Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of John 11:39
Jesus said, Take ye away the stone. Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith unto him, Lord, by this time he stinketh: for he hath been [dead] four days.
39. the sister of him that was dead ] Not inserted gratuitously. It was because she was his sister that she could not bear to see him or allow him to be seen disfigured by corruption. The remark comes much more naturally from the practical Martha than from the reserved and retiring Mary. There is nothing to indicate that she was mistaken; though some would have it that the miracle had begun from Lazarus’ death, and that the corpse had been preserved from decomposition.
he hath been dead four days ] Literally, he is of the fourth day.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Four days – This proves that there could be no deception, for it could not have been a case of suspended animation. All these circumstances are mentioned to show that there was no imposture. Impostors do not mention minute circumstances like these. They deal in generals only. Every part of this narrative bears the marks of truth.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Joh 11:39
Jesus said, Take ye away the stone
Taking the stone away
I. GOD NEVER PERFORMS AN UNNECESSARY ACT. We know most of God in Christ, and Christ never spoke an unnecessary word or did an unnecessary deed, although He had omnipotence at His command. Had this merely been delegated to Christ as a man it is inconceivable that He should not at some time have put forth His power to gratify the curiosity of friends, or to bind the hands of foes. But He never did; then God never does. It is the merest fanaticism to pray that God would give us a sign and set the universe agape.
II. GOD NEVER DOES DIRECTLY WHAT HE CAN DO THROUGH OTHERS. He has begotten children capable of knowing, feeling, and acting. He has made them free, He gives them the field, He allows them time; they must do the rest.
1. He will never do for the race what the race can do for itself. He could have stocked the world at the first with all the implements of agriculture, travel, and research. But He did not. He put man down among the quiet facts and laws of His universe, with physical, intellectual, and moral powers, and man was to produce the result. God made the garden because man could not, and then set man to dress it because God would not.
2. The same rule holds good spiritually. Mans agency precedes Gods working. In regeneration there is first the agency of man in Churches, preaching, books, etc., and then the power of God doing what man cannot do.
III. THE HELP WE CAN RENDER GOD IN THE ACCOMPLISHMENT OF HIS GREAT DESIGNS. We can remove the stones which hinder spiritual resurrections. What are they?
1. Indifference. This is produced by
(1) The engrossing work of life. Your friend is like the racer who does not notice whether the sun is shining or clouds gathering, all he thinks of is the goal. All he needs is to be arrested and made to feel that he is wasting his energies for a prize he may not gain, or if gained, nothing in comparison with what is lost.
(2) Ignorance. He does not know that there is gold in California, and so keeps at his potato patch. Not knowing the treasures of religion he satisfies himself with the best he knows–worldly pursuits and joys.
(3) The frigidity of the religious atmosphere he breathes. When people are at freezing point they would rather die than stir. It is no mercy in a fellow traveller to indulge a freezing man with a short nap. It may be the sleep of death.
2. Scepticism. There are two courses open to doubters. They may open their minds to their friends. Their friends may sympathetically enter into their questions and answer them, and thus remove the stone. Or their friends may do, as too many do, treat them as lepers, in which case they bury their doubts in their own hearts, and a stone is placed over them. Dont do that. Do as Christ did with Thomas.
3. The inconsistency of Christians. How many neighbours, employes, are kept away from Christ by the practical unbelief of the professors with whom they are in daily contact.
4. Vicious indulgence which can only be removed by personal influence and example. (C. F. Deems, D. D.)
The sphere of instrumentality
(text and Joh 11:44):–Although God alone is the Quickener there are many things which we can do for others.
I. BEFORE CONVERSION.
1. We can call in the Master, as the sisters did. We must earnestly pray for souls and get them in contact with the Saviour
2. We can believe as they did, that whatsoever Christ asks of God will be granted; that He is able and willing to raise the spiritually dead.
3. We can roll away the stone of
(1) Ignorance. Let not the people die for lack of knowledge.
(2) Error–that they will be saved by their good works, etc.
(3) Prejudice.
(a) That religion is gloomy, by being happy.
(b) That religion is effeminate, by being men.
(c) That religion is mere sentiment, by experimentally demonstrating its reality.
(d) That religion is not for such as us, i.e., the working classes, by showing that Jesus is the peoples Man.
(4) Solitariness. Let men feel that Christianity is social and fraternal.
