PAPER 139
- THE TWELVE APOSTLES
It is an eloquent
testimony to the charm and righteousness of Jesus'
earth life that, although he repeatedly dashed to
pieces the hopes of his apostles and tore to shreds
their every ambition for personal exaltation, only
one deserted him.
The apostles
learned from Jesus about the kingdom of heaven, and
Jesus learned much from them about the kingdom of
men, human nature as it lives on Urantia and on the
other evolutionary worlds of time and space. These
twelve men represented many different types of human
temperament, and they had not been made alike
by schooling. Many of these Galilean fishermen
carried heavy strains of gentile blood as a result
of the forcible conversion of the gentile population
of Galilee one hundred years previously.
Do not make the
mistake of regarding the apostles as being
altogether ignorant and unlearned. All of them,
except the Alpheus twins, were graduates of the
synagogue schools, having been thoroughly trained in
the Hebrew scriptures and in much of the current
knowledge of that day. Seven were graduates of the
Capernaum synagogue schools, and there were no
better Jewish schools in all Galilee.
When your records
refer to these messengers of the kingdom as being
"ignorant and unlearned," it was intended to convey
the idea that they were laymen, unlearned in the
lore of the rabbis and untrained in the methods of
rabbinical interpretation of the Scriptures. They
were lacking in so-called higher education. In
modern times they would certainly be considered
uneducated, and in some circles of society even
uncultured. One thing is certain: They had not all
been put through the same rigid and stereotyped
educational curriculum. From adolescence on they had
enjoyed separate experiences of learning how to
live.
1.
ANDREW, THE FIRST CHOSEN
Andrew, chairman
of the apostolic corps of the kingdom, was born in
Capernaum. He was the oldest child in a family of
five--himself, his brother Simon, and three sisters.
His father, now dead, had been a partner of Zebedee
in the fish-drying business at Bethsaida, the
fishing harbor of Capernaum. When he became an
apostle, Andrew was unmarried but made his home with
his married brother, Simon Peter. Both were
fishermen and partners of James and John the sons of
Zebedee.
In A.D. 26, the
year he was chosen as an apostle, Andrew was 33, a
full year older than Jesus and the oldest of the
apostles. He sprang from an excellent line
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of ancestors and
was the ablest man of the twelve. Excepting oratory,
he was the peer of his associates in almost every
imaginable ability. Jesus never gave Andrew a
nickname, a fraternal designation. But even as the
apostles soon began to call Jesus Master, so they
also designated Andrew by a term the equivalent of
Chief.
Andrew was a good
organizer but a better administrator. He was one of
the inner circle of four apostles, but his
appointment by Jesus as the head of the apostolic
group made it necessary for him to remain on duty
with his brethren while the other three enjoyed very
close communion with the Master. To the very end
Andrew remained dean of the apostolic corps.
Although Andrew
was never an effective preacher, he was an efficient
personal worker, being the pioneer missionary of the
kingdom in that, as the first chosen apostle, he
immediately brought to Jesus his brother, Simon, who
subsequently became one of the greatest preachers of
the kingdom. Andrew was the chief supporter of
Jesus' policy of utilizing the program of personal
work as a means of training the twelve as messengers
of the kingdom.
Whether Jesus
privately taught the apostles or preached to the
multitude, Andrew was usually conversant with what
was going on; he was an understanding executive and
an efficient administrator. He rendered a prompt
decision on every matter brought to his notice
unless he deemed the problem one beyond the domain
of his authority, in which event he would take it
straight to Jesus.
Andrew and Peter
were very unlike in character and temperament, but
it must be recorded everlastingly to their credit
that they got along together splendidly. Andrew was
never jealous of Peter's oratorical ability. Not
often will an older man of Andrew's type be observed
exerting such a profound influence over a younger
and talented brother. Andrew and Peter never seemed
to be in the least jealous of each other's abilities
or achievements. Late on the evening of the day of
Pentecost, when, largely through the energetic and
inspiring preaching of Peter, two thousand souls
were added to the kingdom, Andrew said to his
brother: "I could not do that, but I am glad I have
a brother who could." To which Peter replied: "And
but for your bringing me to the Master and by your
steadfastness keeping me with him, I should
not have been here to do this." Andrew and Peter
were the exceptions to the rule, proving that even
brothers can live together peaceably and work
together effectively.
After Pentecost
Peter was famous, but it never irritated the older
Andrew to spend the rest of his life being
introduced as "Simon Peter's brother."
Of all the
apostles, Andrew was the best judge of men. He knew
that trouble was brewing in the heart of Judas
Iscariot even when none of the others suspected that
anything was wrong with their treasurer; but he told
none of them his fears. Andrew's great service to
the kingdom was in advising Peter, James, and John
concerning the choice of the first missionaries who
were sent out to proclaim the gospel, and also in
counseling these early leaders about the
organization of the administrative affairs of the
kingdom. Andrew had a great gift for discovering the
hidden resources and latent talents of young people.
Very soon after
Jesus' ascension on high, Andrew began the writing
of a personal record of many of the sayings and
doings of his departed Master. After Andrew's death
other copies of this private record were made and
circulated freely among the early teachers of the
Christian church. These informal notes of Andrew's
were subsequently edited, amended, altered, and
added to until they made up a fairly consecutive
narrative of the Master's life on earth. The last of
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these few altered
and amended copies was destroyed by fire at
Alexandria about one hundred years after the
original was written by the first chosen of the
twelve apostles.
Andrew was a man
of clear insight, logical thought, and firm
decision, whose great strength of character
consisted in his superb stability. His temperamental
handicap was his lack of enthusiasm; he many times
failed to encourage his associates by judicious
commendation. And this reticence to praise the
worthy accomplishments of his friends grew out of
his abhorrence of flattery and insincerity. Andrew
was one of those all-round, even-tempered,
self-made, and successful men of modest affairs.
Every one of the
apostles loved Jesus, but it remains true that each
of the twelve was drawn toward him because of some
certain trait of personality which made a special
appeal to the individual apostle. Andrew admired
Jesus because of his consistent sincerity, his
unaffected dignity. When men once knew Jesus, they
were possessed with the urge to share him with their
friends; they really wanted all the world to know
him.
When the later
persecutions finally scattered the apostles from
Jerusalem, Andrew journeyed through Armenia, Asia
Minor, and Macedonia and, after bringing many
thousands into the kingdom, was finally apprehended
and crucified in Patrae in Achaia. It was two full
days before this robust man expired on the cross,
and throughout these tragic hours he continued
effectively to proclaim the glad tidings of the
salvation of the kingdom of heaven.
2. SIMON
PETER
When Simon joined
the apostles, he was thirty years of age. He was
married, had three children, and lived at Bethsaida,
near Capernaum. His brother, Andrew, and his wife's
mother lived with him. Both Peter and Andrew were
fisher partners of the sons of Zebedee.
The Master had
known Simon for some time before Andrew presented
him as the second of the apostles. When Jesus gave
Simon the name Peter, he did it with a smile; it was
to be a sort of nickname. Simon was well known to
all his friends as an erratic and impulsive fellow.
True, later on, Jesus did attach a new and
significant import to this lightly bestowed
nickname.
