John 11:43
Morning Thoughts |
|
Elder
Phillip N. Conley |
John
11:43, "And when he thus had spoken, he cried with a loud
voice, Lazarus, come forth.”
This
morning, language still has meaning. One of the earliest
lessons about the Bible that I was taught as a little boy
from my natural father was, "You can never hope to know what
the Bible means if you don't first know what it says." To
get the meaning and the message that God has left on record
for us, we have to be acquainted with the Bible's language.
By understanding language, we can then build the language
into secure and solid building blocks of concepts. Those
concepts are in turn then laid together to form the
structure of Biblical theology as a house that both shines
as a testimony to God's work and an example for our course
here below. Without the understanding of language, we fail
to make blocks (or perhaps worse make unsteady blocks that
cannot hold weight). Without blocks that can be laid
together, we have no structure as a house and shield in the
world. We then become ignorant, forget about God's grace,
and wander aimlessly in our daily struggles. Let us choose
the former path that keeps a good house of Biblical thought
built upon the language of the Bible itself.
As we have
already mentioned in our previous writing, Christ's spoken
language in the account of Lazarus in John 11 was for our
benefit to understand what He did, how He did it, and what
it means. Progressing into this three word sentence of
Christ, we will see some beautiful particulars about the
Lord's call, and from that, we glean rich insights into the
overall scope of the Lord's work in this regard. However,
for starters, we need to make some qualifying statements.
While we will use Christ's language to make a comparison to
the effectual call in the new birth (and by extension the
resurrection), this account details bringing a naturally
dead man back to natural life again. What Lazarus
experienced in reality (natural raising), points to what
God's family experiences in spiritual raising.
The first
word of Christ's sentence is "Lazarus." We have often heard
it said, "Had Christ not spoken Lazarus' name, all the
graves would have opened and come forth." While that
statement sounds good and comforting superficially (i.e. it
seems to lend strength to the power of Christ's voice), it
actually diminishes the power and might of God's purpose.
Had Christ only purposed to raise Lazarus and not spoken his
name, only Lazarus' body would have been raised due to the
purpose of Christ Jesus the Lord. Christ could have said
nothing at all, "come forth," etc. and only Lazarus would
have been raised if that was Christ's purpose.
However,
by utilizing the name Lazarus in His address, Christ gives
us insight into the effectual call. First of all, it is
personal. We oftentimes hear people talk about a "personal
Saviour." According to Biblical theology - characterized by
Christ's address here - the Saviour must be personal. He
came on this occasion for the raising of a particular man,
and His work in the great economy of salvation is not for
the general saving of an indiscriminate mass of humanity. As
Paul describes it, Christ did it for "me" out of love for
"me." (Galatians 2:20) Doubtless, Lazarus could say that
Christ came that day for him personally. While I have no
recollection of the exact moment of my regeneration, I like
to think that His voice spoke the word "Philip" into my
heart.
Since the
call in the resurrection is similar to regeneration (see
correlation between John 5:25 and 5:28-29), the same
personal aspect holds true when He comes to call our old
bodies out to be fashioned like unto His glorious body.
While countless millions will be raised in a moment, we will
all be visited personally by Christ. What He did He did for
us personally, and all aspects of that work will be seen to
in a personal fashion on a personal basis. Some might say,
"How would millions of people simultaneously hear their own
individual names at that moment?" Nothing is too hard for
the Lord, and we will be able to not only say, "He loved me
and gave Himself for me, but He came and got me personally."
(I Thessalonians 4:16-17)
The second
word of Christ's sentence is "come." If the first word
denoted the personal nature of the call, this word denotes
the authority and power of the call. Notice that this word
has no qualifiers, additions, etc. to go with the command.
It is simple. Come. Now, looking at this naturally, I tell
my children to come quite often on a daily basis. Sometimes,
my voice is successful, and sometimes it is not. While the
children deal with the consequences of willfully avoiding
and not heeding my voice, such is not the circumstance with
God. When He speaks, it is done. (Psalm 33:9) Consider also
that I am telling living children to come with fair to
moderate success. He is telling dead children to come with
100% success. How infinite and authoritative is the power of
this One!
Lazarus
did not say, "Not today Lord. Maybe tomorrow if I feel like
it." Doing some field work yesterday, I had the opportunity
to listen (albeit briefly) to a radio preacher say these
words, "It is the Holy Spirit's function to give the new
birth. It's His job. We must let Him work and give us the
relationship that matches our standing with God." He went on
to declare that we already have good standing with God -
through Christ's death - but the relationship is not
cemented until we let the Holy Spirit through the door.
