PAPER 143
- GOING THROUGH SAMARIA
At the end of
June, A.D. 27, because of the increasing
opposition of the Jewish religious rulers, Jesus
and the twelve departed from Jerusalem, after
sending their tents and meager personal effects
to be stored at the home of Lazarus at Bethany.
Going north into Samaria, they tarried over the
Sabbath at Bethel. Here they preached for
several days to the people who came from Gophna
and Ephraim. A group of citizens from Arimathea
and Thamna came over to invite Jesus to visit
their villages. The Master and his apostles
spent more than two weeks teaching the Jews and
Samaritans of this region, many of whom came
from as far as Antipatris to hear the good news
of the kingdom.
The people of
southern Samaria heard Jesus gladly, and the
apostles, with the exception of Judas Iscariot,
succeeded in overcoming much of their prejudice
against the Samaritans. It was very difficult
for Judas to love these Samaritans. The last
week of July Jesus and his associates made ready
to depart for the new Greek cities of Phasaelis
and Archelais near the Jordan.
1.
PREACHING AT ARCHELAIS
The first half
of the month of August the apostolic party made
its headquarters at the Greek cities of
Archelais and Phasaelis, where they had their
first experience preaching to well-nigh
exclusive gatherings of gentiles--Greeks,
Romans, and Syrians--for few Jews dwelt in these
two Greek towns. In contacting with these Roman
citizens, the apostles encountered new
difficulties in the proclamation of the message
of the coming kingdom, and they met with new
objections to the teachings of Jesus. At one of
the many evening conferences with his apostles,
Jesus listened attentively to these objections
to the gospel of the kingdom as the twelve
repeated their experiences with the subjects of
their personal labors.
A question
asked by Philip was typical of their
difficulties. Said Philip: "Master, these Greeks
and Romans make light of our message, saying
that such teachings are fit for only weaklings
and slaves. They assert that the religion of the
heathen is superior to our teaching because it
inspires to the acquirement of a strong, robust,
and aggressive character. They affirm that we
would convert all men into enfeebled specimens
of passive nonresisters who would soon perish
from the face of the earth. They like you,
Master, and freely admit that your teaching is
heavenly and ideal, but they will not take us
seriously. They assert that your religion is not
for this world; that men cannot live as you
teach. And now, Master, what shall we say to
these gentiles?"
After Jesus
had heard similar objections to the gospel of
the kingdom presented by Thomas, Nathaniel,
Simon Zelotes, and Matthew, he said to the
twelve:
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"I
have come into this world to do the will of my
Father and to reveal his loving character to all
mankind. That, my brethren, is my mission. And
this one thing I will do, regardless of the
misunderstanding of my teachings by Jews or
gentiles of this day or of another generation.
But you should not overlook the fact that even
divine love has its severe disciplines. A
father's love for his son oftentimes impels the
father to restrain the unwise acts of his
thoughtless offspring. The child does not always
comprehend the wise and loving motives of the
father's restraining discipline. But I declare
to you that my Father in Paradise does rule a
universe of universes by the compelling power of
his love. Love is the greatest of all spirit
realities. Truth is a liberating revelation, but
love is the supreme relationship. And no matter
what blunders your fellow men make in their
world management of today, in an age to come the
gospel which I declare to you will rule this
very world. The ultimate goal of human progress
is the reverent recognition of the fatherhood of
God and the loving materialization of the
brotherhood of man.
"But who told
you that my gospel was intended only for slaves
and weaklings? Do you, my chosen apostles,
resemble weaklings? Did John look like a
weakling? Do you observe that I am enslaved by
fear? True, the poor and oppressed of this
generation have the gospel preached to them. The
religions of this world have neglected the poor,
but my Father is no respecter of persons.
Besides, the poor of this day are the first to
heed the call to repentance and acceptance of
sonship. The gospel of the kingdom is to be
preached to all men--Jew and gentile, Greek and
Roman, rich and poor, free and bond--and equally
to young and old, male and female.