Simon Peter was a
man of impulse, an optimist. He had grown up
permitting himself freely to indulge strong
feelings; he was constantly getting into
difficulties because he persisted in speaking
without thinking. This sort of thoughtlessness also
made incessant trouble for all of his friends and
associates and was the cause of his receiving many
mild rebukes from his Master. The only reason Peter
did not get into more trouble because of his
thoughtless speaking was that he very early learned
to talk over many of his plans and schemes with his
brother, Andrew, before he ventured to make public
proposals.
Peter was a fluent
speaker, eloquent and dramatic. He was also a
natural and inspirational leader of men, a quick
thinker but not a deep reasoner. He asked many
questions, more than all the apostles put together,
and while the majority of these questions were good
and relevant, many of them were thoughtless and
foolish. Peter did not have a deep mind, but he knew
his mind fairly well. He was therefore a man of
quick decision and sudden action. While others
talked in their
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astonishment at
seeing Jesus on the beach, Peter jumped in and swam
ashore to meet the Master.
The one trait
which Peter most admired in Jesus was his supernal
tenderness. Peter never grew weary of contemplating
Jesus' forbearance. He never forgot the lesson about
forgiving the wrongdoer, not only seven times but
seventy times and seven. He thought much about these
impressions of the Master's forgiving character
during those dark and dismal days immediately
following his thoughtless and unintended denial of
Jesus in the high priest's courtyard.
Simon Peter was
distressingly vacillating; he would suddenly swing
from one extreme to the other. First he refused to
let Jesus wash his feet and then, on hearing the
Master's reply, begged to be washed all over. But,
after all, Jesus knew that Peter's faults were of
the head and not of the heart. He was one of the
most inexplicable combinations of courage and
cowardice that ever lived on earth. His great
strength of character was loyalty, friendship. Peter
really and truly loved Jesus. And yet despite this
towering strength of devotion he was so unstable and
inconstant that he permitted a servant girl to tease
him into denying his Lord and Master. Peter could
withstand persecution and any other form of direct
assault, but he withered and shrank before ridicule.
He was a brave soldier when facing a frontal attack,
but he was a fear-cringing coward when surprised
with an assault from the rear.
Peter was the
first of Jesus' apostles to come forward to defend
the work of Philip among the Samaritans and Paul
among the gentiles; yet later on at Antioch he
reversed himself when confronted by ridiculing
Judaizers, temporarily withdrawing from the gentiles
only to bring down upon his head the fearless
denunciation of Paul.
He was the first
one of the apostles to make wholehearted confession
of Jesus' combined humanity and divinity and the
first--save Judas--to deny him. Peter was not so
much of a dreamer, but he disliked to descend from
the clouds of ecstasy and the enthusiasm of dramatic
indulgence to the plain and matter-of-fact world of
reality.
In following
Jesus, literally and figuratively, he was either
leading the procession or else trailing
behind--"following afar off." But he was the
outstanding preacher of the twelve; he did more than
any other one man, aside from Paul, to establish the
kingdom and send its messengers to the four corners
of the earth in one generation.
After his rash
denials of the Master he found himself, and with
Andrew's sympathetic and understanding guidance he
again led the way back to the fish nets while the
apostles tarried to find out what was to happen
after the crucifixion. When he was fully assured
that Jesus had forgiven him and knew he had been
received back into the Master's fold, the fires of
the kingdom burned so brightly within his soul that
he became a great and saving light to thousands who
sat in darkness.
After leaving
Jerusalem and before Paul became the leading spirit
among the gentile Christian churches, Peter traveled
extensively, visiting all the churches from Babylon
to Corinth. He even visited and ministered to many
of the churches which had been raised up by Paul.
Although Peter and Paul differed much in temperament
and education, even in theology, they worked
together harmoniously for the upbuilding of the
churches during their later years.
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Something of
Peter's style and teaching is shown in the sermons
partially recorded by Luke and in the Gospel of
Mark. His vigorous style was better shown in his
letter known as the First Epistle of Peter; at least
this was true before it was subsequently altered by
a disciple of Paul.
But Peter
persisted in making the mistake of trying to
convince the Jews that Jesus was, after all, really
and truly the Jewish Messiah. Right up to the day of
his death, Simon Peter continued to suffer confusion
in his mind between the concepts of Jesus as the
Jewish Messiah, Christ as the world's redeemer, and
the Son of Man as the revelation of God, the loving
Father of all mankind.
Peter's wife was a
very able woman. For years she labored acceptably as
a member of the women's corps, and when Peter was
driven out of Jerusalem, she accompanied him upon
all his journeys to the churches as well as on all
his missionary excursions. And the day her
illustrious husband yielded up his life, she was
thrown to the wild beasts in the arena at Rome.
And so this man
Peter, an intimate of Jesus, one of the inner
circle, went forth from Jerusalem proclaiming the
glad tidings of the kingdom with power and glory
until the fullness of his ministry had been
accomplished; and he regarded himself as the
recipient of high honors when his captors informed
him that he must die as his Master had died--on the
cross. And thus was Simon Peter crucified in Rome.
3. JAMES
ZEBEDEE
James, the older
of the two apostle sons of Zebedee, whom Jesus
nicknamed "sons of thunder," was thirty years old
when he became an apostle. He was married, had four
children, and lived near his parents in the
outskirts of Capernaum, Bethsaida. He was a
fisherman, plying his calling in company with his
younger brother John and in association with Andrew
and Simon. James and his brother John enjoyed the
advantage of having known Jesus longer than any of
the other apostles.
This able apostle
was a temperamental contradiction; he seemed really
to possess two natures, both of which were actuated
by strong feelings. He was particularly vehement
when his indignation was once fully aroused. He had
a fiery temper when once it was adequately provoked,
and when the storm was over, he was always wont to
justify and excuse his anger under the pretense that
it was wholly a manifestation of righteous
indignation. Except for these periodic upheavals of
wrath, James's personality was much like that of
Andrew. He did not have Andrew's discretion or
insight into human nature, but he was a much better
public speaker. Next to Peter, unless it was
Matthew, James was the best public orator among the
twelve.
Though James was
in no sense moody, he could be quiet and taciturn
one day and a very good talker and storyteller the
next. He usually talked freely with Jesus, but among
the twelve, for days at a time he was the silent
man. His one great weakness was these spells of
unaccountable silence.
The outstanding
feature of James's personality was his ability to
see all sides of a proposition. Of all the twelve,
he came the nearest to grasping the real import and
significance of Jesus' teaching. He, too, was slow
at first to comprehend the Master's meaning, but ere
they had finished their training, he had acquired a
superior concept of Jesus' message. James was able
to understand a wide range
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of human nature;
he got along well with the versatile Andrew, the
impetuous Peter, and his self-contained brother
John.
Though James and
John had their troubles trying to work together, it
was inspiring to observe how well they got along.
They did not succeed quite so well as Andrew and
Peter, but they did much better than would
ordinarily be expected of two brothers, especially
such headstrong and determined brothers. But,
strange as it may seem, these two sons of Zebedee
were much more tolerant of each other than they were
of strangers. They had great affection for one
another; they had always been happy playmates. It
was these "sons of thunder" who wanted to call fire
down from heaven to destroy the Samaritans who
presumed to show disrespect for their Master. But
the untimely death of James greatly modified the
vehement temperament of his younger brother John.
