PAPER 167
- THE VISIT TO PHILADELPHIA
Throughout this
period of the Perean ministry, when mention is made
of Jesus and the apostles visiting the various
localities where the seventy were at work, it should
be recalled that, as a rule, only ten were with him
since it was the practice to leave at least two of
the apostles at Pella to instruct the multitude. As
Jesus prepared to go on to Philadelphia, Simon Peter
and his brother, Andrew, returned to the Pella
encampment to teach the crowds there assembled. When
the Master left the camp at Pella to visit about
Perea, it was not uncommon for from three to five
hundred of the campers to follow him. When he
arrived at Philadelphia, he was accompanied by over
six hundred followers.
No miracles had
attended the recent preaching tour through the
Decapolis, and, excepting the cleansing of the ten
lepers, thus far there had been no miracles on this
Perean mission. This was a period when the gospel
was proclaimed with power, without miracles, and
most of the time without the personal presence of
Jesus or even of his apostles.
Jesus and the ten
apostles arrived at Philadelphia on Wednesday,
February 22, and spent Thursday and Friday resting
from their recent travels and labors. That Friday
night James spoke in the synagogue, and a general
council was called for the following evening. They
were much rejoiced over the progress of the gospel
at Philadelphia and among the near-by villages. The
messengers of David also brought word of the further
advancement of the kingdom throughout Palestine, as
well as good news from Alexandria and Damascus.
1.
BREAKFAST WITH THE PHARISEES
There lived in
Philadelphia a very wealthy and influential Pharisee
who had accepted the teachings of Abner, and who
invited Jesus to his house Sabbath morning for
breakfast. It was known that Jesus was expected in
Philadelphia at this time; so a large number of
visitors, among them many Pharisees, had come over
from Jerusalem and from elsewhere. Accordingly,
about forty of these leading men and a few lawyers
were bidden to this breakfast, which had been
arranged in honor of the Master.
As Jesus lingered
by the door, speaking with Abner, and after the host
had seated himself, there came into the room one of
the leading Pharisees of Jerusalem, a member of the
Sanhedrin, and as was his habit, he made straight
for the seat of honor at the left of the host. But
since this place had been reserved for the Master
and that on the right for Abner, the host beckoned
the Jerusalem Pharisee to sit four seats to the
left, and this dignitary was much offended because
he did not receive the seat of honor.
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Soon they were
all seated and enjoying the visiting among
themselves since the majority of those present were
disciples of Jesus or else were friendly to the
gospel. Only his enemies took notice of the fact
that he did not observe the ceremonial washing of
his hands before he sat down to eat. Abner washed
his hands at the beginning of the meal but not
during the serving.
Near the end of
the meal there came in from the street a man long
afflicted with a chronic disease and now in a
dropsical condition. This man was a believer, having
recently been baptized by Abner's associates. He
made no request of Jesus for healing, but the Master
knew full well that this afflicted man came to this
breakfast hoping thereby to escape the crowds which
thronged him and thus be more likely to engage his
attention. This man knew that few miracles were then
being performed; however, he had reasoned in his
heart that his sorry plight might possibly appeal to
the Master's compassion. And he was not mistaken,
for, when he entered the room, both Jesus and the
self-righteous Pharisee from Jerusalem took notice
of him. The Pharisee was not slow to voice his
resentment that such a one should be permitted to
enter the room. But Jesus looked upon the sick man
and smiled so benignly that he drew near and sat
down upon the floor. As the meal was ending, the
Master looked over his fellow guests and then, after
glancing significantly at the man with dropsy, said:
"My friends, teachers in Israel and learned lawyers,
I would like to ask you a question: Is it lawful to
heal the sick and afflicted on the Sabbath day, or
not?" But those who were there present knew Jesus
too well; they held their peace; they answered not
his question.
