PAPER 149
- THE SECOND PREACHING TOUR
The second public
preaching tour of Galilee began on Sunday, October
3, A.D. 28, and continued for almost three months,
ending on December 30. Participating in this effort
were Jesus and his twelve apostles, assisted by the
newly recruited corps of 117 evangelists and by
numerous other interested persons. On this tour they
visited Gadara, Ptolemais, Japhia, Dabaritta,
Megiddo, Jezreel, Scythopolis, Tarichea, Hippos,
Gamala, Bethsaida-Julias, and many other cities and
villages.
Before the
departure on this Sunday morning Andrew and Peter
asked Jesus to give the final charge to the new
evangelists, but the Master declined, saying that it
was not his province to do those things which others
could acceptably perform. After due deliberation it
was decided that James Zebedee should administer the
charge. At the conclusion of James's remarks Jesus
said to the evangelists: "Go now forth to do the
work as you have been charged, and later on, when
you have shown yourselves competent and faithful, I
will ordain you to preach the gospel of the
kingdom."
On this tour only
James and John traveled with Jesus. Peter and the
other apostles each took with them about one dozen
of the evangelists and maintained close contact with
them while they carried on their work of preaching
and teaching. As fast as believers were ready to
enter the kingdom, the apostles would administer
baptism. Jesus and his two companions traveled
extensively during these three months, often
visiting two cities in one day to observe the work
of the evangelists and to encourage them in their
efforts to establish the kingdom. This entire second
preaching tour was principally an effort to afford
practical experience for this corps of 117 newly
trained evangelists.
Throughout this
period and subsequently, up to the time of the final
departure of Jesus and the twelve for Jerusalem,
David Zebedee maintained a permanent headquarters
for the work of the kingdom in his father's house at
Bethsaida. This was the clearinghouse for Jesus'
work on earth and the relay station for the
messenger service which David carried on between the
workers in various parts of Palestine and adjacent
regions. He did all of this on his own initiative
but with the approval of Andrew. David employed
forty to fifty messengers in this intelligence
division of the rapidly enlarging and extending work
of the kingdom. While thus employed, he partially
supported himself by spending some of his time at
his old work of fishing.
1. THE
WIDESPREAD FAME OF JESUS
By the time the
camp at Bethsaida had been broken up, the fame of
Jesus, particularly as a healer, had spread to all
parts of Palestine and through all of
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Syria and the
surrounding countries. For weeks after they left
Bethsaida, the sick continued to arrive, and when
they did not find the Master, on learning from David
where he was, they would go in search of him. On
this tour Jesus did not deliberately perform any
so-called miracles of healing. Nevertheless, scores
of afflicted found restoration of health and
happiness as a result of the reconstructive power of
the intense faith which impelled them to seek for
healing.
There began to
appear about the time of this mission--and continued
throughout the remainder of Jesus' life on earth--a
peculiar and unexplained series of healing
phenomena. In the course of this three months' tour
more than one hundred men, women, and children from
Judea, Idumea, Galilee, Syria, Tyre, and Sidon, and
from beyond the Jordan were beneficiaries of this
unconscious healing by Jesus and, returning to their
homes, added to the enlargement of Jesus' fame. And
they did this notwithstanding that Jesus would,
every time he observed one of these cases of
spontaneous healing, directly charge the beneficiary
to "tell no man."
It was never
revealed to us just what occurred in these cases of
spontaneous or unconscious healing. The Master never
explained to his apostles how these healings were
effected, other than that on several occasions he
merely said, "I perceive that power has gone forth
from me." On one occasion he remarked when touched
by an ailing child, "I perceive that life has gone
forth from me."
In the absence of
direct word from the Master regarding the nature of
these cases of spontaneous healing, it would be
presuming on our part to undertake to explain how
they were accomplished, but it will be permissible
to record our opinion of all such healing phenomena.
We believe that many of these apparent miracles of
healing, as they occurred in the course of Jesus'
earth ministry, were the result of the coexistence
of the following three powerful, potent, and
associated influences:
1. The presence of
strong, dominant, and living faith in the heart of
the human being who persistently sought healing,
together with the fact that such healing was desired
for its spiritual benefits rather than for purely
physical restoration.
2. The existence,
concomitant with such human faith, of the great
sympathy and compassion of the incarnated and
mercy-dominated Creator Son of God, who actually
possessed in his person almost unlimited and
timeless creative healing powers and prerogatives.
