PAPER 147
- THE INTERLUDE VISIT TO JERUSALEM
Jesus and the
apostles arrived in Capernaum on Wednesday, March
17, and spent two weeks at the Bethsaida
headquarters before they departed for Jerusalem.
These two weeks the apostles taught the people by
the seaside while Jesus spent much time alone in the
hills about his Father's business. During this
period Jesus, accompanied by James and John Zebedee,
made two secret trips to Tiberias, where they met
with the believers and instructed them in the gospel
of the kingdom.
Many of the
household of Herod believed in Jesus and attended
these meetings. It was the influence of these
believers among Herod's official family that had
helped to lessen that ruler's enmity toward Jesus.
These believers at Tiberias had fully explained to
Herod that the "kingdom" which Jesus proclaimed was
spiritual in nature and not a political venture.
Herod rather believed these members of his own
household and therefore did not permit himself to
become unduly alarmed by the spreading abroad of the
reports concerning Jesus' teaching and healing. He
had no objections to Jesus' work as a healer or
religious teacher. Notwithstanding the favorable
attitude of many of Herod's advisers, and even of
Herod himself, there existed a group of his
subordinates who were so influenced by the religious
leaders at Jerusalem that they remained bitter and
threatening enemies of Jesus and the apostles and,
later on, did much to hamper their public
activities. The greatest danger to Jesus lay in the
Jerusalem religious leaders and not in Herod. And it
was for this very reason that Jesus and the apostles
spent so much time and did most of their public
preaching in Galilee rather than at Jerusalem and in
Judea.
1. THE
CENTURION'S SERVANT
On the day before
they made ready to go to Jerusalem for the feast of
the Passover, Mangus, a centurion, or captain, of
the Roman guard stationed at Capernaum, came to the
rulers of the synagogue, saying: "My faithful
orderly is sick and at the point of death. Would
you, therefore, go to Jesus in my behalf and beseech
him to heal my servant?" The Roman captain did this
because he thought the Jewish leaders would have
more influence with Jesus. So the elders went to see
Jesus and their spokesman said: "Teacher, we
earnestly request you to go over to Capernaum and
save the favorite servant of the Roman centurion,
who is worthy of your notice because he loves our
nation and even built us the very synagogue wherein
you have so many times spoken."
And when Jesus had
heard them, he said, "I will go with you." And as he
went with them over to the centurion's house, and
before they had entered his yard, the Roman soldier
sent his friends out to greet Jesus, instructing
them to say: "Lord, trouble not yourself to enter my
house, for I am not worthy that you
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should come under
my roof. Neither did I think myself worthy to come
to you; wherefore I sent the elders of your own
people. But I know that you can speak the word where
you stand and my servant will be healed. For I am
myself under the orders of others, and I have
soldiers under me, and I say to this one go, and he
goes; to another come, and he comes, and to my
servants do this or do that, and they do it."
And when Jesus
heard these words, he turned and said to his
apostles and those who were with them: "I marvel at
the belief of the gentile. Verily, verily, I say to
you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in
Israel." Jesus, turning from the house, said, "Let
us go hence." And the friends of the centurion went
into the house and told Mangus what Jesus had said.
And from that hour the servant began to mend and was
eventually restored to his normal health and
usefulness.
But we never knew
just what happened on this occasion. This is simply
the record, and as to whether or not invisible
beings ministered healing to the centurion's
servant, was not revealed to those who accompanied
Jesus. We only know of the fact of the servant's
complete recovery.
2. THE
JOURNEY TO JERUSALEM
Early on the
morning of Tuesday, March 30, Jesus and the
apostolic party started on their journey to
Jerusalem for the Passover, going by the route of
the Jordan valley. They arrived on the afternoon of
Friday, April 2, and established their headquarters,
as usual, at Bethany. Passing through Jericho, they
paused to rest while Judas made a deposit of some of
their common funds in the bank of a friend of his
family. This was the first time Judas had carried a
surplus of money, and this deposit was left
undisturbed until they passed through Jericho again
when on that last and eventful journey to Jerusalem
just before the trial and death of Jesus.
