Jesus arrived
at Bethany, he was told that Lazarus had already
been in his grave for four days. Bethany was
only a few miles down the road from Jerusalem
and many of the people had come to pay their
respects and console Martha and Mary on their
loss. When Martha got word that Jesus was coming,
she went to meet Him. But Mary stayed at home.
Martha said to Jesus, “Lord, if you had
been here, my brother would not have died. But
even now I know that God will give you whatever
you ask.”
Jesus told her, “Your
brother will rise again.”
“Yes,”
Martha said, “When everyone else rises,
on resurrection day.”
Jesus told her: “I
am the resurrection and the life.
Those who believe
in me, even though they die like everyone else,
will live again.
They are given eternal life for believing in
me and will never perish.
Do you believe this,
Martha?”
“Yes, Lord,”
she told Him. “I have always believed
you are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one
who has come into the world from God.”
Then she left him and returned to Mary. She
called Mary aside from the mourners and told
her, “The Teacher is here and wants to
see you.” So Mary immediately went to
him.
Now Jesus had stayed outside the village, at
the place where Martha met him. When the people
who were at the house trying to console Mary
saw her leave so hastily, they assumed she was
going to Lazarus’s grave to weep. So they
followed her there. When Mary arrived and saw
Jesus, she fell down at his feet and said, “Lord,
if you had been here, my brother would not have
died.”
When Jesus saw her
weeping and saw the other people wailing with
her, he was moved with indignation and was deeply
troubled. “Where have you put him?”
He asked them.
They told him, “Lord,
come and see.” Then Jesus wept. The people
who were standing nearby said, “See how
much He loved him.” But some said, “This
man healed a blind man. Why could not he keep
Lazarus from dying?”
And again Jesus was
deeply troubled. Then they came to the grave.
It was a cave with a stone rolled across its
entrance. “Roll the stone aside,”
Jesus told them.
But Martha, the dead
man’s sister, said, “Lord, by now
the smell will be terrible because he has been
dead for four days.”
Jesus responded,
“Didn’t I tell you that you will
see God’s glory if you believe?”
So they rolled the stone aside. Then Jesus looked
up to heaven and said, “Father, thank
you for hearing me. You always hear me, but
I said it out loud for the sake of all these
people standing here, so they will believe you
sent me.” Then Jesus shouted, “Lazarus,
come out!” And Lazarus came out, bound
in grave clothes, his face wrapped in a head
cloth. Jesus told them, “Unwrap him and
let him go.”
A STRANGE RESPONSE TO
DEATH
John 11:1-16
Here is the scene, the picture: Lazarus died
in the town of Bethany, which is a village just
east of Jerusalem. Jesus was not there, but
was over in the town of Perea, which is over
on the other side of the Jordan River, quite
a long distance away. Perea is near where John
the Baptist ministered (John 10:40-42). It is
a long, hot, and dusty walk from there to where
Lazarus died.
THE PURPOSE OF JESUS:
John 11:1-4.
When Jesus heard the news that his friend was
sick, his response was very unusual. Jesus said,
“Lazarus’s sickness will not end
in death. No, it is for the glory of God.”
That answer sounds cold and harsh, and not at
all sympathetic. How could God get glory from
Lazarus being sick? Here are several possible
answers to this:
1. THE MIRACLE WOULD GLORIFY GOD.
Jesus knew He was going to raise Lazarus from
the dead and that people would glorify God when
it happened since only God can raise the dead.
2. LAZARUS WOULD GLORIFY GOD.
There are no words of Lazarus recorded in the
Bible, but his whole life was a message after
his resurrection. In fact, after he was brought
back to life by Jesus we find the chief priests
plotting to kill Jesus because so many Jews
became believers in Jesus on account of Lazarus
(John 12:10-11). Lazarus was a walking advertisement,
a walking sign, that Jesus is God. When the
established religion feels threatened, they
believe they must kill the new religion...even
when the established religion is a false religion.
3. THE DISCIPLES WOULD GLORIFY GOD:
John 11:14-15.
Jesus told his disciples that he was glad he
had not been present when Lazarus died. Jesus
said this so they would get a chance to witness
the resurrection and increase their own faith.
Jesus let his disciples go through difficult
things in order to stretch and build their faith.
Donald Gray Barnhouse once wrote, “I
believe that God does this with everyone, with
all of us all the time.”
To teach us to trust Him, God puts us in a
difficult spot. When God wants us to trust Him
greatly, He puts us in an impossible spot. Think
about that!
4. THE FRIENDS OF LAZARUS WOULD GLORIFY GOD
John 1:19.
Many of Mary and Martha’s friends came
to console them in the loss of their brother.
