PAPER 126
- THE TWO CRUCIAL YEARS
Of all Jesus'
earth-life experiences, the fourteenth and fifteenth
years were the most crucial. These two years, after
he began to be self-conscious of divinity and
destiny, and before he achieved a large measure of
communication with his indwelling Adjuster, were the
most trying of his eventful life on Urantia. It is
this period of two years which should be called the
great test, the real temptation. No human youth, in
passing through the early confusions and adjustment
problems of adolescence, ever experienced a more
crucial testing than that which Jesus passed through
during his transition from childhood to young
manhood.
This
important period in Jesus' youthful development
began with the conclusion of the Jerusalem visit and
with his return to Nazareth. At first Mary was happy
in the thought that she had her boy back once more,
that Jesus had returned home to be a dutiful son÷not
that he was ever anything else÷and that he would
henceforth be more responsive to her plans for his
future life. But she was not for long to bask in
this sunshine of maternal delusion and unrecognized
family pride; very soon she was to be more
completely disillusioned. More and more the boy was
in the company of his father; less and less did he
come to her with his problems, while increasingly
both his parents failed to comprehend his frequent
alternation between the affairs of this world and
the contemplation of his relation to his Father's
business. Frankly, they did not understand him, but
they did truly love him.
As he
grew older, Jesus' pity and love for the Jewish
people deepened, but with the passing years, there
developed in his mind a growing righteous resentment
of the presence in the Father's temple of the
politically appointed priests. Jesus had great
respect for the sincere Pharisees and the honest
scribes, but he held the hypocritical Pharisees and
the dishonest theologians in great contempt; he
looked with disdain upon all those religious leaders
who were not sincere. When he scrutinized the
leadership of Israel, he was sometimes tempted to
look with favor on the possibility of his becoming
the Messiah of Jewish expectation, but he never
yielded to such a temptation.
The
story of his exploits among the wise men of the
temple in Jerusalem was gratifying to all Nazareth,
especially to his former teachers in the synagogue
school. For a time his praise was on everybody's
lips. All the village recounted his childhood wisdom
and praiseworthy conduct and predicted that he was
destined to become a great leader in Israel; at last
a really great teacher was to come out of Nazareth
in Galilee. And they all looked forward to the time
when he
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would be fifteen
years of age so that he might be permitted regularly
to read the Scriptures in the synagogue on the
Sabbath day.
1. HIS
FOURTEENTH YEAR (A.D. 8)
This is
the calendar year of his fourteenth birthday. He had
become a good yoke maker and worked well with both
canvas and leather. He was also rapidly developing
into an expert carpenter and cabinetmaker. This
summer he made frequent trips to the top of the hill
to the northwest of Nazareth for prayer and
meditation. He was gradually becoming more
self-conscious of the nature of his bestowal on
earth.
This
hill, a little more than one hundred years
previously, had been the "high place of Baal," and
now it was the site of the tomb of Simeon, a reputed
holy man of Israel. From the summit of this hill of
Simeon, Jesus looked out over Nazareth and the
surrounding country. He would gaze upon Megiddo and
recall the story of the Egyptian army winning its
first great victory in Asia; and how, later on,
another such army defeated the Judean king Josiah.
Not far away he could look upon Taanach, where
Deborah and Barak defeated Sisera. In the distance
he could view the hills of Dothan, where he had been
taught Joseph's brethren sold him into Egyptian
slavery. He then would shift his gaze over to Ebal
and Gerizim and recount to himself the traditions of
Abraham, Jacob, and Abimelech. And thus he recalled
and turned over in his mind the historic and
traditional events of his father Joseph's people.
He
continued to carry on his advanced courses of
reading under the synagogue teachers, and he also
continued with the home education of his brothers
and sisters as they grew up to suitable ages.
Early
this year Joseph arranged to set aside the income
from his Nazareth and Capernaum property to pay for
Jesus' long course of study at Jerusalem, it having
been planned that he should go to Jerusalem in
August of the following year when he would be
fifteen years of age.