The party had an
uneventful trip to Jerusalem, but they had hardly
got themselves settled at Bethany when from near and
far those seeking healing for their bodies, comfort
for troubled minds, and salvation for their souls,
began to congregate, so much so that Jesus had
little time for rest. Therefore they pitched tents
at Gethsemane, and the Master would go back and
forth from Bethany to Gethsemane to avoid the crowds
which so constantly thronged him. The apostolic
party spent almost three weeks at Jerusalem, but
Jesus enjoined them to do no public preaching, only
private teaching and personal work.
At Bethany they
quietly celebrated the Passover. And this was the
first time that Jesus and all of the twelve partook
of the bloodless Passover feast. The apostles of
John did not eat the Passover with Jesus and his
apostles; they celebrated the feast with Abner and
many of the early believers in John's preaching.
This was the second Passover Jesus had observed with
his apostles in Jerusalem.
When Jesus and the
twelve departed for Capernaum, the apostles of John
did not return with them. Under the direction of
Abner they remained in Jerusalem and the surrounding
country, quietly laboring for the extension of the
kingdom, while Jesus and the twelve returned to work
in Galilee. Never again were the twenty-four all
together until a short time before the commissioning
and sending forth of the seventy evangelists. But
the two groups were co-operative, and
notwithstanding their differences of opinion, the
best of feelings prevailed.
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3. AT THE
POOL OF BETHESDA
The afternoon of
the second Sabbath in Jerusalem, as the Master and
the apostles were about to participate in the temple
services, John said to Jesus, "Come with me, I would
show you something." John conducted Jesus out
through one of the Jerusalem gates to a pool of
water called Bethesda. Surrounding this pool was a
structure of five porches under which a large group
of sufferers lingered in quest of healing. This was
a hot spring whose reddish-tinged water would bubble
up at irregular intervals because of gas
accumulations in the rock caverns underneath the
pool. This periodic disturbance of the warm waters
was believed by many to be due to supernatural
influences, and it was a popular belief that the
first person who entered the water after such a
disturbance would be healed of whatever infirmity he
had.
The apostles were
somewhat restless under the restrictions imposed by
Jesus, and John, the youngest of the twelve, was
especially restive under this restraint. He had
brought Jesus to the pool thinking that the sight of
the assembled sufferers would make such an appeal to
the Master's compassion that he would be moved to
perform a miracle of healing, and thereby would all
Jerusalem be astounded and presently be won to
believe in the gospel of the kingdom. Said John to
Jesus: "Master, see all of these suffering ones; is
there nothing we can do for them?" And Jesus
replied: "John, why would you tempt me to turn aside
from the way I have chosen? Why do you go on
desiring to substitute the working of wonders and
the healing of the sick for the proclamation of the
gospel of eternal truth? My son, I may not do that
which you desire, but gather together these sick and
afflicted that I may speak words of good cheer and
eternal comfort to them."
In speaking to
those assembled, Jesus said: "Many of you are here,
sick and afflicted, because of your many years of
wrong living. Some suffer from the accidents of
time, others as a result of the mistakes of their
forebears, while some of you struggle under the
handicaps of the imperfect conditions of your
temporal existence. But my Father works, and I would
work, to improve your earthly state but more
especially to insure your eternal estate. None of us
can do much to change the difficulties of life
unless we discover the Father in heaven so wills.
After all, we are all beholden to do the will of the
Eternal. If you could all be healed of your physical
afflictions, you would indeed marvel, but it is even
greater that you should be cleansed of all spiritual
disease and find yourselves healed of all moral
infirmities. You are all God's children; you are the
sons of the heavenly Father. The bonds of time may
seem to afflict you, but the God of eternity loves
you. And when the time of judgment shall come, fear
not, you shall all find, not only justice, but an
abundance of mercy. Verily, verily, I say to you: He
who hears the gospel of the kingdom and believes in
this teaching of sonship with God, has eternal life;
already are such believers passing from judgment and
death to light and life. And the hour is coming in
which even those who are in the tombs shall hear the
voice of the resurrection."
And many of those
who heard believed the gospel of the kingdom. Some
of the afflicted were so inspired and spiritually
revivified that they went about proclaiming that
they had also been cured of their physical ailments.
