PAPER 140
- THE ORDINATION OF THE TWELVE
Just before noon
on Sunday, January 12, A.D. 27, Jesus called the
apostles together for their ordination as public
preachers of the gospel of the kingdom. The twelve
were expecting to be called almost any day; so this
morning they did not go out far from the shore to
fish. Several of them were lingering near the shore
repairing their nets and tinkering with their
fishing paraphernalia.
As Jesus started
down the seashore calling the apostles, he first
hailed Andrew and Peter, who were fishing near the
shore; next he signaled to James and John, who were
in a boat near by, visiting with their father,
Zebedee, and mending their nets. Two by two he
gathered up the other apostles, and when he had
assembled all twelve, he journeyed with them to the
highlands north of Capernaum, where he proceeded to
instruct them in preparation for their formal
ordination.
For once all
twelve of the apostles were silent; even Peter was
in a reflective mood. At last the long-waited-for
hour had come! They were going apart with the Master
to participate in some sort of solemn ceremony of
personal consecration and collective dedication to
the sacred work of representing their Master in the
proclamation of the coming of his Father's kingdom.
1.
PRELIMINARY INSTRUCTION
Before the formal
ordination service Jesus spoke to the twelve as they
were seated about him: "My brethren, this hour of
the kingdom has come. I have brought you apart here
with me to present you to the Father as ambassadors
of the kingdom. Some of you heard me speak of this
kingdom in the synagogue when you first were called.
Each of you has learned more about the Father's
kingdom since you have been with me working in the
cities around about the Sea of Galilee. But just now
I have something more to tell you concerning this
kingdom.
"The new kingdom
which my Father is about to set up in the hearts of
his earth children is to be an everlasting dominion.
There shall be no end of this rule of my Father in
the hearts of those who desire to do his divine
will. I declare to you that my Father is not the God
of Jew or gentile. Many shall come from the east and
from the west to sit down with us in the Father's
kingdom, while many of the children of Abraham will
refuse to enter this new brotherhood of the rule of
the Father's spirit in the hearts of the children of
men.
"The power of this
kingdom shall consist, not in the strength of armies
nor in the might of riches, but rather in the glory
of the divine spirit that shall come to teach the
minds and rule the hearts of the reborn citizens of
this heavenly kingdom, the sons of God. This is the
brotherhood of love wherein righteousness
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reigns, and whose
battle cry shall be: Peace on earth and good will to
all men. This kingdom, which you are so soon to go
forth proclaiming, is the desire of the good men of
all ages, the hope of all the earth, and the
fulfillment of the wise promises of all the
prophets.
"But for you, my
children, and for all others who would follow you
into this kingdom, there is set a severe test. Faith
alone will pass you through its portals, but you
must bring forth the fruits of my Father's spirit if
you would continue to ascend in the progressive life
of the divine fellowship. Verily, verily, I say to
you, not every one who says, `Lord, Lord,' shall
enter the kingdom of heaven; but rather he who does
the will of my Father who is in heaven.
"Your message to
the world shall be: Seek first the kingdom of God
and his righteousness, and in finding these, all
other things essential to eternal survival shall be
secured therewith. And now would I make it plain to
you that this kingdom of my Father will not come
with an outward show of power or with unseemly
demonstration. You are not to go hence in the
proclamation of the kingdom, saying, `it is here' or
`it is there,' for this kingdom of which you preach
is God within you.
"Whosoever would
become great in my Father's kingdom shall become a
minister to all; and whosoever would be first among
you, let him become the server of his brethren. But
when you are once truly received as citizens in the
heavenly kingdom, you are no longer servants but
sons, sons of the living God. And so shall this
kingdom progress in the world until it shall break
down every barrier and bring all men to know my
Father and believe in the saving truth which I have
come to declare. Even now is the kingdom at hand,
and some of you will not die until you have seen the
reign of God come in great power.
"And this which
your eyes now behold, this small beginning of twelve
commonplace men, shall multiply and grow until
eventually the whole earth shall be filled with the
praise of my Father. And it will not be so much by
the words you speak as by the lives you live that
men will know you have been with me and have learned
of the realities of the kingdom. And while I would
lay no grievous burdens upon your minds, I am about
to put upon your souls the solemn responsibility of
representing me in the world when I shall presently
leave you as I now represent my Father in this life
which I am living in the flesh." And when he had
finished speaking, he stood up.
2. THE
ORDINATION
Jesus now
instructed the twelve mortals who had just listened
to his declaration concerning the kingdom to kneel
in a circle about him. Then the Master placed his
hands upon the head of each apostle, beginning with
Judas Iscariot and ending with Andrew. When he had
blessed them, he extended his hands and prayed:
"My Father, I now
bring to you these men, my messengers. From among
our children on earth I have chosen these twelve to
go forth to represent me as I came forth to
represent you. Love them and be with them as you
have loved and been with me. And now, my Father,
give these men wisdom as I place all the affairs of
the coming kingdom in their hands. And I would, if
it is your will, tarry on earth a time to help them
in their labors for the kingdom. And again, my
Father, I thank you for these men, and I commit them
to your keeping while I go on to finish the work you
have given me to do."
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When Jesus had
finished praying, the apostles remained each man
bowed in his place. And it was many minutes before
even Peter dared lift up his eyes to look upon the
Master. One by one they embraced Jesus, but no man
said aught. A great silence pervaded the place while
a host of celestial beings looked down upon this
solemn and sacred scene--the Creator of a universe
placing the affairs of the divine brotherhood of man
under the direction of human minds.
3. THE
ORDINATION SERMON
Then Jesus spoke,
saying: "Now that you are ambassadors of my Father's
kingdom, you have thereby become a class of men
separate and distinct from all other men on earth.
You are not now as men among men but as the
enlightened citizens of another and heavenly country
among the ignorant creatures of this dark world. It
is not enough that you live as you were before this
hour, but henceforth must you live as those who have
tasted the glories of a better life and have been
sent back to earth as ambassadors of the Sovereign
of that new and better world. Of the teacher more is
expected than of the pupil; of the master more is
exacted than of the servant. Of the citizens of the
heavenly kingdom more is required than of the
citizens of the earthly rule. Some of the things
which I am about to say to you may seem hard, but
you have elected to represent me in the world even
as I now represent the Father; and as my agents on
earth you will be obligated to abide by those
teachings and practices which are reflective of my
ideals of mortal living on the worlds of space, and
which I exemplify in my earth life of revealing the
Father who is in heaven.