3. Along with the
faith of the creature and the life of the Creator it
should also be noted that this God-man was the
personified expression of the Father's will. If, in
the contact of the human need and the divine power
to meet it, the Father did not will otherwise, the
two became one, and the healing occurred
unconsciously to the human Jesus but was immediately
recognized by his divine nature. The explanation,
then, of many of these cases of healing must be
found in a great law which has long been known to
us, namely, What the Creator Son desires and the
eternal Father wills IS.
It is, then, our
opinion that, in the personal presence of Jesus,
certain forms of profound human faith were literally
and truly compelling in the manifestation of
healing by certain creative forces and personalities
of the universe
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who were at that
time so intimately associated with the Son of Man.
It therefore becomes a fact of record that Jesus did
frequently suffer men to heal themselves in his
presence by their powerful, personal faith.
Many others sought
healing for wholly selfish purposes. A rich widow of
Tyre, with her retinue, came seeking to be healed of
her infirmities, which were many; and as she
followed Jesus about through Galilee, she continued
to offer more and more money, as if the power of God
were something to be purchased by the highest
bidder. But never would she become interested in the
gospel of the kingdom; it was only the cure of her
physical ailments that she sought.
2.
ATTITUDE OF THE PEOPLE
Jesus understood
the minds of men. He knew what was in the heart of
man, and had his teachings been left as he presented
them, the only commentary being the inspired
interpretation afforded by his earth life, all
nations and all religions of the world would
speedily have embraced the gospel of the kingdom.
The well-meant efforts of Jesus' early followers to
restate his teachings so as to make them the more
acceptable to certain nations, races, and religions,
only resulted in making such teachings the less
acceptable to all other nations, races, and
religions.
The Apostle Paul,
in his efforts to bring the teachings of Jesus to
the favorable notice of certain groups in his day,
wrote many letters of instruction and admonition.
Other teachers of Jesus' gospel did likewise, but
none of them realized that some of these writings
would subsequently be brought together by those who
would set them forth as the embodiment of the
teachings of Jesus. And so, while so-called
Christianity does contain more of the Master's
gospel than any other religion, it does also contain
much that Jesus did not teach. Aside from the
incorporation of many teachings from the Persian
mysteries and much of the Greek philosophy into
early Christianity, two great mistakes were made:
1. The effort to
connect the gospel teaching directly onto the Jewish
theology, as illustrated by the Christian doctrines
of the atonement--the teaching that Jesus was the
sacrificed Son who would satisfy the Father's stern
justice and appease the divine wrath. These
teachings originated in a praiseworthy effort to
make the gospel of the kingdom more acceptable to
disbelieving Jews. Though these efforts failed as
far as winning the Jews was concerned, they did not
fail to confuse and alienate many honest souls in
all subsequent generations.
2. The second
great blunder of the Master's early followers, and
one which all subsequent generations have persisted
in perpetuating, was to organize the Christian
teaching so completely about the person of
Jesus. This overemphasis of the personality of Jesus
in the theology of Christianity has worked to
obscure his teachings, and all of this has made it
increasingly difficult for Jews, Mohammedans,
Hindus, and other Eastern religionists to accept the
teachings of Jesus. We would not belittle the place
of the person of Jesus in a religion which might
bear his name, but we would not permit such
consideration to eclipse his inspired life or to
supplant his saving message: the fatherhood of God
and the brotherhood of man.
The teachers of
the religion of Jesus should approach other
religions with the recognition of the truths which
are held in common (many of which come
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directly or
indirectly from Jesus' message) while they refrain
from placing so much emphasis on the differences.
While, at that
particular time, the fame of Jesus rested chiefly
upon his reputation as a healer, it does not follow
that it continued so to rest. As time passed, more
and more he was sought for spiritual help. But it
was the physical cures that made the most direct and
immediate appeal to the common people. Jesus was
increasingly sought by the victims of moral
enslavement and mental harassments, and he
invariably taught them the way of deliverance.
Fathers sought his advice regarding the management
of their sons, and mothers came for help in the
guidance of their daughters. Those who sat in
darkness came to him, and he revealed to them the
light of life. His ear was ever open to the sorrows
of mankind, and he always helped those who sought
his ministry.
When the Creator
himself was on earth, incarnated in the likeness of
mortal flesh, it was inevitable that some
extraordinary things should happen. But you should
never approach Jesus through these so-called
miraculous occurrences. Learn to approach the
miracle through Jesus, but do not make the mistake
of approaching Jesus through the miracle. And this
admonition is warranted, notwithstanding that Jesus
of Nazareth is the only founder of a religion who
performed supermaterial acts on earth.
