John 11:6 When he had heard therefore that he was sick, he abode two days still in the same place where he was.
In
the forefront of this marvelous chapter stands the affirmation, "Jesus
loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus,"...
As if to teach us that at
the very heart and foundation of all God's dealings with us, however
dark and mysterious they may be, we must dare to believe in and assert
the infinite, unmerited, and unchanging love of God.
Love permits pain.
The sisters never doubted that He would speed at all hazards and stay
their brother from death, but, "When he had heard therefore that he was
sick, he abode two days still in the same place where he was.
What
a startling "therefore"! He abstained from going, not because He did
not love them, but because He did love them.
His love alone kept Him
back from hasting at once to the dear and stricken home.
Anything less
than infinite love must have rushed instantly to the relief of those
loved and troubled hearts, to stay their grief and to have the luxury of
wiping and stanching their tears and causing sorrow and sighing to flee
away.
Divine love could alone hold back the impetuosity of the Savior's
tender-heartedness until the Angel of Pain had done her work.
Who
can estimate how much we owe to suffering and pain?
But for them we
should have little scope for many of the chief virtues of the Christian
life.
Where were faith, without trial to test it; or patience, with
nothing to bear; or experience, without tribulation to develop
it?
~Selected
Loved! then the way will not be drear; For One we know is ever near...
Proving it to our hearts so clear, That we are loved.
Loved when our sky is clouded o'er, And days of sorrow press us sore...
Still we will trust Him evermore, For we are loved.
Time, that affects all things below, Can never change the love He'll show...
The heart of Christ with love will flow, And we are loved.
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