Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Out From the Grave

Episode Date: March 25, 2026

The raising of Lazarus is the seventh and climactic of Jesus’ miraculous signs in the Gospel of John. John says Jesus did many miracles, but these seven particularly revealed who Jesus was and what ...he came to do. And this one is probably the most famous.  Jesus especially loved Mary, Martha, and Lazarus—there was a special friendship there. But Lazarus gets sick when Jesus is away, and Lazarus is dead by the time Jesus gets there. Everyone’s mourning, and that’s when this account begins.  Looking at this passage, we learn 1) about who Jesus is, from when he’s with the sisters, and 2) about what Jesus came to do, from when he’s with Lazarus. This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on March 2, 2014. Series: Seeing Jesus. Scripture: John 11:18-44. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.

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Starting point is 00:00:03 Welcome to the Gospel and Life podcast. John's Gospel recounts several of Jesus' miracles, from turning water into wine to healing a blind man. John says these miracles are signs pointing us to something greater. But what is it that we should see? In today's sermon, Tim Keller looks at one of these signs and what it reveals about who Jesus is and what he came to accomplish during his life on earth.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Our scripture today is from John, chapter 11, verses 18 through 14. Now Bethany was less than two miles from Jerusalem, and many Jews had come to Martha and Mary to comfort them in the loss of their brother. When Martha heard that Jesus was coming, she went out to meet him, but Mary stayed at home. Lord, Martha said to Jesus, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. But I know that even now God will give you whatever you ask. Jesus said to her, your brother will rise again. Martha answered, I know he will rise again in the resurrection at the last day. Jesus said to her, I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die.
Starting point is 00:01:25 And whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this? Yes, Lord, she replied. I believe that you are the Messiah, the son of God who is to come into the world. after she had said this she went back and called her sister mary aside the teacher is here she said and is asking for you when mary heard this she got up quickly and went to him now jesus had not yet entered the village but was still at the place where martha had met him when the jews who had been with mary in the house comforting her noticed how quickly she got up and went out they followed her supposing she was going to the tomb to mourn there When Mary reached the place where Jesus was and saw him, she fell at his feet.
Starting point is 00:02:12 Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. When Jesus saw her weeping and the Jews who had come along with her also weeping, he was deeply moved in spirit and troubled. Where have you laid him? he asked. Come and see, Lord, they replied. Jesus wept. Then the Jews said, see how he loved him. but some of them said,
Starting point is 00:02:36 Could not he who opened the eyes of the blind man have kept this man from dying? Jesus, once more deeply moved, came to the tomb. It was a cave with a stone laid across the entrance. Take away the stone, he said. But Lord, said Martha, the sister of the dead man, by this time there is a bad odour, for he has been in there four days. Then Jesus said, did I not tell you that if you believe,
Starting point is 00:03:00 you will see the glory of God? So they took away the stone. Then Jesus looked up and said, Father, I thank you that you have heard me. I knew that you always hear me, but I said this for the benefit of the people standing here, that they may believe that you sent me. When he had said this, Jesus called in a loud voice,
Starting point is 00:03:22 Lazarus come out. The dead man came out, his hands and feet wrapped with strips of linen and a cloth around his face. Jesus said to them, take off the grave clothes and let him go. This is the word of the Lord. For the last couple of months, we've been looking in the Gospel of John at these accounts of Jesus' miraculous signs.
Starting point is 00:03:50 That's what John calls them. John says in his gospel that there's quite a lot of miracles that Jesus did, but John particularly chose these seven miracles that he called signs because he believed that they particularly revealed who Jesus was and what he came to do. And the raising of Lazarus is the seventh. It's the climactic. It's the, and we'll explain why it's climactic.
Starting point is 00:04:18 The seventh of those signs, and probably the most famous. Mary, Martha, and Lazarus, sisters and a brother. And Jesus especially loved them. In the very beginning of the account, which we didn't read, the very beginning of the chapter, the message that comes about Lazarus's sickness was, Lord, the one that you love is sick. And down here in verse 36, it says, then the Jews said, see how he loved him. He was well known to be very close to Mary Martha and Lazarus.
