Readings: Ez 37:12-14; Rom 8:8-11; Jn 11:1-45
We don’t know what became of Lazarus
after Jesus called him forth from his tomb.
John’s Gospel speaks of him
immediately following
the passage we have just heard
as being present at a meal
given in Jesus’ honor,
and tells us that
the priests in Jerusalem
had decided to kill not only Jesus
but Lazarus as well,
for his very life now witnessed
to the power of Jesus.
But we don’t know if they succeeded.
After this point, the Scriptures
fall silent with regard to Lazarus.
But Christians down the centuries
have tended to imagine him
going on to lead a long life,
and over the centuries have
filled in those extra years
with legends and traditions.
The Eastern Orthodox have told tales
of him becoming a bishop in Cyprus;
Medieval Catholics claimed that he
became a bishop in Marseilles
and was martyred during the reign
of the emperor Domitian.
There is also an odd medieval legend
that, having seen the unredeemed
during his four days among the dead,
Lazarus never smiled or laughed again.
But, as I say,
these may be simply
made-up stories.
We don’t really know
what became of Lazarus.
But we imagine a life
spent bearing witness,
even to the point of death,
to the one who gave
that life back to him
by calling him out of his tomb.
For what else would you do
with the gift of such a life?
We try to imagine it,
and we are right to do so,
because in thinking of the life of Lazarus
we are really thinking about our own lives,
for we too are Lazarus:
buried with Christ in baptism
we have been called back into life
through the Spirit
who raised Christ from the dead
and will give life to our mortal bodies.
We are Lazarus,
our graves of sin opened,
the shroud of death unwound,
invited to recline with Christ at his table.
We are Lazarus,
graciously given a measure of days
in which to bear witness
to the power of Jesus.
Of course, we might not think
of ourselves this way.
We might think of our baptisms
as simply benign rituals of belonging
or nice naming ceremonies for a baby,
something that sets us on the course
of an ordinary and respectable life.
We might think this way
because we would prefer to live
an ordinary and respectable life
rather than what we might call
a Lazarus life.
For a Lazarus life is a life unbound
from the shroud of death,
a life called forth
from the tomb of sin,
and so a Lazarus life is one that bears
the dangerous memory of Jesus
and gives testimony to his power
even in the face of opposition.
For what do you do
with a life that has been
lost and found again?
How do you spend the days
that have been pulled
free from the tomb
and given back to you as a gift?
Surely you must live those days differently
as you live them not according to the flesh
but according to the spirit of righteousness.
Surely you must live a life
that can risk compassion and mercy,
a life of peacemaking
and hungering for justice,
a life not dedicated to anxious grasping
for security and control and power
but a life lived with open hands.
Surely you must live a life that seeks
to give to others the gift of new life
that you yourself have received.
Surely you must live a life
that weeps with those who weep
even as it bears witness to the one
who is resurrection and life itself.
The world needs Lazarus lives,
because our world is beset by death:
physical death wrought
by war and oppression,
and spiritual death
wrought by sin and self-seeking.
The world needs Lazarus lives
to show that another way is possible.
So in these waning days of Lent
let us ask ourselves
whether the lives we live show forth
what it means to live a Lazarus life,
a life that has been raised from death.
And let us pray to our gracious God,
who called us out of death in Baptism,
that all those whom we meet
might see in us a people
who live out the measure of their days
as a gift graciously given;
may they see in us what it means
to live free and unafraid
to the glory and praise of God.
And may God who is merciful
have mercy on us all.









