
In yesterday’s study, we noted that Jesus returned to Bethany after a delay of two days. Upon arriving, He was told that Lazarus had been dead four days. This meant that Lazarus must have died before Jesus had even received the message that Lazarus was sick. And this means that Jesus knew of Lazarus’ death from the beginning and delayed His return for a specific purpose.

In yesterday’s study, we noted that Jesus returned to Bethany after a delay of two days. Upon arriving, He was told that Lazarus had been dead four days. This meant that Lazarus must have died before Jesus had even received the message that Lazarus was sick. And this means that Jesus knew of Lazarus’ death from the beginning and delayed His return for a specific purpose.

Now trouble came into the family of Mary, Martha and Lazarus, and Jesus was not there to help them. He had been there a few days previously, but He had gone away, telling them where he was going. While He was gone Lazarus took sick, and the sickness was serious enough for the sisters to send for Jesus. The messenger who bore the report told Jesus, “Lord, behold, he whom thou lovest is sick.” There is a lesson at this point, and we should acknowledge it before we go further.

During the first pre-Christian century a famous letter was written by Sulpicius Severus, a Roman, to Cicero, the great orator, on the occasion of the death of Cicero’s beloved daughter Tullia. The letter expresses deep sympathy and reminds the orator that his daughter had only experienced the common lot of mankind and had only passed away when the freedom of the republic itself was failing. It is warm and moving, but it contains nothing of a sure hope of life beyond the grave. In reply, Cicero thanks his friend for his sympathy and enlarges upon the magnitude of his loss.

The resurrection hope has come down to us through many centuries of Church history. Let it pass to our children and to our children’s children, until the living Lord Jesus Christ returns in His glory. Jesus Christ lives! He lives! Then let us tell others, and let us shout with Job, “I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth”!

There is a third point to Job’s statement. Not only does Job declare that he has a Redeemer, not only does he affirm that He is a living Redeemer, but he adds, quite properly, that He is his Redeemer. “My” is the word he uses. “I know that my redeemer liveth!” Do you know that “my” in relation to Jesus Christ? It is a reminder of the need for a personal religion.

What made the difference? What made cowards bold, a scattering body of individuals into a cohesive force, a disillusioned following into evangelists? Only one thing accounts for it: the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

In the same way we too have a living Redeemer, the same Redeemer, who is Jesus. This is the thrust of our testimony on Easter Sunday, and indeed on every other Lord’s Day also. We testify that Jesus rose from the dead and that He ever lives to help all who call upon Him. The evidences for this fact are overwhelming.
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