In
today’s
Gospel, Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead. He had been dead four
days and was warned that if the tomb would be opened, there would be
a stench due to his decaying body.
But,
Our Lord, prayed to His Father and then said with a loud voice,
“Lazarus,
come out!”
He
rose from the dead and came
out, still tied hand and foot with burial bands and face wrapped in a
cloth.
The
miracle of Jesus Raising Lazarus from the dead reminds us Jesus is
the Resurrection and the life. Jesus, is both human and divine, and
as God He has power over all things including death. The raising of
Lazarus from the dead is foreshadowing of Our Lord’s resurrection
on Easter and the General resurrection of the dead at the end of the
world mentioned by Martha. At the end of the world, all the dead will
come forth from the tombs and immediately receive a resurrected body,
like the body of Jesus when He rose from the dead. Lazarus, however,
though he was brought back to life, would die again because he was
not resurrected.
Did
you know Jesus raised two
others from the dead, there are
others in scripture who
raised people from the dead
and saints raised many from
the dead?
Elijah
the prophet of the Old Testament, by God’s power, raised a child
from the dead. (1 Kings 17:17-24)
Jesus
raised the son of a widow, who was being carried away in a funeral
procession. (Luke 7:11-15)
Our
Lord
took
the
hand of the daughter of Jarius, who
had died,
and
said, “Talitha
cumi”,
which means
“Little
girl, get up.” (Mark
5:21-43).
And
she came back to life.
In
Matthew’s Gospel, at the death of Jesus, some
were raised
from the dead. “At
that moment (of
His death) the
curtain in the sanctuary of the Temple was torn in two, from top to
bottom. The earth shook, rocks split apart, and tombs opened. The
bodies of many godly men and women who had died were raised from the
dead. They left the cemetery after Jesus’ resurrection, went into
the holy city of Jerusalem, and appeared to many people.”
(Matthew
27:51-53)
When
Our Lord sent out His apostles, he commanded them:“Heal
the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, cast out devils: freely
you have received, freely give.”
(Matthew
10:8).
And
this is exactly what happened, we know that Peter and Paul raised the
dead. In the Acts of the Apostles, a Christian woman named Tabitha
died in the city of Joppa. “Peter...
knelt down and prayed; then turning to the body he said, “Tabitha,
rise.” And she opened her eyes, and when she saw Peter she sat up.”
(Acts
9:36-42)
In
the Acts of the Apostles, we learn that Paul raised a man from the
dead, “Seated
in a window was a young man named Eutychus, who was sinking into a
deep sleep as Paul talked on and on. When he was sound asleep, he
fell to the ground from the third story and died.
Paul went down, bent
over him, and embracing him, said, “Don’t
be alarmed,” he said. “He’s alive!”...The people took the
young man home alive and were greatly comforted.” (Acts
20:7-12)
According
to St. Irenaeus in the early 2nd century, “Some
persons that were dead have been raised again and have continued
among us many years.”
Did
you know there are over 400 true stories of saints raising people
from the dead? There is a book called Raised
from the Dead
written by Fr. Albert Hebert. Here
is a list of some
saints
that raised people from the dead: St.
Francis of Paola, St. Bernardine of Siena, St.
Catherine of Sienna,
St. John Capistrano, St. Joseph of Cupertino, St. Peter of Alcantara,
St. Dominic, St. Ignatius Loyola, St. Philip Neri, St. Paul of the
Cross, St. John Bosco, St. Rose of Lima, St. Martin de Porres, St.
Francis Solanus, Marianne de Jesus of Quito, St. Stanislaus,
St. Peregrine, St. Gerard Majella, St. Charbel, St. Padre Pio, St.
Margaret of Cortona, St. Felix of Cantalice, St. Rose of Viterbo, St.
Francis Xavier, St. John Francis Regis, etc..
St.
Marcarius, a holy monk living in the deserts of Egypt, encountered a
man who didn’t believe in the resurrection of Jesus. In order to
convince him, the saint invoked God’s power over a dead man and he
was raised back to life. This miracle was spread throughout the
Egyptian desert.
In
the 300’s, during an excavation, St. Helena found the true Cross
and two other crosses belonging to the two men who were crucified
with Jesus. Not knowing which was the true Cross, she brought a sick
man to the crosses and after touching the first two crosses, nothing
happened. But when he sick man was touched by the 3rd
cross, he was healed. In order to be absolutely certain it was the
true Cross, they dug up a dead man, who was just buried, and brought
him before the 3 crosses, and after touching the first 2 crosses,
nothing happened. Only when the dead man was touched by the 3rd
Cross was the dead man raised from the dead and became alive.
