Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Living and Dying with Lazarus


We decided at the roundtable that the season of Lent this year should be called the season of Long John.  We have been stricken with a series of exceptionally long passages from John’s gospel.  I have always considered John’s Jesus to be especially long-winded, and now I see that is a quality he shares with John himself.
The long John story this week is on the raising of Lazarus, or better, the long lead-up to the raising of Lazarus.  It begins with Jesus’ apparent decision to let Lazarus die before he does anything.  “This illness isn’t fatal,” he says.  Only it is.  And Jesus knew that.
Two days later he tells his disciples that they will go to Bethany after all, adding, “Lazarus has died.”  What’s more, he tells them, he’s glad.  This seems inappropriate.
One member of the roundtable shared a story about a beloved friend who refused to allow her loved ones to hold a funeral for her.  She had left firm instructions with her family about this.  Friends didn’t know until after she died, and this news made them feel their grief compounded. 
“If I get my way, I’ll just go off to a secret place by myself and die alone.  No one will have to do anything,” another said.  Why, we asked, would you want that?  “So as not to cause trouble for anyone.”  I don’t know if she was serious or not.  But I do know that the “trouble” we go to is all for ourselves.  The funeral is for the living, not the dead. 
Mary and Martha are joined by their community in their grieving.  Mary’s friends never leave her side, following her wherever she goes.  I can imagine them joining their cries to hers in a ritual lament.  Both Mary and Martha go out to meet Jesus on the road and tell him, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother wouldn’t have died.” 
Is this an accusation? A statement of faith? Or just a fact?  The theological discussion that follows would suggest faith, but that doesn’t rule out resentment, does it?
Finally, he gets around to the act of raising Lazarus from his tomb, something about which, it turns out, Martha has reservations.  Nevertheless, Lazarus is summoned from the grave, unbound from his burial clothes, and set free.  Later, Jesus returns to the home of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus to dine with them, like a doctor following up with his patient.  I am troubled by the notion of Lazarus resurrected, partly because I wonder how it felt to be pulled out of rest.  But also because he will die again.  Possible soon, as the Pharisees plan to put Lazarus to death.  Again.  Apparently, to get rid of the evidence.
As Christians, we have complicated feelings about life and death.  We are taught not to fear death because Jesus Christ has the victory over death.  But we don’t embrace death, because we believe Jesus lived so we may have abundant life.  And judging from the wonderful works he did on earth, I don’t believe he was talking only about the after-life.

Death is a mystery, and life is also.  At birth, we cry tears of joy; at death, tears of sorrow.  Yet joy and sorrow are but two sides of the same coin.  When Lazarus was raised from his grave, Mary and Martha’s tears were a mixture of both.  In joy and in sorrow, in life and in death, we hold one another up, leaning on love where understanding ends. 

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