"Because my
Father is a God of love and delights in the
practice of mercy, do not imbibe the idea that
the service of the kingdom is to be one of
monotonous ease. The Paradise ascent is the
supreme adventure of all time, the rugged
achievement of eternity. The service of the
kingdom on earth will call for all the
courageous manhood that you and your coworkers
can muster. Many of you will be put to death for
your loyalty to the gospel of this kingdom. It
is easy to die in the line of physical battle
when your courage is strengthened by the
presence of your fighting comrades, but it
requires a higher and more profound form of
human courage and devotion calmly and all alone
to lay down your life for the love of a truth
enshrined in your mortal heart.
"Today, the
unbelievers may taunt you with preaching a
gospel of nonresistance and with living lives of
nonviolence, but you are the first volunteers of
a long line of sincere believers in the gospel
of this kingdom who will astonish all mankind by
their heroic devotion to these teachings. No
armies of the world have ever displayed more
courage and bravery than will be portrayed by
you and your loyal successors who shall go forth
to all the world proclaiming the good news--the
fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of men.
The courage of the flesh is the lowest form of
bravery. Mind bravery is a higher type of human
courage, but the highest and supreme is
uncompromising loyalty to the enlightened
convictions of profound spiritual realities. And
such courage constitutes the heroism of the
God-knowing man. And you are all God-knowing
men; you are in very truth the personal
associates of the Son of Man."
This was not
all that Jesus said on that occasion, but it is
the introduction of his address, and he went on
at great length in amplification and in
illustration of this pronouncement. This was one
of the most impassioned addresses which
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Jesus
ever delivered to the twelve. Seldom did the
Master speak to his apostles with evident strong
feeling, but this was one of those few occasions
when he spoke with manifest earnestness,
accompanied by marked emotion.
The result
upon the public preaching and personal ministry
of the apostles was immediate; from that very
day their message took on a new note of
courageous dominance. The twelve continued to
acquire the spirit of positive aggression in the
new gospel of the kingdom. From this day forward
they did not occupy themselves so much with the
preaching of the negative virtues and the
passive injunctions of their Master's many-sided
teaching.
2.
LESSON ON SELF-MASTERY
The Master was
a perfected specimen of human self-control. When
he was reviled, he reviled not; when he
suffered, he uttered no threats against his
tormentors; when he was denounced by his
enemies, he simply committed himself to the
righteous judgment of the Father in heaven.
At one of the
evening conferences, Andrew asked Jesus:
"Master, are we to practice self-denial as John
taught us, or are we to strive for the
self-control of your teaching? Wherein does your
teaching differ from that of John?" Jesus
answered: "John indeed taught you the way of
righteousness in accordance with the light and
laws of his fathers, and that was the religion
of self-examination and self-denial. But I come
with a new message of self-forgetfulness and
self-control. I show to you the way of life as
revealed to me by my Father in heaven.
"Verily,
verily, I say to you, he who rules his own self
is greater than he who captures a city.
Self-mastery is the measure of man's moral
nature and the indicator of his spiritual
development. In the old order you fasted and
prayed; as the new creature of the rebirth of
the spirit, you are taught to believe and
rejoice. In the Father's kingdom you are to
become new creatures; old things are to pass
away; behold I show you how all things are to
become new. And by your love for one another you
are to convince the world that you have passed
from bondage to liberty, from death into life
everlasting.
"By the old
way you seek to suppress, obey, and conform to
the rules of living; by the new way you are
first transformed by the Spirit of Truth
and thereby strengthened in your inner soul by
the constant spiritual renewing of your mind,
and so are you endowed with the power of the
certain and joyous performance of the gracious,
acceptable, and perfect will of God. Forget
not--it is your personal faith in the
exceedingly great and precious promises of God
that ensures your becoming partakers of the
divine nature. Thus by your faith and the
spirit's transformation, you become in reality
the temples of God, and his spirit actually
dwells within you. If, then, the spirit dwells
within you, you are no longer bondslaves of the
flesh but free and liberated sons of the spirit.
The new law of the spirit endows you with the
liberty of self-mastery in place of the old law
of the fear of self-bondage and the slavery of
self-denial.