"I send you forth
to proclaim liberty to the spiritual captives, joy
to those in the bondage of fear, and to heal the
sick in accordance with the will of my Father in
heaven. When you find my children in distress, speak
encouragingly to them, saying:
"Happy are the
poor in spirit, the humble, for theirs are the
treasures of the kingdom of heaven.
"Happy are they
who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they
shall be filled.
"Happy are the
meek, for they shall inherit the earth.
"Happy are the
pure in heart, for they shall see God.
"And even so speak
to my children these further words of spiritual
comfort and promise:
"Happy are they
who mourn, for they shall be comforted. Happy are
they who weep, for they shall receive the spirit of
rejoicing.
"Happy are the
merciful, for they shall obtain mercy.
"Happy are the
peacemakers, for they shall be called the sons of
God.
"Happy are they
who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Happy are you when
men shall revile you and persecute you and shall say
all manner of evil against you falsely. Rejoice and
be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in
heaven.
"My brethren, as I
send you forth, you are the salt of the earth, salt
with a saving savor. But if this salt has lost its
savor, wherewith shall it be salted? It is
henceforth good for nothing but to be cast out and
trodden under foot of men.
"You are the light
of the world. A city set upon a hill cannot be hid.
Neither do men light a candle and put it under a
bushel, but on a candlestick; and it gives
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light to all who
are in the house. Let your light so shine before men
that they may see your good works and be led to
glorify your Father who is in heaven.
"I am sending you
out into the world to represent me and to act as
ambassadors of my Father's kingdom, and as you go
forth to proclaim the glad tidings, put your trust
in the Father whose messengers you are. Do not
forcibly resist injustice; put not your trust in the
arm of the flesh. If your neighbor smites you on the
right cheek, turn to him the other also. Be willing
to suffer injustice rather than to go to law among
yourselves. In kindness and with mercy minister to
all who are in distress and in need.
"I say to you:
Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you,
bless those who curse you, and pray for those who
despitefully use you. And whatsoever you believe
that I would do to men, do you also to them.
"Your Father in
heaven makes the sun to shine on the evil as well as
upon the good; likewise he sends rain on the just
and the unjust. You are the sons of God; even more,
you are now the ambassadors of my Father's kingdom.
Be merciful, even as God is merciful, and in the
eternal future of the kingdom you shall be perfect,
even as your heavenly Father is perfect.
"You are
commissioned to save men, not to judge them. At the
end of your earth life you will all expect mercy;
therefore do I require of you during your mortal
life that you show mercy to all of your brethren in
the flesh. Make not the mistake of trying to pluck a
mote out of your brother's eye when there is a beam
in your own eye. Having first cast the beam out of
your own eye, you can the better see to cast the
mote out of your brother's eye.
"Discern the truth
clearly; live the righteous life fearlessly; and so
shall you be my apostles and my Father's
ambassadors. You have heard it said: `If the blind
lead the blind, they both shall fall into the pit.'
If you would guide others into the kingdom, you must
yourselves walk in the clear light of living truth.
In all the business of the kingdom I exhort you to
show just judgment and keen wisdom. Present not that
which is holy to dogs, neither cast your pearls
before swine, lest they trample your gems under foot
and turn to rend you.
"I warn you
against false prophets who will come to you in
sheep's clothing, while on the inside they are as
ravening wolves. By their fruits you shall know
them. Do men gather grapes from thorns or figs from
thistles? Even so, every good tree brings forth good
fruit, but the corrupt tree bears evil fruit. A good
tree cannot yield evil fruit, neither can a corrupt
tree produce good fruit. Every tree that does not
bring forth good fruit is presently hewn down and
cast into the fire. In gaining an entrance into the
kingdom of heaven, it is the motive that counts. My
Father looks into the hearts of men and judges by
their inner longings and their sincere intentions.
"In the great day
of the kingdom judgment, many will say to me, `Did
we not prophesy in your name and by your name do
many wonderful works?' But I will be compelled to
say to them, `I never knew you; depart from me you
who are false teachers.' But every one who hears
this charge and sincerely executes his commission to
represent me before men even as I have represented
my Father to you, shall find an abundant entrance
into my service and into the kingdom of the heavenly
Father."
Never before had
the apostles heard Jesus speak in this way, for he
had talked to them as one having supreme authority.
They came down from the mountain about sundown, but
no man asked Jesus a question.
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4. YOU
ARE THE SALT OF THE EARTH
The so-called
"Sermon on the Mount" is not the gospel of Jesus. It
does contain much helpful instruction, but it was
Jesus' ordination charge to the twelve apostles. It
was the Master's personal commission to those who
were to go on preaching the gospel and aspiring to
represent him in the world of men even as he was so
eloquently and perfectly representative of his
Father.
"You are the
salt of the earth, salt with a saving savor. But if
this salt has lost its savor, wherewith shall it be
salted? It is henceforth good for nothing but to be
cast out and trodden under foot of men."
In Jesus' time
salt was precious. It was even used for money. The
modern word "salary" is derived from salt. Salt not
only flavors food, but it is also a preservative. It
makes other things more tasty, and thus it serves by
being spent.
"You are the
light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be
hid. Neither do men light a candle and put it under
a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it gives light
to all who are in the house. Let your light so shine
before men that they may see your good works and be
led to glorify your Father who is in heaven."
While light
dispels darkness, it can also be so "blinding" as to
confuse and frustrate. We are admonished to let our
light so shine that our fellows will be
guided into new and godly paths of enhanced living.
Our light should so shine as not to attract
attention to self. Even one's vocation can be
utilized as an effective "reflector" for the
dissemination of this light of life.
Strong characters
are not derived from not doing wrong but
rather from actually doing right. Unselfishness is
the badge of human greatness. The highest levels of
self-realization are attained by worship and
service. The happy and effective person is
motivated, not by fear of wrongdoing, but by love of
right doing.
"By their
fruits you shall know them." Personality is
basically changeless; that which changes--grows--is
the moral character. The major error of modern
religions is negativism. The tree which bears no
fruit is "hewn down and cast into the fire." Moral
worth cannot be derived from mere
repression--obeying the injunction "Thou shalt not."
Fear and shame are unworthy motivations for
religious living. Religion is valid only when it
reveals the fatherhood of God and enhances the
brotherhood of men.
An effective
philosophy of living is formed by a combination of
cosmic insight and the total of one's emotional
reactions to the social and economic environment.
Remember: While inherited urges cannot be
fundamentally modified, emotional responses to such
urges can be changed; therefore the moral nature can
be modified, character can be improved. In the
strong character emotional responses are integrated
and co-ordinated, and thus is produced a unified
personality. Deficient unification weakens the moral
nature and engenders unhappiness.