Starting point is 00:04:52 And there was a particular friendship there, and it was a special love. Jesus is away when Lazarus gets sick and is dead by the time Jesus gets there. and everyone is in mourning and everyone is grieving and that's when the account begins. And so let's see what we learn here under the two headings I've already mentioned. What do we learn about who he is and about what Jesus came to do? His person and his work. And we learn about his person when he's with the sisters in the first part of the account and we learned something I think about what he came to do in the second part when he's with Lazarus.
Starting point is 00:05:34 So first of all, who he is with his sisters. Now, Martha comes out and says, Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. And then when Mary comes out, she says exactly the same words. Lord, if you had been there, if you had been here, this is in verse 32, my brother would not have died. Okay. two women in the very same situation, the same kind of grief, and they even use the same words,
Starting point is 00:06:08 but Jesus' response to the two of them is radically different. And one commentator I read said, this is not fiction, because no fiction writer would have ever imagined this kind of disjunction. It's absolutely counterintuitive that two women grieving in the same way, in the same situation, saying the very same words would get two completely different responses. Because, see, with Martha, Jesus basically argues. He says, I am the resurrection in the life. It's never too late. I'm here now.
Starting point is 00:06:47 But with Mary, he doesn't actually, not only doesn't he argue, he doesn't say a thing. See, with Martha, in a sense, he stands against the flow of her heart. He resists her sorrow and calls her to hope. But with Mary, he just enters right into the sorrow, right into the flow of her heart. He's sort of pulled in with her and all he does is weep. Doesn't say a thing. Just weeps. Just grieves with her.
Starting point is 00:07:18 Now, what does this mean? What does this mean? It's completely counterintuitive, but it's more than just something counterintuitive. It's not just a counterintuitive curiosity that some eyewitness remembered, even though it was an eyewitness, I think, oral history. But it's not just a curiosity. I think it's an insight into who Jesus is. It's a profound insight because with Martha, he's claiming to be God. And with Mary, he's showing himself to be human.
Starting point is 00:07:47 In other words, he's the God man. The encounter with the girls, with the sisters, with the women, shows him to be the God man. shows them to be the God man. So first of all, with Mary, what does he say? I mean, pardon me, with Martha. He doesn't say, I have access to divine power, and I can raise this man from the dead. He doesn't say I have access to divine power.
Starting point is 00:08:12 He says, I am the power that gives everything life. He doesn't just say I'm the resurrection. He says, I'm the life. I am life. I am the source of all life. Only God is that. So with Martha, he's giving her a bracing response, and he's, in a sense, arguing with her and standing against her
Starting point is 00:08:32 and claiming to be God. But with Mary, he's showing himself to be human, to be God in the flesh. He's showing himself to be a God who is completely human because what we have here, in spite of the claim of deity, is a real man, weak, weeping. His love for them
Starting point is 00:08:55 pulls him into their devastation. And so along with the power of deity, we have got vulnerable humanity. He is a human being, and therefore he feels the horror of death. If he was only deity, he would not feel the horror of death. And of course, just,
Starting point is 00:09:14 and the grief of losing love. And so there what we have is Jesus Christ, fully divine, fully human, the God man. Now, at one level, this is mind-numbing. This is the doctrine of the hypostatic union, that he's fully God and fully man. And what we could do, if we wanted to, is get out, say, Philippians 2,
Starting point is 00:09:43 and parse every part of it, and notice that Jesus Christ, though he was God, he emptied himself of his glory, but not of his deity, and assumed a human nature. We could go into all that. It is a little bit mind-numbing, I suppose. but at a service of worship before the Lord's Supper,
Starting point is 00:09:57 I would rather show you that even though it might numb your mind, the idea that Jesus is both fully God and fully man is exactly what your heart needs. It's exactly what it needs. In two ways. First of all, it shows him, because he's both God and man, to be the perfect, wonderful counselor.
