PAPER 153
- THE CRISIS AT CAPERNAUM
On Friday evening,
the day of their arrival at Bethsaida, and on
Sabbath morning, the apostles noticed that Jesus was
seriously occupied with some momentous problem; they
were cognizant that the Master was giving unusual
thought to some important matter. He ate no
breakfast and but little at noontide. All of Sabbath
morning and the evening before, the twelve and their
associates were gathered together in small groups
about the house, in the garden, and along the
seashore. There was a tension of uncertainty and a
suspense of apprehension resting upon all of them.
Jesus had said little to them since they left
Jerusalem.
Not in months had
they seen the Master so preoccupied and
uncommunicative. Even Simon Peter was depressed, if
not downcast. Andrew was at a loss to know what to
do for his dejected associates. Nathaniel said they
were in the midst of the "lull before the storm."
Thomas expressed the opinion that "something out of
the ordinary is about to happen." Philip advised
David Zebedee to "forget about plans for feeding and
lodging the multitude until we know what the Master
is thinking about." Matthew was putting forth
renewed efforts to replenish the treasury. James and
John talked over the forthcoming sermon in the
synagogue and speculated much as to its probable
nature and scope. Simon Zelotes expressed the
belief, in reality a hope, that "the Father in
heaven may be about to intervene in some unexpected
manner for the vindication and support of his Son,"
while Judas Iscariot dared to indulge the thought
that possibly Jesus was oppressed with regrets that
"he did not have the courage and daring to permit
the five thousand to proclaim him king of the Jews."
It was from among
such a group of depressed and disconsolate followers
that Jesus went forth on this beautiful Sabbath
afternoon to preach his epoch-making sermon in the
Capernaum synagogue. The only word of cheerful
greeting or well-wishing from any of his immediate
followers came from one of the unsuspecting Alpheus
twins, who, as Jesus left the house on his way to
the synagogue, saluted him cheerily and said: "We
pray the Father will help you, and that we may have
bigger multitudes than ever."
1. THE
SETTING OF THE STAGE
A distinguished
congregation greeted Jesus at three o'clock on this
exquisite Sabbath afternoon in the new Capernaum
synagogue. Jairus presided and handed Jesus the
Scriptures to read. The day before, fifty-three
Pharisees and Sadducees had arrived from Jerusalem;
more than thirty of the leaders and rulers of the
neighboring synagogues were also present. These
Jewish religious leaders were acting directly under
orders from the Sanhedrin at Jerusalem, and they
constituted the orthodox vanguard which had come to
inaugurate
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open warfare on
Jesus and his disciples. Sitting by the side of
these Jewish leaders, in the synagogue seats of
honor, were the official observers of Herod Antipas,
who had been directed to ascertain the truth
concerning the disturbing reports that an attempt
had been made by the populace to proclaim Jesus the
king of the Jews, over in the domains of his brother
Philip.
Jesus comprehended
that he faced the immediate declaration of avowed
and open warfare by his increasing enemies, and he
elected boldly to assume the offensive. At the
feeding of the five thousand he had challenged their
ideas of the material Messiah; now he chose again
openly to attack their concept of the Jewish
deliverer. This crisis, which began with the feeding
of the five thousand, and which terminated with this
Sabbath afternoon sermon, was the outward turning of
the tide of popular fame and acclaim. Henceforth,
the work of the kingdom was to be increasingly
concerned with the more important task of winning
lasting spiritual converts for the truly religious
brotherhood of mankind. This sermon marks the crisis
in the transition from the period of discussion,
controversy, and decision to that of open warfare
and final acceptance or final rejection.
The Master well
knew that many of his followers were slowly but
surely preparing their minds finally to reject him.
He likewise knew that many of his disciples were
slowly but certainly passing through that training
of mind and that discipline of soul which would
enable them to triumph over doubt and courageously
to assert their full-fledged faith in the gospel of
the kingdom. Jesus fully understood how men prepare
themselves for the decisions of a crisis and the
performance of sudden deeds of courageous choosing
by the slow process of the reiterated choosing
between the recurring situations of good and evil.
He subjected his chosen messengers to repeated
rehearsals in disappointment and provided them with
frequent and testing opportunities for choosing
between the right and the wrong way of meeting
spiritual trials. He knew he could depend on his
followers, when they met the final test, to make
their vital decisions in accordance with prior and
habitual mental attitudes and spirit reactions.