Without a worthy
goal, life becomes aimless and unprofitable, and
much unhappiness results. Jesus' discourse at the
ordination of the twelve constitutes a master
philosophy of life. Jesus exhorted his followers to
exercise experiential faith. He admonished them not
to depend on mere intellectual assent, credulity,
and established authority.
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Education should
be a technique of learning (discovering) the better
methods of gratifying our natural and inherited
urges, and happiness is the resulting total of these
enhanced techniques of emotional satisfactions.
Happiness is little dependent on environment, though
pleasing surroundings may greatly contribute
thereto.
Every mortal
really craves to be a complete person, to be perfect
even as the Father in heaven is perfect, and such
attainment is possible because in the last analysis
the "universe is truly fatherly."
5.
FATHERLY AND BROTHERLY LOVE
From the Sermon on
the Mount to the discourse of the Last Supper, Jesus
taught his followers to manifest fatherly
love rather than brotherly love. Brotherly
love would love your neighbor as you love yourself,
and that would be adequate fulfillment of the
"golden rule." But fatherly affection would require
that you should love your fellow mortals as Jesus
loves you.
Jesus loves
mankind with a dual affection. He lived on earth as
a twofold personality--human and divine. As the Son
of God he loves man with a fatherly love--he is
man's Creator, his universe Father. As the Son of
Man, Jesus loves mortals as a brother--he was truly
a man among men.
Jesus did not
expect his followers to achieve an impossible
manifestation of brotherly love, but he did expect
them to so strive to be like God--to be perfect even
as the Father in heaven is perfect--that they could
begin to look upon man as God looks upon his
creatures and therefore could begin to love men as
God loves them--to show forth the beginnings of a
fatherly affection. In the course of these
exhortations to the twelve apostles, Jesus sought to
reveal this new concept of fatherly love as
it is related to certain emotional attitudes
concerned in making numerous environmental social
adjustments.
The Master
introduced this momentous discourse by calling
attention to four faith attitudes as the
prelude to the subsequent portrayal of his four
transcendent and supreme reactions of fatherly love
in contrast to the limitations of mere brotherly
love.
He first talked
about those who were poor in spirit, hungered after
righteousness, endured meekness, and who were pure
in heart. Such spirit-discerning mortals could be
expected to attain such levels of divine
selflessness as to be able to attempt the amazing
exercise of fatherly affection; that even as
mourners they would be empowered to show mercy,
promote peace, and endure persecutions, and
throughout all of these trying situations to love
even unlovely mankind with a fatherly love. A
father's affection can attain levels of devotion
that immeasurably transcend a brother's affection.
The faith and the
love of these beatitudes strengthen moral character
and create happiness. Fear and anger weaken
character and destroy happiness. This momentous
sermon started out upon the note of happiness.
1. "Happy are
the poor in spirit--the humble." To a child,
happiness is the satisfaction of immediate pleasure
craving. The adult is willing to sow seeds of
self-denial in order to reap subsequent harvests of
augmented happiness. In Jesus' times and since,
happiness has all too often been associated with the
idea of the possession of wealth. In the story of
the Pharisee and the publican praying in the temple,
the one felt rich in spirit--egotistical; the other
felt "poor in spirit"--
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humble. One was
self-sufficient; the other was teachable and
truth-seeking. The poor in spirit seek for goals of
spiritual wealth--for God. And such seekers after
truth do not have to wait for rewards in a distant
future; they are rewarded now. They find the
kingdom of heaven within their own hearts, and they
experience such happiness now.
2. "Happy are
they who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for
they shall be filled." Only those who feel poor
in spirit will ever hunger for righteousness. Only
the humble seek for divine strength and crave
spiritual power. But it is most dangerous to
knowingly engage in spiritual fasting in order to
improve one's appetite for spiritual endowments.
Physical fasting becomes dangerous after four or
five days; one is apt to lose all desire for food.
Prolonged fasting, either physical or spiritual,
tends to destroy hunger.
Experiential
righteousness is a pleasure, not a duty. Jesus'
righteousness is a dynamic love--fatherly-brotherly
affection. It is not the negative or thou-shalt-not
type of righteousness. How could one ever hunger for
something negative--something "not to do"?
It is not so easy
to teach a child mind these first two of the
beatitudes, but the mature mind should grasp their
significance.
3. "Happy are
the meek, for they shall inherit the earth."
Genuine meekness has no relation to fear. It is
rather an attitude of man co-operating with
God--"Your will be done." It embraces patience and
forbearance and is motivated by an unshakable faith
in a lawful and friendly universe. It masters all
temptations to rebel against the divine leading.
Jesus was the ideal meek man of Urantia, and he
inherited a vast universe.
4. "Happy are
the pure in heart, for they shall see God."
Spiritual purity is not a negative quality, except
that it does lack suspicion and revenge. In
discussing purity, Jesus did not intend to deal
exclusively with human sex attitudes. He referred
more to that faith which man should have in his
fellow man; that faith which a parent has in his
child, and which enables him to love his fellows
even as a father would love them. A father's love
need not pamper, and it does not condone evil, but
it is always anticynical. Fatherly love has
singleness of purpose, and it always looks for the
best in man; that is the attitude of a true parent.
To see God--by
faith--means to acquire true spiritual insight. And
spiritual insight enhances Adjuster guidance, and
these in the end augment God-consciousness. And when
you know the Father, you are confirmed in the
assurance of divine sonship, and you can
increasingly love each of your brothers in the
flesh, not only as a brother--with brotherly
love--but also as a father--with fatherly affection.
It is easy to
teach this admonition even to a child. Children are
naturally trustful, and parents should see to it
that they do not lose that simple faith. In dealing
with children, avoid all deception and refrain from
suggesting suspicion. Wisely help them to choose
their heroes and select their lifework.
And then Jesus
went on to instruct his followers in the realization
of the chief purpose of all human
struggling--perfection--even divine attainment.
Always he admonished them: "Be you perfect, even as
your Father in heaven is perfect." He did not exhort
the twelve to love their neighbors as they loved
themselves. That would have been a worthy
achievement; it would have indicated the achievement
of brotherly love. He rather admonished his apostles
to love men as
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he had loved
them--to love with a fatherly as well as a
brotherly affection. And he illustrated this by
pointing out four supreme reactions of fatherly
love:
1. "Happy are
they who mourn, for they shall be comforted."