That
characteristic of Jesus which James most admired was
the Master's sympathetic affection. Jesus'
understanding interest in the small and the great,
the rich and the poor, made a great appeal to him.
James Zebedee was
a well-balanced thinker and planner. Along with
Andrew, he was one of the more level-headed of the
apostolic group. He was a vigorous individual but
was never in a hurry. He was an excellent balance
wheel for Peter.
He was modest and
undramatic, a daily server, an unpretentious worker,
seeking no special reward when he once grasped
something of the real meaning of the kingdom. And
even in the story about the mother of James and
John, who asked that her sons be granted places on
the right hand and the left hand of Jesus, it should
be remembered that it was the mother who made this
request. And when they signified that they were
ready to assume such responsibilities, it should be
recognized that they were cognizant of the dangers
accompanying the Master's supposed revolt against
the Roman power, and that they were also willing to
pay the price. When Jesus asked if they were ready
to drink the cup, they replied that they were. And
as concerns James, it was literally true--he did
drink the cup with the Master, seeing that he was
the first of the apostles to experience martyrdom,
being early put to death with the sword by Herod
Agrippa. James was thus the first of the twelve to
sacrifice his life upon the new battle line of the
kingdom. Herod Agrippa feared James above all the
other apostles. He was indeed often quiet and
silent, but he was brave and determined when his
convictions were aroused and challenged.
James lived his
life to the full, and when the end came, he bore
himself with such grace and fortitude that even his
accuser and informer, who attended his trial and
execution, was so touched that he rushed away from
the scene of James's death to join himself to the
disciples of Jesus.
4. JOHN
ZEBEDEE
When he became an
apostle, John was twenty-four years old and was the
youngest of the twelve. He was unmarried and lived
with his parents at Bethsaida; he was a fisherman
and worked with his brother James in partnership
with Andrew and Peter. Both before and after
becoming an apostle, John functioned as the personal
agent of Jesus in dealing with the Master's family,
and he continued to bear this responsibility as long
as Mary the mother of Jesus lived.
Since John was the
youngest of the twelve and so closely associated
with Jesus in his family affairs, he was very dear
to the Master, but it cannot be truthfully
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said that he was
"the disciple whom Jesus loved." You would hardly
suspect such a magnanimous personality as Jesus to
be guilty of showing favoritism, of loving one of
his apostles more than the others. The fact that
John was one of the three personal aides of Jesus
lent further color to this mistaken idea, not to
mention that John, along with his brother James, had
known Jesus longer than the others.
Peter, James, and
John were assigned as personal aides to Jesus soon
after they became apostles. Shortly after the
selection of the twelve and at the time Jesus
appointed Andrew to act as director of the group, he
said to him: "And now I desire that you assign two
or three of your associates to be with me and to
remain by my side, to comfort me and to minister to
my daily needs." And Andrew thought best to select
for this special duty the next three first-chosen
apostles. He would have liked to volunteer for such
a blessed service himself, but the Master had
already given him his commission; so he immediately
directed that Peter, James, and John attach
themselves to Jesus.
John Zebedee had
many lovely traits of character, but one which was
not so lovely was his inordinate but usually
well-concealed conceit. His long association with
Jesus made many and great changes in his character.
This conceit was greatly lessened, but after growing
old and becoming more or less childish, this
self-esteem reappeared to a certain extent, so that,
when engaged in directing Nathan in the writing of
the Gospel which now bears his name, the aged
apostle did not hesitate repeatedly to refer to
himself as the "disciple whom Jesus loved." In view
of the fact that John came nearer to being the chum
of Jesus than any other earth mortal, that he was
his chosen personal representative in so many
matters, it is not strange that he should have come
to regard himself as the "disciple whom Jesus loved"
since he most certainly knew he was the disciple
whom Jesus so frequently trusted.
The strongest
trait in John's character was his dependability; he
was prompt and courageous, faithful and devoted. His
greatest weakness was this characteristic conceit.
He was the youngest member of his father's family
and the youngest of the apostolic group. Perhaps he
was just a bit spoiled; maybe he had been humored
slightly too much. But the John of after years was a
very different type of person than the self-admiring
and arbitrary young man who joined the ranks of
Jesus' apostles when he was twenty-four.
Those
characteristics of Jesus which John most appreciated
were the Master's love and unselfishness; these
traits made such an impression on him that his whole
subsequent life became dominated by the sentiment of
love and brotherly devotion. He talked about love
and wrote about love. This "son of thunder" became
the "apostle of love"; and at Ephesus, when the aged
bishop was no longer able to stand in the pulpit and
preach but had to be carried to church in a chair,
and when at the close of the service he was asked to
say a few words to the believers, for years his only
utterance was, "My little children, love one
another."
John was a man of
few words except when his temper was aroused. He
thought much but said little. As he grew older, his
temper became more subdued, better controlled, but
he never overcame his disinclination to talk; he
never fully mastered this reticence. But he was
gifted with a remarkable and creative imagination.
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There was another
side to John that one would not expect to find in
this quiet and introspective type. He was somewhat
bigoted and inordinately intolerant. In this respect
he and James were much alike--they both wanted to
call down fire from heaven on the heads of the
disrespectful Samaritans. When John encountered some
strangers teaching in Jesus' name, he promptly
forbade them. But he was not the only one of the
twelve who was tainted with this kind of self-esteem
and superiority consciousness.
John's life was
tremendously influenced by the sight of Jesus' going
about without a home as he knew how faithfully he
had made provision for the care of his mother and
family. John also deeply sympathized with Jesus
because of his family's failure to understand him,
being aware that they were gradually withdrawing
from him. This entire situation, together with
Jesus' ever deferring his slightest wish to the will
of the Father in heaven and his daily life of
implicit trust, made such a profound impression on
John that it produced marked and permanent changes
in his character, changes which manifested
themselves throughout his entire subsequent life.
John had a cool
and daring courage which few of the other apostles
possessed. He was the one apostle who followed right
along with Jesus the night of his arrest and dared
to accompany his Master into the very jaws of death.
He was present and near at hand right up to the last
earthly hour and was found faithfully carrying out
his trust with regard to Jesus' mother and ready to
receive such additional instructions as might be
given during the last moments of the Master's mortal
existence. One thing is certain, John was thoroughly
dependable. John usually sat on Jesus' right hand
when the twelve were at meat. He was the first of
the twelve really and fully to believe in the
resurrection, and he was the first to recognize the
Master when he came to them on the seashore after
his resurrection.
This son of
Zebedee was very closely associated with Peter in
the early activities of the Christian movement,
becoming one of the chief supporters of the
Jerusalem church. He was the right-hand support of
Peter on the day of Pentecost.
Several years
after the martyrdom of James, John married his
brother's widow. The last twenty years of his life
he was cared for by a loving granddaughter.