One man who had
been many years downcast and grievously afflicted by
the infirmities of his troubled mind, rejoiced at
Jesus' words and, picking up his
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bed, went forth
to his home, even though it was the Sabbath day.
This afflicted man had waited all these years for
somebody to help him; he was such a victim of
the feeling of his own helplessness that he had
never once entertained the idea of helping himself
which proved to be the one thing he had to do in
order to effect recovery--take up his bed and walk.
Then said Jesus to
John: "Let us depart ere the chief priests and the
scribes come upon us and take offense that we spoke
words of life to these afflicted ones." And they
returned to the temple to join their companions, and
presently all of them departed to spend the night at
Bethany. But John never told the other apostles of
this visit of himself and Jesus to the pool of
Bethesda on this Sabbath afternoon.
4. THE
RULE OF LIVING
On the evening of
this same Sabbath day, at Bethany, while Jesus, the
twelve, and a group of believers were assembled
about the fire in Lazarus's garden, Nathaniel asked
Jesus this question: "Master, although you have
taught us the positive version of the old rule of
life, instructing us that we should do to others as
we wish them to do to us, I do not fully discern how
we can always abide by such an injunction. Let me
illustrate my contention by citing the example of a
lustful man who thus wickedly looks upon his
intended consort in sin. How can we teach that this
evil-intending man should do to others as he would
they should do to him?"
When Jesus heard
Nathaniel's question, he immediately stood upon his
feet and, pointing his finger at the apostle, said:
"Nathaniel, Nathaniel! What manner of thinking is
going on in your heart? Do you not receive my
teachings as one who has been born of the spirit? Do
you not hear the truth as men of wisdom and
spiritual understanding? When I admonished you to do
to others as you would have them do to you, I spoke
to men of high ideals, not to those who would be
tempted to distort my teaching into a license for
the encouragement of evil doing."
When the Master
had spoken, Nathaniel stood up and said: "But,
Master, you should not think that I approve of such
an interpretation of your teaching. I asked the
question because I conjectured that many such men
might thus misjudge your admonition, and I hoped you
would give us further instruction regarding these
matters." And then when Nathaniel had sat down,
Jesus continued speaking: "I well know, Nathaniel,
that no such idea of evil is approved in your mind,
but I am disappointed in that you all so often fail
to put a genuinely spiritual interpretation upon my
commonplace teachings, instruction which must be
given you in human language and as men must speak.
Let me now teach you concerning the differing levels
of meaning attached to the interpretation of this
rule of living, this admonition to `do to others
that which you desire others to do to you':
"1. The level
of the flesh. Such a purely selfish and lustful
interpretation would be well exemplified by the
supposition of your question.
"2. The level
of the feelings. This plane is one level higher
than that of the flesh and implies that sympathy and
pity would enhance one's interpretation of this rule
of living.
"3. The level
of mind. Now come into action the reason of mind
and the intelligence of experience. Good judgment
dictates that such a rule of living
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should be
interpreted in consonance with the highest idealism
embodied in the nobility of profound self-respect.
"4. The level
of brotherly love. Still higher is discovered
the level of unselfish devotion to the welfare of
one's fellows. On this higher plane of wholehearted
social service growing out of the consciousness of
the fatherhood of God and the consequent recognition
of the brotherhood of man, there is discovered a new
and far more beautiful interpretation of this basic
rule of life.
"5. The moral
level. And then when you attain true philosophic
levels of interpretation, when you have real insight
into the rightness and wrongness of
things, when you perceive the eternal fitness of
human relationships, you will begin to view such a
problem of interpretation as you would imagine a
high-minded, idealistic, wise, and impartial third
person would so view and interpret such an
injunction as applied to your personal problems of
adjustment to your life situations.
"6. The
spiritual level. And then last, but greatest of
all, we attain the level of spirit insight and
spiritual interpretation which impels us to
recognize in this rule of life the divine command to
treat all men as we conceive God would treat them.
That is the universe ideal of human relationships.
And this is your attitude toward all such problems
when your supreme desire is ever to do the Father's
will. I would, therefore, that you should do to all
men that which you know I would do to them in like
circumstances."
