RECEIVING NEW MEMBERS
We will be receiving New Members in January at our 30@6 Saturday evening service, and/or our 10:00 a.m. Sunday morning Traditional Service.
If you are interested in becoming a member of our beloved church, please contact the church office at 412-264-0470, extension 10, or speak with Pastor Rebecca.
SATURDAY at 6:00 p.m. ~~~ "30@6" - A Casual 30-minute Service in our Social Hall
SUNDAY at 10:00 a.m. ~~~ A Traditional Service in our Sanctuary
To everyone who has faith or needs it, who lives in hope or would gladly do so, whose character is glorified by the love of God or marred by the love of self; to those who pray and those who do not, who mourn and are weary or who rejoice and are strong; to everyone, in the name of Him who was lifted up to draw all people unto Himself, this Church offers a door of entry and a place of worship, saying ‘Welcome Home’!
Sunday Worship will be at 10am beginning January 4, 2026
John 11:1–45
Opening
One of the hardest things to live with
is the feeling that God has arrived too late.
That if things had gone just a little differently—
if help had come just a little sooner—
things might not have ended the way they did.
And that is exactly where this story begins.
“Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.”
It is a statement of faith.
And it is a statement of grief.
All at once.
We know what that feels like.
When timing doesn’t line up the way we hoped.
When help comes—but not soon enough.
When answers to prayers feel like they arrive… just a little too late.
And we’re left holding both things at once:
trust… and disappointment.
We are feeling some of that even now.
We had hoped Pastor Rebecca would have a quicker recovery.
We know that she is healing—
and that is something to be grateful for.
But it is not happening as quickly as we wanted.
And certainly not as quickly as she would want either.
And in moments like that, it can feel like our prayers
have been answered—
just not in the timing we had hoped for.
Which doesn’t mean faith is absent.
It means faith is still trying to make sense
of what is unfolding.
Entering the Story
Martha and Mary are not questioning Jesus’ power.
They believe in him.
They trust that he could have done something.
But underneath that trust is an assumption:
That Jesus’ role is to prevent death.
That if he had arrived sooner, this could have been avoided.
And that is where the tension in this story begins.
Because Jesus does not come to Bethany in time to prevent death.
He comes after.
And what he reveals is not about avoiding death altogether—
but about something deeper.
About what it means to be alive in relationship with God—
even in the presence of death.
Because it is one thing to believe that God can fix what is broken.
It is another thing to trust that God is present
even when what is broken is not fixed.
The people in this story are still hoping for the first.
Jesus is revealing the second.
Clarifying Resurrection (Theological Grounding)
When Martha speaks with Jesus, she says something faithful and familiar:
She believes her brother will rise again—
on the last day.
That is a real and meaningful hope—
a belief that God will, in the end,
restore life fully.
But Jesus shifts the ground beneath that belief.
“I am the resurrection and the life.”
Not I will be.
Not someday.
“I am.”
He is not dismissing her hope—
he is expanding it.
Because in John’s Gospel, resurrection is not only something that happens in the future.
It is something that is already breaking into the present
in relationship with Jesus.
As the Wisdom Commentary on John 11–21 puts it, resurrection here is not just an event to wait for—it is a reality revealed in encountering Christ, who embodies God’s life now.
And this is consistent with how our tradition speaks about life with God:
We are not only promised life after death—
we are drawn into life with God even now,
a life that death cannot ultimately interrupt.
(See Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) theology on union with Christ and eternal life.)
Resurrection is not only a future event.
It is a present reality
embodied in him.
Jesus is revealing a life
that is already present—
already unfolding in relationship with God.
And still, it cannot yet be seen.
They are surrounded by loss.
They are speaking from grief.
They are holding on to what has been taken from them.
And maybe that is what makes this moment so heavy.
That life is already present—
and still, it cannot yet be recognized.
And it is right there, in that space,
that Jesus weeps.
Not to correct them.
Not to argue with them.
But to be with them.
To stand in the space
where grief and misunderstanding meet.
To share in what they are carrying—
even as he reveals something
they cannot yet see.
Jesus Weeps
Jesus weeps.
Not because he is powerless.
Not because he does not know what he is about to do.
But because the people he loves
cannot yet see what he is revealing.
They believe in resurrection—
but they cannot yet recognize
that resurrection is standing in front of them.
There is a distance
between who Jesus is
and what they are able to understand.
And that distance is filled with grief.
The Complication (Lean Into It)
When Lazarus walks out of the tomb,
this should resolve everything.
But it doesn’t.
Some believe.
Some are afraid.
Some go to the religious authorities hoping for guidance.
The raising of Lazarus does not create unity.
It creates division.
Which is unsettling.
Because we might expect that something this clear—
something this powerful—
would remove all doubt.
But it doesn’t.
Because faith is not forced,
even by miracles.
In the verses that follow,
this moment becomes the turning point
that leads to the decision to kill Jesus.
As the Wisdom Commentary notes, this sign does not produce universal faith; instead, it exposes the fault lines already present—fear, power, control, and misunderstanding.
Even the religious leaders interpret what has happened through the lens of survival:
“It is better for one man to die
than for the whole nation to be destroyed.”
Which, in a way they do not fully understand,
becomes true.
Life breaks into the world—
and it unsettles everything.
Lazarus — A Sign, Not the End
And Lazarus himself—
He is called back.
Back into a life that will again include grief,
loss, and eventually death.
This is not the fulfillment of resurrection.
It is a sign pointing beyond itself.
Which matters—because it reminds us:
Jesus is not simply here to resuscitate life as it was.
He is revealing a life
that death itself cannot undo.
Mary — Subtle Thread
John tells this story in a curious way.
He introduces Mary as if we already know her—
as if her story, her faith, runs deeper
than what we can immediately see.
And maybe that’s part of what’s happening here too—
That there is always more depth,
more faith,
more struggle
than what appears on the surface.
Eternal Life — Bringing It Home
So what is Jesus actually revealing here?
Not that death will never come.
Not that faith prevents loss.
But that life with God
is not interrupted by death.
Eternal life is not something that begins after we die.
It begins in relationship with God—now.
And:
Eternal life is not about escaping death.
It is about living so deeply in God
that even death cannot separate us from that life.
This is not always easy to recognize.
Because we are still looking for the moment
when everything is fixed,
everything is clear,
everything is resolved.
And instead—
Jesus stands in the midst of grief,
in the presence of death,
in a world that does not fully understand him—
and says:
Life is here.
Ending
So maybe the invitation is not just to believe in resurrection someday.
Maybe it is to begin recognizing life—now.
In the midst of grief.
In the presence of uncertainty.
This does not mean everything suddenly makes sense.
It does not mean grief disappears.
But it does mean that even here—
life is not absent.
To trust that life with God is already unfolding—
even here.
Because life with God is not something that begins after death.
It is something we are drawn into even now—
in Christ, who is one with God from the beginning.
A life that death cannot undo.
A life we are still learning to recognize.