John was in prison
several times and was banished to the Isle of Patmos
for a period of four years until another emperor
came to power in Rome. Had not John been tactful and
sagacious, he would undoubtedly have been killed as
was his more outspoken brother James. As the years
passed, John, together with James the Lord's
brother, learned to practice wise conciliation when
they appeared before the civil magistrates. They
found that a "soft answer turns away wrath." They
also learned to represent the church as a "spiritual
brotherhood devoted to the social service of
mankind" rather than as "the kingdom of heaven."
They taught loving service rather than ruling
power--kingdom and king.
When in temporary
exile on Patmos, John wrote the Book of Revelation,
which you now have in greatly abridged and distorted
form. This Book of Revelation contains the surviving
fragments of a great revelation, large portions of
which were lost, other portions of which were
removed, subsequent to John's writing. It is
preserved in only fragmentary and adulterated form.
John traveled
much, labored incessantly, and after becoming bishop
of the Asia churches, settled down at Ephesus. He
directed his associate, Nathan, in
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the writing of
the so-called "Gospel according to John," at
Ephesus, when he was ninety-nine years old. Of all
the twelve apostles, John Zebedee eventually became
the outstanding theologian. He died a natural death
at Ephesus in A.D. 103 when he was one hundred and
one years of age.
5. PHILIP
THE CURIOUS
Philip was the
fifth apostle to be chosen, being called when Jesus
and his first four apostles were on their way from
John's rendezvous on the Jordan to Cana of Galilee.
Since he lived at Bethsaida, Philip had for some
time known of Jesus, but it had not occurred to him
that Jesus was a really great man until that day in
the Jordan valley when he said, "Follow me." Philip
was also somewhat influenced by the fact that
Andrew, Peter, James, and John had accepted Jesus as
the Deliverer.
Philip was
twenty-seven years of age when he joined the
apostles; he had recently been married, but he had
no children at this time. The nickname which the
apostles gave him signified "curiosity." Philip was
always wanting to be shown. He never seemed to see
very far into any proposition. He was not
necessarily dull, but he lacked imagination. This
lack of imagination was the great weakness of his
character. He was a commonplace and matter-of-fact
individual.
When the apostles
were organized for service, Philip was made steward;
it was his duty to see that they were at all times
supplied with provisions. And he was a good steward.
His strongest characteristic was his methodical
thoroughness; he was both mathematical and
systematic.
Philip came from a
family of seven, three boys and four girls. He was
next to the oldest, and after the resurrection he
baptized his entire family into the kingdom.
Philip's people were fisherfolk. His father was a
very able man, a deep thinker, but his mother was of
a very mediocre family. Philip was not a man who
could be expected to do big things, but he was a man
who could do little things in a big way, do them
well and acceptably. Only a few times in four years
did he fail to have food on hand to satisfy the
needs of all. Even the many emergency demands
attendant upon the life they lived seldom found him
unprepared. The commissary department of the
apostolic family was intelligently and efficiently
managed.
The strong point
about Philip was his methodical reliability; the
weak point in his make-up was his utter lack of
imagination, the absence of the ability to put two
and two together to obtain four. He was mathematical
in the abstract but not constructive in his
imagination. He was almost entirely lacking in
certain types of imagination. He was the typical
everyday and commonplace average man. There were a
great many such men and women among the multitudes
who came to hear Jesus teach and preach, and they
derived great comfort from observing one like
themselves elevated to an honored position in the
councils of the Master; they derived courage from
the fact that one like themselves had already found
a high place in the affairs of the kingdom. And
Jesus learned much about the way some human minds
function as he so patiently listened to Philip's
foolish questions and so many times complied with
his steward's request to "be shown."
The one quality
about Jesus which Philip so continuously admired was
the Master's unfailing generosity. Never could
Philip find anything in Jesus which was small,
niggardly, or stingy, and he worshiped this
ever-present and unfailing liberality.
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There was little
about Philip's personality that was impressive. He
was often spoken of as "Philip of Bethsaida, the
town where Andrew and Peter live." He was almost
without discerning vision; he was unable to grasp
the dramatic possibilities of a given situation. He
was not pessimistic; he was simply prosaic. He was
also greatly lacking in spiritual insight. He would
not hesitate to interrupt Jesus in the midst of one
of the Master's most profound discourses to ask an
apparently foolish question. But Jesus never
reprimanded him for such thoughtlessness; he was
patient with him and considerate of his inability to
grasp the deeper meanings of the teaching. Jesus
well knew that, if he once rebuked Philip for asking
these annoying questions, he would not only wound
this honest soul, but such a reprimand would so hurt
Philip that he would never again feel free to ask
questions. Jesus knew that on his worlds of space
there were untold billions of similar slow-thinking
mortals, and he wanted to encourage them all to look
to him and always to feel free to come to him with
their questions and problems. After all, Jesus was
really more interested in Philip's foolish questions
than in the sermon he might be preaching. Jesus was
supremely interested in men, all kinds of
men.
The apostolic
steward was not a good public speaker, but he was a
very persuasive and successful personal worker. He
was not easily discouraged; he was a plodder and
very tenacious in anything he undertook. He had that
great and rare gift of saying, "Come." When his
first convert, Nathaniel, wanted to argue about the
merits and demerits of Jesus and Nazareth, Philip's
effective reply was, "Come and see." He was not a
dogmatic preacher who exhorted his hearers to
"Go"--do this and do that. He met all situations as
they arose in his work with "Come"--"come with me; I
will show you the way." And that is always the
effective technique in all forms and phases of
teaching. Even parents may learn from Philip the
better way of saying to their children not
"Go do this and go do that," but rather, "Come with
us while we show and share with you the better way."
The inability of
Philip to adapt himself to a new situation was well
shown when the Greeks came to him at Jerusalem,
saying: "Sir, we desire to see Jesus." Now Philip
would have said to any Jew asking such a question,
"Come." But these men were foreigners, and Philip
could remember no instructions from his superiors
regarding such matters; so the only thing he could
think to do was to consult the chief, Andrew, and
then they both escorted the inquiring Greeks to
Jesus. Likewise, when he went into Samaria preaching
and baptizing believers, as he had been instructed
by his Master, he refrained from laying hands on his
converts in token of their having received the
Spirit of Truth. This was done by Peter and John,
who presently came down from Jerusalem to observe
his work in behalf of the mother church.
Philip went on
through the trying times of the Master's death,
participated in the reorganization of the twelve,
and was the first to go forth to win souls for the
kingdom outside of the immediate Jewish ranks, being
most successful in his work for the Samaritans and
in all his subsequent labors in behalf of the
gospel.
Philip's wife, who
was an efficient member of the women's corps, became
actively associated with her husband in his
evangelistic work after their flight from the
Jerusalem persecutions. His wife was a fearless
woman. She stood at the foot of Philip's cross
encouraging him to proclaim the glad tidings even to
his murderers, and when his strength failed, she
began the recital of the story of salvation
Page 1558
by faith in Jesus
and was silenced only when the irate Jews rushed
upon her and stoned her to death. Their eldest
daughter, Leah, continued their work, later on
becoming the renowned prophetess of Hierapolis.
Philip, the
onetime steward of the twelve, was a mighty man in
the kingdom, winning souls wherever he went; and he
was finally crucified for his faith and buried at
Hierapolis.
