PAPER 159
- THE DECAPOLIS TOUR
When Jesus and the
twelve arrived at Magadan Park, they found awaiting
them a group of almost one hundred evangelists and
disciples, including the women's corps, and they
were ready immediately to begin the teaching and
preaching tour of the cities of the Decapolis.
On this Thursday
morning, August 18, the Master called his followers
together and directed that each of the apostles
should associate himself with one of the twelve
evangelists, and that with others of the evangelists
they should go out in twelve groups to labor in the
cities and villages of the Decapolis. The women's
corps and others of the disciples he directed to
remain with him. Jesus allotted four weeks to this
tour, instructing his followers to return to Magadan
not later than Friday, September 16. He promised to
visit them often during this time. In the course of
this month these twelve groups labored in Gerasa,
Gamala, Hippos, Zaphon, Gadara, Abila, Edrei,
Philadelphia, Heshbon, Dium, Scythopolis, and many
other cities. Throughout this tour no miracles of
healing or other extraordinary events occurred.
1. THE
SERMON ON FORGIVENESS
One evening at
Hippos, in answer to a disciple's question, Jesus
taught the lesson on forgiveness. Said the Master:
"If a kindhearted
man has a hundred sheep and one of them goes astray,
does he not immediately leave the ninety and nine
and go out in search of the one that has gone
astray? And if he is a good shepherd, will he not
keep up his quest for the lost sheep until he finds
it? And then, when the shepherd has found his lost
sheep, he lays it over his shoulder and, going home
rejoicing, calls to his friends and neighbors,
`Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep that was
lost.' I declare that there is more joy in heaven
over one sinner who repents than over ninety and
nine righteous persons who need no repentance. Even
so, it is not the will of my Father in heaven that
one of these little ones should go astray, much less
that they should perish. In your religion God may
receive repentant sinners; in the gospel of the
kingdom the Father goes forth to find them even
before they have seriously thought of repentance.
"The Father in
heaven loves his children, and therefore should you
learn to love one another; the Father in heaven
forgives you your sins; therefore should you learn
to forgive one another. If your brother sins against
you, go to him and with tact and patience show him
his fault. And do all this between you and him
alone. If he will listen to you, then have you won
your brother. But if your brother will not hear you,
if he persists in the error of his way, go again to
him, taking with you one or two mutual friends that
you may thus have two or even
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three witnesses
to confirm your testimony and establish the fact
that you have dealt justly and mercifully with your
offending brother. Now if he refuses to hear your
brethren, you may tell the whole story to the
congregation, and then, if he refuses to hear the
brotherhood, let them take such action as they deem
wise; let such an unruly member become an outcast
from the kingdom. While you cannot pretend to sit in
judgment on the souls of your fellows, and while you
may not forgive sins or otherwise presume to usurp
the prerogatives of the supervisors of the heavenly
hosts, at the same time, it has been committed to
your hands that you should maintain temporal order
in the kingdom on earth. While you may not meddle
with the divine decrees concerning eternal life, you
shall determine the issues of conduct as they
concern the temporal welfare of the brotherhood on
earth. And so, in all these matters connected with
the discipline of the brotherhood, whatsoever you
shall decree on earth shall be recognized in heaven.
Although you cannot determine the eternal fate of
the individual, you may legislate regarding the
conduct of the group, for, where two or three of you
agree concerning any of these things and ask of me,
it shall be done for you if your petition is not
inconsistent with the will of my Father in heaven.
And all this is ever true, for, where two or three
believers are gathered together, there am I in the
midst of them."
