Tag: death

  • While we wait… DEATH and Resurrection

    While we wait… DEATH and Resurrection

    While we must wait…

    Life has not been progressing even remotely how we had planned.

    Here we are locked up as if in the prison of death. All normal life interrupted by events of recent days. Yet what next — what now?

    For the church in the year of our Lord, 2020 of these last days, it was Easter we could not celebrate in our familiar gathering of all who believe (as well as some who would like to hope in something other than death).

    In the first century, this waiting by the Apostle Thomas to see Jesus once more was somewhat different. For the other Disciples had given reliable first-hand witness of the Good News of the resurrection of the Messiah Jesus, their friend and Lord!

    In case you missed their perspective of Jesus’ DEATH and Resurrection, you might briefly look back.

    THE DEATH & RESURRECTION OF CHRIST

    Many of us have recently taken an entire day to worship the Lord Jesus on Resurrection Sunday or Easter Sunday.

    We have watched (even online) a sermon entirely dedicated to the Gospel of Jesus Christ being raised by God the Father from the tomb after His Sacrifice — His real and human suffering in the flesh –His sacrificial spilling of His Blood on the Cross for our sins.

    He IS risen indeed!

    Yet what now? What in this long time of waiting will happen next? God only knows.

    And what, for Christ’s sake (yes, for the Messiah’s sake), must we do?

    Waiting AFTER the Resurrection

    DEATH cries out! from many perspectives

    My own study of the Gospel of John in the year of our Lord, 2020, has reached briefly into the doubting thoughts of all concerning death and what does follow.

    Today is the eighth day since Thomas received the reliable Good News that Jesus had appeared to the other Disciples after DEATH.

    The Apostle Thomas must have greatly anticipated the time (whenever it might finally come) to witness the risen Lord Jesus in person. (Most of us know the story already mentioned from the Gospel of John.)

    It’s just been eight days of the fifty days during which the risen Lord Jesus bodily appears at various times to more than 500 witnesses. For Thomas, just about six more weeks to once again personally see and hear the Lord, the Son of Man risen from the grave.

    If you follow talkofJesus.com did eight days seem like a long wait after the rapidity of the events leading up to the Crucifixion and Resurrection of Jesus?

    And if you’re anything like me (and likely Thomas) even eight days, thirty or forty days must seem like an eternity. Remember, it is not.

    Today we take not the liturgical path leading to Pentecost, the chronological path of detailed witness of the Apostles, nor do we simply return to what we did before, recognizing that things have changed since we planned our year.

    Like Thomas and the Disciples, we did not come to this day anticipating it to be any different than the last three years.

    Life changed for the Apostles once Jesus rose from death.

    And now life changes for the 21st century church caught in a diaspora of faith and witness.

    Roger Harned talkofJesus.com

    Acts of the Apostles

    All seems lost for the Lord’s chosen Disciples once Jerusalem’s religious authorities and powerful Roman governor crucify the Messiah Jesus. Even those who had believed, been healed and followed Jesus to Jerusalem’s gates were left in despair. But then prophecy is fulfilled.

    The Sacrificial Lamb for our sin completes that for which the Son of Man was sent by God the Father.

    Jesus IS risen!

    After instructing the Disciples to take the Gospel into all the world, He ascends into the heavens from which He came. He will return once again in glory at the end of the age!

    Those same men who sought to preserve their own flesh by cowering behind locked doors now boldly witness the risen Lord Jesus in the public place.

    All the Apostles would eventually be martyred for their witness of Jesus Christ, except John (though he would be tortured and exiled). For now and until their earthly deaths the Apostles’ witness and preaching, emboldened by the Spirit of God, convicted sinners and attracted believers by faith in the Lord Jesus.

    Peter and the Apostles, filled with the Holy Spirit of the Lord God, preach to the crowds in the Jerusalem!

    The crowds are amazed, then Peter directs his preaching directly to the Jews, a remnant of faithful Jews recognizing the fulfillment of prophecy in what they have just witnessed.

    Acts 2:

    ‘In the last days,’ God says,
    ‘I will pour out my Spirit upon all people.
    Your sons and daughters will prophesy.

    Acts 2:17 NLT, quoting Joel 2:28

    Take now to heart, fellow 21st c. believer, that which Peter preached to those who had not seen the Lord raised from death on the Cross.

