
"Lazarus, Come Out!"
by Father Brian J. Soliven on Sunday April 6, 2025
The story of Lazarus’ resurrection in the Gospel of John is one of the most profound and stirring accounts in the Christian tradition. In John 11, Jesus calls forth Lazarus from the grave after he has been dead for four days, demonstrating His divine power over death and revealing the fullness of His identity as the Son of God. While the event itself is a miracle of unparalleled magnitude, the early Church Fathers, with their deep theological insight, also saw it as a powerful symbol of both spiritual renewal and the hope of eternal life.
The early Church Fathers, including Augustine and Chrysostom, viewed the raising of Lazarus as more than just a demonstration of Christ’s miraculous abilities. For them, it was a theological statement about the nature of Christ's power to overcome not just physical death, but spiritual death. Lazarus, they noted, was not merely revived in his body; he was called out from a tomb that symbolizes the grave of the human soul. Through this act, Jesus was showing that, just as He could restore life to a dead body, He also had the power to bring life to souls that were spiritually dead in sin.
St. Augustine, in his writings, emphasized that Lazarus' resurrection was a foreshadowing of the ultimate resurrection of all believers at the end of time. He saw in Lazarus' return to life a glimpse of the future hope Christians hold in the resurrection of the dead. As Augustine wrote in *Sermon 356*, “The raising of Lazarus is an image of our own resurrection. Just as Lazarus was called forth from the tomb by the voice of Christ, so too will the dead in Christ rise to eternal life through His voice at the end of time.”
Chrysostom, on the other hand, focused on the personal transformation implied in Lazarus’ story. He saw Lazarus as an archetype for all who are spiritually dead, whose hearts are hardened by sin and whose lives are bound by the graveclothes of worldly attachments. Lazarus' awakening from death, for Chrysostom, symbolized the Christian journey of repentance and conversion—when we hear Christ’s call, we are to cast off our burial cloths and step into the light of new life. The resurrection of Lazarus is, in this sense, not only a future promise but a present reality for every believer who encounters Christ in faith.
Through the eyes of the early Church Fathers, the raising of Lazarus becomes a story not only of physical resurrection but also of spiritual renewal, liberation, and hope. It is a call to all believers to heed the voice of Christ, who calls them out of the darkness of death and into the light of eternal life. It reminds us that Christ is the source of both physical and spiritual resurrection, and that through Him, death, whether physical or spiritual, can be overcome. In the raising of Lazarus, we see a clear and compelling invitation: to come out of our tombs, cast off the graveclothes of sin and despair, and embrace the life-giving power of Jesus Christ, who offers us both redemption and eternal life.