Simon Peter was
the apostle in charge of the workers at Hippos, and
when he heard Jesus thus speak, he asked: "Lord, how
often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive
him? Until seven times?" And Jesus answered Peter:
"Not only seven times but even to seventy times and
seven. Therefore may the kingdom of heaven be
likened to a certain king who ordered a financial
reckoning with his stewards. And when they had begun
to conduct this examination of accounts, one of his
chief retainers was brought before him confessing
that he owed his king ten thousand talents. Now this
officer of the king's court pleaded that hard times
had come upon him, and that he did not have
wherewith to pay this obligation. And so the king
commanded that his property be confiscated, and that
his children be sold to pay his debt. When this
chief steward heard this stern decree, he fell down
on his face before the king and implored him to have
mercy and grant him more time, saying, `Lord, have a
little more patience with me, and I will pay you
all.' And when the king looked upon this negligent
servant and his family, he was moved with
compassion. He ordered that he should be released,
and that the loan should be wholly forgiven.
"And this chief
steward, having thus received mercy and forgiveness
at the hands of the king, went about his business,
and finding one of his subordinate stewards who owed
him a mere hundred denarii, he laid hold upon him
and, taking him by the throat, said, `Pay me all you
owe.' And then did this fellow steward fall down
before the chief steward and, beseeching him, said:
`Only have patience with me, and I will presently be
able to pay you.' But the chief steward would not
show mercy to his fellow steward but rather had him
cast in prison until he should pay his debt. When
his fellow servants saw what had happened, they were
so distressed that they went and told their lord and
master, the king. When the king heard of the doings
of his chief steward, he called this ungrateful and
unforgiving man before him and said: `You are a
wicked and unworthy steward. When you sought for
compassion, I freely forgave you your entire debt.
Why did you not also show mercy to your fellow
steward, even as I showed mercy to you?' And the
king was so very angry that he delivered his
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ungrateful chief
steward to the jailers that they might hold him
until he had paid all that was due. And even so
shall my heavenly Father show the more abundant
mercy to those who freely show mercy to their
fellows. How can you come to God asking
consideration for your shortcomings when you are
wont to chastise your brethren for being guilty of
these same human frailties? I say to all of you:
Freely you have received the good things of the
kingdom; therefore freely give to your fellows on
earth."
Thus did Jesus
teach the dangers and illustrate the unfairness of
sitting in personal judgment upon one's fellows.
Discipline must be maintained, justice must be
administered, but in all these matters the wisdom of
the brotherhood should prevail. Jesus invested
legislative and judicial authority in the group,
not in the individual. Even this investment
of authority in the group must not be exercised as
personal authority. There is always danger that the
verdict of an individual may be warped by prejudice
or distorted by passion. Group judgment is more
likely to remove the dangers and eliminate the
unfairness of personal bias. Jesus sought always to
minimize the elements of unfairness, retaliation,
and vengeance.
[The use of the
term seventy-seven as an illustration of mercy and
forbearance was derived from the Scriptures
referring to Lamech's exultation because of the
metal weapons of his son Tubal-Cain, who, comparing
these superior instruments with those of his
enemies, exclaimed: "If Cain, with no weapon in his
hand, was avenged seven times, I shall now be
avenged seventy-seven."]
2. THE
STRANGE PREACHER
Jesus went over to
Gamala to visit John and those who worked with him
at that place. That evening, after the session of
questions and answers, John said to Jesus: "Master,
yesterday I went over to Ashtaroth to see a man who
was teaching in your name and even claiming to be
able to cast out devils. Now this fellow had never
been with us, neither does he follow after us;
therefore I forbade him to do such things." Then
said Jesus: "Forbid him not. Do you not perceive
that this gospel of the kingdom shall presently be
proclaimed in all the world? How can you expect that
all who will believe the gospel shall be subject to
your direction? Rejoice that already our teaching
has begun to manifest itself beyond the bounds of
our personal influence. Do you not see, John, that
those who profess to do great works in my name must
eventually support our cause? They certainly will
not be quick to speak evil of me. My son, in matters
of this sort it would be better for you to reckon
that he who is not against us is for us. In the
generations to come many who are not wholly worthy
will do many strange things in my name, but I will
not forbid them. I tell you that, even when a cup of
cold water is given to a thirsty soul, the Father's
messengers shall ever make record of such a service
of love."
