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Preliminary Events To The Resurrection Of Lazarus
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167:4.1 Very late on Sunday night, February 26, a runner from
Bethany
arrived at
Philadelphia,
bringing a message from Martha and Mary which said, "Lord, he whom you love is very sick."
This message reached Jesus at the close of the evening conference and just as he was taking leave of the
apostles
for the night. At first Jesus made no reply. There occurred one of those strange interludes, a time when he appeared to be in communication with
something outside of, and beyond, himself. And then, looking up, he addressed the messenger in the hearing of the apostles, saying: "This sickness is really not to the death. Doubt not that it may be used to glorify God and exalt the Son."
167:4.2 Jesus was very fond of Martha, Mary, and their
brother, Lazarus; he loved them with a fervent affection. His first and human thought was
to go to their assistance at once, but another idea came into his combined mind. He had almost given up hope that the
Jew
leaders at
Jerusalem
would ever accept the kingdom, but he still loved his people, and there now occurred to him a plan whereby the
scribes
and
Pharisees
of Jerusalem might have one more chance to accept his teachings; and he decided, his Father willing, to make this last appeal to Jerusalem the most
profound and stupendous outward working of his entire earth career. The Jews clung to the idea of a wonder-working deliverer. And though he refused to
stoop to the performance of material wonders or to the enactment of temporal exhibitions of political power, he did now ask the Father's consent for
the manifestation of his hitherto unexhibited power over life and death.
(167:4.3) The Jews were in the habit of burying
their dead on the day of their demise; this was a necessary practice in such a warm climate. It often happened that they put in the tomb one who was
merely comatose, so that on the second or even the third day, such a one would come forth from the tomb. But it was the belief of the Jews that, while
the spirit or soul might linger near the body for two or three days, it never tarried
after the third day; that decay was well advanced by the fourth day, and that no one ever returned from the tomb after the lapse of such a period. And
it was for these reasons that Jesus tarried yet two full days in Philadelphia before he made ready to start for
Bethany.
167:4.4 Accordingly, early on Wednesday morning he said to his
apostles: "Let us prepare at once to go into
Judea
again." And when the apostles heard their Master say this, they drew off by themselves for a time to take counsel of one
another. James assumed the direction of the conference, and they all agreed that it was only folly to allow Jesus to go again into Judea, and they
came back as one man and so informed him. Said James: "Master, you were in Jerusalem a few weeks back, and the leaders sought your death, while the
people were minded to stone you. At that time you gave these men their chance to receive the truth, and we will not permit you to go again into
Judea."
167:4.5 Then said Jesus: "But do you not understand
that there are twelve hours of the day in which work may safely be done? If a man walks in the day, he does not stumble inasmuch as he has light. If a
man walks in the night, he is liable to stumble since he is without light. As long as my day lasts, I fear not to enter Judea. I would do one more
mighty work for these Jews; I would give them one more chance to believe, even on their own terms—conditions of outward glory and the visible
manifestation of the power of the Father and the love of the Son. Besides, do you not realize that our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep, and I would
go to awake him out of this sleep!"
167:4.6 Then said one of the
apostles: "Master, if Lazarus has fallen asleep, then will he the more surely recover." It
was the custom of the Jews at that time to speak of death as a form of sleep, but as the
apostles did not understand that Jesus meant that Lazarus had departed from this world, he now said plainly: "Lazarus is
dead. And I am glad for your sakes, even if the others are not thereby saved, that I was not there, to the end that you shall now have new cause to
believe in me; and by that which you will witness, you should all be strengthened in preparation for that day when I shall take leave of you and go to
the Father."
167:4.7 When they could not persuade him to refrain from
going into Judea, and when some of the
apostles were loath even to accompany him, Thomas addressed his fellows, saying: "We have
told the Master our fears, but he is determined to go to
Bethany.
I am satisfied it means the end; they will surely kill him, but if that is the Master's choice, then let us acquit ourselves like men of courage; let
us go also that we may die with him." And it was ever so; in matters requiring deliberate and sustained courage, Thomas was always the mainstay of the
twelve
apostles.
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