Today is the Feast of the Raising of Lazarus, which along with Palm Sunday tomorrow, forms a joyous interlude before the somber tragedy of Holy Week, as well as a prelude to the triumph of Christ’s Resurrection.
Bringing Lazarus back to life after four days in the tomb stands out among Our Lord’s miracles. Cures and exorcisms are unspectacular fare by comparison. The question naturally arises: If Jesus performed this miracle, if all of Lazarus’ family and friends could testify to it, how could there have been any doubt about His divinity? Wouldn’t all unbelief be instantly silenced?
Extending that thought, why, if God is real, doesn’t He show Himself to us with wonders that no atheist could deny? Instead His power skulks in the shadows, revealed, so it seems, only to those who are predisposed to believe in Him without tangible proof.
The answer is that belief in supernatural forces is not good in and of itself. Magicians and Satanists believe in them, too. Those who saw the raising of Lazarus knew only that a man who claimed to be a prophet had performed a miracle. How they reacted to that news depended less on what Jesus did than on their own characters. If they already loved God, they were drawn nearer to Him by this sign of His love for a stricken friend. If they loved only the things of this world, they saw a possible benefactor, a bestower of health, wealth and pleasures, to be approached in the same manner as any earthly despot. The Gospels forbear to record it, but we may be sure that Our Lord was surrounded by flatterers and schemers, by men who desired to use Him for their own purposes. Some of those purposes may have been idealistic: to free Israel from its Roman masters or relieve poverty through perpetual manna from Heaven. Others were less creditable. All were distortions, for they treated God as a means rather that as the supreme end.
Cheap miracles, dispensed to all and sundry, would alter most people’s conception of how the world operates, but not of what its purpose is. The supernatural would be just another tool, which wicked men would seek to use wickedly. It is only a man who is already moving toward union with God who can profit when God touches his life in a manner outside the ordinary course of nature. The rest are better left in the shadows until they are ready to receive the true light.
Troparion - Tone 1
By raising Lazarus from the dead before Your passion,
You did confirm the universal Resurrection, O Christ God!
Like the children with the palms of victory,
We cry out to You, O Vanquisher of death;
Hosanna in the Highest!
Blessed is He that comes in the Name of the Lord!
Kontakion - Tone 2
Christ the Joy, the Truth and the Light of all,
The Life of the World and the Resurrection
Has appeared in His goodness, to those on earth.
He has become the Image of our Resurrection,
Granting divine forgiveness to all!
And now, after 41 consecutive days, I’m going to bring the Lenten Weblog to a close. Lent isn’t over, but there are plenty of church services to occupy my time between Palm Sunday and Easter. Attending to them will be more profitable to my soul than writing these foolish and inadequate words. May Holy Week be blessed to all, as we await the glory of Pascha.
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