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- The Life Of Jesus Christ In Its Historical Connexion
- Section 232. The Death Of Lazarus. -Christ's Conversation With Martha (John, Xi., 21-28) And With Mary (V. 33, 34).--Jesus Weeps (V. 35).
Section 232. The Death of Lazarus.--Christ's Conversation with Martha (John, xi., 21-28) and with Mary (v. 33, 34).--Jesus Weeps (v. 35).
Although she did not fully comprehend his words, they gave her new hopes; and, after expressing anew her faith in him as the Messiah -- which included for her all things else -- she hastened away to call her broken-hearted sister, who had not even yet heard of the Saviour's approach. Nothing could rouse her from her profound and passive grief but her love for Him to whose words of life she had so often surrendered herself, as passively and humbly. She hastened toward Jesus. The Jews that were condoling with her in the house, fearing that she was going to her brother's grave to give up to an excess of sorrow, followed after. She saw Jesus, but offered no such request as her sister had done; falling at his feet, she only cried, "Lord, if thou hadst been here, my brother had not died." Tears choked her further utterance; nor, indeed, was it her wont to anticipate Him whom her soul so revered and loved. The Jews around, sympathizing in her sorrow, could not refrain from tears.
And Jesus wept in the depth of his compassion. It has been inferred from this, that although he hoped to restore Lazarus, he was not, as yet, sure of it; had he been so (it is said), the consciousness that he was soon to turn the mourning into joy would have banished all grief from his mind. But surely the expressions of bitter lamentation, the tears and agony of all around, were enough to stir the corn passionate heart of Him who sympathized so deeply with all human feelings, even though he knew that he should soon remove the cause of grief itself. A physician (though the analogy is utterly inadequate), standing by the bedside of a patient surrounded by weeping friends, may well be affected by their grief, though he may be sure, so far as human skill can give surety, that he will heal the disease. And we must bear in mind, too, that Christ was Man as well as God; and that the blending of the Godhead and the manhood, the Divine infallibility with the human hesitancy, must, in the very nature of the case, offer many enigmas for our contemplation.
The Evangelist gives a graphic description of the effects produced upon the Jews around by the sight of the tears of Jesus. The better disposed saw in them only a manifestation of his love for Lazarus. Others affected to doubt the truth of his miracles; he loved Lazarus, and his family; why did he not save him? "Could not this man, which opened the eyes of the blind, [625] have caused that even this man should not have died?"