Bethany - The Lord's Thought For His Assembly
Table of
Contents
1. The Lord Recognized
And Received
2. His Heart's
Satisfaction
3. Adjusted Service
4. Precious Ointment
Poured Forth
5. The Power Of His Resurrection
6. Celebrating His
Victory
7. Outward And Upward
Bethany - The Lord's Thought For His Assembly
by T. Austin-Sparks
The
upper room of the first chapter of the Acts corresponds with Bethany, the
"house of figs", and Bethany with the upper room. We are going to
take up that thought and, as the Lord helps us, follow it out to greater
fullness. What is before us is the Lord's desire to have at the end what He had
at the beginning - to have in His people, spiritually, that which He Himself
constituted by His own presence at the beginning: and if I were asked to put
into a word what I feel the object of the Lord to be, I should say, speaking
symbolically, that it is 'Bethanies'. For Bethany, to
my mind, most fully corresponds to the Lord's thought: He would have things on
the basis of Bethany, constituted according to Bethany, and have His universal
Church represented locally by 'Bethanies'. Now I am
going to ask you to look at seven passages where Bethany is mentioned.
THE LORD RECOGNISED AND RECEIVED
Luke
10:38. "Now it came to
pass, as they went, that he entered into a certain village(do not forget that villages
represent local assemblies): and
a certain woman named Martha received him into her house. (You know whose the house was now, who was the head of that
house.) And she had a sister
called Mary, which also sat at Jesus' feet, and heard his word. But Martha was
cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and said..."
Now here, in this first mention of Bethany, we have one or two things which in
principle represent that Church, and that assembly, and that house, which the
Lord has His heart set upon, and I fasten at once upon one word: "And a
certain woman named Marthareceived him into her house." The word
"received" is the key-word to this whole thing, and it represents
immediately a great difference. It is a discriminating word, a differentiating
word.
One remembers that it was said concerning His coming from glory to this earth:
"He came unto his own, and his own received him not" (John 1:11). We
shall remember that He said of Himself: "The foxes have holes, and the
birds of the heaven have nests; but the Son of man hath not where to lay his
head" (Luke 9:58). And if it really did break upon us with anything like
its real meaning, when we reflect as to who it is of
whom the first is said, and who is saying the second, it would leave us
astonished. Here is the Creator of all, the Proprietor of all, the Lord of
heaven and of earth; the Lord who has greater right to everything and anything
than any other being in the universe; the Lord, for whom and through whom all
things were made - and He came and had not where to lay His head in the world
of His creation, in the realm of all His sovereign rights. He was not received,
but, as truly expressing the attitude even of His own kinsfolk to Him, He represented
them as saying: "This is the heir; come, let us kill him, and take his
inheritance. And they took him, and cast him forth..." (Matthew 21:38,39).
But here we read: "And a
certain woman named Martha received him..." "My church" - "My church" - His assembly, His
spiritual house, is the place where He is gladly received and finds His rest.
It is His place, His place in a world which rejects Him; it
is the place where He is recognised. Do you notice
that when assemblies are being scattered over the face of the earth it is
always that which is the beginning of an assembly?
They "receive" the word. Pentecost was that: "Then they that received his
word..." (Acts 2:41). At Philippi, "a
certain woman named Lydia... whose heart the Lord opened, to give heed unto the
things which were spoken by Paul. And when she was baptized, and her household,
she besought us, saying, If ye have judged me to be faithful to the Lord, come
into my house, and abide there" (Acts
16:14,15). That is the beginning of the assembly - it is like that everywhere.
It is a spiritual perception issuing in an open-hearted reception. That is the
first thing which befeatures His Church:
"received". It is the giving Him a place, the place of honour.
Now that is very simple, but it represents much to the Lord, and it carries us
a long way, because it represents something more than the Lord coming just to
be a sojourner in the midst. It represents that the Lord has got a footing, a
foothold, a place which provides Him with that which is necessary to Him to
secure all His rights universally. Let me illustrate.