    Most had not been among the more than five hundred to witness the risen Christ Jesus, before His ascension on Pentecost just a few days prior to Peter’s preaching.

    23 But God knew what would happen, and his prearranged plan was carried out when Jesus was betrayed. With the help of lawless Gentiles, you nailed him to a cross and killed him. 24 But God released him from the horrors of death and raised him back to life, for death could not keep him in its grip.

    Isolated, then sent out

    two men in discussion behind this building is closes sign in a large church

    Do you suppose that the locked doors of your church surprise God?

    Could the Lord have a purpose in all of this — a purpose central to the Gospel of Jesus Christ crucified, buried, risen and returning again in glory?

    Of course God knew it! – the Lord God knows everything that has happened and will happen, even those unseen things which require our faith and glorious things beyond our grasp.

    Peter now recognizes this through the Holy Spirit of God, the same Holy Spirit he witnessed in Christ Jesus our Lord.

    God the Father and the Son of Man are ONE in the Same with the Holy Spirit!

    And Peter preaches the GOOD NEWS with anointed confidence to those with ears to hear.

    Son of David, Son of God!

    31 David was looking into the future and speaking of the Messiah’s resurrection. He was saying that God would not leave him among the dead or allow his body to rot in the grave.

    “God raised Jesus from the dead, and we are all witnesses of this.

    33 Now he is exalted to the place of highest honor in heaven, at God’s right hand. And the Father, as he had promised, gave him the Holy Spirit to pour out upon us, just as you see and hear today.

    34 For David himself never ascended into heaven, yet he said,

    ‘The Lord said to my Lord,
    “Sit in the place of honor at my right hand
    until I humble your enemies,
    making them a footstool under your feet.”’

    36 “So let everyone in Israel know for certain that God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, to be both Lord and Messiah!”

    37 Peter’s words pierced their hearts…

    His words pierced their hearts

    Do they pierce yours?

    Does the Gospel of Christ Jesus, sent to save sinners from death ring out to the crowds beyond the locked doors of a church building where once you gathered?

    A response of faith

    … and they said to him and to the other apostles,
    “Brothers, what should we do?”

    What must we do?

    If now the Holy Spirit finally pierces our own tech-brittled 21st century hearts, what is our response while we wait for the LORD’s return?

    Or even our response in this brief time before our own inevitable DEATH?

    For like this time of waiting for the Apostles, this life will no longer be the same for you and me.

    A former perspective of Church

    We have put on our ‘Sunday best’ for Easter for all these years. And we call ourselves, “Christian.” (Always from within the walls of our ‘church,’ and occasionally even in this world where we live, work and play.)

    What witness of Jesus yet resounds in the hearts of those who hear us claim — the Holy Name of the Lord?

    For they no longer may enter the building of our gathering, the place to which we once gladly invited:

    Let’s go to church.

    It seems that everything has changed and our vision for the church building no longer applies.

    Could a prosperous and comfortable church of these recent centuries have wandered aimlessly into a by-path meadow? It has remained an enduring challenge to the church.

    May God’s Grace preserve you from straying into Bypath Meadow!

    The man who professes to be a Christian must not expect God’s angels to keep him if he goes in the way of worldliness. There are hundreds, and I fear thousands, of church members who say that they are the people of God, yet they appear to live entirely to this world. The great aim is moneymaking and personal aggrandizement—just as much as it is the aim of altogether ungodly men.

    C. H. SPURGEON, AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON, ON LORD’S-DAY EVENING, AUGUST 22, 1875.

    The World’s Perspective of the 21st C. ‘church’

    The Acts of the Apostles witnesses the boldness of the early church even in the face of DEATH for their confidence and love in Christ.

    Unbeliever you know in this 21st century world of chaos look near and far for an example of men and women who exemplify the ‘god’ we claim by the witness of our lives.

    We tell some that Jesus died on a Cross for our sins.

    While our witness makes them wonder of YOU ‘so love the world’ that YOU would die for THEM.

    Where is the Christian who does not fear death,’ they ask?

    Yet when some agendized so-called ‘christians’ act boldly in ways repugnant to their own ideals, good-seeking souls of this world ask,

    ‘Why would I want to be a fool like THEM?’

    IF GOD SO LOVED THE WORLD, WHY DON’T I SEE IT IN CHRISTIANS?