This instruction
greatly perplexed John. Had he not heard the Master
say, "He who is not with me is against me"? And he
did not perceive that in this case Jesus was
referring to man's personal relation to the
spiritual teachings of the kingdom, while in the
other case reference was made to the outward and
far-flung social relations of believers regarding
the questions of administrative control and the
jurisdiction of one group of believers over the work
of other groups which would eventually compose the
forthcoming world-wide brotherhood.
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But John
oftentimes recounted this experience in connection
with his subsequent labors in behalf of the kingdom.
Nevertheless, many times did the apostles take
offense at those who made bold to teach in the
Master's name. To them it always seemed
inappropriate that those who had never sat at Jesus'
feet should dare to teach in his name.
This man whom John
forbade to teach and work in Jesus' name did not
heed the apostle's injunction. He went right on with
his efforts and raised up a considerable company of
believers at Kanata before going on into
Mesopotamia. This man, Aden, had been led to believe
in Jesus through the testimony of the demented man
whom Jesus healed near Kheresa, and who so
confidently believed that the supposed evil spirits
which the Master cast out of him entered the herd of
swine and rushed them headlong over the cliff to
their destruction.
3.
INSTRUCTION FOR TEACHERS AND BELIEVERS
At Edrei, where
Thomas and his associates labored, Jesus spent a day
and a night and, in the course of the evening's
discussion, gave expression to the principles which
should guide those who preach truth, and which
should activate all who teach the gospel of the
kingdom. Summarized and restated in modern
phraseology, Jesus taught:
Always respect the
personality of man. Never should a righteous cause
be promoted by force; spiritual victories can be won
only by spiritual power. This injunction against the
employment of material influences refers to psychic
force as well as to physical force. Overpowering
arguments and mental superiority are not to be
employed to coerce men and women into the kingdom.
Man's mind is not to be crushed by the mere weight
of logic or overawed by shrewd eloquence. While
emotion as a factor in human decisions cannot be
wholly eliminated, it should not be directly
appealed to in the teachings of those who would
advance the cause of the kingdom. Make your appeals
directly to the divine spirit that dwells within the
minds of men. Do not appeal to fear, pity, or mere
sentiment. In appealing to men, be fair; exercise
self-control and exhibit due restraint; show proper
respect for the personalities of your pupils.
Remember that I have said: "Behold, I stand at the
door and knock, and if any man will open, I will
come in."
In bringing men
into the kingdom, do not lessen or destroy their
self-respect. While overmuch self-respect may
destroy proper humility and end in pride, conceit,
and arrogance, the loss of self-respect often ends
in paralysis of the will. It is the purpose of this
gospel to restore self-respect to those who have
lost it and to restrain it in those who have it.
Make not the mistake of only condemning the wrongs
in the lives of your pupils; remember also to accord
generous recognition for the most praiseworthy
things in their lives. Forget not that I will stop
at nothing to restore self-respect to those who have
lost it, and who really desire to regain it.
Take care that you
do not wound the self-respect of timid and fearful
souls. Do not indulge in sarcasm at the expense of
my simple-minded brethren. Be not cynical with my
fear-ridden children. Idleness is destructive of
self-respect; therefore, admonish your brethren ever
to keep busy at their chosen tasks, and put forth
every effort to secure work for those who find
themselves without employment.
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Never be guilty
of such unworthy tactics as endeavoring to frighten
men and women into the kingdom. A loving father does
not frighten his children into yielding obedience to
his just requirements.
Sometime the
children of the kingdom will realize that strong
feelings of emotion are not equivalent to the
leadings of the divine spirit. To be strongly and
strangely impressed to do something or to go to a
certain place, does not necessarily mean that such
impulses are the leadings of the indwelling spirit.
Forewarn all
believers regarding the fringe of conflict which
must be traversed by all who pass from the life as
it is lived in the flesh to the higher life as it is
lived in the spirit. To those who live quite wholly
within either realm, there is little conflict or
confusion, but all are doomed to experience more or
less uncertainty during the times of transition
between the two levels of living. In entering the
kingdom, you cannot escape its responsibilities or
avoid its obligations, but remember: The gospel yoke
is easy and the burden of truth is light.