One
of greatest miracle workers in the history of the Catholic church was
the Dominican priest St. Vincent Ferrer (1350-1419). He converted
25,000 Jews and 8,000 Muslims; his total number of conversions was
around 200,000 souls- among them Muslims, Jews, heretics, and
apostate Catholics. St. Antoninus said that St. Vincent had raised 28
persons from the dead.
Here
is one example: There
was a rich Jew named Abraham, who began to leave a church in anger
while Vincent was preaching. The
instant the man
left, part of the porch structure fell on him and crushed him to
death. Then the saint rose from his chair and went to the body. He
knelt there in prayer. Abraham came to life, and his first words
were: "The
religion of the Jews is not the true faith. The True Faith is that of
the Christians."
When
invoking the name of the Holy Trinity, St. Patrick is said to have
raised 33 people from the dead.
Among
the many miracles worked by St Philip Neri in his lifetime was the
raising to life of Paolo Massimo, the 14-year old son of his friend
Prince Fabrizio Massimo, on March 16, 1583. St Philip had tended the
boy spiritually during his long illness, and was sent when it became
clear that he was about to die. He was then living fairly close by at
the church of San Giorolamo della Carità , but he was celebrating
Mass when the messenger arrived, and the boy died before he could
finish and be informed. Coming to the Palazzo Massimo, he prayed at
the boy’s bedside, sprinkled holy water on his face, and, like the
Prophet Elijah, breathed upon his face. He then called his name
loudly twice, and Paolo Massimo returned to life. On seeing his
spiritual father at his bedside, the boy asked to confess a sin that
he had forgotten; St Philip heard his confession and absolved him of
his sins.
Bishop
Fulton Sheen is noted for raising a child from the dead. “Fulton
Sheen, Fulton Sheen,” prayed Bonnie Engstrom. She had just given
birth, and her baby boy was dead, his umbilical cord tied tightly
around his neck. He did not breathe; his heart did not beat.
Sixty-one minutes after delivery, his heart still did not beat, and
the monitor showed nothing but “pulseless electric activity.” He
could not be revived, and the ER doctors turned away to call the time
of death. Still his parents prayed to Fulton Sheen. Then the
baby’s heart began to beat. His mother and father believe it
was the intercession of Fulton Sheen that brought him back to life –
not only back to life, but back to health. James was stillborn and
without a heartbeat for 61 minutes. He is now a healthy young
boy! The Vatican Congregation for the Causes of Saints approved
this miracle on July 6, 2019. The child, James Fulton Engstrom, shows
no physical or mental defects from the hour he spent among the dead
nine years ago.
All
those who were raised from the dead, would later die again. But the
raising of the dead, shows us how much God loves each and every
person and how He desires us to live in this life.
In
a few weeks, we will be celebrating the resurrection of Jesus from
the dead. By His own power, after He had been dead for three days, He
rose with a new resurrected body.
At
the end of the world, everyone will receive a new resurrected body.
The dead will come forth from their graves and those who are still
alive will also receive a new resurrected body.
St.
Paul in his letter to the Philippians 3:20-21 said, “But our
common wealth is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord
Jesus Christ, who will change our lowly bodies to be like His
glorious body...” And
Jesus Himself said, “..for
the hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear his voice
and come forth, those who have done good, to the resurrection of
life, and those who have done evil, to the resurrection of judgment.”
(John 5:28-29).
In
this life, we are to respect our bodies and after we die, we give
them a proper burial to be prepared for that day when our body will
be reunited with our soul after the resurrection of the dead.
Jesus
said, “I
am the resurrection and the life; whoever believes in me, even if he
dies, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never
die.” When
He said, this He meant it in two ways. One way is that those who
believe in Him, will not suffer eternal death and those who do
believe in Him will live with Him forever in
heaven.
But, He also meant that He has power over physical death and at the
end of the world, our bodies will be resurrected from the dead.
As
we approach Easter in several weeks, let us prepare our souls by
making a good confession, and receive Jesus in the Eucharist as often
as possible, because as Jesus said, “He
who eats my flesh and drinks my blood, will live forever and I will
raise Him on the last day.”