So-called common sense or the best of logic would
never suggest that happiness could be derived from
mourning. But Jesus did not refer to outward or
ostentatious mourning. He alluded to an emotional
attitude of tenderheartedness. It is a great error
to teach boys and young men that it is unmanly to
show tenderness or otherwise to give evidence of
emotional feeling or physical suffering. Sympathy is
a worthy attribute of the male as well as the
female. It is not necessary to be calloused in order
to be manly. This is the wrong way to create
courageous men. The world's great men have not been
afraid to mourn. Moses, the mourner, was a greater
man than either Samson or Goliath. Moses was a
superb leader, but he was also a man of meekness.
Being sensitive and responsive to human need creates
genuine and lasting happiness, while such kindly
attitudes safeguard the soul from the destructive
influences of anger, hate, and suspicion.
2. "Happy are
the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy."
Mercy here denotes the height and depth and breadth
of the truest friendship--loving-kindness. Mercy
sometimes may be passive, but here it is active and
dynamic--supreme fatherliness. A loving parent
experiences little difficulty in forgiving his
child, even many times. And in an unspoiled child
the urge to relieve suffering is natural. Children
are normally kind and sympathetic when old enough to
appreciate actual conditions.
3. "Happy are
the peacemakers, for they shall be called the sons
of God." Jesus' hearers were longing for
military deliverance, not for peacemakers. But
Jesus' peace is not of the pacific and negative
kind. In the face of trials and persecutions he
said, "My peace I leave with you." "Let not your
heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid." This
is the peace that prevents ruinous conflicts.
Personal peace integrates personality. Social peace
prevents fear, greed, and anger. Political peace
prevents race antagonisms, national suspicions, and
war. Peacemaking is the cure of distrust and
suspicion.
Children can
easily be taught to function as peacemakers. They
enjoy team activities; they like to play together.
Said the Master at another time: "Whosoever will
save his life shall lose it, but whosoever will lose
his life shall find it."
4. "Happy are
they who are persecuted for righteousness' sake, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Happy are you when
men shall revile you and persecute you and shall say
all manner of evil against you falsely. Rejoice and
be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in
heaven."
So often
persecution does follow peace. But young people and
brave adults never shun difficulty or danger.
"Greater love has no man than to lay down his life
for his friends." And a fatherly love can freely do
all these things--things which brotherly love can
hardly encompass. And progress has always been the
final harvest of persecution.
Children always
respond to the challenge of courage. Youth is ever
willing to "take a dare." And every child should
early learn to sacrifice.
And so it is
revealed that the beatitudes of the Sermon on the
Mount are based on faith and love and not on
law--ethics and duty.
Fatherly love
delights in returning good for evil--doing good in
retaliation for injustice.
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6. THE
EVENING OF THE ORDINATION
Sunday evening, on
reaching the home of Zebedee from the highlands
north of Capernaum, Jesus and the twelve partook of
a simple meal. Afterward, while Jesus went for a
walk along the beach, the twelve talked among
themselves. After a brief conference, while the
twins built a small fire to give them warmth and
more light, Andrew went out to find Jesus, and when
he had overtaken him, he said: "Master, my brethren
are unable to comprehend what you have said about
the kingdom. We do not feel able to begin this work
until you have given us further instruction. I have
come to ask you to join us in the garden and help us
to understand the meaning of your words." And Jesus
went with Andrew to meet with the apostles.
When he had
entered the garden, he gathered the apostles around
him and taught them further, saying: "You find it
difficult to receive my message because you would
build the new teaching directly upon the old, but I
declare that you must be reborn. You must start out
afresh as little children and be willing to trust my
teaching and believe in God. The new gospel of the
kingdom cannot be made to conform to that which is.
You have wrong ideas of the Son of Man and his
mission on earth. But do not make the mistake of
thinking that I have come to set aside the law and
the prophets; I have not come to destroy but to
fulfill, to enlarge and illuminate. I come not to
transgress the law but rather to write these new
commandments on the tablets of your hearts.
"I demand of you a
righteousness that shall exceed the righteousness of
those who seek to obtain the Father's favor by
almsgiving, prayer, and fasting. If you would enter
the kingdom, you must have a righteousness that
consists in love, mercy, and truth--the sincere
desire to do the will of my Father in heaven."
Then said Simon
Peter: "Master, if you have a new commandment, we
would hear it. Reveal the new way to us." Jesus
answered Peter: "You have heard it said by those who
teach the law: `You shall not kill; that whosoever
kills shall be subject to judgment.' But I look
beyond the act to uncover the motive. I declare to
you that every one who is angry with his brother is
in danger of condemnation. He who nurses hatred in
his heart and plans vengeance in his mind stands in
danger of judgment. You must judge your fellows by
their deeds; the Father in heaven judges by the
intent.
"You have heard
the teachers of the law say, `You shall not commit
adultery.' But I say to you that every man who looks
upon a woman with intent to lust after her has
already committed adultery with her in his heart.
You can only judge men by their acts, but my Father
looks into the hearts of his children and in mercy
adjudges them in accordance with their intents and
real desires."
Jesus was minded
to go on discussing the other commandments when
James Zebedee interrupted him, asking: "Master, what
shall we teach the people regarding divorcement?
Shall we allow a man to divorce his wife as Moses
has directed?" And when Jesus heard this question,
he said: "I have not come to legislate but to
enlighten. I have come not to reform the kingdoms of
this world but rather to establish the kingdom of
heaven. It is not the will of the Father that I
should yield to the temptation to teach you rules of
government, trade, or social behavior, which, while
they might be good for today, would be far from
suitable for the society of another age. I am on
earth solely to comfort the minds, liberate the
spirits, and save the souls of men. But I will say,
concerning this
Page 1577
question of
divorcement, that, while Moses looked with favor
upon such things, it was not so in the days of Adam
and in the Garden."
After the apostles
had talked among themselves for a short time, Jesus
went on to say: "Always must you recognize the two
viewpoints of all mortal conduct--the human and the
divine; the ways of the flesh and the way of the
spirit; the estimate of time and the viewpoint of
eternity." And though the twelve could not
comprehend all that he taught them, they were truly
helped by this instruction.
And then said
Jesus: "But you will stumble over my teaching
because you are wont to interpret my message
literally; you are slow to discern the spirit of my
teaching. Again must you remember that you are my
messengers; you are beholden to live your lives as I
have in spirit lived mine. You are my personal
representatives; but do not err in expecting all men
to live as you do in every particular. Also must you
remember that I have sheep not of this flock, and
that I am beholden to them also, to the end that I
must provide for them the pattern of doing the will
of God while living the life of the mortal nature."