"Many times,
when you have done evil, you have thought to
charge up your acts to the influence of the evil
one when in reality you have but been led astray
by your own natural tendencies. Did not the
Prophet Jeremiah long ago tell you that the
human heart is deceitful above all things and
sometimes even desperately wicked? How easy for
you to become self-deceived and thereby fall
into
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foolish fears, divers lusts, enslaving
pleasures, malice, envy, and even vengeful
hatred!
"Salvation is
by the regeneration of the spirit and not by the
self-righteous deeds of the flesh. You are
justified by faith and fellowshipped by grace,
not by fear and the self-denial of the flesh,
albeit the Father's children who have been born
of the spirit are ever and always masters
of the self and all that pertains to the desires
of the flesh. When you know that you are saved
by faith, you have real peace with God. And all
who follow in the way of this heavenly peace are
destined to be sanctified to the eternal service
of the ever-advancing sons of the eternal God.
Henceforth, it is not a duty but rather your
exalted privilege to cleanse yourselves from all
evils of mind and body while you seek for
perfection in the love of God.
"Your sonship
is grounded in faith, and you are to remain
unmoved by fear. Your joy is born of trust in
the divine word, and you shall not therefore be
led to doubt the reality of the Father's love
and mercy. It is the very goodness of God that
leads men into true and genuine repentance. Your
secret of the mastery of self is bound up with
your faith in the indwelling spirit, which ever
works by love. Even this saving faith you have
not of yourselves; it also is the gift of God.
And if you are the children of this living
faith, you are no longer the bondslaves of self
but rather the triumphant masters of yourselves,
the liberated sons of God.
"If, then, my
children, you are born of the spirit, you are
forever delivered from the self-conscious
bondage of a life of self-denial and watchcare
over the desires of the flesh, and you are
translated into the joyous kingdom of the
spirit, whence you spontaneously show forth the
fruits of the spirit in your daily lives; and
the fruits of the spirit are the essence of the
highest type of enjoyable and ennobling
self-control, even the heights of terrestrial
mortal attainment--true self-mastery."
3.
DIVERSION AND RELAXATION
About this
time a state of great nervous and emotional
tension developed among the apostles and their
immediate disciple associates. They had hardly
become accustomed to living and working
together. They were experiencing increasing
difficulties in maintaining harmonious relations
with John's disciples. The contact with the
gentiles and the Samaritans was a great trial to
these Jews. And besides all this, the recent
utterances of Jesus had augmented their
disturbed state of mind. Andrew was almost
beside himself; he did not know what next to do,
and so he went to the Master with his problems
and perplexities. When Jesus had listened to the
apostolic chief relate his troubles, he said:
"Andrew, you cannot talk men out of their
perplexities when they reach such a stage of
involvement, and when so many persons with
strong feelings are concerned. I cannot do what
you ask of me--I will not participate in these
personal social difficulties--but I will join
you in the enjoyment of a three-day period of
rest and relaxation. Go to your brethren and
announce that all of you are to go with me up on
Mount Sartaba, where I desire to rest for a day
or two.
"Now you
should go to each of your eleven brethren and
talk with him privately, saying: `The Master
desires that we go apart with him for a season
to rest and relax. Since we all have recently
experienced much vexation of spirit and stress
of mind, I suggest that no mention be made of
our trials and troubles while on this holiday.
Can I depend upon you to co-operate with me in
this
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matter?' In this way privately and personally
approach each of your brethren." And Andrew did
as the Master had instructed him.
This was a
marvelous occasion in the experience of each of
them; they never forgot the day going up the
mountain. Throughout the entire trip hardly a
word was said about their troubles. Upon
reaching the top of the mountain, Jesus seated
them about him while he said: "My brethren, you
must all learn the value of rest and the
efficacy of relaxation. You must realize that
the best method of solving some entangled
problems is to forsake them for a time. Then
when you go back fresh from your rest or
worship, you are able to attack your troubles
with a clearer head and a steadier hand, not to
mention a more resolute heart. Again, many times
your problem is found to have shrunk in size and
proportions while you have been resting your
mind and body."
The next day
Jesus assigned to each of the twelve a topic for
discussion. The whole day was devoted to
reminiscences and to talking over matters not
related to their religious work. They were
momentarily shocked when Jesus even neglected to
give thanks--verbally--when he broke bread for
their noontide lunch. This was the first time
they had ever observed him to neglect such
formalities.