The most
astonishing and the most revolutionary feature of
Michael's mission on earth was his attitude toward
women. In a day and generation when a man was not
supposed to salute even his own wife in a public
place, Jesus dared to take women along as teachers
of the gospel in connection with his third tour of
Galilee. And he had the consummate courage to do
this in the face of the rabbinic teaching which
declared that it was "better that the words of the
law should be burned than delivered to women."
In one generation
Jesus lifted women out of the disrespectful oblivion
and the slavish drudgery of the ages. And it is the
one shameful thing about the religion that presumed
to take Jesus' name that it lacked the moral courage
to follow this noble example in its subsequent
attitude toward women.
As Jesus mingled
with the people, they found him entirely free from
the superstitions of that day. He was free from
religious prejudices; he was never intolerant. He
had nothing in his heart resembling social
antagonism. While he complied with the good in the
religion of his fathers, he did not hesitate to
disregard man-made traditions of superstition and
bondage. He dared to teach that catastrophes of
nature, accidents of time, and other calamitous
happenings are not visitations of divine judgments
or mysterious dispensations of Providence. He
denounced slavish devotion to meaningless
ceremonials and exposed the fallacy of materialistic
worship. He boldly proclaimed man's spiritual
freedom and dared to teach that mortals of the flesh
are indeed and in truth sons of the living God.
Jesus transcended
all the teachings of his forebears when he boldly
substituted clean hearts for clean hands as the mark
of true religion. He put reality in the place of
tradition and swept aside all pretensions of vanity
and hypocrisy. And yet this fearless man of God did
not give vent to destructive criticism or manifest
an utter disregard of the religious, social,
economic, and political usages of his day. He was
not a militant revolutionist; he was a progressive
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evolutionist. He
engaged in the destruction of that which was
only when he simultaneously offered his fellows the
superior thing which ought to be.
Jesus received the
obedience of his followers without exacting it. Only
three men who received his personal call refused to
accept the invitation to discipleship. He exercised
a peculiar drawing power over men, but he was not
dictatorial. He commanded confidence, and no man
ever resented his giving a command. He assumed
absolute authority over his disciples, but no one
ever objected. He permitted his followers to call
him Master.
The Master was
admired by all who met him except by those who
entertained deep-seated religious prejudices or
those who thought they discerned political dangers
in his teachings. Men were astonished at the
originality and authoritativeness of his teaching.
They marveled at his patience in dealing with
backward and troublesome inquirers. He inspired hope
and confidence in the hearts of all who came under
his ministry. Only those who had not met him feared
him, and he was hated only by those who regarded him
as the champion of that truth which was destined to
overthrow the evil and error which they had
determined to hold in their hearts at all cost.
On both friends
and foes he exercised a strong and peculiarly
fascinating influence. Multitudes would follow him
for weeks, just to hear his gracious words and
behold his simple life. Devoted men and women loved
Jesus with a well-nigh superhuman affection. And the
better they knew him the more they loved him. And
all this is still true; even today and in all future
ages, the more man comes to know this God-man, the
more he will love and follow after him.
3.
HOSTILITY OF THE RELIGIOUS LEADERS
Notwithstanding
the favorable reception of Jesus and his teachings
by the common people, the religious leaders at
Jerusalem became increasingly alarmed and
antagonistic. The Pharisees had formulated a
systematic and dogmatic theology. Jesus was a
teacher who taught as the occasion served; he was
not a systematic teacher. Jesus taught not so much
from the law as from life, by parables. (And when he
employed a parable for illustrating his message, he
designed to utilize just one feature of the
story for that purpose. Many wrong ideas concerning
the teachings of Jesus may be secured by attempting
to make allegories out of his parables.)
The religious
leaders at Jerusalem were becoming well-nigh frantic
as a result of the recent conversion of young
Abraham and by the desertion of the three spies who
had been baptized by Peter, and who were now out
with the evangelists on this second preaching tour
of Galilee. The Jewish leaders were increasingly
blinded by fear and prejudice, while their hearts
were hardened by the continued rejection of the
appealing truths of the gospel of the kingdom. When
men shut off the appeal to the spirit that dwells
within them, there is little that can be done to
modify their attitude.
When Jesus first
met with the evangelists at the Bethsaida camp, in
concluding his address, he said: "You should
remember that in body and mind--emotionally--men
react individually. The only uniform thing
about men is the indwelling spirit. Though divine
spirits may vary somewhat in the nature and extent
of their experience, they react uniformly to all
spiritual appeals. Only through, and by appeal to,
this spirit can mankind ever attain unity and
brotherhood."