This crisis in
Jesus' earth life began with the feeding of the five
thousand and ended with this sermon in the
synagogue; the crisis in the lives of the apostles
began with this sermon in the synagogue and
continued for a whole year, ending only with the
Master's trial and crucifixion.
As they sat there
in the synagogue that afternoon before Jesus began
to speak, there was just one great mystery, just one
supreme question, in the minds of all. Both his
friends and his foes pondered just one thought, and
that was: "Why did he himself so deliberately and
effectively turn back the tide of popular
enthusiasm?" And it was immediately before and
immediately after this sermon that the doubts and
disappointments of his disgruntled adherents grew
into unconscious opposition and eventually turned
into actual hatred. It was after this sermon in the
synagogue that Judas Iscariot entertained his first
conscious thought of deserting. But he did, for the
time being, effectively master all such
inclinations.
Everyone was in a
state of perplexity. Jesus had left them dumfounded
and confounded. He had recently engaged in the
greatest demonstration of supernatural power to
characterize his whole career. The feeding of the
five thousand was the one event of his earth life
which made the greatest appeal
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to the Jewish
concept of the expected Messiah. But this
extraordinary advantage was immediately and
unexplainedly offset by his prompt and unequivocal
refusal to be made king.
On Friday evening,
and again on Sabbath morning, the Jerusalem leaders
had labored long and earnestly with Jairus to
prevent Jesus' speaking in the synagogue, but it was
of no avail. Jairus' only reply to all this pleading
was: "I have granted this request, and I will not
violate my word."
2. THE
EPOCHAL SERMON
Jesus introduced
this sermon by reading from the law as found in
Deuteronomy: "But it shall come to pass, if this
people will not hearken to the voice of God, that
the curses of transgression shall surely overtake
them. The Lord shall cause you to be smitten by your
enemies; you shall be removed into all the kingdoms
of the earth. And the Lord shall bring you and the
king you have set up over you into the hands of a
strange nation. You shall become an astonishment, a
proverb, and a byword among all nations. Your sons
and your daughters shall go into captivity. The
strangers among you shall rise high in authority
while you are brought very low. And these things
shall be upon you and your seed forever because you
would not hearken to the word of the Lord. Therefore
shall you serve your enemies who shall come against
you. You shall endure hunger and thirst and wear
this alien yoke of iron. The Lord shall bring
against you a nation from afar, from the end of the
earth, a nation whose tongue you shall not
understand, a nation of fierce countenance, a nation
which will have little regard for you. And they
shall besiege you in all your towns until the high
fortified walls wherein you have trusted come down;
and all the land shall fall into their hands. And it
shall come to pass that you will be driven to eat
the fruit of your own bodies, the flesh of your sons
and daughters, during this time of siege, because of
the straitness wherewith your enemies shall press
you."
And when Jesus had
finished this reading, he turned to the Prophets and
read from Jeremiah: "`If you will not hearken to the
words of my servants the prophets whom I have sent
you, then will I make this house like Shiloh, and I
will make this city a curse to all the nations of
the earth.' And the priests and the teachers heard
Jeremiah speak these words in the house of the Lord.
And it came to pass that, when Jeremiah had made an
end of speaking all that the Lord had commanded him
to speak to all the people, the priests and teachers
laid hold of him, saying, `You shall surely die.'
And all the people crowded around Jeremiah in the
house of the Lord. And when the princes of Judah
heard these things, they sat in judgment on
Jeremiah. Then spoke the priests and the teachers to
the princes and to all the people, saying: `This man
is worthy to die, for he has prophesied against our
city, and you have heard him with your own ears.'
Then spoke Jeremiah to all the princes and to all
the people: `The Lord sent me to prophesy against
this house and against this city all the words which
you have heard. Now, therefore, amend your ways and
reform your doings and obey the voice of the Lord
your God that you may escape the evil which has been
pronounced against you. As for me, behold I am in
your hands. Do with me as seems good and right in
your eyes. But know you for certain that, if you put
me to death, you shall bring innocent blood upon
yourselves and upon this people, for of a truth the
Lord has sent me to speak all these words in your
ears.'
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"The priests and
teachers of that day sought to kill Jeremiah, but
the judges would not consent, albeit, for his words
of warning, they did let him down by cords in a
filthy dungeon until he sank in mire up to his
armpits. That is what this people did to the Prophet
Jeremiah when he obeyed the Lord's command to warn
his brethren of their impending political downfall.