When they went
up the mountain, Andrew's head was full of
problems. John was inordinately perplexed in his
heart. James was grievously troubled in his
soul. Matthew was hard pressed for funds
inasmuch as they had been sojourning among the
gentiles. Peter was overwrought and had recently
been more temperamental than usual. Judas was
suffering from a periodic attack of
sensitiveness and selfishness. Simon was
unusually upset in his efforts to reconcile his
patriotism with the love of the brotherhood of
man. Philip was more and more nonplused by the
way things were going. Nathaniel had been less
humorous since they had come in contact with the
gentile populations, and Thomas was in the midst
of a severe season of depression. Only the twins
were normal and unperturbed. All of them were
exceedingly perplexed about how to get along
peaceably with John's disciples.
The third day
when they started down the mountain and back to
their camp, a great change had come over them.
They had made the important discovery that many
human perplexities are in reality nonexistent,
that many pressing troubles are the creations of
exaggerated fear and the offspring of augmented
apprehension. They had learned that all such
perplexities are best handled by being forsaken;
by going off they had left such problems to
solve themselves.
Their return
from this holiday marked the beginning of a
period of greatly improved relations with the
followers of John. Many of the twelve really
gave way to mirth when they noted the changed
state of everybody's mind and observed the
freedom from nervous irritability which had come
to them as a result of their three days'
vacation from the routine duties of life. There
is always danger that monotony of human contact
will greatly multiply perplexities and magnify
difficulties.
Not many of
the gentiles in the two Greek cities of
Archelais and Phasaelis believed in the gospel,
but the twelve apostles gained a valuable
experience in this their first extensive work
with exclusively gentile populations. On a
Monday morning, about the middle of the month,
Jesus said to Andrew: "We go into Samaria." And
they set out at once for the city of Sychar,
near Jacob's well.
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4.
THE JEWS AND THE SAMARITANS
For more than
six hundred years the Jews of Judea, and later
on those of Galilee also, had been at enmity
with the Samaritans. This ill feeling between
the Jews and the Samaritans came about in this
way: About seven hundred years b.c., Sargon,
king of Assyria, in subduing a revolt in central
Palestine, carried away and into captivity over
twenty-five thousand Jews of the northern
kingdom of Israel and installed in their place
an almost equal number of the descendants of the
Cuthites, Sepharvites, and the Hamathites. Later
on, Ashurbanipal sent still other colonies to
dwell in Samaria.
The religious
enmity between the Jews and the Samaritans dated
from the return of the former from the
Babylonian captivity, when the Samaritans worked
to prevent the rebuilding of Jerusalem. Later
they offended the Jews by extending friendly
assistance to the armies of Alexander. In return
for their friendship Alexander gave the
Samaritans permission to build a temple on Mount
Gerizim, where they worshiped Yahweh and their
tribal gods and offered sacrifices much after
the order of the temple services at Jerusalem.
At least they continued this worship up to the
time of the Maccabees, when John Hyrcanus
destroyed their temple on Mount Gerizim. The
Apostle Philip, in his labors for the Samaritans
after the death of Jesus, held many meetings on
the site of this old Samaritan temple.
The
antagonisms between the Jews and the Samaritans
were time-honored and historic; increasingly
since the days of Alexander they had had no
dealings with each other. The twelve apostles
were not averse to preaching in the Greek and
other gentile cities of the Decapolis and Syria,
but it was a severe test of their loyalty to the
Master when he said, "Let us go into Samaria."
But in the year and more they had been with
Jesus, they had developed a form of personal
loyalty which transcended even their faith in
his teachings and their prejudices against the
Samaritans.
5.
THE WOMAN OF SYCHAR
When the
Master and the twelve arrived at Jacob's well,
Jesus, being weary from the journey, tarried by
the well while Philip took the apostles with him
to assist in bringing food and tents from
Sychar, for they were disposed to stay in this
vicinity for a while. Peter and the Zebedee sons
would have remained with Jesus, but he requested
that they go with their brethren, saying: "Have
no fear for me; these Samaritans will be
friendly; only our brethren, the Jews, seek to
harm us." And it was almost six o'clock on this
summer's evening when Jesus sat down by the well
to await the return of the apostles.