Then went Jesus
over to where the sick man sat and, taking him by
the hand, said: "Arise and go your way. You have not
asked to be healed, but I know the desire of your
heart and the faith of your soul." Before the man
left the room, Jesus returned to his seat and,
addressing those at the table, said: "Such works my
Father does, not to tempt you into the kingdom, but
to reveal himself to those who are already in the
kingdom. You can perceive that it would be like the
Father to do just such things because which one of
you, having a favorite animal that fell in the well
on the Sabbath day, would not go right out and draw
him up?" And since no one would answer him, and
inasmuch as his host evidently approved of what was
going on, Jesus stood up and spoke to all present:
"My brethren, when you are bidden to a marriage
feast, sit not down in the chief seat, lest,
perchance, a more honored man than you has been
invited, and the host will have to come to you and
request that you give your place to this other and
honored guest. In this event, with shame you will be
required to take a lower place at the table. When
you are bidden to a feast, it would be the part of
wisdom, on arriving at the festive table, to seek
for the lowest place and take your seat therein, so
that, when the host looks over the guests, he may
say to you: `My friend, why sit in the seat of the
least? come up higher'; and thus will such a one
have glory in the presence of his fellow guests.
Forget not, every one who exalts himself shall be
humbled, while he who truly humbles himself shall be
exalted. Therefore, when you entertain at dinner or
give a supper, invite not always your friends, your
brethren, your kinsmen, or your rich neighbors that
they in return may bid you to their feasts, and thus
will you be recompensed. When you give a banquet,
sometimes bid the poor, the maimed, and the blind.
In this way you shall be blessed in your heart, for
you well know that the lame and the halt cannot
repay you for your loving ministry."
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2.
PARABLE OF THE GREAT SUPPER
As Jesus finished
speaking at the breakfast table of the Pharisee, one
of the lawyers present, desiring to relieve the
silence, thoughtlessly said: "Blessed is he who
shall eat bread in the kingdom of God"--that being a
common saying of those days. And then Jesus spoke a
parable, which even his friendly host was compelled
to take to heart. He said:
"A certain ruler
gave a great supper, and having bidden many guests,
he dispatched his servants at suppertime to say to
those who were invited, `Come, for everything is now
ready.' And they all with one accord began to make
excuses. The first said, `I have just bought a farm,
and I must needs to go prove it; I pray you have me
excused.' Another said, `I have bought five yoke of
oxen, and I must go to receive them; I pray you have
me excused.' And another said, `I have just married
a wife, and therefore I cannot come.' So the
servants went back and reported this to their
master. When the master of the house heard this, he
was very angry, and turning to his servants, he
said: `I have made ready this marriage feast; the
fatlings are killed, and all is in readiness for my
guests, but they have spurned my invitation; they
have gone every man after his lands and his
merchandise, and they even show disrespect to my
servants who bid them come to my feast. Go out
quickly, therefore, into the streets and lanes of
the city, out into the highways and the byways, and
bring hither the poor and the outcast, the blind and
the lame, that the marriage feast may have guests.'
And the servants did as their lord commanded, and
even then there was room for more guests. Then said
the lord to his servants: `Go now out into the roads
and the countryside and constrain those who are
there to come in that my house may be filled. I
declare that none of those who were first bidden
shall taste of my supper.' And the servants did as
their master commanded, and the house was filled."
And when they
heard these words, they departed; every man went to
his own place. At least one of the sneering
Pharisees present that morning comprehended the
meaning of this parable, for he was baptized that
day and made public confession of his faith in the
gospel of the kingdom. Abner preached on this
parable that night at the general council of
believers.
The next day all
of the apostles engaged in the philosophic exercise
of endeavoring to interpret the meaning of this
parable of the great supper. Though Jesus listened
with interest to all of these differing
interpretations, he steadfastly refused to offer
them further help in understanding the parable. He
would only say, "Let every man find out the meaning
for himself and in his own soul."
3. THE
WOMAN WITH THE SPIRIT OF INFIRMITY
Abner had arranged
for the Master to teach in the synagogue on this
Sabbath day, the first time Jesus had appeared in a
synagogue since they had all been closed to his
teachings by order of the Sanhedrin. At the
conclusion of the service Jesus looked down before
him upon an elderly woman who wore a downcast
expression, and who was much bent in form. This
woman had long been fear-ridden, and all joy had
passed out of her life. As Jesus stepped down from
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the pulpit, he
went over to her and, touching her bowed-over form
on the shoulder, said: "Woman, if you would only
believe, you could be wholly loosed from your spirit
of infirmity." And this woman, who had been bowed
down and bound up by the depressions of fear for
more than eighteen years, believed the words of the
Master and by faith straightened up immediately.
