The God Who Cries at Funerals
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“Jesus wept” (John 11:35).
Grace and peace to you from God our Father and
the Lord Jesus Christ!
“God so loved the world He gave His one and
only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting
life” (John 3:16).
“Because
of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for His compassions never fail.
They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness” (Lamentations 3:22-23).
“How great is the love the Father has lavished
on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!” (1
John 3:1).
Each of these passages, often used in funeral
services, speaks of God’s love and compassion. God loves the world. He loves
you and me. He shows that love by sending His Son, Jesus Christ, into the world
as one of us. Jesus lived the perfect life that you and I could not live. He
loves His Father above all things and loves His neighbor as Himself. He
demonstrates the depth of that love by laying down His life as the perfect
atoning sacrifice for the sins of the world, only to take it up again. No
greater love has any man than this!
But when I think about God’s love and
compassion, I also think of our Gospel lesson for today. I think of the God who
weeps at His friend’s tomb. I think of the God who comforts Mary and Martha,
even though He knows what’s coming next. All the Scriptures extol the love and
compassion of our Savior. But it’s hard to beat a God who cries at
funerals.
We have just heard the words of comfort that
Jesus speaks to Martha. “I Am the Resurrection and the Life. He that believes
in Me, even though he dies, yet shall he live, and he that lives and believes
in Me will never die.”
Jesus’ words speak the eternal truth that has
soothed many a troubled heart at a deathbed, during a funeral, or at a
gravesite. Whoever believes in Jesus—even though death makes its unwelcome
earthly visit—will live. Whoever lives by faith in Jesus will never die. The
life we have in Christ survives death and the grave. Physical death does not
separate us from God. We are alive with Him forever and will at the last be
restored body and soul to enjoy the glories of His heaven.
“Do you believe this?” Jesus asks Martha.
Martha emphatically says, yes, she believes, and she identifies Jesus as the
object of her faith. She believes He is the Christ. She believes that He is the
Son of God. She believes He is the one who is to come into the world. She
confesses Jesus as the Savior sent from heaven. Such faith gives her the life
and hope that overcomes death and despair.
The Lord promises Martha that her brother will
rise again. He will personally empty the graves of all His beloved. He is
Resurrection personified. And it is while Jesus gives this comfort that Mary
comes to her Lord and says to Him the very same words that her sister Martha
had just spoken. She says, “Lord, if You had been here, my brother would not
have died.”
For Mary and Martha, the loss is deep. Not only
have they lost their beloved brother, but they have also lost their support,
their source of God’s provision for daily bread. Death shatters the world of
those who survive. A raw, gaping hole is torn that only the resurrection will
completely heal. You face the prospect of waking up each morning not seeing the
face of the man or woman with whom you’ve spent the last fifty years of your
life. Someone else will have to tell the same old joke many, many times. There
will be one less familiar face cheering you on at your games and activities.
There is one more birthday or anniversary that brings sadness rather than
celebration.
Yes, Mary and Martha believe in Jesus; they
hope in the resurrection on the Last Day, but that doesn’t help them so much
right now. Now is the pain. Now is the grief. Now is their loved one in the
tomb. Now they have to bear all the consequences that the enemy death has
wrought on them.
Jesus sees this. Jesus feels it. His guts are
turned inside out. He gasps for breath. The Lord’s compassion is fueled by His
love for Mary, Martha, and Lazarus, and His relentless hatred of death and
hell. Those He loves are grieving. Their brother, His friend, is dead. When
Mary says to Jesus, “See where they laid him,” it’s all over. There is no macho
show of manly strength. Jesus weeps openly and unashamedly. He sobs quietly,
allowing the pain to flow from His eyes.
God cries at funerals. He cries because He
loves His children. He cries because of His deep compassion for those who are
left behind. He cries because the greatest evil has the appearance of victory.
But the Lord’s tears will yield to His words. Death is being a little too proud.
But it shouldn’t be. Life Incarnate now stands before Lazarus’ tomb. The grave
is going to be robbed today.
Jesus approaches the tomb and orders them to
remove the stone that seals the entrance. But Martha objects, saying that the
corpse, now four days old, will smell of decay. So, Jesus reminds Martha of His
earlier promises. Lazarus’ illness will not end in death. It is for God’s
glory.
As they move the stone from the entrance to the
tomb, Jesus looks up and tries to turn the onlookers' thoughts heavenward. With
them listening, Jesus thanks His heavenly Father for listening to Him and prays
that the people standing there will believe. Jesus doesn’t have to speak the
words because He and the Father are one, in perfect harmony with each other. The
Father always hears the Son. But Jesus speaks for the benefit of all the others
there. Some question whether Jesus is really sent from the Father. If they hear
Him call to the Father and see the ensuing miracle, they will know Jesus’
claims are true.
When His prayer ends, Jesus raises His voice
and commands the corpse: “Lazarus! Come forth!” Incredibly, Lazarus does just
that! Still wrapped in His grave clothes, Lazarus walks out of what is supposed
to be his final resting place. At the word of the Lord, death flees, and life
comes. Gone is decay. Gone is death. Empty is the tomb where they laid him.
Jesus is the Resurrection and the Life. Lazarus, even though he has died, has
come forth from the tomb. He hears His Savior’s voice, because when Life
beckons, even the dead can hear it.
