The Resurrection and the Life (John 11-12)

It’s intriguing that Mary and Martha both complained to Jesus in the same words: “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died” (11:21, 11:32). I’ve felt that same way, and even offered pretty much that same complaint: “Lord, why weren’t you here to work a miracle and heal him so he would not have died?”

Yet despite the poignancy of our feelings, that’s not quite an accurate assessment of the situation, is it? Because after all, Jesus was with us every time. Jesus has been right here, and our brothers and sisters have gone ahead and died anyway, even while we were all recognizing the genuine presence of Jesus as they died. Jesus has been right here, and yet we all die at some point or other: and that’s been true through all these centuries.

Jesus does not promise that he’ll show up and keep healing us so that this earthly life never comes to an end. What Jesus tells us instead is this: “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, nevertheless they will live” (11:25).

It is not ever-ongoing earthly life that he offers us. We do fall in love with this earthly life, and it is hard for us to reckon that this unseen eternal life Jesus has for us is better than this earthly life we can see in the here and now. We’re like people listening to the overture to the musical, and the overture is so sweepingly beautiful that we just want to keep listening to it: but the overture is, after all, just the overture to the magnificent show that’s about to begin. We’re like people reading the prologue to the great novel, and the prologue is so captivating that we just want to keep reading it: but the prologue is, after all, just the prologue to the grand saga that begins when we turn the page. And so, even though we die, yet we will live: and what a full and rich eternal life it will be!

* * * * *

Your promise stands sure, O Lord: we believe in your promise, and we believe in you. And still our hearts break when those we love die: you yourself wept at the tomb of your friend. But even in our tears and sorrow we trust in you, O Lord: for you are the Resurrection and the Life, forever!

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2 responses to “The Resurrection and the Life (John 11-12)”

  1. rocketryan54fc46118109 Avatar
    rocketryan54fc46118109

    I like the analogy of the pleasures of this life to an overture. Recently I have come to appreciate the view that the end game after the return of Jesus and our resurrection is life on the New Earth (I.e., I don’t go to heaven but heaven comes to earth). So perhaps there is more similarity and continuity in the pleasures I enjoy now except without the effects of sin, sickness, and sorrow. There may be some danger in clinging too much to the overture, but to me it beats the teachings of many in our college years that the earth and all its culture and development will be destroyed and replaced with something completely unknown but better.

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    1. Good insights, Don.

      All in all, it’s probably best for us to accept that we don’t know. We don’t know when Jesus will return, because he told us that it is not for us to know the schedule; and if he says we don’t get to know, then it’s all right for us not to know. In the same way, we don’t know what heaven will be like, and it is all right for us not to know. People often speculate about the details, and that’s all right, too, as long we remember that we are speculating, rather than knowing.

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