Should this statement be true, we have a division and
disharmony of power in the Godhead. Indeed, Christ can make
us just and grant good standing in the halls of heaven, but
the Holy Spirit is helpless and powerless to consummate that
relationship unless we "let Him?" Isaiah plainly states that
the Lord will work and who shall let it. (Isaiah 43:13)
When the
power of Christ speaks life into the body of Lazarus, heart
and soul in the new birth, or the resurrection at the end of
time, the effect is immediate with force of power to fulfill
the command. Lazarus was dead, and given a command.
Naturally this does not work. Dead alien sinners are spoken
to by God with a command. Bodies gone into the ground decay
and have gone back to dust, but will one day be commanded to
live and come. The reason that the dead do not stay dead nor
disobey the command is because the command contains life,
and with the life the draw to do what is commanded. (John
6:37, 44) Job never hinted at the possibility of refusal to
obey this call (Job 14:14-15); Christ never admitted one
iota of possibility that His work in ANY count come to
nought. (John 10:27-30)
The final
word "forth" brings the thought full circle. We have a
personal call that is effectual in power by command, but the
word "forth" denotes not the power or the personality of the
call but the direction of it. Lazarus was not called out to
some unspecified location, left to his own devices to
"finally make it," persevere long enough to outrun the devil
into heaven, or any other erroneous teaching that is
promoted from time to time. Christ called (commanded)
Lazarus to a direction of "forth." That word, when spoken in
this way, literally means that the direction implied is
towards the speaker. Christ's direction by command of call
was to Him! Lazarus was not called half-way, part-way, but
all the way to Christ. This direction shows completion. What
Christ did, He completed totally and fully.
Had
Lazarus been given life and then told to "get all the way to
Christ," he still would have failed. How many of us, even
after being given life, have lived a perfect day? Should any
be so bold to claim such holiness, how about a perfect week,
month, or year? Unless Christ did the work all the way, and
thereby commanded us all the way to Him, we would have an
unpopulated heaven and brimming capacity of hell. To show
how secure our direction and conclusion with Christ is, let
us consider how David describes being called out of a
deplorable state.
In Psalm
40:2, David describes the work of the Lord in pulling him
from the horrible pit and miry clay. However, David does not
leave us to wonder what the Lord did after that. After
pulling him out, God set his feet upon a rock and
established his goings. The word "set" means to complete and
secure something, as we today often speak of "setting
concrete." Once concrete has reached its "set" point of
hardening, it is there, like it or not. If one does not like
it, you either bust it up and start over or deal with it.
Since no one can bust up Christ's work, our best course is
to thankfully view it with reverence and praise. What God
did in setting David's feet upon a rock shows security in
the work.
Still,
look at David's ultimate completion: "established my
goings." By comparing Hebrew words, the English words "set"
and "established" come from the same Hebrew word. Therefore,
the security we ascribe to David's position on the rock
(Christ), is the same security we ascribe to his goings.
Now, the fatalist might delightfully state, "Aha! What David
did from that moment on was just as bedrock as his position
on Christ." Is that what David meant? Such would contradict
the highest tenor of Scriptural injunction for us to walk in
a godly way and keep ourselves unspotted from the world.
(James 1:27)
Instead,
what David means is that his "goings" are just as secure and
complete as his position. Someone's "goings" references
their end. Like the end of a journey, the final place is
"established. " David's intended thought is that heaven
awaiting at the end of his journey is just as bedrock as his
current position on the Rock of Jesus Christ. Lazarus was
called by Christ's command to a position not a fraction
short of being where Christ was. While I do not know how far
Lazarus' body physically had to come to be with Christ, he
came forth however far that was to be with Christ.
This
directional word should spark the highest sense of comfort
in us that His work is not only authoritative but carries
the fullest sense of completion down throughout all the ages
of time and into the ceaseless age of eternity. We have not
been called one fraction of a step short, but to come
"forth:" directed right to where He is. On that day, Lazarus
was directed to Christ's physical position. One sweet day,
our person in its entirety (body, soul, and spirit) will be
directed to the very portal of heaven to be with Christ
where He is. (John 14:1-6) Is it sure? Yea, indeed it is
just as sure as our current position and standing on the
Rock of our Saviour.
Friends,
while Christ was not required to speak, we should delight in
these three little - yet powerful - words that speak volumes
into the work of Christ in the salvation of His people. From
these three words, language is used to build the blocks of
personal salvation, effectual and authoritative power of
God, and completion of salvation to its fullest degree.
These blocks are then, in turn, laid together as part of the
building that heralds and cries unto the majesty of "grace"
by God to unworthy dead men. This edifice of grace and love
serves as a shelter from life's evils and sufficient
motivation to live a life of thanksgiving unto the One that
has done all this. Who shall keep Him from it? Not one, but
may we look with thanksgiving upon Him and His most blessed
work. |