You remember the tragic story in II Samuel 15, of the rejection of David in the
usurping of Absalom. It is a pathetic story - David driven away from his place;
leaving, passing out of, the realm of his rights. One and another accompany
him, and Zadok the priest brings the ark of God with
him, but David turns to Zadok and says: "Carry
back the ark of God into the city: if I shall find favour
in the eyes of the Lord, he will bring me again, and show me both it, and his
habitation" (vs.25). The inference is: 'When I come back, I shall have in
the city, in the place of my rejection, that which is sympathetic with me, to
which I can come back. I shall not come back a stranger; I shall not come back
to nothing; I shall not come back to find no place; I
shall not come back and find there is no home for me: I shall come back to
something that is one with me. Zadok, you are one
with me; yes, you wanted to come out with me - this is a perfect sympathy. Now
go back into the city, and when I come back I shall come back to something that
is with me'
And that is the principle here. The assembly here
provides the Lord with that in which He is now, by His Spirit. It declares that
He has a foothold in a rejecting world, and He is coming back to that. He will have something to
come back to which is on His side and which, being on His side, will provide
Him with the ground for re-establishing His universal rights, just as Zadok did for David.
And that is why the Lord would have His Church here in assemblies, local
assemblies, over the face of the earth. They are testimonies to His rights, in
a world where those rights are disputed and disowned; and they stand there to
say: 'Yes, His rights are the supreme rights in this world, not the rights of
the usurper', and they maintain that testimony. When He comes back, they are to
be the means, the instrument, of His recovery of those rights which have been
disputed and from which He has been driven out. There is a good deal bound up
with receiving the Lord. He is coming back to His own because He is already
there in possession.
You understand why the Devil is always out to destroy, if possible, the local
expression of the Church; to destroy the little companies of the Lord's people
who are living in heavenly union and fellowship with Him. It is because they
represent His rights - the Lord's rights - and they are there all the time
disputing by their very presence the rights of the usurper. The ark of the
testimony is there; and while that is there, on the side of the Lord, the
usurper has not universal sway. He knows that it represents that his kingdom is
defeated, is menaced, and it is a constant thorn in his side. And so, if
possible, he will quench it, break it, divide it, do anything to get rid of
that local expression which is according to Christ and in which He is. That is
what the Church ought to be as locally represented; that is what every believer
ought to be here on earth: a foothold to the Lord in this earth, a testimony to
His sovereign lordship and right. To receive the Lord provides Him with such a
foothold and such a testimony.
And so we see that the very first step as related to Bethany is of the greatest
significance. It represents a principle of tremendous importance. The Church is
constituted, to begin with, upon the simple principle that Christ has found a place:
amidst all the range of rejection He has found a place.
HIS HEART'S SATISFACTION
Now
we continue with the passage: "...
received him into her house. And she had a sister called Mary, which also sat
at Jesus' feet, and heard his word." Literally
the words are: "who also took her seat at the feet of Jesus and went on
listening to His word." "Took her seat at His feet and went on
listening." It was that which irritated Martha: she went on listening. What Martha really said to
the Lord was in the same tense, the imperfect. When she came to the Lord she
said: "Dost thou not care
that my sister doth KEEP ON LEAVING me to serve alone?" "Keep on leaving me" -
because she "kept on listening"!
What is this? Well, it is that which provides the Lord with what He most
desires. It is the heart satisfaction of the Lord that is represented by this.
The heart satisfaction of the Lord was found in what Mary did. It is here that
we understand the meaning of Bethany. You go over to Matthew 21, and you will
find the story of the fig tree. Jesus is moving between Jerusalem and Bethany;
He has been into Jerusalem and has seen things in the temple, and His heart has
been pained, shot through with the agony of disappointment. He has looked round
upon all things, and has said nothing, and has gone back to Bethany. In the
morning, as He is in the way, being hungry and seeing a fig tree, He comes up
to it, to see whether perhaps it is bearing fruit. But He finds none, and says,
"Let no fruit grow on thee henceforward for ever";
and as they return, the disciples mark that the fig tree is withered and dead;
they point out the fact.
Now that fig tree, as we know, was bound up with Jerusalem, and was a type of
Judaism as it then was. The heart disappointment which the Lord had met in the
temple was one with His heart disappointment in coming hungry to the fig tree
and finding no fruit; the two things are one. That order of things, then,
passes out of His realm of interest; Judaism goes out for the rest of the age -
"Let no fruit grow on thee henceforward forever" (Gr. "unto the
age"). It cannot satisfy Him, and it goes; it is a withered tree providing
the Lord with nothing.
But when that heart disappointment is felt so acutely, and registered in that
way by Him, He goes to Bethany, and Bethany means "the house of
figs". Not in the temple, and not in Jerusalem, does the Lord find His
satisfaction, but in Bethany. That is why He was always going there. Heart
satisfaction for Him now was not in the cold, lifeless, formal religious system
of the day, but in the living, throbbing, warm atmosphere of the Bethany home.
