PAPER 122
- BIRTH AND INFANCY OF JESUS
It will
hardly be possible fully to explain the many reasons
which led to the selection of Palestine as the land
for Michael's bestowal, and especially as to just
why the family of Joseph and Mary should have been
chosen as the immediate setting for the appearance
of this Son of God on Urantia.
After a
study of the special report on the status of
segregated worlds prepared by the Melchizedeks, in
counsel with Gabriel, Michael finally chose Urantia
as the planet whereon to enact his final bestowal.
Subsequent to this decision Gabriel made a personal
visit to Urantia, and, as a result of his study of
human groups and his survey of the spiritual,
intellectual, racial, and geographic features of the
world and its peoples, he decided that the Hebrews
possessed those relative advantages which warranted
their selection as the bestowal race. Upon Michael's
approval of this decision, Gabriel appointed and
dispatched to Urantia the Family Commission of
Twelve—selected from among the higher orders of
universe personalities—which was intrusted with the
task of making an investigation of Jewish family
life. When this commission ended its labors, Gabriel
was present on Urantia and received the report
nominating three prospective unions as being, in the
opinion of the commission, equally favorable as
bestowal families for Michael's projected
incarnation.
From the
three couples nominated, Gabriel made the personal
choice of Joseph and Mary, subsequently making his
personal appearance to Mary, at which time he
imparted to her the glad tidings that she had been
selected to become the earth mother of the bestowal
child.
1. JOSEPH
AND MARY
Joseph,
the human father of Jesus (Joshua ben Joseph), was a
Hebrew of the Hebrews, albeit he carried many
non-Jewish racial strains which had been added to
his ancestral tree from time to time by the female
lines of his progenitors. The ancestry of the father
of Jesus went back to the days of Abraham and
through this venerable patriarch to the earlier
lines of inheritance leading to the Sumerians and
Nodites and, through the southern tribes of the
ancient blue man, to Andon and Fonta. David and
Solomon were not in the direct line of Joseph's
ancestry, neither did Joseph's lineage go directly
back to Adam. Joseph's immediate ancestors were
mechanics—builders, carpenters, masons, and smiths.
Joseph himself was a carpenter and later a
contractor. His family belonged to a long and
illustrious line of the nobility of the common
people, accentuated ever and anon by the appearance
of unusual individuals who had distinguished
themselves in connection with the evolution of
religion on Urantia.
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Mary,
the earth mother of Jesus, was a descendant of a
long line of unique ancestors embracing many of the
most remarkable women in the racial history of
Urantia. Although Mary was an average woman of her
day and generation, possessing a fairly normal
temperament, she reckoned among her ancestors such
well-known women as Annon, Tamar, Ruth, Bathsheba,
Ansie, Cloa, Eve, Enta, and Ratta. No Jewish woman
of that day had a more illustrious lineage of common
progenitors or one extending back to more auspicious
beginnings. Mary's ancestry, like Joseph's, was
characterized by the predominance of strong but
average individuals, relieved now and then by
numerous outstanding personalities in the march of
civilization and the progressive evolution of
religion. Racially considered, it is hardly proper
to regard Mary as a Jewess. In culture and belief
she was a Jew, but in hereditary endowment she was
more a composite of Syrian, Hittite, Phoenician,
Greek, and Egyptian stocks, her racial inheritance
being more general than that of Joseph.
Of all
couples living in Palestine at about the time of
Michael's projected bestowal, Joseph and Mary
possessed the most ideal combination of widespread
racial connections and superior average of
personality endowments. It was the plan of Michael
to appear on earth as an average man, that
the common people might understand him and receive
him; wherefore Gabriel selected just such persons as
Joseph and Mary to become the bestowal parents.
2.
GABRIEL APPEARS TO ELIZABETH
Jesus'
lifework on Urantia was really begun by John the
Baptist. Zacharias, John's father, belonged to the
Jewish priesthood, while his mother, Elizabeth, was
a member of the more prosperous branch of the same
large family group to which Mary the mother of Jesus
also belonged. Zacharias and Elizabeth, though they
had been married many years, were childless.
