Jeff Adams


Archive March 2010

When God is Late

March 11, 2010

Yet when He heard that Lazarus was sick, He stayed where He was two more days. – John 11:6

This whole theme of hurting people continues to hold me captive.

You know the above verse, don’t you? Jesus had just received word that his friend was sick. You would think that he would hurry on his way to heal him. He did not. He stayed put for two whole days until Lazarus was good and dead. Why in the world would he do that!

Lazarus’ sister Martha articulated the emotion we have all experienced. “Lord, if you would have come, my brother wouldn’t have died.” Martha was probably questioning Jesus’ love for her brother. The real issue was not a lack of love, but the completion of God’s purposes.

How many times have we said or felt like saying something similar?

Os Hillman comments on this passage.

God often has to delay His work in us in order to accomplish something for His purposes that can be achieved only in the delay. Jesus had to let Lazarus die in order for the miracle that was about to take place to have its full effect. If Jesus had simply healed a sick man, the impact of the miracle would not have been as newsworthy as resurrecting a man who had been dead for four days. This is Jesus’ greatest “public relations act” of His whole ministry. What many do not realize is that the key to the whole story is in the next chapter.

Many people, because they had heard that He had given this miraculous sign, went out to meet Him. So the Pharisees said to one another, “See, this is getting us nowhere. Look how the whole world has gone after Him!” (John 12:18-19)

If Jesus had not raised Lazarus from the dead, there would have been no crowds to cheer the Lord when He came into Jerusalem riding on a donkey.

God often sets the stage so that His glory is revealed through the events that He orchestrates. He did this with Moses and Pharaoh, allowing delay after delay for release of the Israelites from Egypt. He did this with Abraham and Sarah for the promised child, Isaac. God granted Sarah a baby past the age of childbearing in order to demonstrate His power.

I have many questions without answers. Why does God heal this one but not that one? Why did this one have to die? Why now? Did it have to be this way?

The reality is that God alone has all the answers and he owes me none. So, I suppose I’m right back to Zak’s concluding statement in his video testimony – “If God chooses to heal me, God is still God and God is still good. If God chooses not to heal me … then God is still God and God is still good.”