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But many of the
leaders of the Jews had closed the doors of their
hearts to the spiritual appeal of the gospel. From
this day on they ceased not to plan and plot for the
Master's destruction. They were convinced that Jesus
must be apprehended, convicted, and executed as a
religious offender, a violator of the cardinal
teachings of the Jewish sacred law.
4.
PROGRESS OF THE PREACHING TOUR
Jesus did very
little public work on this preaching tour, but he
conducted many evening classes with the believers in
most of the cities and villages where he chanced to
sojourn with James and John. At one of these evening
sessions one of the younger evangelists asked Jesus
a question about anger, and the Master among other
things said, in reply:
"Anger is a
material manifestation which represents, in a
general way, the measure of the failure of the
spiritual nature to gain control of the combined
intellectual and physical natures. Anger indicates
your lack of tolerant brotherly love plus your lack
of self-respect and self-control. Anger depletes the
health, debases the mind, and handicaps the spirit
teacher of man's soul. Have you not read in the
Scriptures that `wrath kills the foolish man,' and
that man `tears himself in his anger'? That `he who
is slow of wrath is of great understanding,' while
`he who is hasty of temper exalts folly'? You all
know that `a soft answer turns away wrath,' and how
`grievous words stir up anger.' `Discretion defers
anger,' while `he who has no control over his own
self is like a defenseless city without walls.'
`Wrath is cruel and anger is outrageous.' `Angry men
stir up strife, while the furious multiply their
transgressions.' `Be not hasty in spirit, for anger
rests in the bosom of fools.'" Before Jesus ceased
speaking, he said further: "Let your hearts be so
dominated by love that your spirit guide will have
little trouble in delivering you from the tendency
to give vent to those outbursts of animal anger
which are inconsistent with the status of divine
sonship."
On this same
occasion the Master talked to the group about the
desirability of possessing well-balanced characters.
He recognized that it was necessary for most men to
devote themselves to the mastery of some vocation,
but he deplored all tendency toward
overspecialization, toward becoming narrow-minded
and circumscribed in life's activities. He called
attention to the fact that any virtue, if carried to
extremes, may become a vice. Jesus always preached
temperance and taught consistency--proportionate
adjustment of life problems. He pointed out that
overmuch sympathy and pity may degenerate into
serious emotional instability; that enthusiasm may
drive on into fanaticism. He discussed one of their
former associates whose imagination had led him off
into visionary and impractical undertakings. At the
same time he warned them against the dangers of the
dullness of overconservative mediocrity.
And then Jesus
discoursed on the dangers of courage and faith, how
they sometimes lead unthinking souls on to
recklessness and presumption. He also showed how
prudence and discretion, when carried too far, lead
to cowardice and failure. He exhorted his hearers to
strive for originality while they shunned all
tendency toward eccentricity. He pleaded for
sympathy without sentimentality, piety without
sanctimoniousness. He taught reverence free from
fear and superstition.
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It was not so
much what Jesus taught about the balanced character
that impressed his associates as the fact that his
own life was such an eloquent exemplification of his
teaching. He lived in the midst of stress and storm,
but he never wavered. His enemies continually laid
snares for him, but they never entrapped him. The
wise and learned endeavored to trip him, but he did
not stumble. They sought to embroil him in debate,
but his answers were always enlightening, dignified,
and final. When he was interrupted in his discourses
with multitudinous questions, his answers were
always significant and conclusive. Never did he
resort to ignoble tactics in meeting the continuous
pressure of his enemies, who did not hesitate to
employ every sort of false, unfair, and unrighteous
mode of attack upon him.
While it is true
that many men and women must assiduously apply
themselves to some definite pursuit as a livelihood
vocation, it is nevertheless wholly desirable that
human beings should cultivate a wide range of
cultural familiarity with life as it is lived on
earth. Truly educated persons are not satisfied with
remaining in ignorance of the lives and doings of
their fellows.
5. LESSON
REGARDING CONTENTMENT
When Jesus was
visiting the group of evangelists working under the
supervision of Simon Zelotes, during their evening
conference Simon asked the Master: "Why are some
persons so much more happy and contented than
others? Is contentment a matter of religious
experience?" Among other things, Jesus said in
answer to Simon's question:
"Simon, some
persons are naturally more happy than others. Much,
very much, depends upon the willingness of man to be
led and directed by the Father's spirit which lives
within him. Have you not read in the Scriptures the
words of the wise man, `The spirit of man is the
candle of the Lord, searching all the inward parts'?
