Greek Key Terms:
Context: John 11:1-44 is the seventh and climactic sign of John's Gospel, structurally positioned as the immediate cause of the Sanhedrin's decision to kill Jesus (11:47-53). John has been building toward this episode through six prior signs (water to wine, healing of official's son, healing at Bethesda, feeding the five thousand, walking on water, healing of the man born blind), each demonstrating a specific dimension of Jesus' identity. The raising of Lazarus is the culminating sign because it demonstrates what the resurrection vocabulary of John 5:25-29 promised: "An hour is coming when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who hear will live." John emphasizes the totality of Lazarus's death (four days in the tomb, v.17; Martha's "by now he stinks," v.39 — a detail no polite narrator would include unless it were theologically necessary) to establish beyond any dispute that what follows is not resuscitation but resurrection. The passage's theological center is the dialogue between Jesus and Martha (vv.21-27), where Jesus' "I am the resurrection and the life" constitutes the trajectory's interpretive key: He is not performing a sign that points to resurrection; He is the resurrection in person.
OT-to-OT Development: John 11 uses the "sleep/awakening" vocabulary (vv.11-13) drawn directly from Isaiah 26:19 ("wake up and shout for joy, you who dwell in the dust") and Daniel 12:2 ("many who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake"). Martha's resurrection confession ("I know he will rise again in the resurrection at the last day," v.24) is orthodox Second Temple Jewish eschatology — the Pharisaic position that Daniel 12:2 and Isaiah 26:19 had established as mainstream hope. Jesus does not contradict this hope; He fulfills it present-tense: "I am the resurrection and the life." The raising of Lazarus is not merely an anticipation of the last-day resurrection; it is the last-day resurrection inaugurated and personified in Jesus, breaking into time before the final day. John's Gospel as a whole operates in inaugurated eschatology (eternal life now; judgment now; resurrection now), and Lazarus's raising is the narrative climax of that theme.
Connections:
Christological Connection: John 11 is the trajectory's penultimate act — the fullest demonstration of resurrection power before Christ undergoes death Himself. The escalation from Elijah/Elisha is total and categorical. Elijah prayed three times; Jesus simply commands. Elisha stretched out over the boy in physical effort; Jesus stands at the mouth of the tomb. The prophets worked by channeling YHWH's power; Jesus works as the source of that power. The prophets interceded for the dead; Jesus is "the resurrection and the life" — He does not petition for life; He is life.
The episode's most theologically significant feature is what comes before the miracle: "Jesus wept" (v.35). The Life-Giver, who knows He is about to reverse the death He sees, weeps at the sight of it. This is not performative emotion — the surrounding context makes clear that He is "deeply moved in spirit and troubled" (vv.33, 38). The word translated "deeply moved" (ἐμβριμάομαι) carries the force of anger, indignation — Jesus is not merely sympathetically sad; He is enraged at death's encroachment on the world He made. His weeping and His anger are the emotional expression of the cross: this is what death does to the creation, and this is why He came to destroy it. The raising of Lazarus is both a sign of His power and a preview of His purpose: He came to "destroy the one who holds the power of death—that is, the devil" (Hebrews 2:14).
The already/not-yet: Lazarus is raised but will die again — his resurrection is a sign, not the final reality. Christ's resurrection (three days later in the Gospel's sequence) is the firstfruits that guarantees the harvest. The "last day" that Martha correctly located in the future (v.24) has been inaugurated in the present — those who believe in Christ have already passed from death to life (John 5:24) and will not die eternally, even if they die physically (v.26). The consummation awaits: "all who are in their graves will hear his voice and come out" (John 5:28-29).
Connection Method(s): Typology (Backward-Looking — retrospectively, John 11 reveals Elijah's and Elisha's raisings as typological precursors; all five criteria met: correspondence, historicity, escalation [categorical], pointing-forwardness [Isaiah 26:19; Daniel 12:2 as OT indicators], retrospective interpretation [1 Corinthians 15 reads the entire raising trajectory as pointing to the firstfruits of resurrection in Christ]). Also Promise-Fulfillment — Isaiah 26:19's promise of resurrection is fulfilled inchoately in Lazarus's raising and definitively in Christ's resurrection. Also Longitudinal Theme — the "YHWH who raises the dead" theme reaches its enacted climax here before Christ's own resurrection consummates it.
Trajectory Table: 188 - Raising the Dead (Lazarus and the Life-Giver)