When this woman saw that she had been made straight,
she lifted up her voice and glorified God.
Notwithstanding
that this woman's affliction was wholly mental, her
bowed-over form being the result of her depressed
mind, the people thought that Jesus had healed a
real physical disorder. Although the congregation of
the synagogue at Philadelphia was friendly toward
the teachings of Jesus, the chief ruler of the
synagogue was an unfriendly Pharisee. And as he
shared the opinion of the congregation that Jesus
had healed a physical disorder, and being indignant
because Jesus had presumed to do such a thing on the
Sabbath, he stood up before the congregation and
said: "Are there not six days in which men should do
all their work? In these working days come,
therefore, and be healed, but not on the Sabbath
day."
When the
unfriendly ruler had thus spoken, Jesus returned to
the speaker's platform and said: "Why play the part
of hypocrites? Does not every one of you, on the
Sabbath, loose his ox from the stall and lead him
forth for watering? If such a service is permissible
on the Sabbath day, should not this woman, a
daughter of Abraham who has been bound down by evil
these eighteen years, be loosed from this bondage
and led forth to partake of the waters of liberty
and life, even on this Sabbath day?" And as the
woman continued to glorify God, his critic was put
to shame, and the congregation rejoiced with her
that she had been healed.
As a result of his
public criticism of Jesus on this Sabbath the chief
ruler of the synagogue was deposed, and a follower
of Jesus was put in his place.
Jesus frequently
delivered such victims of fear from their spirit of
infirmity, from their depression of mind, and from
their bondage of fear. But the people thought that
all such afflictions were either physical disorders
or possession of evil spirits.
Jesus taught again
in the synagogue on Sunday, and many were baptized
by Abner at noon on that day in the river which
flowed south of the city. On the morrow Jesus and
the ten apostles would have started back to the
Pella encampment but for the arrival of one of
David's messengers, who brought an urgent message to
Jesus from his friends at Bethany, near Jerusalem.
4. THE
MESSAGE FROM BETHANY
Very late on
Sunday night, February 26, a runner from Bethany
arrived at Philadelphia, bringing a message from
Martha and Mary which said, "Lord, he whom you love
is very sick." This message reached Jesus at the
close of the evening conference and just as he was
taking leave of the apostles for the night. At first
Jesus made no reply. There occurred one of those
strange interludes, a time when he appeared to be in
communication with something outside of, and beyond,
himself. And then, looking up, he addressed the
messenger in the hearing of the apostles, saying:
"This sickness is really not to the death. Doubt not
that it may be used to glorify God and exalt the
Son."
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Jesus was very
fond of Martha, Mary, and their brother, Lazarus; he
loved them with a fervent affection. His first and
human thought was to go to their assistance at once,
but another idea came into his combined mind. He had
almost given up hope that the Jewish leaders at
Jerusalem would ever accept the kingdom, but he
still loved his people, and there now occurred to
him a plan whereby the scribes and Pharisees of
Jerusalem might have one more chance to accept his
teachings; and he decided, his Father willing, to
make this last appeal to Jerusalem the most profound
and stupendous outward working of his entire earth
career. The Jews clung to the idea of a
wonder-working deliverer. And though he refused to
stoop to the performance of material wonders or to
the enactment of temporal exhibitions of political
power, he did now ask the Father's consent for the
manifestation of his hitherto unexhibited power over
life and death.
The Jews were in
the habit of burying their dead on the day of their
demise; this was a necessary practice in such a warm
climate. It often happened that they put in the tomb
one who was merely comatose, so that on the second,
or even the third, day such a one would come forth
from the tomb. But it was the belief of the Jews
that, while the spirit or soul might linger near the
body for two or three days, it never tarried after
the third day; that decay was well advanced by the
fourth day, and that no one ever returned from the
tomb after the lapse of such a period. And it was
for these reasons that Jesus tarried yet two full
days in Philadelphia before he made ready to start
for Bethany.