And also that such spirit-led mortals say: `The
lines are fallen to me in pleasant places; yes, I
have a goodly heritage.' `A little that a righteous
man has is better than the riches of many wicked,'
for `a good man shall be satisfied from within
himself.' `A merry heart makes a cheerful
countenance and is a continual feast. Better is a
little with the reverence of the Lord than great
treasure and trouble therewith. Better is a dinner
of herbs where love is than a fatted ox and hatred
therewith. Better is a little with righteousness
than great revenues without rectitude.' `A merry
heart does good like a medicine.' `Better is a
handful with composure than a superabundance with
sorrow and vexation of spirit.'
"Much of man's
sorrow is born of the disappointment of his
ambitions and the wounding of his pride. Although
men owe a duty to themselves to make the best of
their lives on earth, having thus sincerely exerted
themselves, they should cheerfully accept their lot
and exercise ingenuity in making the most of that
which has fallen to their hands. All too many of
man's troubles take origin in the fear soil of his
own natural heart. `The wicked flee when no man
pursues.' `The wicked are like the troubled sea, for
it cannot rest, but its waters cast up mire and
dirt; there is no peace, says God, for the wicked.'
"Seek not, then,
for false peace and transient joy but rather for the
assurance of faith and the sureties of divine
sonship which yield composure, contentment, and
supreme joy in the spirit."
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Jesus hardly
regarded this world as a "vale of tears." He rather
looked upon it as the birth sphere of the eternal
and immortal spirits of Paradise ascension, the
"vale of soul making."
6. THE
"FEAR OF THE LORD"
It was at Gamala,
during the evening conference, that Philip said to
Jesus: "Master, why is it that the Scriptures
instruct us to `fear the Lord,' while you would have
us look to the Father in heaven without fear? How
are we to harmonize these teachings?" And Jesus
replied to Philip, saying:
"My children, I am
not surprised that you ask such questions. In the
beginning it was only through fear that man could
learn reverence, but I have come to reveal the
Father's love so that you will be attracted to the
worship of the Eternal by the drawing of a son's
affectionate recognition and reciprocation of the
Father's profound and perfect love. I would deliver
you from the bondage of driving yourselves through
slavish fear to the irksome service of a jealous and
wrathful King-God. I would instruct you in the
Father-son relationship of God and man so that you
may be joyfully led into that sublime and supernal
free worship of a loving, just, and merciful
Father-God.
"The `fear of the
Lord' has had different meanings in the successive
ages, coming up from fear, through anguish and
dread, to awe and reverence. And now from reverence
I would lead you up, through recognition,
realization, and appreciation, to love. When
man recognizes only the works of God, he is led to
fear the Supreme; but when man begins to understand
and experience the personality and character of the
living God, he is led increasingly to love such a
good and perfect, universal and eternal Father. And
it is just this changing of the relation of man to
God that constitutes the mission of the Son of Man
on earth.
"Intelligent
children do not fear their father in order that they
may receive good gifts from his hand; but having
already received the abundance of good things
bestowed by the dictates of the father's affection
for his sons and daughters, these much loved
children are led to love their father in responsive
recognition and appreciation of such munificent
beneficence. The goodness of God leads to
repentance; the beneficence of God leads to service;
the mercy of God leads to salvation; while the love
of God leads to intelligent and freehearted worship.
"Your forebears
feared God because he was mighty and mysterious. You
shall adore him because he is magnificent in love,
plenteous in mercy, and glorious in truth. The power
of God engenders fear in the heart of man, but the
nobility and righteousness of his personality beget
reverence, love, and willing worship. A dutiful and
affectionate son does not fear or dread even a
mighty and noble father. I have come into the world
to put love in the place of fear, joy in the place
of sorrow, confidence in the place of dread, loving
service and appreciative worship in the place of
slavish bondage and meaningless ceremonies. But it
is still true of those who sit in darkness that `the
fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.' But
when the light has more fully come, the sons of God
are led to praise the Infinite for what he is
rather than to fear him for what he does.
"When children are
young and unthinking, they must necessarily be
admonished to honor their parents; but when they
grow older and become somewhat
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more appreciative
of the benefits of the parental ministry and
protection, they are led up, through understanding
respect and increasing affection, to that level of
experience where they actually love their parents
for what they are more than for what they have done.
The father naturally loves his child, but the child
must develop his love for the father from the fear
of what the father can do, through awe, dread,
dependence, and reverence, to the appreciative and
affectionate regard of love.
