Catholic Daily Reflections

The Fifth Sunday of Lent (Year A) - Jesus’ Human and Divine Love

6 snips
Mar 21, 2026
Reflection on Jesus’ visceral reaction to Lazarus’ death and the Greek words that reveal his deep emotion. A look at death as a consequence of sin and why that might provoke righteous indignation. Exploration of the shortest verse, Jesus’ silent tears, contrasted with loud ritual mourning. An invitation to ponder how Christ’s human sorrow connects us to his divine sympathy.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Jesus' Visceral Reaction To Death

  • Jesus' emotional reaction to Lazarus shows genuine human disturbance rather than theatrical mourning.
  • The Greek embrimaomai implies a visceral, even indignant response, suggesting Jesus was moved by death as a consequence of sin.
INSIGHT

Righteous Indignation At Death

  • Jesus' anger may have been directed at death itself as an effect of sin rather than at people present.
  • From a divine perspective he knew death wasn't part of the Father's plan, provoking righteous indignation.
INSIGHT

Silent Tears Versus Loud Wailing

  • Jesus wept in a quiet, intimate way that differs from communal loud mourning described in the passage.
  • The Greek words contrast edakrysen (silent tears) with klaio (loud wailing), showing personal compassionate grief.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app