Then asked
Nathaniel: "Master, shall we give no place to
justice? The law of Moses says, `An eye for an eye,
and a tooth for a tooth.' What shall we say?" And
Jesus answered: "You shall return good for evil. My
messengers must not strive with men, but be gentle
toward all. Measure for measure shall not be your
rule. The rulers of men may have such laws, but not
so in the kingdom; mercy always shall determine your
judgments and love your conduct. And if these are
hard sayings, you can even now turn back. If you
find the requirements of apostleship too hard, you
may return to the less rigorous pathway of
discipleship."
On hearing these
startling words, the apostles drew apart by
themselves for a while, but they soon returned, and
Peter said: "Master, we would go on with you; not
one of us would turn back. We are fully prepared to
pay the extra price; we will drink the cup. We would
be apostles, not merely disciples."
When Jesus heard
this, he said: "Be willing, then, to take up your
responsibilities and follow me. Do your good deeds
in secret; when you give alms, let not the left hand
know what the right hand does. And when you pray, go
apart by yourselves and use not vain repetitions and
meaningless phrases. Always remember that the Father
knows what you need even before you ask him. And be
not given to fasting with a sad countenance to be
seen by men. As my chosen apostles, now set apart
for the service of the kingdom, lay not up for
yourselves treasures on earth, but by your unselfish
service lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven,
for where your treasures are, there will your hearts
be also.
"The lamp of the
body is the eye; if, therefore, your eye is
generous, your whole body will be full of light. But
if your eye is selfish, the whole body will be
filled with darkness. If the very light which is in
you is turned to darkness, how great is that
darkness!"
And then Thomas
asked Jesus if they should "continue having
everything in common." Said the Master: "Yes, my
brethren, I would that we should live together as
one understanding family. You are intrusted with a
great work, and I crave your undivided service. You
know that it has been well said: `No man can serve
two masters.' You cannot sincerely worship God and
at the same time wholeheartedly serve mammon. Having
now enlisted unreservedly in the work of the
kingdom, be not anxious for your lives; much less be
concerned with what you shall eat or what you shall
drink; nor yet for your bodies, what clothing you
shall wear. Already have you learned that willing
hands and earnest hearts shall not go hungry. And
now, when you prepare to devote all of your energies
to the
Page 1578
work of the
kingdom, be assured that the Father will not be
unmindful of your needs. Seek first the kingdom of
God, and when you have found entrance thereto, all
things needful shall be added to you. Be not,
therefore, unduly anxious for the morrow. Sufficient
for the day is the trouble thereof."
When Jesus saw
they were disposed to stay up all night to ask
questions, he said to them: "My brethren, you are
earthen vessels; it is best for you to go to your
rest so as to be ready for the morrow's work." But
sleep had departed from their eyes. Peter ventured
to request of his Master that "I have just a little
private talk with you. Not that I would have secrets
from my brethren, but I have a troubled spirit, and
if, perchance, I should deserve a rebuke from my
Master, I could the better endure it alone with
you." And Jesus said, "Come with me, Peter"--leading
the way into the house. When Peter returned from the
presence of his Master much cheered and greatly
encouraged, James decided to go in to talk with
Jesus. And so on through the early hours of the
morning, the other apostles went in one by one to
talk with the Master. When they had all held
personal conferences with him save the twins, who
had fallen asleep, Andrew went in to Jesus and said:
"Master, the twins have fallen asleep in the garden
by the fire; shall I arouse them to inquire if they
would also talk with you?" And Jesus smilingly said
to Andrew, "They do well--trouble them not." And now
the night was passing; the light of another day was
dawning.
7. THE
WEEK FOLLOWING THE ORDINATION
After a few hours'
sleep, when the twelve were assembled for a late
breakfast with Jesus, he said: "Now must you begin
your work of preaching the glad tidings and
instructing believers. Make ready to go to
Jerusalem." After Jesus had spoken, Thomas mustered
up courage to say: "I know, Master, that we should
now be ready to enter upon the work, but I fear we
are not yet able to accomplish this great
undertaking. Would you consent for us to stay
hereabouts for just a few days more before we begin
the work of the kingdom?" And when Jesus saw that
all of his apostles were possessed by this same
fear, he said: "It shall be as you have requested;
we will remain here over the Sabbath day."
For weeks and
weeks small groups of earnest truth seekers,
together with curious spectators, had been coming to
Bethsaida to see Jesus. Already word about him had
spread over the countryside; inquiring groups had
come from cities as far away as Tyre, Sidon,
Damascus, Caesarea, and Jerusalem. Heretofore, Jesus
had greeted these people and taught them concerning
the kingdom, but the Master now turned this work
over to the twelve. Andrew would select one of the
apostles and assign him to a group of visitors, and
sometimes all twelve of them were so engaged.
For two days they
worked, teaching by day and holding private
conferences late into the night. On the third day
Jesus visited with Zebedee and Salome while he sent
his apostles off to "go fishing, seek carefree
change, or perchance visit your families." On
Thursday they returned for three more days of
teaching.
During this week
of rehearsing, Jesus many times repeated to his
apostles the two great motives of his postbaptismal
mission on earth:
1. To reveal the
Father to man.
2. To lead men to
become son-conscious--to faith-realize that they are
the children of the Most High.
Page 1579
One week of this
varied experience did much for the twelve; some even
became over self-confident. At the last conference,
the night after the Sabbath, Peter and James came to
Jesus, saying, "We are ready--let us now go forth to
take the kingdom." To which Jesus replied, "May your
wisdom equal your zeal and your courage atone for
your ignorance."
Though the
apostles failed to comprehend much of his teaching,
they did not fail to grasp the significance of the
charmingly beautiful life he lived with them.
8.
THURSDAY AFTERNOON ON THE LAKE
Jesus well knew
that his apostles were not fully assimilating his
teachings. He decided to give some special
instruction to Peter, James, and John, hoping they
would be able to clarify the ideas of their
associates. He saw that, while some features of the
idea of a spiritual kingdom were being grasped by
the twelve, they steadfastly persisted in attaching
these new spiritual teachings directly onto their
old and entrenched literal concepts of the kingdom
of heaven as a restoration of David's throne and the
re-establishment of Israel as a temporal power on
earth. Accordingly, on Thursday afternoon Jesus went
out from the shore in a boat with Peter, James, and
John to talk over the affairs of the kingdom. This
was a four hours' teaching conference, embracing
scores of questions and answers, and may most
profitably be put in this record by reorganizing the
summary of this momentous afternoon as it was given
by Simon Peter to his brother, Andrew, the following
morning:
1. Doing the
Father's will. Jesus' teaching to trust in the
overcare of the heavenly Father was not a blind and
passive fatalism. He quoted with approval, on this
afternoon, an old Hebrew saying: "He who will not
work shall not eat." He pointed to his own
experience as sufficient commentary on his
teachings. His precepts about trusting the Father
must not be adjudged by the social or economic
conditions of modern times or any other age. His
instruction embraces the ideal principles of living
near God in all ages and on all worlds.
