PAPER 142
- THE PASSOVER AT JERUSALEM
The month of April
Jesus and the apostles worked in Jerusalem, going
out of the city each evening to spend the night at
Bethany. Jesus himself spent one or two nights each
week in Jerusalem at the home of Flavius, a Greek
Jew, where many prominent Jews came in secret to
interview him.
The first day in
Jerusalem Jesus called upon his friend of former
years, Annas, the onetime high priest and relative
of Salome, Zebedee's wife. Annas had been hearing
about Jesus and his teachings, and when Jesus called
at the high priest's home, he was received with much
reserve. When Jesus perceived Annas's coldness, he
took immediate leave, saying as he departed: "Fear
is man's chief enslaver and pride his great
weakness; will you betray yourself into bondage to
both of these destroyers of joy and liberty?" But
Annas made no reply. The Master did not again see
Annas until the time when he sat with his son-in-law
in judgment on the Son of Man.
1.
TEACHING IN THE TEMPLE
Throughout this
month Jesus or one of the apostles taught daily in
the temple. When the Passover crowds were too great
to find entrance to the temple teaching, the
apostles conducted many teaching groups outside the
sacred precincts. The burden of their message was:
1. The kingdom of
heaven is at hand.
2. By faith in the
fatherhood of God you may enter the kingdom of
heaven, thus becoming the sons of God.
3. Love is the
rule of living within the kingdom--supreme devotion
to God while loving your neighbor as yourself.
4. Obedience to
the will of the Father, yielding the fruits of the
spirit in one's personal life, is the law of the
kingdom.
The multitudes who
came to celebrate the Passover heard this teaching
of Jesus, and hundreds of them rejoiced in the good
news. The chief priests and rulers of the Jews
became much concerned about Jesus and his apostles
and debated among themselves as to what should be
done with them.
Besides teaching
in and about the temple, the apostles and other
believers were engaged in doing much personal work
among the Passover throngs. These interested men and
women carried the news of Jesus' message from this
Passover celebration to the uttermost parts of the
Roman Empire and also to the East. This was the
beginning of the spread of the gospel of the kingdom
to the outside world. No longer was the work of
Jesus to be confined to Palestine.
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2. GOD'S
WRATH
There was in
Jerusalem in attendance upon the Passover
festivities one Jacob, a wealthy Jewish trader from
Crete, and he came to Andrew making request to see
Jesus privately. Andrew arranged this secret meeting
with Jesus at Flavius's home the evening of the next
day. This man could not comprehend the Master's
teachings, and he came because he desired to inquire
more fully about the kingdom of God. Said Jacob to
Jesus: "But, Rabbi, Moses and the olden prophets
tell us that Yahweh is a jealous God, a God of great
wrath and fierce anger. The prophets say he hates
evildoers and takes vengeance on those who obey not
his law. You and your disciples teach us that God is
a kind and compassionate Father who so loves all men
that he would welcome them into this new kingdom of
heaven, which you proclaim is so near at hand."
When Jacob
finished speaking, Jesus replied: "Jacob, you have
well stated the teachings of the olden prophets who
taught the children of their generation in
accordance with the light of their day. Our Father
in Paradise is changeless. But the concept of his
nature has enlarged and grown from the days of Moses
down through the times of Amos and even to the
generation of the prophet Isaiah. And now have I
come in the flesh to reveal the Father in new glory
and to show forth his love and mercy to all men on
all worlds. As the gospel of this kingdom shall
spread over the world with its message of good cheer
and good will to all men, there will grow up
improved and better relations among the families of
all nations. As time passes, fathers and their
children will love each other more, and thus will be
brought about a better understanding of the love of
the Father in heaven for his children on earth.
Remember, Jacob, that a good and true father not
only loves his family as a whole--as a family--but
he also truly loves and affectionately cares for
each individual member."
After considerable
discussion of the heavenly Father's character, Jesus
paused to say: "You, Jacob, being a father of many,
know well the truth of my words." And Jacob said:
"But, Master, who told you I was the father of six
children? How did you know this about me?" And the
Master replied: "Suffice it to say that the Father
and the Son know all things, for indeed they see
all. Loving your children as a father on earth, you
must now accept as a reality the love of the
heavenly Father for you--not just for all the
children of Abraham, but for you, your individual
soul."
