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It's comforting to know that He shares all of those emotions with us. Joy in our joy, happiness in our happiness
"Now compassion is an emotional identification, and Christ had that in full perfection. The man who has this wound of compassion is a man who suffers along with other people. Jesus Christ our Lord can never suffer to save us any more. This He did, once for all, when He gave Himself without spot through the Holy Ghost to the Father on Calvary's cross. He cannot suffer to save us but He still must suffer to win us. He does not call His people to redemptive suffering. That's impossible; it could not be. Redemption is a finished work. But He does call His people to feel along with Him and to feel along with those that rejoice and those that suffer. He calls His people to be to Him the kind of an earthly body in which He can weep again and suffer again and love again. For our Lord has two bodies. One is the body He took to the tree on Calvary; that was the body in which He suffered to redeem us. But He has a body on earth now, composed of those who have been baptized into it by the Holy Ghost at conversion. In that body He would now suffer to win men. Paul said that he was glad that he could suffer for the Colossians and fill up the measure of the afflictions of Christ in his body for the church's sake."Man - The Dwelling Place of God by A. W. Tozer, chapter 25
I agree with Tammy that Jesus never doubted. Even from a young age He left His parents to go teach in the synagogue. He was born with the Holy Spirit, knowing who He was.
I don't see His being sad over their lack of faith the same as being sad over their sorrow. Yes, He knew they'd believe. But even we believe and yet...do we believe enough that we never have a doubt, enough to see signs and wonders in His name? I can see Him being saddened knowing we lack faith enough in what He can do that we will not be able to see all that He could have for us if we would just believe enough.
On the other hand, part may have been empathy in what I was saying about my crying because others were. He may have wept because they wept. But I doubt He wept because Lazarus was physically dead.
Tammy had mentioned how we love our children and don't want to see them hurting. But isn't there a measure of joy in knowing the pain they feel from something now is going to have a better outcome? Say your child falls and breaks their leg and needs x-rays. You would feel bad because your child is hurting. But if you knew ahead of time that a broken leg would prompt the x-ray that would show a tumor that had it been there a week longer would have cost them their leg, wouldn't you be joyful?
I think that He cried more so because He knew what they could have with faith and because He felt their pain, but not because He missed His friend or was hurting over Lazarus' physical death.
Yes, He was compassionate and felt their "pain", but the way some state it is that He was sad because His friend was dead, not because Mary, Martha and others were sad over the death, but because He was sad that His friend was dead. But why be sad over something you knew was going to be wonderful? If you cry with someone who is hurting over a loss, it isn't the same as crying for the loss itself. You cry because that person hurts or is crying. Add to that, that if they'd known what He did, they would have been rejoicing instead that news of this miracle was going to make many believers. And He was sorrowful that they didn't know this or have faith in it. Sorrowful that they were hurting and knowing they wouldn't need to be if they had enough faith to believe.
Jesus became man. He was moved to tears by the great sadness and grief of the situation.
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