Accordingly, early
on Wednesday morning he said to his apostles: "Let
us prepare at once to go into Judea again." And when
the apostles heard their Master say this, they drew
off by themselves for a time to take counsel of one
another. James assumed the direction of the
conference, and they all agreed that it was only
folly to allow Jesus to go again into Judea, and
they came back as one man and so informed him. Said
James: "Master, you were in Jerusalem a few weeks
back, and the leaders sought your death, while the
people were minded to stone you. At that time you
gave these men their chance to receive the truth,
and we will not permit you to go again into Judea."
Then said Jesus:
"But do you not understand that there are twelve
hours of the day in which work may safely be done?
If a man walks in the day, he does not stumble
inasmuch as he has light. If a man walks in the
night, he is liable to stumble since he is without
light. As long as my day lasts, I fear not to enter
Judea. I would do one more mighty work for these
Jews; I would give them one more chance to believe,
even on their own terms--conditions of outward glory
and the visible manifestation of the power of the
Father and the love of the Son. Besides, do you not
realize that our friend Lazarus has fallen asleep,
and I would go to awake him out of this sleep!"
Then said one of
the apostles: "Master, if Lazarus has fallen asleep,
then will he the more surely recover." It was the
custom of the Jews at that time to speak of death as
a form of sleep, but as the apostles did not
understand that Jesus meant that Lazarus had
departed from this world, he now said plainly:
"Lazarus is dead. And I am glad for your sakes, even
if the others are not thereby saved, that I was not
there, to the end that you shall now have new cause
to believe in me; and by that which you will
witness, you should all be strengthened in
preparation for that day when I shall take leave of
you and go to the Father."
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When they could
not persuade him to refrain from going into Judea,
and when some of the apostles were loath even to
accompany him, Thomas addressed his fellows, saying:
"We have told the Master our fears, but he is
determined to go to Bethany. I am satisfied it means
the end; they will surely kill him, but if that is
the Master's choice, then let us acquit ourselves
like men of courage; let us go also that we may die
with him." And it was ever so; in matters requiring
deliberate and sustained courage, Thomas was always
the mainstay of the twelve apostles.
5. ON THE
WAY TO BETHANY
On the way to
Judea Jesus was followed by a company of almost
fifty of his friends and enemies. At their noon
lunchtime, on Wednesday, he talked to his apostles
and this group of followers on the "Terms of
Salvation," and at the end of this lesson told the
parable of the Pharisee and the publican (a tax
collector). Said Jesus: "You see, then, that the
Father gives salvation to the children of men, and
this salvation is a free gift to all who have the
faith to receive sonship in the divine family. There
is nothing man can do to earn this salvation. Works
of self-righteousness cannot buy the favor of God,
and much praying in public will not atone for lack
of living faith in the heart. Men you may deceive by
your outward service, but God looks into your souls.
What I am telling you is well illustrated by two men
who went into the temple to pray, the one a Pharisee
and the other a publican. The Pharisee stood and
prayed to himself: `O God, I thank you that I am not
like the rest of men, extortioners, unlearned,
unjust, adulterers, or even like this publican. I
fast twice a week; I give tithes of all that I get.'
But the publican, standing afar off, would not so
much as lift his eyes to heaven but smote his
breast, saying, `God be merciful to me a sinner.' I
tell you that the publican went home with God's
approval rather than the Pharisee, for every one who
exalts himself shall be humbled, but he who humbles
himself shall be exalted."
That night, in
Jericho, the unfriendly Pharisees sought to entrap
the Master by inducing him to discuss marriage and
divorce, as did their fellows one time in Galilee,
but Jesus artfully avoided their efforts to bring
him into conflict with their laws concerning
divorce. As the publican and the Pharisee
illustrated good and bad religion, their divorce
practices served to contrast the better marriage
laws of the Jewish code with the disgraceful laxity
of the Pharisaic interpretations of these Mosaic
divorce statutes. The Pharisee judged himself by the
lowest standard; the publican squared himself by the
highest ideal. Devotion, to the Pharisee, was a
means of inducing self-righteous inactivity and the
assurance of false spiritual security; devotion, to
the publican, was a means of stirring up his soul to
the realization of the need for repentance,
confession, and the acceptance, by faith, of
merciful forgiveness. The Pharisee sought justice;
the publican sought mercy. The law of the universe
is: Ask and you shall receive; seek and you shall
find.