By the
beginning of this year both Joseph and Mary
entertained frequent doubts about the destiny of
their first-born son. He was indeed a brilliant and
lovable child, but he was so difficult to
understand, so hard to fathom, and again, nothing
extraordinary or miraculous ever happened. Scores of
times had his proud mother stood in breathless
anticipation, expecting to see her son engage in
some superhuman or miraculous performance, but
always were her hopes dashed down in cruel
disappointment. And all this was discouraging, even
disheartening. The devout people of those days truly
believed that prophets and men of promise always
demonstrated their calling and established their
divine authority by performing miracles and working
wonders. But Jesus did none of these things;
wherefore was the confusion of his parents steadily
increased as they contemplated his future.
The
improved economic condition of the Nazareth family
was reflected in many ways about the home and
especially in the increased number of smooth white
boards which were used as writing slates, the
writing being done with charcoal. Jesus was also
permitted to resume his music lessons; he was very
fond of playing the harp.
Throughout this year it can truly be said that Jesus
"grew in favor with man and with God." The prospects
of the family seemed good; the future was bright.
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2. THE
DEATH OF JOSEPH
All did
go well until that fateful day of Tuesday, September
25, when a runner from Sepphoris brought to this
Nazareth home the tragic news that Joseph had been
severely injured by the falling of a derrick while
at work on the governor's residence. The messenger
from Sepphoris had stopped at the shop on the way to
Joseph's home, informing Jesus of his father's
accident, and they went together to the house to
break the sad news to Mary. Jesus desired to go
immediately to his father, but Mary would hear to
nothing but that she must hasten to her husband's
side. She directed that James, then ten years of
age, should accompany her to Sepphoris while Jesus
remained home with the younger children until she
should return, as she did not know how seriously
Joseph had been injured. But Joseph died of his
injuries before Mary arrived. They brought him to
Nazareth, and on the following day he was laid to
rest with his fathers.
Just at
the time when prospects were good and the future
looked bright, an apparently cruel hand struck down
the head of this Nazareth household, the affairs of
this home were disrupted, and every plan for Jesus
and his future education was demolished. This
carpenter lad, now just past fourteen years of age,
awakened to the realization that he had not only to
fulfill the commission of his heavenly Father to
reveal the divine nature on earth and in the flesh,
but that his young human nature must also shoulder
the responsibility of caring for his widowed mother
and seven brothers and sisters÷and another yet to be
born. This lad of Nazareth now became the sole
support and comfort of this so suddenly bereaved
family. Thus were permitted those occurrences of the
natural order of events on Urantia which would force
this young man of destiny so early to assume these
heavy but highly educational and disciplinary
responsibilities attendant upon becoming the head of
a human family, of becoming father to his own
brothers and sisters, of supporting and protecting
his mother, of functioning as guardian of his
father's home, the only home he was to know while on
this world.
Jesus
cheerfully accepted the responsibilities so suddenly
thrust upon him, and he carried them faithfully to
the end. At least one great problem and anticipated
difficulty in his life had been tragically solved÷he
would not now be expected to go to Jerusalem to
study under the rabbis. It remained always true that
Jesus "sat at no man's feet." He was ever willing to
learn from even the humblest of little children, but
he never derived authority to teach truth from human
sources.
Still he
knew nothing of the Gabriel visit to his mother
before his birth; he only learned of this from John
on the day of his baptism, at the beginning of his
public ministry.
As the
years passed, this young carpenter of Nazareth
increasingly measured every institution of society
and every usage of religion by the unvarying test:
What does it do for the human soul? does it bring
God to man? does it bring man to God? While this
youth did not wholly neglect the recreational and
social aspects of life, more and more he devoted his
time and energies to just two purposes: the care of
his family and the preparation to do his Father's
heavenly will on earth.