Starting point is 00:10:20 He's the wonderful counselor. See, with my... Martha, he gives her a bracing response. He confronts her with Mary. He just enters in and gives no advice at all and just supports her and just loves her and just grieves with her. Now, I'm a pastor. And so after all these years, I've done a fair amount of counseling. And all of us who do any kind of counseling, as time goes on, we come to recognize how severely limited we are,
Starting point is 00:10:49 at least in the range of people that we can help. it's kind of a grief to anybody who's a counselor. There's a limited range of the people we can help. Why? Some people need confrontation. Some people need nothing but support. Some people need what Jesus gives. The ministry of truth, which is what he gets to Martha.
Starting point is 00:11:09 Sometimes people just need the ministry of tears, which is what he gets to Mary. And people need them sometimes at different times in their lives. And if you give, if you give, if you give, confrontation to someone who needs support or support to someone who needs confrontation, or if you give it to them at the time they need support and you give confrontation, the time they need confrontation you give support, you harm them. The problem is all of us human counselors are limited in how well we can do that. You know why? We have temperaments. We all have habitual temperaments. We tend more to truth or tend more to tears. And for various reasons, background genetics, who knows what,
Starting point is 00:11:53 limited range of people that we really can help very, very well. But not Jesus. Because he's infinitely high and infinitely low. He's deity and utterly human at once. And therefore, he inhabits the entire spectrum of what people need. And he always gives you because he's infinitely high and infinitely low and infinitely wise about how he deploys his highness and his lowness. He is the only perfect counselor. He's the only one that can give you exactly what you need when you need it if you look to him. And that's the reason why you've got a passage like this in Hebrews chapter four. We do not have a high priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin. Therefore, let us draw near with confidence to the
Starting point is 00:12:49 throne of grace so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need. And did you hear that? Tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin. There's the balance. See, on the one hand, he's not just a sinless God who doesn't know what it's like to go through what we have gone through. He doesn't understand. I've never felt the terror of life.
Starting point is 00:13:10 So on the one hand, we don't just have a sinless God who has an experience what we've experienced, but on the other hand, we don't have somebody who's just like us, who's no better than us. How can someone like that help us? we have the wonderful counselor because it's infinitely high and infinitely low at once. It's like odd man. But here's the other thing that our heart needs.
Starting point is 00:13:34 Here's the other way in which his being both deity and humanity meets the need of our heart. He's an absolute beauty. St. Augustine may be the greatest theological mind of all time. And one of the things that is so brilliant that has reverberated through Christian theology and ministry ever since is his idea that the fundamental problem of the human heart is what he would call disordered loves. That means our loves are out of order.
Starting point is 00:14:08 That's our problem. And that means that if you love anything more than God, anything more than God, whatever that thing is, you will crush it through your expectations. and it will break your heart. And so spouses learn that if they don't love God more than they love their spouse, they won't love their spouse well. See, if your spouse is your main source of love and meaning and hope of your main thing in life, then on the one hand, it means that you will be too angry when your spouse messes up. Way too angry.
Starting point is 00:14:51 You'll crush your spouse under your expectations. On the other hand, you'll be too afraid of your spouse's anger to confront and tell the truth. You will not be able to love your spouse well unless you love God more. Our loves are out of order. Now, yesterday, we had a singles conference right here, and that point was made in some various ways. And afterwards, I stood down here and talked to people for a good hour afterwards. I got a lot of good questions, but an awful lot of them were like, this, we're along this line. What they said is, okay, I'm supposed to love God more than anything else.
Starting point is 00:15:27 Like, okay, like, all right? How do I do that? I mean, how in the world do I just love God more than all the other things that I love? And then I said something, well, it's a process. You can't do it or not. Okay, fine, it's a process. But what is the process? You know, all right? Thank you very much, Pastor. But tell me, what do I do? I'm not really sure. I can't remember what I said yesterday. I hope it was helpful to you if you're here. But as I was preparing for this today, I realized, oh, my goodness, wait. What will draw your heart out toward God? God is an abstraction, but Jesus Christ, especially Jesus Christ, the God man is not.
