PAPER 148
- TRAINING EVANGELISTS AT BETHSAIDA
From May 3 to
October 3, A.D. 28, Jesus and the apostolic party
were in residence at the Zebedee home at Bethsaida.
Throughout this five months' period of the dry
season an enormous camp was maintained by the
seaside near the Zebedee residence, which had been
greatly enlarged to accommodate the growing family
of Jesus. This seaside camp, occupied by an
ever-changing population of truth seekers, healing
candidates, and curiosity devotees, numbered from
five hundred to fifteen hundred. This tented city
was under the general supervision of David Zebedee,
assisted by the Alpheus twins. The encampment was a
model in order and sanitation as well as in its
general administration. The sick of different types
were segregated and were under the supervision of a
believer physician, a Syrian named Elman.
Throughout this
period the apostles would go fishing at least one
day a week, selling their catch to David for
consumption by the seaside encampment. The funds
thus received were turned over to the group
treasury. The twelve were permitted to spend one
week out of each month with their families or
friends.
While Andrew
continued in general charge of the apostolic
activities, Peter was in full charge of the school
of the evangelists. The apostles all did their share
in teaching groups of evangelists each forenoon, and
both teachers and pupils taught the people during
the afternoons. After the evening meal, five nights
a week, the apostles conducted question classes for
the benefit of the evangelists. Once a week Jesus
presided at this question hour, answering the
holdover questions from previous sessions.
In five months
several thousand came and went at this encampment.
Interested persons from every part of the Roman
Empire and from the lands east of the Euphrates were
in frequent attendance. This was the longest settled
and well-organized period of the Master's teaching.
Jesus' immediate family spent most of this time at
either Nazareth or Cana.
The encampment was
not conducted as a community of common interests, as
was the apostolic family. David Zebedee managed this
large tent city so that it became a self-sustaining
enterprise, notwithstanding that no one was ever
turned away. This ever-changing camp was an
indispensable feature of Peter's evangelistic
training school.
1. A NEW
SCHOOL OF THE PROPHETS
Peter, James, and
Andrew were the committee designated by Jesus to
pass upon applicants for admission to the school of
evangelists. All the races and
Page 1658
nationalities of
the Roman world and the East, as far as India, were
represented among the students in this new school of
the prophets. This school was conducted on the plan
of learning and doing. What the students learned
during the forenoon they taught to the assembly by
the seaside during the afternoon. After supper they
informally discussed both the learning of the
forenoon and the teaching of the afternoon.
Each of the
apostolic teachers taught his own view of the gospel
of the kingdom. They made no effort to teach just
alike; there was no standardized or dogmatic
formulation of theologic doctrines. Though they all
taught the same truth, each apostle presented
his own personal interpretation of the Master's
teaching. And Jesus upheld this presentation of the
diversity of personal experience in the things of
the kingdom, unfailingly harmonizing and
co-ordinating these many and divergent views of the
gospel at his weekly question hours. Notwithstanding
this great degree of personal liberty in matters of
teaching, Simon Peter tended to dominate the
theology of the school of evangelists. Next to
Peter, James Zebedee exerted the greatest personal
influence.
The one hundred
and more evangelists trained during this five months
by the seaside represented the material from which
(excepting Abner and John's apostles) the later
seventy gospel teachers and preachers were drawn.
The school of evangelists did not have everything in
common to the same degree as did the twelve.
These evangelists,
though they taught and preached the gospel, did not
baptize believers until after they were later
ordained and commissioned by Jesus as the seventy
messengers of the kingdom. Only seven of the large
number healed at the sundown scene at this place
were to be found among these evangelistic students.
The nobleman's son of Capernaum was one of those
trained for gospel service in Peter's school.
2. THE
BETHSAIDA HOSPITAL
In connection with
the seaside encampment, Elman, the Syrian physician,
with the assistance of a corps of twenty-five young
women and twelve men, organized and conducted for
four months what should be regarded as the kingdom's
first hospital. At this infirmary, located a short
distance to the south of the main tented city, they
treated the sick in accordance with all known
material methods as well as by the spiritual
practices of prayer and faith encouragement. Jesus
visited the sick of this encampment not less than
three times a week and made personal contact with
each sufferer. As far as we know, no so-called
miracles of supernatural healing occurred among the
one thousand afflicted and ailing persons who went
away from this infirmary improved or cured. However,
the vast majority of these benefited individuals
ceased not to proclaim that Jesus had healed them.
