George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
July 13
The Tears of Jesus -- Part II
Jesus wept--Joh. 11:35
He beheld the city, and wept over
it--Luk. 19:41
Tears Shed for Death and for Life
The next difference which impresses me is
this--and it is a suggestive and profound distinction--it is that the former
tears were shed for death, and the latter tears were shed for life. There was
something in the death of Lazarus which made a profound impression upon Christ.
He was troubled; He groaned in spirit; He wept. Often He had been face to face
with death before, with death in some of its most tragic aspects. He had looked
on the still, cold face of Jairus' daughter, and had seen the anguish of the
widow of Nain. Yet it is only now, upon the road at Bethany, that we see the
storm and passion of His soul when faced by the awful ravages of death. Nobody
ever fathoms all that death means until its hand has knocked upon his door. It
is when someone whom we have loved is taken that we understand its meaning and
its misery. And Christ, being tempted like as we are, felt the anguish of it in
His soul with intensity. Death had come home to Him--attacked Him at close
quarters--carried one of the bastions of His being. How utterly cruel was the
last great enemy. The Lord groaned in spirit and was troubled: a storm of
passion swept across His soul. He wept for all that death had done and all that
death was doing in the world. And so these tears of His are sacramental of all
the sorrow of the aching heart when the place is empty, and the grave is
tenanted, and the familiar voice is silent.
Now with that dark and dreary scene will
you for a moment contrast the other scene? It is a city shimmering in beauty
under the radiance of a Sunday morning. Children are playing in the
marketplace; women are singing as they rock the cradle; men are at business and
regiments are marching--there is movement and there is music everywhere.
Friends are meeting who have not met for years for Passover was the great
season of reunion, and eyes are bright and hearts are beating bravely in the
gladness of these old ties reknit. Out on the Bethany road there had been
death; here in the teeming city there was life; life in the crowd--life in the
marching soldiery--life in the little children romping merrily; life
everywhere, in the indistinguishable murmur which rises where there are ten
thousand people who have waked in the sunshine of another morning to the
traffic and the concourse of the day. It was all that which swept into the gaze
of Christ, and it was that which swept into the heart of Christ that Sunday
morning when from the brow of Olivet He looked across the valley to Jerusalem.
As a lad of twelve He had looked, and looking wondered, with all the thrilling
expectancy of boyhood. Now we read that He looked, and looking, wept. They were
not tears for death, but tears for life; tears of divine compassion for the
living; tears for the might-have-been--the vanity--the awful judgment that was
yet to be; tears for the living who have gone astray and who are hungering for
peace and have missed it and who have had their opportunity and failed. There
is a sorrow for the dead which may be intense and very tragical. It may wither
every flower across the meadow and take all the summer sunshine from the sky. But
there is a sorrow deeper than sorrow for the dead--it is the sorrow for the
living; and it is much to know that Jesus understood it. The bitterest sorrow has
no grave to stand at, no sepulchre to adorn with opening flowers; the bitterest
sorrow wears no garb of mourning, and receives no beautiful letters by the
post. The bitterest sorrow does not spring from death; it springs from that
mystery which we call life; and Jesus felt it to His depths. Thou who art
mourning for the dead, for thee there is Jesus by the grave of Lazarus. Thou
who art mourning for the living, for thee also is that same compassion. He
understands it all. He shares it. Like a great tide it flowed upon Him once,
when in the morning from the brow of Olivet, He looked upon Jerusalem and wept.
Tears Others Shared in and Tears None
Could Understand
I close by pointing out one other
difference that stands out very clearly in the Scripture. The former tears were
such as others shared in; the latter were tears that no one understood. Read
that chapter in the Gospel of John again, and you find that Christ was not
alone in weeping. Martha and Mary were there, and they were weeping also, and
the Jews who had known Lazarus and loved him. There was a kinship in a common
sorrow there, a fellow feeling which united hearts, a sense of common loss and
ache and loneliness. Now turn to the other scene, and what a difference! It is
a pageantry of enthusiastic gladness. The cry goes ringing along the country
road, "Hosanna to the Son of David." And it is amid these shouting
voices of men beside themselves with wild enthusiasm that the Scripture tells
us Jesus wept. At the grave of Lazarus many an eye was wet. Here every eye was
dancing with excitement. No one was weeping here; nobody thought of weeping; it
was the triumph of the Lord--Hosanna! And all alone, amid that welcoming
tumult, in a grief which nobody could pierce or penetrate, the tears came
welling from our Savior's eyes. In this our mortal life there are common
griefs, touches of nature which make the whole world kin. But how endlessly
true is the old saying of Scripture that the heart knoweth its own bitterness.
And in those bitternesses which words can never utter and which lie too deep
for any human help, what a comfort to know that our Savior understands! In all
the common sorrows of humanity He is our Brother, and He weeps with us. He
stands beside the grave of Lazarus still, clothed in the beauty of His
resurrection. But in that lonely unutterable sorrow, which is the price and the
penalty of personality, we may be sure He understands us also.
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