the Second Week after Easter
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Filipino Cebuano Bible
Juan 11:35
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from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
John 11:33, Genesis 43:30, Job 30:25, Psalms 35:13-15, Psalms 119:136, Isaiah 53:3, Isaiah 63:9, Jeremiah 9:1, Jeremiah 13:17, Jeremiah 14:17, Lamentations 1:16, Luke 19:11, Luke 19:41, Romans 9:2, Romans 9:3, Hebrews 2:16, Hebrews 2:17, Hebrews 4:15
Reciprocal: Genesis 23:2 - mourn Genesis 50:1 - wept 2 Kings 8:11 - wept Psalms 88:9 - Mine Mark 7:34 - he sighed Luke 6:21 - ye that weep John 11:15 - I am glad John 13:21 - he was Philippians 2:26 - ye had Hebrews 5:7 - tears
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Jesus wept. As he was going along to the grave, see
John 11:28; as he was meditating upon the state of his friend Lazarus, the distress his two sisters were in, and the greater damnation that would befall the Jews then present, who, notwithstanding the miracle, would not believe in him. This shows him to be truly and really man, subject to like passions, only without sin.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Jesus wept - It has been remarked that this is the shortest verse in the Bible; but it is exceedingly important and tender. It shows the Lord Jesus as a friend, a tender friend, and evinces his character as a man. And from this we learn:
- That the most tender personal friendship is not inconsistent with the most pure religion. Piety binds stronger the ties of friendship, makes more tender the emotions of love, and seals and sanctifies the affections of friends.
- It is right, it is natural, it is indispensable for the Christian to sympathize with others in their afflictions. Romans 12:15; “rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep.”
- Sorrow at the death of friends is not improper. It is right to weep. It is the expression of nature and religion does not forbid or condemn it. All that religion does in the case is to temper and chasten our grief; to teach us to mourn with submission to God; to weep without complaining, and to seek to banish tears, not by hardening the heart or forgetting the friend, but by bringing the soul, made tender by grief, to receive the sweet influences of religion, and to find calmness and peace in the God of all consolation.
- We have here an instance of the tenderness of the character of Jesus, The same Savior wept over Jerusalem, and felt deeply for poor dying, sinners. To the same tender and compassionate Saviour Christians may now come Hebrews 4:15; and to him the penitent sinner may also come, knowing that he will not cast him away.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse 35. Jesus wept. — The least verse in the Bible, yet inferior to none. Some of the ruthless ancients, improperly styled fathers of the Church, thought that weeping was a degradation of the character of Christ; and therefore, according to the testimony of Epiphanius, Anchorat. c. 13, razed out of the Gospel of St. Luke the place (Luke 19:41) where Christ is said to have wept over Jerusalem.