![]() Ģ When John, ( C) who was in prison, ( D) heard about the deeds of the Messiah, he sent his disciples 3 to ask him, “Are you the one who is to come, ( E) or should we expect someone else?”Ĥ Jesus replied, “Go back and report to John what you hear and see: 5 The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is proclaimed to the poor. In the How to Study the Bible podcast, pastor and Bible teacher Nicole Unice brings life back to reading the Bible by walking listeners through her Alive Method of Bible study, helping us personally encounter God through his Word by giving us a practical, clear road map for understanding, interpreting and applying Scripture to our lives.11 After Jesus had finished instructing his twelve disciples, ( B) he went on from there to teach and preach in the towns of Galilee. What should feel alive often feels confusing and boring and irrelevant. We want to experience God through the Bible… we really do!īut our good intentions fall flat when reading the Bible just doesn’t seem to help us experience God in a real way. Print your own copy for a beautiful daily devotional leading up to Easter.Įditor's note: This content was taken from the original article: Jesus Wept: 2 Simple Words with Incredible Depth Get your FREE 8-Day Prayer and Scripture Guide - Praying Through the Holy Week HERE. But in them he is full of compassion ( Psalms 103:13), he hates the calamity sin brings, and he himself has suffered more than we ever will ever know in order to pay the full cost of our eternal resurrection. His reasons for not sparing us these things are righteous and glorious. Just these few reasons for Jesus’ weeping at Lazarus’ tomb give us a glimpse into how God views our suffering and death. Giving Lazarus life was sealing Jesus’ own death. If Jesus had any struggle that day would not have been whether his Father would answer, but what would result when his Father answered. Jesus wept because he knew the accusationsĪ fourth possible reason for Jesus’ tears was that he knew that raising Lazarus would actually cause the religious leaders to finally take action to put him to death ( John 11:45-53). But the reality of what lay between was weighing heavily. He was looking to the joy that was set before him ( Hebrews 12:2). Jesus, who had never known sin, was about to become Lazarus’ sin, and the sin of all who had or would believe in him. The cross was just days away and no one really knew the inner distress ( Luke 12:50) Jesus was experiencing. Jesus wept because he knew the sacrificeĪ third reason for weeping was the cost that he was about to pay to purchase not only Lazarus’ short-term resurrection but his everlasting life. Tears of anger and longing were mixed with Jesus’ tears of grief. Death had taken Lazarus, and it would take him again before it was all over. ![]() And ever since the fall of Adam and Eve, he had endured sin’s horrific destruction. But sin grieves God deeply and so do the wages of sin: death ( Romans 6:23). As God the Son who had come into the world to destroy the devil’s works ( 1 John 3:8), Jesus was about to deliver death its deathblow ( 1 Corinthians 15:26). ![]() Jesus wept over the wages of sinĪnother reason Jesus wept was over the calamity of sin. No, Jesus is sympathetic ( Hebrews 4:15) and we get a glimpse of how the Father feels over the affliction and grief his children experience. Even though Jesus always chooses what will ultimately bring his Father the most glory ( John 11:4)-and sometimes, as in this case, it requires affliction and grief-he does not take delight in the affliction and grief itself. It is true that by not speaking healing from a distance or by his delay in coming ( John 11:6) he had let Lazarus die. One reason is simply the deep compassion that Jesus felt for those who were suffering. Why? Here are four possible reasons why Jesus was weeping and troubled. But he was “greatly troubled” ( John 11:33) and he wept. So one would think that Jesus would be a confident, joyful calm in that storm of sorrow. Except that Jesus had come to Bethany to raise Lazarus from the dead. Jesus wept after speaking with Lazarus’ grieving sisters, Martha and Mary, and seeing all the mourners. ![]() The shortest verse in the Bible is John 11:35: “Jesus wept.” But for all its grammatical simplicity, it’s packed with unfathomable complexity.
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