It was
late in the month of June, 8 B.C., about three
months after the marriage of Joseph and Mary, that
Gabriel appeared to Elizabeth at noontide one day,
just as he later made his presence known to Mary.
Said Gabriel:
"While
your husband, Zacharias, stands before the altar in
Jerusalem, and while the assembled people pray for
the coming of a deliverer, I, Gabriel, have come to
announce that you will shortly bear a son who shall
be the forerunner of this divine teacher, and you
shall call your son John. He will grow up dedicated
to the Lord your God, and when he has come to full
years, he will gladden your heart because he will
turn many souls to God, and he will also proclaim
the coming of the soul-healer of your people and the
spirit-liberator of all mankind. Your kinswoman Mary
shall be the mother of this child of promise, and I
will also appear to her."
This
vision greatly frightened Elizabeth. After Gabriel's
departure she turned this experience over in her
mind, long pondering the sayings of the majestic
visitor, but did not speak of the revelation to
anyone save her husband until her subsequent visit
with Mary in early February of the following year.
For five
months, however, Elizabeth withheld her secret even
from her husband. Upon her disclosure of the story
of Gabriel's visit, Zacharias was very skeptical and
for weeks doubted the entire experience, only
consenting halfheartedly to believe in Gabriel's
visit to his wife when he could no longer question
that she was expectant with child. Zacharias was
very much perplexed regarding
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the prospective
motherhood of Elizabeth, but he did not doubt the
integrity of his wife, notwithstanding his own
advanced age. It was not until about six weeks
before John's birth that Zacharias, as the result of
an impressive dream, became fully convinced that
Elizabeth was to become the mother of a son of
destiny, one who was to prepare the way for the
coming of the Messiah.
Gabriel
appeared to Mary about the middle of November, 8
B.C., while she was at work in her Nazareth home.
Later on, after Mary knew without doubt that she was
to become a mother, she persuaded Joseph to let her
journey to the City of Judah, four miles west of
Jerusalem, in the hills, to visit Elizabeth. Gabriel
had informed each of these mothers-to-be of his
appearance to the other. Naturally they were anxious
to get together, compare experiences, and talk over
the probable futures of their sons. Mary remained
with her distant cousin for three weeks. Elizabeth
did much to strengthen Mary's faith in the vision of
Gabriel, so that she returned home more fully
dedicated to the call to mother the child of destiny
whom she was so soon to present to the world as a
helpless babe, an average and normal infant of the
realm.
John was
born in the City of Judah, March 25, 7 B.C.
Zacharias and Elizabeth rejoiced greatly in the
realization that a son had come to them as Gabriel
had promised, and when on the eighth day they
presented the child for circumcision, they formally
christened him John, as they had been directed
aforetime. Already had a nephew of Zacharias
departed for Nazareth, carrying the message of
Elizabeth to Mary proclaiming that a son had been
born to her and that his name was to be John.
From his
earliest infancy John was judiciously impressed by
his parents with the idea that he was to grow up to
become a spiritual leader and religious teacher. And
the soil of John's heart was ever responsive to the
sowing of such suggestive seeds. Even as a child he
was found frequently at the temple during the
seasons of his father's service, and he was
tremendously impressed with the significance of all
that he saw.
3.