Jesus made clear
to the three the difference between the requirements
of apostleship and discipleship. And even then he
did not forbid the exercise of prudence and
foresight by the twelve. What he preached against
was not forethought but anxiety, worry. He taught
the active and alert submission to God's will. In
answer to many of their questions regarding
frugality and thriftiness, he simply called
attention to his life as carpenter, boatmaker, and
fisherman, and to his careful organization of the
twelve. He sought to make it clear that the world is
not to be regarded as an enemy; that the
circumstances of life constitute a divine
dispensation working along with the children of God.
Jesus had great
difficulty in getting them to understand his
personal practice of nonresistance. He absolutely
refused to defend himself, and it appeared to the
apostles that he would be pleased if they would
pursue the same policy. He taught them not to resist
evil, not to combat injustice or injury, but he did
not teach passive tolerance of wrongdoing. And he
made it plain on this afternoon that he approved of
the social punishment of evildoers and criminals,
and that the civil government must sometimes employ
force for the maintenance of social order and in the
execution of justice.
He never ceased to
warn his disciples against the evil practice of
retaliation; he made no allowance for revenge,
the idea of getting even. He deplored the holding
Page 1580
of grudges. He
disallowed the idea of an eye for an eye and a tooth
for a tooth. He discountenanced the whole concept of
private and personal revenge, assigning these
matters to civil government, on the one hand, and to
the judgment of God, on the other. He made it clear
to the three that his teachings applied to the
individual, not the state. He summarized his
instructions up to that time regarding these
matters, as:
Love your
enemies--remember the moral claims of human
brotherhood.
The futility of
evil: A wrong is not righted by vengeance. Do not
make the mistake of fighting evil with its own
weapons.
Have
faith--confidence in the eventual triumph of divine
justice and eternal goodness.
2. Political
attitude. He cautioned his apostles to be
discreet in their remarks concerning the strained
relations then existing between the Jewish people
and the Roman government; he forbade them to become
in any way embroiled in these difficulties. He was
always careful to avoid the political snares of his
enemies, ever making reply, "Render to Caesar the
things which are Caesar's and to God the things
which are God's." He refused to have his attention
diverted from his mission of establishing a new way
of salvation; he would not permit himself to be
concerned about anything else. In his personal life
he was always duly observant of all civil laws and
regulations; in all his public teachings he ignored
the civic, social, and economic realms. He told the
three apostles that he was concerned only with the
principles of man's inner and personal spiritual
life.
Jesus was not,
therefore, a political reformer. He did not come to
reorganize the world; even if he had done this, it
would have been applicable only to that day and
generation. Nevertheless, he did show man the best
way of living, and no generation is exempt from the
labor of discovering how best to adapt Jesus' life
to its own problems. But never make the mistake of
identifying Jesus' teachings with any political or
economic theory, with any social or industrial
system.
3. Social
attitude. The Jewish rabbis had long debated the
question: Who is my neighbor? Jesus came presenting
the idea of active and spontaneous kindness, a love
of one's fellow men so genuine that it expanded the
neighborhood to include the whole world, thereby
making all men one's neighbors. But with all this,
Jesus was interested only in the individual, not the
mass. Jesus was not a sociologist, but he did labor
to break down all forms of selfish isolation. He
taught pure sympathy, compassion. Michael of Nebadon
is a mercy-dominated Son; compassion is his very
nature.
The Master did not
say that men should never entertain their friends at
meat, but he did say that his followers should make
feasts for the poor and the unfortunate. Jesus had a
firm sense of justice, but it was always tempered
with mercy. He did not teach his apostles that they
were to be imposed upon by social parasites or
professional alms-seekers. The nearest he came to
making sociological pronouncements was to say,
"Judge not, that you be not judged."
He made it clear
that indiscriminate kindness may be blamed for many
social evils. The following day Jesus definitely
instructed Judas that no apostolic funds were to be
given out as alms except upon his request or upon
the joint petition of two of the apostles. In all
these matters it was the practice of Jesus always to
say, "Be as wise as serpents but as harmless as
doves." It seemed to be his purpose in all social
situations to teach patience, tolerance, and
forgiveness.
Page 1581
The family
occupied the very center of Jesus' philosophy of
life--here and hereafter. He based his teachings
about God on the family, while he sought to correct
the Jewish tendency to overhonor ancestors. He
exalted family life as the highest human duty but
made it plain that family relationships must not
interfere with religious obligations. He called
attention to the fact that the family is a temporal
institution; that it does not survive death. Jesus
did not hesitate to give up his family when the
family ran counter to the Father's will. He taught
the new and larger brotherhood of man--the sons of
God. In Jesus' time divorce practices were lax in
Palestine and throughout the Roman Empire. He
repeatedly refused to lay down laws regarding
marriage and divorce, but many of Jesus' early
followers had strong opinions on divorce and did not
hesitate to attribute them to him. All of the New
Testament writers held to these more stringent and
advanced ideas about divorce except John Mark.
4. Economic
attitude. Jesus worked, lived, and traded in the
world as he found it. He was not an economic
reformer, although he did frequently call attention
to the injustice of the unequal distribution of
wealth. But he did not offer any suggestions by way
of remedy. He made it plain to the three that, while
his apostles were not to hold property, he was not
preaching against wealth and property, merely its
unequal and unfair distribution. He recognized the
need for social justice and industrial fairness, but
he offered no rules for their attainment.
He never taught
his followers to avoid earthly possessions, only his
twelve apostles. Luke, the physician, was a strong
believer in social equality, and he did much to
interpret Jesus' sayings in harmony with his
personal beliefs. Jesus never personally directed
his followers to adopt a communal mode of life; he
made no pronouncement of any sort regarding such
matters.
Jesus frequently
warned his listeners against covetousness, declaring
that "a man's happiness consists not in the
abundance of his material possessions." He
constantly reiterated, "What shall it profit a man
if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?"