Though Jesus
refused to be drawn into a controversy with the
Pharisees concerning divorce, he did proclaim a
positive teaching of the highest ideals regarding
marriage. He exalted marriage as the most ideal and
highest of all human relationships. Likewise, he
intimated strong disapproval of the lax and unfair
divorce practices of the Jerusalem Jews, who at that
time permitted a
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man to divorce
his wife for the most trifling of reasons, such as
being a poor cook, a faulty housekeeper, or for no
better reason than that he had become enamoured of a
better-looking woman.
The Pharisees had
even gone so far as to teach that divorce of this
easy variety was a special dispensation granted the
Jewish people, particularly the Pharisees. And so,
while Jesus refused to make pronouncements dealing
with marriage and divorce, he did most bitterly
denounce these shameful floutings of the marriage
relationship and pointed out their injustice to
women and children. He never sanctioned any divorce
practice which gave man any advantage over woman;
the Master countenanced only those teachings which
accorded women equality with men.
Although Jesus did
not offer new mandates governing marriage and
divorce, he did urge the Jews to live up to their
own laws and higher teachings. He constantly
appealed to the written Scriptures in his effort to
improve their practices along these social lines.
While thus upholding the high and ideal concepts of
marriage, Jesus skillfully avoided clashing with his
questioners about the social practices represented
by either their written laws or their much-cherished
divorce privileges.
It was very
difficult for the apostles to understand the
Master's reluctance to make positive pronouncements
relative to scientific, social, economic, and
political problems. They did not fully realize that
his earth mission was exclusively concerned with
revelations of spiritual and religious truths.
After Jesus had
talked about marriage and divorce, later on that
evening his apostles privately asked many additional
questions, and his answers to these inquiries
relieved their minds of many misconceptions. At the
conclusion of this conference Jesus said: "Marriage
is honorable and is to be desired by all men. The
fact that the Son of Man pursues his earth mission
alone is in no way a reflection on the desirability
of marriage. That I should so work is the Father's
will, but this same Father has directed the creation
of male and female, and it is the divine will that
men and women should find their highest service and
consequent joy in the establishment of homes for the
reception and training of children, in the creation
of whom these parents become copartners with the
Makers of heaven and earth. And for this cause shall
a man leave his father and mother and shall cleave
to his wife, and they two shall become as one."
And in this way
Jesus relieved the minds of the apostles of many
worries about marriage and cleared up many
misunderstandings regarding divorce; at the same
time he did much to exalt their ideals of social
union and to augment their respect for women and
children and for the home.
6.
BLESSING THE LITTLE CHILDREN
That evening
Jesus' message regarding marriage and the
blessedness of children spread all over Jericho, so
that the next morning, long before Jesus and the
apostles prepared to leave, even before breakfast
time, scores of mothers came to where Jesus lodged,
bringing their children in their arms and leading
them by their hands, and desired that he bless the
little ones. When the apostles went out to view this
assemblage of mothers with their children, they
endeavored to send them away, but these women
refused to depart until the Master laid his hands on
their children and blessed them. And when the
apostles loudly rebuked these mothers, Jesus,
hearing the tumult, came out and indignantly
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reproved them,
saying: "Suffer little children to come to me;
forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of
heaven. Verily, verily, I say to you, whosoever
receives not the kingdom of God as a little child
shall hardly enter therein to grow up to the full
stature of spiritual manhood."
And when the
Master had spoken to his apostles, he received all
of the children, laying his hands on them, while he
spoke words of courage and hope to their mothers.
Jesus often talked
to his apostles about the celestial mansions and
taught that the advancing children of God must there
grow up spiritually as children grow up physically
on this world. And so does the sacred oftentimes
appear to be the common, as on this day these
children and their mothers little realized that the
onlooking intelligences of Nebadon beheld the
children of Jericho playing with the Creator of a
universe.
Woman's status in
Palestine was much improved by Jesus' teaching; and
so it would have been throughout the world if his
followers had not departed so far from that which he
painstakingly taught them.
It was also at
Jericho, in connection with the discussion of the
early religious training of children in habits of
divine worship, that Jesus impressed upon his
apostles the great value of beauty as an influence
leading to the urge to worship, especially with
children. The Master by precept and example taught
the value of worshiping the Creator in the midst of
the natural surroundings of creation. He preferred
to commune with the heavenly Father amidst the trees
and among the lowly creatures of the natural world.
