This Evening's Meditation By C. H. Spurgeon
"Lazarus was one of them that sat at the table with Him."—John 12:2.
E is to be envied.
It was well to be Martha and serve, but better to be Lazarus and
commune. There are times for each purpose, and each is comely in its
season, but none of the trees of the garden yield such clusters as the
vine of fellowship. To sit with Jesus, to hear His words, to mark His
acts, and receive His smiles, was such a favour as must have made
Lazarus as happy as the angels. When it has been our happy lot to feast
with our Beloved in His banqueting-hall, we would not have given half a
sigh for all the kingdoms of the world, if so much breath could have
bought them.
He is to be imitated.
It would have been a strange thing if Lazarus had not been at the table
where Jesus was, for he had been dead, and Jesus had raised him. For
the risen one to be absent when the Lord who gave him life was at his
house, would have been ungrateful indeed. We too were once dead, yea,
and like Lazarus stinking in the grave of sin; Jesus raised us, and by
His life we live—can we be content to live at a distance from Him? Do we
omit to remember Him at His table, where He deigns to feast with His
brethren? Oh, this is cruel! It behoves us to repent, and do as He
has bidden us, for His least wish should be law to us. To have lived
without constant intercourse with one of whom the Jews said, "Behold how
He loved him," would have been disgraceful to Lazarus, is it excusable
in us whom Jesus has loved with an everlasting love? To have been cold
to Him who wept over his lifeless corpse, would have argued great
brutishness in Lazarus. What does it argue in us over whom the Saviour
has not only wept, but bled? Come, brethren, who read this portion, let
us return unto our heavenly Bridegroom, and ask for His Spirit that we
may be on terms of closer intimacy with Him, and henceforth sit at the
table with Him.
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