(5) Degradation. Help men out of the mire of sin.
(6) Despair. Infuse hope into the most hopeless.
II. AFTER CONVERSION. Lazarus is alive, but he is encumbered with grave clothes; it is the business of his friends to loose him and let him go. New converts want loosing for the sake of their own
1. Comfort. Remove their doubts and fears.
2. Freedom. Gently lead them out of those habits which still bind the new man.
3. Fellowship. Just as Lazarus could not enjoy his sisters society till his swathing bands were off, so real Christians are kept back from fellowship by a sense of unfitness, etc. Encourage them: compel them to come in.
4. Testimony. Lazarus was unable to bear witness while the napkin was about his head, so young converts are deterred by nervousness, etc.
5. Service. Take them by the hand and teach them how to use their hands and feet for God.
6. Communion with Christ. After Lazarus was unbound he sat at the table with Jesus. Dont leave the new convert until he enjoys full fellowship with Christ. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Man as a helper in Divine work
(text and Joh 11:44):–Gods power is all-sufficient. He does not need human help. The utmost that man can do is little. What little man is required or permitted to do is for his own welfare and improvement.
I. Is THE REALM OF NATURE.
1. Physical. God has given bodily life, and then continues to uphold its powers, so that man is capable of work within the appointed limits.
2. Natural. God has adapted the seed to the soil, and sunshine, rain, and seasons to harvests; but to man He has given the important work of combining the conditions. God will not plough and scatter the seed; neither will He cut and grind the grain. God stops His work where mans may begin, and begins His where mans must stop.
II. IN THE REALM OF THE SUPERNATURAL.
1. The miraculous. It was just as easy for Christ to do all, in the raising up of Lazarus, as only a part. But at the grave He said, Take ye away the stone; and after the working of the miracle, Jesus said unto them, Loose him, and let him go. This the friends of Lazarus might do, and in doing might either receive unmistakable proof of the life-giving power, or show their tender sympathy for the sisters and the risen man by ministering to them and him.
2. The spiritual. It is the Holy Spirit that gives life or renews the soul, and then the means of grace are to be faithfully used in building up a Christlike character.
3. The providential. Here the renewed are directed to offer prayer for the fulfilment of the promises as relate to nations and individuals, for the evangelization of the world, for the coming of Gods kingdom, and then faithfully to employ all necessary instrumentalities by which to secure these ends.
III. INFERENCES.
1. Take ye away the stone. This is preliminary. If the word is to enter a soul dead in trespasses and sins, the stone of prejudice, ignorance and unbelief must be taken away, and then the life-giving word will enter and do its work.
2. Loose him. Let us help others to a greater freedom and larger usefulness.
3. And let him go. Let us not chide others if they do not work in exactly our chosen methods, or in the same branches of moral and spiritual work. There is one Spirit, and to every man his work. (L. O. Thompson.)
The stone taken away
When Luther received the Divine call: Take away the stone! the body of the Church had already lain more than four hundred years in the Romish grave, and more than one faint-hearted Martha shrank from the smell of corruption which was being wafted by the stone-removing Reformation; but Luthers faith prospered unto the seeing of the glory of God. And we, if we would believe, should then know by real experience that the fragrance of incorruptible life, which goes forth from the Head of the Church, is powerful enough to overcome the corruption which Death is working in her members. Before every Lazarus grave of Jesus beloved Church the glory of the Lord stands ready to reveal itself. (R. Besser, D. D.)
