John 11:1–16
Divine delay magnifies resurrection glory.
Scripture Text
11:1 Now a certain man was sick, Lazarus from Bethany, of the village of Mary and her sister, Martha.
11:2 It was that Mary who had anointed the Lord with ointment and wiped His feet with her hair, whose brother, Lazarus, was sick.
11:3 The sisters therefore sent to Him, saying, “Lord, behold, He for whom You have great affection is sick.”
11:4 But when Jesus heard it, He said, “This sickness is not to death, but for the glory of God, that God’s Son may be glorified by it.”
11:5 Now Jesus loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus.
11:6 When therefore He heard that He was sick, He stayed two days in the place where He was.
11:7 Then after this He said to the disciples, “Let’s go into Judea again.”
11:8 The disciples asked Him, “Rabbi, the Jews were just trying to stone You. Are You going there again?”
11:9 Jesus answered, “Aren’t there twelve hours of daylight? If a man walks in the day, He doesn’t stumble, because He sees the light of this world.
11:10 But if a man walks in the night, He stumbles, because the light isn’t in Him.”
11:11 He said these things, and after that, He said to them, “Our friend, Lazarus, has fallen asleep, but I am going so that I may awake Him out of sleep.”
11:12 The disciples therefore said, “Lord, if He has fallen asleep, He will recover.”
11:13 Now Jesus had spoken of His death, but they thought that He spoke of taking rest in sleep.
11:14 So Jesus said to them plainly then, “Lazarus is dead.
11:15 I am glad for Your sakes that I was not there, so that You may believe. Nevertheless, let’s go to Him.”
11:16 Thomas therefore, who is called Didymus, said to His fellow disciples, “Let’s go also, that we may die with Him.”
Divine delay magnifies resurrection glory.
Christ delays intentionally so that God’s glory may be revealed through victory over death.
The chapter presses readers away from despair, shallow interpretations of delay, and self-protective unbelief, and toward trusting Christ's love, believing His word, grieving with hope, and seeing life through His death.
- Delay, love, and divine glory Jesus receives news of Lazarus's sickness, delays because God's glory and faith are at stake, then goes toward Judea despite mortal danger.
- Martha, resurrection, and confession Jesus leads Martha from future resurrection hope to personal faith in Him as the resurrection and the life, resulting in her confession that He is the Messiah, the Son of God.
- Mary, grief, and Jesus' tears Mary's grief and the mourning crowd draw forth Jesus' deep emotional response, revealing the incarnate Son's holy sorrow before death.
- The tomb, the prayer, and the life-giving voice Jesus commands the stone removed, prays to the Father, and summons Lazarus from death by His word.
- Belief and murderous unbelief The sign produces belief in many but hardens official opposition into a death plot, with Caiaphas unwittingly prophesying the substitutionary and gathering significance of Jesus' death.
- Withdrawal before Passover Jesus withdraws from public movement as Passover approaches and the authorities seek information to arrest Him.
Jesus delays for God's glory, goes to Bethany in the face of danger, reveals Himself as the resurrection and the life, raises Lazarus from the tomb, and thereby provokes the leadership decision that He must die for the nation and gather God's scattered children.
John 11 argues that Jesus holds authority over death itself because resurrection and life are found in His person. His delay is not loveless absence but purposeful timing for God's glory, the Son's glorification, and the disciples' faith. In Bethany, Jesus enters real grief without surrendering divine authority. He weeps before the tomb and then commands the dead man to come out. The raising of Lazarus reveals the glory of God and anticipates Jesus' own resurrection, but it also provokes the official decision to kill Him. Caiaphas's political calculation becomes, in God's providence, an unwitting prophecy: Jesus will die for the nation and gather the scattered children of God into one.
Theological logic
- The sisters appeal to Jesus' love for Lazarus, showing that the crisis is framed by relationship, not distance.
- Jesus interprets Lazarus's sickness through divine glory and the Son's glorification.
- Jesus' love and his delay are not contradictions; the delay serves a higher purpose of revelation, faith, and glory.
- Jesus returns toward Judea despite mortal danger, showing that his mission is governed by obedience to the Father's timing.