Many of the cures
effected by Jesus in connection with his ministry in
behalf of Elman's patients did, indeed, appear to
resemble the working of miracles, but we were
instructed that they were only just such
transformations of mind and spirit as may occur in
the experience of expectant and faith-dominated
persons who are under the immediate and
inspirational influence of a strong, positive, and
beneficent personality whose ministry banishes fear
and destroys anxiety.
Elman and his
associates endeavored to teach the truth to these
sick ones concerning the "possession of evil
spirits," but they met with little success. The
Page 1659
belief that
physical sickness and mental derangement could be
caused by the dwelling of a so-called unclean spirit
in the mind or body of the afflicted person was
well-nigh universal.
In all his contact
with the sick and afflicted, when it came to the
technique of treatment or the revelation of the
unknown causes of disease, Jesus did not disregard
the instructions of his Paradise brother, Immanuel,
given ere he embarked upon the venture of the
Urantia incarnation. Notwithstanding this, those who
ministered to the sick learned many helpful lessons
by observing the manner in which Jesus inspired the
faith and confidence of the sick and suffering.
The camp disbanded
a short time before the season for the increase in
chills and fever drew on.
3. THE
FATHER'S BUSINESS
Throughout this
period Jesus conducted public services at the
encampment less than a dozen times and spoke only
once in the Capernaum synagogue, the second Sabbath
before their departure with the newly trained
evangelists upon their second public preaching tour
of Galilee.
Not since his
baptism had the Master been so much alone as during
this period of the evangelists' training encampment
at Bethsaida. Whenever any one of the apostles
ventured to ask Jesus why he was absent so much from
their midst, he would invariably answer that he was
"about the Father's business."
During these
periods of absence, Jesus was accompanied by only
two of the apostles. He had released Peter, James,
and John temporarily from their assignment as his
personal companions that they might also participate
in the work of training the new evangelistic
candidates, numbering more than one hundred. When
the Master desired to go to the hills about the
Father's business, he would summon to accompany him
any two of the apostles who might be at liberty. In
this way each of the twelve enjoyed an opportunity
for close association and intimate contact with
Jesus.
It has not been
revealed for the purposes of this record, but we
have been led to infer that the Master, during many
of these solitary seasons in the hills, was in
direct and executive association with many of his
chief directors of universe affairs. Ever since
about the time of his baptism this incarnated
Sovereign of our universe had become increasingly
and consciously active in the direction of certain
phases of universe administration. And we have
always held the opinion that, in some way not
revealed to his immediate associates, during these
weeks of decreased participation in the affairs of
earth he was engaged in the direction of those high
spirit intelligences who were charged with the
running of a vast universe, and that the human Jesus
chose to designate such activities on his part as
being "about his Father's business."
Many times, when
Jesus was alone for hours, but when two of his
apostles were near by, they observed his features
undergo rapid and multitudinous changes, although
they heard him speak no words. Neither did they
observe any visible manifestation of celestial
beings who might have been in communication with
their Master, such as some of them did witness on a
subsequent occasion.
4. EVIL,
SIN, AND INIQUITY
It was the habit
of Jesus two evenings each week to hold special
converse with individuals who desired to talk with
him, in a certain secluded and sheltered
Page 1660
corner of the
Zebedee garden. At one of these evening
conversations in private Thomas asked the Master
this question: "Why is it necessary for men to be
born of the spirit in order to enter the kingdom? Is
rebirth necessary to escape the control of the evil
one? Master, what is evil?" When Jesus heard these
questions, he said to Thomas:
"Do not make the
mistake of confusing evil with the evil
one, more correctly the iniquitous one.
He whom you call the evil one is the son of
self-love, the high administrator who knowingly went
into deliberate rebellion against the rule of my
Father and his loyal Sons. But I have already
vanquished these sinful rebels. Make clear in your
mind these different attitudes toward the Father and
his universe. Never forget these laws of relation to
the Father's will:
"Evil is the
unconscious or unintended transgression of the
divine law, the Father's will. Evil is likewise the
measure of the imperfectness of obedience to the
Father's will.
"Sin is the
conscious, knowing, and deliberate transgression of
the divine law, the Father's will. Sin is the
measure of unwillingness to be divinely led and
spiritually directed.
"Iniquity is the
willful, determined, and persistent transgression of
the divine law, the Father's will. Iniquity is the
measure of the continued rejection of the Father's
loving plan of personality survival and the Sons'
merciful ministry of salvation.