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This
year it became the custom for the neighbors to drop
in during the winter evenings to hear Jesus play
upon the harp, to listen to his stories (for the lad
was a master storyteller), and to hear him read from
the Greek scriptures.
The
economic affairs of the family continued to run
fairly smoothly as there was quite a sum of money on
hand at the time of Joseph's death. Jesus early
demonstrated the possession of keen business
judgment and financial sagacity. He was liberal but
frugal; he was saving but generous. He proved to be
a wise and efficient administrator of his father's
estate.
But in
spite of all that Jesus and the Nazareth neighbors
could do to bring cheer into the home, Mary, and
even the children, were overcast with sadness.
Joseph was gone. Joseph was an unusual husband and
father, and they all missed him. And it seemed all
the more tragic to think that he died ere they could
speak to him or hear his farewell blessing.
3. THE
FIFTEENTH YEAR (A.D. 9)
By the
middle of this fifteenth year÷and we are reckoning
time in accordance with the twentieth-century
calendar, not by the Jewish year÷Jesus had taken a
firm grasp upon the management of his family. Before
this year had passed, their savings had about
disappeared, and they were face to face with the
necessity of disposing of one of the Nazareth houses
which Joseph and his neighbor Jacob owned in
partnership.
On
Wednesday evening, April 17, A.D. 9, Ruth, the baby
of the family, was born, and to the best of his
ability Jesus endeavored to take the place of his
father in comforting and ministering to his mother
during this trying and peculiarly sad ordeal. For
almost a score of years (until he began his public
ministry) no father could have loved and nurtured
his daughter any more affectionately and faithfully
than Jesus cared for little Ruth. And he was an
equally good father to all the other members of his
family.
During
this year Jesus first formulated the prayer which he
subsequently taught to his apostles, and which to
many has become known as "The Lord's Prayer." In a
way it was an evolution of the family altar; they
had many forms of praise and several formal prayers.
After his father's death Jesus tried to teach the
older children to express themselves individually in
prayer÷much as he so enjoyed doing÷but they could
not grasp his thought and would invariably fall back
upon their memorized prayer forms. It was in this
effort to stimulate his older brothers and sisters
to say individual prayers that Jesus would endeavor
to lead them along by suggestive phrases, and
presently, without intention on his part, it
developed that they were all using a form of prayer
which was largely built up from these suggestive
lines which Jesus had taught them.
At last
Jesus gave up the idea of having each member of the
family formulate spontaneous prayers, and one
evening in October he sat down by the little squat
lamp on the low stone table, and, on a piece of
smooth cedar board about eighteen inches square,
with a piece of charcoal he wrote out the prayer
which became from that time on the standard family
petition.
This
year Jesus was much troubled with confused thinking.
Family responsibility had quite effectively removed
all thought of immediately carrying out any plan for
responding to the Jerusalem visitation directing him
to "be about his Father's business." Jesus rightly
reasoned that the watchcare of his earthly
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father's family
must take precedence of all duties; that the support
of his family must become his first obligation.
In the
course of this year Jesus found a passage in the
so-called Book of Enoch which influenced him in the
later adoption of the term "Son of Man" as a
designation for his bestowal mission on Urantia. He
had thoroughly considered the idea of the Jewish
Messiah and was firmly convinced that he was not to
be that Messiah. He longed to help his father's
people, but he never expected to lead Jewish armies
in overthrowing the foreign domination of Palestine.
He knew he would never sit on the throne of David at
Jerusalem. Neither did he believe that his mission
was that of a spiritual deliverer or moral teacher
solely to the Jewish people. In no sense, therefore,
could his life mission be the fulfillment of the
intense longings and supposed Messianic prophecies
of the Hebrew scriptures; at least, not as the Jews
understood these predictions of the prophets.
Likewise he was certain he was never to appear as
the Son of Man depicted by the Prophet Daniel.
But when
the time came for him to go forth as a world
teacher, what would he call himself? What claim
should he make concerning his mission? By what name
would he be called by the people who would become
believers in his teachings?