"You have been
taught that you should `fear God and keep his
commandments, for that is the whole duty of man.'
But I have come to give you a new and higher
commandment. I would teach you to `love God and
learn to do his will, for that is the highest
privilege of the liberated sons of God.' Your
fathers were taught to `fear God--the Almighty
King.' I teach you, `Love God--the all-merciful
Father.'
"In the kingdom of
heaven, which I have come to declare, there is no
high and mighty king; this kingdom is a divine
family. The universally recognized and unreservedly
worshiped center and head of this far-flung
brotherhood of intelligent beings is my Father and
your Father. I am his Son, and you are also his
sons. Therefore it is eternally true that you and I
are brethren in the heavenly estate, and all the
more so since we have become brethren in the flesh
of the earthly life. Cease, then, to fear God as a
king or serve him as a master; learn to reverence
him as the Creator; honor him as the Father of your
spirit youth; love him as a merciful defender; and
ultimately worship him as the loving and all-wise
Father of your more mature spiritual realization and
appreciation.
"Out of your wrong
concepts of the Father in heaven grow your false
ideas of humility and springs much of your
hypocrisy. Man may be a worm of the dust by nature
and origin, but when he becomes indwelt by my
Father's spirit, that man becomes divine in his
destiny. The bestowal spirit of my Father will
surely return to the divine source and universe
level of origin, and the human soul of mortal man
which shall have become the reborn child of this
indwelling spirit shall certainly ascend with the
divine spirit to the very presence of the eternal
Father.
"Humility, indeed,
becomes mortal man who receives all these gifts from
the Father in heaven, albeit there is a divine
dignity attached to all such faith candidates for
the eternal ascent of the heavenly kingdom. The
meaningless and menial practices of an ostentatious
and false humility are incompatible with the
appreciation of the source of your salvation and the
recognition of the destiny of your spirit-born
souls. Humility before God is altogether appropriate
in the depths of your hearts; meekness before men is
commendable; but the hypocrisy of self-conscious and
attention-craving humility is childish and unworthy
of the enlightened sons of the kingdom.
"You do well to be
meek before God and self-controlled before men, but
let your meekness be of spiritual origin and not the
self-deceptive display of a self-conscious sense of
self-righteous superiority. The prophet spoke
advisedly when he said, `Walk humbly with God,' for,
while the Father in heaven is the Infinite and the
Eternal, he also dwells `with him who is of a
contrite mind and a humble spirit.' My Father
disdains pride, loathes hypocrisy, and abhors
iniquity. And it was to emphasize the value of
sincerity and perfect trust in the loving support
and faithful guidance of the heavenly Father that I
have so often referred to the little child as
illustrative of the attitude of mind and the
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response of
spirit which are so essential to the entrance of
mortal man into the spirit realities of the kingdom
of heaven.
"Well did the
Prophet Jeremiah describe many mortals when he said:
`You are near God in the mouth but far from him in
the heart.' And have you not also read that direful
warning of the prophet who said: `The priests
thereof teach for hire, and the prophets thereof
divine for money. At the same time they profess
piety and proclaim that the Lord is with them.' Have
you not been well warned against those who `speak
peace to their neighbors when mischief is in their
hearts,' those who `flatter with the lips while the
heart is given to double-dealing'? Of all the
sorrows of a trusting man, none is so terrible as to
be `wounded in the house of a trusted friend.'"
7.
RETURNING TO BETHSAIDA
Andrew, in
consultation with Simon Peter and with the approval
of Jesus, had instructed David at Bethsaida to
dispatch messengers to the various preaching groups
with instructions to terminate the tour and return
to Bethsaida some time on Thursday, December 30. By
supper time on that rainy day all of the apostolic
party and the teaching evangelists had arrived at
the Zebedee home.
The group remained
together over the Sabbath day, being accommodated in
the homes of Bethsaida and near-by Capernaum, after
which the entire party was granted a two weeks'
recess to go home to their families, visit their
friends, or go fishing. The two or three days they
were together in Bethsaida were, indeed,
exhilarating and inspiring; even the older teachers
were edified by the young preachers as they narrated
their experiences.
Of the 117
evangelists who participated in this second
preaching tour of Galilee, only about seventy-five
survived the test of actual experience and were on
hand to be assigned to service at the end of the two
weeks' recess. Jesus, with Andrew, Peter, James, and
John, remained at the Zebedee home and spent much
time in conference regarding the welfare and
extension of the kingdom.
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