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The account of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead is found in the Gospel of John, chapter 11.
The responses were fear, praise and fame first in Luke 7.16,17 when he raised the young man at Nain. When Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, (John 11), the responses were, faith in Jesus from those who believed in him and anger at Jesus and a desire to kill him and Lazarus from the Pharisees.
the book of John
Bethany was the "certain village" that Jesus visited during his later Judean ministry. Bethany was the location of Martha, Mary, and Lazarus. And it was here were Jesus performed the miracle of Lazarus's resurrection.
From Bethany near Jerusalem comes news that Lazarus, brother of Mary and Martha, is ill. By the time Jesus arrives there, Lazarus is dead and already four days in the tomb. Jesus performs the stupendous miracle of recalling Lazarus to life, causing many to put faith in Jesus.
Lazarus was raised from the dead by Jesus. He was a brother of Mary and Martha, living in Bethany. Found in John, chapter 11. Jesus spoke of another Lazarus, who was poor, sitting and begging at the gate of a rich man's home. This beggar died and went to "Abraham's bosom," a way of saying that he went to paradise. The rich man, who didn't care about the needs of the poor beggar, also died, but went to Hell, where he was in torments. Found in Luke 16:19-31.
Jesus did many miracles like healing the ten lepers,turning water into wine, raising Lazarus from the dead. The list can go on.
Matt. 28:1-8, Mk 16:1-8; Lk 24:1-10; Jn 20:1-8
There is no record of Lazarus betraying Jesus in the Bible. In fact, Lazarus was a close friend of Jesus whom he raised from the dead. Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve disciples, is the one known for betraying Jesus by identifying him to the chief priests for thirty pieces of silver.
A:This miracle is in John's Gospel only and the gospel does not say, although it does say that the priests talked about having Lazarus killed (John 12:10). Presuambly they would not have done so because he had become so famous among the Jews and his resurrection was in this gospel the trigger for the arrest and crucifixion of Jesus (John 12:19): "The Pharisees therefore said among themselves, Perceive ye how ye prevail nothing? behold, the world is gone after him. " In spite of this, no contemporary account ever mentions Lazarus and no other gospel author seems to have known of the miracle of raising Lazarus. The nearest parallel we have to the miracle of the resurrection of Lazarus is a parable in Luke's Gospel, which tells of Lazarus hypothetically raised from the dead. John's story has so many parallels to this parable (and even includes the sisters Mary and Martha) that it could be regarded as based on it, in which case Lazarus was not really a historical person, was never raised from the dead and did not live afterwards.
Lazarus was Jesus friend whom he loved and Jesus raised him from the dead while he was in the cave and lazarus walked out.