6. HONEST
NATHANIEL
Nathaniel, the
sixth and last of the apostles to be chosen by the
Master himself, was brought to Jesus by his friend
Philip. He had been associated in several business
enterprises with Philip and, with him, was on the
way down to see John the Baptist when they
encountered Jesus.
When Nathaniel
joined the apostles, he was twenty-five years old
and was the next to the youngest of the group. He
was the youngest of a family of seven, was
unmarried, and the only support of aged and infirm
parents, with whom he lived at Cana; his brothers
and sister were either married or deceased, and none
lived there. Nathaniel and Judas Iscariot were the
two best educated men among the twelve. Nathaniel
had thought to become a merchant.
Jesus did not
himself give Nathaniel a nickname, but the twelve
soon began to speak of him in terms that signified
honesty, sincerity. He was "without guile." And this
was his great virtue; he was both honest and
sincere. The weakness of his character was his
pride; he was very proud of his family, his city,
his reputation, and his nation, all of which is
commendable if it is not carried too far. But
Nathaniel was inclined to go to extremes with his
personal prejudices. He was disposed to prejudge
individuals in accordance with his personal
opinions. He was not slow to ask the question, even
before he had met Jesus, "Can any good thing come
out of Nazareth?" But Nathaniel was not obstinate,
even if he was proud. He was quick to reverse
himself when he once looked into Jesus' face.
In many respects
Nathaniel was the odd genius of the twelve. He was
the apostolic philosopher and dreamer, but he was a
very practical sort of dreamer. He alternated
between seasons of profound philosophy and periods
of rare and droll humor; when in the proper mood, he
was probably the best storyteller among the twelve.
Jesus greatly enjoyed hearing Nathaniel discourse on
things both serious and frivolous. Nathaniel
progressively took Jesus and the kingdom more
seriously, but never did he take himself seriously.
The apostles all
loved and respected Nathaniel, and he got along with
them splendidly, excepting Judas Iscariot. Judas did
not think Nathaniel took his apostleship
sufficiently seriously and once had the temerity to
go secretly to Jesus and lodge complaint against
him. Said Jesus: "Judas, watch carefully your steps;
do not overmagnify your office. Who of us is
competent to judge his brother? It is not the
Father's will that his children should partake only
of the serious things of life. Let me repeat: I have
come that my brethren in the flesh may have joy,
gladness, and life more abundantly. Go then, Judas,
and do well that which has been intrusted to you but
leave Nathaniel, your brother, to give account of
himself to God." And the memory of this, with that
of many similar experiences, long lived in the
self-deceiving heart of Judas Iscariot.
Page 1559
Many times, when
Jesus was away on the mountain with Peter, James,
and John, and things were becoming tense and tangled
among the apostles, when even Andrew was in doubt
about what to say to his disconsolate brethren,
Nathaniel would relieve the tension by a bit of
philosophy or a flash of humor; good humor, too.
Nathaniel's duty
was to look after the families of the twelve. He was
often absent from the apostolic councils, for when
he heard that sickness or anything out of the
ordinary had happened to one of his charges, he lost
no time in getting to that home. The twelve rested
securely in the knowledge that their families'
welfare was safe in the hands of Nathaniel.
Nathaniel most
revered Jesus for his tolerance. He never grew weary
of contemplating the broadmindedness and generous
sympathy of the Son of Man.
Nathaniel's father
(Bartholomew) died shortly after Pentecost, after
which this apostle went into Mesopotamia and India
proclaiming the glad tidings of the kingdom and
baptizing believers. His brethren never knew what
became of their onetime philosopher, poet, and
humorist. But he also was a great man in the kingdom
and did much to spread his Master's teachings, even
though he did not participate in the organization of
the subsequent Christian church. Nathaniel died in
India.
7.
MATTHEW LEVI
Matthew, the
seventh apostle, was chosen by Andrew. Matthew
belonged to a family of tax gatherers, or publicans,
but was himself a customs collector in Capernaum,
where he lived. He was thirty-one years old and
married and had four children. He was a man of
moderate wealth, the only one of any means belonging
to the apostolic corps. He was a good business man,
a good social mixer, and was gifted with the ability
to make friends and to get along smoothly with a
great variety of people.
Andrew appointed
Matthew the financial representative of the
apostles. In a way he was the fiscal agent and
publicity spokesman for the apostolic organization.
He was a keen judge of human nature and a very
efficient propagandist. His is a personality
difficult to visualize, but he was a very earnest
disciple and an increasing believer in the mission
of Jesus and in the certainty of the kingdom. Jesus
never gave Levi a nickname, but his fellow apostles
commonly referred to him as the "money-getter."
Levi's strong
point was his wholehearted devotion to the cause.
That he, a publican, had been taken in by Jesus and
his apostles was the cause for overwhelming
gratitude on the part of the former revenue
collector. However, it required some little time for
the rest of the apostles, especially Simon Zelotes
and Judas Iscariot, to become reconciled to the
publican's presence in their midst. Matthew's
weakness was his shortsighted and materialistic
viewpoint of life. But in all these matters he made
great progress as the months went by. He, of course,
had to be absent from many of the most precious
seasons of instruction as it was his duty to keep
the treasury replenished.
It was the
Master's forgiving disposition which Matthew most
appreciated. He would never cease to recount that
faith only was necessary in the business of finding
God. He always liked to speak of the kingdom as
"this business of finding God."
Page 1560
Though Matthew
was a man with a past, he gave an excellent account
of himself, and as time went on, his associates
became proud of the publican's performances. He was
one of the apostles who made extensive notes on the
sayings of Jesus, and these notes were used as the
basis of Isador's subsequent narrative of the
sayings and doings of Jesus, which has become known
as the Gospel according to Matthew.
The great and
useful life of Matthew, the business man and customs
collector of Capernaum, has been the means of
leading thousands upon thousands of other business
men, public officials, and politicians, down through
the subsequent ages, also to hear that engaging
voice of the Master saying, "Follow me." Matthew
really was a shrewd politician, but he was intensely
loyal to Jesus and supremely devoted to the task of
seeing that the messengers of the coming kingdom
were adequately financed.
The presence of
Matthew among the twelve was the means of keeping
the doors of the kingdom wide open to hosts of
downhearted and outcast souls who had regarded
themselves as long since without the bounds of
religious consolation. Outcast and despairing men
and women flocked to hear Jesus, and he never turned
one away.
Matthew received
freely tendered offerings from believing disciples
and the immediate auditors of the Master's
teachings, but he never openly solicited funds from
the multitudes. He did all his financial work in a
quiet and personal way and raised most of the money
among the more substantial class of interested
believers. He gave practically the whole of his
modest fortune to the work of the Master and his
apostles, but they never knew of this generosity,
save Jesus, who knew all about it. Matthew hesitated
openly to contribute to the apostolic funds for fear
that Jesus and his associates might regard his money
as being tainted; so he gave much in the names of
other believers. During the earlier months, when
Matthew knew his presence among them was more or
less of a trial, he was strongly tempted to let them
know that his funds often supplied them with their
daily bread, but he did not yield. When evidence of
the disdain of the publican would become manifest,
Levi would burn to reveal to them his generosity,
but always he managed to keep still.