Nothing Jesus had
said to the apostles up to this time had ever more
astonished them. They continued to discuss the
Master's words long after he had retired. While
Nathaniel was slow to recover from his supposition
that Jesus had misunderstood the spirit of his
question, the others were more than thankful that
their philosophic fellow apostle had had the courage
to ask such a thought-provoking question.
5.
VISITING SIMON THE PHARISEE
Though Simon was
not a member of the Jewish Sanhedrin, he was an
influential Pharisee of Jerusalem. He was a
half-hearted believer, and notwithstanding that he
might be severely criticized therefor, he dared to
invite Jesus and his personal associates, Peter,
James, and John, to his home for a social meal.
Simon had long observed the Master and was much
impressed with his teachings and even more so with
his personality.
The wealthy
Pharisees were devoted to almsgiving, and they did
not shun publicity regarding their philanthropy.
Sometimes they would even blow a trumpet as they
were about to bestow charity upon some beggar. It
was the custom of these Pharisees, when they
provided a banquet for distinguished guests, to
leave the doors of the house open so that even the
street beggars might come in and, standing around
the walls of the room behind the couches of the
diners, be in position to receive portions of food
which might be tossed to them by the banqueters.
On this particular
occasion at Simon's house, among those who came in
off the street was a woman of unsavory reputation
who had recently become a believer in the good news
of the gospel of the kingdom. This woman was well
known throughout all Jerusalem as the former keeper
of one of the so-called high-class brothels located
hard by the temple court of the gentiles. She had,
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on accepting the
teachings of Jesus, closed up her nefarious place of
business and had induced the majority of the women
associated with her to accept the gospel and change
their mode of living; notwithstanding this, she was
still held in great disdain by the Pharisees and was
compelled to wear her hair down--the badge of
harlotry. This unnamed woman had brought with her a
large flask of perfumed anointing lotion and,
standing behind Jesus as he reclined at meat, began
to anoint his feet while she also wet his feet with
her tears of gratitude, wiping them with the hair of
her head. And when she had finished this anointing,
she continued weeping and kissing his feet.
When Simon saw all
this, he said to himself: "This man, if he were a
prophet, would have perceived who and what manner of
woman this is who thus touches him; that she is a
notorious sinner." And Jesus, knowing what was going
on in Simon's mind, spoke up, saying: "Simon, I have
something which I would like to say to you." Simon
answered, "Teacher, say on." Then said Jesus: "A
certain wealthy moneylender had two debtors. The one
owed him five hundred denarii and the other fifty.
Now, when neither of them had wherewith to pay, he
forgave them both. Which of them do you think,
Simon, would love him most?" Simon answered, "He, I
suppose, whom he forgave the most." And Jesus said,
"You have rightly judged," and pointing to the
woman, he continued: "Simon, take a good look at
this woman. I entered your house as an invited
guest, yet you gave me no water for my feet. This
grateful woman has washed my feet with tears and
wiped them with the hair of her head. You gave me no
kiss of friendly greeting, but this woman, ever
since she came in, has not ceased to kiss my feet.
My head with oil you neglected to anoint, but she
has anointed my feet with precious lotions. And what
is the meaning of all this? Simply that her many
sins have been forgiven, and this has led her to
love much. But those who have received but little
forgiveness sometimes love but little." And turning
around toward the woman, he took her by the hand
and, lifting her up, said: "You have indeed repented
of your sins, and they are forgiven. Be not
discouraged by the thoughtless and unkind attitude
of your fellows; go on in the joy and liberty of the
kingdom of heaven."
When Simon and his
friends who sat at meat with him heard these words,
they were the more astonished, and they began to
whisper among themselves, "Who is this man that he
even dares to forgive sins?" And when Jesus heard
them thus murmuring, he turned to dismiss the woman,
saying, "Woman, go in peace; your faith has saved
you."