The water of
Jacob's well was less mineral than that from the
wells of Sychar and was therefore much valued
for drinking purposes. Jesus was thirsty, but
there was no way of getting water from the well.
When, therefore, a woman of Sychar came up with
her water pitcher and prepared to draw from the
well, Jesus said to her, "Give me a drink." This
woman of Samaria knew Jesus was a Jew by his
appearance and dress, and she surmised that he
was a Galilean Jew from his accent. Her name was
Nalda and she was a comely creature. She was
much surprised to have a Jewish man thus speak
to her at the well and ask for water, for it was
not deemed proper in those days for a
self-respecting man to
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speak
to a woman in public, much less for a Jew to
converse with a Samaritan. Therefore Nalda asked
Jesus, "How is it that you, being a Jew, ask for
a drink of me, a Samaritan woman?" Jesus
answered: "I have indeed asked you for a drink,
but if you could only understand, you would ask
me for a draught of the living water." Then said
Nalda: "But, Sir, you have nothing to draw with,
and the well is deep; whence, then, have you
this living water? Are you greater than our
father Jacob who gave us this well, and who
drank thereof himself and his sons and his
cattle also?"
Jesus replied:
"Everyone who drinks of this water will thirst
again, but whosoever drinks of the water of the
living spirit shall never thirst. And this
living water shall become in him a well of
refreshment springing up even to eternal life."
Nalda then said: "Give me this water that I
thirst not neither come all the way hither to
draw. Besides, anything which a Samaritan woman
could receive from such a commendable Jew would
be a pleasure."
Nalda did not
know how to take Jesus' willingness to talk with
her. She beheld in the Master's face the
countenance of an upright and holy man, but she
mistook friendliness for commonplace
familiarity, and she misinterpreted his figure
of speech as a form of making advances to her.
And being a woman of lax morals, she was minded
openly to become flirtatious, when Jesus,
looking straight into her eyes, with a
commanding voice said, "Woman, go get your
husband and bring him hither." This command
brought Nalda to her senses. She saw that she
had misjudged the Master's kindness; she
perceived that she had misconstrued his manner
of speech. She was frightened; she began to
realize that she stood in the presence of an
unusual person, and groping about in her mind
for a suitable reply, in great confusion, she
said, "But, Sir, I cannot call my husband, for I
have no husband." Then said Jesus: "You have
spoken the truth, for, while you may have once
had a husband, he with whom you are now living
is not your husband. Better it would be if you
would cease to trifle with my words and seek for
the living water which I have this day offered
you."
By this time
Nalda was sobered, and her better self was
awakened. She was not an immoral woman wholly by
choice. She had been ruthlessly and unjustly
cast aside by her husband and in dire straits
had consented to live with a certain Greek as
his wife, but without marriage. Nalda now felt
greatly ashamed that she had so unthinkingly
spoken to Jesus, and she most penitently
addressed the Master, saying: "My Lord, I repent
of my manner of speaking to you, for I perceive
that you are a holy man or maybe a prophet." And
she was just about to seek direct and personal
help from the Master when she did what so many
have done before and since--dodged the issue of
personal salvation by turning to the discussion
of theology and philosophy. She quickly turned
the conversation from her own needs to a
theological controversy. Pointing over to Mount
Gerizim, she continued: "Our fathers worshiped
on this mountain, and yet you would say
that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought
to worship; which, then, is the right place to
worship God?"
Jesus
perceived the attempt of the woman's soul to
avoid direct and searching contact with its
Maker, but he also saw that there was present in
her soul a desire to know the better way of
life. After all, there was in Nalda's heart a
true thirst for the living water; therefore he
dealt patiently with her, saying: "Woman, let me
say to you that the day is soon coming when
neither on this mountain nor in Jerusalem will
you worship the Father. But now you worship that
which you know not, a mixture of the religion of
many pagan gods and
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gentile philosophies. The Jews at least know
whom they worship; they have removed all
confusion by concentrating their worship upon
one God, Yahweh. But you should believe me when
I say that the hour will soon come--even now
is--when all sincere worshipers will worship the
Father in spirit and in truth, for it is just
such worshipers the Father seeks. God is spirit,
and they who worship him must worship him in
spirit and in truth. Your salvation comes not
from knowing how others should worship or where
but by receiving into your own heart this living
water which I am offering you even now."