He made no direct attack on the possession of
property, but he did insist that it is eternally
essential that spiritual values come first. In his
later teachings he sought to correct many erroneous
Urantia views of life by narrating numerous parables
which he presented in the course of his public
ministry. Jesus never intended to formulate economic
theories; he well knew that each age must evolve its
own remedies for existing troubles. And if Jesus
were on earth today, living his life in the flesh,
he would be a great disappointment to the majority
of good men and women for the simple reason that he
would not take sides in present-day political,
social, or economic disputes. He would remain
grandly aloof while teaching you how to perfect your
inner spiritual life so as to render you manyfold
more competent to attack the solution of your purely
human problems.
Jesus would make
all men Godlike and then stand by sympathetically
while these sons of God solve their own political,
social, and economic problems. It was not wealth
that he denounced, but what wealth does to the
majority of its devotees. On this Thursday afternoon
Jesus first told his associates that "it is more
blessed to give than to receive."
5. Personal
religion. You, as did his apostles, should the
better understand Jesus' teachings by his life. He
lived a perfected life on Urantia, and his unique
Page 1582
teachings can
only be understood when that life is visualized in
its immediate background. It is his life, and not
his lessons to the twelve or his sermons to the
multitudes, that will assist most in revealing the
Father's divine character and loving personality.
Jesus did not
attack the teachings of the Hebrew prophets or the
Greek moralists. The Master recognized the many good
things which these great teachers stood for, but he
had come down to earth to teach something
additional, "the voluntary conformity of man's
will to God's will." Jesus did not want simply to
produce a religious man, a mortal wholly
occupied with religious feelings and actuated only
by spiritual impulses. Could you have had but one
look at him, you would have known that Jesus was a
real man of great experience in the things of this
world. The teachings of Jesus in this respect have
been grossly perverted and much misrepresented all
down through the centuries of the Christian era; you
have also held perverted ideas about the Master's
meekness and humility. What he aimed at in his life
appears to have been a superb self-respect.
He only advised man to humble himself that he might
become truly exalted; what he really aimed at was
true humility toward God. He placed great value upon
sincerity--a pure heart. Fidelity was a cardinal
virtue in his estimate of character, while
courage was the very heart of his teachings.
"Fear not" was his watchword, and patient endurance
his ideal of strength of character. The teachings of
Jesus constitute a religion of valor, courage, and
heroism. And this is just why he chose as his
personal representatives twelve commonplace men, the
majority of whom were rugged, virile, and manly
fishermen.
Jesus had little
to say about the social vices of his day; seldom did
he make reference to moral delinquency. He was a
positive teacher of true virtue. He studiously
avoided the negative method of imparting
instruction; he refused to advertise evil. He was
not even a moral reformer. He well knew, and so
taught his apostles, that the sensual urges of
mankind are not suppressed by either religious
rebuke or legal prohibitions. His few denunciations
were largely directed against pride, cruelty,
oppression, and hypocrisy.
Jesus did not
vehemently denounce even the Pharisees, as did John.
He knew many of the scribes and Pharisees were
honest of heart; he understood their enslaving
bondage to religious traditions. Jesus laid great
emphasis on "first making the tree good." He
impressed the three that he valued the whole life,
not just a certain few special virtues.
The one thing
which John gained from this day's teaching was that
the heart of Jesus' religion consisted in the
acquirement of a compassionate character coupled
with a personality motivated to do the will of the
Father in heaven.
Peter grasped the
idea that the gospel they were about to proclaim was
really a fresh beginning for the whole human race.
He conveyed this impression subsequently to Paul,
who formulated therefrom his doctrine of Christ as
"the second Adam."
James grasped the
thrilling truth that Jesus wanted his children on
earth to live as though they were already citizens
of the completed heavenly kingdom.
Jesus knew men
were different, and he so taught his apostles. He
constantly exhorted them to refrain from trying to
mold the disciples and believers according to some
set pattern. He sought to allow each soul to develop
in its own way, a perfecting and separate individual
before God. In answer to one of Peter's
Page 1583
many questions,
the Master said: "I want to set men free so that
they can start out afresh as little children upon
the new and better life." Jesus always insisted that
true goodness must be unconscious, in bestowing
charity not allowing the left hand to know what the
right hand does.
The three apostles
were shocked this afternoon when they realized that
their Master's religion made no provision for
spiritual self-examination. All religions before and
after the times of Jesus, even Christianity,
carefully provide for conscientious
self-examination. But not so with the religion of
Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus' philosophy of life is
without religious introspection. The carpenter's son
never taught character building; he taught
character growth, declaring that the kingdom
of heaven is like a mustard seed. But Jesus said
nothing which would proscribe self-analysis as a
prevention of conceited egotism.
The right to enter
the kingdom is conditioned by faith, personal
belief. The cost of remaining in the progressive
ascent of the kingdom is the pearl of great price,
in order to possess which a man sells all that he
has.
The teaching of
Jesus is a religion for everybody, not alone for
weaklings and slaves. His religion never became
crystallized (during his day) into creeds and
theological laws; he left not a line of writing
behind him. His life and teachings were bequeathed
the universe as an inspirational and idealistic
inheritance suitable for the spiritual guidance and
moral instruction of all ages on all worlds. And
even today, Jesus' teaching stands apart from all
religions, as such, albeit it is the living hope of
every one of them.
Jesus did not
teach his apostles that religion is man's only
earthly pursuit; that was the Jewish idea of serving
God. But he did insist that religion was the
exclusive business of the twelve. Jesus taught
nothing to deter his believers from the pursuit of
genuine culture; he only detracted from the
tradition-bound religious schools of Jerusalem. He
was liberal, bighearted, learned, and tolerant.
Self-conscious piety had no place in his philosophy
of righteous living.
The Master offered
no solutions for the nonreligious problems of his
own age nor for any subsequent age. Jesus wished to
develop spiritual insight into eternal realities and
to stimulate initiative in the originality of
living; he concerned himself exclusively with the
underlying and permanent spiritual needs of the
human race. He revealed a goodness equal to God. He
exalted love--truth, beauty, and goodness--as the
divine ideal and the eternal reality.
The Master came to
create in man a new spirit, a new will--to impart a
new capacity for knowing the truth, experiencing
compassion, and choosing goodness--the will to be in
harmony with God's will, coupled with the eternal
urge to become perfect, even as the Father in heaven
is perfect.
