P1849:5, 168:5.1
Lazarus remained at the Bethany home, being the center of great interest to
many sincere believers and to numerous curious individuals, until the day
of the crucifixion of Jesus, when he received warning that the Sanhedrin had
decreed his death. The rulers of the Jews were determined to put a stop to
the further spread of the teachings of Jesus, and they well judged that it
would be useless to put Jesus to death if they permitted Lazarus, who represented
the very peak of his wonder-working, to live and bear testimony to the fact
that Jesus had raised him from the dead. Already had Lazarus suffered bitter
persecution from them.
P1849:6, 168:5.2
And so Lazarus took hasty leave of his sisters at Bethany, fleeing down through
Jericho and across the Jordan, never permitting himself to rest long until
he had reached Philadelphia. Lazarus knew Abner well, and here he felt safe
from the murderous intrigues of the wicked Sanhedrin.
P1849:7, 168:5.3
Soon after this Martha and Mary disposed of their lands at Bethany and joined
their brother in Perea. Meantime, Lazarus had become the treasurer of the
church at Philadelphia. He became a strong supporter of Abner in his controversy
with Paul and the Jerusalem church and ultimately died, when 67 years old,
of the same sickness that carried him off when he was a younger man at Bethany.