    • THEY are after our money to build their grand cathedrals of prosperous vanity.
    • How are their corporate jets any different than those of the world’s great philanthropists who would save our world for another generation?
    • Are these so-called ‘christians’ banned from their big gatherings any better than the man isolated in a cave or on a mountaintop?
    • Really, are Christians any different than me?

    Fair questions of the world to any who claim faith.

    In our witness they observe a discrepancy between claim of Christ and our inability to differentiate between you and the world, because of Christ.

    Assuming God (against Whom the world rebels), how must those obedient to the Lord act when the world seemingly slips rapidly back into the chaos preceding creation?

    Fortunately, scripture provides not only answers, but also direction. For we are SINNERS LIKE THEM seeking justice, yet offering solace in LIFE after DEATH.

    Are you the Christian who fears not DEATH (yet is no fool)?

    Proverbs & Prophecy

    When the wicked die, their hopes die with them,
    for they rely on their own feeble strength.

    Proverbs 11:7 NLT

    Evil people get rich for the moment,
    but the reward of the godly will last.
    Godly people find life;
    evil people find death.

    Proverbs 11:18-19 NLT

    We find that those who do not believe may well accept the comfort of Scripture as hope for their own future. Proverbial advice, however, need not come exclusively from scripture.

    Others may have it right as well, so our random words of wisdom from scripture may make no more difference than those from a worshiper of stone living in the lies of idolatry. The Lord our God is One!

    The Prophet Isaiah, who we so often quote concerning the Messiah of God also promises a glorious future:

    Behold, a king will reign righteously…

    No longer will the fool be called noble,
    Or the rogue be spoken of as generous.

    For a fool speaks nonsense,
    And his heart inclines toward wickedness:
    To practice ungodliness and to speak error against the LORD,
    To keep the hungry person unsatisfied
    And to withhold drink from the thirsty.

    Isaiah 32:1a,5-6 NASB

    Tell those of the world who speak sense that you know this One Righteous King.

    “He existed in the beginning with God. And “God created everything through him.

    How they will know

    Do you, beloved brother or sister in Christ, recall Jesus’ last command to the eleven after Judas left them to betray the Lord?

    It would be for this time of waiting by the Disciples who must endure during the trying times of Jesus’ crucifixion.

    One way to look at the timing and importance of the Lord’s ‘new commandment’ to the Disciples might be to rephrase it to say something like:

    If you don’t remember anything else of what I have taught you, remember this…

    DO YOU?

    AND does Jesus New Command to His Disciples apply to the CHURCH while we await His return in glory?

    John 13:

    33 Little children, I am with you a little while longer. You will seek Me; and as I said to the Jews, now I also say to you, ‘Where I am going, you cannot come.’

    “A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, even as I have loved you, that you also love one another.

    John 13:34 NASB

    35 By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.”

    Does the church obey this new commandment of Jesus?

    IF YOU HAVE LOVE FOR ONE ANOTHER…

    Is this not the witness of Christ which builds His CHURCH — soul by sinful redeemed soul?

    Has the world not seen our white-washed building without seeing Christ?

    “Go into all the world,” the Lord commanded the disciples. Yet Jesus never suggested that we bring all of the world into our building of worship.

    Let your hearts, imprisoned in cells away from each other, hear what the Lord through Scripture says to the Church.

    For when once more we gather together, to ask the Lord’s blessing, perhaps those wandering lost souls of our neighbors will see that Christ’s Church is in fact, us.

    Amen.
  • DEATH cries out! from many perspectives

    DEATH cries out! from many perspectives

    A poem of death’s despair.

    From cries of pain

    Surrounded by suffering

    Entombed in death

    Men and women

    Hung their heads

    In death’s despair.

    +

    His pain I now know

    His suffering I deserve

    From this dark place of justice

    My sorrow must pierce.

    Roger Harned - TalkofJESUS.com

    “ELOI, ELOI, LAMA SABACHTHANI?”

    22:1 אֵלִי אֵלִי לָמָה עֲזַבְתָּנִי רָחֹוק מִֽישׁוּעָתִי דִּבְרֵי שַׁאֲגָתִֽי׃
    “Eli, Eli, lama” are Hebrew words in the Hebrew Bible (Ps. 22:2)
    David said “lama azavthani” (why have you forsaken me?) and 
    Jesus said “lama sabachthani” (why have you sacrificed me?). 
    -source [2016 site not secure]: http://messiah-study.net/sabachthani.htm

    Jesus from the Cross

    So the soldiers came and broke the legs of the first man and of the other one who had been crucified with him. When they came to Jesus, they did not break his legs since they saw that he was already dead. But one of the soldiers pierced his side with a spear, and at once blood and water came out.

