The Miracles of JesusSýnishorn
The Foreshadowing Miracle
The man who had died came out, his hands and feet bound with linen strips, and his face wrapped with a cloth. Jesus said to them, “Unbind him, and let him go.” (v. 44)
Death can feel like a cruel captor, the final captor, separating the living and the dead.
The passage just before today’s reading tells us that Jesus knew his friend Lazarus was dying. Yet Jesus deliberately delayed coming to Lazarus in time to provide a cure. Lazarus’s sister Mary was brutally blunt: “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died” (v. 21). The grief of Lazarus’s sisters, Mary and Martha, as well as Jesus’s own grief, was great. In verse 33, the Greek verb tarassō, used here of Jesus’s response, means “stirred or troubled in both a physical and mental sense.”
Jesus knows there is something wrong about death. Lazarus’s body was in a cave, and a stone covered the opening. Lazarus was really dead, had been dead for four days. But Jesus issued his command to Lazarus’s corpse: “Lazarus, come out” (v. 43). And he did, bound hand and foot in his wrappings.
This is the rehearsal. A preparation for the curtain that is about to open on the greatest miracle of all. But see in this moment that, as you can trust Jesus in life, you can trust him to bring life from death.
As you pray, consider what life would be like without fear of death. Ask Jesus to help you find that life in him.
Ritningin
About this Plan
The miracles of Jesus are one of the best places to understand why and how God performs miracles. Jesus’s miracles are simultaneously seeds of belief, planted in our hearts to grow into a living faith, and expressions of God’s character, enacted by Jesus because he did what his Father, God, is doing. This 16-day series will take you through the miracles of Jesus found in all four gospels.
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