As Jesus arose
with his friends to leave, he turned to Simon and
said: "I know your heart, Simon, how you are torn
betwixt faith and doubts, how you are distraught by
fear and troubled by pride; but I pray for you that
you may yield to the light and may experience in
your station in life just such mighty
transformations of mind and spirit as may be
comparable to the tremendous changes which the
gospel of the kingdom has already wrought in the
heart of your unbidden and unwelcome guest. And I
declare to all of you that the Father has opened the
doors of the heavenly kingdom to all who have the
faith to enter, and no man or association of men can
close those doors even to the most humble soul or
supposedly most flagrant sinner on earth if such
sincerely seek an entrance." And Jesus, with Peter,
James, and John, took leave of their host and went
to join the rest of the apostles at the camp in the
garden of Gethsemane.
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That same evening
Jesus made the long-to-be-remembered address to the
apostles regarding the relative value of status with
God and progress in the eternal ascent to Paradise.
Said Jesus: "My children, if there exists a true and
living connection between the child and the Father,
the child is certain to progress continuously toward
the Father's ideals. True, the child may at first
make slow progress, but the progress is none the
less sure. The important thing is not the rapidity
of your progress but rather its certainty. Your
actual achievement is not so important as the fact
that the direction of your progress is
Godward. What you are becoming day by day is of
infinitely more importance than what you are today.
"This transformed
woman whom some of you saw at Simon's house today
is, at this moment, living on a level which is
vastly below that of Simon and his well-meaning
associates; but while these Pharisees are occupied
with the false progress of the illusion of
traversing deceptive circles of meaningless
ceremonial services, this woman has, in dead
earnest, started out on the long and eventful search
for God, and her path toward heaven is not blocked
by spiritual pride and moral self-satisfaction. The
woman is, humanly speaking, much farther away from
God than Simon, but her soul is in progressive
motion; she is on the way toward an eternal goal.
There are present in this woman tremendous spiritual
possibilities for the future. Some of you may not
stand high in actual levels of soul and spirit, but
you are making daily progress on the living way
opened up, through faith, to God. There are
tremendous possibilities in each of you for the
future. Better by far to have a small but living and
growing faith than to be possessed of a great
intellect with its dead stores of worldly wisdom and
spiritual unbelief."
But Jesus
earnestly warned his apostles against the
foolishness of the child of God who presumes upon
the Father's love. He declared that the heavenly
Father is not a lax, loose, or foolishly indulgent
parent who is ever ready to condone sin and forgive
recklessness. He cautioned his hearers not
mistakenly to apply his illustrations of father and
son so as to make it appear that God is like some
overindulgent and unwise parents who conspire with
the foolish of earth to encompass the moral undoing
of their thoughtless children, and who are thereby
certainly and directly contributing to the
delinquency and early demoralization of their own
offspring. Said Jesus: "My Father does not
indulgently condone those acts and practices of his
children which are self-destructive and suicidal to
all moral growth and spiritual progress. Such sinful
practices are an abomination in the sight of God."
Many other
semiprivate meetings and banquets did Jesus attend
with the high and the low, the rich and the poor, of
Jerusalem before he and his apostles finally
departed for Capernaum. And many, indeed, became
believers in the gospel of the kingdom and were
subsequently baptized by Abner and his associates,
who remained behind to foster the interests of the
kingdom in Jerusalem and thereabouts.
6.
RETURNING TO CAPERNAUM
The last week of
April, Jesus and the twelve departed from their
Bethany headquarters near Jerusalem and began their
journey back to Capernaum by way of Jericho and the
Jordan.
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The chief priests
and the religious leaders of the Jews held many
secret meetings for the purpose of deciding what to
do with Jesus. They were all agreed that something
should be done to put a stop to his teaching, but
they could not agree on the method. They had hoped
that the civil authorities would dispose of him as
Herod had put an end to John, but they discovered
that Jesus was so conducting his work that the Roman
officials were not much alarmed by his preaching.
Accordingly, at a meeting which was held the day
before Jesus' departure for Capernaum, it was
decided that he would have to be apprehended on a
religious charge and be tried by the Sanhedrin.
Therefore a commission of six secret spies was
appointed to follow Jesus, to observe his words and
acts, and when they had amassed sufficient evidence
of lawbreaking and blasphemy, to return to Jerusalem
with their report. These six Jews caught up with the
apostolic party, numbering about thirty, at Jericho
and, under the pretense of desiring to become
disciples, attached themselves to Jesus' family of
followers, remaining with the group up to the time
of the beginning of the second preaching tour in
Galilee; whereupon three of them returned to
Jerusalem to submit their report to the chief
priests and the Sanhedrin.