The world is
filled with hungry souls who famish in the very
presence of the bread of life; men die searching for
the very God who lives within them. Men seek for the
treasures of the kingdom with yearning hearts and
weary feet when they are all within the immediate
grasp of living faith. Faith is to religion what
sails are to a ship; it is an addition of power, not
an added burden of life. There is but one struggle
for those who enter the kingdom, and that is to
fight the good fight of faith. The believer has only
one battle, and that is against doubt--unbelief.
In preaching the
gospel of the kingdom, you are simply teaching
friendship with God. And this fellowship will appeal
alike to men and women in that both will find that
which most truly satisfies their characteristic
longings and ideals. Tell my children that I am not
only tender of their feelings and patient with their
frailties, but that I am also ruthless with sin and
intolerant of iniquity. I am indeed meek and humble
in the presence of my Father, but I am equally and
relentlessly inexorable where there is deliberate
evildoing and sinful rebellion against the will of
my Father in heaven.
You shall not
portray your teacher as a man of sorrows. Future
generations shall know also the radiance of our joy,
the buoyance of our good will, and the inspiration
of our good humor. We proclaim a message of good
news which is infectious in its transforming power.
Our religion is throbbing with new life and new
meanings. Those who accept this teaching are filled
with joy and in their hearts are constrained to
rejoice evermore. Increasing happiness is always the
experience of all who are certain about God.
Teach all
believers to avoid leaning upon the insecure props
of false sympathy. You cannot develop strong
characters out of the indulgence of self-pity;
honestly endeavor to avoid the deceptive influence
of mere fellowship in misery. Extend sympathy to the
brave and courageous while you withhold overmuch
pity from those cowardly souls who only
halfheartedly stand up before the trials of living.
Offer not consolation to those who lie down before
their troubles without a struggle. Sympathize not
with your fellows merely that they may sympathize
with you in return.
When my children
once become self-conscious of the assurance of the
divine presence, such a faith will expand the mind,
ennoble the soul, reinforce the personality, augment
the happiness, deepen the spirit perception, and
enhance the power to love and be loved.
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Teach all
believers that those who enter the kingdom are not
thereby rendered immune to the accidents of time or
to the ordinary catastrophes of nature. Believing
the gospel will not prevent getting into trouble,
but it will insure that you shall be unafraid
when trouble does overtake you. If you dare to
believe in me and wholeheartedly proceed to follow
after me, you shall most certainly by so doing enter
upon the sure pathway to trouble. I do not promise
to deliver you from the waters of adversity, but I
do promise to go with you through all of them.
And much more did
Jesus teach this group of believers before they made
ready for the night's sleep. And they who heard
these sayings treasured them in their hearts and did
often recite them for the edification of the
apostles and disciples who were not present when
they were spoken.
4. THE
TALK WITH NATHANIEL
And then went
Jesus over to Abila, where Nathaniel and his
associates labored. Nathaniel was much bothered by
some of Jesus' pronouncements which seemed to
detract from the authority of the recognized Hebrew
scriptures. Accordingly, on this night, after the
usual period of questions and answers, Nathaniel
took Jesus away from the others and asked: "Master,
could you trust me to know the truth about the
Scriptures? I observe that you teach us only a
portion of the sacred writings--the best as I view
it--and I infer that you reject the teachings of the
rabbis to the effect that the words of the law are
the very words of God, having been with God in
heaven even before the times of Abraham and Moses.
What is the truth about the Scriptures?" When Jesus
heard the question of his bewildered apostle, he
answered:
"Nathaniel, you
have rightly judged; I do not regard the Scriptures
as do the rabbis. I will talk with you about this
matter on condition that you do not relate these
things to your brethren, who are not all prepared to
receive this teaching. The words of the law of Moses
and the teachings of the Scriptures were not in
existence before Abraham. Only in recent times have
the Scriptures been gathered together as we now have
them. While they contain the best of the higher
thoughts and longings of the Jewish people, they
also contain much that is far from being
representative of the character and teachings of the
Father in heaven; wherefore must I choose from among
the better teachings those truths which are to be
gleaned for the gospel of the kingdom.