While
turning all these problems over in his mind, he
found in the synagogue library at Nazareth, among
the apocalyptic books which he had been studying,
this manuscript called "The Book of Enoch"; and
though he was certain that it had not been written
by Enoch of old, it proved very intriguing to him,
and he read and reread it many times. There was one
passage which particularly impressed him, a passage
in which this term "Son of Man" appeared. The writer
of this so-called Book of Enoch went on to tell
about this Son of Man, describing the work he would
do on earth and explaining that this Son of Man,
before coming down on this earth to bring salvation
to mankind, had walked through the courts of
heavenly glory with his Father, the Father of all;
and that he had turned his back upon all this
grandeur and glory to come down on earth to proclaim
salvation to needy mortals. As Jesus would read
these passages (well understanding that much of the
Eastern mysticism which had become admixed with
these teachings was erroneous), he responded in his
heart and recognized in his mind that of all the
Messianic predictions of the Hebrew scriptures and
of all the theories about the Jewish deliverer, none
was so near the truth as this story tucked away in
this only partially accredited Book of Enoch; and he
then and there decided to adopt as his inaugural
title "the Son of Man." And this he did when he
subsequently began his public work. Jesus had an
unerring ability for the recognition of truth, and
truth he never hesitated to embrace, no matter from
what source it appeared to emanate.
By this
time he had quite thoroughly settled many things
about his forthcoming work for the world, but he
said nothing of these matters to his mother, who
still held stoutly to the idea of his being the
Jewish Messiah.
The
great confusion of Jesus' younger days now arose.
Having settled something about the nature of his
mission on earth, "to be about his Father's
business"÷to show forth his Father's loving nature
to all mankind÷he began to ponder anew the many
statements in the Scriptures referring to the coming
of a national deliverer, a Jewish teacher or king.
To what event did these prophecies refer? Was not he
a Jew? or was he? Was he or was he not of the house
of David? His
Page 1391
mother averred he
was; his father had ruled that he was not. He
decided he was not. But had the prophets confused
the nature and mission of the Messiah?
After
all, could it be possible that his mother was right?
In most matters, when differences of opinion had
arisen in the past, she had been right. If he were a
new teacher and not the Messiah, then how
should he recognize the Jewish Messiah if such a one
should appear in Jerusalem during the time of his
earth mission; and, further, what should be his
relation to this Jewish Messiah? And what should be
his relation, after embarking on his life mission,
to his family? to the Jewish commonwealth and
religion? to the Roman Empire? to the gentiles and
their religions? Each of these momentous problems
this young Galilean turned over in his mind and
seriously pondered while he continued to work at the
carpenter's bench, laboriously making a living for
himself, his mother, and eight other hungry mouths.
Before
the end of this year Mary saw the family funds
diminishing. She turned the sale of doves over to
James. Presently they bought a second cow, and with
the aid of Miriam they began the sale of milk to
their Nazareth neighbors.
His
profound periods of meditation, his frequent
journeys to the hilltop for prayer, and the many
strange ideas which Jesus advanced from time to
time, thoroughly alarmed his mother. Sometimes she
thought the lad was beside himself, and then she
would steady her fears, remembering that he was,
after all, a child of promise and in some manner
different from other youths.
But
Jesus was learning not to speak of all his thoughts,
not to present all his ideas to the world, not even
to his own mother. From this year on, Jesus'
disclosures about what was going on in his mind
steadily diminished; that is, he talked less about
those things which an average person could not
grasp, and which would lead to his being regarded as
peculiar or different from ordinary folks. To all
appearances he became commonplace and conventional,
though he did long for someone who could understand
his problems. He craved a trustworthy and
confidential friend, but his problems were too
complex for his human associates to comprehend. The
uniqueness of the unusual situation compelled him to
bear his burdens alone.