"By nature, before
the rebirth of the spirit, mortal man is subject to
inherent evil tendencies, but such natural
imperfections of behavior are neither sin nor
iniquity. Mortal man is just beginning his long
ascent to the perfection of the Father in Paradise.
To be imperfect or partial in natural endowment is
not sinful. Man is indeed subject to evil, but he is
in no sense the child of the evil one unless he has
knowingly and deliberately chosen the paths of sin
and the life of iniquity. Evil is inherent in the
natural order of this world, but sin is an attitude
of conscious rebellion which was brought to this
world by those who fell from spiritual light into
gross darkness.
"You are confused,
Thomas, by the doctrines of the Greeks and the
errors of the Persians. You do not understand the
relationships of evil and sin because you view
mankind as beginning on earth with a perfect Adam
and rapidly degenerating, through sin, to man's
present deplorable estate. But why do you refuse to
comprehend the meaning of the record which discloses
how Cain, the son of Adam, went over into the land
of Nod and there got himself a wife? And why do you
refuse to interpret the meaning of the record which
portrays the sons of God finding wives for
themselves among the daughters of men?
"Men are, indeed,
by nature evil, but not necessarily sinful. The new
birth--the baptism of the spirit--is essential to
deliverance from evil and necessary for entrance
into the kingdom of heaven, but none of this
detracts from the fact that man is the son of God.
Neither does this inherent presence of potential
evil mean that man is in some mysterious way
estranged from the Father in heaven so that, as an
alien, foreigner, or stepchild, he must in some
manner seek for legal adoption by the Father. All
such notions are born, first, of your
misunderstanding of the Father and, second, of your
ignorance of the origin, nature, and destiny of man.
"The Greeks and
others have taught you that man is descending from
godly perfection steadily down toward oblivion or
destruction; I have come to show
Page 1661
that man, by
entrance into the kingdom, is ascending certainly
and surely up to God and divine perfection. Any
being who in any manner falls short of the divine
and spiritual ideals of the eternal Father's will is
potentially evil, but such beings are in no sense
sinful, much less iniquitous.
"Thomas, have you
not read about this in the Scriptures, where it is
written: `You are the children of the Lord your
God.' `I will be his Father and he shall be my son.'
`I have chosen him to be my son--I will be his
Father.' `Bring my sons from far and my daughters
from the ends of the earth; even every one who is
called by my name, for I have created them for my
glory.' `You are the sons of the living God.' `They
who have the spirit of God are indeed the sons of
God.' While there is a material part of the human
father in the natural child, there is a spiritual
part of the heavenly Father in every faith son of
the kingdom."
All this and much
more Jesus said to Thomas, and much of it the
apostle comprehended, although Jesus admonished him
to "speak not to the others concerning these matters
until after I shall have returned to the Father."
And Thomas did not mention this interview until
after the Master had departed from this world.
5. THE
PURPOSE OF AFFLICTION
At another of
these private interviews in the garden Nathaniel
asked Jesus: "Master, though I am beginning to
understand why you refuse to practice healing
indiscriminately, I am still at a loss to understand
why the loving Father in heaven permits so many of
his children on earth to suffer so many
afflictions." The Master answered Nathaniel, saying:
"Nathaniel, you
and many others are thus perplexed because you do
not comprehend how the natural order of this world
has been so many times upset by the sinful
adventures of certain rebellious traitors to the
Father's will. And I have come to make a beginning
of setting these things in order. But many ages will
be required to restore this part of the universe to
former paths and thus release the children of men
from the extra burdens of sin and rebellion. The
presence of evil alone is sufficient test for the
ascension of man--sin is not essential to survival.
"But, my son, you
should know that the Father does not purposely
afflict his children. Man brings down upon himself
unnecessary affliction as a result of his persistent
refusal to walk in the better ways of the divine
will. Affliction is potential in evil, but much of
it has been produced by sin and iniquity. Many
unusual events have transpired on this world, and it
is not strange that all thinking men should be
perplexed by the scenes of suffering and affliction
which they witness. But of one thing you may be
sure: The Father does not send affliction as an
arbitrary punishment for wrongdoing. The
imperfections and handicaps of evil are inherent;
the penalties of sin are inevitable; the destroying
consequences of iniquity are inexorable. Man should
not blame God for those afflictions which are the
natural result of the life which he chooses to live;
neither should man complain of those experiences
which are a part of life as it is lived on this
world. It is the Father's will that mortal man
should work persistently and consistently toward the
betterment of his estate on earth. Intelligent
application would enable man to overcome much of his
earthly misery.