Starting point is 00:16:06 Jonathan Edwards, years ago preached and then wrote, published a sermon called the Excellency of Jesus Christ, and is based on the place in Revelation where it says that Jesus Christ, is both a lion and a lamb. He is the lion who is a lamb. He's the lamb who is a lion. And his thesis is that Jesus Christ, because he's both God and man, combines diverse and usually
Starting point is 00:16:32 opposite excellencies and glories in one person and therefore makes him of surpassing beauty. It's because he's both. It's because he combines the highness and the loneliness together and all the attributes that go with it that make him not an abstraction. God to some degree is an abstraction, but Jesus Christ is not. Not as you see him moving through the pages of the New Testament. Here's one person, a couple of writers, I'm putting them together for you, put it like this. Despite his high claims, he is never pompous, and you never see him standing on his own dignity.
Starting point is 00:17:12 He is tenderness without weakness, strength without harshness, humility without the slightest lack of confidence, unhesitating authority with a complete lack of self-absorption, unbending convictions without the slightest lack of approachability, power without insensitivity, enthusiasm without fanaticism, holiness without Phariseeism, passion without prejudice. Nothing he does falls short. In fact, he is always surprising you and taking your breath away because he's incomparably. better than you could have imagined for yourself. Why? These are the surprises of perfection. And I think Edwards is absolutely right. When you see those things brought together, the
Starting point is 00:17:52 highness and the lowliness, the power and the humility, the greatness with no pomposity, when you see them together, it's attraction. It attracts you. You feel it, do you not? You know, you can't look at the sun directly without burning at your eyes. It's attraction. It attracts you. You feel it. You know, you can't look at the sun directly without burning your eyes. So you have to look at it through a filter and then you can see the beauty of it. You can see the flames. When you
Starting point is 00:18:23 look at Jesus Christ, you see what he says in verse 40? You're looking at the glory of God through the filter of a human nature. And only there can you see the absolute beauty. And this will draw your heart out and this will reorder your loves. It's His
Starting point is 00:18:40 Highness and His Lowness, his Dea it in his humanity together that does that. Jesus was the most influential man to ever walk the earth, and his story has been told through books, movies, and articles in hundreds of different ways. Can anything more be said about him? In his book, Jesus the King, Tim Keller journeys through the Gospel of Mark to reveal how the life of Jesus helps us make sense of our lives. Dr. Keller shows us how the story of Jesus is at once cosmic, historical, and personal, calling each of us to take a fresh look at our relationship with God. During the month of March, we'll send you a copy of Jesus the King as our thanks for your gift to help Gospel in Life share the transforming love of Christ with people all over the world.
Starting point is 00:19:26 So request your copy today at gospelonlife.com slash give. That's gospelonlife.com slash give. Now here's Dr. Keller with the remainder of today's teaching. So first of all, we see who he is, the God man, with Mary and Martha. But then he goes to the tomb to meet Lazarus. and here we learned something about what he came to do. What did he come to do? Well, the first thing we came to do, we know he came to do, is he came to fight for us. Because, and there is no translation that seems to be quite willing to take the plunge here. You see, in verse 33, it says he was
Starting point is 00:20:06 deeply moved in spirit and troubled. And then verse 38, it says, Jesus, once more deeply moved, came to the tomb. Now, the Greek word here, and the Greek words here, are words. words that generally mean angry. In fact, one of the words means, it's literally, means to bellow like an animal, to roar like an animal. It says he's coming to the tomb, angry, furious. B.B. Warfield, a rather austere, older theologian was at Princeton in the late 1800s and early 1900s. He wrote this about this text. He says, Jesus advances to the tomb not weak and sniveling, but as a champion preparing for conflict. John uncovers the heart of Jesus as he wins our salvation, not in cold unconcerned, but with fiery wrath against our enemy.
Starting point is 00:21:09 Now, what's interesting is he's angry. And you ought to notice what he's not angry at. First of all, he's not angry at the family. He's not like one of Job's friends. He doesn't show up and say, say, well, I don't know why he died so young, but you must have done something bad. So he's not angry at the family. But here's what's interesting. He's just claimed to be deity. He doesn't just say, I have the power to raise this man from the dead. I am the source of all life. I am the power that gives everything life. He's just claimed to be God, but guess what? He's not mad at himself. Here's suffering and evil, and he's not mad at God. No.
