No. The truly dead person, if truly dead, is dead. Case closed. The Frankenstein monster was the exception and that, if I remember correctly was fictional. Isn't education wonderful?
Elijah after raising the son of the widow of Zarephath.
The main characters are Elijah, the widow, the widow's son and God
This encounter took place at the gates of a city called Nain. See Luke 7:11-17.
Most famously, Lazarus. Eventually, everyone. In addition, a widow's son, and the 12-year-old daughter of a temple official called Jairus.
One Jewish tradition says that Jonah was the son of the widow of Zarephath whom Elijah raised from the dead (1 Kings 17:8-24).
The widow believed the promise of God through Elijah that she would have sufficient food and not starve to death if she shared her remaining food with the prophet. Elijah had said to her (1 Kings 17:14-16): 14For thus saith the LORD God of Israel, The barrel of meal shall not waste, neither shall the cruse of oil fail, until the day that the LORD sendeth rain upon the earth.15And she went and did according to the saying of Elijah: and she, and he, and her house, did eat many days. 16And the barrel of meal wasted not, neither did the cruse of oil fail, according to the word of the LORD, which he spake by Elijah. She also showed faith by believing that God had used Elijah to raise her son back to life.
The first resurrection recorded in the Bible was the one performed by the prophet Elijah in 1 Kings 17:17-24. The prophet brought back to life the son of a widow living in Zerephath.
She was a widow of great faith in Almighty God, who sent Elijah to go to Zarephath and stay there. This was during a great famine. When Elijah asked her for water, she supplied him with water. But when he asked her for bread, she replied that she had no bread, only a handful of flour and a little oil. But she then made him a small portion. By her display of faith and hospitality to Elijah, God made sure that her large jar of flour did not run out and that her oil jar was never empty. This lasted for quite a while, as long as Elijah stayed with her. Later, her only son became sick and died. Elijah called on God and the boy was raised from the dead. This account is covered in 1 Kings, chapter 17.
Elisha- raised the widow's son from the dead as Jesus did for Lazarus.
Luke 7:10-17 tells of Jesus entering Nain at the city gate, when he saw a grieving widow accompanying her dead son being carried out. Jesus had compassion on the widow and touched the coffin, calling on the son to rise up, and he delivered him to his mother.Scholars say there are too many parallels between this account and a similar account in 1 Kings, in which Elijah raised the widow's son from the dead. They conclude that the account of Jesus in Nain was inspired by the story of Elijah, in which case Jesus did not really raise the young man from the dead, and probably did not even visit Nain. Some parallels between the two narratives:Both stories mention the “city gate” (1 Kings 17:10; Luke 7:12)Both stories concern raising the dead son of a widow (1 Kings 17:10,21-2; Luke 7:12)Both stories use the same introductory phrase, “And it came to pass” (1 Kings 17:17; Luke 7:11)Both stories use the phrase,“delivered him to his mother” (1 Kings 17:23; Luke 7:15)As a result of these miracles, Elijah and Jesus were both declared to be prophets (1 Kings 17:24; Luke 7:16)Rex Weyler says in The Jesus Sayings that the evidence that Luke copies from the earlier story is confirmed because no wall or city gate appears in the archaeological record of Nain, which was only a small village in Galilee, and villages did not have defensive walls and city gates. He says the author was unfamiliar with Galilee and simply unaware of this.
Cher and Greg Allman had a son named Elijah Blue.
Some notable Bible characters who were raised from the dead include Lazarus, as recorded in the Gospel of John, the daughter of Jairus as mentioned in the Gospels of Mark, Matthew, and Luke, and the son of the widow of Zarephath whom Prophet Elijah raised from the dead in the Old Testament.