Pity must be followed by active help
Suppose we had read, Jesus wept, and went about His daily business, I should have felt small comfort in the passage. If nothing had come of it but tears, it would have been a great falling off from the usual ways of our blessed Lord. Tears! what are they alone? Salt water! A cup of them would be of little worth to anybody. But, beloved, Jesus wept, and then He cried, Lazarus, come forth. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
The reticence of power
The Divine modesty, if we may so say, of the miracle which tells us that this setting aside for once of the stern law of death is the work of Him who is the Lord of law, and respects it in all His worlds–the Author not of confusion, but of peace. To have done these other things without means would not have rendered the true marvel greater, it would only have added something of prodigy to miracle, which Jesus never did. What is still more to the purpose, it would have been out of keeping with His working, who never wastes His power, who never confuses the natural and the supernatural, the human and the Divine. In His all-wise hand the two systems are one plan. The supernatural is never made to do the work of the natural, but the natural is the basis and preparation for the supernatural. The principle is a most important one, and most pointedly applicable to the kingdom of grace. You say, if God means to save my friend, or my child, his salvation will be of grace; and grace is wholly supernatural. The new heart is a Divine gift; nothing but an immediate act of Divine power will make him a new creature; just as nothing but the voice of Jesus could call Lazarus from the tomb. True! yet He bids you take away the stone. Remove ignorance, root up bad habits, implant good ones, rescue your neglected brother from degradation and misery. Give your children Christian education, prepare their minds to receive the truth in Jesus. Do these things, then may you pray and look for the raising of the morally lifeless. But if you do nothing; if you neglect to teach, to train, to strive and pray for them, wonder not if they sink into utter ungodliness and spiritual death. (J. Laidlaw, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 39. Take ye away the stone.] He desired to convince all those who were at the place, and especially those who took away the stone, that Lazarus was not only dead, but that putrescency had already taken place, that it might not be afterwards said that Lazarus had only fallen into a lethargy; but that the greatness of the miracle might be fully evinced.
He stinketh] The body is in a state of putrefaction. The Greek word signifies simply to smell, whether the scent be good or bad; but the circumstances of the case sufficiently show that the latter is its meaning here. Our translators might have omitted the uncouth term in the common text; but they chose literally to follow the Anglo-Saxon, [A.S.], and it would be now useless to attempt any change, as the common reading would perpetually recur, and cause all attempts at mending to sound even worse than that in the text.
For he hath been dead four days.] , This is the fourth day, i.e. since his interment. Christ himself was buried on the same day on which he was crucified, see Joh 19:42, and it is likely that Lazarus was buried also on the same day on which he died. See Clarke on Joh 11:17.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Our Lord commandeth the removal of the stone, which was at the mouth of the sepulchre, that the miracle might be evident; for Lazarus to have come forth, the door of the cave being shut, and a great stone making it fast, would have looked more like an apparition than a resurrection. It is very probable that Martha thought that our Saviour commanded the removal of the stone, not in order to a commanding him to life again, but out of a curiosity to view his dead body; and therefore she objects the putrefaction of his body, from which the soul was now departed four days, as that which our Saviour would not be able to endure the savour of.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
39-44. Jesus said, Take ye away thestonespoken to the attendants of Martha and Mary; for it was awork of no little labor [GROTIUS].According to the Talmudists, it was forbidden to open a grave afterthe stone was placed upon it. Besides other dangers, they wereapprehensive of legal impurity by contact with the dead. Hence theyavoided coming nearer a grave than four cubits [MAIMONIDESin LAMPE]. But He whotouched the leper, and the bier of the widow of Nain’s son, riseshere also above these Judaic memorials of evils, every one of whichHe had come to roll away. Observe here what our Lord did Himself,and what He made others do. As Elijah himself repaired the altaron Carmel, arranged the wood, cut the victim, and placed the pieceson the fuel, but made the by-standers fill the surrounding trenchwith water, that no suspicion might arise of fire having beensecretly applied to the pile (1Ki18:30-35); so our Lord would let the most skeptical see that,without laying a hand on the stone that covered His friend, He couldrecall him to life. But what could be done by human hand He orders tobe done, reserving only to Himself what transcended the ability ofall creatures.
Martha, the sister of . . .the deadand as such the proper guardian of the preciousremains; the relationship being here mentioned to account forher venturing gently to remonstrate against their exposure, in astate of decomposition, to eyes that had loved him so tenderly inlife.