Today, I desire to ask you: What will the chief
priests and religious leaders of this people do with
the man who dares to warn them of the day of their
spiritual doom? Will you also seek to put to death
the teacher who dares to proclaim the word of the
Lord, and who fears not to point out wherein you
refuse to walk in the way of light which leads to
the entrance to the kingdom of heaven?
"What is it you
seek as evidence of my mission on earth? We have
left you undisturbed in your positions of influence
and power while we preached glad tidings to the poor
and the outcast. We have made no hostile attack upon
that which you hold in reverence but have rather
proclaimed new liberty for man's fear-ridden soul. I
came into the world to reveal my Father and to
establish on earth the spiritual brotherhood of the
sons of God, the kingdom of heaven. And
notwithstanding that I have so many times reminded
you that my kingdom is not of this world, still has
my Father granted you many manifestations of
material wonders in addition to more evidential
spiritual transformations and regenerations.
"What new sign is
it that you seek at my hands? I declare that you
already have sufficient evidence to enable you to
make your decision. Verily, verily, I say to many
who sit before me this day, you are confronted with
the necessity of choosing which way you will go; and
I say to you, as Joshua said to your forefathers,
`choose you this day whom you will serve.' Today,
many of you stand at the parting of the ways.
"Some of you, when
you could not find me after the feasting of the
multitude on the other side, hired the Tiberias
fishing fleet, which a week before had taken shelter
near by during a storm, to go in pursuit of me, and
what for? Not for truth and righteousness or that
you might the better know how to serve and minister
to your fellow men! No, but rather that you might
have more bread for which you had not labored. It
was not to fill your souls with the word of life,
but only that you might fill the belly with the
bread of ease. And long have you been taught that
the Messiah, when he should come, would work those
wonders which would make life pleasant and easy for
all the chosen people. It is not strange, then, that
you who have been thus taught should long for the
loaves and the fishes. But I declare to you that
such is not the mission of the Son of Man. I have
come to proclaim spiritual liberty, teach eternal
truth, and foster living faith.
"My brethren,
hanker not after the meat which perishes but rather
seek for the spiritual food that nourishes even to
eternal life; and this is the bread of life which
the Son gives to all who will take it and eat, for
the Father has given the Son this life without
measure. And when you asked me, `What must we do to
perform the works of God?' I plainly told you: `This
is the work of God, that you believe him whom he has
sent.'"
And then said
Jesus, pointing up to the device of a pot of manna
which decorated the lintel of this new synagogue,
and which was embellished with grape clusters: "You
have thought that your forefathers in the wilderness
ate manna--the bread of heaven--but I say to you
that this was the bread of earth. While Moses did
not give your fathers bread from heaven, my Father
now
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stands ready to
give you the true bread of life. The bread of heaven
is that which comes down from God and gives eternal
life to the men of the world. And when you say to
me, Give us this living bread, I will answer: I am
this bread of life. He who comes to me shall not
hunger, while he who believes me shall never thirst.
You have seen me, lived with me, and beheld my
works, yet you believe not that I came forth from
the Father. But to those who do believe--fear not.
All those led of the Father shall come to me, and he
who comes to me shall in nowise be cast out.
"And now let me
declare to you, once and for all time, that I have
come down upon the earth, not to do my own will, but
the will of Him who sent me. And this is the final
will of Him who sent me, that of all those he has
given me I should not lose one. And this is the will
of the Father: That every one who beholds the Son
and who believes him shall have eternal life. Only
yesterday did I feed you with bread for your bodies;
today I offer you the bread of life for your hungry
souls. Will you now take the bread of the spirit as
you then so willingly ate the bread of this world?"
As Jesus paused
for a moment to look over the congregation, one of
the teachers from Jerusalem (a member of the
Sanhedrin) rose up and asked: "Do I understand you
to say that you are the bread which comes down from
heaven, and that the manna which Moses gave to our
fathers in the wilderness did not?" And Jesus
answered the Pharisee, "You understood aright." Then
said the Pharisee: "But are you not Jesus of
Nazareth, the son of Joseph, the carpenter? Are not
your father and mother, as well as your brothers and
sisters, well known to many of us? How then is it
that you appear here in God's house and declare that
you have come down from heaven?"
By this time there
was much murmuring in the synagogue, and such a
tumult was threatened that Jesus stood up and said:
"Let us be patient; the truth never suffers from
honest examination. I am all that you say but more.