GABRIEL'S ANNOUNCEMENT TO MARY
One
evening about sundown, before Joseph had returned
home, Gabriel appeared to Mary by the side of a low
stone table and, after she had recovered her
composure, said: "I come at the bidding of one who
is my Master and whom you shall love and nurture. To
you, Mary, I bring glad tidings when I announce that
the conception within you is ordained by heaven, and
that in due time you will become the mother of a
son; you shall call him Joshua, and he shall
inaugurate the kingdom of heaven on earth and among
men. Speak not of this matter save to Joseph and to
Elizabeth, your kinswoman, to whom I have also
appeared, and who shall presently also bear a son,
whose name shall be John, and who will prepare the
way for the message of deliverance which your son
shall proclaim to men with great power and deep
conviction. And doubt not my word, Mary, for this
home has been chosen as the mortal habitat of the
child of destiny. My benediction rests upon you, the
power of the Most Highs will strengthen you, and the
Lord of all the earth shall overshadow you."
Mary
pondered this visitation secretly in her heart for
many weeks until of a certainty she knew she was
with child, before she dared to disclose these
unusual
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events to her
husband. When Joseph heard all about this, although
he had great confidence in Mary, he was much
troubled and could not sleep for many nights. At
first Joseph had doubts about the Gabriel
visitation. Then when he became well-nigh persuaded
that Mary had really heard the voice and beheld the
form of the divine messenger, he was torn in mind as
he pondered how such things could be. How could the
offspring of human beings be a child of divine
destiny? Never could Joseph reconcile these
conflicting ideas until, after several weeks of
thought, both he and Mary reached the conclusion
that they had been chosen to become the parents of
the Messiah, though it had hardly been the Jewish
concept that the expected deliverer was to be of
divine nature. Upon arriving at this momentous
conclusion, Mary hastened to depart for a visit with
Elizabeth.
Upon her
return, Mary went to visit her parents, Joachim and
Hannah. Her two brothers and two sisters, as well as
her parents, were always very skeptical about the
divine mission of Jesus, though, of course, at this
time they knew nothing of the Gabriel visitation.
But Mary did confide to her sister Salome that she
thought her son was destined to become a great
teacher.
Gabriel's announcement to Mary was made the day
following the conception of Jesus and was the only
event of supernatural occurrence connected with her
entire experience of carrying and bearing the child
of promise.
4.
JOSEPH'S DREAM
Joseph
did not become reconciled to the idea that Mary was
to become the mother of an extraordinary child until
after he had experienced a very impressive dream. In
this dream a brilliant celestial messenger appeared
to him and, among other things, said: "Joseph, I
appear by command of Him who now reigns on high, and
I am directed to instruct you concerning the son
whom Mary shall bear, and who shall become a great
light in the world. In him will be life, and his
life shall become the light of mankind. He shall
first come to his own people, but they will hardly
receive him; but to as many as shall receive him to
them will he reveal that they are the children of
God." After this experience Joseph never again
wholly doubted Mary's story of Gabriel's visit and
of the promise that the unborn child was to become a
divine messenger to the world.
In all
these visitations nothing was said about the house
of David. Nothing was ever intimated about Jesus'
becoming a "deliverer of the Jews," not even that he
was to be the long-expected Messiah. Jesus was not
such a Messiah as the Jews had anticipated, but he
was the world's deliverer. His mission was to
all races and peoples, not to any one group.
Joseph was not of
the line of King David. Mary had more of the Davidic
ancestry than Joseph. True, Joseph did go to the
City of David, Bethlehem, to be registered for the
Roman census, but that was because, six generations
previously, Joseph's paternal ancestor of that
generation, being an orphan, was adopted by one
Zadoc, who was a direct descendant of David; hence
was Joseph also accounted as of the "house of
David."
Most of
the so-called Messianic prophecies of the Old
Testament were made to apply to Jesus long after his
life had been lived on earth. For centuries the
Hebrew prophets had proclaimed the coming of a
deliverer, and these promises had been construed by
successive generations as referring to a new Jewish
ruler who would sit upon the throne of David and, by
the reputed miraculous methods
Page 1348
of Moses, proceed
to establish the Jews in Palestine as a powerful
nation, free from all foreign domination. Again,
many figurative passages found throughout the Hebrew
scriptures were subsequently misapplied to the life
mission of Jesus. Many Old Testament sayings were so
distorted as to appear to fit some episode of the
Master's earth life. Jesus himself onetime publicly
denied any connection with the royal house of David.