    John 19:32-34 CSB

    Zechariah 12:10 וְשָׁפַכְתִּי עַל־בֵּית דָּוִיד וְעַל יֹושֵׁב יְרוּשָׁלִַם רוּחַ חֵן וְתַחֲנוּנִים וְהִבִּיטוּ אֵלַי אֵת אֲשֶׁר־דָּקָרוּ וְסָפְדוּ עָלָיו כְּמִסְפֵּד עַל־הַיָּחִיד וְהָמֵר עָלָיו כְּהָמֵר עַֽל־הַבְּכֹֽור׃

    DEATH! surrounding a Cross

    Is your own heart pierced by the cry of death — the death of a loved one, that of your own inevitable failing flesh?

    Would your soul cry out even from the grave that the death of God’s own Son should have been your own?

    What those imprisoned in the dark dungeons of death must have thought as Jesus cried out as Sacrifice of Blood and Flesh from the Cross!

    Who is the Son of Man entering the Jerusalem of the Jews?

    In the year of our Lord, 2020, of these last days of a new covenant, I have been sharing the Good News of John.

    We cannot cover all of the nuances of reactions to the Messiah entering Jerusalem for the Passover some two thousand years ago, but look back to some of the thoughts of those encountering Jesus between Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday which the church celebrates with great joy.

    The context of their first century perspective also includes witnesses of many signs of the Messiah including healing the sick, giving sight to the blind, miraculously feeding crowds of followers and raising the dead who include recently Lazarus of Bethany.

    The Apostle Philip & the crowds

    John 12:

    9 Then a large crowd of the Jews learned he was there. They came not only because of Jesus but also to see Lazarus, the one he had raised from the dead.

    10 But the chief priests had decided to kill Lazarus also, because he was the reason many of the Jews were deserting them and believing in Jesus.

    The Apostle Philip, of course, travels with Jesus when the Messiah returns to Bethany. Crowds follow them into Jerusalem and friends of the Apostle hear about Jesus the Rabbi of their friend Philip.

    21 So they came to Philip, who was from Bethsaida in Galilee, and requested of him, “Sir, we want to see Jesus.” Philip went and told Andrew; then Andrew and Philip went and told Jesus.

    23 And Jesus answered them, saying,

    “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified…

    Jesus has much more to say and then this witness before them:

    “…and what shall I say, ‘Father, save Me from this hour’? But for this purpose I came to this hour. Father, glorify Your name.”

    John 12:27b-28a NASB

    Then a voice came out of heaven:

    “I have both glorified it, and will glorify it again.”

    29 So the crowd of people who stood by and heard it were saying that it had thundered; others were saying, “An angel has spoken to Him.” Jesus answered and said, “This voice has not come for My sake, but for your sakes.

    Philip witnesses this truly awesome scene after Jesus had said,

    “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit…

    John 12:24 NASB

    Thomas: ‘Lord, we know not..’

    Don’t you have to love a guy who just has to ask the questions you want to ask the Lord?

    Peter was one of these sometimes clueless Disciples who asked Jesus the obvious. We have heard much preaching on Peter, this anointed Apostle of the early church, about his denials and restorations in this Holy Week.

    Like Peter, a man of bold faith, Thomas, a man of bold questions often gets a bad wrap for questions and doubt exactly like ours.

    Observe the Lord’s Supper from this perspective of Thomas.

    The Lord got up from supper, and laid aside His garments; and taking a towel, He girded Himself, after which Jesus washes his feet along with the other eleven.

    [Later] He became troubled in spirit, and testified and said,

    “Truly, truly, I say to you, that one of you will betray Me.”

    22 The disciples began looking at one another…

    33 Little children, I am with you a little while longer. You will seek Me; and as I said to the Jews, now I also say to you, ‘Where I am going, you cannot come…’

    36 Simon Peter said to Him,

    “Lord, where are You going?”

    Jesus answered,

    “Where I go, you cannot follow Me now; but you will follow later.”

    37 Peter said to Him,

    “Lord, why can I not follow You right now?