The Father and I are one; the Son does only that
which the Father teaches him, while all those who
are given to the Son by the Father, the Son will
receive to himself. You have read where it is
written in the Prophets, `You shall all be taught by
God,' and that `Those whom the Father teaches will
hear also his Son.' Every one who yields to the
teaching of the Father's indwelling spirit will
eventually come to me. Not that any man has seen the
Father, but the Father's spirit does live within
man. And the Son who came down from heaven, he has
surely seen the Father. And those who truly believe
this Son already have eternal life.
"I am this bread
of life. Your fathers ate manna in the wilderness
and are dead. But this bread which comes down from
God, if a man eats thereof, he shall never die in
spirit. I repeat, I am this living bread, and every
soul who attains the realization of this united
nature of God and man shall live forever. And this
bread of life which I give to all who will receive
is my own living and combined nature. The Father in
the Son and the Son one with the Father--that is my
life-giving revelation to the world and my saving
gift to all nations."
When Jesus had
finished speaking, the ruler of the synagogue
dismissed the congregation, but they would not
depart. They crowded up around Jesus to ask more
questions while others murmured and disputed among
themselves. And this state of affairs continued for
more than three hours. It was well past seven
o'clock before the audience finally dispersed.
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3. THE
AFTER MEETING
Many were the
questions asked Jesus during this after meeting.
Some were asked by his perplexed disciples, but more
were asked by caviling unbelievers who sought only
to embarrass and entrap him.
One of the
visiting Pharisees, mounting a lampstand, shouted
out this question: "You tell us that you are the
bread of life. How can you give us your flesh to eat
or your blood to drink? What avail is your teaching
if it cannot be carried out?" And Jesus answered
this question, saying: "I did not teach you that my
flesh is the bread of life nor that my blood is the
water thereof. But I did say that my life in the
flesh is a bestowal of the bread of heaven. The fact
of the Word of God bestowed in the flesh and the
phenomenon of the Son of Man subject to the will of
God, constitute a reality of experience which is
equivalent to the divine sustenance. You cannot eat
my flesh nor can you drink my blood, but you can
become one in spirit with me even as I am one in
spirit with the Father. You can be nourished by the
eternal word of God, which is indeed the bread of
life, and which has been bestowed in the likeness of
mortal flesh; and you can be watered in soul by the
divine spirit, which is truly the water of life. The
Father has sent me into the world to show how he
desires to indwell and direct all men; and I have so
lived this life in the flesh as to inspire all men
likewise ever to seek to know and do the will of the
indwelling heavenly Father."
Then one of the
Jerusalem spies who had been observing Jesus and his
apostles, said: "We notice that neither you nor your
apostles wash your hands properly before you eat
bread. You must well know that such a practice as
eating with defiled and unwashed hands is a
transgression of the law of the elders. Neither do
you properly wash your drinking cups and eating
vessels. Why is it that you show such disrespect for
the traditions of the fathers and the laws of our
elders?" And when Jesus heard him speak, he
answered: "Why is it that you transgress the
commandments of God by the laws of your tradition?
The commandment says, `Honor your father and your
mother,' and directs that you share with them your
substance if necessary; but you enact a law of
tradition which permits undutiful children to say
that the money wherewith the parents might have been
assisted has been `given to God.' The law of the
elders thus relieves such crafty children of their
responsibility, notwithstanding that the children
subsequently use all such monies for their own
comfort. Why is it that you in this way make void
the commandment by your own tradition? Well did
Isaiah prophesy of you hypocrites, saying: `This
people honors me with their lips, but their heart is
far from me. In vain do they worship me, teaching as
their doctrines the precepts of men.'
"You can see how
it is that you desert the commandment while you hold
fast to the tradition of men. Altogether willing are
you to reject the word of God while you maintain
your own traditions. And in many other ways do you
dare to set up your own teachings above the law and
the prophets."
Jesus then
directed his remarks to all present. He said: "But
hearken to me all of you. It is not that which
enters into the mouth that spiritually defiles the
man, but rather that which proceeds out of the mouth
and from the heart." But even the apostles failed
fully to grasp the meaning of his words, for Simon
Peter also asked him: "Lest some of your hearers be
unnecessarily offended, would you explain to us the
meaning of these words?" And then said Jesus to
Peter:
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"Are you also
hard of understanding? Know you not that every plant
which my heavenly Father has not planted shall be
rooted up? Turn now your attention to those who
would know the truth. You cannot compel men to love
the truth. Many of these teachers are blind guides.