Then Jesus went on
to say: "When your children are very young and
immature, and when you must chastise them, they may
reflect that their father is angry and filled with
resentful wrath. Their immaturity cannot penetrate
beyond the punishment to discern the father's
farseeing and corrective affection. But when these
same children become grown-up men and women, would
it not be folly for them to cling to these earlier
and misconceived notions regarding their father? As
men and women they should now discern their father's
love in all these early disciplines. And should not
mankind, as the centuries pass, come the better to
understand the true nature and loving character of
the Father in heaven? What profit have you from
successive generations of spiritual illumination if
you persist in viewing God as Moses and the prophets
saw him? I say to you, Jacob, under the bright light
of this hour you should see the Father as none of
those who have gone before ever beheld him. And thus
seeing him, you should rejoice
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to enter the
kingdom wherein such a merciful Father rules, and
you should seek to have his will of love dominate
your life henceforth."
And Jacob
answered: "Rabbi, I believe; I desire that you lead
me into the Father's kingdom."
3. THE
CONCEPT OF GOD
The twelve
apostles, most of whom had listened to this
discussion of the character of God, that night asked
Jesus many questions about the Father in heaven. The
Master's answers to these questions can best be
presented by the following summary in modern
phraseology:
Jesus mildly
upbraided the twelve, in substance saying: Do you
not know the traditions of Israel relating to the
growth of the idea of Yahweh, and are you ignorant
of the teaching of the Scriptures concerning the
doctrine of God? And then did the Master proceed to
instruct the apostles about the evolution of the
concept of Deity throughout the course of the
development of the Jewish people. He called
attention to the following phases of the growth of
the God idea:
1. Yahweh--the
god of the Sinai clans. This was the primitive
concept of Deity which Moses exalted to the higher
level of the Lord God of Israel. The Father in
heaven never fails to accept the sincere worship of
his children on earth, no matter how crude their
concept of Deity or by what name they symbolize his
divine nature.
2. The Most
High. This concept of the Father in heaven
was proclaimed by Melchizedek to Abraham and was
carried far from Salem by those who subsequently
believed in this enlarged and expanded idea of
Deity. Abraham and his brother left Ur because of
the establishment of sun worship, and they became
believers in Melchizedek's teaching of El Elyon--the
Most High God. Theirs was a composite concept of
God, consisting in a blending of their older
Mesopotamian ideas and the Most High doctrine.
3. El
Shaddai. During these early days many of the
Hebrews worshiped El Shaddai, the Egyptian concept
of the God of heaven, which they learned about
during their captivity in the land of the Nile. Long
after the times of Melchizedek all three of these
concepts of God became joined together to form the
doctrine of the creator Deity, the Lord God of
Israel.
4. Elohim.
From the times of Adam the teaching of the Paradise
Trinity has persisted. Do you not recall how the
Scriptures begin by asserting that "In the beginning
the Gods created the heavens and the earth"? This
indicates that when that record was made the Trinity
concept of three Gods in one had found lodgment in
the religion of our forebears.
5. The
Supreme Yahweh. By the times of Isaiah these
beliefs about God had expanded into the concept of a
Universal Creator who was simultaneously
all-powerful and all-merciful. And this evolving and
enlarging concept of God virtually supplanted all
previous ideas of Deity in our fathers' religion.
6. The
Father in heaven. And now do we know God as
our Father in heaven. Our teaching provides a
religion wherein the believer is a son of
God. That is the good news of the gospel of the
kingdom of heaven. Coexistent with the Father are
the Son and the Spirit, and the revelation of the
nature and ministry
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of these Paradise
Deities will continue to enlarge and brighten
throughout the endless ages of the eternal spiritual
progression of the ascending sons of God. At all
times and during all ages the true worship of any
human being--as concerns individual spiritual
progress--is recognized by the indwelling spirit as
homage rendered to the Father in heaven.