Page 1662
"Nathaniel, it is
our mission to help men solve their spiritual
problems and in this way to quicken their minds so
that they may be the better prepared and inspired to
go about solving their manifold material problems. I
know of your confusion as you have read the
Scriptures. All too often there has prevailed a
tendency to ascribe to God the responsibility for
everything which ignorant man fails to understand.
The Father is not personally responsible for all you
may fail to comprehend. Do not doubt the love of the
Father just because some just and wise law of his
ordaining chances to afflict you because you have
innocently or deliberately transgressed such a
divine ordinance.
"But, Nathaniel,
there is much in the Scriptures which would have
instructed you if you had only read with
discernment. Do you not remember that it is written:
`My son, despise not the chastening of the Lord;
neither be weary of his correction, for whom the
Lord loves he corrects, even as the father corrects
the son in whom he takes delight.' `The Lord does
not afflict willingly.' `Before I was afflicted, I
went astray, but now do I keep the law. Affliction
was good for me that I might thereby learn the
divine statutes.' `I know your sorrows. The eternal
God is your refuge, while underneath are the
everlasting arms.' `The Lord also is a refuge for
the oppressed, a haven of rest in times of trouble.'
`The Lord will strengthen him upon the bed of
affliction; the Lord will not forget the sick.' `As
a father shows compassion for his children, so is
the Lord compassionate to those who fear him. He
knows your body; he remembers that you are dust.'
`He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their
wounds.' `He is the hope of the poor, the strength
of the needy in his distress, a refuge from the
storm, and a shadow from the devastating heat.' `He
gives power to the faint, and to them who have no
might he increases strength.' `A bruised reed shall
he not break, and the smoking flax he will not
quench.' `When you pass through the waters of
affliction, I will be with you, and when the rivers
of adversity overflow you, I will not forsake you.'
`He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to
proclaim liberty to the captives, and to comfort all
who mourn.' `There is correction in suffering;
affliction does not spring forth from the dust.'
6. THE
MISUNDERSTANDING OF SUFFERING--DISCOURSE ON JOB
It was this same
evening at Bethsaida that John also asked Jesus why
so many apparently innocent people suffered from so
many diseases and experienced so many afflictions.
In answering John's questions, among many other
things, the Master said:
"My son, you do
not comprehend the meaning of adversity or the
mission of suffering. Have you not read that
masterpiece of Semitic literature--the Scripture
story of the afflictions of Job? Do you not recall
how this wonderful parable begins with the recital
of the material prosperity of the Lord's servant?
You well remember that Job was blessed with
children, wealth, dignity, position, health, and
everything else which men value in this temporal
life. According to the time-honored teachings of the
children of Abraham such material prosperity was
all-sufficient evidence of divine favor. But such
material possessions and such temporal prosperity do
not indicate God's favor. My Father in heaven loves
the poor just as much as the rich; he is no
respecter of persons.
Page 1663
"Although
transgression of divine law is sooner or later
followed by the harvest of punishment, while men
certainly eventually do reap what they sow, still
you should know that human suffering is not always a
punishment for antecedent sin. Both Job and his
friends failed to find the true answer for their
perplexities. And with the light you now enjoy you
would hardly assign to either Satan or God the parts
they play in this unique parable. While Job did not,
through suffering, find the resolution of his
intellectual troubles or the solution of his
philosophical difficulties, he did achieve great
victories; even in the very face of the breakdown of
his theological defenses he ascended to those
spiritual heights where he could sincerely say, `I
abhor myself'; then was there granted him the
salvation of a vision of God. So even through
misunderstood suffering, Job ascended to the
superhuman plane of moral understanding and
spiritual insight. When the suffering servant
obtains a vision of God, there follows a soul peace
which passes all human understanding.
"The first of
Job's friends, Eliphaz, exhorted the sufferer to
exhibit in his afflictions the same fortitude he had
prescribed for others during the days of his
prosperity. Said this false comforter: `Trust in
your religion, Job; remember that it is the wicked
and not the righteous who suffer. You must deserve
this punishment, else you would not be afflicted.