9. THE
DAY OF CONSECRATION
The next Sabbath
day Jesus devoted to his apostles, journeying back
to the highland where he had ordained them; and
there, after a long and beautifully touching
personal message of encouragement, he engaged in the
solemn act of the consecration of the twelve. This
Sabbath afternoon Jesus assembled the apostles
around him on the hillside and gave them into the
hands of his heavenly Father in preparation for the
day when he would be compelled to leave them alone
in the world. There was no new teaching on this
occasion, just visiting and communion.
Page 1584
Jesus reviewed
many features of the ordination sermon, delivered on
this same spot, and then, calling them before him
one by one, he commissioned them to go forth in the
world as his representatives. The Master's
consecration charge was: "Go into all the world and
preach the glad tidings of the kingdom. Liberate
spiritual captives, comfort the oppressed, and
minister to the afflicted. Freely you have received,
freely give."
Jesus advised them
to take neither money nor extra clothing, saying,
"The laborer is worthy of his hire." And finally he
said: "Behold I send you forth as sheep in the midst
of wolves; be you therefore as wise as serpents and
as harmless as doves. But take heed, for your
enemies will bring you up before their councils,
while in their synagogues they will castigate you.
Before governors and rulers you will be brought
because you believe this gospel, and your very
testimony shall be a witness for me to them. And
when they lead you to judgment, be not anxious about
what you shall say, for the spirit of my Father
indwells you and will at such a time speak through
you. Some of you will be put to death, and before
you establish the kingdom on earth, you will be
hated by many peoples because of this gospel; but
fear not; I will be with you, and my spirit shall go
before you into all the world. And my Father's
presence will abide with you while you go first to
the Jews, then to the gentiles."
And when they came
down from the mountain, they journeyed back to their
home in Zebedee's house.
10. THE
EVENING AFTER THE CONSECRATION
That evening while
teaching in the house, for it had begun to rain,
Jesus talked at great length, trying to show the
twelve what they must be, not what they must
do. They knew only a religion that imposed
the doing of certain things as the means of
attaining righteousness--salvation. But Jesus would
reiterate, "In the kingdom you must be
righteous in order to do the work." Many times did
he repeat, "Be you therefore perfect, even as
your Father in heaven is perfect." All the while was
the Master explaining to his bewildered apostles
that the salvation which he had come to bring to the
world was to be had only by believing, by
simple and sincere faith. Said Jesus: "John preached
a baptism of repentance, sorrow for the old way of
living. You are to proclaim the baptism of
fellowship with God. Preach repentance to those who
stand in need of such teaching, but to those already
seeking sincere entrance to the kingdom, open the
doors wide and bid them enter into the joyous
fellowship of the sons of God." But it was a
difficult task to persuade these Galilean fishermen
that, in the kingdom, being righteous, by
faith, must precede doing righteousness in
the daily life of the mortals of earth.
Another great
handicap in this work of teaching the twelve was
their tendency to take highly idealistic and
spiritual principles of religious truth and remake
them into concrete rules of personal conduct. Jesus
would present to them the beautiful spirit of the
soul's attitude, but they insisted on translating
such teachings into rules of personal behavior. Many
times, when they did make sure to remember what the
Master said, they were almost certain to forget what
he did not say. But they slowly assimilated
his teaching because Jesus was all that he
taught. What they could not gain from his verbal
instruction, they gradually acquired by living with
him.
Page 1585
It was not
apparent to the apostles that their Master was
engaged in living a life of spiritual inspiration
for every person of every age on every world of a
far-flung universe. Notwithstanding what Jesus told
them from time to time, the apostles did not grasp
the idea that he was doing a work on this
world but for all other worlds in his vast
creation. Jesus lived his earth life on Urantia, not
to set a personal example of mortal living for the
men and women of this world, but rather to create
a high spiritual and inspirational ideal for all
mortal beings on all worlds.
This same evening
Thomas asked Jesus: "Master, you say that we must
become as little children before we can gain
entrance to the Father's kingdom, and yet you have
warned us not to be deceived by false prophets nor
to become guilty of casting our pearls before swine.
Now, I am honestly puzzled. I cannot understand your
teaching." Jesus replied to Thomas: "How long shall
I bear with you! Ever you insist on making literal
all that I teach. When I asked you to become as
little children as the price of entering the
kingdom, I referred not to ease of deception, mere
willingness to believe, nor to quickness to trust
pleasing strangers. What I did desire that you
should gather from the illustration was the
child-father relationship. You are the child, and it
is your Father's kingdom you seek to enter.
There is present that natural affection between
every normal child and its father which insures an
understanding and loving relationship, and which
forever precludes all disposition to bargain for the
Father's love and mercy. And the gospel you are
going forth to preach has to do with a salvation
growing out of the faith-realization of this very
and eternal child-father relationship."
The one
characteristic of Jesus' teaching was that the
morality of his philosophy originated in the
personal relation of the individual to God--this
very child-father relationship. Jesus placed
emphasis on the individual, not on the race
or nation. While eating supper, Jesus had the talk
with Matthew in which he explained that the morality
of any act is determined by the individual's motive.
Jesus' morality was always positive. The golden rule
as restated by Jesus demands active social contact;
the older negative rule could be obeyed in
isolation. Jesus stripped morality of all rules and
ceremonies and elevated it to majestic levels of
spiritual thinking and truly righteous living.
This new religion
of Jesus was not without its practical implications,
but whatever of practical political, social, or
economic value there is to be found in his teaching
is the natural outworking of this inner experience
of the soul as it manifests the fruits of the spirit
in the spontaneous daily ministry of genuine
personal religious experience.
After Jesus and
Matthew had finished talking, Simon Zelotes asked,
"But, Master, are all men the sons of God?"
And Jesus answered: "Yes, Simon, all men are the
sons of God, and that is the good news you are going
to proclaim." But the apostles could not grasp such
a doctrine; it was a new, strange, and startling
announcement. And it was because of his desire to
impress this truth upon them that Jesus taught his
followers to treat all men as their brothers.
In response to a
question asked by Andrew, the Master made it clear
that the morality of his teaching was inseparable
from the religion of his living. He taught morality,
not from the nature of man, but from the
relation of man to God.
John asked Jesus,
"Master, what is the kingdom of heaven?" And Jesus
answered: "The kingdom of heaven consists in these
three essentials: first, recognition
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of the fact of
the sovereignty of God; second, belief in the truth
of sonship with God; and third, faith in the
effectiveness of the supreme human desire to do the
will of God--to be like God. And this is the good
news of the gospel: that by faith every mortal may
have all these essentials of salvation."
And now the week
of waiting was over, and they prepared to depart on
the morrow for Jerusalem. |