Never before had
the apostles been so shocked as they were upon
hearing this recounting of the growth of the concept
of God in the Jewish minds of previous generations;
they were too bewildered to ask questions. As they
sat before Jesus in silence, the Master continued:
"And you would have known these truths had you read
the Scriptures. Have you not read in Samuel where it
says: `And the anger of the Lord was kindled against
Israel, so much so that he moved David against them,
saying, go number Israel and Judah'? And this was
not strange because in the days of Samuel the
children of Abraham really believed that Yahweh
created both good and evil. But when a later writer
narrated these events, subsequent to the enlargement
of the Jewish concept of the nature of God, he did
not dare attribute evil to Yahweh; therefore he
said: `And Satan stood up against Israel and
provoked David to number Israel.' Cannot you discern
that such records in the Scriptures clearly show how
the concept of the nature of God continued to grow
from one generation to another?
"Again should you
have discerned the growth of the understanding of
divine law in perfect keeping with these enlarging
concepts of divinity. When the children of Israel
came out of Egypt in the days before the enlarged
revelation of Yahweh, they had ten commandments
which served as their law right up to the times when
they were encamped before Sinai. And these ten
commandments were:
"1. You shall
worship no other god, for the Lord is a jealous God.
"2. You shall not
make molten gods.
"3. You shall not
neglect to keep the feast of unleavened bread.
"4. Of all the
males of men or cattle, the first-born are mine,
says the Lord.
"5. Six days you
may work, but on the seventh day you shall rest.
"6. You shall not
fail to observe the feast of the first fruits and
the feast of the ingathering at the end of the year.
"7. You shall not
offer the blood of any sacrifice with leavened
bread.
"8. The sacrifice
of the feast of the Passover shall not be left until
morning.
"9. The first of
the first fruits of the ground you shall bring to
the house of the Lord your God.
"10. You shall not
seethe a kid in its mother's milk.
"And then, amidst
the thunders and lightnings of Sinai, Moses gave
them the new ten commandments, which you will all
allow are more worthy utterances to accompany the
enlarging Yahweh concepts of Deity. And did you
never take notice of these commandments as twice
recorded in the Scriptures, that in the first case
deliverance from Egypt is assigned as the reason for
Sabbath keeping, while in a later record the
advancing religious beliefs of our forefathers
demanded that this be changed to the recognition of
the fact of creation as the reason for Sabbath
observance?
"And then will you
remember that once again--in the greater spiritual
enlightenment of Isaiah's day--these ten negative
commandments were changed
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into the great
and positive law of love, the injunction to love God
supremely and your neighbor as yourself. And it is
this supreme law of love for God and for man that I
also declare to you as constituting the whole duty
of man."
And when he had
finished speaking, no man asked him a question. They
went, each one to his sleep.
4.
FLAVIUS AND GREEK CULTURE
Flavius, the Greek
Jew, was a proselyte of the gate, having been
neither circumcised nor baptized; and since he was a
great lover of the beautiful in art and sculpture,
the house which he occupied when sojourning in
Jerusalem was a beautiful edifice. This home was
exquisitely adorned with priceless treasures which
he had gathered up here and there on his world
travels. When he first thought of inviting Jesus to
his home, he feared that the Master might take
offense at the sight of these so-called images. But
Flavius was agreeably surprised when Jesus entered
the home that, instead of rebuking him for having
these supposedly idolatrous objects scattered about
the house, he manifested great interest in the
entire collection and asked many appreciative
questions about each object as Flavius escorted him
from room to room, showing him all of his favorite
statues.
The Master saw
that his host was bewildered at his friendly
attitude toward art; therefore, when they had
finished the survey of the entire collection, Jesus
said: "Because you appreciate the beauty of things
created by my Father and fashioned by the artistic
hands of man, why should you expect to be rebuked?
Because Moses onetime sought to combat idolatry and
the worship of false gods, why should all men frown
upon the reproduction of grace and beauty? I say to
you, Flavius, Moses' children have misunderstood
him, and now do they make false gods of even his
prohibitions of images and the likeness of things in
heaven and on earth. But even if Moses taught such
restrictions to the darkened minds of those days,
what has that to do with this day when the Father in
heaven is revealed as the universal Spirit Ruler
over all? And, Flavius, I declare that in the coming
kingdom they shall no longer teach, `Do not worship
this and do not worship that'; no longer shall they
concern themselves with commands to refrain from
this and take care not to do that, but rather shall
all be concerned with one supreme duty. And this
duty of man is expressed in two great privileges:
sincere worship of the infinite Creator, the
Paradise Father, and loving service bestowed upon
one's fellow men. If you love your neighbor as you
love yourself, you really know that you are a son of
God.
