the Dead
How many people were raised from the dead in the
Bible?
The Bible records several accounts of resurrection.
The Bible records several accounts of resurrection.
Every time a
person is raised from the dead, it is a stupendous miracle, showing that the
God who is Himself the Source of Life has the ability to give life to whom He
will - even after death.
The following people were raised from the dead in
the Bible:
The son of the widow of Zarephath (1 Kings 17:17–24).
Elijah the prophet raised the widow of Zarephath’s son from the dead.
Elijah was
staying in an upper room of the widow’s house during a severe drought in the
land. While he was there, the widow’s son became ill and died.
In her grief,
the woman brought the body of her son to Elijah with the assumption that his
presence in her household had brought about the death of her boy as a judgment
on her past sin.
Elijah took the dead boy from her arms, went to the upper
room, and prayed, “Lord my God, let this boy’s life return to him!” (verse 21).
Elijah stretched himself out on the boy three times as he
prayed, and “the Lord heard Elijah’s cry, and the boy’s life returned to him, and
he lived” (verse 22).
The prophet brought the boy to his mother, who was filled
with faith in the power of God through Elijah: “Now I know that you are a man of
God and that the word of the Lord from your mouth is the truth” (verse 24).
The Shunammite woman’s son (2 Kings 4:18–37).
The prophet
Elisha raised the Shunammite woman’s son from the dead.
Elisha
regularly stayed in Shunem in an upper room prepared for him by this woman and
her husband.
One day, while
Elisha was at Mount Carmel, the couple’s young son died. The woman carried the
body of her son to Elisha’s room and laid it on the bed (verse 21).
Then, without
even telling her husband the news, she departed for Carmel to find Elisha (verses
22–25).
When she found
Elisha, she pleaded with him to come to Shunem. Elisha sent his servant,
Gehazi, ahead of them with instructions to lay Elisha’s staff on the boy’s face
(verse 31).
As soon as
Elisha and the Shunammite woman arrived
back home, Elisha went to the upper room, shut the door, and prayed.
Then he
stretched out on top of the boy’s body, and the body began to warm (verse 34).
Elisha arose,
walked about the room, and stretched himself out on the body again. The boy
then sneezed seven times and awoke from death (verse 35).
Elisha then
delivered the boy, alive again, to his grateful mother (verses
36–37).
The man raised out of Elisha’s grave (2 Kings 13:20–21).
Elisha is
connected with another resurrection that occurred after his death.
Sometime after
Elisha had died and was buried, some men were burying another body in the same
area.
The grave
diggers saw a band of Moabite raiders approaching, and, rather than risk an
encounter with the Moabites, they threw the man’s body into Elisha’s grave.
Scripture records that, “when the body touched Elisha’s bones, the
man came to life and stood up on his feet” (verse 21).
The son of the widow of Nain (Luke 7:11–17).
This is the
first of the resurrections that Jesus performed.
As the Lord
approached the town of Nain, He met a funeral procession leaving the city. In
the coffin was a young man, the only son of a widow.
When Jesus saw the procession, “his heart went out to [the
woman] and he said, ‘Don’t cry’” (verse 13).
Jesus came close and touched the coffin and spoke to the dead
man: “Young
man, I say to you, get up!” (verse 14).
Obeying the divine order, “the dead man sat up and began to talk”
(verse 15).
And thus Jesus turned the funeral into a praise and worship
service: “God has come to help his people,” the people said (verse 16).
Jairus’ daughter (Luke 8:52–56).
Jesus also
showed His power over death by raising the young daughter of Jairus, a
synagogue leader.
The Lord was
surrounded by crowds when Jairus came to Him, begging Him to visit his house
and heal his dying twelve-year-old daughter (verses 41–42).
Jesus began to
follow Jarius home, but on the way a member of Jarius’ household approached
them with the sad news that Jairus’ daughter had died.
Jesus turned to Jarius with words of hope: “Don’t
be afraid; just believe, and she will be healed” (verse 50).
Upon arriving at Jarius’ house, Jesus took the
girl’s parents, Peter, James, and John and entered the room where the body lay.
There, “he took her by the hand and said, ‘My
child, get up!’ Her spirit returned, and at once she stood up” (verses
54–55).
Jesus and His
disciples then left the resurrected girl with her astonished parents.
Lazarus of Bethany (John 11).
The third
person that Jesus raised from the dead was His friend Lazarus.
Word had come
to Jesus that Lazarus was ill, but Jesus did not go to Bethany to heal him.
Instead, He told His disciples, “This sickness will not end in
death. No, it is for God’s glory so that God’s Son may be glorified through it”
(verse 4).
A couple days later, Jesus told His disciples that Lazarus
had died, but He promised a resurrection: “I am going there to wake him up” (verse 11).
When Jesus reached Bethany, four days after Lazarus’ death,
Lazarus’ grieving sisters both greeted Jesus with the same words: “Lord,
if you had been here, my brother would not have died” (verses 21 and
32).
Jesus, speaking to Martha, promised to raise Lazarus from the
dead (verse 23) and proclaimed Himself to be
“the
resurrection and the life” (verse 25).
