John 12:1-11 · Jesus Anointed at Bethany
Time Out
John 12:1-11
Sermon
by Robert Beringer
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A woman who worked in a high level job for a major corporation experienced a grueling schedule and a lot of pressure. So when she was offered the opportunity to attend a stress reduction seminar, she quickly accepted. However, she soon realized the seminar might not be as helpful as she first thought. The instructor arrived late, out of breath, and announced, "In order to accommodate everyone's busy schedules, this five-day seminar will be speeded up and completed in two days!"

In our study of turning points in people's lives, we must focus on the dramatic difference that takes place when a person learns the secret of taking "time out" for rest and renewal. No one who reads the gospel accounts of Jesus' public ministry can miss the fact that our Lord lived a very busy and challenging life. Everywhere he went, the crowds followed him. Many people sought his help both day and night. Like many people in our time, Jesus lived with a grueling schedule and lots of pressure. But a careful reading of the gospels reveals that Jesus knew the wisdom of taking "time out" in his busy life for rest, relaxation, and renewal.

Most often, that "time out" happened when Jesus visited the home of his friends Mary, Martha and Lazarus in the village of Bethany. It was there that he could relax among tried and proven friends. In the garden of that home, Jesus could meditate and find the inner strength he needed from God for the challenges of his public ministry. Bethany was only a mile and a half from Jerusalem, and it is no coincidence that during that last pressure-packed week of his earthly life, Jesus sought the calm and the quiet of that home in Bethany before facing the ordeal of the cross.

Bethany was a turning point in the life of Jesus -- a place where he recovered a rhythm between work and rest, between spiritual renewal and confrontation. For those of us whose lives today are overburdened, overpressured and overtaxed by all kinds of responsibilities and commitments, discovering the importance of taking a "time out" can be a major turning point in our walk of faith. What was it that Jesus discovered in his visits to that simple home in Bethany?

1. A Place Of Rest

Millenniums ago God decreed that men and women should not work constantly without periods of rest. Even in the creation story in Genesis, God "rested" on the seventh day. And yet, we modern Americans continue to identify business with busyness and success with feverish haste. We seem to admire the person who is always dashing off to keep an appointment or to close another deal. One observer of the human scene suggests we coin a new beatitude that would go, "Blessed are those that goeth around in circles, for they shall be known as big wheels!"

But Jesus understood the need for rest, and for pacing his life so that his ministry could be productive. It was at Bethany that he found the time to be alone and to rest. Everyone needs a place to escape from the noise of the traffic, the blaring of the radio, and the insistent ring of the telephone. Even military personnel in the midst of wartime manage to make time for "R & R," an opportunity for rest and relaxation. There is a prayer that I keep in a prominent place in my study which helps me remember the importance of making time for rest:

Slow me down, Lord! Ease the pounding of my heart by the quieting of my mind. Steady my hurried pace with a vision of the eternal reach of time. Give me, amidst the confusion of my day, the calmness of the ever-lasting hills. Break the tension of my nerves and muscles with the soothing music of the singing streams that live in my memory. Help me to know the magical, restoring power of sleep. Teach me the art of taking minute vacations -- of slowing down to look at a flower, to chat with a friend, to pat a dog, or to read a few lines from a good book. Let me look up into the branches of the towering oak, and know that it grew great and strong, because it grew slowly and well.1

2. A Place Of Reflection

The home at Bethany was not only a place of rest for Jesus, but was even more importantly a place for reflection on his own life and work. It was a place where he could go apart and gain some perspective on what was happening around him. This chapter is inspired by a woman I once knew who lived an extremely busy life, but who never seemed frantic or hurried in her dealings with people. When I asked her what was the secret of her serenity in the midst of such a busy life, she told me it was her "Time Out With God." For this woman, her "time out" is an early morning priority. It is a time alone with the Lord in which she reviews every single item that she can foresee on her daily schedule. Her prayer time is a seeking for guidance and wisdom about the things she will face that day, and as she often told me, "Things really change after my "Time Out With God." Jesus found in the home of Mary, Martha and Lazarus such a place for reflection.

