Let’s not sugar coat the issue of the All Saint's Day text, death sucks.
The prospects of the process of dying scare us because we do not want to suffer
and we do not want to leave our loved ones in pain. Death seems like the ending
point in our lives because we will cease to exist as our minds can fathom.
Death certainly seems like the end.
This is the sort of attitude that the disciples, Mary,
Martha, and the gathered community were operating with at the time of Lazarus’
death. They cry and weep before Jesus, “If you only you had been here to save
him…” These people who have been following Jesus around Judea had seen miracle
upon miracle and they certainly believe that he has powers, but they couldn’t
understand what kind. Jesus turns water into wine, Jesus heals a blind man,
Jesus walks on water. But they could not grasp the idea that death could be
defied. They could not envision Jesus as the resurrection and the life
overcoming death’s stronghold. It’s no wonder that Jesus cries, because they
simply do not understand what is going on…why Jesus is here…
Who do you identify with in this gospel reading? My guess is
that we all feel like Mary and Martha more often than not. We believe in a
loving God that is gracious and merciful and can do miraculous things. Yet when
it comes to death we lash out in lament. Why did you let all of those people die?
Why is there so much suffering and pain in the world? Why don’t you do
anything? Why didn’t you come and save my brother? Why?
Such a way of life, of looking to the future without hope, is
attractive because it does not require us to move out of our grief and pain. We
find it comfortable to wallow in despair, but that is not the life God calls us
to.
To make his point Jesus goes to the place where they had
buried Lazarus. Why? Because he is going to show the people that he doesn’t
have the power to stop death. God has the power to overcome death. “Lazarus
come out!” These three words crack open the door, enough for us to peek through
and catch a glimpse of what God will be up to in the resurrection. God is
giving us new life not just after our deaths, but in the here and now.
Where does God beckon you to come out? Which one of death’s
relatives keeps you behind a stone? What sin keeps you from living into
discipleship? How does despair pin you down? How does division separate you
from God’s love? How is our community trapped in old ways that keep us from
participating in God’s mission in a new time and place? Lazarus, come out!
This call is a call of resurrection that God is not afraid to
offer to me and to you in all of the dark, dank, stench ridden places of our
lives. God goes to such extents not to usher us into heaven, rather to lead us
to a life of service. If we look at the end of the passage, Jesus calls for the
community to come to Lazarus to unbind him from his burial wrappings. Jesus
calls for us, the community, to enter into the miracle in order to finish it.
That is the life we are called to.
On November 1st we celebrated All Saints Day.
It is a day where the church gathers together to remember with honor those who
have died in the last year. But why do we call them saints? Simply put saints
are people who have been declared holy. Now I do not mean that a special
committee gets together to decide who is holy and who is not, rather, it is God
who declares us holy. You see we are not holy by any merit or work of our own,
rather God does because it is God who sets us apart in the world to do God’s
work in the world. All Saints Day then takes on new form, it honors those who
have been living into their various vocations in service to God and it encourages
us to continue our journey of faith and life.
You see whatever we do in faith is considered holy. And when
we do it…we can see moments of God’s transforming presence. We can see miracles
today. We can see resurrection. We can hear the divine voice calling,
“Lazarus, come out.”
When I coached high school football in Minneapolis, some of
the coaches who were teachers and myself would hold a study hall for those
struggling academically. And there is one young man in particular who I will
always remember. His family immigrated to the U.S. from an African country and he adjusted well to the US culture, but academics were a tough road to
travel for this young man. We would sit together for the entire study session
going over math problems where I would have to put it in terms that he could
understand…football terms.
It was an awesome sight to see him catch on and eventually
excel in math and other subjects. It was an awesome sight to see him develop
into a stellar high school football player. And it is now an awesome sight to
see him fulfilling his dream of playing college football at a division one
school. Looking back I have no doubt God was working a miracle in this man’s
life. And it took a community of family members, football coaches, and teachers
to make this miracle happen. He heard God beckoning to him, “Lazarus, come
out!” And he did. And there was a community surrounding him to help God finish
the miracle.
All Saints Day celebrates those who have done that work and
have died. All Saints Day directs us not to look up to heaven in the hopes of
resurrection, that will come. It directs us to look at our neighbors, the ones
who are left on the margins of society, the lonely, the hungry, the least of
these. All Saints Day, is a day in which we are reminded of our baptismal
calling of new life in Christ and creating such a way for others.
All Saints Day is a reminder that we shouldn’t be perpetually
stuck like Mary, Martha, and the other disciples. Rather we are called to a
faith that trusts that Christ is the resurrection and the life, a faith that
hears the call to come out of our own tombs where death wants to keep us
trapped, a faith that works with one another to do God’s work. Indeed we are
called and we must respond. Lazarus come out.
-Tom
-Tom
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