Even the passage, "a maiden shall bear a son," was
made to read, "a virgin shall bear a son." This was
also true of the many genealogies of both Joseph and
Mary which were constructed subsequent to Michael's
career on earth. Many of these lineages contain much
of the Master's ancestry, but on the whole they are
not genuine and may not be depended upon as factual.
The early followers of Jesus all too often succumbed
to the temptation to make all the olden prophetic
utterances appear to find fulfillment in the life of
their Lord and Master.
5. JESUS'
EARTH PARENTS
Joseph
was a mild-mannered man, extremely conscientious,
and in every way faithful to the religious
conventions and practices of his people. He talked
little but thought much. The sorry plight of the
Jewish people caused Joseph much sadness. As a
youth, among his eight brothers and sisters, he had
been more cheerful, but in the earlier years of
married life (during Jesus' childhood) he was
subject to periods of mild spiritual discouragement.
These temperamental manifestations were greatly
improved just before his untimely death and after
the economic condition of his family had been
enhanced by his advancement from the rank of
carpenter to the role of a prosperous contractor.
Mary's
temperament was quite opposite to that of her
husband. She was usually cheerful, was very rarely
downcast, and possessed an ever-sunny disposition.
Mary indulged in free and frequent expression of her
emotional feelings and was never observed to be
sorrowful until after the sudden death of Joseph.
And she had hardly recovered from this shock when
she had thrust upon her the anxieties and
questionings aroused by the extraordinary career of
her eldest son, which was so rapidly unfolding
before her astonished gaze. But throughout all this
unusual experience Mary was composed, courageous,
and fairly wise in her relationship with her strange
and little-understood first-born son and his
surviving brothers and sisters.
Jesus
derived much of his unusual gentleness and marvelous
sympathetic understanding of human nature from his
father; he inherited his gift as a great teacher and
his tremendous capacity for righteous indignation
from his mother. In emotional reactions to his
adult-life environment, Jesus was at one time like
his father, meditative and worshipful, sometimes
characterized by apparent sadness; but more often he
drove forward in the manner of his mother's
optimistic and determined disposition. All in all,
Mary's temperament tended to dominate the career of
the divine Son as he grew up and swung into the
momentous strides of his adult life. In some
particulars Jesus was a blending of his parents'
traits; in other respects he exhibited the traits of
one in contrast with those of the other.
From
Joseph Jesus secured his strict training in the
usages of the Jewish ceremonials and his unusual
acquaintance with the Hebrew scriptures; from Mary
he derived a broader viewpoint of religious life and
a more liberal concept of personal spiritual
freedom.
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The
families of both Joseph and Mary were well educated
for their time. Joseph and Mary were educated far
above the average for their day and station in life.
He was a thinker; she was a planner, expert in
adaptation and practical in immediate execution.
Joseph was a black-eyed brunet; Mary, a brown-eyed
well-nigh blond type.
Had
Joseph lived, he undoubtedly would have become a
firm believer in the divine mission of his eldest
son. Mary alternated between believing and doubting,
being greatly influenced by the position taken by
her other children and by her friends and relatives,
but always was she steadied in her final attitude by
the memory of Gabriel's appearance to her
immediately after the child was conceived.
Mary was
an expert weaver and more than averagely skilled in
most of the household arts of that day; she was a
good housekeeper and a superior homemaker. Both
Joseph and Mary were good teachers, and they saw to
it that their children were well versed in the
learning of that day.
When
Joseph was a young man, he was employed by Mary's
father in the work of building an addition to his
house, and it was when Mary brought Joseph a cup of
water, during a noontime meal, that the courtship of
the pair who were destined to become the parents of
Jesus really began.
