desire of silencing those who violently denied the
divine mission of Jesus, carried his enthusiastic
friends beyond all bounds. It may be that Lazarus,
still pallid with disease, caused himself to be wrapped
in bandages as if dead, and shut up in the tomb of
his family. These tombs were large vaults cut
in the rock, and were entered by a square opening,
closed by an enormous stone. Martha and Mary
went to meet Jesus, and without allowing him to enter
Bethany, conducted him to the cave. The emotion
which Jesus experienced at the tomb of his friend,
whom he believed to be dead,[3] might be taken by
those present for the agitation and trembling[4] which
accompanied miracles. Popular opinion required
that the divine virtue should manifest itself in man
as an epileptic and convulsive principle. Jesus
(if we follow the above hypothesis) desired to see
once more him whom he had loved; and, the stone being
removed, Lazarus came forth in his bandages, his head
covered with a winding-sheet. This reappearance
would naturally be regarded by every one as a resurrection.
Faith knows no other law than the interest of that
which it believes to be true. Regarding the object
which it pursues as absolutely holy, it makes no scruple
of invoking bad arguments in support of its thesis
when good ones do not succeed. If such and such
a proof be not sound many others are! If such
and such a wonder be not real, many others have been!
Being intimately persuaded that Jesus was a thaumaturgus,
Lazarus and his two sisters may have aided in the
execution of one of his miracles, just as many pious
men who, convinced of the truth of their religion,
have sought to triumph over the obstinacy of their
opponents by means of whose weakness they were well
aware. The state of their conscience was that
of the stigmatists, of the convulsionists, of the
possessed ones in convents, drawn, by the influence
of the world in which they live, and by their own
belief, into feigned acts. As to Jesus, he was
no more able than St. Bernard or St. Francis d’Assisi
to moderate the avidity for the marvellous, displayed
by the multitude, and even by his own disciples.
Death, moreover, in a few days would restore him his
divine liberty, and release him from the fatal necessities
of a position which each day became more exacting,
and more difficult to sustain.
[Footnote 1: Matt. ix. 18, and following; Mark v. 22, and following; Luke vii. 11, and following, viii. 41, and following.]
[Footnote 2: John xi. 3, and following.]
[Footnote 3: John xi. 35, and following.]
[Footnote 4: John xi. 33, 38.]