![]() ![]() Jesus thanks God for hearing him, and how is Lazarus raised? By hearing Jesus. Note what Jesus highlights in his prayer–hearing (11:41-42). Jesus then pauses to pray and this prayer is more than demonstrative. Since Jewish belief held that the soul left the body after three days, just in case we are wondering, Lazarus is really dead. Lazarus has been dead four days (see also 11:17). We are told that the tomb was a cave and that there was a stone against it. They contribute both to the narrative suspense and to the extraordinary final scene of Lazarus, dead man walking. The narrative elements that set up Lazarus coming out of the tomb are significant. This is not to say that the raising of Lazarus is not important. Why is the structure changed for this last sign and what does it suggest for the preaching on the raising of Lazarus? How do these details in the story leading up to Lazarus finally walking out of the tomb contribute to our understanding of the meaning of this sign? ![]() In other words, Jesus’ interpretation of the meaning of the sign is perhaps as, or more, critical than the sign itself. Why does Jesus comment on the sign before actually raising Lazarus from the dead? On one level, it seems that what precedes the miracle is just as important. Previously in the Gospel, Jesus performs a sign, which is typically followed by dialogue and a discourse by Jesus that interprets the sign (5:1-47 9:1-10:21). The events, discussion, and details prior to the main event receive the bulk of the narrative space. The actual raising of Lazarus is narrated in only two verses (11:43-44). Chapter 12 functions as a bridge chapter before the narrative halts in time for Jesus’ last meal and words to his disciples (chapters 13-17). The raising of Lazarus is the last of Jesus’ “signs” in the Gospel of John. The repercussions of the raising of Lazarus are not included in the lectionary reading, or any time in the three-year lectionary cycle (12:1-11 only on Holy Monday), and should either be read or referenced in preaching on this text. It is Jesus’ very claim, “I am the resurrection and the life” (11:25) that provokes his death in the Fourth Gospel. In John 11:46-57, the chief priests and the Pharisees are told what Jesus did and “from that day on they planned to put him to death.” Moreover, the chief priests want to get rid of the evidence as well, and plan to put Lazarus to death “since it was on account of him that many of the Jews were deserting and were believing in Jesus” (12:9-11). In the Gospel of John, the temple scene is moved to the beginning of the Gospel, immediately following the Wedding at Cana, and it is the raising of Lazarus to life that incites the plot for Jesus’ arrest and death (11:53, 57). For the Synoptic Gospels, the cleansing of the temple is the impetus for the plot to kill Jesus (Mark 11:18 Luke 19:47-48). The Sunday immediately preceding Palm/Passion Sunday. It is significant that the story of Lazarus, unique to the Gospel of John, is the Gospel reading for the last Sunday in Lent,
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