Peter preached to
the assembled multitude at the crossing of the
Jordan, and the following morning they moved up the
river toward Amathus. They wanted to proceed
straight on to Capernaum, but such a crowd gathered
here they remained three days, preaching, teaching,
and baptizing. They did not move toward home until
early Sabbath morning, the first day of May. The
Jerusalem spies were sure they would now secure
their first charge against Jesus--that of Sabbath
breaking--since he had presumed to start his journey
on the Sabbath day. But they were doomed to
disappointment because, just before their departure,
Jesus called Andrew into his presence and before
them all instructed him to proceed for a distance of
only one thousand yards, the legal Jewish Sabbath
day's journey.
But the spies did
not have long to wait for their opportunity to
accuse Jesus and his associates of Sabbath breaking.
As the company passed along the narrow road, the
waving wheat, which was just then ripening, was near
at hand on either side, and some of the apostles,
being hungry, plucked the ripe grain and ate it. It
was customary for travelers to help themselves to
grain as they passed along the road, and therefore
no thought of wrongdoing was attached to such
conduct. But the spies seized upon this as a pretext
for assailing Jesus. When they saw Andrew rub the
grain in his hand, they went up to him and said: "Do
you not know that it is unlawful to pluck and rub
the grain on the Sabbath day?" And Andrew answered:
"But we are hungry and rub only sufficient for our
needs; and since when did it become sinful to eat
grain on the Sabbath day?" But the Pharisees
answered: "You do no wrong in eating, but you do
break the law in plucking and rubbing out the grain
between your hands; surely your Master would not
approve of such acts." Then said Andrew: "But if it
is not wrong to eat the grain, surely the rubbing
out between our hands is hardly more work than the
chewing of the grain, which you allow; wherefore do
you quibble over such trifles?" When Andrew
intimated that they were quibblers, they were
indignant, and rushing back to where Jesus walked
along, talking to Matthew, they protested, saying:
"Behold, Teacher, your apostles do that which is
unlawful on the Sabbath day; they pluck, rub, and
eat the grain. We are sure you will command them to
cease." And then said Jesus to the accusers: "You
are
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indeed zealous
for the law, and you do well to remember the Sabbath
day to keep it holy; but did you never read in the
Scripture that, one day when David was hungry, he
and they who were with him entered the house of God
and ate the showbread, which it was not lawful for
anyone to eat save the priests? and David also gave
this bread to those who were with him. And have you
not read in our law that it is lawful to do many
needful things on the Sabbath day? And shall I not,
before the day is finished, see you eat that which
you have brought along for the needs of this day? My
good men, you do well to be zealous for the Sabbath,
but you would do better to guard the health and
well-being of your fellows. I declare that the
Sabbath was made for man and not man for the
Sabbath. And if you are here present with us to
watch my words, then will I openly proclaim that the
Son of Man is lord even of the Sabbath."
The Pharisees were
astonished and confounded by his words of
discernment and wisdom. For the remainder of the day
they kept by themselves and dared not ask any more
questions.
Jesus' antagonism
to the Jewish traditions and slavish ceremonials was
always positive. It consisted in what he did
and in what he affirmed. The Master spent little
time in negative denunciations. He taught that those
who know God can enjoy the liberty of living without
deceiving themselves by the licenses of sinning.
Said Jesus to the apostles: "Men, if you are
enlightened by the truth and really know what you
are doing, you are blessed; but if you know not the
divine way, you are unfortunate and already breakers
of the law."
7. BACK
IN CAPERNAUM
It was around noon
on Monday, May 3, when Jesus and the twelve came to
Bethsaida by boat from Tarichea. They traveled by
boat in order to escape those who journeyed with
them. But by the next day the others, including the
official spies from Jerusalem, had again found
Jesus.