The Jews say, “See how He loved him!” And they
will. Lazarus will. Mary will. Martha will. They will all see how Jesus has
loved them. You and I will, too! Jesus has set His face toward Jerusalem. Even
as He gives comfort to Mary and Martha and gives Lazarus back to them, the Lord
will not be satisfied until He has destroyed death forever.
You see, the death and resurrection of Lazarus
is a prelude to Jesus’ own death and resurrection. In less than two weeks,
Jesus will experience something far more dreadful than the sickness and death
that Lazarus goes through. On the cross, Jesus will undergo severe suffering
and physical pain. Even worse, He will experience eternal death, total
separation from God. But then Jesus will come crashing out of death again in an
even more glorious resurrection.
The death and resurrection of Lazarus, in a
sense, brings on the death of Jesus. It prompts His enemies to move more
quickly than they might have otherwise. Many of the Jews who see what Jesus
does believe in Him. Some even tell the Pharisees what has happened, perhaps
hoping to convince them that Jesus is the Christ.
But this only accelerates the Pharisees’
determination to get rid of Jesus. They meet with the chief priests. “He is a
serious problem—a threat to our nation,” they argue. “His group of followers
continues to grow as a result of these miracles. The Romans might come in to
punish us. They could take everything from us. Our city and our temple will be
lost.”
Caiaphas, the pragmatic high priest, speaks up.
He explains that it is expedient to get rid of Jesus. Better that one man die
than all of them. Caiaphas’ concern is political rather than religious, but God
makes his words prophetic. Caiaphas wants to preserve a nation on earth, which
will be destroyed 40 years later anyway. Jesus, Caiaphas’ intended victim,
comes to establish a nation that can never be destroyed. Jesus will die as a
sacrifice for everyone in the world so that all who believe in Him are saved
from death and made one in His holy church.
Martin Luther calls this “The Great Exchange”
and writes, “Our sins must either be upon our own necks or upon Christ. If they
remain upon us, we are lost forever, but if they be upon Christ, we are saved.”
St. Peter declares the truth about this when He writes: “Christ died for your
sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, that He might bring us to
God” (1 Peter 3:18).
In the marvelous wisdom of God’s mercy, the
death of the innocent Jesus will be the occasion for the substitutionary
atonement of the Righteous One for the unrighteous by laying our sins upon Him.
Here is the unfailing source of pardon and salvation for all who are guilty
before God, from the malicious plotters in our text to you and me. Here is our
hope and life in the face of death. And so, Jesus goes to the cross. He carries
with Him the sins of Lazarus, Mary, Martha, you, and me. He suffers all the
pangs of hell. He delivers Himself into the grave and raises Himself up on the
third day so that He might destroy death forever.
Lazarus’ body is awake from the sleep of death
for a time, but he will die again. The sin that brought him to the grave the
first time will eventually win again. This is not acceptable to Jesus. This is
not the way He created the world to be. The Lord created you for immortal joy,
not tears and grief. His intent from the very foundation of the world has been
that you would live with Him in your body forever, where there will be no more
tears, no more death or mourning or pain.
I’m sometimes told that death isn’t that bad.
That it’s really a friend. It’s the liberation of the soul from the flesh, they
say. And really, our human flesh is a bad thing. It limits us. When we get rid
of the body, then we’ll be truly free. Then we’ll be at peace. We’ll be at one
with the universe and never have to suffer any of the body’s pains or sorrows.
These are lies, dear Christian! They are lies
told by Satan to try to make you forget what you were created for. You were
created for life—eternal life for both body and soul. On the day of
resurrection, your very eyes will behold your Savior’s face forever. Your very
lips will sing His praises. If the flesh were so evil, if our destiny was to be
delivered from our body, then I suppose we could have had a spiritual Savior
not one who came as flesh and blood. If our goal was to get rid of the body, I
suppose that death could be seen as good.
But death is not good! Death is the enemy. It
is the ultimate evil. But death has been defeated. Your Savior is the Lamb who
was slain, but He is not dead. Your Savior is the firstborn from the dead, and
He lives and reigns forever. He is the source of your life, and even though
your body will sleep for a time, death cannot kill you. Jesus will not leave
you or your loved ones to the grave. On the day of His return, every grave will
be empty, and all His saints will go with Him, body and soul, into paradise
forever. That, dear Christian, is the way of the God who cries at funerals. He
loves you. He wants you to live with Him forever. And He will have His way with
you. Every funeral He attends ends with a resurrection.
In the midst of our weak, frail, and powerless
life on earth, we have a powerful Lord Jesus Christ whose resurrected life
affects us today. We don’t have to grieve without hope when a loved one dies.
We don’t have to quake in fear as we contemplate our own inevitable death. When
faced with trials and troubles and our own struggle with sin, we have the power
of the resurrection to know that we live in the newness of life, which not only
holds hope and promise of our resurrection from the dead, but gives us strength
for living here and now.
Life for us does not end in death. We will rise
again on the Last Day and forever celebrate the joy of life we have in Jesus
Christ, who is the Resurrection and the Life. Only Jesus and His life-giving
Word can give us true hope and life in the face of death. You can be sure this
is true, because Jesus gave up His life for you that you may be forgiven of all
your sins.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Spirit. Amen
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