You well know that no man can be righteous in God's
sight. You know that the wicked never really
prosper. Anyway, man seems predestined to trouble,
and perhaps the Lord is only chastising you for your
own good.' No wonder poor Job failed to get much
comfort from such an interpretation of the problem
of human suffering.
"But the counsel
of his second friend, Bildad, was even more
depressing, notwithstanding its soundness from the
standpoint of the then accepted theology. Said
Bildad: `God cannot be unjust. Your children must
have been sinners since they perished; you must be
in error, else you would not be so afflicted. And if
you are really righteous, God will certainly deliver
you from your afflictions. You should learn from the
history of God's dealings with man that the Almighty
destroys only the wicked.'
"And then you
remember how Job replied to his friends, saying: `I
well know that God does not hear my cry for help.
How can God be just and at the same time so utterly
disregard my innocence? I am learning that I can get
no satisfaction from appealing to the Almighty.
Cannot you discern that God tolerates the
persecution of the good by the wicked? And since man
is so weak, what chance has he for consideration at
the hands of an omnipotent God? God has made me as I
am, and when he thus turns upon me, I am
defenseless. And why did God ever create me just to
suffer in this miserable fashion?'
"And who can
challenge the attitude of Job in view of the counsel
of his friends and the erroneous ideas of God which
occupied his own mind? Do you not see that Job
longed for a human God, that he hungered to
commune with a divine Being who knows man's mortal
estate and understands that the just must often
suffer in innocence as a part of this first life of
the long Paradise ascent? Wherefore has the Son of
Man come forth from the Father to live such a life
in the flesh that he will be able to comfort and
succor all those who must henceforth be called upon
to endure the afflictions of Job.
"Job's third
friend, Zophar, then spoke still less comforting
words when he said: `You are foolish to claim to be
righteous, seeing that you are thus afflicted. But I
admit that it is impossible to comprehend God's
ways. Perhaps there is
Page 1664
some hidden
purpose in all your miseries.' And when Job had
listened to all three of his friends, he appealed
directly to God for help, pleading the fact that
`man, born of woman, is few of days and full of
trouble.'
"Then began the
second session with his friends. Eliphaz grew more
stern, accusing, and sarcastic. Bildad became
indignant at Job's contempt for his friends. Zophar
reiterated his melancholy advice. Job by this time
had become disgusted with his friends and appealed
again to God, and now he appealed to a just God
against the God of injustice embodied in the
philosophy of his friends and enshrined even in his
own religious attitude. Next Job took refuge in the
consolation of a future life in which the inequities
of mortal existence may be more justly rectified.
Failure to receive help from man drives Job to God.
Then ensues the great struggle in his heart between
faith and doubt. Finally, the human sufferer begins
to see the light of life; his tortured soul ascends
to new heights of hope and courage; he may suffer on
and even die, but his enlightened soul now utters
that cry of triumph, `My Vindicator lives!'
"Job was
altogether right when he challenged the doctrine
that God afflicts children in order to punish their
parents. Job was ever ready to admit that God is
righteous, but he longed for some soul-satisfying
revelation of the personal character of the Eternal.
And that is our mission on earth. No more shall
suffering mortals be denied the comfort of knowing
the love of God and understanding the mercy of the
Father in heaven. While the speech of God spoken
from the whirlwind was a majestic concept for the
day of its utterance, you have already learned that
the Father does not thus reveal himself, but rather
that he speaks within the human heart as a still,
small voice, saying, `This is the way; walk
therein.' Do you not comprehend that God dwells
within you, that he has become what you are that he
may make you what he is!"
Then Jesus made
this final statement: "The Father in heaven does not
willingly afflict the children of men. Man suffers,
first, from the accidents of time and the
imperfections of the evil of an immature physical
existence. Next, he suffers the inexorable
consequences of sin--the transgression of the laws
of life and light. And finally, man reaps the
harvest of his own iniquitous persistence in
rebellion against the righteous rule of heaven on
earth. But man's miseries are not a personal
visitation of divine judgment. Man can, and will, do
much to lessen his temporal sufferings. But once and
for all be delivered from the superstition that God
afflicts man at the behest of the evil one. Study
the Book of Job just to discover how many wrong
ideas of God even good men may honestly entertain;
and then note how even the painfully afflicted Job
found the God of comfort and salvation in spite of
such erroneous teachings. At last his faith pierced
the clouds of suffering to discern the light of life
pouring forth from the Father as healing mercy and
everlasting righteousness."