When the funds for
the week were short of the estimated requirements,
Levi would often draw heavily upon his own personal
resources. Also, sometimes when he became greatly
interested in Jesus' teaching, he preferred to
remain and hear the instruction, even though he knew
he must personally make up for his failure to
solicit the necessary funds. But Levi did so wish
that Jesus might know that much of the money came
from his pocket! He little realized that the Master
knew all about it. The apostles all died without
knowing that Matthew was their benefactor to such an
extent that, when he went forth to proclaim the
gospel of the kingdom after the beginning of the
persecutions, he was practically penniless.
When these
persecutions caused the believers to forsake
Jerusalem, Matthew journeyed north, preaching the
gospel of the kingdom and baptizing believers. He
was lost to the knowledge of his former apostolic
associates, but on he went, preaching and baptizing,
through Syria, Cappadocia, Galatia, Bithynia, and
Thrace. And it was in Thrace, at Lysimachia, that
certain unbelieving Jews conspired with the Roman
soldiers to encompass his death. And this
regenerated publican died triumphant in the faith of
a salvation he had so surely learned from the
teachings of the Master during his recent sojourn on
earth.
Page 1561
8. THOMAS
DIDYMUS
Thomas was the
eighth apostle, and he was chosen by Philip. In
later times he has become known as "doubting
Thomas," but his fellow apostles hardly looked upon
him as a chronic doubter. True, his was a logical,
skeptical type of mind, but he had a form of
courageous loyalty which forbade those who knew him
intimately to regard him as a trifling skeptic.
When Thomas joined
the apostles, he was twenty-nine years old, was
married, and had four children. Formerly he had been
a carpenter and stone mason, but latterly he had
become a fisherman and resided at Tarichea, situated
on the west bank of the Jordan where it flows out of
the Sea of Galilee, and he was regarded as the
leading citizen of this little village. He had
little education, but he possessed a keen, reasoning
mind and was the son of excellent parents, who lived
at Tiberias. Thomas had the one truly analytical
mind of the twelve; he was the real scientist of the
apostolic group.
The early home
life of Thomas had been unfortunate; his parents
were not altogether happy in their married life, and
this was reflected in Thomas's adult experience. He
grew up having a very disagreeable and quarrelsome
disposition. Even his wife was glad to see him join
the apostles; she was relieved by the thought that
her pessimistic husband would be away from home most
of the time. Thomas also had a streak of suspicion
which made it very difficult to get along peaceably
with him. Peter was very much upset by Thomas at
first, complaining to his brother, Andrew, that
Thomas was "mean, ugly, and always suspicious." But
the better his associates knew Thomas, the more they
liked him. They found he was superbly honest and
unflinchingly loyal. He was perfectly sincere and
unquestionably truthful, but he was a natural-born
faultfinder and had grown up to become a real
pessimist. His analytical mind had become cursed
with suspicion. He was rapidly losing faith in his
fellow men when he became associated with the twelve
and thus came in contact with the noble character of
Jesus. This association with the Master began at
once to transform Thomas's whole disposition and to
effect great changes in his mental reactions to his
fellow men.
Thomas's great
strength was his superb analytical mind coupled with
his unflinching courage--when he had once made up
his mind. His great weakness was his suspicious
doubting, which he never fully overcame throughout
his whole lifetime in the flesh.
In the
organization of the twelve Thomas was assigned to
arrange and manage the itinerary, and he was an able
director of the work and movements of the apostolic
corps. He was a good executive, an excellent
businessman, but he was handicapped by his many
moods; he was one man one day and another man the
next. He was inclined toward melancholic brooding
when he joined the apostles, but contact with Jesus
and the apostles largely cured him of this morbid
introspection.
Jesus enjoyed
Thomas very much and had many long, personal talks
with him. His presence among the apostles was a
great comfort to all honest doubters and encouraged
many troubled minds to come into the kingdom, even
if they could not wholly understand everything about
the spiritual and philosophic phases of the
teachings of Jesus. Thomas's membership in the
twelve was a standing declaration that Jesus loved
even honest doubters.
Page 1562
The other
apostles held Jesus in reverence because of some
special and outstanding trait of his replete
personality, but Thomas revered his Master because
of his superbly balanced character. Increasingly
Thomas admired and honored one who was so lovingly
merciful yet so inflexibly just and fair; so firm
but never obstinate; so calm but never indifferent;
so helpful and so sympathetic but never meddlesome
or dictatorial; so strong but at the same time so
gentle; so positive but never rough or rude; so
tender but never vacillating; so pure and innocent
but at the same time so virile, aggressive, and
forceful; so truly courageous but never rash or
foolhardy; such a lover of nature but so free from
all tendency to revere nature; so humorous and so
playful, but so free from levity and frivolity. It
was this matchless symmetry of personality that so
charmed Thomas. He probably enjoyed the highest
intellectual understanding and personality
appreciation of Jesus of any of the twelve.
In the councils of
the twelve Thomas was always cautious, advocating a
policy of safety first, but if his conservatism was
voted down or overruled, he was always the first
fearlessly to move out in execution of the program
decided upon. Again and again would he stand out
against some project as being foolhardy and
presumptuous; he would debate to the bitter end, but
when Andrew would put the proposition to a vote, and
after the twelve would elect to do that which he had
so strenuously opposed, Thomas was the first to say,
"Let's go!" He was a good loser. He did not hold
grudges nor nurse wounded feelings. Time and again
did he oppose letting Jesus expose himself to
danger, but when the Master would decide to take
such risks, always was it Thomas who rallied the
apostles with his courageous words, "Come on,
comrades, let's go and die with him."
Thomas was in some
respects like Philip; he also wanted "to be shown,"
but his outward expressions of doubt were based on
entirely different intellectual operations. Thomas
was analytical, not merely skeptical. As far as
personal physical courage was concerned, he was one
of the bravest among the twelve.
Thomas had some
very bad days; he was blue and downcast at times.
The loss of his twin sister when he was nine years
old had occasioned him much youthful sorrow and had
added to his temperamental problems of later life.
When Thomas would become despondent, sometimes it
was Nathaniel who helped him to recover, sometimes
Peter, and not infrequently one of the Alpheus
twins. When he was most depressed, unfortunately he
always tried to avoid coming in direct contact with
Jesus. But the Master knew all about this and had an
understanding sympathy for his apostle when he was
thus afflicted with depression and harassed by
doubts.
Sometimes Thomas
would get permission from Andrew to go off by
himself for a day or two. But he soon learned that
such a course was not wise; he early found that it
was best, when he was downhearted, to stick close to
his work and to remain near his associates. But no
matter what happened in his emotional life, he kept
right on being an apostle. When the time actually
came to move forward, it was always Thomas who said,
"Let's go!"
Thomas is the
great example of a human being who has doubts, faces
them, and wins. He had a great mind; he was no
carping critic. He was a logical thinker; he was the
acid test of Jesus and his fellow apostles. If Jesus
and his work had not been genuine, it could not have
held a man like Thomas from the start to the finish.