So Jesus knew that there would be a large number
of people witnessing the miracle and that they
would bring glory to God - and that many of
them would be drawn to Jesus as a result of
what they saw.
Lives are often changed through the experience
of another person’s death, and Jesus knew
that would happen here.
5. THE CROSS WOULD GLORIFY GOD
John 17:1 and 17:5.
In John 17:1 and 17:5, Jesus referred to the
cross as His “Glorification”. Just
days after Lazarus’ death and resurrection
came His own death and resurrection. Jesus knew
that what He was about to do for Lazarus would
cause the Pharisees to put Him to death. His
death would ultimately bring salvation to the
world, and so in an indirect way, Lazarus’
death leads to God’s glory, by leading
to the death of Christ.
6. THE DELAY OF JESUS
John 11:5-6.
Jesus started by saying something unusual to
the disciples and then continued by doing something
unusual when he postponed His visit to see about
his friend Lazarus’ condition. John says
that Jesus loved Martha, Mary, and Lazarus,
yet he stayed two more days in Perea without
going to Bethany.
No Pastor today would be able to get away with
that!
When there is a crisis and the pastor is called
to offer support, there is no way he could wait
two days and then show up at the hospital. Yet
somehow Jesus did not go to be with his friend,
even though Jesus loved Lazarus and the family.
The reason, of course, was that Jesus knew
what He was going to do when He did arrive.
By postponing an immediate answer to their need
of the family, Jesus was able to arrange an
even greater demonstration of His love.
Think about this: Sometimes the love of God
is delayed for our own ultimate benefit. First,
delays in expressions of God’s love can
allow time for us to think things through more
clearly. For example, we have asked God for
something and the answer is delayed. Then we
have time to reflect on the situation and by
doing this we can gain more understanding and
a more clear way to proceed.
Second, delays can help confirm our faith.
It is easy to trust the Lord when we have everything
we need. But when God’s answer is delayed
it causes our faith to be stretched - and that
is a good thing.
Someone wrote this:
We need to interpret circumstances by the love
of Christ,
And not interpret the love of Christ by circumstances.
The Jews in the time of Jesus had a tradition,
a belief that at death a person’s spirit
remained close to the body for two days; after
that it left. Jesus may have been allowing that
two-day period to pass so there would be no
question about Lazarus’ death. There is
no Biblical support for that belief, of course.
But perhaps Jesus did not want superstition
or tradition to get in the way of what He was
planning to do.
7. THE PRONOUNCEMENT OF JESUS:
John 11:7-16.
Another strange turn of events happened when
Jesus tries to explain it to the disciples.
He says, “Our friend Lazarus has fallen
asleep, but now I will go and wake him up.”
The disciples were worried about Jesus going
near Jerusalem since the Jews wanted to persecute
Him.
They thought Lazarus would be fine by himself
if he was just sleeping, so why risk a confrontation
with the Jews? But then, after a discussion,
Jesus puts it to them plainly: “Lazarus
is dead.” He wanted the disciples to see
the resurrection (verse 15) so off the Bethany
they went.
A SORROWFUL RESPONSE TO DEATH:
John 11:17-37
In the middle section of this story, we see
Jesus’ strange response to death replaced
by a sorrowful response.
THE SORROW OF THE SISTERS
John 11:17-32.
Mary and Martha have very different personalities,
and you can see that here as well as in Luke
10:38-42. Mary is relaxed, Martha is consumed
with concern. She is nervous about everything.
Martha accuses Jesus of letting Lazarus die
needlessly - she says that if Jesus had come
earlier He could have healed him before he died.
But Jesus tells her that Lazarus will live.
Martha then goes to call Mary, who has been
waiting in their house. When Mary came to where
Jesus was, she said the same thing Martha did
- that Lazarus would not have died if Jesus
had come sooner. Mary is sounding like Martha,
and Martha is sounding like Mary. The two sisters
were consumed with grief, and they are very
upset and confused as to why Jesus had not come
sooner to care for their brother. They say that
Jesus has let them down. Many people today say
the same thing...That they called on Jesus but
He did not do things the way they wanted Him
to, so they were no longer going to believe
in Him ...You have probably talked to people
like that. As Mary and Martha said, and as many
people today say, there would be no grief if
Jesus would just come when I call Him. He should
do what I tell Him to do.
THE SORROW OF THE SAVIOR:
John 11:33-37.
Now, the next thing that follows right after
the sister’s grief, is a scene that can
touch our hearts in a special way. What is it?
Well, it is the sorrow of the Savior. Jesus
experienced sorrow, which is a very human feeling.
One translation says that Jesus “groaned
in the spirit”. This means He was deeply
troubled. He was agitated, which is to say he
shook with emotion. This is a picture of Jesus
feeling intensely sorrowful because of the grief
of Lazarus’ family and friends. It was
their grief that prompted His own.