Lord, by this time hestinketh, for he hath been dead four days(See on Joh11:17). It is wrong to suppose from this (as LAMPEand others do) that, like the by-standers, she had not thought of hisrestoration to life. But the glimmerings of hope which she cherishedfrom the first (Joh 11:22),and which had been brightened by what Jesus said to her (Joh11:23-27), had suffered a momentary eclipse on the proposal toexpose the now sightless corpse. To such fluctuations all realfaith is subject in dark hours. (See, for example, the case ofJob).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Jesus said, take ye away the stone,…. This was said either to the Jews, or rather to the servants that came along with Martha and Mary; and this he ordered, not to facilitate the resurrection, or merely in order to make way for Lazarus: he that could command him to come forth, could have commanded away the stone, but he chose to have it removed this way, that the corpse might be seen, and even smelt; and that it might be manifest, there was no fallacy, nor any intrigue between him, and the sisters of the deceased in this matter: this order was contrary to a rule of the Jews, which forbid the opening of a grave after it was stopped up h; but a greater than the fathers of the traditions was here, even he who has the keys of hell, or the grave, and can open, or order it to be opened, when he pleases:
Martha the sister of him that was dead: that is, of Lazarus, as the Persic version expresses it, calling him, “Gazarus”,
saith unto him, Lord, by this time he stinketh; or smells; not that she perceived this upon their moving the stone, but she concluded it from the time he had been dead, and had lain in the grave, in which dead bodies usually putrefy and smell: whether she said this out of respect to her brother, being unwilling he should be exposed to the view of persons, in such a state of corruption, she knew he must now be; or whether out of respect to Christ, lest he should be disordered with the offensive smell, is not certain: however, it seems as if she had no notion that Christ was about to raise her brother from the dead; and that the stone was commanded to be removed for that purpose, not merely for a sight of the dead, but that the dead might be seen to come forth alive: she imagined that Christ only wanted to have the stone removed, that he might have a sight of his deceased friend, which she thought would be very disagreeable and nauseous; so soon had she forgot what Christ had said to her, and lost that little exercise she had of faith and hope, with respect to the resurrection of her brother. Frames of soul, and acts of grace, are very changeable, and uncertain things; and especially when carnal reasoning is indulged.
For he hath been [dead] four days; he had been so long in the grave,
Joh 11:17. The word “dead” is not in the text; he might have been dead longer; though the Jews usually buried on the same day a person died: however, the sense is here, he had been so long in the grave; and so the Persic version renders it, “for it is the fourth day that he has been in the grave”; in the original text it is, “he is one of four days”; so many days he had been in the house appointed for all living; so long he had been removed from the sight of men, and had been in another world, and had begun another era, and four days had passed in it; he was so many days old according to that: so that his countenance was changed, he was not fit to be seen, nor approached unto; nor was there any hope of his returning to life. The Jews i say, that
“for three days the soul goes to the grave, thinking the body may return; but when it sees the figure of the face changed, it goes away, and leaves it, as it is said,
Job 14:22.”
So of Jonah’s being three days and three nights in the whale’s belly, they say k,
“these are the three days a man is in the grave, and his bowels burst; and after three days that defilement is turned upon his face.”
Hence, they do not allow anyone to bear witness of one that is dead or killed, that he is such an one, after three days, because then his countenance is changed l, and he cannot be well known.
h Apud Buxtorf Lex. Rab. col. 437. i Bereshit Rabba, sect. 100. fol. 88. 2. & T. Hieros. Moed Katon, fol. 82. 2. k Zohar in Exod. fol. 78. 2. l Misn. Yebamot, c. 16. sect. 3. & Maimon. Jarchi, & Bartenora in ib. & Maimon. Hilchot Gerushim, c. 13. sect. 21. T. Bab. Yebamot, fol. 120. 1. & Gloss. in ib.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Take ye away the stone ( ). First aorist active imperative of . They could do this much without the exercise of Christ’s divine power. It was a startling command to them.
By this time he stinketh ( ). Present active indicative of old verb, here only in N.T. (cf. Ex 8:14). It means to give out an odour, either good or bad.
For he hath been dead four days ( ). The Greek simply says, “For he is a fourth-day man.” It is an old ordinal numeral from (fourth). Herodotus (ii. 89) has of one four days dead as here. The word is only here in the N.T. The same idiom occurs in Ac 28:13 with (second-day men). Lightfoot (Hor. Hebr.) quotes a Jewish tradition (Beresh. Rabba) to the effect that the soul hovers around the tomb for three days hoping to return to the body, but on the fourth day leaves it. But there is no suggestion here that Martha held that notion. Her protest is a natural one in spite of her strong faith in verses 22-27.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
1) “Jesus said, Take ye away the stone.” (legei ho lesous arate ton eithon) “Jesus said, you all lift the stone,” from the entrance to the cave that had become the grave of Lazarus. Lift, take, or bear the stone away, the stone entrance, was the command of the Lord; It was a shockingly unusual command. He asked that the people do what they were able, to show obedient faith, Joh 2:5; Jas 1:22; Joh 15:4.
