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"Lazarus"

St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Glen Ellyn, IL
March 9, 2008
Jim Hamilton

Lazarus awoke with a sudden gasp. He sat bolt upright, everything around was still and dark. He touched his face, his arms, his legs; a new ritual. He hadn’t slept much since that day, several weeks back. He wasn’t exactly afraid of sleep. It still unnerved him, sure. Those first few nights, he had been uncertain if he would wake again the following morning. He was unsure about how long he had left, if this new life would last. Maybe it was just a brief reprieve from an inevitable sentence. That, and all the initial excitement made sleep hard to come by, in the beginning.

But now, after some time had passed, he simply didn’t want to sleep as much. It seemed frivolous. Oh, and his dreams now were epic, grand and sometimes terrifying. He was disembodied in them, watching events happen to him, like he was in the audience at the theatre looking down at a stage. The same dreams repeated from night to night, over and over. And, there was one that always made him wake up, like it did this morning.

He was on a boat with a flat deck. It was large enough to carry fifty, but there were only three people aboard. He stood dead center, straight-backed and unmoving, Martha on his right and Mary on his left. They were both pointing in the direction that the boat was moving, and looking at him with imploring eyes. They were mute, but he could tell they were urging him to do something. The boat was moving swiftly, effortlessly across a dark sea. There was no mast, no sails, no oars, no rudder. The sea was vast and choppy. There was no land in sight. But the ship was unshaken; it glided forward in the tormented sea. This time the dream was different though, this time there was something new.

Lazarus sat in his bed, still alert, but pondering what had happened to him over the past few weeks.

After the tomb, there were parties to be had and people who wished to marvel at him. He was a spectacle. But, he didn’t talk much himself. Martha and Mary were excellent spokeswomen. And, he didn’t quite know what to say.

Things had changed. He initially tried to take in work like before. He went to the market to drum up business; he attempted to proceed with his life as if nothing had happened. It just wasn’t working.

For one thing, his skin had been dead. He had actually been dead for several days and his body was now, well, molting. The dead skin was being sloughed off, revealing soft new skin. Spending time with friends over meals was…difficult, most were disgusted. He looked like a leper, at the beginning, and was treated accordingly by most. There was the smell too. He had already burned his bed sheets and some of the clothes he had worn directly after. But it still seemed to linger in his room. That smell reminded him too much of who he had been, or what he had been.

The other thing was his reputation. Many of his longtime friends could not even look at him. He felt marked, made to feel like a pariah by those who once invited him into their homes. Still, there were an alarming number of strangers who wanted to talk to him, to touch the cloak of the man who had once been dead. It was a strange sort of celebrity. He wasn’t sure if he liked his new life.

Some things had remained the same, strangely unchanged by his miraculous experience. He still helped with the household chores, cleaning up after dinner and sweeping up after guests. Sometimes he would pause in the middle of chores, watching his sisters happily tidying. He felt out of place, like a man out of time or out of step with the rest of the world.

Last night had been a big reunion party. Jesus and his friends had passed back through town…on their way to Jerusalem. Lazarus had noticed that the mood had been tense the whole evening. Judas and Thomas both looked particularly troubled. Several days back, when Mary and Martha had been shopping to find some scent to freshen up the house, Mary had picked up a pricy Far East perfume made with muskroot. She wanted to anoint Jesus with it, as a present for all he had done. But, Judas barked something at her about spending the money on poor people, not out of character for him, but a bit more pointed than usual. That and several of the disciples looked scared. Lazarus had heard some rumors about temple leaders taking some action against Jesus, but surely they wouldn’t do anything during Passover. Leave it to Peter to lighten the mood, he stood up and recited the dry bones section of Ezekial with a few added flourishes, this story Lazarus was now quite familiar with. En-fleshed bones covered with skin; yes, that is how he felt. His body didn’t belong to him like it once did.

Jesus had been cryptic throughout the entire evening, as usual. But something was different there too. Whenever Lazarus had looked over at his friend Jesus, he had been already staring right at him, or through him. So finally, he asked, “What’s wrong? Is there something you need?” And Jesus asked him, “What was it like?” “What do you mean,” Lazarus tilted his ear closer to Jesus to hear his question. “Tell me what death was like,” Jesus almost whispered. Truthfully, Lazarus didn’t remember much about being dead. But he did remember dying. He tried to relay it as eloquently as he could. “It is like you are holding onto a great taut rope, it is pulling you and you are holding on, desperately. Until all of a sudden, you forget why it is so important to hold on any longer, and you let go. The letting go, is not really a decision…but something faithful and inevitable.” Jesus seemed happy with the answer. At the time, he had been worried that the answer wasn’t good enough and didn’t even think to worry about why Jesus asked the question.

The dream had been slightly different that night. The boat had been the same as before, as solid and steady as dry land, though moving rapidly forward. But this time Lazarus saw himself alone on the boat. And in front of the boat there was a pillar of burning light. It pierced through the darkness of the night and continued on into the abyss of the sea. A great pillar of near blinding light. Lazarus stood still, unmoved on this boat traveling toward the awesome pillar. Suddenly a great voice boomed, reverberating off of the ocean. “Lazarus, come out.” The voice said it only once, the same thing that Jesus had said at the tomb, the day that Lazarus was reborn.

It was time now to get out of bed. He tied his sandals tight; they seemed looser on his new feet. He briefly considered leaving a note for his sisters, but he didn’t know where he was going, and he felt certain that he would see them again. He was restless; he was ready to begin whatever was next. He left his fear behind too, as he walked out into the brisk, dark morning.












 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 


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