And verse 35 shows in the most direct way possible
the sorrow Jesus felt over the whole situation:
“Jesus wept”. Literally, the test
implies that Jesus burst into tears. He identified
with the loss of His friends and their extended
family. The New Testament says we are to weep
with those who weep (Romans 12:15), and bear
one another’s burdens (Galatians 6:2).
Suffering of our own helps us identify with
the suffering of others, which is another reason
not to resist the troubles God brings into your
life.
Jesus is called “the suffering Servant”
because He had a heart easily broken by the
needs of other people.
A SUPERNATURAL RESPONSE TO DEATH
John 11:38-46
When Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, Jesus
displayed both that He was human and that He
was God. His humanity was show in His having
the same emotion that His friends had. But He
does some more human things. You see, He does
things that any human could do, right up to
the time He gets to the point where human power
stopped. Jesus approaches the scene like you
or I would. First, He tells the bystanders to
take away the stone covering the tomb. Could
He have moved it with a wave of His hand? Yes,
but He did not. He does the same thing when
He instructs those standing by to take the grave
clothes off of Lazarus. Could He have raised
Lazarus right through the grave clothes? Yes,
but He didn’t. You see, Jesus’ miracles
are never flashy or showy. They are always easy
for us to understand.
In this study, we learn that Jesus does not
do for us what we can do for ourselves, but
He does do for us what we cannot do for ourselves.
So let us look for a moment at Martha, who
is always the person who is concerned with details.
Martha steps in to warn Jesus that there will
be a stink if they take away the stone. She
tells Jesus that Lazarus has been dead for four
days. How often do we give God advice about
things which He has exhaustive knowledge about?
If we would just obey Him it would demonstrate
greater faith than when we remind Him of this
or that.
Martha has no idea what Jesus is doing. She
probably thought Jesus just wanted to see His
friend Lazarus one last time. In that sense,
warning Him about the smell and condition of
the body makes some sense. But she should have
known by this time to trust Jesus and wait to
see what He had in mind. Especially since Jesus
tells her it is the glory of God that is about
to be revealed (Verse 40). In any event, Jesus
tells the people to move the stone and they
did.
Next, Jesus stands before the opened tomb and
called Lazarus from death back to life: “Lazarus
come out”. And the once-dead friend of
Jesus walked out of the tomb. Some Bible scholars
say that if Jesus had not mentioned Lazarus
by name, ALL the people in the tomb would have
come out!
This was a very great miracle - the miracle
of resurrection. WE know that in the time of
Lazarus, dead people were “mummified”.
That means that he was wrapped in strips of
linen cloth all around his body, with embalming
spices being enclosed within the wraps of the
cloth. The body would be placed in the tomb
on a shelf along with others buried in the same
tomb. Lazarus would not even be able to see
since his head was also covered with cloth wrapping.
He somehow made it outside of the tomb still
wrapped in the grave clothes - at this point
Jesus gave instructions to unwrap him and “let
him go”.
Someone once said two
of the greatest things God gives Christians
to do are:
1. To remove the stones from in front of the
grave, and
2. To remove the grave clothes from those resurrected
from death to new life.
Removing the stones is a symbolic way of saying
to remove the obstacles to a person’s
faith. For example, answering their questions,
being their friend, and in all ways smoothing
their path to Jesus.
And removing the grave clothes is helping that
person; our friend or our family-member; to
take off their old person and put on the new.
God gives the new life, but our part is to help
them as they move from spiritual death to spiritual
life.
So now, before closing our study of the miracle
of Lazarus’ resurrection, we need to look
again at the part of this miracle that spans
the centuries to our time today. This message
is as valuable to us today as it was to those
people standing right there and who saw Lazarus
walk out of the grave. In verses 25 and 26,
Jesus said:
I am the resurrection and the life.
Whoever believes in Me, though they die like
everyone else, will live again.
They are given eternal life for believing in
me and will never perish.
Do you believe this?
Jesus originally asked that question to Martha.
But right now, He is asking you the same question.
This is the most important question in the Bible.
It is the most important question you will ever
be asked. It is true that we will die a physical
death, but Jesus is talking about spiritual
life and death. You will die physically, but
if you believe in Jesus you will never die spiritually.
You will live forever in heaven with Jesus.
If you have read this story and you want to
live forever, then right now ask Jesus to come
into your life; tell Him that you have sinned,
and are sorry for your sins. In the best way
you know how, ask Jesus to come into your life
and give you the free gift of eternal life.
The miracle that will happen in your life is
the greatest miracle of all...you will move
from death to life, and you will be “born
again” into eternal life with God. If
you have never trusted Jesus, you can do it
today.