He had a keen and sure sense of fact. At the
first appearance of fraud or deception Thomas would
have forsaken them all. Scientists may not
Page 1563
fully understand
all about Jesus and his work on earth, but there
lived and worked with the Master and his human
associates a man whose mind was that of a true
scientist--Thomas Didymus--and he believed in Jesus
of Nazareth.
Thomas had a
trying time during the days of the trial and
crucifixion. He was for a season in the depths of
despair, but he rallied his courage, stuck to the
apostles, and was present with them to welcome Jesus
on the Sea of Galilee. For a while he succumbed to
his doubting depression but eventually rallied his
faith and courage. He gave wise counsel to the
apostles after Pentecost and, when persecution
scattered the believers, went to Cyprus, Crete, the
North African coast, and Sicily, preaching the glad
tidings of the kingdom and baptizing believers. And
Thomas continued preaching and baptizing until he
was apprehended by the agents of the Roman
government and was put to death in Malta. Just a few
weeks before his death he had begun the writing of
the life and teachings of Jesus.
9. and
10. JAMES AND JUDAS ALPHEUS
James and Judas
the sons of Alpheus, the twin fishermen living near
Kheresa, were the ninth and tenth apostles and were
chosen by James and John Zebedee. They were
twenty-six years old and married, James having three
children, Judas two.
There is not much
to be said about these two commonplace fisherfolk.
They loved their Master and Jesus loved them, but
they never interrupted his discourses with
questions. They understood very little about the
philosophical discussions or the theological debates
of their fellow apostles, but they rejoiced to find
themselves numbered among such a group of mighty
men. These two men were almost identical in personal
appearance, mental characteristics, and extent of
spiritual perception. What may be said of one should
be recorded of the other.
Andrew assigned
them to the work of policing the multitudes. They
were the chief ushers of the preaching hours and, in
fact, the general servants and errand boys of the
twelve. They helped Philip with the supplies, they
carried money to the families for Nathaniel, and
always were they ready to lend a helping hand to any
one of the apostles.
The multitudes of
the common people were greatly encouraged to find
two like themselves honored with places among the
apostles. By their very acceptance as apostles these
mediocre twins were the means of bringing a host of
faint-hearted believers into the kingdom. And, too,
the common people took more kindly to the idea of
being directed and managed by official ushers who
were very much like themselves.
James and Judas,
who were also called Thaddeus and Lebbeus, had
neither strong points nor weak points. The nicknames
given them by the disciples were good-natured
designations of mediocrity. They were "the least of
all the apostles"; they knew it and felt cheerful
about it.
James Alpheus
especially loved Jesus because of the Master's
simplicity. These twins could not comprehend the
mind of Jesus, but they did grasp the sympathetic
bond between themselves and the heart of their
Master. Their minds were not of a high order; they
might even reverently be called stupid, but they had
a real experience in their spiritual natures. They
believed in Jesus; they were sons of God and fellows
of the kingdom.
Page 1564
Judas Alpheus was
drawn toward Jesus because of the Master's
unostentatious humility. Such humility linked with
such personal dignity made a great appeal to Judas.
The fact that Jesus would always enjoin silence
regarding his unusual acts made a great impression
on this simple child of nature.
The twins were
good-natured, simple-minded helpers, and everybody
loved them. Jesus welcomed these young men of one
talent to positions of honor on his personal staff
in the kingdom because there are untold millions of
other such simple and fear-ridden souls on the
worlds of space whom he likewise wishes to welcome
into active and believing fellowship with himself
and his outpoured Spirit of Truth. Jesus does not
look down upon littleness, only upon evil and sin.
James and Judas were little, but they were
also faithful. They were simple and ignorant,
but they were also big-hearted, kind, and generous.
And how gratefully
proud were these humble men on that day when the
Master refused to accept a certain rich man as an
evangelist unless he would sell his goods and help
the poor. When the people heard this and beheld the
twins among his counselors, they knew of a certainty
that Jesus was no respecter of persons. But only a
divine institution--the kingdom of heaven--could
ever have been built upon such a mediocre human
foundation!
Only once or twice
in all their association with Jesus did the twins
venture to ask questions in public. Judas was once
intrigued into asking Jesus a question when the
Master had talked about revealing himself openly to
the world. He felt a little disappointed that there
were to be no more secrets among the twelve, and he
made bold to ask: "But, Master, when you do thus
declare yourself to the world, how will you favor us
with special manifestations of your goodness?"
The twins served
faithfully until the end, until the dark days of
trial, crucifixion, and despair. They never lost
their heart faith in Jesus, and (save John) they
were the first to believe in his resurrection. But
they could not comprehend the establishment of the
kingdom. Soon after their Master was crucified, they
returned to their families and nets; their work was
done. They had not the ability to go on in the more
complex battles of the kingdom. But they lived and
died conscious of having been honored and blessed
with four years of close and personal association
with a Son of God, the sovereign maker of a
universe.
11. SIMON
THE ZEALOT
Simon Zelotes, the
eleventh apostle, was chosen by Simon Peter. He was
an able man of good ancestry and lived with his
family at Capernaum. He was twenty-eight years old
when he became attached to the apostles. He was a
fiery agitator and was also a man who spoke much
without thinking. He had been a merchant in
Capernaum before he turned his entire attention to
the patriotic organization of the Zealots.
Simon Zelotes was
given charge of the diversions and relaxation of the
apostolic group, and he was a very efficient
organizer of the play life and recreational
activities of the twelve.
Simon's strength
was his inspirational loyalty. When the apostles
found a man or woman who floundered in indecision
about entering the kingdom, they would send for
Simon. It usually required only about fifteen
minutes for this enthusiastic advocate of salvation
through faith in God to settle all doubts and
Page 1565
remove all
indecision, to see a new soul born into the "liberty
of faith and the joy of salvation."
Simon's great
weakness was his material-mindedness. He could not
quickly change himself from a Jewish nationalist to
a spiritually minded internationalist. Four years
was too short a time in which to make such an
intellectual and emotional transformation, but Jesus
was always patient with him.
The one thing
about Jesus which Simon so much admired was the
Master's calmness, his assurance, poise, and
inexplicable composure.
Although Simon was
a rabid revolutionist, a fearless firebrand of
agitation, he gradually subdued his fiery nature
until he became a powerful and effective preacher of
"Peace on earth and good will among men." Simon was
a great debater; he did like to argue. And when it
came to dealing with the legalistic minds of the
educated Jews or the intellectual quibblings of the
Greeks, the task was always assigned to Simon.
He was a rebel by
nature and an iconoclast by training, but Jesus won
him for the higher concepts of the kingdom of
heaven. He had always identified himself with the
party of protest, but he now joined the party of
progress, unlimited and eternal progression of
spirit and truth. Simon was a man of intense
loyalties and warm personal devotions, and he did
profoundly love Jesus.
Jesus was not
afraid to identify himself with business men,
laboring men, optimists, pessimists, philosophers,
skeptics, publicans, politicians, and patriots.
The Master had
many talks with Simon, but he never fully succeeded
in making an internationalist out of this ardent
Jewish nationalist. Jesus often told Simon that it
was proper to want to see the social, economic, and
political orders improved, but he would always add:
"That is not the business of the kingdom of heaven.