"In an age when my
Father was not well understood, Moses was justified
in his attempts to withstand idolatry, but in the
coming age the Father will have been revealed in the
life of the Son; and this new revelation of God will
make it forever unnecessary to confuse the Creator
Father with idols of stone or images of gold and
silver. Henceforth, intelligent men may enjoy the
treasures of art without confusing such material
appreciation of beauty with the worship and service
of the Father in Paradise, the God of all things and
all beings."
Flavius believed
all that Jesus taught him. The next day he went to
Bethany beyond the Jordan and was baptized by the
disciples of John. And this he did because the
apostles of Jesus did not yet baptize believers.
When Flavius returned to Jerusalem, he made a great
feast for Jesus and invited sixty of his
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friends. And many
of these guests also became believers in the message
of the coming kingdom.
5. THE
DISCOURSE ON ASSURANCE
One of the great
sermons which Jesus preached in the temple this
Passover week was in answer to a question asked by
one of his hearers, a man from Damascus. This man
asked Jesus: "But, Rabbi, how shall we know of a
certainty that you are sent by God, and that we may
truly enter into this kingdom which you and your
disciples declare is near at hand?" And Jesus
answered:
"As to my message
and the teaching of my disciples, you should judge
them by their fruits. If we proclaim to you the
truths of the spirit, the spirit will witness in
your hearts that our message is genuine. Concerning
the kingdom and your assurance of acceptance by the
heavenly Father, let me ask what father among you
who is a worthy and kindhearted father would keep
his son in anxiety or suspense regarding his status
in the family or his place of security in the
affections of his father's heart? Do you earth
fathers take pleasure in torturing your children
with uncertainty about their place of abiding love
in your human hearts? Neither does your Father in
heaven leave his faith children of the spirit in
doubtful uncertainty as to their position in the
kingdom. If you receive God as your Father, then
indeed and in truth are you the sons of God. And if
you are sons, then are you secure in the position
and standing of all that concerns eternal and divine
sonship. If you believe my words, you thereby
believe in Him who sent me, and by thus believing in
the Father, you have made your status in heavenly
citizenship sure. If you do the will of the Father
in heaven, you shall never fail in the attainment of
the eternal life of progress in the divine kingdom.
"The Supreme
Spirit shall bear witness with your spirits that you
are truly the children of God. And if you are the
sons of God, then have you been born of the spirit
of God; and whosoever has been born of the spirit
has in himself the power to overcome all doubt, and
this is the victory that overcomes all uncertainty,
even your faith.
"Said the Prophet
Isaiah, speaking of these times: `When the spirit is
poured upon us from on high, then shall the work of
righteousness become peace, quietness, and assurance
forever.' And for all who truly believe this gospel,
I will become surety for their reception into the
eternal mercies and the everlasting life of my
Father's kingdom. You, then, who hear this message
and believe this gospel of the kingdom are the sons
of God, and you have life everlasting; and the
evidence to all the world that you have been born of
the spirit is that you sincerely love one another."
The throng of
listeners remained many hours with Jesus, asking him
questions and listening attentively to his
comforting answers. Even the apostles were
emboldened by Jesus' teaching to preach the gospel
of the kingdom with more power and assurance. This
experience at Jerusalem was a great inspiration to
the twelve. It was their first contact with such
enormous crowds, and they learned many valuable
lessons which proved of great assistance in their
later work.
6. THE
VISIT WITH NICODEMUS
One evening at the
home of Flavius there came to see Jesus one
Nicodemus, a wealthy and elderly member of the
Jewish Sanhedrin. He had heard much
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about the
teachings of this Galilean, and so he went one
afternoon to hear him as he taught in the temple
courts. He would have gone often to hear Jesus
teach, but he feared to be seen by the people in
attendance upon his teaching, for already were the
rulers of the Jews so at variance with Jesus that no
member of the Sanhedrin would want to be identified
in any open manner with him. Accordingly, Nicodemus
had arranged with Andrew to see Jesus privately and
after nightfall on this particular evening. Peter,
James, and John were in Flavius's garden when the
interview began, but later they all went into the
house where the discourse continued.
