Commentary on John
Look at the audacity of the Pharisees! Trying to stir up the people, they spread the rumor that all the Jews are threatened with danger and destruction from the Romans on suspicion of seizing supreme power. "If," they say, "we leave Him alone, many people will follow Him, drawn by the manifestation of miracles, and finally the Romans will suspect all of us of seizing supreme power, will take our cities and destroy them." They said this with cunning. So that it would not appear that they were plotting against Christ out of envy, they put forward the common danger, inciting the people against Christ as the future cause of their destruction.
Understand, perhaps, this miracle also in relation to the inner man. Our mind is a friend of Christ, but it is often overcome by the weakness of human nature, falls into sin, and dies a spiritual and most pitiable death, yet one deemed worthy of compassion on Christ's part, for the one who died is His friend. Let, then, the sisters and kinswomen of the dead mind — the flesh, as Martha (for Martha is more bodily and material), and the soul, as Mary (for Mary is more devout and reverent) — come to Christ and fall down before Him, leading after them the thoughts of confession, as those women led the Jews. For Judah means confession. And the Lord will undoubtedly stand at the tomb, will command that the blindness lying upon the memory be taken away, like some stone, and will bring to remembrance the future blessings and torments. And He will cry out with the great voice of the evangelical trumpet: "Come out from the world, do not bury yourself in worldly distractions and passions"; just as He also said to His disciples, "you are not of the world" (John 15:19), and the Apostle Paul said, "let us go forth to Him outside the camp" (Heb. 13:13), that is, the world, and thus will raise from sin the dead man, whose wounds reeked of malice. The dead man gave off a smell because he was four days dead, that is, he had died to the four gentle and radiant virtues and was idle and immovable toward them. However, although he was immovable and bound hand and foot, constricted by the bonds of his own sins and seemed completely inactive, and although his face was covered with a cloth so that under the overlay of the fleshly covering he could see nothing divine — in short, was in the very worst condition both in "activity," which is signified by the hands and feet, and in "contemplation," which is signified by the covered face — even though he is in such a calamitous state, he will hear: "Unbind him, you good angels or priests who serve salvation, and give him the forgiveness of sins; let him go and set about the doing of good."
Some have understood "Martha" to mean the Jewish church, and "Mary" the Church from the Gentiles. The Jewish church is concerned with many things, for the commandments of the law are many and difficult to fulfill, while the Church from the Gentiles needs not many commandments, but a few, in which "all the law and the prophets" are contained (Matt. 22:40), namely the commandments of love. By their brother, raised from the dead, they understood the souls of people who descend into hell on account of their sins, as it is written, "let the sinners be turned into hell" (Ps. 9:17), but these souls the Lord raises.
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Commentary on John
1570 The root of their problem was that they feared the losses that would follow. The Evangelist mentions two things referring to this. First, their loss of spiritual leadership. He says about this, If we let him go on thus, every one will believe in him. This, of course, would be the best for all concerned, because it is faith in Christ that saves and leads to eternal life: "But these are written that you may believe...and that believing you may have life in his name" (20:31). But in relation to their wicked intention this was terrifying to them, for they believed that no one who believed in Christ would obey them. And so, because of their ambition, they backed away from salvation and took others with themselves: "But Diotrephes, who likes to put himself first does not acknowledge my authority" (3 Jn 1:9).
1571 Secondly, he mentions their ambition for temporal possessions when he says, and the Romans will come and destroy both our place and our nation. This seems to follow from the other, as Augustine says, for if all believed in Christ, there would be no one left to defend the temple of God against the Romans, because they would have abandoned the holy temple and the laws of their fathers, as they thought the teaching of Christ was directed against these. But this does not really seem to have much bearing on the issue, since they would still be subject to the Romans and would not be planning to war against them. Thus, it seems better to say, with Chrysostom, that they said this because they observed that Christ was being honored by the people as a king. And because the Romans had ordered that no one could be king unless they had appointed him, they were afraid that if the Romans heard that they were regarding Christ as a king, they would look upon the Jews as rebels. Then they would move against them and destroy their city and nation: "Every one who makes himself a king sets himself against Caesar" (19:12).
1572 Notice their pitiable state, for they fear nothing but the loss of temporal things, and do not think of eternal life: "The fountain of Jacob alone, in a land of grain and wine" (Deut 33:28). But as we read in Proverbs (10:24): "What the wicked dreads will come upon him"; and so after our Lord's passion and glorification, the Romans overcame and displaced them, taking their land and nation.
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