2) “Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith unto him,” (legei auto he adelphe tou teteleutekotos Martha) “Martha the sister of the one who had died (of Lazarus) said,” as the mistress of the home, the family affairs, always speaking out her opinion, Joh 11:21; Joh 11:24; Luk 10:38-42.
3) “Lord, by this time he stinketh: (kurie ede ozei) “Lord, he already smells,” that is, she supposed he did. With her strong faith she was astounded that her Lord would attempt to interfere or come near the dead body of her brother, Lazarus. Contrast this with our Lord who in death saw no corruption, Psa 16:10; Act 13:36-37.
4) “For he hath been dead four days.” (tetartaios gar estin) “Because it is four days,” since he died. He is four days dead, indicating her fear of his exposure to a bad odor of her decomposing, un-embalmed brother. Some believe the precious ointment Mary later used to anoint Jesus had been first bought to anoint Lazarus, but was never used, Joh 12:3. Those who knew best knew he had died, his death had taken place, witnessed by 1 ) Martha, Joh 11:21; Joh 11:39; by 2) Mary, Joh 11:32; and by 3) the Jews, Joh 11:37. That he was dead was therefore sustained by incontestable evidence of two or three witnesses, as required to satisfy Jewish law, so that there was no collusion in the reported miracle that followed, though recounted in John’s Gospel only, Deu 19:15; 2Co 13:1.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
39. Lord, he already stinketh. This is an indication of distrust, for she promises herself less from the power of Christ than she ought to have done. The root of the evil consists in measuring the infinite and incomprehensible power of God by the perception of her flesh. There being nothing more inconsistent with life than putrefaction and offensive smell, Martha infers that no remedy can be found. Thus, when our minds are preoccupied by foolish thoughts, we banish God from us, if we may be allowed the expression, so that he cannot accomplish in us his own work. Certainly, it was not owing to Martha, that her brother did not lie continually in the tomb, for she cuts off the expectation of life for him, and, at the same time, endeavors to hinder Christ from raising him; and yet nothing was farther from her intention. This arises from the weakness of faith. Distracted in various ways, we fight with ourselves, and while we stretch out the one hand to ask assistance from God, we repel, with the other hand, that very assistance, as soon as it is offered. (326) True, Martha did not speak falsely, when she said, I know that whatsoever thou shalt ask from God he will give thee; but a confused faith is of little advantage, unless it be put in operation, when we come to a practical case.
We may also perceive in Martha how various are the effects of faith, even in the most excellent persons. She was the first that came to meet Christ; this was no ordinary proof of her piety; and yet she does not cease to throw difficulties in his way. That the grace of God may have access to us, let us learn to ascribe to it far greater power than our senses can comprehend; and, if the first and single promise of God has not sufficient weight with us, let us, at least, follow the example of Martha by giving our acquiescence, when he confirms us a second and third time.
(326) “ Ceste mesme aide, si tost qu’il nous la presente.”
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(39) Martha, the sister of him that was dead.This fact of close relationship is mentioned again to account for her remark. We know, from the whole narrative, that she was his sister; but this verse would say, not simply that Martha spoke, but that that in Martha which was sister to him who was dead spoke. She thinks that the form of him she loved has now passed to corruption; she cannot bear that her own eyes or the eyes of others should see it.
For he hath been dead four days.The word dead is not expressed in the Greek, which says literally, for he hath been of the fourth day; and the thought is rather of the sepulchre than of deathfor he hath been in the sepulchre four days. (Comp. Joh. 11:17.) The body had been embalmed (Joh. 11:44); but the manner of the Jews was to embalm only with spice, and to wrap in linen clothes (Joh. 19:40-42), and there is no evidence that they at any time followed the Egyptian method of embalming. The only instance of Jewish embalming mentioned in the Old Testament is that of Asa (2Ch. 16:14).
The fact that the body had been in the sepulcher four days is given by the sister as a proof that decomposition must have taken place, and expositors have generally assumed that it was so. This is, however, not stated in the text, and the assumption is opposed by the fact that there was an interval during which the sepulchre was open, and Jesus prayed to the Father (Joh. 11:41-42).
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
39. Away the stone The same power that could raise the dead could surely move the stone. Angels rolled the stone when Jesus rose. The same power that raised could also have unbound the body. But here let man do all that man can do. God will do what God alone can do.
