Romans 8:11 (NRSV)
If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will give life to your mortal bodies also through his Spirit that dwells in you.
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"Modern thinkers - philosophers such as Heidegger, sociologists such as Ernst Becker - have shown us how much we are “beings-toward-death.” [Rene] Girard gives us the anthropological explanation of how the powerful catharses around death are at the foundations of culture, and thus as a driving force behind our human experience. Moreover, Girard's faith takes him beyond where Heidegger would dare to go, such that Jesus can be seen to offer us freedom from our “Being-toward-death” into a “Being-toward-life.”
"Jesus, in John 11, is concerned before his passion to help his followers to be prepared for the founding of God's culture, founded in the boundless life of the Resurrection. Living in God's culture begun at the Resurrection, our “Being-toward-” can undergo the fundamental transformation from death to life. “Eternal life” isn't just something that happens to us after we die. It is something that happens to us the instant we begin to experience the Resurrection and begin the journey of becoming “Beings-toward-life.” John 11 gives us a story about Jesus' warm-up exercise to experiencing the Resurrection. It is a coaxing preparation for being able to live in the light of the Resurrection."
- Paul J. Nuechterlein, from Resources section on John 11 on the Girardian Lectionary page for Lent 5A (link below)
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"Does [an] emphasis on teaching us how to face death totally spiritualize this story out of being a miracle? [...] I'll speak for myself in reflecting on the miraculous nature of raising Lazarus.
"First, we might ask more generally, what was the point of Jesus doing miracles? In what did the miracles consist? More to the point: when Jesus performed a miracle, which was the more important “miracle”: the suspending of physical laws of nature that worked a miraculous change in the physical world, or the effect which that “miracle” had in changing human hearts? Which is more significant: working a dramatic change in the course of natural events, or working a dramatic change in human hearts?
"I ask these questions because [...] what is important to me about such miracles, is the miraculous change it can make in us. Jesus wasn't there to simply wow the crowd with a few magic tricks. He was there to invite them into a whole new orientation to life and death, a miracle of human transformation that wouldn't be complete until his own death and resurrection. Jesus was there to confront their old ways of facing death and to begin to give them a new way. To the extent that he, along with the Holy Spirit, is actually able to give us that new orientation, that for me is the real miracle. It's not that the raising of Lazarus didn't happen or that we should debunk it; it's that there's something even more important going on, a potential change in the human heart. In other words, if we stop with only the literal raising of Lazarus, we still miss the most important miracle that may happen here, something that even goes beyond the resuscitation, that dramatic change in the course of natural events.
"What could be more meaningful than the resuscitation of a dead friend? Lazarus would still die a death of his earthly body some day. Jesus was saving him from that only for the time-being. But what if, in the meantime, Lazarus' new lease on living could be transformed into an existence that is wholly for life? That's what I think John's Jesus means by “eternal life.” And it is a “realized eschatology” to the extent that one can immediately begin to experience this “eternal life” the moment one believes in Jesus, who is the resurrection and the life. Martha responds to Jesus about resurrection in terms of something in the future, “on the last day.” Jesus further responds to her in the present tense, “I am ...”"
- Paul J. Nuechterlein, from Reflections and Questions section on John 11 on the Girardian Lectionary page for Lent 5A (link below)
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"In John's Gospel, as a matter of fact, raising Lazarus back to life after four days in the grave, is not even called a miracle. No, in John's Gospel, it's called a sign. It's the seventh and last sign. It began with the wedding at Cana, turning the water in the ritual purification jars into wine. The water for a somber ritual was turned into the wine of a joyful celebration of life. Then, in ch. 4, Jesus heals the son of a royal official – the second sign. In ch. 5, it's the healing of a lame man at the pool of Bethsaida. Chapter 6, two signs: feeding five thousand and walking on water. We heard the sixth sign last week: healing the man born blind. Today, the seventh and final sign – final, that is, until Easter morning, the eighth sign on the eighth day, the first day of the new week, the first day of a New Creation. In John's Gospel, these are not miracles. They are signs of the Creation beginning again.
"They are signs to help us to believe, signs to signal our entry into the New Creation, signs to help us be faithful by working in the New Creation. And that's why Jesus is not only sad at Lazarus's wake, but he's also troubled in spirit, perhaps even angry. The word used for “troubled” in verses 33 and 38 is translated in Matthew and Mark's Gospels as being angry or frustrated. Why would Jesus be angry or frustrated at such a sad occasion? Because he is giving them signs to invite them into New Creation, and they aren't getting it. He has staged this entire event with Lazarus death – staying a couple of extra days on purpose, to make sure that Lazarus would die – and they still aren't believing that he is all about resurrection and life. They aren't yet understanding.