Starting point is 00:21:48 why not? We talked about this last week, so we can't go into it again. He's not acting as if the human race doesn't deserve the world we have. Because when the human race turned away from the one who created us and the one who sustains us every second to decide we're going to be our own masters, our own saviors, our own lords, the world stopped working the way it should. Genesis 3, Romans 8, they tell us about this. The world doesn't work, suffering, evil, death, disease, all the things that were not
Starting point is 00:22:17 originally part of God's design are now here. So Jesus is not mad at them, and he's also not mad actually at himself or God or acting as if this world isn't what the human race deserves, but he is mad at death. And he is mad. I like that. He's not a stoic. This isn't Greek stoicism saying, well, you know death is inevitable. You can't let it get to you. He's not even doing the evangelical Christian kind of stoicism. Well, I'm just praising the Lord. It's really hard, but I'm just trusting him. He's mad. He's mad at our enemy.
Starting point is 00:22:54 He's raging against the dying of the light. But here's the problem. If it's true that evil and suffering and death is actually the death sentence of the human race, it's a sentence on how we've been living. How can Jesus Christ do anything
Starting point is 00:23:12 about this sentence if we deserve it? How can you destroy death without destroying us? That's what we deserve. And the answer is, this miracle shows not only that he came to fight for us, but also that he came to die for us. Now you say, well, where does it tell you about dying for you? Well, this is the turning point in the book of John. I said this is the climactic miracle. It's the, of the miraculous
Starting point is 00:23:40 sciences, the seventh one. And John chapter one to 11 is all about Jesus' life. But starting here, John chapter 12 to the end is all about Jesus' death. this is the turning point this is the hinge kathy was pointing out the other night that in a kind of favorite movie of ours the greatest story ever told that kind of epic about jesus in 1965 uh even the movie makers realized that it was at the resurrection of lacerus it's it all comes together it's sort of the turning point in the movie um and before the gates of jerusalem there's three guys and one says a man was dead but now he lives he's i was crippled but now i walk i was blind now i see it's It's like it all comes together here, and then they decided to have to kill him.
Starting point is 00:24:24 In fact, if you read the rest of chapter 11, you immediately see what happened. This is too visible a miracle. This is too public. This is too decisive. And so, verse 53, which we didn't read, says this. It says, from that day on, they decided to take his life. This is the thing that sealed his doom. It was too much.
Starting point is 00:24:52 He'd gone too far. His enemy said, now he's got to die. This is the turning point. And you know what that means? You know that Jesus knew what he was doing. Jesus knew that the only way to get Lazarus out of the grave was to put himself into it. And therefore, Jesus also knew that the only way to stop our funeral is to cause his own. He had to go to the cross. Jesus Christ knew that the only way that he was going to save us is if the inexorable jaws of death closed upon him like a vice and he experienced all the wrath of divine justice on sin
Starting point is 00:25:38 and he took what we deserve and unless that happened we could not be saved. So when he said Lazarus come out he was signing his own death warrant and he knew it. and see these folks spoke better than they knew behold how he loves him see that they just looked at his tears and they said see how he loved him look how Jesus loved him
Starting point is 00:26:00 but you and I can look at Jesus saying Lazarus come forth and say behold how he loves us he would do this for Lazarus he's not just doing this for Lazarus he's doing it for us he's doing it for us All right, let me just leave you with four very practical implications and applications of this remarkable account. Four things. Number one, don't be mad at Jesus for your suffering. See, a lot of you are in pain right now, and it's very, very simple, easy to say, you know, Jesus, why are you letting this happen? But, you see, Jesus is not mad at himself. He's mad at death, and he's come to do something about it.
Starting point is 00:26:47 and of all people albert camus says this he says the god man suffers with patience evil and death can no longer be imputed to him since he suffers and dies the night on golgatha is so important in the history of man only because in its shadows the divinity ostensibly abandon its traditional privilege live through to the end, despair included the agony of death. Thus is explained the Lama Sabakhani, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me, and the frightful struggle of Christ in agony. You know what he's saying? You know, we talked about it last week, and we often say it, but I'll just say it here. It is hard to know why God is letting you go through the evil and suffering you're going through right now.