Jesus asked to see the grave. When He got to the place, He
commanded the stone to be rolled away from the tomb (verse 39), and He prayed (verses 41–42) and “called
in a loud voice, ‘Lazarus, come out!’” (verse 43).
Just as Jesus had promised, “the dead man came out” (verse 44).
The result of this miracle was that God was glorified and “many
of the Jews who had come to visit Mary, and had seen what Jesus did, believed
in him” (verse 45).
Others,
however, refused to believe in Jesus and plotted to destroy both Jesus and
Lazarus (John 11:53; 12:10).
Various saints in Jerusalem (Matthew 27:50–53).
The Bible
mentions some resurrections that
occurred en masse at the resurrection
of Christ.
When Jesus died, “the earth shook, the rocks split and the
tombs broke open” (verses 51–52).
Those open tombs remained open until the third day. At that
time, “the bodies of many holy people . . . were raised to life. They came
out of the tombs after Jesus’ resurrection and went into the holy city and
appeared to many people” (verses 52–53).
On the day
that Jesus was raised to life, these saints were also raised and became
witnesses in Jerusalem of the life that only Jesus can give.
Tabitha (Acts 9:36–43).
Tabitha, whose
Greek name was Dorcas, was a believer who lived in the coastal city of Joppa.
Her resurrection was performed by the apostle Peter.
Dorcas was known for “always doing good and helping the poor”
(verse 36).
When she died,
the believers in Joppa were filled with sadness.
They laid the
body in an upper room and sent for Peter, who was in the nearby town of Lydda (verses
37–38).
Peter came at
once and met with the disciples in Joppa, who showed him the clothing that
Dorcas had made for the widows there (verse 39).
Peter sent them all out of the room and prayed. Then “turning
toward the dead woman, he said, ‘Tabitha, get up.’ She opened her eyes, and
seeing Peter she sat up. He took her by the hand and helped her to her feet”
(verses
40–41).
The overjoyed believers received their resurrected friend,
and the news spread quickly throughout the city. “Many people believed in the
Lord” as a result (verse 42).
Eutychus (Acts 20:7–12).
Eutychus was a young
man who lived (and died and lived again) in Troas. He was raised from the dead
by the apostle Paul.
The believers
in Troas were gathered in an upper room to hear the apostle speak. Since Paul
was leaving town the next day, he spoke late into the night.
One of his
audience members was Eutychus, who sat in a window and, unfortunately, fell
asleep. Eutychus slipped out of the window and fell three stories to his death (verse 9).
Paul went down and “threw himself on the young man and put his
arms around him” (verse 10).
Eutychus came
back to life, went upstairs, and ate a meal with the others.
When the meeting finally broke up at daylight, “the
people took the young man home alive and were greatly comforted” (verse 12).
Jesus (Mark 16:1–8).
Of course, any
list of resurrections in the Bible must include the resurrection of Jesus
Christ.
His death and
resurrection are the focal point of Scripture and the most important events in
the history of the world.
The
resurrection of Jesus is different from the Bible’s other resurrections in a
very notable way: Jesus’ resurrection is the first “permanent” resurrection;
all the other resurrections in the Bible were “temporary” in that those raised
to life died again.
Lazarus died
twice; Jesus rose, nevermore to die.
In this way, He is “the firstfruits of those who have fallen
asleep” (1 Corinthians 15:20).
Jesus’
resurrection justifies us (Romans 4:25).
And ensures our eternal life: “Because I live, you also will
live” (John 14:19).
https://www.gotquestions.org/raised-from-the-dead.html
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lyrics
They all walked away, nothing
to say
They'd just lost their dearest friend
All that He said, now He was dead
So this was the way it would end
They'd just lost their dearest friend
All that He said, now He was dead
So this was the way it would end
The dreams they had dreamed
were not what they'd seemed
Now that He was dead and gone
The garden, the jail, the hammer, the nail
How could a night be so long?
Now that He was dead and gone
The garden, the jail, the hammer, the nail
How could a night be so long?
Then came the morning
Night turned into day
The stone was rolled away
Hope rose with the dawn
Night turned into day
The stone was rolled away
Hope rose with the dawn
Then came the morning
Shadows vanished before the sun
Death had lost and life had won
For morning had come
Shadows vanished before the sun
Death had lost and life had won
For morning had come
The angel, the star, the kings
from afar
The wedding, the water, the wine
Now it was done, they'd taken her Son
Wasted before His time
The wedding, the water, the wine
Now it was done, they'd taken her Son
Wasted before His time
She knew it was true, she'd
watched Him die too
She'd heard them call Him just a man
But deep in her heart she knew from the start
Somehow her Son would live again
She'd heard them call Him just a man
But deep in her heart she knew from the start
Somehow her Son would live again
Then came the morning
Shadows vanished before the sun
Death had lost and life had won
For morning had come
Shadows vanished before the sun
Death had lost and life had won
For morning had come
Then came the morning
Shadows vanished before the sun
Death had lost and life had won
For morning had come
For morning had come
Shadows vanished before the sun
Death had lost and life had won
For morning had come
For morning had come
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