I have the privilege of contributing to He Reads Truth, a website of whose purpose is “To help men become who we were made to be, by doing what we were made to do, by the power and provision that God has given us to do it, for the glory of Jesus Christ.” They do this by providing scripture reading plans accompanied by reflections that can be accessed for free online or purchased as print books. For those of you looking to engage scripture in a fresh way – either because you are dried up or have been away from it, these studies/plans will refresh your soul and engage your mind.
What follows is one of the pieces I wrote on the book of John. You can find the full plan HERE.
John 11:1-57, Daniel 12:2-3, 1 Thessalonians 4:13-14
So. So is a word that indicates purpose. I am tired, so I take a nap. I am hungry, so I get a snack. My daughter is talking, so I listen (sometimes—she talks a lot).
John 11 turns on the word so. People brought Jesus word that His close friend Lazarus was deathly ill. You’d expect Him to drop everything and rush to Lazarus’s home, especially because Jesus could heal any illness. But He didn’t. The passage says, “so when He heard Lazarus was sick He stayed two more days.” What? Why? That seems insane or negligent or insanely negligent—even more so when Jesus said that the sickness would not lead to death. Of course it would if nobody healed him. But Jesus waited on purpose.
“This sickness will not end in death but is for the glory of God that the Son of God may be glorified through it” (John 11:4). Those are Jesus’ words. Except Lazarus did die. And dead is dead, final, life over. Jesus could have stopped it, and Lazarus’s sisters knew it. Yet He intentionally waited to show up and then had the audacity to say Lazarus had “fallen asleep.”
What was Jesus getting at? What did all this add up to? A display of both His full humanity and full deity, His deep connection to His friends and His power over all.
When Jesus arrived in the town where Lazarus had lived, He walked into the pain of loss. Martha and Mary, Lazarus’s sisters, met Him and—as people do when they are overcome with pain and are grasping for answers—asked why Jesus hadn’t been there to heal their brother. “If you had been here,” they said. If. Jesus had stayed away on purpose. He had let Lazarus die.
But Jesus wept. How could He weep when He had allowed the pain to happen? Jesus wept over the loss of a friend and over the pain of death. He wept over the pervasive evil that steals life from everyone and the devastating effects of sin on the world. He wept for the pain of Martha and Mary. He wept because He was a man who deeply hurt.
Then He showed why He’d waited, what that so was all about. “Lazarus, come forth,” He commanded. (John 11:43). Jesus gave death an order to depart, and it did. For a moment He pulled back the curtain and gave a glimpse into the resurrection to come, the impending death of death He would bring about by laying down His own life.
In that moment, in the midst of mourning, Jesus proved the hope that all His followers have, a hope greater than death.