- Jesus calls Lazarus's death sleep, not because death is unreal, but because he has authority to awaken him.
- Jesus says he is glad for the disciples' sake that he was not there, because the event will lead them to believe.
- Thomas's statement reveals courage mixed with misunderstanding: following Jesus now means walking toward death.
- Martha's grief is mingled with faith; she believes Jesus could have prevented death and that God still hears him.
- Jesus redirects Martha from general resurrection doctrine to personal faith in himself as the resurrection and the life.
- Jesus' 'I am' statement means resurrection life is not merely an event at the end of history but is embodied in him.
- Martha's confession gathers Johannine purpose language: Messiah, Son of God, the one coming into the world.
- Mary's sorrow and the mourning crowd reveal the heavy human reality of death and loss.
- Jesus is deeply moved and troubled, showing holy agitation before death, unbelief, sorrow, and the ravages of sin.
- Jesus weeps, revealing true incarnate compassion without diminishing his divine authority.
- The command to remove the stone tests whether Martha's confession will become obedient trust at the tomb.
- Jesus' prayer reveals his unity with the Father and his concern that the crowd believe the Father sent him.
- Jesus' loud cry displays the authority of his word over death.
- Lazarus comes out still wrapped in grave clothes, showing restoration to mortal life and requiring others to unbind him.
- The sign produces belief among many, fulfilling the purpose of Jesus' signs.
- The same sign provokes hardened opposition, proving that signs alone do not overcome willful unbelief.
- The leaders fear loss of place and nation, revealing political self-preservation beneath religious concern.
- Caiaphas speaks better than he knows: one man will die for the people.
- John interprets Caiaphas's words as prophecy concerning substitutionary death and the gathering of God's scattered children.
- The decision to kill Jesus after he raises Lazarus reveals the irony of unbelief: the giver of life is sentenced to death.
- The approaching Passover frames Jesus' death as the decisive redemptive event toward which the Gospel now moves.
- Do not equate sickness automatically with immediate healing expectation.
- Do not interpret delay as absence of love.
- Do not separate glory from suffering.
- Do not minimize the real grief present in the narrative.
- Delay does not imply divine indifference.
- Crisis may serve deeper faith formation.
- Obedience may require returning toward danger.
- Death is not ultimate for those under Christ's authority.
- Read John 11 and mark every reference to love, glory, belief, death, life, and sending.
- Use John 11:4-6 to teach that love and delay can coexist in God's wise purposes.
- Use John 11:25-26 as a core confession of Christ-centered resurrection hope.
- Use John 11:35 to dignify Christian grief without surrendering Christian hope.
- Use John 11:40 to call believers to trust that faith sees God's glory in God's timing.
- Use John 11:43-44 to show the life-giving authority of Jesus' word.
- Use John 11:49-52 to connect the sign to the cross and the gathering of God's people.
- Use John 11 as a bridge from the Book of Signs into the passion narrative.
Resurrection-shaped faith that trusts Jesus' love in delay, confesses Him in grief, obeys Him near the tomb, and worships Him as the one whose voice conquers death.
- God gives life to the dead : Jesus' raising of Lazarus embodies the Old Testament truth that the Lord has authority over death and life.
- Resurrection hope : Martha's expectation of resurrection at the last day resonates with Old Testament resurrection hope, which Jesus centers in Himself.
- Death swallowed and tears wiped away : Jesus' tears at the tomb and authority over death anticipate the final defeat of death and removal of tears.
- The beloved son and substitution : The themes of beloved one, death, and substitution echo the pattern of God providing life through sacrifice.
- Passover and one dying for the people : The approaching Passover frames Jesus' death as redemptive and substitutionary.
- Gathering scattered children : Jesus' death gathers God's scattered children, fulfilling prophetic regathering and one-flock hope.
- The Son sent by the Father : Jesus' prayer aims for the crowd to believe that the Father sent Him, continuing a major Johannine theme.
- Voice of the Son and the dead : Jesus' call to Lazarus anticipates His teaching that the dead will hear the Son's voice and live.
Jesus, who will soon confront the grave, delays to reveal God’s glory and to demonstrate that belief in Him transforms death into the doorway of resurrection life.