"I am the Resurrection."—John 11:25
Whose lips proclaim this mighty word? Who is the speaker
claiming such authority? Is it on earth that this announcement sounds? Can
it be the calm utterance of sober mind? Is attention due to it as emanating
from One who spoke what He well knew, and testified an indubitable truth?
Let all doubt vanish, as morning mists before the orb of
day. Let reverence give heed. Let adoration meekly bow. Jesus here appears
in the character of the true, "the faithful Witness." The Word, the eternal
Word—He who is light, and in whom there is no darkness at all; He who cannot
deceive, and cannot be deceived—thus testifies. He in whom "are hidden all
the treasures of wisdom and knowledge" gives this sublime revelation, "I am
the Resurrection." Jesus the speaker, of Himself thus speaks—to Himself He
points, exclaiming, "I am the Resurrection."
The question now occurs, What is the import of the term?
What is its main significance? Accurate definitions lead to accurate
conclusions. The end will not be reached, when first steps move in a wrong
course. The target should be seen, before the arrow flies.
Doubtless the word is often used in figurative sense. It
lends expressive aid to exemplify various occurrences. When wintry sods
relax, and hardened fields assume again their verdant carpet; when flowers
bloom, and buds expand, and renovated beauty clothes the earth, Nature is
said to put on her resurrection-dress. When the soul has felt the absence of
heavenly dew, when grace has languished, and no gracious breezes from above
have nourished spiritual shoots, when after this cold period the Spirit
revisits the heart, and renews the joys of holy communion, a metaphor speaks
of the resurrection of the inner man. Other revivals might be characterized
as resurrections.
But there is no figurative meaning in these words, "I am
the Resurrection." The context at once claims literal acceptance. Let
thought now realize the scene of utterance. The lifeless frame of Lazarus
had recently been carried to the grave. Jesus seeks Bethany, to comfort the
weeping sisters. Martha hastens to meet Him. In reply to her impassioned
grief, He gives her the assurance, "Your brother shall rise again." The
mourner acquiesces in the truth. She knew that her brother's body should not
lie always in the grave. She assents that it again shall be arrayed with
life, and again shall possess all properties of being. It is in connection
with this assent that Jesus sublimely cries, "I am the Resurrection."
We here learn that Jesus speaks of the Resurrection of
the body, and that this marvel shall be accomplished through the direct
exercise of His mighty power.
Let grateful joy now revel in these wondrous tidings!
When death opens the cage, the spirit flies to separate existence. It leaves
the deserted tenement to crumble into dust. But the soul, alive without the
body, is not entire and perfect man. It is but one portion of the total
being. For man to be complete, the body must again resuscitate. The
component parts must live, co-partners of one tenement. A re-animated frame
must receive the ever living soul. Then man is man again. How delightedly,
then, should we drink in the heaven-born assurance, "I am the Resurrection."
We rely not on utterance alone for this grand comfort.
Indeed, if Jesus had but once thus spoken, faith would possess sufficient
ground for solid standing, its feet would rest on a firm rock; it could
confront a world of doubters, and trample down all sneering fallacies. But
to fill the believing heart with confidence, Jesus adds demonstration to His
word. Few moments are allowed to pass, when at His word a dead body lives
again.
He asks, "Where have you laid him?" They guide Him to the
grave. "It was a cave, and a stone lay upon it." He orders its removal, and
having lifted up His eyes to heaven, in supplication to His Father, He cried
with a loud voice, "Lazarus, come forth." There is no delay. Instantly death
withdraws its hold. The body "that was dead came forth." Thus Jesus by
undoubted fact established what His lips had recently declared—"I am the
Resurrection."
Had this fact only been exhibited, faith would rejoice in
perfect confirmation. It would rightly exult and sing, Jesus is "the
Resurrection." His voice declares it. His deed corroborates it. But this is
not the only instance where Christ manifests His power to loosen the grasp
of death. Let thought review the early days of His ministry. Jairus, high in
Jewish rank, with supplicating urgency implored that death might not remove
his little daughter. He asked much, and he obtained more. What an
encouragement to bold and earnest prayer! The youthful sufferer expired.
Great was the lamentation! Jesus hastened to the spot, and entered the
chamber of the lifeless child. He takes her hand, and speaking with all
authority, as "the Resurrection," cries, "Little girl, I say to you, get
up." (Mark 5:41) He displays His re-animating power. "Immediately the girl
stood up, and walked around."
Jesus multiplies evidence, that faith may with stronger
grasp cling to Him as "the Resurrection." In His journeyings He approaches
Nain. According to the pre-arrangements of His will, when He reached the
gate, "there was a dead man carried out, the only son of his mother, and she
was a widow: and much people of the city was with her. And when the Lord saw
her, He had compassion on her, and said to her, Weep not. And He came and
touched the bier: and those who bore him stood still." And now He, who is
"the Resurrection," speaks: "Young man, I say to you, get up." The word goes
forth, almighty in authority, and arrayed with the strength of Omnipotence.
No opposition checks obedience. No foes in earth or hell can stay the
mandate. Instantly the corpse resumes its former life. "The dead man sat up
and began to talk, and Jesus gave him back to his mother." (Luke 7:11-15)
Thus assurance towers to the heavens that Jesus is "the Resurrection."
