Sunday, April 4, 2021

Little Details Matter

There is a rule in screen writing that you never put in a detail that won’t be used later. James Bond movies are famous for this. Early on in every James Bond movie Q gives James the exact secret gadgets he will need to get out of a life and death situation later in the movie. These gadgets are never reused in any movie that follow.


Scripture is full of details that are often overlooked or are viewed simply as descriptions that have little importance later in the story. One such example is in the story of the raising of Lazarus. We are told that Lazarus was dead and in the tomb for four days. His sisters did not want the tomb opened because there would have been a stench by this time. This was to let us know that he has truly dead and not merely near death.


This scene in the story always reminds me of an Irish wake. The old tale goes that they would lay the body of a dead Irishman out on the table in his home for three days. People would come to visit but the main purpose was to make sure the person had really died and not had succumb to lead poisoning that leached into the beer from the pewter tanks it was stored in. It is probably nothing more than a wives’ tale but even wives’ tales have a grain of truth to them. I wonder how many Irishmen sat up in their coffins during their funerals.


One of the details in the story of Lazarus that is easily overlooked is the fact that Lazarus stumbles out of his tomb still wrapped securely in his burial cloths when Jesus beckons to him from outside. His sisters had to rush to his aid to free him from these cloths. Like a good Bond movie, this detail was not put into the story just to help us paint a mental picture of the scene. It points out a greater reality later in the story.


Fast forward to Easter Sunday. Peter and John enter the tomb where Jesus was laid on Good Friday. Scripture tells us that they saw the burial wrappings laying there and the cloth that covered Jesus’ head rolled up in another place. This is another place in scripture where the actual Greek text gives us a more complete understanding of what the disciples saw.


The burial cloth of Jesus was not just simply laying there as if it were taken off, folded up, and placed on the stone. It was laying there as if it were deflated, as if the body of Jesus simply disappeared from being. This is where the details of Lazarus’ resurrection become important.


If Jesus simply rose from the dead, he would have been still wrapped in his burial linens the way Lazarus was. The women who came to anoint Jesus on Sunday morning would have found him wrapped snug as a bug in a rug and would have to had freed our risen Lord. But that is not what was found.


The details we are given in scripture would indicate that the bloody and bruised body of our crucified Lord was transformed into his glorified body when he returned from the dead. His earthly body became no more when he took on his glorified body.


There are many who believe that the Shroud of Turin is the actual burial cloth spoken about in scripture. I am one of these people. The more science honestly studies the shroud the more it appears to be the genuine article. The image on the shroud is believed to be a 3D hologram of a man that fits the description of what Christ would have looked like when wrapped in his burial cloth. It is a photo negative just like the negatives we used to develop pictures from before the age of the cell phone camera. Scientists cannot explain how the image on the shroud was created and the best scientific guess right now is that the image was created by a blast of intense light that burned the image on the upper parts of the fibers that make up the cloth.


For those with unshakable faith, signs and wonders are not needed. For those without faith there is not a sign or wonder good enough to remove doubt. For those of us somewhere in the middle, we are given signs and wonders so that we may come to believe and have our faith grow.


My heart is full because the tomb is empty.