Ten Questions Jesus Is Asking Christians
Question 6: "Do You Believe This?"
Read: John 11:25-26
My opening comment:
The strength of the Devil is that the people fail to believe in him. The weakness of Man is that they fail to truly believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. And in that failure mankind has lost hope.
Jesus said to Martha, “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though she die, yet she will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die."
Jesus makes this statement...and then he asks Martha this simple question, "Do you believe this?"
Do you believe this?”
Though we may not know what to believe, or even at times know what to pray for, our Great Intercessor knows what to ask of us. We may in our fear and grief forget to believe in the power of the life-giver when the pains of death and despair overwhelm our emotions. Even so, how we answer Jesus and his question, will mark us as either his child or not.
REALITY CHECK:
Knowing for sure that you are eternally secure is not a matter of inspecting your behavior. It is a matter of taking the Lord Jesus Christ at His Word. Jesus is the Word...the Word made flesh...The Word spoken of in the Scriptures. The Word...that brought creation into being, and he is the same Word that heals the sick and raises the dead.
Today Christians aren't very much different than unbelievers, or even atheists. Compromised truth and moral relativism has seen to that. Very few Christian people know for sure that they are going to heaven when they die, and that they are eternally secure in Christ. Many are uncertain that heaven is a real place for that matter. They look in all the wrong places for their assurances. They look to the imperfect earthly realms and kingdoms. They look to their own outward commitments to the Church, which is imperfect. They rely upon their works, which are also imperfect. They're counting on their fervor for God, which sometimes wanes. Much of their faith is superficial. They hate the sin and love the sinner, but to be honest their hatred of sin isn't always consistent, that to is imperfect. More than ever the people need a perfect Savior to save them from themselves.
Martha expressed no doubts in the divine power Jesus has over life and death. Her grief however shows her underlying fear that there may be some limiting factors to God's graces. That somehow, in some way, someone must have failed to accomplish some necessary requirement in order to save her brother Lazarus from death. What's clear is, that from within her belief she didn't have assurance of salvation in Christ. She "knew" of it, but did not "have" it. And so many live from one day to the next in this very same state of uncertainty. They love God, they confess faith in his words, and promises, and yet they fear there is no eternal reward for them.
Blessed assurance is not like having ten thousand million to one lottery tickets, or ten million for that matter. It's not even like having assurance that the winning tickets are guaranteed to come from the store you purchased yours from. It's more like having the lottery winnings already in your safe deposit box at the bank, and kept close with you is the key to that box. Martha, the practical one, didn’t really understand what Jesus meant by his words. She thought He was simply saying one of those kinds of things that people say at such times of death and dying as these, when they just don’t know what else to say. Her heart sank in despair for a moment, she wipes her tears away, and comments to Jesus, “I know that he will rise again in the resurrection at the last day” (verse 24). Martha thought; Lazarus will “rise” —just as we've always been taught about that great day. But in the day to day practice of keeping faith, even with Jesus clear and present, "that great day" remains like some far off dream for another place and time beyond time. Hers and Lazarus's salvation was standing right in front of her, but for all she cared he may as well have been just another among many mourners come to weep for her and her family. And so it goes with most everyone, even those of great abiding faith.
THE CULTURE WAR IS REAL
It's our hope that's on trial today. It's the source of that hope that asks of us, "do you believe this?" And in this new age, this hopeless culture, our faith is being called out to prove itself, or to shut up and go sit down in some assigned corner until such time that we're called upon to put our special religious essence onto some state or culturally approved social activity. Our whole lives are characterized by this hope, because Jesus’ tomb is empty and He is alive today. He Himself is our 'living hope'. He is alive today, He Himself is the substance of our own personal experience of hope in the midst of all the daily challenges of life. Jesus doesn't ask his question of a philosophy class at the university. He's not lecturing on it, or writing it in a book of poetry. He speaks about his promise of assurance and asks about the faith of those souls who are hurting and starving for hope. The need has already arisen. The loss has already occurred. The God sized hole already exists in the hearts and minds of the sad sin-sick people.
For Martha and company this truly was a test of their faith in Him. It's not like Jesus completely ignored them and their dread circumstances regarding their brother Lazarus and his deadly illness. Though he didn't immediately run to the rescue before Lazarus passes on, Jesus did send an assuring word to them, he sent a messenger back with this message, “This sickness is not unto death but for the glory of God, that the Son of God may be glorified through it” (John 11:4) And that same word of assurance is given to us, even unto this age. And Jesus tells his followers, when the time has come to leave, that they need to go and wake their sleeping friend who is dead and he's glad for it because now maybe they will all believe Him when he asks "do you believe this?". He's obviously been setting this whole thing up as a demonstration for their sakes (and ours). Very often this case is for us—without our realizing it—that in some of the difficulties and trials we face in life, God is instructing us by means of our difficulties. In fact Jesus, (maybe in an exasperated tone) reminds them of this in verse 40 “Did I not say to you that if you would believe you would see the glory of God?”
SO WHAT'S THE POINT?
The point of this whole thing is this:
The resurrection is not just an event, it's a person.
Let that sink in for a minute.
Our great hope is not like some kind of holiday we all look forward to and deck the halls in preparation for. It's not even a destination, though we are truly going somewhere with all of this. The point is, Jesus is the point. He is the resurrection. And Jesus wept for their lack of faith in Him and his words. Several times Jesus went to great lengths to say that these things must take place in order that God's grace would be revealed in it. Several times reminding them that he had already sent a message to that effect. And he wept for their lack of faith.
CONCLUSION:
Our celebration of His resurrection isn’t a distant dream—it's not something somehow separated from our everyday experiences. Jesus is our hope right here and right now. Day by day. We do not loose heart. Our faith is renewed with every new day, by his grace and abiding love. Our affliction is temporary. Our hope is eternal. And God's house is not built by human hands, it exists in Christ Jesus in whom we have our hope and faith. He truly is the sum and substance of the resurrection.
Do you believe this?