If you believe that people go immediately to heaven when they die, do you think it might have been a bit cruel to Lazarus for Jesus to bring him back to life?
Think of what Paul writes in Romans: āIf we live, we live for the Lord; and if we die, we die for the Lord. So, whether we live or die, we belong to the Lordā (Rom. 14:8). For Lazarusā case, we might add: āIf we are asked to ācome backā for the sake of some work the Lord has for us to do, we are the Lordāsāin life, death, and resurrection.ā Although it may be ābetter by farā to be in the presence of the Lord, it may be āmore necessaryā for others that we remain (Phil. 1:22-24).
In any case, I appreciate the way that Dorothy Sayers rendered the scene in her series of radio dramas, The Man Born to Be King (broadcast in 1941-1942). Hereās the dialogue after Lazarus is raised from the dead:
Mary [to Lazarus]: You are smilingāyou are laughingāyou are alive!
Lazarus (joyfully): Yes, I am alive!
Martha: Where have you been?
Lazarus: With life.
Mary: Do you know who called you back?
Lazarus: Life. He is here and he has never left me.
(The Man Born to Be King: Wade Annotated Edition. p. 264)
Lazarus would have to die again. His loved ones would have to grieve again. But they would grieve with hope because in the raising of Lazarus they saw a preview of things to come. More importantly, they were able to place their firm hope in the Lord, who waits (John 11:6) and weeps (11:35) but ultimately says āI am the resurrection and the lifeā (11:25) and raises the dead. This is our great hopeāand the hope of all creation.
About the Author
Justin Ariel Bailey is assistant professor of theology at Dordt University. He, his wife, and their two children are members of Covenant CRC in Sioux Center, Iowa.