Jesus Wept

There are at least two references in the Bible to Jesus weeping. We’re quite familiar with the first, the shortest verse in the Bible:

Jesus wept. (John 11:35 NASB)

Does anyone know where to find the second reference?

Nestled within the events surrounding the triumphal entry of Jesus into Jerusalem we find the second reference. The people, in response to the entrance of Jesus, are shouting Hosannas, praises to the king. The Pharisees, the self-appointed praise monitors, demanded that Jesus silence those who were praising him. Rather than stifle their praise, Jesus informs the praise police that if his followers were to remain silent the rocks would cry out in praise.

Look what happens next:

And when He approached, He saw the city and wept over it, (Luke 19:41 NASB)

Why did Jesus weep? Why did he cry?

The first instance, the familiar instance, we find Jesus crying over the death of his friend Lazarus. Though we could also understand that the tears of Jesus may have come as a result of the unbelief of some and the belief of others.

The second instance, perhaps not so well known, we find Jesus crying because the people of Jerusalem had failed to recognize the graceful activity of God.

I wish you knew today what would bring you peace. But now it is hidden from you. The time is coming when your enemies will build a wall around you and will hold you in on all sides. They will destroy you and all your people, and not one stone will be left on another. All this will happen because you did not recognize the time when God came to save you. (Luke 19:42-44 NCV)

Jesus wept because the people did not recognize what would bring them peace.

Jesus wept because the people did not recognize the stubbornness and unbelief that would destroy them.

Jesus wept because the people did not recognize that their sins consumed them.

Jesus wept because the people did not recognize that God came to save them.

Do you remember what the people said of Jesus when they say him weeping for his friend Lazarus?

So the Jews said, “See how much he loved him.” (John 11:36 NCV)

Would not the tears of Jesus for the people of Jerusalem had also conveyed his great love?

You know I have to ask the question. Does the sinful condition of the cities in which we live, and our love for the people in our city, actually cause us to weep?

I’m not saying if you haven’t shed tears over your city you don’t care. I am saying that we often criticize and condemn the sin in our cities without the care and compassion of Christ.

How do we begin to move beyond condemnation to compassion? How do we develop the attitude and actions of Jesus in response to the condition of our cities?

Stand on your front porch in the morning as you go out the door - take a moment and look at those who live around you - pray for them.

Look at the people who ride the metro with you into or out of the city – take a moment and pray for them.

Look out into your cubicle, look at the people who work in your building and pray for them.

Look out your office window down onto the city block - take a moment and pray for the people you see.

Walking to lunch look at the people around you - in the mall, in the cafeteria, in the restaurants - pray for them.

Driving around on your route, driving back and forth, observe all posted traffic signs and pray for the people you see.

Jesus probably still weeps for our cities. He cries for those who have not yet found peace. He cries for those who have failed to recognize that God wants to save them.

Every once in a while we could use a good cry.

June 9, 2005 • Posted in: Blog Thoughts

3 Responses to “Jesus Wept”

  1. meowmix - June 9th, 2005

    I appreciate your thoughts on this………we can’t care too much. Oh, to have a heart like His!

  2. Thurman8er - June 9th, 2005

    There is one other reference to the tears of our Lord. I think that it, too, speaks volumes.

    Hebrews 5:7–”During His earthly life, He offered prayers and appeals, with loud cries and tears, to the One who was able to save Him from death, and He was heard because of His reverence.”

    This is a tough one. In context, it comes in reference to Jesus’ place as high priest AND as son of God. But it does not seem to be a repeat of the times he prayed on behalf of the lost. If so, I think the writer would have referred to God as “the One able to save THEM from death.” No, it reads as though Jesus’ shed tears over his own coming demise.

    That actually bothers me not one bit. It goes even further in humanizing Jesus, in helping me to understand that he truly did (does) know precisely what I’m going through.

    It is also profoundly important to notice that God heard his prayers. Just as He hears ours. And He chose to say NO. And I have little doubt that He shed tears of His own in having to say so.

  3. Ebyboy - June 12th, 2005

    I have always wondered how Jesus felt realizing that the great sacrifice he was making meant less to his earthly kith and kin among whom he toiled for three years than it would mean for others did not have the priviledge of physical proximity.

    His tears was an expression of how he felt.

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