He always knew that, while His words were rejected in Jerusalem, they would be
accepted there, and listened to eagerly, and there would always be someone who
would 'keep on' listening.
I am impressed with Acts 2; it says that after Pentecost those who believed
"continued stedfastly in the apostles'
teaching" (vs.42). You see, there the Church came in, and that is its
feature: "they continued stedfastly in the
apostles' teaching." We are so used to those words that they do not seem
to convey very much to us. Will you bear with a simple practical way of seeking
to apply it?
In these pages certain things are being said. Now you will read them, and you
will go your way, and perhaps you will remember them for a certain length of
time; perhaps for a long time you will remember Bethany. Mention of Bethany
will bring back something - certain things that you have read. You may speak of
this message as a more or less good one, an interesting message, or something
like that. What a difference between that and your going away and 'continuing stedfastly in the teaching'! You must yourself interpret
this, and say to yourself: 'Now what does it mean for me to continue stedfastly in that?'
The word really is 'persisting'. "They persisted in the apostles' teaching". There
is all the difference between persisting in the teaching, and going away and
saying: 'Well, that was a very nice message'. 'Persisting' represents the
practical, positive application of the heart to the truth,
and that constitutes His Church; it is where that which comes from Him is
received and the whole heart, the whole life, is given to it. There is abandonment to it.
And that was probably what Martha did not like. Mary was abandoned to it, she
was given to it; and that is what the Lord is seeking. I wonder what would be
the result if we took that attitude toward every word of Divine truth that came
to us. When I think of the mountains of truth that have been built up, I cannot
help asking the question: 'What is the percentage of real application to that
truth on the part of those who hear it?' It was because those at the beginning
took such a practical attitude toward the things which they heard, and
persisted in them, that you had the effectiveness there. They did not go away
and say: 'What a wonderful sermon Peter preached today!' No, they persisted in
the apostles' teaching.
That is what the Lord wants. That is what satisfies His heart. Mary took her
seat at His feet and went on listening to His word, and that satisfied His
heart when all else disappointed Him. Heart satisfaction must be a feature of
the life of the Lord's people; and heart satisfaction to Him is just this, that we hang upon His word, we appraise it rightly, we
regard it as the supreme thing. The assembly must be the "house of
figs" for the Lord.
ADJUSTED SERVICE
Next
let us look at Martha. "But
Martha was cumbered about much serving, and came to him, and said..." The Greek is very strong: it means
that she walked up to Him and involved Him in this. It implies that she
regarded Him as responsible, and if she had said all that was in her mind, she
would have said: 'You are responsible for this, You
are involved in this, and it is up to You to put it right.' That is what is
implied by the original words here - regarding Him as the one involved in it,
and He could if He would, and He ought to, put it right. It implies that she
burst out. She had been bottling this thing up, and at last, able to contain it
no longer, she went up to Him and burst out: "Lord,
dost thou not care that my sister hath left me to serve alone? Bid her
therefore that she help me."
Now I want you to get the force of the situation, and it will help you with
Martha. We must understand Martha's mood and position. "Cumbered about
much serving" hardly conveys to us what really was the situation. We get
from the translation an altogether imperfect impression, I think, of exactly
how things were. The Greek word here is a word which means "was
distracted", "pulled in different directions". Probably her
anxiety showed in her face. And what was the anxiety over? Many household cares,
perhaps many dishes; preoccupations of all kinds. And the Lord said to Martha:
'Martha, you are bothered about all sorts of secondary considerations; you have
got more than you can handle. There is but one thing that is really necessary
-'.
You are beginning to understand the situation now, are you not? It was simply
that there was necessary an adjustment of things on
the part of Martha, so that what was most important should have its place. It
was not that the Lord was out of sympathy with Martha's providing them with a meal,
but He saw that she was causing this meal business to become such an elaborate
and extensive thing as to be altogether out of proportion, and to put the more
essential things into a place much less than the non-essential.
Yes, a meal may be right, but oh, let us put things in their right proportion.
Let us see to it that temporal things do not overwhelm spiritual. Do not let us
become so anxious and distracted about the passing things that the spiritual
things are eclipsed. For the one thing which ought to be made to keep all the
other things in their right places - they are all right in their places - is
the thing which comes from the lips of the Lord.
