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Called by Name
- 02/01/10
- 10
This morning my devotions took me to the final chapters of John (which, to those who know the reading plan I’m using this year, is an admission that I’m a few days behind). We find such poignant little stories in these chapters, stories like Peter and John running to the empty tomb, Thomas falling on his face before the risen Lord, Jesus restoring Peter after his three denials. There is one story among them, though, that I love most of all.
Mary Magdalene has come to Jesus’ tomb and is distressed to see that his body is gone, the stone rolled away. Convinced that someone has taken away his body, she stands outside the tomb weeping. Two angels appear within and ask simply “Woman, why are you weeping?” She replies, “They have taken away my Lord, and I do not know where they have laid him.” The words carry with them the pain of her loss. Not only has she lost her Lord, but even his body has been taken away. She is lost and alone.
Then she turns and sees someone else. She does not recognize Him, though it is the very one she seeks. Somehow her eyes are closed so she cannot see who it is. This man says “Woman, why are you weeping? Whom are you seeking?” She supposes he must be the gardener and says, “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have laid him, and I will take him away.” She wants the body back, needs the body back, and begs that this man might return it to her.
But then, in an instant, her eyes are opened. Jesus, as he had called Lazarus out from the tomb, calls to her. He says but one word. “Mary.” It’s one of the best sentences in all of the Bible. At at that very instant she knows. At that very instant she sees and knows and understands that the One she seeks is standing right there behind her. He is alive! He has risen! She turns and cries out “Rabboni!” (which means teacher). I wonder, does she scream this word, run to him, and throw her arms around his neck? Perhaps she can do little more than call out in a whisper as she falls at his feet. We don’t know. But we do know that she clings to Jesus, overwhelmed with his presence, overwhelmed to know that he is alive. She sees and hears and believes. She knows now that Jesus is alive.
As I read these words, I think of the way Jesus called me and the way he has called countless numbers of men and women to himself. Like Mary I was once unable to see Jesus for who he is. I saw a man who may as well have been a gardener. He was a good man, a moral man, and maybe even a great man. But he was just a man. Only when Jesus called me by name was I able to see that him as the God-man. Only then was I able to see him as the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. Only then did I really and truly know him. And only then were my eyes opened so I could see and my ears unstopped so I could hear and my heart renewed so I could believe. Like Mary, he called me by name.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (10)
I loved your description of the moment Mary recognized Jesus. I lived most of my life thinking I knew Him. Like you, it changed everything when I came to know who He truly is.
Nice. Thanks. It’s hard to believe our Lord would call me by name. Does He really say, “Donald.” Or did He say my name to the Father, and perhaps the Father says our names to the Son.
After reading your post, I went and skimmed the four gospels and the different aspects they each give us of Jesus’ ressurection, and it is difficult to put them all together.
Seems there were three women at the tomb, maybe four, and they went to Peter, and Peter went to the tomb with Mary. Then as Peter and john left, Mary was the only one there, and then met the Lord. And yet the other women, or perhaps only the other Mary, were there when Jesus called to Mary. And they fell at His feet and must have grabbed His feet, and even perhaps saw His wounds.
Would be nice to put all four Gosples together in sequence.
When Jesus just calls my name, I instantly know what I’m supposed to do! It’s uncanny. It’s almost like he knows me or something!
DavidRed Letter Believers blog - “Salt and Light”http://www.redletterbelivers.com
This post is a reminder of when Jesus called my name, many years ago. I wasn’t even aware of my need, I didn’t know I needed to be reconciled to a loving Heavenly Father and be saved from the wrath to come, but God knew. I praise and thank Him every day He called my name.
That line, “Mary,” seems somewhat reminiscent of the final line in George Herbert’s poem, The Collar:
But as I rav’d and grew more fierce and wildeAt every word,Me thoughts I heard one calling, Childe:And I reply’d, My Lord.
That’s really all it takes, just one simple word and we’re quickened.
Thanks for this.
It’s simply amazing that he knows each of his own by name!
Mary may have wanted to hug Jesus, but we know that was not possible. John 20:17: Jesus said to her, “Do not cling to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father; but go to y my brothers and say to them, ‘I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to a my God and your God.’”
It’s simply amazing that he knows each of his own by name!
Mary may have wanted to hug Jesus, but we know that was not possible. John 20:17: Jesus said to her, “Do not cling to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father; but go to my brothers and say to them, ‘I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.’”
I don’t think John’s line, “supposing him to be the gardener” was incidental. In the sense that Jesus is the new Adam, He *is* the Gardener.
And to think that Mary Magdalene was a woman, had 7 demons cast out of her and was the first one Christ chose to appear to after the resurrection is an overwhelming affirmation of the Savior’s great mercy and love for me too! I’m so thankful he called my name 38 yrs ago. Thanks for this heart warming post!
From a layperson’s POV, it’s many times difficult to understand how powerful people’s emotions were or how strongly they reacted to Jesus, His teachings, His miracles, etc. I like the way Ken Davis explains how he thinks the disciples reacted when Jesus performed miracles they just could not comprehend. He explains it in an amusing yet revealing way (if you haven’t heard or seen Ken Davis’ presentations I urge you to check them out).