In receiving
Nicodemus, Jesus showed no particular deference; in
talking with him, there was no compromise or undue
persuasiveness. The Master made no attempt to
repulse his secretive caller, nor did he employ
sarcasm. In all his dealings with the distinguished
visitor, Jesus was calm, earnest, and dignified.
Nicodemus was not an official delegate of the
Sanhedrin; he came to see Jesus wholly because of
his personal and sincere interest in the Master's
teachings.
Upon being
presented by Flavius, Nicodemus said: "Rabbi, we
know that you are a teacher sent by God, for no mere
man could so teach unless God were with him. And I
am desirous of knowing more about your teachings
regarding the coming kingdom."
Jesus answered
Nicodemus: "Verily, verily, I say to you, Nicodemus,
except a man be born from above, he cannot see the
kingdom of God." Then replied Nicodemus: "But how
can a man be born again when he is old? He cannot
enter a second time into his mother's womb to be
born."
Jesus said:
"Nevertheless, I declare to you, except a man be
born of the spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God. That which is born of the flesh is flesh,
and that which is born of the spirit is spirit. But
you should not marvel that I said you must be born
from above. When the wind blows, you hear the rustle
of the leaves, but you do not see the wind--whence
it comes or whither it goes--and so it is with
everyone born of the spirit. With the eyes of the
flesh you can behold the manifestations of the
spirit, but you cannot actually discern the spirit."
Nicodemus replied:
"But I do not understand--how can that be?" Said
Jesus: "Can it be that you are a teacher in Israel
and yet ignorant of all this? It becomes, then, the
duty of those who know about the realities of the
spirit to reveal these things to those who discern
only the manifestations of the material world. But
will you believe us if we tell you of the heavenly
truths? Do you have the courage, Nicodemus, to
believe in one who has descended from heaven, even
the Son of Man?"
And Nicodemus
said: "But how can I begin to lay hold upon this
spirit which is to remake me in preparation for
entering into the kingdom?" Jesus answered: "Already
does the spirit of the Father in heaven indwell you.
If you would be led by this spirit from above, very
soon would you begin to see with the eyes of the
spirit, and then by the wholehearted choice of
spirit guidance would you be born of the spirit
since your only purpose in living would be to do the
will of your Father who is in heaven. And so finding
yourself born of the spirit and happily in the
kingdom of God, you would begin to bear in your
daily life the abundant fruits of the spirit."
Nicodemus was
thoroughly sincere. He was deeply impressed but went
away bewildered. Nicodemus was accomplished in
self-development, in self-restraint, and even in
high moral qualities. He was refined, egoistic, and
altruistic; but he did not know how to submit
his will to the will of the divine Father as a
little
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child is willing
to submit to the guidance and leading of a wise and
loving earthly father, thereby becoming in reality a
son of God, a progressive heir of the eternal
kingdom.
But Nicodemus did
summon faith enough to lay hold of the kingdom. He
faintly protested when his colleagues of the
Sanhedrin sought to condemn Jesus without a hearing;
and with Joseph of Arimathea, he later boldly
acknowledged his faith and claimed the body of
Jesus, even when most of the disciples had fled in
fear from the scenes of their Master's final
suffering and death.
7. THE
LESSON ON THE FAMILY
After the busy
period of teaching and personal work of Passover
week in Jerusalem, Jesus spent the next Wednesday at
Bethany with his apostles, resting. That afternoon,
Thomas asked a question which elicited a long and
instructive answer. Said Thomas: "Master, on the day
we were set apart as ambassadors of the kingdom, you
told us many things, instructed us regarding our
personal mode of life, but what shall we teach the
multitude? How are these people to live after the
kingdom more fully comes? Shall your disciples own
slaves? Shall your believers court poverty and shun
property? Shall mercy alone prevail so that we shall
have no more law and justice?" Jesus and the twelve
spent all afternoon and all that evening, after
supper, discussing Thomas's questions. For the
purposes of this record we present the following
summary of the Master's instruction:
Jesus sought first
to make plain to his apostles that he himself was on
earth living a unique life in the flesh, and that
they, the twelve, had been called to participate in
this bestowal experience of the Son of Man; and as
such coworkers, they, too, must share in many of the
special restrictions and obligations of the entire
bestowal experience. There was a veiled intimation
that the Son of Man was the only person who had ever
lived on earth who could simultaneously see into the
very heart of God and into the very depths of man's
soul.