"What about us, two thousand years later? Do we get it yet? Yes, we believe that God raises us after we die. But like Jesus says to Martha, ‘I am the resurrection and the life. It's not just happening someday in the future. It's happening right now, Sister! I'm trying to invite you, empower you, right now on how to live wholly and completely for Life.’ Do we get this still? Do we know how to live completely on the side of life here today, and not just put it off until tomorrow?
"Here's what I mean. Perhaps the most telling conversation in John's Gospel is between Jesus and the Judean leaders in chapters 7 and 8. Jesus has come to invite them into life, too, but they are such stick in the muds for the Law, for Torah, that they can't get past Jesus's healing on the Sabbath. To them, Torah is Life. And as a good Jew, it is for Jesus, too. But then you have to understand how to have Torah lead you wholly and completely into life. The Judean leaders still use it to impede working toward life by following the letter of the law instead of the Spirit of it – like getting on Jesus's case for healing on the Sabbath. They also use the law to elevate themselves above others, seeing themselves as fit for life and others as not.
"Jesus had to tell the Pharisee Nicodemus to be born again from above. He had to help him to understand that unless he is able to see every person on this earth as God's child fit for life, then he was really living for death, not life. And Jesus would go on to tell the leaders point blank (in chapter 7) that they would use the law to kill him. And for good measure, when they bring an adulteress to him, ready to stone, ready to kill, he would halt them in their tracks, telling them, “You who is without sin may cast the first stone.” The law is for Life, never for death, never for killing, never for neglecting others because you think that somehow you are better.
"Now do we understand? [...] Do we understand that we can do greater works than Jesus, effecting many more people if we do the work of God's New Creation as best we can, guided by the Spirit?
"If not, Jesus comes here to remind us once again this morning that he is the resurrection and the life right now, here today. This isn't just about some future life in a far-away place. This is about God's Creation here and now. He is here in bread and wine to feed us for living wholly and completely for Life, for the sake of the world. He is here to say to us, “Very truly, I tell you, the one who believes in me will also do the works that I do and, in fact, will do greater works than these, because I have gone to the Father, so that I may live in you and you in me. I am the vine, you are the branches. Those who abide in me and I in them bear much fruit…” Amen"
- Paul J. Nuechterlein, from a sermon delivered at Prince of Peace Lutheran, Portage, MI, on April 10, 2011 (https://girardianlectionary.net/reflections/year-a/lent5a_2011_ser/)
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John 11: 32-33: When Mary came where Jesus was and saw him, she knelt at his feet and said to him, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.” When Jesus saw her weeping and the Jews who came with her also weeping, he was greatly disturbed in spirit and deeply moved.
"When Jesus saw her weeping and the Jews also with her weeping, he was greatly - greatly angered in spirit is what it actually says, and the translators for some reason dumb it down - and deeply perturbed. So here's the questions always being raised: [...] why was he angered by this, and deeply perturbed? Well, the word perturbed appears in Jesus' case whenever some confirmation that the Passion is about to come. In John's Gospel, as it were, the perturbances that happen in the Garden of Gethsemane in St Luke's Gospel, happen in the temple, and here, as well as in the Garden of Gethsemane. [...]
"So Jesus, facing up for what is about to come to him, is lived through. But then there's the question of this anger. He appears to be angry with death, with this whole scene, with these people engaging in the weeping and wailing. He's angry at the cult, what I would call the cult of death, at the notion of all these people giving meaning to something that should have no meaning. If you are Life itself, you're naturally angry when you see people run by death, which they needn't be and shouldn't be.
[...]
"This extraordinary fact, someone who was dead, who was well after the number of days at which it was assumed that the soul left the area of the tomb (it was assumed in Palestinian circles at the time that it was about three days after death that the spirit left the vicinity of the tomb), so the fourth day is very clearly [indicating] there's nothing there to, as it were, to put together. It's a wholly new miracle of bringing to life and Jesus has enacted this in the face of what his whole mission has been about from the time when he said "Come and see" [John 1:39] to what is going to happen to him in the tomb
"In other words, he is producing in them the faith that he himself has in what God is going to do, and this is what we are being asked to receive so that we can be inducted into it, into this power of Life that means we need not fear death, meaning not fear those who are out to get us but we can walk in the light in the midst of darkness."
- James Alison, from video "Homily for Fifth Sunday in Lent 2023 A" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mklxp1Er6s)
[Source of Paul Nuechterlein quotes and link to Paul Nuechterlein sermon, and for analysis and discussion on all the lectionary texts for Lent 5A, see: https://girardianlectionary.net/reflections/year-a/lent5a/]