Grace For The Journey
There is something deeply moving about tears. We see someone weeping and it can have quite an effect on us. The stronger the person who weeps the more powerful the effect is upon us. We are more affected by seeing a man weeping than a child. And when the man is a strong emotionally stable man, with tears running down his face, it speaks volumes to us.
We are told of only three occasions when our Lord wept. I intend to look at each of them in my blog over the next three.
This is not just at a
Great man weeping,
That would be
Touching enough,
But here we see the
Son of God weeping.
Tears allow us to see what really matters to a person. And it is no different with Jesus.
In John 11:35 we come to the first instance of our Lord’s tears. His close friend Lazarus has just died and Jesus has gone to see Lazarus’ sisters. The Bible tells us in John 11:33-36, ‘When Jesus saw Mary weeping, and the Jews who had come along with her also weeping, he was deeply moved in spirit and troubled.
‘Where have you laid him?’ He asked. ‘Come and see, Lord,’ they replied. Jesus wept. Then the Jews said, ‘See how He loved him!’”
The question we need answered is: “Why is Jesus weeping?”
Jesus is not weeping because Lazarus is dead. He knows that in just a few moments He will raise Lazarus from the dead. So why is He weeping? I suggest 2 reasons . . .
Jesus Is Weeping Because He Loves Mary & Martha .
Have you ever had a moment when you’ve seen something and it moved you so much that your eyes filled and the tears ran in rivers down your cheeks? Jesus tears were not like the loud wailing of mourners gathered with Mary and Martha, for a different word is used. Instead, these were silent tears running down His face as He looked at the suffering His loved ones were going through. The people around are struck by this. They react, “See how He loved him.”
Our Savior is no cold conqueror who comes to dispatch the enemy and to free the prisoners.
He is one who weeps
As He sees what the enemy
Has done to His people.
His heart is moved
By our plight.
When we are struggling He is not is not unaffected or watching impassively.
Jesus knew that in a few minutes Mary’s tears would be turned into inexpressible joy; that delight would wash away the memories of sadness. That in a few moments time Lazarus would be restored to them. But though He knew all this, still He weeps.
- He weeps for the pain that sin has cause.
- He weeps for the mess that sin has made of what was a perfect creation.
- He weeps at his loved ones having to suffer.
There is no casual pat on the back, no glib “All things work together for good;” instead there is love made silent through tears. The quietness of sympathy.
The momentary sadness
Of His people
Matters to Him.
Here He weeps
At His loved ones
Having to suffer.
Here we see the beauty of Christ’s tenderness. Here we see Jesus’ love for His people in the midst of suffering. The Savior who offers Himself to us is a most tender caring and feeling Savior. He knows what you are going through and He cares. He wants us to bring our troubles to Him.
Although He is not with us as He was with Mary and Martha, He hasn’t changed. He has still the same heart. And although He knew exactly where the body was, He shows His love to Mary when He asks, “Where have you laid him?” He wants her to take Him, to show Him, because He loves her. And . . .
He does the same with us,
He invites us to
Tell Him our problems,
To take Him to them.
He comes gently to us.
What struck me here was how much my Savior enters into my feelings. Do I realize how much He loves me? As those who surrounded Jesus that day said, “See how He loved him,” can you hear the angels say to each other in awed amazement, “See how He loves them?”
But these tears are not solely tears of sympathy.
Jesus Is Weeping Because Of His Anger At Sin.
He sees two of His dear friends, Martha and Mary distraught at the death of their brother. He sees their grief, pain, and suffering. And another emotion stirs in His heart. It is a surprising one. It is anger.
The phrase “was deeply moved in spirit” (verse 33) literally means “was deeply angered.” As Jesus sees the misery and pain that sin has brought to the world it angered Him.
Jesus sees before Him
All that life was
Not meant to be.
Pain, suffering,
Sadness and death
Only came into the world
After Adam and Eve sinned.
Jesus hates to see
The suffering
That sin causes.
In Mary’s grief
Jesus sees
The history of
The whole human race.
And He is angry. But His anger is not wild and uncontrolled. It is focused.
He approaches the grave of His friend,
And we see in His tears
A desire to reverse the situation.
Sin will not triumph this day.
Death will not win.
Satan will not
Have the last say.
Jesus did not come
To leave sin and suffering
Reigning supreme.
He came to defeat them.
His victory at the tomb of Lazarus is a foretaste of His victory at Calvary. And if He walked determinedly to the tomb to Lazarus to call him forth, how much more will He do the same for us, and call His people from the grave into an eternity of unending pleasure?
Here is proof that
Christ has defeated sin.
How joyful we should be.
Some men go to war not knowing the demands it will make. They go off full of high hopes of an easy victory, and an idealism of what it will be like. Not so this warrior.
As Jesus approaches the tomb
He knows what it will take to defeat sin,
To free people from death.
He knows that there is a price to be paid,
A high price, the highest price.
He knows the pain and the suffering
That His own death will involve,
But His desire to defeat sin
And to free the hostages is greater.
And in verse 41 we are told that He thanks His Father for this opportunity. He is glad to pay that price. Have you gotten a glimpse of how Jesus feels about you and what He is willing to do for you? May this insight cause you to run to Him, to receive from Him the salvation He freely offers, and to rejoice in what that means for today and on into eternity!
This is God Word … This is Grace for your Journey …
Rest and Rejoice in this eternal truth!
Pastor Terry
Ephesians 4:7 – “But to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it.”
Hebrews 4:16 – “Let us then approach the throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.”