Very plainly Jesus
explained that the kingdom of heaven was an
evolutionary experience, beginning here on earth and
progressing up through successive life stations to
Paradise. In the course of the evening he definitely
stated that at some future stage of kingdom
development he would revisit this world in spiritual
power and divine glory.
He next explained
that the "kingdom idea" was not the best way to
illustrate man's relation to God; that he employed
such figures of speech because the Jewish people
were expecting the kingdom, and because John had
preached in terms of the coming kingdom. Jesus said:
"The people of another age will better understand
the gospel of the kingdom when it is presented in
terms expressive of the family relationship--when
man understands religion as the teaching of the
fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man,
sonship with God." Then the Master discoursed at
some length on the earthly family as an illustration
of the heavenly family, restating the two
fundamental laws of living: the first commandment of
love for the father, the head of the family, and the
second commandment of mutual love among the
children, to love your brother as yourself. And then
he explained that such a quality of brotherly
affection would invariably manifest itself in
unselfish and loving social service.
Following that,
came the memorable discussion of the fundamental
characteristics of family life and their application
to the relationship existing between
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God and man.
Jesus stated that a true family is founded on the
following seven facts:
1. The fact of
existence. The relationships of nature and the
phenomena of mortal likenesses are bound up in the
family: Children inherit certain parental traits.
The children take origin in the parents; personality
existence depends on the act of the parent. The
relationship of father and child is inherent in all
nature and pervades all living existences.
2. Security and
pleasure. True fathers take great pleasure in
providing for the needs of their children. Many
fathers are not content with supplying the mere
wants of their children but enjoy making provision
for their pleasures also.
3. Education
and training. Wise fathers carefully plan for
the education and adequate training of their sons
and daughters. When young they are prepared for the
greater responsibilities of later life.
4. Discipline
and restraint. Farseeing fathers also make
provision for the necessary discipline, guidance,
correction, and sometimes restraint of their young
and immature offspring.
5.
Companionship and loyalty. The affectionate
father holds intimate and loving intercourse with
his children. Always is his ear open to their
petitions; he is ever ready to share their hardships
and assist them over their difficulties. The father
is supremely interested in the progressive welfare
of his progeny.
6. Love and
mercy. A compassionate father is freely
forgiving; fathers do not hold vengeful memories
against their children. Fathers are not like judges,
enemies, or creditors. Real families are built upon
tolerance, patience, and forgiveness.
7. Provision
for the future. Temporal fathers like to leave
an inheritance for their sons. The family continues
from one generation to another. Death only ends one
generation to mark the beginning of another. Death
terminates an individual life but not necessarily
the family.
For hours the
Master discussed the application of these features
of family life to the relations of man, the earth
child, to God, the Paradise Father. And this was his
conclusion: "This entire relationship of a son to
the Father, I know in perfection, for all that you
must attain of sonship in the eternal future I have
now already attained. The Son of Man is prepared to
ascend to the right hand of the Father, so that in
me is the way now open still wider for all of you to
see God and, ere you have finished the glorious
progression, to become perfect, even as your Father
in heaven is perfect."
When the apostles
heard these startling words, they recalled the
pronouncements which John made at the time of Jesus'
baptism, and they also vividly recalled this
experience in connection with their preaching and
teaching subsequent to the Master's death and
resurrection.
Jesus is a divine
Son, one in the Universal Father's full confidence.
He had been with the Father and comprehended him
fully. He had now lived his earth life to the full
satisfaction of the Father, and this incarnation in
the flesh had enabled him fully to comprehend man.
Jesus was the perfection of man; he had attained
just such perfection as all true believers are
destined to attain in him and through him. Jesus
revealed a God of perfection to man and presented in
himself the perfected son of the realms to God.
