Jesus Wept

IMG00152-20110116-1720

John 11:35, the shortest verse in the Bible.  It is only two words, but it is a remarkably profound statement about who God is.  When you read about the death of Lazarus, you see very clearly that his death was part of God’s plan.  Jesus not only confirmed that Lazarus was dead, but then added that it was good for your sake so that you will believe.  Jesus had planned all along on raising Lazarus from the dead, so while everyone was upset, mourning, running around telling Jesus that He is needed in Bethany and then blaming Him for the death when he arrived, God was in control the whole time.  Upon arriving at the tomb, Jesus prays to the Father and asks for a miracle, to raise Lazarus from the dead so that those watching would believe.

Even though this was part of God’s plan and Jesus was in control and orchestrated the entire event, Jesus wept because He saw that people were grieving.  Mary, Martha and those of the Jewish community were all openly upset.  The passage says that when Jesus saw them sobbing, He wept.  When you stop and consider that the God of the universe, the Lord of all creation, the omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent Eternal God shares in our sufferings and His heart breaks for us and with us, that is an amazing and humbling experience.  How do you not realize this and not bury your head in your chest, unable to even lift your head to heaven?  This event of Jesus weeping is an expression of love that is so foreign to who we are.  Not that our hearts don’t break when our loved ones are hurting, they certainly do, but think about the context.

Jesus could have said “why are you crying, don’t you know who I am?”  But He did not do that because love is not arrogant.  He could have said “stop your sniveling, check this out, I got this” but love does not brag.  He could have said “don’t cry to Me after you blamed Me for not being here to prevent his death” but love does not keep a record of wrong doings.  This is not who Jesus is.  Jesus wept because love bears all things; Jesus wept because love endures all things; Jesus wept because love is kind; Jesus wept because love does not act unbecomingly; Jesus wept because love hopes all things.  Jesus wept for the same reason that He came into this world, to seek and save those who are lost; Jesus wept for the same reason He can hang on a cross and utter “Father forgive them, they know not what they do.”  Jesus wept because He has a profound love for us that transcends this world and a compassion for our limitations, our lack of faith, our yearning for hope and our limited understanding.

Jesus wept has profound implications for us and who we are called to be.  When I consider why Jesus wept, it is overwhelming.  We are told to weep with those who weep, but that is the type of love that only comes from God.  It is almost 2 A.M. here in California and in about 13 hours I will be gathering with friends and family at a memorial service for my dad.  If the last ten days are any indication of what tomorrow will bring, I suspect there will be lots of weeping.  As I engage people tomorrow, my prayer will be to be mindful of why Jesus wept and ask God to show me how to genuinely share in their grief and be comforting.  John 11 has meant a lot to me during this time, because as I have privately mourned the loss of my dad, I have received some peace and I take solace in the fact that Jesus wept with me.

3 responses to “Jesus Wept”

  1. The photo is of Santa Monica beach at dusk. A place my mom and dad spent a lot of time growing up and a place I like to go to spend time with the Lord.

    Like

  2. THE HARD SAYING?—BY STEVE FINNELL

    John 6:60 Therefore many of His disciples, when they heard this , said, “This is a hard saying who can understand it?”(NKJV)

    What was the hard saying that many disciples did not understand?

    John 6:52-59 The Jews therefore quarreled among themselves, saying, “How can this Man give us His flesh to eat?”…….(NKJV)

    John 6:61 When Jesus knew in Himself that many His disciples murmured about this, He said to them, “Does this offend you?(NKJV)

    Was the problem with many of the disciples that they did not understand the Lord’s Supper? No, it was not. When Jesus was talking about giving them His flesh to eat it was in reference to His sacrifice on the cross.

    John 6:64 “But there are some of you who do not believe.” For Jesus knew from the beginning who they were who did not believe, and who would betray Him.(NKJV)

    The problem was not that they did understand nor believe in the Lord’s Supper. The problem was they did not believe that Jesus was the Christ.

    John 6:67-68 Then Jesus said to the twelve, “Do you also want to go away?” 68 Then Simon Peter answered, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words to eternal life. (NKJV)

    Simon Peter said Jesus had the words to eternal life. Were the words to eternal life that you must participate in the Lord’s Supper every first day of the week? No. What did Peter say? (John 6:69 “Also we have come to believe and know that You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.”)

    The words of eternal life spoken by Jesus. Mark 16:16 “He who believes and is baptized shall be saved…(NKJV)

    If men are sent to hell it will be because they do not believe that Jesus is the Christ. If men are sent to hell it will be because they refuse to be immersed in water for the forgiveness of their sins.

    Does anyone seriously believe that men will be sent to hell because they only participated in the Lord’s Supper monthly, quarterly, yearly or on Saturday night?

    YOU ARE INVITED TO FOLLOW MY BLOG. http://steve-finnell.blogspot.com

    Like

  3. […] My Dad: died in October of 2014.  The process of writing his eulogy helped me realize how much he had shaped who I am. (Things My Dad Taught me). I should have spent more time with him before he died and I should have told him that I love him.  This I deeply regret.  As our family just went through the holidays and his birthday without him, it was apparent that things are not and will not be the same. Our family enjoyed some time laughing at what he would have said about this or that, it was fun and a little healing.  My mom says that I have my dad’s gift of laughter which I take as a great compliment.  My dad’s tombstone says “We miss you Dad, keep them laughing!”  Two other posts about my dads passing are Good Grief and Bad and Jesus Wept. […]

    Like

Leave a reply to Steve Finnell Cancel reply