When Jesus arrived in Bethany
on March 2, 30 AD, Lazarus had been dead for four days. Many people
were comforting Mary and Martha, including some who were enemies of
Jesus. Martha said to Jesus, "Master, if you had been here, my brother
would not have died!" Jesus replied, "Only have faith, Martha, and your
brother shall rise again."
As the grieving sisters led him to the
tomb, Jesus wept. He felt deep affection and sympathy for Martha and
Mary. He resented the outward show of mourning by some of the insincere
in the crowd, and hesitated to bring Lazarus back to the certain bitter
persecution that he would endure.
A group of forty-five people gathered
before the tomb, along with a vast assembly of celestial beings who
awaited the command of their beloved Sovereign. When Jesus asked that
the stone be taken away from the front of the tomb, Martha and Mary
were filled with conflicted emotions. Martha said, "Must we roll away
the stone? My brother has now been dead four days, so that by this time
decay of the body has begun."
Jesus asked, "Did I not tell you at the
first that this sickness was not to the death?" His apostles and some
of the neighbors rolled the stone away. They could see the form of Lazarus,
wrapped in linen, lying in the cave.
Jesus began to pray aloud, and then he
cried out, "Lazarus, come forth!" Lazarus, still wrapped in the grave
cloths, sat upright. Everyone except his sisters and the apostles fled.
Lazarus asked why he was in the garden
wrapped in linens. He had no memory of his death. After Martha explained
what had happened, Lazarus went to the Master, knelt at his feet and
offered praise to God. Jesus lifted his friend and said, "My son, what
has happened to you will also be experienced by all who believe this
gospel except that they shall be resurrected in a more glorious form.
You shall be a living witness of the truth which I spoke-I am the resurrection
and the life."
By noon the next day the story of Lazarus
had spread throughout Jerusalem. People flocked to Bethany to see him.
The alarmed Pharisees called a meeting; the miracle had strengthened
the faith of believers but only made the Sanhedrin more determined to
destroy Jesus.
One of the Pharisees made a proposal advocating
Jesus' immediate death without trial. The resolution did not come to
a vote that day because fourteen members of the Sanhedrin resigned in
protest. Two weeks later, five other members were expelled on the suspicion
that they believed Jesus' gospel.
Although the Sanhedrin admitted that Lazarus
had been resurrected from the dead, they attributed this and all of
Jesus' miracles to the work of the devil. No matter the source of his
power, the Jewish leaders believed that if he were not stopped all the
common people would soon believe in him.
On the following Sunday morning, Jesus
and the apostles traveled back to Pella. On the journey, the apostles
asked Jesus questions concerning the answers to prayer. Jesus taught
them that prayer is an effort of the finite mind to approach the Infinite.
He assured the apostles that all spirit-born prayers are certain of
an answer, even when they appear to go unanswered. Some prayers can
only be answered in eternity or when a person advances to higher spiritual
levels. Sometimes people don't recognize the answers to their prayers.
Lazarus remained at his home in Bethany
until the week Jesus was killed. When Lazarus was warned that the Sanhedrin
were planning to kill him as well, he fled to Perea. Mary and Martha
later joined their brother in Philadelphia where he served as treasurer
of the church under Abner.