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Allen Webster
Topic(s): Jesus, Love, Pain & Suffering
Big boys don’t cry. So we tell little boys when they fall. Then they read in their Bibles that Jesus wept. Does that mean He was a “sissy”? No. One has to consider the reason for the tears. Are they tears of weakness or strength? Of fear or compassion? Jesus was a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief (Isaiah 53:3), and He wept on three occasions. Each time He left us the right example.
The shortest verse of the Bible says a lot! It
tells us that the Great Physician had good bedside manners. Jesus
knew that people generally do not care how much you know until they
know how much you care. He knew that Mary and Martha needed somebody
to care about their pain. They had lost a brother and their hearts
were breaking, so, even though He was about to resurrect Lazarus, He
wept1 with those that wept (Romans
12:15; Job 30:25).
Jesus illustrated the Jewish proverb:
Among those who stand, do not sit;
Among those who sit, do not stand;
Among those who laugh, do not weep;
Among those who weep, do not laugh.
We should be ready to weep with those who weep. A little girl was late coming home from school one day. Her mother paced the floor until she finally arrived about fifteen minutes late. She opened the door and said, “How many times have I told you to come directly home from school! I was worried sick! Don’t you ever make me worry like that again!” The little girl looked up with tears and said, “No, Mommy, you don’t understand.” “What don’t I understand?” her mother said angrily.
The girl responded, “Today was Show and Tell and
Jamie brought a china doll her grandma gave her.” Her mother
interrupted, “I don’t care how nice a doll Jamie had, you don’t stay
to play . . . you come straight home!” “No, no, Mommy, you don’t
understand,” the daughter replied. “Understand what?” her mother
said slowly. “When we were walking home, some boys were mean to us.
Jamie dropped the doll and it broke on the sidewalk. And I stayed to
help Jamie.” Her mother smiled and said, “Oh honey, that is so sweet
that you stayed behind to help Jamie fix her doll, but you still
need to come straight home.” “No, no, Mommy!” the girl said again.
“It was broken so bad we couldn’t fix it! I stayed to help Jamie
cry.”
O that we would have a heart like that. God does not want us to
raise the dead or piece back together shattered china dolls, but He
wants us to be Christ-like in the presence of the broken . . . and
to help them cry.
Jesus weeping at Lazarus’ grave shows that He is touched with the
feeling of our infirmities (Hebrews 4:15; Psalm 35:13–14). He cares
when we hurt (1 Peter 5:7). He understands how we feel, because He
was one of us (John 1:14).
Henry the Eighth, wandering disguised one night in London, was met
at the foot of a bridge by night watchmen. They did not believe he
was the king, so they shut him up without fire or candle in the
Poultry Compter. Upon liberation, he granted thirty chaldrons of
coals and some bread for all night prisoners in the Compter.
Experience brings sympathy.
This world would be better if, instead of putting others in their
place, we more often tried putting ourselves in the place of others.
Those who have felt affliction, doubt, sickness, and temptation are
more apt and better equipped to console those in similar conditions
(2 Corinthians 1:3–4; 1 Peter 3:8). Christians are tenderhearted
(Ephesians 4:32) and have been known to cry upon occasion in funeral
homes and hospitals. This tear of Jesus was a tear of sympathy.
This was the most glorious public moment of
Jesus’ life. He was ushered into the city with a hero’s welcome.
Everyone is singing His praises (literally), yet . . . He breaks
down in passionate sobs.2 Like the
psalmist, rivers of waters ran down His eyes because they kept not
the law (Psalm 119:53, 136, 158; cf. Jeremiah 13:17). Like Paul,
there was great heaviness and continual sorrow in His heart for His
kinsmen according to the flesh (Romans 9:2–3).
He had done all He could to get them to believe, yet they persisted
in doubt. He had come that they might be enlightened, but they chose
darkness (John 1:11). He wanted for them the abundant life, but they
wanted eternal death (John 10:10). The city He had just entered was
on God’s “hit-list” (Matthew 24:4-34), and Sodom and Gomorrah got
off easy by comparison (24:21). These voices now shouting, “Blessed
be the King that cometh in the name of the Lord” (Luke 19:38), would
soon scream, “Crucify him, crucify him, His blood be on us, and on
our children” (Matthew 27:23-25; Mark 15:14).
Jesus still weeps for lost cities and impenitent souls. He longs for
men to mourn over their own sins (Matthew 5:4), so He won’t have to.
Alegend from the Middle Ages tells of a young woman who was expelled
from heaven and told that she would be readmitted only when she
brought back the one gift God valued most.
She brought back a blood drop from a dying martyr.
She collected coins a destitute widow had given the poor.
She found a Bible used by a powerful preacher.
She returned with dust from the shoes of missionaries who served long years in a distant land.
Each time she was turned away. One day she watched a man on horseback come to a fountain where a small boy was playing. Seeing the boy, he was reminded of his own childhood innocence. Then, looking into the fountain, he saw his hardened face. He was overcome by sins and began to weep penitent tears. She took one of those tears to heaven whereupon the door opened wide3 (2 Chronicles 7:14; Isaiah 55:7; Ezekiel 18:21; 2 Kings 22:19). The lost die daily unprepared for what awaits them. Many never give the afterlife an afterthought. We must make them think. Jesus let His tears drive Him to Calvary; ours must drive us to tell of Calvary (Mark 16:15). This was a tear of sorrow.
Hebrews 5:5–7 reveals a detail about that night
in the Garden that neither Matthew, Mark, Luke, nor John gives us.
It says, “when he had offered up prayers and supplications with
strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from
death, and was heard.” Jesus wept in Gethsemane the night He was
arrested. This was not silent, personal grief, but loud, public
crying. The disciples—had they been awake—could have heard it at the
stone’s-throw distance.4 This episode
shows Christ’s humanity. He did not want to suffer Calvary’s
humiliation, pain, and separation (Hebrews 12:2). He prayed that God
would find some other way to save man, but there was no Plan B (Mark
14:32–35; Luke 22:40–44).
Americans take 33,000,000,000 aspirins a year.5
Jesus knows every headache. Sixty-to-ninety percent of medical
office visits are for stress-related symptoms.6
Jesus knows every stressor (Ecclesiastes 8:16; Luke 10:40; 21:34).
Countless pillows are wet each night with heartache’s tears, and
sleep flees from dread of the future. Jesus sees every tear and
understands every fear. We can cast our cares upon Him, for He cares
(1 Peter 5:7). He understands because He has been there. Augustine
of Hippo said, “God had one Son on earth without sin, but never one
without suffering.” Everybody has problems; the wise ones let their
troubles drive them to the Garden of prayer. This was a tear of
struggle. Man is the only creature God made that can cry. No other
experiences sorrow to the extent that we do. But God is there to
comfort (Psalm 23:4; 2 Corinthians 1:3–7; 2:4; 7:2–11). Big boys
sometimes cry—for Christians never outgrow being children (of God).
Endnotes:
1 The root of the word
weep here (klaio) means, “to sob, or wail aloud.” It does not just
mean to become teary-eyed or weep silently (dakruo).
2 The word is klaio again.
3 Don McCullough, “Jesus the Judge,”
Preaching Today, Tape No. 129.
4 Strong, ischuros, means “forcible;
boisterous, mighty” and crying, krauge, could be translated “an
outcry” (it comes from a root, krazo, meaning, “to croak as a raven;
scream aloud; shriek, exclaim”).
5 Reader’s Digest Book of Facts.
6 Harvard Business Review (11–12/94).