4. FIRST
SERMON IN THE SYNAGOGUE
With the
coming of his fifteenth birthday, Jesus could
officially occupy the synagogue pulpit on the
Sabbath day. Many times before, in the absence of
speakers, Jesus had been asked to read the
Scriptures, but now the day had come when, according
to law, he could conduct the service. Therefore on
the first Sabbath after his fifteenth birthday the
chazan arranged for Jesus to conduct the morning
service of the synagogue. And when all the faithful
in Nazareth had assembled, the young man, having
made his selection of Scriptures, stood up and began
to read:
"The
spirit of the Lord God is upon me, for the Lord has
anointed me; he has sent me to bring good news to
the meek, to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim
liberty to the captives, and to set the spiritual
prisoners free; to proclaim the year of God's favor
and the day of our God's reckoning; to comfort all
mourners, to give them beauty for ashes, the oil of
joy in the place of mourning, a song of praise
instead of the spirit of sorrow, that they may be
called trees of righteousness, the planting of the
Lord, wherewith he may be glorified.
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"Seek
good and not evil that you may live, and so the
Lord, the God of hosts, shall be with you. Hate the
evil and love the good; establish judgment in the
gate. Perhaps the Lord God will be gracious to the
remnant of Joseph.
"Wash
yourselves, make yourselves clean; put away the evil
of your doings from before my eyes; cease to do evil
and learn to do good; seek justice, relieve the
oppressed. Defend the fatherless and plead for the
widow.
"Wherewith shall I come before the Lord, to bow
myself before the Lord of all the earth? Shall I
come before him with burnt offerings, with calves a
year old? Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of
rams, ten thousands of sheep, or with rivers of oil?
Shall I give my first-born for my transgression, the
fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? No! for the
Lord has showed us, O men, what is good. And what
does the Lord require of you but to deal justly,
love mercy, and walk humbly with your God?
"To
whom, then, will you liken God who sits upon the
circle of the earth? Lift up your eyes and behold
who has created all these worlds, who brings forth
their host by number and calls them all by their
names. He does all these things by the greatness of
his might, and because he is strong in power, not
one fails. He gives power to the weak, and to those
who are weary he increases strength. Fear not, for I
am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God. I
will strengthen you and I will help you; yes, I will
uphold you with the right hand of my righteousness,
for I am the Lord your God. And I will hold your
right hand, saying to you, fear not, for I will help
you.
"And you
are my witness, says the Lord, and my servant whom I
have chosen that all may know and believe me and
understand that I am the Eternal. I, even I, am the
Lord, and beside me there is no savior."
And when
he had thus read, he sat down, and the people went
to their homes, pondering over the words which he
had so graciously read to them. Never had his
townspeople seen him so magnificently solemn; never
had they heard his voice so earnest and so sincere;
never had they observed him so manly and decisive,
so authoritative.
This
Sabbath afternoon Jesus climbed the Nazareth hill
with James and, when they returned home, wrote out
the Ten Commandments in Greek on two smooth boards
in charcoal. Subsequently Martha colored and
decorated these boards, and for long they hung on
the wall over James's small workbench.
5. THE
FINANCIAL STRUGGLE
Gradually Jesus and his family returned to the
simple life of their earlier years. Their clothes
and even their food became simpler. They had plenty
of milk, butter, and cheese. In season they enjoyed
the produce of their garden, but each passing month
necessitated the practice of greater frugality.
Their breakfasts were very plain; they saved their
best food for the evening meal. However, among these
Jews lack of wealth did not imply social
inferiority.
Already
had this youth well-nigh encompassed the
comprehension of how men lived in his day. And how
well he understood life in the home, field, and
workshop is shown by his subsequent teachings, which
so repletely reveal his intimate contact with all
phases of human experience.
The
Nazareth chazan continued to cling to the belief
that Jesus was to become a great teacher, probably
the successor of the renowned Gamaliel at Jerusalem.