Starting point is 00:27:43 but when you see that Christianity is the only faith in which God actually comes down and involves himself into suffering so that someday he can end all suffering and evil without ending us. What this means is though you do not know the particular reason, you don't know what the reason for your suffering is, you do know what the reason for your suffering is not. It's not that he doesn't love you. And so as Albert Camus said, and at the Bible and Jesus and Albert Camus all agree, it must be right. Don't blame Jesus for your suffering. Secondly, all love is going to entail suffering, though. See, Jesus cannot save and love Lazarus without hurting himself. And of course,
Starting point is 00:28:31 of course, now Jesus is doing the ultimate salvation, therefore he's going through the ultimate suffering. But at all levels it works like this, all real love is a kind of sacrifice. All love is a substitutionary sacrifice. All real love entails you suffering, you dying in small ways so that others can live. I mean, you see it at all levels. So, for example, let me just think about parenting for a second. Little children come into your life. You have children come into your life. Now, if you want to, here's your privacy, your comfort, and your convenience. You know, you could just make sure that you only spend as much time with your children and only do things for them that comport with your privacy with your convenience and with your comfort.
Starting point is 00:29:13 In other words, you could just spend as much time with your children as suits you, in which case your children will grow up to be an absolute mess. They'll grow up needy, they'll grow up in trouble, they'll be all kinds of trouble. And therefore, it's them or you. You can kiss goodbye for many years, your privacy, convenience, and comfort, and they'll grow up strong, or else you can hold on to it, and they'll grow up weak. So what's it going to be?
Starting point is 00:29:40 you can weaken yourself so they'll become strong or you can stay strong so they'll become weak but don't you realize what's going on you have to die that they may live essentially die to some things but it's also you may just have somebody in your network of friends let's just say and he or she you don't particularly like them that much but they're kind of in there all right and suddenly they go through some horrible things some terrible things happening in their life oh it's awful and you know that if you show interest, they're going to glom on to you and want to talk about things and you're going to come out feeling so drained because all you're doing is listening to them. And on the other hand, they're feeling better. They're coming up because somebody finally cares and is listening.
Starting point is 00:30:23 Meanwhile, you're being drained. Guess what? It's them or you. It's them or you. You can hold on to your convenience and privacy and comfort and then let them just sort of die in their loneliness or solitude. Or you can kiss that goodbye and you can help them come together. It's them or you. there is no way to love people without suffering. There's no way to really love them without suffering. Jesus shows it at the macro level, but it happens to the micro level. So reconcile yourself to that because look what he did for you. If he did this for you, why couldn't you just do it in a little ways for others?
Starting point is 00:31:00 That's the essence of the Christian life. Number three. Number three is if he really is this powerful and great, great and he's really done this for you you need to take the limits off of your allegiance to him that you have on them come on let's be honest all of us say oh i'm living for jesus but all of us have got limits to just what we're willing to do and uh you know even if he was just this great when i became a christian in my early years the you know i read the kind of books i read like john stott's basic christianity they always made this point and other speakers always made
Starting point is 00:31:41 this point they said if you have just a prophet or a sage and you have just a prophet or a sage who says, here's, you know, gives you wisdom on what you should do, that's one thing. But when you have a God, when you have someone who says, I'm God, and then says, I'm come to die for you, you can't respond to such a person mildly. You either have to run away as far, as fast as you can, or you have to give him absolutely everything because he deserves it. Absolutely everything. He deserves it twice. He deserves it once as your creator, he owns you. But then he deserves it, if that's possible, doubly as your Redeemer because he gave up everything for you. and if he's that great,
Starting point is 00:32:20 you just shouldn't be sort of dialing him up every so off when you have a problem. You know, as one of my teachers said, and some of you know about this, one of my teachers once said, if the distance between the earth and the sun, I love to even tell it to myself, if the distance between the earth to the sun, which is 92 million miles, was just the thickness of one sheet of paper,
Starting point is 00:32:42 then the distance from Earth to the near star would be a stack of paper 71 feet high. And just that the diameter of our galaxy would be a stack of paper 310 miles high. And our galaxy is just a little speck of dust virtually in this enormous place called the universe. And according to the Bible, Jesus Christ holds this together with the word of his power, his pinky, as it were. And then he came and died for us. Is this the kind of person that you ask into your life to be your personal assistant? Is this the kind of person you bring into your life as a consultant when and you call him when you need him. Otherwise, you're just very happy to, you know, go along your own way. No, you take all the limits off your allegiance and you
Starting point is 00:33:27 live for him utterly. And here's the last thing. Don't let the fear of death control you. For example, you say, well, I don't think I'm afraid of death. Well, all right, listen, don't say, oh my goodness, oh my goodness, I've never gotten here. I've never gotten there. By now I should have had the career and I'll never have the career I want it. I've never been here. I've never seen the Alps. I'll never have a family.
