John 11.1-8, 11-16.
Most of Jesus’s miracle stories are short, but the story of raising his friend Lazarus of Bethany takes up most of John 11. Mostly because this is a whole new experience for Jesus’s students. He’d raised the dead before, but these were people who had just died. One could argue, like Miracle Max in The Princess Bride, those people were mostly dead, not fully dead; Jesus got to them just in time to resuscitate them. Whereas in Lazarus’s case, dude had been dead four days. Wrapped in suffocating strips of linen. Left in a sepulcher to rot. He was super dead. Jesus raised him anyway.
But the story starts with Lazarus alive:
John 11.1-8 KWL 1 Someone is unwell—Lazarus of Bethany,- from the village of Mary, and Martha her sister.
2 Mary is she who anointed the Master with ointment,- who wiped his feet with her hair.
- Her brother Lazarus is unwell.
3 So Lazarus’s sisters send for Jesus,- saying, “Master, look!
- He whom you¹ love is unwell.”
4 Hearing, Jesus says, “This illness doesn’t end in death,- but in God’s glory,
- so God’s son might be glorified by it.”
5 Jesus loves Martha,- her sister, and Lazarus.
6 So when he hears Lazarus is unwell,- he then stays two more days in the place he is.
7 Afterwards, Jesus then tells his students,- “We should go to Judea again.”
8 The students tell Jesus, “Rabbi,- the Judeans are now looking for you¹ to lynch you,
- and you’re¹ going there again?”
The Greek text has
Jesus responds with the Twelve Hours Story, which tends to go over Christians’ heads entirely. So much so, we seldom list it among Jesus’s parables, and seldom teach on it. It deserves its own article, so I’ll discuss it elsewhere. But right after the story:
John 11.11-16 KWL 11 Jesus says these things,- and after them he tells his students,
- “Lazarus our friend slept.
- But I go so I might awaken him.”
12 So the students tell Jesus, “Master,- if he slept, he will recover.”
13 Jesus had spoken about Lazarus’s death,- and the students had thought
- he speaks about sleep and slumber.
14 So then Jesus tells them bluntly,- “Lazarus died.
15 I rejoice for you,²- for you² can believe because I am not there.
- But we should go to him.”
16 So Thomas, called Didymus, told his fellow students,- “We should go, so we can die with him.”
Little pessimistic of Thomas, who’s likely still thinking about that lynch mob. But yeah, off they go to Judea, and by the time they get there Lazarus has been dead four days already.