"These writings
are the work of men, some of them holy men, others
not so holy. The teachings of these books represent
the views and extent of enlightenment of the times
in which they had their origin. As a revelation of
truth, the last are more dependable than the first.
The Scriptures are faulty and altogether human in
origin, but mistake not, they do constitute the best
collection of religious wisdom and spiritual truth
to be found in all the world at this time.
"Many of these
books were not written by the persons whose names
they bear, but that in no way detracts from the
value of the truths which they contain. If the story
of Jonah should not be a fact, even if Jonah had
never lived, still would the profound truth of this
narrative, the love of God for Nineveh and the
so-called heathen, be none the less precious in the
eyes of all those who love their
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fellow men. The
Scriptures are sacred because they present the
thoughts and acts of men who were searching for God,
and who in these writings left on record their
highest concepts of righteousness, truth, and
holiness. The Scriptures contain much that is true,
very much, but in the light of your present
teaching, you know that these writings also contain
much that is misrepresentative of the Father in
heaven, the loving God I have come to reveal to all
the worlds.
"Nathaniel, never
permit yourself for one moment to believe the
Scripture records which tell you that the God of
love directed your forefathers to go forth in battle
to slay all their enemies--men, women, and children.
Such records are the words of men, not very holy
men, and they are not the word of God. The
Scriptures always have, and always will, reflect the
intellectual, moral, and spiritual status of those
who create them. Have you not noted that the
concepts of Yahweh grow in beauty and glory as the
prophets make their records from Samuel to Isaiah?
And you should remember that the Scriptures are
intended for religious instruction and spiritual
guidance. They are not the works of either
historians or philosophers.
"The thing most
deplorable is not merely this erroneous idea of the
absolute perfection of the Scripture record and the
infallibility of its teachings, but rather the
confusing misinterpretation of these sacred writings
by the tradition-enslaved scribes and Pharisees at
Jerusalem. And now will they employ both the
doctrine of the inspiration of the Scriptures and
their misinterpretations thereof in their determined
effort to withstand these newer teachings of the
gospel of the kingdom. Nathaniel, never forget, the
Father does not limit the revelation of truth to any
one generation or to any one people. Many earnest
seekers after the truth have been, and will continue
to be, confused and disheartened by these doctrines
of the perfection of the Scriptures.
"The authority of
truth is the very spirit that indwells its living
manifestations, and not the dead words of the less
illuminated and supposedly inspired men of another
generation. And even if these holy men of old lived
inspired and spirit-filled lives, that does not mean
that their words were similarly spiritually
inspired. Today we make no record of the teachings
of this gospel of the kingdom lest, when I have
gone, you speedily become divided up into sundry
groups of truth contenders as a result of the
diversity of your interpretation of my teachings.
For this generation it is best that we live
these truths while we shun the making of records.
"Mark you well my
words, Nathaniel, nothing which human nature has
touched can be regarded as infallible. Through the
mind of man divine truth may indeed shine forth, but
always of relative purity and partial divinity. The
creature may crave infallibility, but only the
Creators possess it.
"But the greatest
error of the teaching about the Scriptures is the
doctrine of their being sealed books of mystery and
wisdom which only the wise minds of the nation dare
to interpret. The revelations of divine truth are
not sealed except by human ignorance, bigotry, and
narrow-minded intolerance. The light of the
Scriptures is only dimmed by prejudice and darkened
by superstition. A false fear of sacredness has
prevented religion from being safeguarded by common
sense. The fear of the authority of the sacred
writings of the past effectively prevents the honest
souls of today from accepting the new light of the
gospel, the light which these very God-knowing men
of another generation so intensely longed to see.