On Tuesday evening
Jesus was conducting one of his customary classes of
questions and answers when the leader of the six
spies said to him: "I was today talking with one of
John's disciples who is here attending upon your
teaching, and we were at a loss to understand why
you never command your disciples to fast and pray as
we Pharisees fast and as John bade his followers."
And Jesus, referring to a statement by John,
answered this questioner: "Do the sons of the
bridechamber fast while the bridegroom is with them?
As long as the bridegroom remains with them, they
can hardly fast. But the time is coming when the
bridegroom shall be taken away, and during those
times the children of the bridechamber undoubtedly
will fast and pray. To pray is natural for the
children of light, but fasting is not a part of the
gospel of the kingdom of heaven. Be reminded that a
wise tailor does not sew a piece of new and unshrunk
cloth upon an old garment, lest, when it is wet, it
shrink and produce a worse rent. Neither do men put
new wine into old wine skins, lest the new wine
burst the skins so that both the wine and the skins
perish. The wise man puts the new wine into fresh
wine skins. Therefore do my disciples show wisdom in
that they do not bring too much of the old order
over into the new teaching of the gospel of the
kingdom. You who have lost your teacher may be
justified in fasting for a time. Fasting may be an
appropriate part of the law of Moses, but in the
coming kingdom the sons of God shall experience
freedom from fear and joy in the divine spirit."
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And when they
heard these words, the disciples of John were
comforted while the Pharisees themselves were the
more confounded.
Then the Master
proceeded to warn his hearers against entertaining
the notion that all olden teaching should be
replaced entirely by new doctrines. Said Jesus:
"That which is old and also true must abide.
Likewise, that which is new but false must be
rejected. But that which is new and also true, have
the faith and courage to accept. Remember it is
written: `Forsake not an old friend, for the new is
not comparable to him. As new wine, so is a new
friend; if it becomes old, you shall drink it with
gladness.'"
8. THE
FEAST OF SPIRITUAL GOODNESS
That night, long
after the usual listeners had retired, Jesus
continued to teach his apostles. He began this
special instruction by quoting from the Prophet
Isaiah:
"`Why have you
fasted? For what reason do you afflict your souls
while you continue to find pleasure in oppression
and to take delight in injustice? Behold, you fast
for the sake of strife and contention and to smite
with the fist of wickedness. But you shall not fast
in this way to make your voices heard on high.
"`Is it such a
fast that I have chosen--a day for a man to afflict
his soul? Is it to bow down his head like a bulrush,
to grovel in sackcloth and ashes? Will you dare to
call this a fast and an acceptable day in the sight
of the Lord? Is not this the fast I should choose:
to loose the bonds of wickedness, to undo the knots
of heavy burdens, to let the oppressed go free, and
to break every yoke? Is it not to share my bread
with the hungry and to bring those who are homeless
and poor to my house? And when I see those who are
naked, I will clothe them.
"`Then shall your
light break forth as the morning while your health
springs forth speedily. Your righteousness shall go
before you while the glory of the Lord shall be your
rear guard. Then will you call upon the Lord, and he
shall answer; you will cry out, and he shall
say--Here am I. And all this he will do if you
refrain from oppression, condemnation, and vanity.
The Father rather desires that you draw out your
heart to the hungry, and that you minister to the
afflicted souls; then shall your light shine in
obscurity, and even your darkness shall be as the
noonday. Then shall the Lord guide you continually,
satisfying your soul and renewing your strength. You
shall become like a watered garden, like a spring
whose waters fail not. And they who do these things
shall restore the wasted glories; they shall raise
up the foundations of many generations; they shall
be called the rebuilders of broken walls, the
restorers of safe paths in which to dwell.'"
And then long into
the night Jesus propounded to his apostles the truth
that it was their faith that made them secure in the
kingdom of the present and the future, and not their
affliction of soul nor fasting of body. He exhorted
the apostles at least to live up to the ideas of the
prophet of old and expressed the hope that they
would progress far beyond even the ideals of Isaiah
and the older prophets. His last words that night
were: "Grow in grace by means of that living faith
which grasps the fact that you are the sons of God
while at the same time it recognizes every man as a
brother."
It was after two
o'clock in the morning when Jesus ceased speaking
and every man went to his place for sleep. |