By this time he stinketh Supposing, perhaps, that Jesus exposes the corpse in order to take a last look, Martha reminds Jesus that the corpse will be offensive to the senses. Why insist on so repulsive an indulgence? Hereby Martha incidentally brings out the fact that renders the reality of the death of Lazarus to all but wilful scepticism unquestionable.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Joh 11:39. Jesus said, Take ye away the stone. Our Lord could with infinite ease have commanded the stone to roll away of itself,without employing any to remove it. But he judiciously avoided all unnecessary pomp and parade, and mingled all the majestyof this astonishing miracle with the most amiable modesty and simplicity. Besides, he thus removed every the minutest suspicion of fraud; for they who removed the stone would have, from the putrified state of the body, sufficient evidence that it was there; while all who were present might, and no doubt did, see it lying in the sepulchre, when the stone was removed, before Jesus gave the commanding word, Come forth. Martha, yet weak in faith, yet struggling with doubt, in a painful agitation, with a variety of passions, says to Jesus, “Lord, it will be offensive to thee; the putrified body of my dear dead brother cannot be fit for thee to approach; by this time he certainly smelleth, , for he hath been four days in the grave;” not four days dead only, as we render it; for the word dead is not in the original, being improperly supplied by the translators , quatriduanus, one who has continued in any state or place four days. Martha’s meaning therefore was, that her brother had been in the grave four days, as is plain likewise from Joh 11:17. The gracious providence of God directed Martha to mention this circumstance before Lazarus was raised, that the greatness of the miracle might be manifest to all who were present: for if her brother had been buried four days, he must have been dead at least five; for we are to remember that in those hot countries, the dead sooner grow offensive, and cannot be kept so long unburied as with us. Dead bodies, says Dr. Hammond, after a revolution of the humours, which is completed in seventy-two hours, naturally tend to putrefaction; and the Jews say that by the fourth day after death, the body is so altered that one cannot be sure it is such a person.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Joh 11:39-40 . While Jesus called upon those present to take away the stone (which was done, as related in Joh 11:41 ), Mary waited in silent resignation. On Martha, however, with her mobile practical tendency, the command of Jesus, which was equivalent to a wish to see Lazarus, produced a terrifying effect. Her sisterly heart (hence .) shudders at the thought, and rises up against it, and she will not see the corpse of her beloved brother, already passing over into a state of putrefaction, exposed to the gaze of those who were present; from the fact of his having already lain four days, she concludes , with good reason, that he must already have begun to stink. For her earlier idea of a possible resurrection (Joh 11:22 ), which, moreover, had been entertained only for a time, had passed over, owing to the expressions of the Lord in Joh 11:23-26 , into the faith in Christ, as the Resurrection and the Life in general, through whom the dear departed one also liveth (Joh 11:26 ). Accordingly, it is incorrect to suppose that her wish was to call the attention of Jesus to the magnitude of the work to be performed by Him, with a view to calling forth a new confirmation of His promise (Hengstenberg); on the contrary, far removed from such reflections, she now no longer at all expects the reawakening of the corpse , and that, too, not from unbelief, but because the higher direction which her faith had received through Christ’s words had taught her resignation.
The embalming of the body (its fumigation, embrocation, and envelopment in spices, as also its anointing, Joh 12:7 ) can not have taken place; otherwise Martha could not have come to the conclusion which she expresses. This omission may have been due to some cause unknown to us; but the supposition that the sisters still intended carrying out the embalming is inadmissible owing to the .
] of the fourth day (comp. on Joh 11:17 ), that is, one buried for that time. See Wetstein. Comp. Xen. Anab . vi. 4. 9 : (dead); Diog. Laert. 7. 184.
The gentle reproof contained in Joh 11:40 refers to Joh 11:23 ff., and is justified; for that which He had said regarding the glory of God in Joh 11:4 was to be realized by means of the . promised in Joh 11:23 promised in the sense present to Christ’s mind. At the same time, the performance of the miracle was itself dependent on the fulfilment of the condition . (which had been required also in Joh 11:25 f.); to unbelieving sisters He could no more have restored the dead brother than to an unbelieving Jairus his child (Luk 8:50 ), or to the widow of Nain her son, if her attitude towards His compassion and His injunction (Luk 7:13 ) had been one of unbelief.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
39 Jesus said, Take ye away the stone. Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith unto him, Lord, by this time he stinketh: for he hath been dead four days.
