Tonight, we look at John 11 verses 17-27. This passage follows our last study when we looked at the purpose of Lazarus’ death. Tonight’s passage is a conversation between Jesus and Martha. What happened caused an increase in Martha’s faith. Let’s see if this study grows our faith as well.
READ 17-20. The scene was Bethany, a suburb of Jerusalem about 2 miles away. When Jesus arrived, someone told Him that Lazarus had already been buried for 4 days. Jesus didn’t actually enter the city of Bethany. He stayed on the outskirts of the city. Just why, we are not told. There was a huge number of mourners who had come to comfort the family, and some of these were opposed to Jesus as we will see in v. 46.
Jesus apparently sent a messenger to tell Martha that He had arrived. As soon as she heard, she left the house and ran out to meet Him. But Mary stayed at home.
Many sermons have been written over the contrast between Martha and Mary. Martha was the woman of action and energy, so she was the one who went out to meet Jesus. Mary was the contemplative and meditative one, so she remained at home to receive the mourners.
READ 21-22. So, Martha goes straight to the preacher to complain. In her complaining to Jesus, she shows limited faith in Him. She believed in Jesus. She even believed that Jesus could have healed Lazarus and kept him from dying. But you might remember from our last study that Jesus didn’t come immediately when He was called; so, her brother died.
Why didn’t Jesus come when He was called? We were being taught to wait upon the Lord and that everything is in HIS timing, not ours. This waiting before he went all tied in to the fact that Lazarus’ death was to bring glory to God. Why didn’t Jesus heal Lazarus when Martha and the family loved Jesus so much and had done so much for Him? Why did He let Lazarus die?
The point is this: Martha did believe in Jesus, but her faith was a complaining faith. How many of us have a complaining faith? Martha didn’t believe to the point of resting in faith. She didn’t believe with an unlimited and resting faith. She was not entrusting the matter completely into the Lord’s hands. She wasn’t yet convinced that what had happened was for the best. She trusted Jesus as her Savior, but she questioned what had happened. She complained to Jesus.
A complaining faith is a limited faith. It’s a faith that questions Jesus’ Lordship:
• That questions if Jesus has done what is best.
• That questions if Jesus even knows what is best.
It says to Jesus, “If you had been here, if you had acted differently, if you had done this or that, then this trial wouldn’t have happened.” Martha was convicted immediately for having complained and reproached Jesus. She blurts out in v. 22 (READ).
But even here her limited faith shows itself. She didn’t say, “Lord, I know that you can do anything you will.” She said, “God will give you whatever you ask.” She was still limiting Jesus to some level below God. She still had not grasped that Jesus Himself was the Resurrection and the Life. She had a complaining, limited faith in Jesus.
READ 23-24. Here we see Martha’s fundamental faith. Jesus said in v. 23 (READ). He couldn’t have made it clearer. Lazarus was to arise from the dead. Martha misunderstood. She thought Jesus meant that Lazarus would arise in the resurrection at the last day.
Martha had that fundamental faith. She believed in the resurrection. She believed what Jesus had taught. But Martha’s fundamental faith experienced disappointment. The promise of a future resurrection and reunion is not always a comfort. Her loved one was gone NOW. There was now no contact and no relationship with him, not on this earth.
Everything about her life was now completely changed. Her household was radically different. She believed in the resurrection and believed in all the fundamentals of the faith, but the resurrection was so far in the future that it was of little comfort to her then.
The point is this: a fundamental faith is essential. A person must believe in the fundamental of the faith, but a fundamental faith is short. It’s not all there is to faith and to our life in Christ. It’s not a living faith. And every person needs what Martha needed: a living faith, a faith that is alive and vibrant, dynamic and moving. We need the knowledge that Jesus is the resurrection and the life. Is your faith a living faith or a fundamental faith? Do you know someone whose faith if more of a fundamental faith than it is a living faith?
READ 25-27. Here is Martha’s declared faith. I want to make 3 points about this.
1. Jesus makes a great claim that He is the resurrection and the life. He didn’t say He gives the resurrection and life to man, but He IS the Resurrection and the Life. Of course, Jesus DOES give the resurrection and life to believers but His point is not this fact. His point is far more important. Jesus declared that He is the very being and essence, the very power and energy of life.
This means that all life exists only by the will and power of Jesus. He is the Source of all life. There is nothing existing apart from His will.
2. The second point is Jesus’ great promise: believe, and two things happen:
a. He who believes in Me will live, even though he dies. What did Jesus mean? He lives in the other world, in heaven, in the spiritual dimension, in the very presence of God Himself. The believer who has passed from this world is not some place: In a semi-conscious state, in a deep sleep, locked up in a compartment someplace, or in space moving about and floating around on a fluffy cloud.
The believer is fully alive: he lives in heaven. Another world exists just like this world exists. It’s a world that exists now. It’s the spiritual world and dimension where God and Christ and angels and all those who have gone on before now live.
What do you think of that? How does that make you feel?
So, when a person who has believed in Jesus dies, he goes to live in heaven, in the spiritual world and “Hallelujah” is the only word that can express the hope and joy that fills the soul of the true believer.
b. The second thing Jesus said was whoever lives and believed in me will never die.” What does that mean? The believer will never taste death, that is, never experience death. What do I mean by that? Quicker than the believer can blink an eye, he passes from this world into the next world. He is transported and transferred into heaven. The believer never loses a single moment of consciousness. One moment he is conscious and living in this world; the next moment he is conscious and present in the next world.
There is only one difference. He is immediately made perfect: transformed, made much more conscious and aware, more knowledgeable and alive than ever before.
But receiving eternal life is conditional: a person must believe. It is “who believes” and “whoever lives and believes” that lives and never dies. So, Jesus asks Martha, “Do you believe this?” If a person believes Jesus, he never dies; he shall live forever.
3. The third and last point I want to make is about Martha’s great declaration. Martha believed, and she confessed and called Jesus “Lord.” She declared that she believed three things:
a. That Jesus is the Christ, the Messiah.
b. That Jesus is the Son of God
c. That Jesus is the One who was to be sent into the world by God.
With that we close this study with this thought.
Knowing that Jesus is the Resurrection and the Life means three things. It means…
• That Jesus is alive, living right before us in the person of the Holy Spirit. He is both in us and all around us. Our faith is living and alive and in constant communion and fellowship with Him.
• That our loved one is present with Jesus, no longer imperfect in mind and body, but perfect: more conscious, more aware, more alive than they were on earth. How do we know this? Jesus is alive in heaven, and to be away from the body is to be at home with the Lord.
• That Jesus is alive, so the resurrection of our glorified bodies is assured.