Our friend, for the many benefits and services he
rendered us, and therefore we owe it not to fail in his necessity. Sleepeth, therefore we must come to his
assistance: a brother is proved in distress (Prov. xvii. 17).
He sleepeth, I say, as St. Augustine says, to the
Lord. But to men he was dead, nor had they power to raise him.
Sleep is a word we use with various meanings. We
use it to mean natural sleep, negligence, blameworthy inattention, the peace of
contemplation, the peace of future glory, and we use it also to mean death. We
will not have you ignorant, concerning the last sleep, that you be not
sorrowful, even as others that have no hope, says St. Paul (i Thess. iv. 12).
Death is called sleep because of the hope of
resurrection, and so it has been customary to give death this name since the
time when Christ died and was raised again, I have slept and have taken my rest
(Ps. iii. 6).
I go that I may awake him out of sleep--(John xi.
n).
In these words, Jesus gives us to understand that
He could raise Lazarus from the tomb as easily as we raise a sleeper from his
bed. Nor is this to be wondered at, for He is none other than the Lord who
raiseth up the dead and giveth life (John v. 21). And hence He is able to say,
The hour cometh when all that are in the graves shall hear the voice of the Son
of God (ibid. v. 28).
Let us go to him (John xi. 15).
Here it is the mercifulness of God that we are
shown. Men, living in sin and as it were dead, unable of any power of their own
to come to Him, He mercifully draws, anticipating their desire and need.
Jeremias speaks of this when he says, Thus, saith the Lord I have loved thee
with an everlasting love, therefore have I drawn thee, taking pity on thee
(Jer. xxxi. 3).
Jesus therefore came and found that he had been
four days already in the grave (John xi. 17).
St. Augustine sees in the four-days dead Lazarus a
figure of the fourfold spiritual death of the sinner. He dies in fact through
original sin, through actual sin, against the natural law, through actual sin
against the written law, through actual sin against the law of the gospel and
of grace.
Another interpretation is that the first day
represents the sin of the heart, Take away the evil of your thoughts, says
Isaias (i. 16); the second day represents sins of the tongue; Let no evil
speech proceed from your mouth, says St. Paul (Eph. iv. 29); the third day
represents the sins of evil action, cease to do perversely (Isaias i. 16); the
fourth day stands for the sins of wicked habit.
Whatever explanation we give, Our Lord at times
does heal those who are four days dead, that is, those who have broken the law
of the gospel and are bound fast by habits of sin.
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