Joseph
and Mary were married, in accordance with Jewish
custom, at Mary's home in the environs of Nazareth
when Joseph was twenty-one years old. This marriage
concluded a normal courtship of almost two years'
duration. Shortly thereafter they moved into their
new home in Nazareth, which had been built by Joseph
with the assistance of two of his brothers. The
house was located near the foot of the near-by
elevated land which so charmingly overlooked the
surrounding countryside. In this home, especially
prepared, these young and expectant parents had
thought to welcome the child of promise, little
realizing that this momentous event of a universe
was to transpire while they would be absent from
home in Bethlehem of Judea.
The
larger part of Joseph's family became believers in
the teachings of Jesus, but very few of Mary's
people ever believed in him until after he departed
from this world. Joseph leaned more toward the
spiritual concept of the expected Messiah, but Mary
and her family, especially her father, held to the
idea of the Messiah as a temporal deliverer and
political ruler. Mary's ancestors had been
prominently identified with the Maccabean activities
of the then but recent times.
Joseph
held vigorously to the Eastern, or Babylonian, views
of the Jewish religion; Mary leaned strongly toward
the more liberal and broader Western, or
Hellenistic, interpretation of the law and the
prophets.
6. THE
HOME AT NAZARETH
The home
of Jesus was not far from the high hill in the
northerly part of Nazareth, some distance from the
village spring, which was in the eastern section of
the town. Jesus' family dwelt in the outskirts of
the city, and this made it all the easier for him
subsequently to enjoy frequent strolls in the
country and to make trips up to the top of this
near-by highland, the highest of all the hills of
southern Galilee save the Mount Tabor range to the
east and the hill of Nain,
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which was about
the same height. Their home was located a little to
the south and east of the southern promontory of
this hill and about midway between the base of this
elevation and the road leading out of Nazareth
toward Cana. Aside from climbing the hill, Jesus'
favorite stroll was to follow a narrow trail winding
about the base of the hill in a northeasterly
direction to a point where it joined the road to
Sepphoris.
The home
of Joseph and Mary was a one-room stone structure
with a flat roof and an adjoining building for
housing the animals. The furniture consisted of a
low stone table, earthenware and stone dishes and
pots, a loom, a lampstand, several small stools, and
mats for sleeping on the stone floor. In the back
yard, near the animal annex, was the shelter which
covered the oven and the mill for grinding grain. It
required two persons to operate this type of mill,
one to grind and another to feed the grain. As a
small boy Jesus often fed grain to this mill while
his mother turned the grinder.
In later
years, as the family grew in size, they would all
squat about the enlarged stone table to enjoy their
meals, helping themselves from a common dish, or
pot, of food. During the winter, at the evening meal
the table would be lighted by a small, flat clay
lamp, which was filled with olive oil. After the
birth of Martha, Joseph built an addition to this
house, a large room, which was used as a carpenter
shop during the day and as a sleeping room at night.
7. THE
TRIP TO BETHLEHEM
In the
month of March, 8 B.C. (the month Joseph and Mary
were married), Caesar Augustus decreed that all
inhabitants of the Roman Empire should be numbered,
that a census should be made which could be used for
effecting better taxation. The Jews had always been
greatly prejudiced against any attempt to "number
the people," and this, in connection with the
serious domestic difficulties of Herod, King of
Judea, had conspired to cause the postponement of
the taking of this census in the Jewish kingdom for
one year. Throughout all the Roman Empire this
census was registered in the year 8 B.C., except in
the Palestinian kingdom of Herod, where it was taken
in 7 B.C., one year later.
It was
not necessary that Mary should go to Bethlehem for
enrollment—Joseph was authorized to register for his
family—but Mary, being an adventurous and aggressive
person, insisted on accompanying him. She feared
being left alone lest the child be born while Joseph
was away, and again, Bethlehem being not far from
the City of Judah, Mary foresaw a possible
pleasurable visit with her kinswoman Elizabeth.