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"But the saddest
feature of all is the fact that some of the teachers
of the sanctity of this traditionalism know this
very truth. They more or less fully understand these
limitations of Scripture, but they are moral
cowards, intellectually dishonest. They know the
truth regarding the sacred writings, but they prefer
to withhold such disturbing facts from the people.
And thus do they pervert and distort the Scriptures,
making them the guide to slavish details of the
daily life and an authority in things nonspiritual
instead of appealing to the sacred writings as the
repository of the moral wisdom, religious
inspiration, and the spiritual teaching of the
God-knowing men of other generations."
Nathaniel was
enlightened, and shocked, by the Master's
pronouncement. He long pondered this talk in the
depths of his soul, but he told no man concerning
this conference until after Jesus' ascension; and
even then he feared to impart the full story of the
Master's instruction.
5. THE
POSITIVE NATURE OF JESUS' RELIGION
At Philadelphia,
where James was working, Jesus taught the disciples
about the positive nature of the gospel of the
kingdom. When, in the course of his remarks, he
intimated that some parts of the Scripture were more
truth-containing than others and admonished his
hearers to feed their souls upon the best of the
spiritual food, James interrupted the Master,
asking: "Would you be good enough, Master, to
suggest to us how we may choose the better passages
from the Scriptures for our personal edification?"
And Jesus replied: "Yes, James, when you read the
Scriptures look for those eternally true and
divinely beautiful teachings, such as:
"Create in me a
clean heart, O Lord.
"The Lord is my
shepherd; I shall not want.
"You should love
your neighbor as yourself.
"For I, the Lord
your God, will hold your right hand, saying, fear
not; I will help you.
"Neither shall the
nations learn war any more."
And this is
illustrative of the way Jesus, day by day,
appropriated the cream of the Hebrew scriptures for
the instruction of his followers and for inclusion
in the teachings of the new gospel of the kingdom.
Other religions had suggested the thought of the
nearness of God to man, but Jesus made the care of
God for man like the solicitude of a loving father
for the welfare of his dependent children and then
made this teaching the cornerstone of his religion.
And thus did the doctrine of the fatherhood of God
make imperative the practice of the brotherhood of
man. The worship of God and the service of man
became the sum and substance of his religion. Jesus
took the best of the Jewish religion and translated
it to a worthy setting in the new teachings of the
gospel of the kingdom.
Jesus put the
spirit of positive action into the passive doctrines
of the Jewish religion. In the place of negative
compliance with ceremonial requirements, Jesus
enjoined the positive doing of that which his new
religion required of those who accepted it. Jesus'
religion consisted not merely in believing,
but in actually doing, those things which the
gospel required. He did not teach that the essence
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of his religion
consisted in social service, but rather that social
service was one of the certain effects of the
possession of the spirit of true religion.
Jesus did not
hesitate to appropriate the better half of a
Scripture while he repudiated the lesser portion.
His great exhortation, "Love your neighbor as
yourself," he took from the Scripture which reads:
"You shall not take vengeance against the children
of your people, but you shall love your neighbor as
yourself." Jesus appropriated the positive portion
of this Scripture while rejecting the negative part.
He even opposed negative or purely passive
nonresistance. Said he: "When an enemy smites you on
one cheek, do not stand there dumb and passive but
in positive attitude turn the other; that is, do the
best thing possible actively to lead your brother in
error away from the evil paths into the better ways
of righteous living." Jesus required his followers
to react positively and aggressively to every life
situation. The turning of the other cheek, or
whatever act that may typify, demands initiative,
necessitates vigorous, active, and courageous
expression of the believer's personality.
Jesus did not
advocate the practice of negative submission to the
indignities of those who might purposely seek to
impose upon the practitioners of nonresistance to
evil, but rather that his followers should be wise
and alert in the quick and positive reaction of good
to evil to the end that they might effectively
overcome evil with good. Forget not, the truly good
is invariably more powerful than the most malignant
evil. The Master taught a positive standard of
righteousness: "Whosoever wishes to be my disciple,
let him disregard himself and take up the full
measure of his responsibilities daily to follow me."
