WEEKLY DEVOtionals

walk around alive

Pastor Frank Park | Founding and Senior Pastor

John 11:45 - 12:11

There is something undeniable about a resurrected life.

In John 11, Lazarus walks out of a tomb after four days dead. No debate. No spin. No theological argument could explain it away. A man who was dead is now alive.

And then John 12 tells us something remarkable: people didn’t just come to see Jesus Christ, they came to see Lazarus.
“They came… not only on account of Jesus but also to see Lazarus… and because of him many were believing in Jesus.”

Let that land.
Lazarus never preached a sermon.
He never wrote a scroll.
He didn’t start a ministry or build a platform.
All Lazarus did was walk around alive.
And it was enough.

A Life That Can’t Be Argued With
The religious leaders didn’t know what to do with it. They couldn’t refute Lazarus, so they plotted to kill him too.

Why?
Because a resurrected life is dangerous evidence.
You can argue theology.
You can debate doctrine.
You can dismiss opinions.
But it’s hard to argue with a life that was dead and is now undeniably alive.

A man once bound in grave clothes is now sitting at the table. That kind of transformation preaches louder than words ever could.

You Are the Evidence
If you are in Christ, you are Lazarus.
You were dead in sin.
Dead in your thinking.
Dead in your affections.
And then Jesus called your name.
And now you’re alive.

You don’t need a stage to make Jesus known.
You don’t need a microphone or a following.
You just need to live like someone who was raised from the dead.
Walk in freedom where there used to be chains.
Walk in peace where there used to be anxiety.
Walk in holiness where there used to be compromise.
Walk in joy where there used to be emptiness.

That kind of life makes people curious.
That kind of life draws a crowd.
That kind of life points to Jesus.
That kind of life will also provoke opposition.

The Quiet Power of Being Alive
Lazarus didn’t say anything, but his life said everything. And your life is preaching a sermon every single day.

The question is:
Does it look like resurrection?

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