You see, it is a matter of proportion, it is a matter
of where you are placing the most emphasis. It is a matter of whether you are
allowing the things of this life so to absorb, and to occupy, and to draw you
round with anxiety, that the greater things are not getting a chance. And we
all agree now, we have no more quarrel with the Master
over Mary, when we see it like that. What was necessary was that there should
be an adjustment of things: so that, while these other matters had a place, and
a right place, they were in their place and in their own measure;
whilst the supreme things were allowed to predominate and were not submerged in
those lesser matters which, after all, are not the abiding things.
Now, that was the whole situation. In the House of God, the thing that matters
more than all our business, all our feverish activities to do a thousand and
one things of Christian work - the one thing that matters is getting to know
the Lord, and giving the Lord a chance to make Himself known. Feverish
activities so often, in what is called 'the church', exclude the voice of the
Lord, shut Him out; it is all what we are doing, and so little of what He is
getting a chance to say. The place that satisfies Him is the place of
adjustment to the supreme things.
Well, that is Martha.
PRECIOUS OINTMENT POURED FORTH
Now
we turn for the fourth thing to Matthew 26:6-13. It is the same village, and
now the woman with her "alabaster
cruse of exceeding precious ointment". The incident speaks to us in
the first instance of the recognition of the worth of the Lord Jesus. The recognition of the worth of the Lord Jesus. All who
looked on, as good as said: 'He is not worth it'; that is what it amounted to.
'He is not worth it.' Of course they would not have put it like that. She recognised His worth - that He was
worth the 'exceeding preciousness'. It was the exceeding preciousness of Christ
that was in view here, as something recognised. That,
I think, is the main feature. It is a feature of Bethany, it is a feature of
the upper room, it is a feature of "My
church". It is a feature of the Lord's assembly,
it is a feature of the people who are after His own heart: the recognition of
His exceeding preciousness, His exceeding worth; that there is nothing too
costly to lay at His feet. "Unto
you therefore which believe he is precious (is the preciousness)" (1 Pet. 2:7).
Now, that is very simple, and yet again it is a thing that draws forth the deep
appreciation of the Lord Jesus. It is again a thing which gives feature to a
very much beloved village. In other words it is a thing which makes His
assembly of great value to Him, that there His worth is recognised,
and He is appreciated and appraised at His true value. That must mark the house
of the Lord. It is a feature that must be developed more and more. It is a thing to which we must attend, that we have a ready and an ever-growing
recognition of the preciousness and worth of the Lord Jesus. Oh, how different
this is from the merely formal church system! We can hardly say that the
outstanding feature of that is a true heart-appreciation of the worth and of
the value of the Lord Jesus. Where that appreciation is, you have the assembly;
where it is not, whatever else you may have of ornate and elaborate
presentation, you have not got the assembly, it is not
the place of His delight.
I think I see something else here. The brokenness of the cruse brings out into
expression the preciousness of the ointment. It is the 'vessel of fragile clay'
which, being broken, makes possible the manifestation and expression of the
glories of Christ. While that cruse is whole, strong, and sound in itself,
something which you would look at and take account of in itself; something that
would cause you to say: 'That is a beautiful vase, that is a wonderful piece of
alabaster'; - you are not getting at the secret. We may take account of men, as
splendid intellects, splendid men, wonderful preachers and so on - be occupied
with the vase, the cruse - and the other be sealed, be hidden; but when the
cruse is broken, shattered, then you get at the tabernacle secret of the glory
of Christ.
You see it in Paul. I suppose Saul of Tarsus was a wonderful bit of alabaster
intellectually, morally, religiously. He tells us that he was; he tells us all
that he was, all that he gloried in and that men looked at and no doubt
praised; but he was smashed and it is no longer Saul, and it is no longer Paul,
but it is the beauty and glory of Christ. The fragrance of Christ comes out
when the cruse is broken.
And, beloved, it is just like that in our experience. The Church, the true
Church, has been allowed to be shattered, and shattered again, and the members
individually are so often allowed to be broken and broken again; but has it not
proved through history that, for the Church and for the individual, the
breaking, the shattering, the smashing, has brought about an expression of the
glories of Christ in a wonderful way? It is just like that. We go through a new
experience of being broken - we put it in other ways sometimes and say we are
being brought more deeply into the death of Christ, coming into a fresh
experience of the Cross: however we may put it, it means breaking, it means the
breaking of the cruse - but believe me, beloved, it means a fuller expression
and knowledge of the glory of Christ, and it will bring us to a new
appreciation of Him. We shall discover Him in the time of our brokenness. And
in the same way the Church passes through the way of the Cross, but comes by
the breaking to the worth of the Lord Jesus.