Ver. 39. By this time he stinketh ] Ay, the better for that; Christ’s power will be the more manifested. As St Austin said of one that hit him in the teeth with the sins of his youth: The more desperate was the disease, the greater honour redounded to the physician that cured me. Beza’s answer to one that did the like to him, was, Hic homo invidet mihi gratiam Christi. This man envies Christ’s grace for me.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
39. ] The corpse had not been embalmed, but merely ‘wrapped in linen clothes with spices, as the manner of the Jews is to bury,’ see ch. Joh 19:40 , and Joh 11:44 below, , as Meyer remarks, notes the natural horror of the sister’s heart at what was about to be done.
There is no reason to avoid the assumption of the plain fact (see below) stated in . I cannot see that any monstrous character (Olsh., Trench) is given to the miracle by it; any more than such a character can be predicated of restoring the withered hand . In fact, the very act of death is the beginning of decomposition. I have no hesitation, with almost all the ancient, and many of the best modern Commentators, in assuming as a fact , and indeed with Stier, believing it to be spoken not as a supposition , but as a (sensible) fact . The entrances to these vaults were not built up , merely defended, by a stone being rolled to them, from the jackals and beasts of prey.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
Joh 11:39 . The detail, that Jesus said, , is mentioned because it was an unexpected step and quickened inquiry as to what was to follow, but also because it gave rise to practical Martha’s quick objection, . [“He employed natural means to remove natural obstructions, that His Divine power might come face to face with the supernatural element. He puts forth supernatural power to do just that which no less power could accomplish, but all the rest He bids men do in the ordinary way.” Laidlaw, Miracles , p. 360.] shows that Lazarus had not been embalmed or even wrapped in spiced grave-clothes; which, some suppose, sheds light on Joh 12:3 . The fact is mentioned, however, to show how little Martha expected what Jesus was going to do: evidently she supposed He wished to take a last look at His friend, and she [ ] the sister of the deceased, and therefore jealous of any exposure, interposes, knowing what He would see. , “for he is four days [dead]”. Herodotus, ii. 89, tells us that the wives of men of rank were not at death given to the embalmers at once, . Lightfoot quotes a remarkable tradition of Ben Kaphra: “Grief reaches its height on the third day. For three days the spirit hovers about the tomb, if perchance it may return to the body. But when it sees the fashion of the countenance changed, it retires and abandons the body.”
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
four days. The Rabbis taught that the spirit wandered about for three days, seeking re-admission to the body, but abandoned it on the fourth day, as corruption began then.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
39.] The corpse had not been embalmed, but merely wrapped in linen clothes with spices, as the manner of the Jews is to bury,-see ch. Joh 19:40, and Joh 11:44 below, , as Meyer remarks, notes the natural horror of the sisters heart at what was about to be done.
There is no reason to avoid the assumption of the plain fact (see below) stated in . I cannot see that any monstrous character (Olsh., Trench) is given to the miracle by it; any more than such a character can be predicated of restoring the withered hand. In fact, the very act of death is the beginning of decomposition. I have no hesitation, with almost all the ancient, and many of the best modern Commentators, in assuming as a fact, and indeed with Stier, believing it to be spoken not as a supposition, but as a (sensible) fact. The entrances to these vaults were not built up,-merely defended, by a stone being rolled to them, from the jackals and beasts of prey.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
Joh 11:39. , sister of him that was dead) Herein is specified a cause of the greater feeling of instinctive shuddering, arising from nature and the tie of relationship.-, he stinketh) The loathing of putrefaction [is instinctive with all], even with the nearest relatives. There is a contest between reason as well as natural affection on the one hand, and faith on the other.-, of four days continuance) Lazarus seems to have been committed to the tomb the same day on which he died, Joh 11:17, When Jesus came, He found that he had lain in the grave four days already. A similar phrase, , [thine asses that were lost] three days, 1Sa 9:20 [-, in LXX.], 1Sa 30:13.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
Joh 11:39
Joh 11:39
Jesus saith, Take ye away the stone.-Rock vaults were closed with large stones. The sepulcher in which the body of Jesus was placed was one the women could not move, and on the way to anoint his body were troubled to know who would remove the stone for them. Jesus saw it would take some power to remove this stone. He had the fixed purpose to raise him from the dead, and the removing of the stone was preliminary to it.
Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith unto him, Lord, by this time the body decayeth; for he hath been dead four days.-Martha knew he had been dead long enough for decay to set in, and in her practical, direct way objected to opening the grave. He had been dead four days and in that time the body would be offensive. She took it for granted the common course of nature was followed, and to take away the stone would cause a stench offensive to those present, and unpleasant to be remembered of a beloved brother, so her practical common sense, coupled with her failure to believe Jesus would raise him from the dead, led her to oppose the removing of the stone from the grave.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
Take: Mar 16:3
Lord: Joh 11:17, Gen 3:19, Gen 23:4, Psa 49:7, Psa 49:9, Psa 49:14, Act 2:27, Act 13:36, Phi 3:21
Reciprocal: 1Ki 18:33 – Fill four 2Ki 13:17 – Open Mar 5:35 – why Luk 8:53 – knowing Joh 11:44 – Loose
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
9
Jesus told them to take the stone away. “The Lord helps those who help themselves,” is an old and true saying. The people could not restore Lazarus to life, but they could remove the stone. The statement of Martha about the condition of Lazarus’ body was a mild protest against opening the tomb. We are not given any explanation of this, in the light of her great faith as expressed in verse 22. She could not have doubted the ability of Jesus to raise him even out of his state of decay, when she had already affirmed belief in his ability to resurrect him out of death at the last day (verse 24), at which time the entire body will have returned to dust. Her statement was a suggestion that Jesus restore her brother to life before removing the stone, to save those present from the offensiveness clue to decomposition of the body.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
Jesus said, Take ye away the stone. Martha, the sister of him that was dead, saith unto him, Lord, by this time he stinketh: for he hath been dead four days.
[For he hath been dead four days.] The three days of weeping were now past, and the four days of lamentation begun: so that all hope and expectation of his coming to himself was wholly gone.
“They go to the sepulchres, and visit the dead for three days. Neither are they solicitous lest they should incur the reproach of the Amorites.” The story is, They visited a certain person, and he revived again, and lived five-and-twenty years, and then died. They tell of another that lived again, and begot children, and then died.
“It is a tradition of Ben Kaphra’s: The very height of mourning is not till the third day. For three days the spirit wanders about the sepulchre, expecting if it may return into the body. But when it sees that the form or aspect of the face is changed, then it hovers no more, but leaves the body to itself.”
“They do not certify of the dead” [that this is the very man, and not another]’but within the three days after his decease’: for after three days his countenance is changed.”
Fuente: Lightfoot Commentary Gospels
Joh 11:39. Jesus saith, Take ye away the stone. The sister of him that was dead, Martha, saith unto him, Lord, by this time he stinketh: for he hath been four days here. No expectation of some great blessing which God will give in answer to the prayer of Jesus (Joh 11:22) is now in Marthas mind. She cannot understand the removal of the stone. To her, as the (elder) sister, the right of expostulation belonged; and it is in the simplest and most direct terms that she urges that the dead may not be exposed to the living. Nothing could more vividly illustrate the power which at this moment death wielded alike over the body of the departed and his sisters spirit. It is probably to bring out this power in the most forcible manner possible that not only is Martha described as the sister of him that was dead, but that the description precedes her name. How differently does the Evangelist himself feel! It is instructive to observe that in the words him that was dead he changes the term for death, using not that of Joh 11:26, but another which expresses simply coming to the end of life.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Verse 39
Four days. If we allow one day for the messenger to go to the place beyond Jordan, where Jesus was, and one day for Jesus to come to Bethany, it will appear that Lazarus must have died about the time that the messenger left him.
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
Even though Martha had confessed her belief that Jesus would raise the dead she did not understand that Jesus planned to raise her brother immediately. Jesus had given her no reason to hope that He would. The Jews customarily wrapped the bodies of their dead in cloth and added spices to counteract the odors that decomposition produced. They did not embalm them as thoroughly as the Egyptians did. [Note: Sanders, p. 274, footnote 1.]
Interestingly Martha did not appeal to Jesus on the basis of the ritual uncleanness that contact with a dead body would create for the Jews. Perhaps she had learned that ritual uncleanness was not something that bothered Jesus. Her concern was a practical one in harmony with her personality as the Gospel writers presented it.