He rejoiced to contemplate the Father through the
inspiring spectacle of the starry realms of the
Creator Sons.
When it is not
possible to worship God in the tabernacles of
nature, men should do their best to provide houses
of beauty, sanctuaries of appealing simplicity and
artistic embellishment, so that the highest of human
emotions may be aroused in association with the
intellectual approach to spiritual communion with
God. Truth, beauty, and holiness are powerful and
effective aids to true worship. But spirit communion
is not promoted by mere massive ornateness and
overmuch embellishment with man's elaborate and
ostentatious art. Beauty is most religious when it
is most simple and naturelike. How unfortunate that
little children should have their first introduction
to concepts of public worship in cold and barren
rooms so devoid of the beauty appeal and so empty of
all suggestion of good cheer and inspiring holiness!
The child should be introduced to worship in
nature's outdoors and later accompany his parents to
public houses of religious assembly which are at
least as materially attractive and artistically
beautiful as the home in which he is daily
domiciled.
7. THE
TALK ABOUT ANGELS
As they journeyed
up the hills from Jericho to Bethany, Nathaniel
walked most of the way by the side of Jesus, and
their discussion of children in relation to the
kingdom of heaven led indirectly to the
consideration of the ministry of angels. Nathaniel
finally asked the Master this question: "Seeing that
the high priest is a Sadducee, and since the
Sadducees do not believe in angels, what shall we
teach the people regarding the heavenly ministers?"
Then, among other things, Jesus said:
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"The angelic
hosts are a separate order of created beings; they
are entirely different from the material order of
mortal creatures, and they function as a distinct
group of universe intelligences. Angels are not of
that group of creatures called `the Sons of God' in
the Scriptures; neither are they the glorified
spirits of mortal men who have gone on to progress
through the mansions on high. Angels are a direct
creation, and they do not reproduce themselves. The
angelic hosts have only a spiritual kinship with the
human race. As man progresses in the journey to the
Father in Paradise, he does traverse a state of
being at one time analogous to the state of the
angels, but mortal man never becomes an angel.
"The angels never
die, as man does. The angels are immortal unless,
perchance, they become involved in sin as did some
of them with the deceptions of Lucifer. The angels
are the spirit servants in heaven, and they are
neither all-wise nor all-powerful. But all of the
loyal angels are truly pure and holy.
"And do you not
remember that I said to you once before that, if you
had your spiritual eyes anointed, you would then see
the heavens opened and behold the angels of God
ascending and descending? It is by the ministry of
the angels that one world may be kept in touch with
other worlds, for have I not repeatedly told you
that I have other sheep not of this fold? And these
angels are not the spies of the spirit world who
watch upon you and then go forth to tell the Father
the thoughts of your heart and to report on the
deeds of the flesh. The Father has no need of such
service inasmuch as his own spirit lives within you.
But these angelic spirits do function to keep one
part of the heavenly creation informed concerning
the doings of other and remote parts of the
universe. And many of the angels, while functioning
in the government of the Father and the universes of
the Sons, are assigned to the service of the human
races. When I taught you that many of these seraphim
are ministering spirits, I spoke not in figurative
language nor in poetic strains. And all this is
true, regardless of your difficulty in comprehending
such matters.
"Many of these
angels are engaged in the work of saving men, for
have I not told you of the seraphic joy when one
soul elects to forsake sin and begin the search for
God? I did even tell you of the joy in the
presence of the angels of heaven over one sinner
who repents, thereby indicating the existence of
other and higher orders of celestial beings who are
likewise concerned in the spiritual welfare and with
the divine progress of mortal man.
"Also are these
angels very much concerned with the means whereby
man's spirit is released from the tabernacles of the
flesh and his soul escorted to the mansions in
heaven. Angels are the sure and heavenly guides of
the soul of man during that uncharted and indefinite
period of time which intervenes between the death of
the flesh and the new life in the spirit abodes."
And he would have
spoken further with Nathaniel regarding the ministry
of angels, but he was interrupted by the approach of
Martha, who had been informed that the Master was
drawing near to Bethany by friends who had observed
him ascending the hills to the east. And she now
hastened to greet him. |