Joseph
virtually forbade Mary to accompany him, but it was
of no avail; when the food was packed for the trip
of three or four days, she prepared double rations
and made ready for the journey. But before they
actually set forth, Joseph was reconciled to Mary's
going along, and they cheerfully departed from
Nazareth at the break of day.
Joseph
and Mary were poor, and since they had only one
beast of burden, Mary, being large with child, rode
on the animal with the provisions while Joseph
walked, leading the beast. The building and
furnishing of a home had been a great drain on
Joseph since he had also to contribute to the
support of his parents, as his father had been
recently disabled. And so this Jewish couple went
forth from their humble home early on the morning of
August 18, 7 B.C., on their journey to Bethlehem.
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Their
first day of travel carried them around the
foothills of Mount Gilboa, where they camped for the
night by the river Jordan and engaged in many
speculations as to what sort of a son would be born
to them, Joseph adhering to the concept of a
spiritual teacher and Mary holding to the idea of a
Jewish Messiah, a deliverer of the Hebrew nation.
Bright
and early the morning of August 19, Joseph and Mary
were again on their way. They partook of their
noontide meal at the foot of Mount Sartaba,
overlooking the Jordan valley, and journeyed on,
making Jericho for the night, where they stopped at
an inn on the highway in the outskirts of the city.
Following the evening meal and after much discussion
concerning the oppressiveness of Roman rule, Herod,
the census enrollment, and the comparative influence
of Jerusalem and Alexandria as centers of Jewish
learning and culture, the Nazareth travelers retired
for the night's rest. Early in the morning of August
20 they resumed their journey, reaching Jerusalem
before noon, visiting the temple, and going on to
their destination, arriving at Bethlehem in
midafternoon.
The inn
was overcrowded, and Joseph accordingly sought
lodgings with distant relatives, but every room in
Bethlehem was filled to overflowing. On returning to
the courtyard of the inn, he was informed that the
caravan stables, hewn out of the side of the rock
and situated just below the inn, had been cleared of
animals and cleaned up for the reception of lodgers.
Leaving the donkey in the courtyard, Joseph
shouldered their bags of clothing and provisions and
with Mary descended the stone steps to their
lodgings below. They found themselves located in
what had been a grain storage room to the front of
the stalls and mangers. Tent curtains had been hung,
and they counted themselves fortunate to have such
comfortable quarters.
Joseph
had thought to go out at once and enroll, but Mary
was weary; she was considerably distressed and
besought him to remain by her side, which he did.
8. THE
BIRTH OF JESUS
All that
night Mary was restless so that neither of them
slept much. By the break of day the pangs of
childbirth were well in evidence, and at noon,
August 21, 7 B.C., with the help and kind
ministrations of women fellow travelers, Mary was
delivered of a male child. Jesus of Nazareth was
born into the world, was wrapped in the clothes
which Mary had brought along for such a possible
contingency, and laid in a near-by manger.
In just
the same manner as all babies before that day and
since have come into the world, the promised child
was born; and on the eighth day, according to the
Jewish practice, he was circumcised and formally
named Joshua (Jesus).
The next
day after the birth of Jesus, Joseph made his
enrollment. Meeting a man they had talked with two
nights previously at Jericho, Joseph was taken by
him to a well-to-do friend who had a room at the
inn, and who said he would gladly exchange quarters
with the Nazareth couple. That afternoon they moved
up to the inn, where they lived for almost three
weeks until they found lodgings in the home of a
distant relative of Joseph.
The
second day after the birth of Jesus, Mary sent word
to Elizabeth that her child had come and received
word in return inviting Joseph up to Jerusalem to
talk over all their affairs with Zacharias. The
following week Joseph went to Jerusalem to confer
with Zacharias. Both Zacharias and Elizabeth had
become possessed with the sincere conviction that
Jesus was indeed to become the Jewish
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deliverer, the
Messiah, and that their son John was to be his chief
of aides, his right-hand man of destiny. And since
Mary held these same ideas, it was not difficult to
prevail upon Joseph to remain in Bethlehem, the City
of David, so that Jesus might grow up to become the
successor of David on the throne of all Israel.
