1.
Please
pray with me. May the words of my mouth
and the meditation of our hearts be pleasing in Your sight, O Lord, our Rock,
and our Redeemer. Amen. The message from God’s Word this 5th
Sunday in Lent is taken from John 11.1-45 and is entitled, “On the Road to
Resurrection,”
2.
Jesus
raises Lazarus from the dead. But if you pause the story...then it’s not just
about Jesus raising Lazarus. Amazon
Prime now has a video feature called X-ray. X-ray allows you to pause a film
and find out more information. When you press pause, the forward motion of the
film stops, and a different kind of motion begins. You start to move deeper
into what is happening. X-ray helps you find out about the actors, identify the
soundtrack, or get background information on the scene. It is a way of entering
more deeply into a movie.
3.
I
would like to do that with our reading from John this morning. Pause it for a
moment and enter more deeply into what is happening. Our text is the account of the raising of
Lazarus. That is what we call it: The raising of Lazarus. Indeed, this
is the climax of the story. Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead. But if you
pause the story… let us say at the moment when Martha first speaks with Jesus…
then it is not just about Jesus raising Lazarus.
4.
Instead,
the story is about Jesus comforting Martha. If you were to title this scene, it
would be, “Jesus comforts Martha on the long road to resurrection.” For
me, that is important. We spend most of our lives on the long road to
resurrection and so what Jesus does for Martha, how He comforts her, can be
encouraging for us today, especially as we are still in the midst of this
Covid-19, Coronavirus Pandemic in our nation.
Many of us are afraid, anxious, and socially isolated from one another. This is the time for us to be the Church and
comfort one another with the wonderful promise of everlasting life, the
forgiveness of sins, and the resurrection of the body that we have through our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ’s death on the cross and resurrection from the
dead.
5.
When
her brother Lazarus became ill, Martha sent word to Jesus. She asked for Jesus
to come. Unfortunately, it took a while for Him to appear. Now, when Jesus
finally does arrive, her brother is dead, and her life is filled with sorrow.
6.
If
you were to freeze this scene, you would see Martha standing there on the road
with Jesus, looking to the past and looking to the future, wanting to be
anywhere but here. Martha knows what
could have been: “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.”
(John 11:21) And Martha knows what will be: “I know that he will rise again
in the resurrection on the last day.” (John 11:24) But what could have been
and what will be do not change what is right now. Her brother is dead.
Her Lord is late. And her life is filled with sorrow.
7.
This
moment for Martha is familiar to us. It is where we spend most of our lives… on
the road to resurrection. When we look at the past, we know what could have
been. When we look to the future, we know what will be for us in Jesus. But
right now, we stand in the middle of suffering.
We are all waiting for this quarantine to be lifted and we can meet with
one another in person again. What could have been and what will be do not
change the present moment in our lives.
8.
Then
Jesus speaks. He says to Martha, “I am the resurrection and the life.
Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, 26and
everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die. Do you believe this?” (John
11:25-26) Notice the use of the present tense. Jesus is the
resurrection and the life. Jesus does not point to the past – I was the
resurrection and the life – nor to the future – I will be the resurrection and
the life. No, Jesus speaks about the present. I am the resurrection
and the life.
9.
Jesus
takes the power of resurrection and the promise of life and buries it in His
own flesh. This Jesus, the one who is speaking to you right now, He is
the resurrection and the life for you.
10.
What
this means is that before Lazarus walks out of the tomb, before Jesus is raised
from the dead, right now, as Martha stands there in the middle of that long
road to resurrection, Jesus is the resurrection and the life for her. He
has come to be the resurrection and the life for her even in sorrow. In this moment, before Lazarus is raised from
the dead, what does it mean for Jesus to be the resurrection and the life? It
means the resurrection is a hand that can be touched, a voice that can be
heard, a tear that is shed, and a holy conversation that happens with Jesus in
the middle of sorrow.
11.
What
Jesus teaches us is we do not have to wait until the body comes out of the tomb
to participate in the resurrection. Jesus is the resurrection and the
life even now. We do not need to silence the suffering, to mask the mourning,
to soothe the pain. Instead, we can receive them as holy. Jesus is the
resurrection and the life even in the midst of sorrow. And, that is what He
gives us: Moments of holy conversation on a life-long road to resurrection.
He chooses to bring the wonder of His life to us now, as we walk the long road
to resurrection. He reminds us that our
sins are forgiven, for we have confessed our sins before Him, and He has
announced to us that they are forgiven through the Words of Absolution. Through Holy Baptism, He reminds us that we
have been buried with Christ. Paul
writes in Romans 6:3-4, “3Do you not know that all
of us who have been baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death?
4We were buried therefore with him by baptism into death, in order that, just
as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might
walk in newness of life.” In the Lord’s Supper, Jesus gives us His body
broken for us and His blood shed for us for the forgiveness of our sins, in,
with, and under the bread and the wine. The
medicine of immortality.
12.
So,
today, let us pause for a moment in the story. Let us enter more deeply into
what is happening. Wherever you are on that long journey to resurrection, Jesus
has come to be with you. He is the resurrection and the life, even
now, in the midst of your sorrow, filling your present days with His love. Amen. Now
the peace that passes all understanding guard your hearts and minds in Christ
Jesus until life everlasting. Amen.
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