Romans 8: 6-11
John 11: 1-45
March 26, 2023
Rev. Dr. Galen E. Russell III
Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?”
Prayer: Gracious God, how life-giving you are! May each of us find that our lives are renewed in the you, in your presence, and in the power of your Holy Spirit. Amen.
They say that nothing’s for certain in life except death and taxes! I know this to be true—right now! I’ve been doing my taxes during the last week. Still not done. Ugh! And, like several of you, I’ve been dealing with death in its variety of forms in the last several months, actually. This past Friday a very good friend of ours lost her 57 year-old brother due to a heart attack. Earlier in the week my former brother-in-law passed away from cancer. He was just a few years older than me. And Barb’s mother’s funeral was just shy of two weeks ago. I know some of you have faced the deaths of loved ones… mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, cousins in the first part of this year. So yeah, death is for certain and surrounds us all the time. Always has. Always will.
No different for Jesus, honestly. If anything, death was more frequent in Jesus’ day. Life expectancy was way lower than it is today. People were more barbaric, too. And medical knowledge and practices were practically non-existent, and what they did practice was in the stone age of medicine if you could even call it that.
But, the sadness and grief are the same when someone dies. So is death’s emptiness. So, when Jesus’ friend Lazarus was dying, Jesus is summoned. Long story short, Jesus delays. Four days. Lazarus dies. Jesus arrives. Gets scolded by grieving Martha: “You know, you could’ve stopped his death, Jesus. You let us down.” “Your brother will rise again.” “Yeah, I know he will—in the resurrection on the last day.” Martha believes “in” the resurrection. But Jesus says, “I am the resurrection and the life.” And that’s different. It’s an invitation to faith and belief.
Everyone, I don’t want you to miss what John, the Gospel writer is trying to do here. So, I’m going to get a little theological with us. When Jesus says, “I AM the resurrection…” it’s one of many “I Am” statements he makes. I am the vine. I am the gate. I am the Good Shepherd, which is what I preached on last Wednesday night. And so forth.
But the thing is, “I AM” is the beginning of the divine name of God! God told Moses that at Mt. Sinai. In Exodus 3, God says “I AM WHO I AM.” Or, YHWH which translates to LORD in Hebrew (see Exodus 3: 13-15). So, the author John is helping us, the readers, understand that when Jesus says, “I am the resurrection and the life,” he really is claiming that God and Jesus are one. And in both God and Jesus there is resurrection to eternal life. And remember what I think eternal life is? It’s life with God—and eternal life can happen while we live physically. And it’s promised when our bodies die into the new spiritual life of God’s realm.
So the next question is about belief. Jesus talks of two types of people—first, anyone living physically will certainly die, right? We know that. Its part of life. But with belief in God in Christ as resurrection—that person will live spiritually. The Spirit is life and lives within you. Or, as Paul says, “You are in the Spirit, since the Spirit of God dwells in you.”
Which progresses you to the second type of person. Jesus says that anyone living spiritually with belief in God in Christ as the resurrection and life will never die spiritually. That’s because the ENERGY of the Holy Spirit brings eternal life to you, right away, in the moment of belief. Whether it’s in this life or in the next. So when you believe it, you’re instantly aware of how real eternal life always is and always has been. There’s theology for you!
So, then comes Jesus’ penetrating question to Martha and to us: “Do you believe this?” Having belief is the common denominator with both types of people. With belief that God in Christ is the resurrection to eternal life, you can move from emptiness of death in all its forms to confident and certain hope of the resurrection.
That means that you and I have hope and belief that new life will come from any kind of death we face. Could be the death of a loved one. Could be the death of a pet. Could be getting fired. Could be a divorce. Could be the huge explosion in West Reading. Or, Barb’s alma mater Exeter High School getting blown out in the state championship basketball game Friday, or having your March Madness brackets being blown to smithereens!
Whatever kind of death it is… have hope and belief that the spirit of God, which is the resurrection power of life, can unbind us from death. God will always have the last word. Death does not have life enough to give the last word. Have belief that life always finds a way. God’s word of life is always the last word.
Did any of you see the movie with Tom Hanks A Man Called Otto? Any movie that Tom Hanks stars in is bound to be good, if just for his acting alone… just sayin’. In A Man Called Otto, Tom stars as a curmudgeonly old man named Otto whose life is reviewed. I’ll try not to spoil the whole movie for you, so suffice it to say that Otto has given up on life following the loss of his wife. He binds himself to death and tries to end his life… on several occasions. But he fails every time. Because life gets in the way. Someone asks a favor of him right when he tries to commit the deed. Someone calls on him for something. Or, the neighborhood kids need his help… and so on. All of which, plus some other things makes him even grumpier. But, eventually Otto realizes that life getting in the way is actually unbinding him from death, making him move from death’s emptiness into the fullness of new life with his neighbors and their children.
So death never has the last word. Only God does. And deep in the heart of Lent, this I think is our spiritual training. To believe that even in our most challenging circumstances God in Christ has the last word of life for us. We have to train ourselves to be Easter people. Because God in Christ is the resurrection and life.
Which makes me ask, can we look into the places where we have bound ourselves to death? To look at what strips of cloth are binding our hands and feet and are covering our eyes from seeing the death we’ve created?
Like being caught in the vicious circle of substance abuse. Remember that God is there. God is there in the detox as your rock and salvation, loving you back to life.
Like struggling through the emptiness of destructive, illicit, or failed relationships. Train yourself to believe in faith that God is there as your light and love and can unbind you from death that comes in those types of relationships.
Like living an inauthentic life in the closet which is slowly killing you. Discipline yourself to believe that in the pain and emptiness of that kind of death, remember that God resurrects the dead.
In order to encounter resurrection, perhaps we have to train ourselves to peer into the tombs we’ve created, and believe that God is calling us to “Come out!” That God says “come out” of your grave, even if you think you can’t. Come out from whatever tomb you’re in. Come out from the cave that blocks light. From whatever binds us to death, come out, even if it feels impossible, and God’s love will raise you back to life, if you’re willing. That’s the good news.
And one last piece of good news I share with you—Jesus said to those standing there, staring at the risen Lazarus, blown away by him being alive, he said to them “Unbind him, and let him go.” He didn’t say to Lazarus unbind yourself. He told the people whom Lazarus loved and who loved Lazarus to unbind him and let him go. I take that to mean that we are the ones to help each other unbind someone from the death bands that constrict their hands and feet. We’re to assist each other in removing the cloths from their faces and our faces to help all of us see life more clearly.
I know in some AA groups, when new person comes and for the first time admits that they are an alcoholic and life has become unmanageable, that person is given a sponsor. And that sponsor sometimes will give the new person an AA sobriety chip that they can carry in their pocket. Receiving that chip is like a pledge and promise to be there for that newbie during the first year of sobriety. The chip is a reminder that help is always nearby in that other person.
You see? We can bind ourselves to each other to help us have faith in God to be the resurrection and life in our lives. So, all of us are the ones now unbound from death and are sharing in new life.
So, be sure to give thanks that the two things that are certain in life are not death and taxes, but instead are God and God’s resurrection power to unbind us from death, and takes us into life eternal. Thanks be to God. Amen.
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