In the biography of Leonardo da Vinci, Antonio Vallenten tells of a time when the great artist was at work in Milan on his famous painting of the Last Supper. Da Vinci spent many hours meditating in the chapel of the monastery where he was working. The monks resented these "idle periods" and accused the artist of wasting time. But da Vinci defended these periods of reflection by saying, "When I pause the longest, I make the most telling strokes with my brush."2

3. A Place Of Spiritual Renewal

Perhaps even more important than rest and reflection, Jesus found in the simple home in Bethany a place for spiritual renewal. There can be no other explanation for how our Lord managed the inhuman pressures of rejection, arrest, trial, torture, and the agonizingly painful hours on the cross, except that he used the time in Bethany to fill his life with the strengthening power of God's Holy Spirit.

I rejoice that we are once more rediscovering the importance of the Holy Spirit in our Christian lives. For too long, we have neglected the fundamental truth of how the Spirit of God empowers us for life and ministry. Far too many of us push on in the Christian life, trying valiantly to live the life of Christ without the power of Christ! It is as if we were trying to read a book in an ever-darkening room without turning on a light! We struggle to read the words, barely able to make them out, when with the flip of a switch, we could have more than enough light to read the words!

In my own spiritual journey, I have had the hardest struggle in learning how to let God empower my life. For many years even my prayers were said on the run. I felt as a pastor that the fate of God's Kingdom was squarely on my shoulders. I had very nearly reached "burnout" when an elderly pastor friend shared with me the secret for renewing my faith and recharging my spiritual batteries. His technique of prayer, which I still employ, is to spend at least ten minutes relaxing one's body and mind before ever attempting to pray. I often do this sitting in a comfortable chair, slowly letting the tension in legs, arms and neck drain away. When fully relaxed, I picture the Living Christ standing nearby, speaking words of assurance to my troubled mind and heart, such as "Come unto me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." Only after relaxing the body, and focusing the mind on the promises of God, do I begin my prayer.

This simple technique of prayer has proven over the years to be a way of renewing my life with the power of God's Holy Spirit. It is not easy in any age to walk in the footsteps of Jesus. In all of our lives, there must be a Bethany -- a place where the Living God can renew our faith, and empower our lives for ministry.

4. A Place Of Resolve

Bethany was also a place of resolve for Jesus. He never went there without being filled with new resolve to help bring the Kingdom of God to needy men and women in the world about him. Jesus' spirituality was never simply a journey inward to experience the presence of God, but also a journey outward as he brought God's love and mercy to those whose lives were broken and in bondage. For Jesus there was no separation between personal piety and social action. He was equally concerned about the misery of human beings and the glory of God! The times alone with God gave him the resolve to turn belief into behavior and words into deeds of compassion and justice.

We can see that same resolve in the life of John Wesley, the great Methodist preacher. A biography of Wesley gives this description of his very busy but fruitful life: Wesley always arose at four in the morning, preached whenever possible at seven, and was often on the road again at eight. Sometimes he followed his morning sermon with five others in the same day. In fifty years, he preached over 40,000 times! That's an average of fifteen sermons per week. It is estimated that he traveled more than 250,000 miles all on horseback! Even when he was eighty-three years old, he recorded with some regret that he could only write about fifteen hours a day before his eyes hurt too much to continue. At eighty-five, when his friends urged him to ride his horse to a place six miles away where he was to preach, Wesley said indignantly, "I'd be ashamed if any Methodist preacher in tolerable health made a difficulty of six miles." And off he tramped on foot to keep his engagement!3

At the end of this description of such a full and busy life, the biographer tells us the secret of Wesley's resolve: "His ability to achieve was due in the main to a temperament which was remarkably steady and self-possessed. He never seemed to hurry or to worry, and he always made time in his busy day to be alone with God."

Those words could easily have been written about our Lord Jesus Christ who discovered in "time out" in a simple home in Bethany the renewing power of the Living God. May God grant us the grace to make his example a turning point in our walk of faith.


1. What Is A Christian?, A. Leonard Griffith, Abingdon Press, Nashville, Tennessee, 1962, page 81. Used by permission.

2. Ibid., page 80.

3. The Story Of Methodism, Halford Luccock, Paul Hutchinson, and Robert Goodloe, Abingdon Press, Nashville, Tennessee, 1949, page 67. Used by permission.

CSS Publishing Company, Turning Points, by Robert Beringer