
Lazarus, the friend of Jesus, the brother of Martha and Mary, was the one of whom the Jews
said, "See how much he loved him." In their sight Jesus raised his friend Lazarus from the
dead.
Legends abound about the life of Lazarus after the death and resurrection of Jesus. He is
supposed to have left a written account of what he saw in the next world before he was called back
to life. Some say he followed Peter into Syria. Another story is that despite being put into a
leaking boat by the Jews at Jaffa, he, his sisters and others landed safely in Cyprus. There he died
peacefully after serving as bishop for 30 years.
A church was built in his honor in Constantinople and some of his reputed
relics were transferred there in 890. A Western legend has the oarless boat arriving in Gaul. There
he was bishop of Marseilles, was martyred after making a number of converts and was buried in a
cave. His relics were transferred to the new cathedral in Autun in 1146.
It is certain there was
early devotion to the saint. Around the year 390, the pilgrim lady Etheria talks of the procession
that took place on the Saturday before Palm Sunday at the tomb where Lazarus had been raised from
the dead. In the West, Passion Sunday was called Dominica de Lazaro, and Augustine tells us that in
Africa the Gospel of the raising of Lazarus was read at the office of Palm Sunday.
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