+ 5th Sunday in Lent – March 22nd, 2026 +
Series A: Ezekiel 37:1-14; Roans 8:1-11; John 11
Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church
Milton, WA

In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
There’s a way we want our stories to go. The guy gets the girl. Good conquers evil. The bad guys are brought to justice. A perfect ending. And they all lived happily ever after.
And yet, rarely in this life do our stories seem to be written this way. Not a straight line from sorrow to joy but a death march. A dirge. A lament. A cry in the dark. Hot, stinging tears of shame and sadness.
Grim reality creeps in. Death is a tick burrowing into our skin. A termite digging into our rafters and floor boards. A cancer spreading its ugliness to every cell in the body. A serpent whose venom hits the bloodstream instantly. Too often it seems that our story is over before it begins.
Death gets the last word. Death writes the last chapter of our story and it’s not a happy ending. No happily ever after. Death is, to us at least, an unassailable, unconquerable, undefeated enemy.
And we’re not alone in this. Death surrounds our Scripture readings today.
Israel is in a valley of dry, dusty, dead, lifeless bones. They have become like their idols: lifeless. Helpless. A boneyard. A necropolis where Death is mayor.
Paul proclaims that we were in our own valley of tombs as well. The body is dead in sin. The mind set on the flesh is hostile to God. And hell bent on death.
Lazarus is dead. Four days in the grave, stone-cold, stinking dead. Lazarus cannot heal himself. Fix his own problems. Or raise himself from the dead.
It seems that death wins. Death has the last word. The final curtain call. The last laugh.
Our stories follow a similar path. Lent began this way. In the dust. In the ashes. In the grave. Remember that you are dust and to dust you shall return.
We walk this life surrounded by death. Outflanked by the enemy at every turn. Death on the news. Death on our city streets. Death in our communities. Death on display in our phones and social media feeds. Death in our hearts and minds and words. The wages of sin is death. All our stories seem to begin and end in death.
With Mary and Martha we grieve the brokenness of this fallen world. Lord, if you had been here.
We ask God the question that he asked of Ezekiel. Can these bones live? Can these bones, plagued by illness, can this mind poisoned by despair and anxieties, can this body that aches and groans with early onset death live? Can these bones that cry out with grief and shame jump for joy again? Can these bones that have lost a friend, lost a spouse, lost a baby ever live again? Can my bones live?
It would seem that we’re all Lazarus. Try as we might we cannot fix ourselves. We cannot heal ourselves. We cannot make ourselves righteous. We cannot raise ourselves from the dead.
For us, as for Lazarus and Mary and Martha, for Ezekiel and St. Paul, it appears that there’s nothing we can do in the face of death. We’re defeated. Defenseless.
But when Death encounters Jesus. When Jesus comes before Death at the tomb of Lazarus, Death is a coward. Defenseless. Defeated. An enemy that is overcome. In Christ, death is squashed. Exterminated. Crushed and stomped under foot.
In Christ, Death, the unassailable, unconquerable, undefeated enemy meets its match. Jesus charges Death head on, in hand to hand, and nail to hand, and thorns to head, and nail to feet combat. And Jesus comes out of the grave victorious.
Jesus conquers the unconquerable. We are liberated by him who lays down his life for us. Jesus defeats death by taking the paths of the dead for us.
Our story begins in the grave with Lazarus. In the valley of dry bones with Israel. In our dead in sin flesh. But that’s not where it ends.
Resurrection happens for us in the same way it happens for Israel, in Romans, and for Lazarus. By the voice of Jesus. Jesus speaks and destroys death with a word.
Jesus weeps. Stands by the tomb of Lazarus. Take away the stone. I AM the resurrection and the life. For Lazarus. For Mary and Martha. And for you. Lazarus, come out. And he does. He lives. And in Christ, so do you. In his cross and death and resurrection. There is one true, happily ever after ending.
Thus says the Lord God: Behold, I will open your graves and raise you from your graves, O my people.
For the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ Jesus from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit who dwells in you.
For Lazarus and for you, Death does not get the last word. Jesus does. Our stories, which begin with death, end in life. Even in death, you are not alone. Christ has gone before you. Is for you. And goes with you.
Jesus writes the end of our story. The last chapter. The last laugh of joy and resurrection over sin and death. It’s written in sacred ink, signed and sealed by his holy blood and solemn promise:
“I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die forever.
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.


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