And you know that, if the blind lead the blind, both
shall fall into the pit. But hearken while I tell
you the truth concerning those things which morally
defile and spiritually contaminate men. I declare it
is not that which enters the body by the mouth or
gains access to the mind through the eyes and ears,
that defiles the man. Man is only defiled by that
evil which may originate within the heart, and which
finds expression in the words and deeds of such
unholy persons. Do you not know it is from the heart
that there come forth evil thoughts, wicked projects
of murder, theft, and adulteries, together with
jealousy, pride, anger, revenge, railings, and false
witness? And it is just such things that defile men,
and not that they eat bread with ceremonially
unclean hands."
The Pharisaic
commissioners of the Jerusalem Sanhedrin were now
almost convinced that Jesus must be apprehended on a
charge of blasphemy or on one of flouting the sacred
law of the Jews; wherefore their efforts to involve
him in the discussion of, and possible attack upon,
some of the traditions of the elders, or so-called
oral laws of the nation. No matter how scarce water
might be, these traditionally enslaved Jews would
never fail to go through with the required
ceremonial washing of the hands before every meal.
It was their belief that "it is better to die than
to transgress the commandments of the elders." The
spies asked this question because it had been
reported that Jesus had said, "Salvation is a matter
of clean hearts rather than of clean hands." But
such beliefs, when they once become a part of one's
religion, are hard to get away from. Even many years
after this day the Apostle Peter was still held in
the bondage of fear to many of these traditions
about things clean and unclean, only being finally
delivered by experiencing an extraordinary and vivid
dream. All of this can the better be understood when
it is recalled that these Jews looked upon eating
with unwashed hands in the same light as commerce
with a harlot, and both were equally punishable by
excommunication.
Thus did the
Master elect to discuss and expose the folly of the
whole rabbinic system of rules and regulations which
was represented by the oral law--the traditions of
the elders, all of which were regarded as more
sacred and more binding upon the Jews than even the
teachings of the Scriptures. And Jesus spoke out
with less reserve because he knew the hour had come
when he could do nothing more to prevent an open
rupture of relations with these religious leaders.
4. LAST
WORDS IN THE SYNAGOGUE
In the midst of
the discussions of this after meeting, one of the
Pharisees from Jerusalem brought to Jesus a
distraught youth who was possessed of an unruly and
rebellious spirit. Leading this demented lad up to
Jesus, he said: "What can you do for such affliction
as this? Can you cast out devils?" And when the
Master looked upon the youth, he was moved with
compassion and, beckoning for the lad to come to
him, took him by the hand and said: "You know who I
am; come out of him; and I charge one of your loyal
fellows to see that you do not return." And
immediately the lad was normal and in his right
mind. And this is the first case where Jesus really
cast an "evil spirit" out of a
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human being. All
of the previous cases were only supposed possession
of the devil; but this was a genuine case of
demoniac possession, even such as sometimes occurred
in those days and right up to the day of Pentecost,
when the Master's spirit was poured out upon all
flesh, making it forever impossible for these few
celestial rebels to take such advantage of certain
unstable types of human being.
When the people
marveled, one of the Pharisees stood up and charged
that Jesus could do these things because he was in
league with devils; that he admitted in the language
which he employed in casting out this devil that
they were known to each other; and he went on to
state that the religious teachers and leaders at
Jerusalem had decided that Jesus did all his
so-called miracles by the power of Beelzebub, the
prince of devils. Said the Pharisee: "Have nothing
to do with this man; he is in partnership with
Satan."
Then said Jesus:
"How can Satan cast out Satan? A kingdom divided
against itself cannot stand; if a house be divided
against itself, it is soon brought to desolation.
Can a city withstand a siege if it is not united? If
Satan casts out Satan, he is divided against
himself; how then shall his kingdom stand? But you
should know that no one can enter into the house of
a strong man and despoil his goods except he first
overpower and bind that strong man. And so, if I by
the power of Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do
your sons cast them out? Therefore shall they be
your judges. But if I, by the spirit of God, cast
out devils, then has the kingdom of God truly come
upon you. If you were not blinded by prejudice and
misled by fear and pride, you would easily perceive
that one who is greater than devils stands in your
midst. You compel me to declare that he who is not
with me is against me, while he who gathers not with
me scatters abroad. Let me utter a solemn warning to
you who would presume, with your eyes open and with
premeditated malice, knowingly to ascribe the works
of God to the doings of devils! Verily, verily, I
say to you, all your sins shall be forgiven, even
all of your blasphemies, but whosoever shall
blaspheme against God with deliberation and wicked
intention shall never obtain forgiveness. Since such
persistent workers of iniquity will never seek nor
receive forgiveness, they are guilty of the sin of
eternally rejecting divine forgiveness.
