Day 31: “The raising of a dead man: a sign of God’s loving omnipotence”

After reflecting on the figure of St. Joseph as part of our Lenten journey, today we hear, both in the reading (1 Kings 17:17–24) and in the Gospel (John 11:1–45), the account of the resurrection of a dead person. In the first case, it concerns the prophet Elijah, who raises the son of the widow who had taken him in. This miracle fully convinced the widow that Elijah was a prophet: “Now I know that you are a man of God, and that the word of the Lord in your mouth is truth” (v. 24).

Thus, what must follow from such a miracle came to pass: faith in the work of God. In fact, one could say that the resurrection of a dead person is the visible proof that God is the master of life and death, and that only a man who belongs to Him can perform a miracle of such magnitude. Unfortunately, however, not everyone comes to this conclusion, as we must sadly note in various passages of the Gospel.

Today’s Gospel also tells us of the raising of a dead man. In this case, it is Lazarus, whose story is so familiar to us. Prior to today’s passage, the evangelist Saint John tells us that more and more people were coming to believe in Jesus (cf. John 10:42). His witness and the signs He performed were so powerful that those who had not closed their hearts to Him were convinced. And now the great event of Lazarus’s resurrection was added to this.

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“RAISING THE DEAD AND ETERNAL LIFE”

Beloved Father, why were the resurrections of the dead not enough to change the minds of the Pharisees? Shouldn’t a miracle of such magnitude make it clear that You are at work? What more must happen?

But we can already foresee Your answer, for You have given it to us through the testimony of Scripture. Even in the lives of the saints, it was not uncommon for the greatest miracles to fail to lead tyrants to repentance.

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