    [Thomas must have also have wondered what Peter so typically blurts out.

    Why? We all wonder.]

    John 14:

    Perhaps Thomas’ perspective was something like this:

    ‘Jesus was troubled in spirit then Judas left {on an errand for the festival, I guess.’}

    2 In my Father’s house are many rooms; if not, I would have told you. I am going away to prepare a place for you.

    John 14:2 CSB – Jesus comforting Disciples about death and resurrection

    … And you know where I am going, and you know the way

    5 Thomas said to Him,

    “Lord, we do not know where You are going, how do we know the way?”

    Be honest, fellow saint:

    Don’t you have days of doubting the resurrection as well?

    Yet though you may quote the assurance which follows of Jesus to Thomas, your faith frequently falters .

    Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me.

    John 14:6 NASB

    Again, fellow believer, consider the gravity of Jesus’ exclusive claim.

    For the Lord draws a line in the dust we often omit, when witnessing to win others to Christ through our own blurred vision of this life.

    “I am the way, and the truth, and the life;

    no one comes to the Father

    but through Me. –

    John 14:6

    Jesus’ exclusive ____line____ in the dust between death and eternal life

    7 If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also; from now on you know Him, and have seen Him.”

    8 Philip said to Him,

    “Lord, show us the Father, and it is enough for us.”

    9 Jesus said to him, “Have I been so long with you, and yet you have not come to know Me, Philip?

    Let’s pause a moment there, fellow saint of Christ:

    Has Jesus been so part of your routine that you have failed to know your Lord?

    Jesus continues instructing Thomas:

    He who has seen Me has seen the Father; how can you say,

    ‘Show us the Father’?

    Do you not believe that I am in the Father, and the Father is in Me?

    John 14:10a NASB

    The words that I say to you I do not speak on My own initiative, but the Father abiding in Me does His works. Believe Me that I am in the Father and the Father is in Me; otherwise believe because of the works themselves.

    12 Truly, truly, I say to you, he who believes in Me, the works that I do, he will do also; and greater works than these he will do; because I go to the Father. Whatever you ask in My name, that will I do, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. If you ask Me anything in My name, I will do it.

    15 “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments.

    Between Gethsemane & Doubt

    We know that Thomas and the Disciples fail to keep alert in the late hours after Jesus shares the New Covenant Cup of communion and broken bread symbolizing and making memorial of what is about to happen to His broken Body and shed Blood of Sacrifice for our sins.

    Jesus prays, is betrayed by Judas as the eleven stand near, then bound and taken away to appear in secret before those who will judge their Messiah. They will then sentence their Redeemer to death on a Cross — ALL in fulfillment of Scripture.

    We may self-righteously go on about Peter denying Jesus as he also attempts to run away from death for a time.

    In fact, all of us may only escape death — for a time.

    CHRIST DIED!

    The Apostle John relates more details of these events worth your perspective on DEATH from the darkness of these days.

    DEATH then Resurrection

    From the depth of isolation and despair

    of darkness and fear

    of the judgment of your dust

    in the grave —

    beyond the — line — of hope

    found only in Jesus

    we peer dimly from the depths

    of our soul seeking the Light

    of the Resurrection —

    the Way of Truth

    to eternal life

    born anew

    in a raised body and soul

    to the glory of the LORD

    our Father, Son and Holy Spirit!

    John 20:

    Perspectives of these first witnesses of Jesus’ resurrection

    Mary of Magdala (a small village on the shore of the Sea of Galilee) discovers Jesus’ tomb EMPTY!

    “They have taken away the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid Him.”

    Mary tells Peter and John

    They all return to the tomb with the sealed stone rolled away.

    Mary of Magdala weeping over Jesus' death outside His tomb

    “Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you seeking?”

    “Sir, if you have carried Him away, tell me where you have laid Him, and I will take Him away.”

    16 Jesus said to her, “Mary!”

    She turned and said to Him, “Rabboni!” [My great teacher, master.]

    Touch me not; for I am not yet ascended to my Father: but go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father, and your Father; and to my God, and your God.

    Later Appearance to the Disciples

    When it was evening of that first day of the week, the disciples were gathered together with the doors locked because they feared the Jews.

    Jesus came and stood in their midst and said to them,

    Peace to you.