But Nalda
would make one more effort to avoid the
discussion of the embarrassing question of her
personal life on earth and the status of her
soul before God. Once more she resorted to
questions of general religion, saying: "Yes, I
know, Sir, that John has preached about the
coming of the Converter, he who will be called
the Deliverer, and that, when he shall come, he
will declare to us all things"--and Jesus,
interrupting Nalda, said with startling
assurance, "I who speak to you am he."
This was the
first direct, positive, and undisguised
pronouncement of his divine nature and sonship
which Jesus had made on earth; and it was made
to a woman, a Samaritan woman, and a woman of
questionable character in the eyes of men up to
this moment, but a woman whom the divine eye
beheld as having been sinned against more than
as sinning of her own desire and as now
being a human soul who desired salvation,
desired it sincerely and wholeheartedly, and
that was enough.
As Nalda was
about to voice her real and personal longing for
better things and a more noble way of living,
just as she was ready to speak the real desire
of her heart, the twelve apostles returned from
Sychar, and coming upon this scene of Jesus'
talking so intimately with this woman--this
Samaritan woman, and alone--they were more than
astonished. They quickly deposited their
supplies and drew aside, no man daring to
reprove him, while Jesus said to Nalda: "Woman,
go your way; God has forgiven you. Henceforth
you will live a new life. You have received the
living water, and a new joy will spring up
within your soul, and you shall become a
daughter of the Most High." And the woman,
perceiving the disapproval of the apostles, left
her waterpot and fled to the city.
As she entered
the city, she proclaimed to everyone she met:
"Go out to Jacob's well and go quickly, for
there you will see a man who told me all I ever
did. Can this be the Converter?" And ere the sun
went down, a great crowd had assembled at
Jacob's well to hear Jesus. And the Master
talked to them more about the water of life, the
gift of the indwelling spirit.
The apostles
never ceased to be shocked by Jesus' willingness
to talk with women, women of questionable
character, even immoral women. It was very
difficult for Jesus to teach his apostles that
women, even so-called immoral women, have souls
which can choose God as their Father, thereby
becoming daughters of God and candidates for
life everlasting. Even nineteen centuries later
many show the same unwillingness to grasp the
Master's teachings. Even the Christian religion
has been persistently built up around the fact
of the death of Christ instead of around the
truth of his life. The world should be more
concerned with his happy and God-revealing life
than with his tragic and sorrowful death.
Nalda told
this entire story to the Apostle John the next
day, but he never revealed it fully to the other
apostles, and Jesus did not speak of it in
detail to the twelve.
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Nalda
told John that Jesus had told her "all I ever
did." John many times wanted to ask Jesus about
this visit with Nalda, but he never did. Jesus
told her only one thing about herself, but his
look into her eyes and the manner of his dealing
with her had so brought all of her checkered
life in panoramic review before her mind in a
moment of time that she associated all of this
self-revelation of her past life with the look
and the word of the Master. Jesus never told her
she had had five husbands. She had lived with
four different men since her husband cast her
aside, and this, with all her past, came up so
vividly in her mind at the moment when she
realized Jesus was a man of God that she
subsequently repeated to John that Jesus had
really told her all about herself.
6.
THE SAMARITAN REVIVAL
On the evening
that Nalda drew the crowd out from Sychar to see
Jesus, the twelve had just returned with food,
and they besought Jesus to eat with them instead
of talking to the people, for they had been
without food all day and were hungry. But Jesus
knew that darkness would soon be upon them; so
he persisted in his determination to talk to the
people before he sent them away. When Andrew
sought to persuade him to eat a bite before
speaking to the crowd, Jesus said, "I have meat
to eat that you do not know about." When the
apostles heard this, they said among themselves:
"Has any man brought him aught to eat? Can it be
that the woman gave him food as well as drink?"