Starting point is 00:33:56 I'll never be married. You know what that is? That's fear of death. Because, see, death won't trump anything for you if you're in Jesus Christ. Jesus says, I am the life. It's all in me. Don't say, oh, I'm dying now and I'm. I'm never going to see the Alps.
Starting point is 00:34:15 You don't think there's mountains in God. You don't think that in him there's infinite, to an infinite degree greater, the things that you would, you see when you see majestic mountains. You don't think that in God there's family, there's love, there's love infinitely greater than any spousal love.
Starting point is 00:34:37 You're going to miss out on nothing, nothing at all because he is the resurrection of the life so don't let the fear of death either kind of covertly or overtly or in any way cow you or control you know the dialogue anthem that great poem by uh george herbert in which christian and death is having a dialogue so christian speaks and the death speech and the very last interchange goes like this. The Christian says, you know, the last thing the death says is, I'm going to crush you with my arms. And the last thing Christian says is, spare not, do thy worst. You shall make me, but make me better than before, thou so much worse that thou shalt be no more. And see, in one sense,
Starting point is 00:35:32 at the first level, that's Jesus Christ talking. He says to death, come on, destroy me. And you'll only be destroying yourself. There's a whole book written called The Death of Death in the Death of Christ. When death killed Jesus Christ, it basically signed its own death warrant. But guess what? Now, that's also you, the Christian. If you're in Jesus Christ and you see death coming at you, you can say, spare not, do thy worst, meaning the worst thing you could possibly do to me is the best thing that you could do to me. You may think you're going to unmake me. You're only going to make me. You think you're going to make me better? You're worse.
Starting point is 00:36:11 You're only going to make me better. Because what Jesus Christ says is I'm the resurrection, I'm the life, I am rebirth, I am life, and don't be afraid I've overcome the universe. Let's pray. So, Father, keep us from being afraid of death at any level. Keep us from taking, putting limits on our allegiance to you. prevent us also from blaming you for our suffering. In all these ways, work in our hearts and lives
Starting point is 00:36:47 through this tremendous display of what you did for us. First, O Lord Jesus Christ, you emptied yourself of your glory and you assumed a human nature and you became the God man and then you went to the cross for us. And because of that, we can live life with confidence. confidence. We also have to live life in submission to you. We pray that all these great things that could be ours, if we truly appropriate by faith what you've done for us would be ours to your glory and to our joy. And we pray that you'd help us now as we do the Lord's supper work these things into our hearts at a new
Starting point is 00:37:30 level. We ask it in Jesus' name. Amen. Thanks for listening to today's teaching. It's our prayer that you encouraged by it and that it helps you apply the gospel to your life and share it with others. For more helpful resources from Tim Keller, visit gospelandlife.com. There, you can subscribe to the Life and the Gospel Quarterly Journal. When you do, you will also receive free articles, sermons, devotionals, and other great gospel-centered resources. Again, it's all at gospelandlife.com. You can also stay connected with us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and X. Today's sermon was recorded in 2014.
Starting point is 00:38:11 The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017, while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.

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