    20 Having said this, he showed them his hands and his side. So the disciples rejoiced when they saw the Lord.

    21 Jesus said to them again,

    “Peace be with you. As the Father has sent me, I also send you.”

    22 After saying this, he breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit…

    Did you miss the RESURRECTION OF JESUS?

    Don’t some of the most important things in life often happen when you least expect?

    Returning later to the scene of the Disciples (but not all of them) in the locked room), Thomas returns.

    He missed it! (and perhaps was somewhat sceptical when he heard the witness of his fellow Disciples).

    “We’ve seen the Lord!”

    “Unless I see in His hands the imprint of the nails, and put my finger into the place of the nails, and put my hand into His side, I will not believe.”

    Eight more days pass

    What disappointment. To have followed Jesus the Messiah as He walked the earth for three years of His ministry prior to His fulfillment of Scripture. AND you missed HIS return!

    His disciples were again inside, and Thomas with them. Jesus came, the doors having been shut, and stood in their midst…

    Peace to you.

    And the Lord, turning to Thomas,

    “Reach here with your finger, and see My hands; and reach here your hand and put it into My side; and do not be unbelieving, but believing.”

    “My Lord and my God!”

    And yet again…

    John tells us:

    30 And many other signs truly did Jesus in the presence of his disciples, which are not written in this book…

    John 21:

    After this, Jesus revealed himself again to his disciples by the Sea of Tiberias…

    12 Jesus said to them,

    “Come and have breakfast.”

    None of the disciples ventured to question Him, “Who are You?” knowing that it was the Lord.

    Jesus came and took the bread and gave it to them, and the fish likewise.

    14 This is now the third time that Jesus was manifested to the disciples, after He was raised from the dead.

    CHRIST IS RISEN!

    — a traditional opening to a sunrise service on Resurrection Sunday or other Easter Sunday worship.

    And the joyous response of the congregation of worshipers:

    HE IS RISEN INDEED!

    ALLELUIA – ἁλληλουϊά

    praise ye the Lord, Hallelujah!

    יָהּ הָלַל

    Yet without DEATH! resurrection remains irrelevant

    — that is, until the inevitable inescapable day.

    CHRIST WILL COME AGAIN!

    You will die — your body returning to dust…

    And your soul — the spirit that is you in this ever-so-brief mortal life…

    What will the judgment and resurrection be like for your fallen flesh and soul forgotten?

    Jesus reveals even more to John long after the deaths of all the other Apostles.

    apokalypsis Iēsous Christos

    8 “I am the Alpha and the Omega,” says the Lord God, “who is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty.”

    17 When I saw Him, I fell at His feet like a dead man.

    And He placed His right hand on me, saying,

    “Do not be afraid;

    I am the first and the last, and the living One;

    and I was dead, and behold,

    I am alive forevermore,

    and I have the keys of death and of Hades.

    Revelation 21:

    3 And I heard a loud voice from the throne, saying,

    “Behold, the tabernacle of God is among men, and He will dwell among them, and they shall be His people, and God Himself will be among them, and He will wipe away every tear from their eyes; and there will no longer be any death; there will no longer be any mourning, or crying, or pain; the first things have passed away.”

    אָמֵן אָמֵן

    amen, amen.

    Even so, Come Lord Jesus.
    AMEN.
  • Lazarus – Death and Resurrection

    Lazarus – Death and Resurrection

    Death and Resurrection
    Hosea 13:4 I have been the Lord your God
    ever since the land of Egypt;
    you know no God but me,
    and no Savior exists besides me.
    5 I knew you in the wilderness,
    in the land of drought.

    “Moses didn’t give you bread from heaven, but my Father gives you the true bread from heaven. God’s bread is the man who comes from heaven and gives life to the world.”

    Yeshua told them, “I am the bread of life…

    John 6:32b,34a NOG

    The Death and Resurrection of Lazarus

    John has already introduced us to those Jesus loves. Lazarus – HELP from the grave.

    topical map of Israel from sea of Galilee, valley of the Jordan

    Now after a considerable walk from somewhere beyond Judea, Jesus arrives in Bethany.

    Jesus walks into a scene of death visited by mourners who loved Lazarus but also religious officials from Jerusalem who sought to accuse their Messiah of blasphemy for previous signs on the Sabbath.

    As reminder of both heavy hearts and hard hearts in the crowds:

    John 6:

    30 So they said to him, ‘What sign are you going to give us then, so that we may see it and believe you? What work are you performing?