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Although Jesus
discoursed for several hours, Thomas was not yet
satisfied, for he said: "But, Master, we do not find
that the Father in heaven always deals kindly and
mercifully with us. Many times we grievously suffer
on earth, and not always are our prayers answered.
Where do we fail to grasp the meaning of your
teaching?"
Jesus replied:
"Thomas, Thomas, how long before you will acquire
the ability to listen with the ear of the spirit?
How long will it be before you discern that this
kingdom is a spiritual kingdom, and that my Father
is also a spiritual being? Do you not understand
that I am teaching you as spiritual children in the
spirit family of heaven, of which the fatherhead is
an infinite and eternal spirit? Will you not allow
me to use the earth family as an illustration of
divine relationships without so literally applying
my teaching to material affairs? In your minds
cannot you separate the spiritual realities of the
kingdom from the material, social, economic, and
political problems of the age? When I speak the
language of the spirit, why do you insist on
translating my meaning into the language of the
flesh just because I presume to employ commonplace
and literal relationships for purposes of
illustration? My children, I implore that you cease
to apply the teaching of the kingdom of the spirit
to the sordid affairs of slavery, poverty, houses,
and lands, and to the material problems of human
equity and justice. These temporal matters are the
concern of the men of this world, and while in a way
they affect all men, you have been called to
represent me in the world, even as I represent my
Father. You are spiritual ambassadors of a spiritual
kingdom, special representatives of the spirit
Father. By this time it should be possible for me to
instruct you as full-grown men of the spirit
kingdom. Must I ever address you only as children?
Will you never grow up in spirit perception?
Nevertheless, I love you and will bear with you,
even to the very end of our association in the
flesh. And even then shall my spirit go before you
into all the world."
8. IN
SOUTHERN JUDEA
By the end of
April the opposition to Jesus among the Pharisees
and Sadducees had become so pronounced that the
Master and his apostles decided to leave Jerusalem
for a while, going south to work in Bethlehem and
Hebron. The entire month of May was spent in doing
personal work in these cities and among the people
of the surrounding villages. No public preaching was
done on this trip, only house-to-house visitation. A
part of this time, while the apostles taught the
gospel and ministered to the sick, Jesus and Abner
spent at Engedi, visiting the Nazarite colony. John
the Baptist had gone forth from this place, and
Abner had been head of this group. Many of the
Nazarite brotherhood became believers in Jesus, but
the majority of these ascetic and eccentric men
refused to accept him as a teacher sent from heaven
because he did not teach fasting and other forms of
self-denial.
The people living
in this region did not know that Jesus had been born
in Bethlehem. They always supposed the Master had
been born at Nazareth, as did the vast majority of
his disciples, but the twelve knew the facts.
This sojourn in
the south of Judea was a restful and fruitful season
of labor; many souls were added to the kingdom. By
the first days of June the agitation against Jesus
had so quieted down in Jerusalem that the Master and
the apostles returned to instruct and comfort
believers.
Page 1606
Although Jesus
and the apostles spent the entire month of June in
or near Jerusalem, they did no public teaching
during this period. They lived for the most part in
tents, which they pitched in a shaded park, or
garden, known in that day as Gethsemane. This park
was situated on the western slope of the Mount of
Olives not far from the brook Kidron. The Sabbath
week ends they usually spent with Lazarus and his
sisters at Bethany. Jesus entered within the walls
of Jerusalem only a few times, but a large number of
interested inquirers came out to Gethsemane to visit
with him. One Friday evening Nicodemus and one
Joseph of Arimathea ventured out to see Jesus but
turned back through fear even after they were
standing before the entrance to the Master's tent.
And, of course, they did not perceive that Jesus
knew all about their doings.
When the rulers of
the Jews learned that Jesus had returned to
Jerusalem, they prepared to arrest him; but when
they observed that he did no public preaching, they
concluded that he had become frightened by their
previous agitation and decided to allow him to carry
on his teaching in this private manner without
further molestation. And thus affairs moved along
quietly until the last days of June, when one Simon,
a member of the Sanhedrin, publicly espoused the
teachings of Jesus, after so declaring himself
before the rulers of the Jews. Immediately a new
agitation for Jesus' apprehension sprang up and grew
so strong that the Master decided to retire into the
cities of Samaria and the Decapolis. |