It's one thing to believe in Jesus and to believe in eternal life – but there are people walking around who believe that stuff, yet somehow they're not quite living the life that He promised us for here and now.
You know, I reckon if there is a God, I mean if God is God then he is going to want us to live life to the full. I mean outrageously, abundantly to the full. Not a two out of ten, not a seven out of ten, a minimum of ten out of ten and then some. That doesn't mean there won't be ups and downs, there always will be. But I don't know, my hunch is he'd want us to live a life of outrageous joy right here through the ups and the downs.
But I know so many people, people who believe in Jesus and people who don't, who seem to be living a two or a five or a seven out of ten kind of life always with this nagging sense of destiny that there's something more for them but never really get in close to that. Me? I want to be the 'me' I was meant to be, how about you?
And yet there's an amazing portrait of that kind of half-life, not really complete life, in the Bible. Yesterday we looked at the story of Lazarus, that he was dying, he was a good mate of Jesus, they came to tell Jesus "Lazarus is about to kick to bucket." And Jesus waits a few days before he goes to Lazarus. And do you know what everyone says when he gets there? "Jesus, how come you didn't get here sooner? You could have healed him." I mean they'd seen Jesus do healing stuff.
It's a bit like us, we look at Jesus sometimes and God and we look at the mess we have in life and we say, "God, how can you dish this up to me? Why didn't you come earlier? You could have made it better".
Jesus said to the people, "You know something, I'm glad I didn't get there because God is about to make a point and to do something you don't expect". Everyone wanted Jesus to have fixed the problem before Lazarus died but Jesus said to his disciples, "Lazarus is dead and for your sake I'm glad I wasn't there so that you might believe. Come on, let's go to him." So no-one could see it.
Jesus was saying it to Martha, his sister. He said, "Your brother will rise again." And Martha said, "I know he'll rise in the resurrection on the last day." So she doesn't get it, she's happy to believe in "pie in the sky when you die" not "steak on the plate while you wait". Let's pick up the story and just read the story, if you have a Bible you can go to it, it's John chapter 11 and it begins at verse 38:
Jesus was deeply moved when he came to the tomb. It was a cave with a stone laid across the entrance. "Take away the stone" he said. "But Lord," said Martha the sister of Lazarus, "By this time there's a bad odour, I mean he's been dead for four days." And Jesus said, "Didn't I tell you that if you believed you would see the glory of God."
I love that, "If you believed you would see the glory of God."
So they took away the stone and then Jesus looked up and said, "Father I thank You that you heard me, I always knew that You would but I'm saying this for the benefit of the people around me, they might believe that You sent me." And when he said this Jesus said in a loud voice, "Lazarus come on out!" The dead man came out. His hands and feet were wrapped with strips of linen and a cloth was around his face and Jesus said to them, "Take off the grave clothes and let him go."
Jesus was deeply moved. I mean, he loved Lazarus, He cared for him. He was a good mate. He wept for him. So it's not some publicity stunt but it's a tender encounter and people were thinking, 'well, what's Jesus doing? He can't do this I mean Lazarus is dead, Lazarus is on the nose'. I reckon we have to be careful about telling God what He can't do, about putting God in this little box. Imagining somehow that he could never bring Lazarus back to life, imagining somehow he could never really bring life back into us.
You see all these people, Martha, Mary, the disciples, all the others, they'd seen Jesus do amazing miracles, they knew him. Yet they didn't believe that he could bring a man to life. But he did.
But look at the picture of Lazarus when he walks out of the tomb. "Lazarus, come out" said Jesus. "The dead man came out, his hands and feet wrapped with strips of linen and a cloth around his face." You see, Lazarus was bound up in his grave clothes and this is a picture that looks like a lot of people that I know, living this half-life. On the one hand, Jesus has spoken a word of life into them, on the other they're still bound up in their grave clothes, bound up in the things of the past.
When Lazarus walked out of that tomb, beneath those grave clothes he was living and breathing, there was colour in his cheeks but he couldn't go living the rest of his life in those grave clothes and the same is true for us. Some people have life from Jesus and yet they have one foot in the past, in that dead half-life that didn't work, one foot in Jesus' new life kind of hoping things will work out and they never quite do it.
You know something, there's a reason for that, you can't live your life wrapped in grave clothes. Let me say that again, you can't live your life wrapped in grave clothes. If we believe in Jesus we're like Lazarus, we have colour in our cheeks, he's breathed life into our souls yet people want to hang on to the things of the past, it just doesn't work.
What sort of life do you think it would have been for Lazarus if he had continued on in those grave clothes? And anyway that wasn't Jesus' plan for him, look at what Jesus says. Jesus said to them, "Take off the grave clothes and let him go." You like that last bit? "Let him go. Set him free; set him free to be the Lazarus I meant him to be."
Being the "me" I was meant to be is a "boots and all thing". "Oh, you know Berni but I want to hang on to this compromise or that attitude, I still want to cheat or lie or be tight with my money or not serve other people and I want to be selfish because you know, all this Jesus stuff is not particularly convenient". Great! Great, stay in your grave clothes but don't expect to be the me you were meant to be because you can't be.
The alternative is to set our hearts like flint on being the "me" we were meant to be no matter the cost. You know there is a cost? There is a cost for a heroin addict to give up heroin, there is a cost for an alcoholic to give up alcohol, there is a cost for a smoker to give up smoking.
The first step is admitting where we are and the second step is deciding, here and now, "you know something, that joker on the radio has a point, I have to do something. I can't live my life in these grave clothes anymore and you know our grave clothes are all different."
For some people, it might be lying and cheating, for other people it might be gossiping, for other people it might just be an attitude of selfishness. You look in the mirror and you know what it is.
If you want to be the "me" you were meant to be, you've gotta do what Jesus said. Take off the grave clothes 'cause that's what sets you free. And Jesus is the one who does that. We can come to him and say, "Lord, I just heard this message and you know something? I've got some grave clothes happening in my life, I've got one foot back in that half-life and I recognise that and I don't know what to do about it and I want you to help me".
That's the starting point. That invitation for Jesus is when he steps in and He starts taking control and He deals with the things we can't deal with. Sometimes we have to make tough decisions and sometimes we have to ditch some things to get on with life. The choice belongs to each one of us.