Accordingly, they remained in Bethlehem more than a
year, Joseph meantime working some at his
carpenter's trade.
At the
noontide birth of Jesus the seraphim of Urantia,
assembled under their directors, did sing anthems of
glory over the Bethlehem manger, but these
utterances of praise were not heard by human ears.
No shepherds nor any other mortal creatures came to
pay homage to the babe of Bethlehem until the day of
the arrival of certain priests from Ur, who were
sent down from Jerusalem by Zacharias.
These
priests from Mesopotamia had been told sometime
before by a strange religious teacher of their
country that he had had a dream in which he was
informed that "the light of life" was about to
appear on earth as a babe and among the Jews. And
thither went these three teachers looking for this
"light of life." After many weeks of futile search
in Jerusalem, they were about to return to Ur when
Zacharias met them and disclosed his belief that
Jesus was the object of their quest and sent them on
to Bethlehem, where they found the babe and left
their gifts with Mary, his earth mother. The babe
was almost three weeks old at the time of their
visit.
These
wise men saw no star to guide them to Bethlehem. The
beautiful legend of the star of Bethlehem originated
in this way: Jesus was born August 21 at noon, 7
B.C. On May 29, 7 B.C., there occurred an
extraordinary conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn in
the constellation of Pisces. And it is a remarkable
astronomic fact that similar conjunctions occurred
on September 29 and December 5 of the same year.
Upon the basis of these extraordinary but wholly
natural events the well-meaning zealots of the
succeeding generation constructed the appealing
legend of the star of Bethlehem and the adoring Magi
led thereby to the manger, where they beheld and
worshiped the newborn babe. Oriental and
near-Oriental minds delight in fairy stories, and
they are continually spinning such beautiful myths
about the lives of their religious leaders and
political heroes. In the absence of printing, when
most human knowledge was passed by word of mouth
from one generation to another, it was very easy for
myths to become traditions and for traditions
eventually to become accepted as facts.
9. THE
PRESENTATION IN THE TEMPLE
Moses
had taught the Jews that every first-born son
belonged to the Lord, and that, in lieu of his
sacrifice as was the custom among the heathen
nations, such a son might live provided his parents
would redeem him by the payment of five shekels to
any authorized priest. There was also a Mosaic
ordinance which directed that a mother, after the
passing of a certain period of time, should present
herself (or have someone make the proper sacrifice
for her) at the temple for purification. It was
customary to perform both of these ceremonies at the
same time. Accordingly, Joseph and Mary went up to
the temple at Jerusalem in person to present Jesus
to the priests and effect his redemption and also to
make the proper sacrifice to insure Mary's
ceremonial purification from the alleged uncleanness
of childbirth.
Page 1353
There
lingered constantly about the courts of the temple
two remarkable characters, Simeon a singer and Anna
a poetess. Simeon was a Judean, but Anna was a
Galilean. This couple were frequently in each
other's company, and both were intimates of the
priest Zacharias, who had confided the secret of
John and Jesus to them. Both Simeon and Anna longed
for the coming of the Messiah, and their confidence
in Zacharias led them to believe that Jesus was the
expected deliverer of the Jewish people.
Zacharias knew the day Joseph and Mary were expected
to appear at the temple with Jesus, and he had
prearranged with Simeon and Anna to indicate, by the
salute of his upraised hand, which one in the
procession of first-born children was Jesus.
For this
occasion Anna had written a poem which Simeon
proceeded to sing, much to the astonishment of
Joseph, Mary, and all who were assembled in the
temple courts. And this was their hymn of the
redemption of the first-born son:
Blessed be the
Lord, the God of Israel,
For he has
visited us and wrought redemption for his
people;
He has raised
up a horn of salvation for all of us
In the house
of his servant David.