And he so lived himself in that "he went about doing
good." And this aspect of the gospel was well
illustrated by many parables which he later spoke to
his followers. He never exhorted his followers
patiently to bear their obligations but rather with
energy and enthusiasm to live up to the full measure
of their human responsibilities and divine
privileges in the kingdom of God.
When Jesus
instructed his apostles that they should, when one
unjustly took away the coat, offer the other
garment, he referred not so much to a literal second
coat as to the idea of doing something positive
to save the wrongdoer in the place of the olden
advice to retaliate--"an eye for an eye" and so on.
Jesus abhorred the idea either of retaliation or of
becoming just a passive sufferer or victim of
injustice. On this occasion he taught them the three
ways of contending with, and resisting, evil:
1. To return evil
for evil--the positive but unrighteous method.
2. To suffer evil
without complaint and without resistance--the purely
negative method.
3. To return good
for evil, to assert the will so as to become master
of the situation, to overcome evil with good--the
positive and righteous method.
One of the
apostles once asked: "Master, what should I do if a
stranger forced me to carry his pack for a mile?"
Jesus answered: "Do not sit down and sigh for relief
while you berate the stranger under your breath.
Righteousness comes not from such passive attitudes.
If you can think of nothing more effectively
positive to do, you can at least carry the pack a
second mile. That will of a certainty challenge the
unrighteous and ungodly stranger."
The Jews had heard
of a God who would forgive repentant sinners and try
to forget their misdeeds, but not until Jesus came,
did men hear about a God who went in search of lost
sheep, who took the initiative in looking for
sinners, and
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who rejoiced when
he found them willing to return to the Father's
house. This positive note in religion Jesus extended
even to his prayers. And he converted the negative
golden rule into a positive admonition of human
fairness.
In all his
teaching Jesus unfailingly avoided distracting
details. He shunned flowery language and avoided the
mere poetic imagery of a play upon words. He
habitually put large meanings into small
expressions. For purposes of illustration Jesus
reversed the current meanings of many terms, such as
salt, leaven, fishing, and little children. He most
effectively employed the antithesis, comparing the
minute to the infinite and so on. His pictures were
striking, such as, "The blind leading the blind."
But the greatest strength to be found in his
illustrative teaching was its naturalness. Jesus
brought the philosophy of religion from heaven down
to earth. He portrayed the elemental needs of the
soul with a new insight and a new bestowal of
affection.
6. THE
RETURN TO MAGADAN
The mission of
four weeks in the Decapolis was moderately
successful. Hundreds of souls were received into the
kingdom, and the apostles and evangelists had a
valuable experience in carrying on their work
without the inspiration of the immediate personal
presence of Jesus.
On Friday,
September 16, the entire corps of workers assembled
by prearrangement at Magadan Park. On the Sabbath
day a council of more than one hundred believers was
held at which the future plans for extending the
work of the kingdom were fully considered. The
messengers of David were present and made reports
concerning the welfare of the believers throughout
Judea, Samaria, Galilee, and adjoining districts.
Few of Jesus'
followers at this time fully appreciated the great
value of the services of the messenger corps. Not
only did the messengers keep the believers
throughout Palestine in touch with each other and
with Jesus and the apostles, but during these dark
days they also served as collectors of funds, not
only for the sustenance of Jesus and his associates,
but also for the support of the families of the
twelve apostles and the twelve evangelists.
About this time
Abner moved his base of operations from Hebron to
Bethlehem, and this latter place was also the
headquarters in Judea for David's messengers. David
maintained an overnight relay messenger service
between Jerusalem and Bethsaida. These runners left
Jerusalem each evening, relaying at Sychar and
Scythopolis, arriving in Bethsaida by breakfast time
the next morning.
Jesus and his
associates now prepared to take a week's rest before
they made ready to start upon the last epoch of
their labors in behalf of the kingdom. This was
their last rest, for the Perean mission developed
into a campaign of preaching and teaching which
extended right on down to the time of their arrival
at Jerusalem and of the enactment of the closing
episodes of Jesus' earth career. |