John pondered
these sayings in his heart for many days. His entire
afterlife was markedly changed as a result of this
conversation with the Master in the garden, and he
did much, in later times, to cause the other
apostles to change their viewpoints regarding the
source, nature, and purpose of commonplace human
afflictions. But John never spoke of this conference
until after the Master had departed.
7. THE
MAN WITH THE WITHERED HAND
The second Sabbath
before the departure of the apostles and the new
corps of evangelists on the second preaching tour of
Galilee, Jesus spoke in the
Page 1665
Capernaum
synagogue on the "Joys of Righteous Living." When
Jesus had finished speaking, a large group of those
who were maimed, halt, sick, and afflicted crowded
up around him, seeking healing. Also in this group
were the apostles, many of the new evangelists, and
the Pharisaic spies from Jerusalem. Everywhere that
Jesus went (except when in the hills about the
Father's business) the six Jerusalem spies were sure
to follow.
The leader of the
spying Pharisees, as Jesus stood talking to the
people, induced a man with a withered hand to
approach him and ask if it would be lawful to be
healed on the Sabbath day or should he seek help on
another day. When Jesus saw the man, heard his
words, and perceived that he had been sent by the
Pharisees, he said: "Come forward while I ask you a
question. If you had a sheep and it should fall into
a pit on the Sabbath day, would you reach down, lay
hold on it, and lift it out? Is it lawful to do such
things on the Sabbath day?" And the man answered:
"Yes, Master, it would be lawful thus to do well on
the Sabbath day." Then said Jesus, speaking to all
of them: "I know wherefore you have sent this man
into my presence. You would find cause for offense
in me if you could tempt me to show mercy on the
Sabbath day. In silence you all agreed that it was
lawful to lift the unfortunate sheep out of the pit,
even on the Sabbath, and I call you to witness that
it is lawful to exhibit loving-kindness on the
Sabbath day not only to animals but also to men. How
much more valuable is a man than a sheep! I proclaim
that it is lawful to do good to men on the Sabbath
day." And as they all stood before him in silence,
Jesus, addressing the man with the withered hand,
said: "Stand up here by my side that all may see
you. And now that you may know that it is my
Father's will that you do good on the Sabbath day,
if you have the faith to be healed, I bid you
stretch out your hand."
And as this man
stretched forth his withered hand, it was made
whole. The people were minded to turn upon the
Pharisees, but Jesus bade them be calm, saying: "I
have just told you that it is lawful to do good on
the Sabbath, to save life, but I did not instruct
you to do harm and give way to the desire to kill."
The angered Pharisees went away, and notwithstanding
it was the Sabbath day, they hastened forthwith to
Tiberias and took counsel with Herod, doing
everything in their power to arouse his prejudice in
order to secure the Herodians as allies against
Jesus. But Herod refused to take action against
Jesus, advising that they carry their complaints to
Jerusalem.
This is the first
case of a miracle to be wrought by Jesus in response
to the challenge of his enemies. And the Master
performed this so-called miracle, not as a
demonstration of his healing power, but as an
effective protest against making the Sabbath rest of
religion a veritable bondage of meaningless
restrictions upon all mankind. This man returned to
his work as a stone mason, proving to be one of
those whose healing was followed by a life of
thanksgiving and righteousness.
8. LAST
WEEK AT BETHSAIDA
The last week of
the sojourn at Bethsaida the Jerusalem spies became
much divided in their attitude toward Jesus and his
teachings. Three of these Pharisees were
tremendously impressed by what they had seen and
heard. Meanwhile, at Jerusalem, Abraham, a young and
influential member of the Sanhedrin, publicly
espoused the teachings of Jesus and was baptized in
the pool
Page 1666
of Siloam by
Abner. All Jerusalem was agog over this event, and
messengers were immediately dispatched to Bethsaida
recalling the six spying Pharisees.
The Greek
philosopher who had been won for the kingdom on the
previous tour of Galilee returned with certain
wealthy Jews of Alexandria, and once more they
invited Jesus to come to their city for the purpose
of establishing a joint school of philosophy and
religion as well as an infirmary for the sick. But
Jesus courteously declined the invitation.