THE POWER OF HIS RESURRECTION
We
pass to John and the well-known chapter 11. Here is Bethany again in view, and
this time it is the raising of Lazarus which comes before us. We will not go
through the whole story and take its details, but simply come swiftly to its
one conclusion at the end. Bethany, in this instance, becomes the scene, the
sphere, of the manifestation of resurrection power, resurrection life. There
are many other things here. There is a wonderful expression of love; there is a
wonderful expression of fellowship here in this chapter. Far away from Bethany
the Lord said to His disciples: "Our
friend Lazarus is fallen asleep". "Our friend"; not "My friend", but "our
friend". You see, it is fellowship."Now
Jesus loved Martha, and her sister, and Lazarus." It is love. All these are features of
Bethany; but the outstanding feature here is the manifestation of His
resurrection, the power of His resurrection, resurrection life.
And here again Bethany is an illustration of the Church that He is building. We
know this from Ephesians, the 'Church Epistle', as we call it. We very soon
come to our being "quickened... together with Christ" (Eph. 2:5). The
Church is the vessel in which the power of His resurrection is displayed; and
here again we not only testify to the fact, to the doctrine, but we have to
apply the test, that the assembly according to the mind of the Lord is that in
which His resurrection power and life are displayed.
Now, I know, when things like that are said, so often there is that vacant
feeling that remains: 'Yes, we know it ought to be so, just as we ought to be
crucified with Christ; we know we ought to be risen with Christ, and it is
quite true that we ought to know the power of His resurrection, and His
resurrection life'. That is said again and again, but we leave it there. The
point is: how is it to be?
Now, we have to recognise that the Lord has brought
His Church into being for the specific purpose of displaying the power of His
resurrection, and we should dedicate ourselves unto the Lord for that very end.
That is the way: in recognising that the object, the
very object of our being in that Church, of that Body, is that He might display
in us His resurrection power and life. We, recognising
that, have a definite understanding with our Lord that we are consecrated to
Him; now our responsibility ends there, if it is from our hearts, and the Lord
will begin His work.
We shall not be able to raise ourselves any more than we can crucify ourselves,
but we must recognise that the Lord's dealings with
us are with that in view. In order to display the power of His resurrection, He
will very often have to take the attitude toward us of letting things get well
beyond all human power to remedy or save, of allowing things to go so far that
there is no other power in all the universe that can do anything whatever to
save the situation. He will allow death, disintegration, to work, so that
nothing, nothing in the universe is of any avail, except the power of His
resurrection.
We shall come to the place where Abraham came, who became the great type of
faith which moved right into resurrection: "He considered his own body now
as good as dead" (Rom. 4:19). That is the phrase used by the apostle about
Abraham: "as good as dead". And Paul came into that: "We had the
sentence of death in ourselves, that we should not
trust in ourselves, but in God which raiseth the
dead" (2 Cor. 1:9). Whatever else men may be able to do in the realm of
creation, they stop short when death has actually taken place; they can do no
more. Resurrection is God's act, and God's alone. Men
can do very many things when they have got life, but when there is no life it
is only God who can do anything. And God will allow His Church and its members oft-times to get into such situations as are
altogether beyond human help, in order that He may give the display, which is
His own display, in which no man has any place to glory.
So said the Lord Jesus: "This
sickness is not unto death, but for THE GLORY OF GOD, that the Son of God might
be glorified thereby." Glorified!
We have dedicated ourselves to that course of things - that is, we have
dedicated ourselves to a line of human despair; but how slow we are to accept
it in its outworking. When things get to a desperate situation, we kick so much
and think that all has gone wrong. It may be just going right for the Lord! Oh,
yes, it is desperate; that consideration does not take away from the
desperateness of it, the awfulness of it; but if it is going to provide the
Lord with His supreme opportunity to raise His pre-eminent testimony, then it
is right - that is, it will be right in its issue.