Even as he
spoke by the mouth of his holy prophets—
Salvation from
our enemies and from the hand of all who hate
us;
To show mercy
to our fathers, and remember his holy covenant—
The oath which
he swore to Abraham our father,
To grant us
that we, being delivered out of the hand of our
enemies,
Should serve
him without fear,
In holiness
and righteousness before him all our days.
Yes, and you,
child of promise, shall be called the prophet of
the Most High;
For you shall
go before the face of the Lord to establish his
kingdom;
To give
knowledge of salvation to his people
In the
remission of their sins.
Rejoice in the
tender mercy of our God because the dayspring
from on high has now visited us
To shine upon
those who sit in darkness and the shadow of
death;
To guide our
feet into ways of peace.
And now let
your servant depart in peace, O Lord, according
to your word,
For my eyes
have seen your salvation,
Which you have
prepared before the face of all peoples;
A light for
even the unveiling of the gentiles
And the glory
of your people Israel.
On the
way back to Bethlehem, Joseph and Mary were
silent—confused and overawed. Mary was much
disturbed by the farewell salutation of Anna, the
aged poetess, and Joseph was not in harmony with
this premature effort to make Jesus out to be the
expected Messiah of the Jewish people.
10. HEROD
ACTS
But the
watchers for Herod were not inactive. When they
reported to him the visit of the priests of Ur to
Bethlehem, Herod summoned these Chaldeans to appear
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before him. He
inquired diligently of these wise men about the new
"king of the Jews," but they gave him little
satisfaction, explaining that the babe had been born
of a woman who had come down to Bethlehem with her
husband for the census enrollment. Herod, not being
satisfied with this answer, sent them forth with a
purse and directed that they should find the child
so that he too might come and worship him, since
they had declared that his kingdom was to be
spiritual, not temporal. But when the wise men did
not return, Herod grew suspicious. As he turned
these things over in his mind, his informers
returned and made full report of the recent
occurrences in the temple, bringing him a copy of
parts of the Simeon song which had been sung at the
redemption ceremonies of Jesus. But they had failed
to follow Joseph and Mary, and Herod was very angry
with them when they could not tell him whither the
pair had taken the babe. He then dispatched
searchers to locate Joseph and Mary. Knowing Herod
pursued the Nazareth family, Zacharias and Elizabeth
remained away from Bethlehem. The boy baby was
secreted with Joseph's relatives.
Joseph
was afraid to seek work, and their small savings
were rapidly disappearing. Even at the time of the
purification ceremonies at the temple, Joseph deemed
himself sufficiently poor to warrant his offering
for Mary two young pigeons as Moses had directed for
the purification of mothers among the poor.
When,
after more than a year of searching, Herod's spies
had not located Jesus, and because of the suspicion
that the babe was still concealed in Bethlehem, he
prepared an order directing that a systematic search
be made of every house in Bethlehem, and that all
boy babies under two years of age should be killed.
In this manner Herod hoped to make sure that this
child who was to become "king of the Jews" would be
destroyed. And thus perished in one day sixteen boy
babies in Bethlehem of Judea. But intrigue and
murder, even in his own immediate family, were
common occurrences at the court of Herod.
The
massacre of these infants took place about the
middle of October, 6 B.C., when Jesus was a little
over one year of age. But there were believers in
the coming Messiah even among Herod's court
attachés, and one of these, learning of the order to
slaughter the Bethlehem boy babies, communicated
with Zacharias, who in turn dispatched a messenger
to Joseph; and the night before the massacre Joseph
and Mary departed from Bethlehem with the babe for
Alexandria in Egypt. In order to avoid attracting
attention, they journeyed alone to Egypt with Jesus.
They went to Alexandria on funds provided by
Zacharias, and there Joseph worked at his trade
while Mary and Jesus lodged with well-to-do
relatives of Joseph's family. They sojourned in
Alexandria two full years, not returning to
Bethlehem until after the death of Herod. |