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Apparently all Jesus' plans for a career were
thwarted. The future did not look bright as matters
now developed. But he did not falter; he was not
discouraged. He lived on, day by day, doing well the
present duty and faithfully discharging the
immediate responsibilities of his station in
life. Jesus' life is the everlasting comfort of all
disappointed idealists.
The pay
of a common day-laboring carpenter was slowly
diminishing. By the end of this year Jesus could
earn, by working early and late, only the equivalent
of about twenty-five cents a day. By the next year
they found it difficult to pay the civil taxes, not
to mention the synagogue assessments and the temple
tax of one-half shekel. During this year the tax
collector tried to squeeze extra revenue out of
Jesus, even threatening to take his harp.
Fearing
that the copy of the Greek scriptures might be
discovered and confiscated by the tax collectors,
Jesus, on his fifteenth birthday, presented it to
the Nazareth synagogue library as his maturity
offering to the Lord.
The
great shock of his fifteenth year came when Jesus
went over to Sepphoris to receive the decision of
Herod regarding the appeal taken to him in the
dispute about the amount of money due Joseph at the
time of his accidental death. Jesus and Mary had
hoped for the receipt of a considerable sum of money
when the treasurer at Sepphoris had offered them a
paltry amount. Joseph's brothers had taken an appeal
to Herod himself, and now Jesus stood in the palace
and heard Herod decree that his father had nothing
due him at the time of his death. And for such an
unjust decision Jesus never again trusted Herod
Antipas. It is not surprising that he once alluded
to Herod as "that fox."
The
close work at the carpenter's bench during this and
subsequent years deprived Jesus of the opportunity
of mingling with the caravan passengers. The family
supply shop had already been taken over by his
uncle, and Jesus worked altogether in the home shop,
where he was near to help Mary with the family.
About this time he began sending James up to the
camel lot to gather information about world events,
and thus he sought to keep in touch with the news of
the day.
As he
grew up to manhood, he passed through all those
conflicts and confusions which the average young
persons of previous and subsequent ages have
undergone. And the rigorous experience of supporting
his family was a sure safeguard against his having
overmuch time for idle meditation or the indulgence
of mystic tendencies.
This was
the year that Jesus rented a considerable piece of
land just to the north of their home, which was
divided up as a family garden plot. Each of the
older children had an individual garden, and they
entered into keen competition in their agricultural
efforts. Their eldest brother spent some time with
them in the garden each day during the season of
vegetable cultivation. As Jesus worked with his
younger brothers and sisters in the garden, he many
times entertained the wish that they were all
located on a farm out in the country where they
could enjoy the liberty and freedom of an unhampered
life. But they did not find themselves growing up in
the country; and Jesus, being a thoroughly practical
youth as well as an idealist, intelligently and
vigorously attacked his problem just as he found it,
and did everything within his power to adjust
himself and his family to the realities of their
situation and to adapt their condition to the
highest possible satisfaction of their individual
and collective longings.
At one
time Jesus faintly hoped that he might be able to
gather up sufficient means, provided they could
collect the considerable sum of money due his father
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for work on
Herod's palace, to warrant undertaking the purchase
of a small farm. He had really given serious thought
to this plan of moving his family out into the
country. But when Herod refused to pay them any of
the funds due Joseph, they gave up the ambition of
owning a home in the country. As it was, they
contrived to enjoy much of the experience of farm
life as they now had three cows, four sheep, a flock
of chickens, a donkey, and a dog, in addition to the
doves. Even the little tots had their regular duties
to perform in the well-regulated scheme of
management which characterized the home life of this
Nazareth family.
With the
close of this fifteenth year Jesus completed the
traversal of that dangerous and difficult period in
human existence, that time of transition between the
more complacent years of childhood and the
consciousness of approaching manhood with its
increased responsibilities and opportunities for the
acquirement of advanced experience in the
development of a noble character. The growth period
for mind and body had ended, and now began the real
career of this young man of Nazareth. |