    … 40 My Father wants all those who see the Son and believe in him to have eternal life. He wants me to bring them back to life on the last day.”

    John 11

    17 When Jesus arrived, he found that Lazarus had already been in the tomb four days. Bethany was near Jerusalem (less than two miles away).

    He arrives at the funeral of Lazarus. No talk of death and resurrection here, just wailing and mourning his loss.

    19 Many Jews had come to Martha and Mary to comfort them about their brother. When Martha heard that Yeshua was coming, she went to meet him.

    “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 him.”

    Lord God

    Ἰησοῦν κύριε Iēsous kyrios – Jesus Lord

    Martha addresses their Messiah and friend.

    “I know that God, theos in greek referring to any gods, but for Jews and followers of Christ (a Greek word for Messiah), Martha’s confidence in God includes a mysterious relationship between this Son of Man and the HOLY SPIRIT of the LORD God!

    “God with”ho with the Holy Spirit, the very breath of life which hovered over creation.

    Gen 1:2
    וְהָאָרֶץ הָיְתָה תֹהוּ וָבֹהוּ וְחֹשֶׁךְ עַל־פְּנֵי תְהֹום וְרוּחַ אֱלֹהִים מְרַחֶפֶת עַל־פְּנֵי הַמָּֽיִם׃

    “Who are you with,” we would ask?

    Jesus, God with us, frequently answered religious critics with personally relational replies like,

    “God is spirit, and those G3588 who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.”

    Now, out of compassion for a deceased friend and love for the family of Lazarus, the Messiah Jesus returns to Judea with nothing more to prove. (For the Lord had already raised others from death and healed some near to death of likely life-ending ailments to a cleansing of the flesh with life!)

    Death and Resurrection

    Death and resurrection always have connection. Will you rise again from the grave?

    For Jesus’ friend Lazarus, temporary restoration of health and life in his case. Yet all understand judgment by the Lord God requires a raising of the spirit of your soul to life.

    After flesh fails and bones decay to dust and ashes will the Lord also breathe life into a new body of each soul?

    “..even now I know that God will give you whatever you ask him.”

    23 Yeshua told Martha, “Your brother will come back to life.”

    24 Martha answered Yeshua, “I know that he’ll come back to life on the last day, when everyone will come back to life.”

    25 Yeshua said to her,

    “I am the one who brings people back to life, and I am life itself. Those who believe in me will live even if they die. Everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.

    The Messiah of God!

    Do you believe that?”

    Pause to think:

    “I am life itself!” Those who believe in Jesus ( יְהוֹשׁוּעַ ) will live even though we die. The Lord God IS our Salvation!

    27 Martha said to him, “Yes, Lord, I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one who was expected to come into the world.”

    She has said this – that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God – with witnesses surrounding her home — Jews who believe and Jews looking for excuse to kill Jesus.

    … she went away and called Mary her sister, saying secretly,

    “The Teacher is here and is calling for you.”

    When Mary heard this she sprang to her feet and went to him.

    30 (Yeshua had not yet come into the village but was still where Martha had met him.) The Jews who were comforting Mary in the house saw her get up quickly and leave. So they followed her…

    The Messiah approaching death and resurrection

    Compelling drama! – with much expectation.

    Those who loved this family and mourned the loss of Lazarus would not have expected Mary’s sudden joy. Rather, they followed her to continue their expected public mouring for the death of a fellow Jew.

    Imagine their surprise at the scene about to unfold.

    33 When Yeshua saw her crying, and the Jews who were crying with her, he was deeply moved and troubled.

    34 So Yeshua asked, “Where did you put Lazarus?”

    They answered him, “Lord, come and see.”

    35 Yeshua cried.

    36 The Jews said, “See how much Yeshua loved him.”

    An appropriate witness of the true personal compassion of the Lord Jesus. Yet listen to the dissent of hardened hearts.

    37 But some of the Jews asked, “Couldn’t this man who gave a blind man sight keep Lazarus from dying?”

    Jesus hears our complaints and the Messiah hears our kind words. All those comments of the crowds did not matter to the Son of Man sent to this place to weep – sent here to suffer for our sins.

    38 Deeply moved again, Yeshua went to the tomb.

    It was a cave with a stone covering the entrance.

    39 Yeshua said, “Take the stone away.”

    To be continued...