About this time
there arrived at the Bethsaida encampment a trance
prophet from Bagdad, one Kirmeth. This supposed
prophet had peculiar visions when in trance and
dreamed fantastic dreams when his sleep was
disturbed. He created a considerable disturbance at
the camp, and Simon Zelotes was in favor of dealing
rather roughly with the self-deceived pretender, but
Jesus intervened and allowed him entire freedom of
action for a few days. All who heard his preaching
soon recognized that his teaching was not sound as
judged by the gospel of the kingdom. He shortly
returned to Bagdad, taking with him only a half
dozen unstable and erratic souls. But before Jesus
interceded for the Bagdad prophet, David Zebedee,
with the assistance of a self-appointed committee,
had taken Kirmeth out into the lake and, after
repeatedly plunging him into the water, had advised
him to depart hence--to organize and build a camp of
his own.
On this same day,
Beth-Marion, a Phoenician woman, became so fanatical
that she went out of her head and, after almost
drowning from trying to walk on the water, was sent
away by her friends.
The new Jerusalem
convert, Abraham the Pharisee, gave all of his
worldly goods to the apostolic treasury, and this
contribution did much to make possible the immediate
sending forth of the one hundred newly trained
evangelists. Andrew had already announced the
closing of the encampment, and everybody prepared
either to go home or else to follow the evangelists
into Galilee.
9.
HEALING THE PARALYTIC
On Friday
afternoon, October 1, when Jesus was holding his
last meeting with the apostles, evangelists, and
other leaders of the disbanding encampment, and with
the six Pharisees from Jerusalem seated in the front
row of this assembly in the spacious and enlarged
front room of the Zebedee home, there occurred one
of the strangest and most unique episodes of all
Jesus' earth life. The Master was, at this time,
speaking as he stood in this large room, which had
been built to accommodate these gatherings during
the rainy season. The house was entirely surrounded
by a vast concourse of people who were straining
their ears to catch some part of Jesus' discourse.
While the house
was thus thronged with people and entirely
surrounded by eager listeners, a man long afflicted
with paralysis was carried down from Capernaum on a
small couch by his friends. This paralytic had heard
that Jesus was about to leave Bethsaida, and having
talked with Aaron the stone mason, who had been so
recently made whole, he resolved to be carried into
Jesus' presence, where he could seek healing. His
friends tried to gain entrance to Zebedee's house by
both the front and back doors, but too many people
were crowded together. But the paralytic refused to
accept defeat; he directed
Page 1667
his friends to
procure ladders by which they ascended to the roof
of the room in which Jesus was speaking, and after
loosening the tiles, they boldly lowered the sick
man on his couch by ropes until the afflicted one
rested on the floor immediately in front of the
Master. When Jesus saw what they had done, he ceased
speaking, while those who were with him in the room
marveled at the perseverance of the sick man and his
friends. Said the paralytic: "Master, I would not
disturb your teaching, but I am determined to be
made whole. I am not like those who received healing
and immediately forgot your teaching. I would be
made whole that I might serve in the kingdom of
heaven." Now, notwithstanding that this man's
affliction had been brought upon him by his own
misspent life, Jesus, seeing his faith, said to the
paralytic: "Son, fear not; your sins are forgiven.
Your faith shall save you."
When the Pharisees
from Jerusalem, together with other scribes and
lawyers who sat with them, heard this pronouncement
by Jesus, they began to say to themselves: "How dare
this man thus speak? Does he not understand that
such words are blasphemy? Who can forgive sin but
God?" Jesus, perceiving in his spirit that they thus
reasoned within their own minds and among
themselves, spoke to them, saying: "Why do you so
reason in your hearts? Who are you that you sit in
judgment over me? What is the difference whether I
say to this paralytic, your sins are forgiven, or
arise, take up your bed, and walk? But that you who
witness all this may finally know that the Son of
Man has authority and power on earth to forgive
sins, I will say to this afflicted man, Arise, take
up your bed, and go to your own house." And when
Jesus had thus spoken, the paralytic arose, and as
they made way for him, he walked out before them
all. And those who saw these things were amazed.
Peter dismissed the assemblage, while many prayed
and glorified God, confessing that they had never
before seen such strange happenings.
And it was about
this time that the messengers of the Sanhedrin
arrived to bid the six spies return to Jerusalem.
When they heard this message, they fell to earnest
debate among themselves; and after they had finished
their discussions, the leader and two of his
associates returned with the messengers to
Jerusalem, while three of the spying Pharisees
confessed faith in Jesus and, going immediately to
the lake, were baptized by Peter and fellowshipped
by the apostles as children of the kingdom. |