When at last, in eternity, we read the story of the Church, which is His Body,
and see all that it really did come through, we shall have to confess that no
human institution, no man-made thing, could have survived, could have gone
through that which the saints went through. When it is understood in the light
of eternity and appraised by true spiritual standards, we shall say that none
but God Almighty could have achieved that, could have brought it through: that
it has undoubtedly become the vehicle of the expression of "the exceeding
greatness of his power" (Eph. 1.19); and that is to say a great deal. If
"the exceeding greatness of his power" is necessary to this, well,
that says much for what we have to be brought out of, doesn't it? If "the
weakness of God is stronger than men" (1 Cor. 1:25), what must "the
exceeding greatness of his power" represent?
Well, that is in resurrection; as you know, the words are connected with that:
"the exceeding greatness of his power to us-ward who believe, according to
that working of the strength of his might which he wrought in Christ, when he
raised him from the dead" (Eph. 1:19,20). That is "to us-ward who believe". Now the Church, the Bethany testimony, is to
be a testimony to the power of His resurrection, and if His methods with us are
making that necessary, then let us take encouragement and comfort from the fact
that we are thus to be a true expression of what He desires of His Church.
CELEBRATING HIS VICTORY
We
pass from chapter 11 of John to chapter 12. "Jesus
therefore six days before the passover came to
Bethany, where Lazarus was, whom Jesus raised from the dead. So they made him a
supper there: and Martha served" (evidently
she had not gathered, from the Lord's words to her, that service was wrong; she
is still serving - it is all right now); "but
Lazarus was one of them that sat at meat with him. Mary therefore took a pound
of ointment of spikenard, very precious, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and
wiped his feet with her hair; and the house was filled with the odour of the ointment."
Here we have the feast, and the feast has several elements. One, represented by
Mary and her action, speaks of worship. Once again, it is the appreciation of
Christ that is in view. That is worship. Worship - according to God's thought -
is always simply the appreciation of the Lord Jesus; bringing up before God the
sweet odour of a heart-appreciation of His Son. That
may sound simple, but worship in its purest essence is what we think of the
Lord Jesus, expressed to the Father. That is worship. The assembly is for that.
Bethany speaks of that.
Martha - yes, Martha served. But it is adjusted service. She is still serving,
but it is all right; there is no rebuke now. There is no circling round of her
face with anxiety now; she is not drawn around with care: she is serving in a
resurrection house. Here is adjusted service, and service in the Lord's house
is quite according to His mind when the service is in fellowship with, and in
right proportion to, the worship. There is an adjustment between the sisters
now, you see. They were disjointed before, because things were ill-proportioned
and out of place; now the adjustment has been made and they are just getting on
constantly together. It is adjusted service.
Lazarus sat at meat, and of course he is the principle of life, resurrection
life. That, again, is a mark of the Lord's spiritual house. So we have worship,
adjusted service, resurrection life.
Yes, but there is always some sinister thing not far away: "Why was not
this ointment sold for three hundred pence, and given to the poor?" When
you get the assembly just as the Lord wants it you will always find that the
Devil is lurking very near. That may be a compliment to the assembly, for
anything that the Devil does not cast his eye on jealously will surely not be
that which is satisfying the heart of the Lord. But it is always like that.
Just begin to get something that is according to the Lord's heart, and you find
a sinister thing begin to circle round with a view to destroying that worship,
to divert that appreciation of the Lord. It becomes a feature of the very
assembly itself, that the Devil jealously casts his eyes upon what the Lord is
getting, and would have that for himself.
You see, the Church is that which brings to the Lord Jesus what He ought to
have, and from eternity the Devil has been out to rob him of that, and he will
do it in the assembly if he can, because the assembly is that in which the Lord
does get what His heart is set upon.
OUTWARD AND UPWARD
Now
we close by noting the last thing in Luke 24:50-52.
"And he led them out until they were over against Bethany: and he
lifted up his hand, and blessed them. And it came to pass, while he blessed
them, he parted from them, and was carried up into heaven. And they worshipped
him, and returned to Jerusalem with great joy."
Three words: "led out", "blessed", "carried up":
out with the Lord, in His place apart; under His blessing; and linked with Him
in heaven - to use Paul's words, "made... to sit together with him in the
heavenlies."
That is Bethany, that is the Church, that is what the
Lord wants to have in the life of His people today.
Go back over Bethany again and just allow your heart to exercise itself on
these things, and seek very definitely that the Lord shall have in you just
these features which are according to His own mind. And what we do
individually, let us seek to do in those fellowships, those assemblies, with
which we are connected, that they shall be true Bethanies,
the village-expression of the great city of God, the Heavenly Jerusalem.