Lent forces us to consider the meaning of resurrection. Are we buying it, or not? As Christians our faith in Jesus as savior is balanced on accepting and believing he rose from the dead. Let’s not kid ourselves, it is hard to believe. But we do want to believe don’t we? So, we set aside the squeaky wheel that calls for proof, we suspend our doubts…”with God, all things are possible.”
This weekend we will hear the story of Lazarus being raised from the dead. The story informs our skeptical minds and says “listen, if you can’t believe this, how can you expect to accept what comes next?”
In recent days, I have been struck by the implicit role of community in each of our own personal resurrection stories. Yesterday, after breaking open the word together at a staff meeting, Fr. Joel challenged us to reflect on where we witness the resurrection story, in personal lives, in the parish, in the people we serve, and beyond.
At my age, I can say I have heard the story of Lazarus a hundred times or more. But yesterday I heard something new in the following passages:
He cried out in a loud voice, “Lazarus, come out!”
The dead man came out, tied hand and foot with burial bands, and his face was wrapped in a cloth. –John 11:33
Notice how Jesus uses a loud voice when he tells Lazarus to come out. The dead man’s response might be, “uh, Jesus, my friend, don't shout. If you haven’t noticed I am now dead to the world.” To which Jesus would quip “no, you aren’t, you have more to give, now get up!” Jesus' loud voice did not tell the others, “Go in there and help him out,” it was directed to Lazarus, and Lazarus had to respond willingly to Jesus’ command and without help. How many times have we heard the unmistakable voice of Jesus telling us to pull ourselves together and make a change? His voice is quite loud. But we are bound up in our burial cloths. His voice is persistent. But we don’t think he is talking to us.
Listen! We have to respond of our own free will to the incredible, unbelievable, other worldly possibilities to which Jesus calls us.
The next line is even more telling
So Jesus said to them, “Untie him and let him go.” --John 11:34
Here is the role of community: “Untie him and let him go.” Our willingness to respond to Jesus' call is step one, but it is not enough. We are limited by what binds us: our way of thinking, our sense of purpose, our abilities, or lack thereof, and the ever-increasing limitations placed upon us by others, all these burial cloths need to be removed. Jesus doesn’t tell Lazarus to break free on his own; he tells the others to help him.
And that is all we know about Lazarus. We don’t know the rest of the story. We don’t know what Lazarus does with the rest of his life. It is not important. What is important is what we do.
What are you going to do when you hear the loud voice of Jesus waking you, will you respond? Who will Jesus command to help free you from the burial cloths that prevent resurrection? Will you do the same for another?
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
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