We must be dedicated to the doing of the Father's
will. Our business is to be ambassadors of a
spiritual government on high, and we must not
immediately concern ourselves with aught but the
representation of the will and character of the
divine Father who stands at the head of the
government whose credentials we bear." It was all
difficult for Simon to comprehend, but gradually he
began to grasp something of the meaning of the
Master's teaching.
After the
dispersion because of the Jerusalem persecutions,
Simon went into temporary retirement. He was
literally crushed. As a nationalist patriot he had
surrendered in deference to Jesus' teachings; now
all was lost. He was in despair, but in a few years
he rallied his hopes and went forth to proclaim the
gospel of the kingdom.
He went to
Alexandria and, after working up the Nile,
penetrated into the heart of Africa, everywhere
preaching the gospel of Jesus and baptizing
believers. Thus he labored until he was an old man
and feeble. And he died and was buried in the heart
of Africa.
12. JUDAS
ISCARIOT
Judas Iscariot,
the twelfth apostle, was chosen by Nathaniel. He was
born in Kerioth, a small town in southern Judea.
When he was a lad, his parents moved to Jericho,
where he lived and had been employed in his father's
various business enterprises until he became
interested in the preaching and work of
Page 1566
John the Baptist.
Judas's parents were Sadducees, and when their son
joined John's disciples, they disowned him.
When Nathaniel met
Judas at Tarichea, he was seeking employment with a
fish-drying enterprise at the lower end of the Sea
of Galilee. He was thirty years of age and unmarried
when he joined the apostles. He was probably the
best-educated man among the twelve and the only
Judean in the Master's apostolic family. Judas had
no outstanding trait of personal strength, though he
had many outwardly appearing traits of culture and
habits of training. He was a good thinker but not
always a truly honest thinker. Judas did not
really understand himself; he was not really sincere
in dealing with himself.
Andrew appointed
Judas treasurer of the twelve, a position which he
was eminently fitted to hold, and up to the time of
the betrayal of his Master he discharged the
responsibilities of his office honestly, faithfully,
and most efficiently.
There was no
special trait about Jesus which Judas admired above
the generally attractive and exquisitely charming
personality of the Master. Judas was never able to
rise above his Judean prejudices against his
Galilean associates; he would even criticize in his
mind many things about Jesus. Him whom eleven of the
apostles looked upon as the perfect man, as the "one
altogether lovely and the chiefest among ten
thousand," this self-satisfied Judean often dared to
criticize in his own heart. He really entertained
the notion that Jesus was timid and somewhat afraid
to assert his own power and authority.
Judas was a good
business man. It required tact, ability, and
patience, as well as painstaking devotion, to manage
the financial affairs of such an idealist as Jesus,
to say nothing of wrestling with the helter-skelter
business methods of some of his apostles. Judas
really was a great executive, a farseeing and able
financier. And he was a stickler for organization.
None of the twelve ever criticized Judas. As far as
they could see, Judas Iscariot was a matchless
treasurer, a learned man, a loyal (though sometimes
critical) apostle, and in every sense of the word a
great success. The apostles loved Judas; he was
really one of them. He must have believed in
Jesus, but we doubt whether he really loved
the Master with a whole heart. The case of Judas
illustrates the truthfulness of that saying: "There
is a way that seems right to a man, but the end
thereof is death." It is altogether possible to fall
victim to the peaceful deception of pleasant
adjustment to the paths of sin and death. Be assured
that Judas was always financially loyal to his
Master and his fellow apostles. Money could never
have been the motive for his betrayal of the Master.
Judas was an only
son of unwise parents. When very young, he was
pampered and petted; he was a spoiled child. As he
grew up, he had exaggerated ideas about his
self-importance. He was a poor loser. He had loose
and distorted ideas about fairness; he was given to
the indulgence of hate and suspicion. He was an
expert at misinterpretation of the words and acts of
his friends. All through his life Judas had
cultivated the habit of getting even with those whom
he fancied had mistreated him. His sense of values
and loyalties was defective.
To Jesus, Judas
was a faith adventure. From the beginning the Master
fully understood the weakness of this apostle and
well knew the dangers of admitting him to
fellowship. But it is the nature of the Sons of God
to give every created being a full and equal chance
for salvation and survival. Jesus wanted not only
the mortals of this world but the onlookers of
innumerable other worlds to know
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that, when doubts
exist as to the sincerity and wholeheartedness of a
creature's devotion to the kingdom, it is the
invariable practice of the Judges of men fully to
receive the doubtful candidate. The door of eternal
life is wide open to all; "whosoever will may come";
there are no restrictions or qualifications save the
faith of the one who comes.
This is just the
reason why Jesus permitted Judas to go on to the
very end, always doing everything possible to
transform and save this weak and confused apostle.
But when light is not honestly received and lived up
to, it tends to become darkness within the soul.
Judas grew intellectually regarding Jesus' teachings
about the kingdom, but he did not make progress in
the acquirement of spiritual character as did the
other apostles. He failed to make satisfactory
personal progress in spiritual experience.
Judas became
increasingly a brooder over personal disappointment,
and finally he became a victim of resentment. His
feelings had been many times hurt, and he grew
abnormally suspicious of his best friends, even of
the Master. Presently he became obsessed with the
idea of getting even, anything to avenge himself,
yes, even betrayal of his associates and his Master.
But these wicked
and dangerous ideas did not take definite shape
until the day when a grateful woman broke an
expensive box of incense at Jesus' feet. This seemed
wasteful to Judas, and when his public protest was
so sweepingly disallowed by Jesus right there in the
hearing of all, it was too much. That event
determined the mobilization of all the accumulated
hate, hurt, malice, prejudice, jealousy, and revenge
of a lifetime, and he made up his mind to get even
with he knew not whom; but he crystallized all the
evil of his nature upon the one innocent
person in all the sordid drama of his unfortunate
life just because Jesus happened to be the chief
actor in the episode which marked his passing from
the progressive kingdom of light into that
self-chosen domain of darkness.
The Master many
times, both privately and publicly, had warned Judas
that he was slipping, but divine warnings are
usually useless in dealing with embittered human
nature. Jesus did everything possible, consistent
with man's moral freedom, to prevent Judas's
choosing to go the wrong way. The great test finally
came. The son of resentment failed; he yielded to
the sour and sordid dictates of a proud and vengeful
mind of exaggerated self-importance and swiftly
plunged on down into confusion, despair, and
depravity.
Judas then entered
into the base and shameful intrigue to betray his
Lord and Master and quickly carried the nefarious
scheme into effect. During the outworking of his
anger-conceived plans of traitorous betrayal, he
experienced moments of regret and shame, and in
these lucid intervals he faintheartedly conceived,
as a defense in his own mind, the idea that Jesus
might possibly exert his power and deliver himself
at the last moment.
When the sordid
and sinful business was all over, this renegade
mortal, who thought lightly of selling his friend
for thirty pieces of silver to satisfy his
long-nursed craving for revenge, rushed out and
committed the final act in the drama of fleeing from
the realities of mortal existence--suicide.
The eleven
apostles were horrified, stunned. Jesus regarded the
betrayer only with pity. The worlds have found it
difficult to forgive Judas, and his name has become
eschewed throughout a far-flung universe. |