"Many of you have
this day come to the parting of the ways; you have
come to a beginning of the making of the inevitable
choice between the will of the Father and the
self-chosen ways of darkness. And as you now choose,
so shall you eventually be. You must either make the
tree good and its fruit good, or else will the tree
become corrupt and its fruit corrupt. I declare that
in my Father's eternal kingdom the tree is known by
its fruits. But some of you who are as vipers, how
can you, having already chosen evil, bring forth
good fruits? After all, out of the abundance of the
evil in your hearts your mouths speak."
Then stood up
another Pharisee, who said: "Teacher, we would have
you give us a predetermined sign which we will agree
upon as establishing your authority and right to
teach. Will you agree to such an arrangement?" And
when Jesus heard this, he said: "This faithless and
sign-seeking generation seeks a token, but no sign
shall be given you other than that which you already
have, and that which you shall see when the Son of
Man departs from among you."
And when he had
finished speaking, his apostles surrounded him and
led him from the synagogue. In silence they
journeyed home with him to Bethsaida. They were all
amazed and somewhat terror-stricken by the sudden
change in the
Page 1715
Master's teaching
tactics. They were wholly unaccustomed to seeing him
perform in such a militant manner.
5. THE
SATURDAY EVENING
Time and again had
Jesus dashed to pieces the hopes of his apostles,
repeatedly had he crushed their fondest
expectations, but no time of disappointment or
season of sorrow had ever equaled that which now
overtook them. And, too, there was now admixed with
their depression a real fear for their safety. They
were all surprisingly startled by the suddenness and
completeness of the desertion of the populace. They
were also somewhat frightened and disconcerted by
the unexpected boldness and assertive determination
exhibited by the Pharisees who had come down from
Jerusalem. But most of all they were bewildered by
Jesus' sudden change of tactics. Under ordinary
circumstances they would have welcomed the
appearance of this more militant attitude, but
coming as it did, along with so much that was
unexpected, it startled them.
And now, on top of
all of these worries, when they reached home, Jesus
refused to eat. For hours he isolated himself in one
of the upper rooms. It was almost midnight when Joab,
the leader of the evangelists, returned and reported
that about one third of his associates had deserted
the cause. All through the evening loyal disciples
had come and gone, reporting that the revulsion of
feeling toward the Master was general in Capernaum.
The leaders from Jerusalem were not slow to feed
this feeling of disaffection and in every way
possible to seek to promote the movement away from
Jesus and his teachings. During these trying hours
the twelve women were in session over at Peter's
house. They were tremendously upset, but none of
them deserted.
It was a little
after midnight when Jesus came down from the upper
chamber and stood among the twelve and their
associates, numbering about thirty in all. He said:
"I recognize that this sifting of the kingdom
distresses you, but it is unavoidable. Still, after
all the training you have had, was there any good
reason why you should stumble at my words? Why is it
that you are filled with fear and consternation when
you see the kingdom being divested of these lukewarm
multitudes and these halfhearted disciples? Why do
you grieve when the new day is dawning for the
shining forth in new glory of the spiritual
teachings of the kingdom of heaven? If you find it
difficult to endure this test, what, then, will you
do when the Son of Man must return to the Father?
When and how will you prepare yourselves for the
time when I ascend to the place whence I came to
this world?
"My beloved, you
must remember that it is the spirit that quickens;
the flesh and all that pertains thereto is of little
profit. The words which I have spoken to you are
spirit and life. Be of good cheer! I have not
deserted you. Many shall be offended by the plain
speaking of these days. Already you have heard that
many of my disciples have turned back; they walk no
more with me. From the beginning I knew that these
halfhearted believers would fall out by the way. Did
I not choose you twelve men and set you apart as
ambassadors of the kingdom? And now at such a time
as this would you also desert? Let each of you look
to his own faith, for one of you stands in grave
danger." And when Jesus had finished speaking, Simon
Peter said: "Yes, Lord, we are sad and perplexed,
but we will never forsake you. You have taught us
the words of eternal life. We have believed in you
and followed with you all this time. We
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will not turn
back, for we know that you are sent by God." And as
Peter ceased speaking, they all with one accord
nodded their approval of his pledge of loyalty.
Then said Jesus:
"Go to your rest, for busy times are upon us; active
days are just ahead." |