This Sunday’s Gospel (Jn. 11:1–45) is considerably long – it is the story of the death and raising to life of Lazarus, the brother of Martha and Mary.
Proclaiming the story offers its own challenges. Standing and listening, I would well imagine, offers considerably more!

Elements of the story that have given me cause for reflection.
Firstly, the story is recounted only in the Gospel of St John. I would have thought such an astonishing event would have been recorded everywhere.
Today, such a miracle would have been front-page news on TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and media outlets worldwide! Why the silence on the part of Matthew, Mark, and Luke?
Secondly, while the story itself is long, we could compress it to one sentence – in fact, two words: “Jesus wept.”
While the story is indeed about Lazarus, it also affords an opportunity to reflect on the response of Jesus. “Where have you laid him?” is his enquiry, and when shown the sight, the immediate, spontaneous response of Jesus is tears.
Tears are an integral part of our being human. They come as a response to joy, happiness, delight, wonder, and awe. They come too as a response to deflation, disappointment, sadness, pain, and grief.
Tears are an important part of the human person’s communication system. When vocabulary seems at a loss to express the feeling quality associated with an occasion or a person, the language of emotion takes over.
Tears communicate all manner of feeling – as our Gospel story affirms: “So the Jews said, ‘See how he loved him!’ “
The third point for reflection is that all this happened in public. Jesus’ grief was overt, available for all to see. He was a Jewish man exhibiting his Jewishness.
As mature Pākehā we are more inclined – though not all of us – to weep in private. Consider the number of films you have watched where an adult begins to weep, grabs a tissue, and hurries from the room.
One of the after-effects of a stroke is that people often experience emotional and behavioural changes. The reason is straightforward: stroke impacts the brain, and the brain controls our behaviour and emotions.
As a consequence, a person may be sitting watching a TV programme or listening to music, and quite spontaneously tears well up and roll down their cheeks – inevitably, with others in the room.
The final point for reflection is the request of Jesus: “Unbind him, let him go free.” This request was given to those gathered at the burial site.
Hold on a moment. I don’t mind standing at the place of burial. I don’t mind shedding a private tear or two. But getting that up close and personal? “Unbind him, let him go free.” Ultimately, another person’s freedom arrives when I unbind them.
Prints from other masters inspired Van Gogh during his stay at the hospital in Saint-Rémy. He made his version of the Raising of Lazarus from an etching by Rembrandt (1642). With his ginger beard, Lazarus bears some resemblance to Van Gogh himself.
The painter may have seen a parallel between Lazarus’ return from the dead and his own struggle from mental illness towards recovery.
Art critics note that Van Gogh’s depiction left out the central figure of Christ with his arm raised, as is very evident in Rembrandt’s painting. Or did he? Notice – the sun/Son is shining.
Consider, too, the colour of each painting. Van Gogh painted with the vibrancy of light; Rembrandt is dark and sombre.
Possibly, the vibrancy of light in the Van Gogh painting represents the new life of Christ experienced by Lazarus.