The most notable evidence still claims attention. On the
accursed tree at Calvary, Jesus lays down His life. To pay the penalty of
transgression, to make entire satisfaction to all the outraged attributes of
God, to drink to the dregs the cup of wrath, to fulfill all predictions, and
to buy His ransomed heritage, He hangs a lifeless body upon the cross. To
the grave He is consigned. The appointed morn arrives. Will He still lie
among the dead? Vain are the watch, the stone, the guard; vain is all the
precautionary vigilance; vain is all the power of the grave and hell; Jesus
comes forth the mighty Conqueror of death. Hear His subsequent words to the
beloved disciple, "I am He who lives, and was dead; and behold, I am alive
forevermore." (Rev. 1:18) He who raised others now rises Himself. He who
raised others will raise us too. Reader! adore Him!—the Lord, "the
Resurrection."
Further instruction is graciously imparted by the Holy
Spirit. It is His desire that our hearts should overflow with consolation.
He would not leave us deficient in any knowledge which could enlighten and
delight. He therefore with loving hand withdraws the veil, and exhibits the
main wonders of the Resurrection-day. He bids us now in spirit to intermix
in events in which we surely shall have part, and which the flight of time
brings on apace. The Apostle writes that when the set time is fully come,
and all the decrees of salvation are accomplished, the blessed Jesus will
rise from His high throne, and again in person hasten to this earth. We
read, "The Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the
voice of the Arch-angel, and with the trumpet of God." (1 Thess. 4:16) Other
branches of His work He has entrusted to commissioned hands. Prophets and
apostles have proclaimed His Word. Enlightened ministers have called sinners
to His faith, and have toiled to place spiritual stones in the spiritual
house of God. All His angels have been sent "forth to minister for those who
shall be heirs of salvation." (Heb. 1:14) But here is work which so
intensely fills His heart that it can be entrusted to no other agent. The
raising of the bodies of His sleeping saints shall be accomplished by
Himself alone. The Spirit, with a herald's voice declares, "The Lord Himself
shall descend from heaven." The angels' assurance is now verified, "This
same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like
manner as you have seen Him go into heaven." (Acts 1:11) Will He come back
in silent pomp? Oh, no! He descends with a shout, with the voice of the
Archangel. Angels and authorities, and powers, who are made subject unto
Him, obey His call. All heaven hears, and re-echoes the mighty shout. All
earth hears, and trembles through its length and breadth.
But what is the shout? Conjecture may with reverence
surmise, but it finds no certainty. We may suppose that His voice summons
all the hosts of heaven to bear Him under the canopy of their glittering
wings, and all the ransomed spirits who had left their bodies in the graves
of earth, fly to cluster around Him in His glorious return. To the
Archangel's voice there is the adjunct of the trumpet of God. Paul, when
treating of the wonders of this day, omits not this accompaniment, "Behold,
I show you a mystery: we shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet: for the
trumpet shall sound." (1 Cor. 15:51, 52) It is wisdom's employ to live
listening for this trumpet's sound.
What is the effect of this world-shaking note? Behold
with faith the first occurrence. "The dead in Christ shall rise first." (1
Thess. 4:16) Every grave which holds the body of a sleeping saint shall open
its cold portals. Each inhabitant shall rise from the couch on which it has
reclined. If any slumber in ocean's deep caverns, they shall uplift the
head. From the four winds of heaven they shall stand again in living form on
earth. Oh! what a mighty army! All whoever fell asleep in Christ, from Abel
to the last who died in faith, shall re-appear.
But how changed are now their bodies! how perfect, how
beauteous, how glorious! They shall put off their death-clothes for bodies
like Christ's glorious body. In what condition was the body consigned to its
parent earth? It was "sown in corruption"—tainted by decay, soiled by all
which is most loathsome; but now, "it is raised in incorruption," blooming
in pure loveliness, incapable again to know pollution's touch. It was "sown
in dishonor." It was hidden as a revolting object from all sight. Its home
was among the worms and reptiles of the ground. Now, "it is raised in
glory." Its brilliancy surpasses the sun in midday splendor. All brightness
is eclipsed by its surpassing rays. It was "sown in weakness." It lay in
feebleness, without power to move, or exercise the least prerogative of
life. "It is raised in power." We know the might of angels: more than
angelic activity is now worn. Suffice, it was sown an heir to all the
imbecilities and nothingness which cling to the earth-born. "It is raised a
spiritual body." The term is easily uttered. Its full import must be unknown
until the grand reality is reached.
But the Resurrection of the sleeping saints is
accompanied with the change of all the bodies of the Lord's flock who meet
that day in tenements of clay. All this Resurrection-glory shall be theirs.
They thus transformed shall be caught up in one collected mass to join the
risen saints; they shall together "meet the Lord in the air," and together
reign with Him forever. This is the consummation of the work of Jesus, "the
Resurrection."
Who will not cry from his inmost soul, All praise to Him
who said, "I am the Resurrection!" Blessed day! The espousal of the Church
to the Heavenly Bridegroom is now complete. He had wooed and won her in her
time-state. Mighty voices now shout: "Let us be glad and rejoice, and give
honor to Him: for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and His wife has made
herself ready." (Rev. 19:7) The enraptured Apostle "saw the holy city, new
Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned
for her husband." (Rev. 21:2) We bless You, O Lord, our Resurrection!
Blessed day! It witnesses the coronation of all who have
washed in Jesus' blood, and by faith have put on His righteousness. The
promise of a crown was freely given, and now is gloriously redeemed.
"Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the
Lord, the righteous Judge, shall give me at that day." (2 Tim. 4:8) Thus the
Bride's head receives the crown of life—"the crown of glory that does not
fade away." (1 Pet. 5:4) We bless You, O Lord, our Resurrection!