House Of Bethany


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The House of Bethany


The House of Bethany

Author: Greg Crawford

language: en

Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

Release Date: 2012-12-05


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The House of Bethany has become a favorite with many pastors and those that desire to know how to entertain and set an environment for God to come and not just visit but dwell. Explaining key elements to have the tangible presence of God. Looking at the biblical pattern of Bethany, we soon see what Jesus was looking for at Bethany and why He was constantly drawn back to this location at key times. God is no respecter of persons. What he ahs done in one location is not dictated by geography but heart attitudes. See Biblical what Jesus was draw to ... a place were no demand was placed upon him because hearts were content.

The Home at Bethany


The Home at Bethany

Author: James Culross

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 1876


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The House Where Blessed Jesus Rests


The House Where Blessed Jesus Rests

Author: Mario Villalta

language: es

Publisher: Independently Published

Release Date: 2026-01-12


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Bethany is not merely a setting in the Gospel. It is a home with open doors where the Blessed Lord Jesus rests, weeps, eats, converses, remains silent... and, when necessary, calls out to life with a voice that shatters stone. Bethany is that place where God does not present Himself as a distant idea, but as a close Friend: He enters the living room, allows Himself to be loved, permits the touch of perfume, and does not fear grief or human fragility. This is why Bethany is not just biblical nostalgia: it is a way of inhabiting the heart. This book proposes an intimate journey: walking through Bethany like someone exploring a house from the inside, room by room. In the first part, Bethany appears as an "outside" to the noise: close to the religious centre of Jerusalem, but far from the spectacle. It is a domestic spirituality where the greatest things happen without a microphone. There, the reader discovers that mature faith is not always shouted; often, it is cooked, shared, listened to, sustained, forgiven... and wept over without shame. Next, the house fills with faces that are both mirror and medicine. Martha teaches holiness in an apron: love that becomes concrete service, but also the temptation to grow bitter, to compare oneself, and to carry more than the heart can bear. In her, the Blessed Lord Jesus does not correct to humiliate, but to heal: service is not meant to leave you "burnt out," but to make you free, clean, and whole. Mary reveals a listening that burns: sitting at the Master's feet as a revolutionary gesture, choosing "one thing only" amidst a thousand distractions, and learning that contemplation does not only live on mountaintops-it also lives in the living room, in the ordinary, and in the silence that orders the soul. Lazarus, for his part, opens the most human of wounds: God's delay. The faith that trembles, the "if you had been here...", the tears of the Blessed Jesus, and the mystery of a resurrection that does not deny pain, but moves through and transforms it. Throughout the journey, the reader encounters deeply contemporary themes: shared grief and stubborn hope; the stone that blocks life; the "bad odour" of the shame many hide; the need to be "untied" by the community; the tension between calculation and gratuity when love is poured out like perfume; and the silent question that remains: what does it mean, today, for God to want to dwell in a house? Here, Bethany becomes a mirror of the Church: when the community becomes only a structure, it grows cold; when it becomes a home, the Gospel returns. Bread, truth, and tenderness under the same roof. The book culminates in showing that Bethany does not stay in Bethany. The goal is not to visit a place, but to carry it with you: to build that house within, to set boundaries against the noise, to integrate action and contemplation without breaking, to reconcile with vulnerability, and to turn the inner home into a mission. For whoever rests in the Blessed Lord Jesus does not close themselves off; they go out with more mercy. And in a harsh world, that mercy does not always need speeches; sometimes presence is enough: being the "perfume" that changes the atmosphere and opens sealed doors. To ensure this does not remain a momentary inspiration, the book includes lectio divina appendices: a 7-day itinerary, a second cycle with the same readings and new questions, and a simple 40-day pilgrimage. Not as spiritual perfectionism, but as a daily ember: a real space for God, small but faithful, where the Blessed Lord Jesus slowly remakes the heart. In short: this book is an invitation to enter the house where the Blessed Jesus rests... until the house begins to walk with you.