When Jesus heard them talking among themselves,
before he spoke to the people, he turned aside
and said to the twelve: "My meat is to do the
will of Him who sent me and to accomplish His
work. You should no longer say it is such and
such a time until the harvest. Behold these
people coming out from a Samaritan city to hear
us; I tell you the fields are already white for
the harvest. He who reaps receives wages and
gathers this fruit to eternal life; consequently
the sowers and the reapers rejoice together. For
herein is the saying true: `One sows and another
reaps.' I am now sending you to reap that
whereon you have not labored; others have
labored, and you are about to enter into their
labor." This he said in reference to the
preaching of John the Baptist.
Jesus and the
apostles went into Sychar and preached two days
before they established their camp on Mount
Gerizim. And many of the dwellers in Sychar
believed the gospel and made request for
baptism, but the apostles of Jesus did not yet
baptize.
The first
night of the camp on Mount Gerizim the apostles
expected that Jesus would rebuke them for their
attitude toward the woman at Jacob's well, but
he made no reference to the matter. Instead he
gave them that memorable talk on "The realities
which are central in the kingdom of God." In any
religion it is very easy to allow values to
become disproportionate and to permit facts to
occupy the place of truth in one's theology. The
fact of the cross became the very center of
subsequent Christianity; but it is not the
central truth of the religion which may be
derived from the life and teachings of Jesus of
Nazareth.
The theme of
Jesus' teaching on Mount Gerizim was: That he
wants all men to see God as a Father-friend just
as he (Jesus) is a brother-friend. And again and
again he impressed upon them that love is the
greatest relationship in the world--in the
universe--just as truth is the greatest
pronouncement of the observation of these divine
relationships.
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Jesus
declared himself so fully to the Samaritans
because he could safely do so, and because he
knew that he would not again visit the heart of
Samaria to preach the gospel of the kingdom.
Jesus and the
twelve camped on Mount Gerizim until the end of
August. They preached the good news of the
kingdom--the fatherhood of God--to the
Samaritans in the cities by day and spent the
nights at the camp. The work which Jesus and the
twelve did in these Samaritan cities yielded
many souls for the kingdom and did much to
prepare the way for the marvelous work of Philip
in these regions after Jesus' death and
resurrection, subsequent to the dispersion of
the apostles to the ends of the earth by the
bitter persecution of believers at Jerusalem.
7.
TEACHINGS ABOUT PRAYER AND WORSHIP
At the evening
conferences on Mount Gerizim, Jesus taught many
great truths, and in particular he laid emphasis
on the following:
True religion
is the act of an individual soul in its
self-conscious relations with the Creator;
organized religion is man's attempt to socialize the worship of individual
religionists.
Worship--contemplation of the spiritual--must
alternate with service, contact with material
reality. Work should alternate with play;
religion should be balanced by humor. Profound
philosophy should be relieved by rhythmic
poetry. The strain of living--the time tension
of personality--should be relaxed by the
restfulness of worship. The feelings of
insecurity arising from the fear of personality
isolation in the universe should be antidoted by
the faith contemplation of the Father and by the
attempted realization of the Supreme.
Prayer is
designed to make man less thinking but more realizing; it is not designed to increase
knowledge but rather to expand insight.
Worship is
intended to anticipate the better life ahead and
then to reflect these new spiritual
significances back onto the life which now is.
Prayer is spiritually sustaining, but worship is
divinely creative.
Worship is the
technique of looking to the One for the
inspiration of service to the many.
Worship is the yardstick which measures the
extent of the soul's detachment from the
material universe and its simultaneous and
secure attachment to the spiritual realities of
all creation.
Prayer is
self-reminding--sublime thinking; worship is
self-forgetting--superthinking. Worship is
effortless attention, true and ideal soul rest,
a form of restful spiritual exertion.
Worship is the
act of a part identifying itself with the Whole;
the finite with the Infinite; the son with the
Father; time in the act of striking step with
eternity. Worship is the act of the son's
personal communion with the divine Father, the
assumption of refreshing, creative, fraternal,
and romantic attitudes by the human soul-spirit.
Although the
apostles grasped only a few of his teachings at
the camp, other worlds did, and other
generations on earth will. |