"Jesus wept." - John xi. 35.
My soul! look at thy Redeemer in this account of him. Was there ever a
more interesting portrait than what the evangelist hath here drawn of
the Son of God? If the imagination were to be employed forever in
forming an interesting scene of the miseries of human nature, what
could furnish so complete a picture as these two words give of Christ,
at the sight of them? "Jesus wept." Here we have at once the evidence
how much the miseries of our nature affected the heart of Jesus; and
here we have the most convincing testimony, that he partook of all the
sinless infirmities of our nature, and was truly, and in all points,
man, as well as God. We are told by one of the ancient writers (as well
as I recollect, it was St. Chrysostom) that some weak but injudicious
Christians in his days, were so rash as to strike this verse out of
their bibles, from an idea, that it was unsuitable and unbecoming in
the Son of God to weep. But we have cause to bless the over-ruling
providence of God, that though they struck it out from their bibles,
they did it not from ours. It is blessed to us to have it preserved,
for it affords one of the most delightful views we can possibly have of
the affectionate heart of Jesus, in feeling for the sorrows of his
people. And methinks, had they judged aright, they would have thought,
that if it were unsuitable or unbecoming in Jesus to weep, it would
have been more so to put on the appearance of it. And why those groans
at the grave of Lazarus, if tears were improper? Precious Lord! how
refreshing is it to my soul the consideration, that, "Forasmuch as the
children were partakers of flesh and blood, thou likewise didst take
part of the same; that in all things it behoved thee to be made like to
thy brethren!" Hence, when my poor heart is afflicted, when Satan
storms, or the world frowns, when sickness in myself, or when under
bereaving providences for my friends, "all thy waves and storms seem to
go over me;" Oh, what relief is it, to know that Jesus looks on, and
sympathizes! Then do I say to myself, will not Jesus, who wept at the
grave of Lazarus, feel for me? Shah I look up to him, and look up in
vain? Did Jesus, when upon earth, know what those exercises were; and
was his precious soul made sensible of distresses even to tears; and
will he be regardless of what! feel, and the sorrows under which I
groan? Oh no! the sigh that bursts in secret from my heart, is not
secret to him; the tear that on my night couch, drops unperceived and
unknown to the world, is known and numbered by him. Though now exalted
at the right hand of power, where he hath wiped away all tears from off
all faces, yet he himself still retains the feelings and the character
of "the man of sorrows, and of one well acquainted with grief." Help
me, Lord, thus to look up to thee, and thus to remember thee! Oh! that
blessed scripture; "In all their afflictions, he was afflicted; and the
angel of his presence saved them; in his love, and in his pity, he
redeemed them, and he bare them, and carried them all the days of old,"
Isa. lxiii. 9.
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