Luke 7:11-17
11 Not long after that, Jesus went to the village
Nain. His disciples were with him, along with quite a large crowd. 12 As they
approached the village gate, they met a funeral procession-- a woman's only son
was being carried out for burial. And the mother was a widow. 13 When Jesus saw
her, his heart broke. He said to her, "Don't cry." 14 Then he went
over and touched the coffin. The pallbearers stopped. He said, "Young man,
I tell you: Get up." 15 The dead son sat up and began talking. Jesus
presented him to his mother. 16 They all realized they were in a place of holy
mystery, that God was at work among them. They were quietly worshipful-- and
then noisily grateful, calling out among themselves, "God is back, looking
to the needs of his people!" 17 The news of Jesus spread all through the country.
Food for thought!
When Jesus came to Nain he met a sad scene by all
standards. We are told that the victim is a young man. That he is “the only son
of his mother”. And we are told that the mother was a widow. In other words,
she had lost her husband, and now her son. Double tragedy!
Here is a young man whose life had been filled with
great potential. He might have had hopes of marriage and of fathering children,
but now he is dead. There may have been plans of going into business to support
himself and his widowed mother, but now he is dead. Those eyes which had been
bright with the gleam of youth are now dulled by death. That mind that had
hoped and dreamed was now stilled by the cold embrace of death. That voice that
had laughed and cried has been silenced forever. Death has come and it has
brought with it all the cruelness and heartache it possesses.
You will notice the wording of the text: “there was
a dead man carried out, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow.” Here
is a woman who had already felt the icy hand of death as it took her husband
from her life. The only things remaining from her marriage are a few memories
and the only son that she and her husband brought into the world. Now, her
precious son has been taken away by death, as well.
But, there is more here than just the death of a
beloved son. This poor woman had no one left to care for her in her old age. In
that day there was no welfare or assistance available to widows like her. It
was up to a woman’s children, especially her sons, to see that she was cared
for in her declining years. But, she has no one left! She is all alone,
helpless and caught in a desperate condition.
If yesterday it was a desperate centurion that
Jesus helped by Jesus, today it is a desperate woman. If yesterday it was sick
man that Jesus healed, today he raises a dead man back to life, back to
dreaming, back to living! The gospel says that the dead man began to talk
AGAIN! Jesus is not only the Lord of life; he is the Lord of death also. This
miracle, as the miracle of his own resurrection, is what makes Jesus stand out
of all the other religious figures. As you know, Jesus raised three dead people
from the dead. One had just died (Luke 8:40-56); the second is this one of
today's gospel, who was being carried to be buried; the third is Lazarus that
had been in the tomb four days (Jn 11:1-44).
What is noteworthy about all of them, is the moment
they were brought back to life: one had just died; another was on the way to
the cemetery; the last was in the cemetery already for four days. It means
that, for Jesus, time means nothing. He will rise those who died long ago,
those who died recently, and those who will have died. He will rise us all who
believe that he will.
It also means that for Jesus it is never too late.
With Jesus, we can rise up from where we fell, regardless of when. If and when
we fall into sin, into hopelessness, into helplessness, into confusion, into
desperation, He can bring us back to normality, regardless. It means that never
lose hope in Jesus, with Jesus never write yourself or anybody off. You are
never too dead of anything to rise up again. There's no sin, no state he cannot
rescue us from. To him be praise and honour and glory, both for now and for
ever. Amen.
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