PAPER 166
- LAST VISIT TO NORTHERN PEREA
From February 11
to 20, Jesus and the twelve made a tour of all the
cities and villages of northern Perea where the
associates of Abner and the members of the women's
corps were working. They found these messengers of
the gospel meeting with success, and Jesus
repeatedly called the attention of his apostles to
the fact that the gospel of the kingdom could spread
without the accompaniment of miracles and wonders.
This entire
mission of three months in Perea was successfully
carried on with little help from the twelve
apostles, and the gospel from this time on
reflected, not so much Jesus' personality, as his
teachings. But his followers did not long follow
his instructions, for soon after Jesus' death and
resurrection they departed from his teachings and
began to build the early church around the
miraculous concepts and the glorified memories of
his divine-human personality.
1. THE
PHARISEES AT RAGABA
On Sabbath,
February 18, Jesus was at Ragaba, where there lived
a wealthy Pharisee named Nathaniel; and since quite
a number of his fellow Pharisees were following
Jesus and the twelve around the country, he made a
breakfast on this Sabbath morning for all of them,
about twenty in number, and invited Jesus as the
guest of honor.
By the time Jesus
arrived at this breakfast, most of the Pharisees,
with two or three lawyers, were already there and
seated at the table. The Master immediately took his
seat at the left of Nathaniel without going to the
water basins to wash his hands. Many of the
Pharisees, especially those favorable to Jesus'
teachings, knew that he washed his hands only for
purposes of cleanliness, that he abhorred these
purely ceremonial performances; so they were not
surprised at his coming directly to the table
without having twice washed his hands. But Nathaniel
was shocked by this failure of the Master to comply
with the strict requirements of Pharisaic practice.
Neither did Jesus wash his hands, as did the
Pharisees, after each course of food nor at the end
of the meal.
After considerable
whispering between Nathaniel and an unfriendly
Pharisee on his right and after much lifting of
eyebrows and sneering curling of lips by those who
sat opposite the Master, Jesus finally said: "I had
thought that you invited me to this house to break
bread with you and perchance to inquire of me
concerning the proclamation of the new gospel of the
kingdom of God; but I perceive that you have brought
me here to witness an exhibition of ceremonial
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devotion to your
own self-righteousness. That service you have now
done me; what next will you honor me with as your
guest on this occasion?"
When the Master
had thus spoken, they cast their eyes upon the table
and remained silent. And since no one spoke, Jesus
continued: "Many of you Pharisees are here with me
as friends, some are even my disciples, but the
majority of the Pharisees are persistent in their
refusal to see the light and acknowledge the truth,
even when the work of the gospel is brought before
them in great power. How carefully you cleanse the
outside of the cups and the platters while the
spiritual-food vessels are filthy and polluted! You
make sure to present a pious and holy appearance to
the people, but your inner souls are filled with
self-righteousness, covetousness, extortion, and all
manner of spiritual wickedness. Your leaders even
dare to plot and plan the murder of the Son of Man.
Do not you foolish men understand that the God of
heaven looks at the inner motives of the soul as
well as on your outer pretenses and your pious
professions? Think not that the giving of alms and
the paying of tithes will cleanse you from
unrighteousness and enable you to stand clean in the
presence of the Judge of all men. Woe upon you
Pharisees who have persisted in rejecting the light
of life! You are meticulous in tithing and
ostentatious in almsgiving, but you knowingly spurn
the visitation of God and reject the revelation of
his love. Though it is all right for you to give
attention to these minor duties, you should not have
left these weightier requirements undone. Woe upon
all who shun justice, spurn mercy, and reject truth!
Woe upon all those who despise the revelation of the
Father while they seek the chief seats in the
synagogue and crave flattering salutations in the
market places!"
When Jesus would
have risen to depart, one of the lawyers who was at
the table, addressing him, said: "But, Master, in
some of your statements you reproach us also. Is
there nothing good in the scribes, the Pharisees, or
the lawyers?" And Jesus, standing, replied to the
lawyer: "You, like the Pharisees, delight in the
first places at the feasts and in wearing long robes
while you put heavy burdens, grievous to be borne,
on men's shoulders. And when the souls of men
stagger under these heavy burdens, you will not so
much as lift with one of your fingers. Woe upon you
who take your greatest delight in building tombs for
the prophets your fathers killed! And that you
consent to what your fathers did is made manifest
when you now plan to kill those who come in this day
doing what the prophets did in their
day--proclaiming the righteousness of God and
revealing the mercy of the heavenly Father. But of
all the generations that are past, the blood of the
prophets and the apostles shall be required of this
perverse and self-righteous generation. Woe upon all
of you lawyers who have taken away the key of
knowledge from the common people! You yourselves
refuse to enter into the way of truth, and at the
same time you would hinder all others who seek to
enter therein. But you cannot thus shut up the doors
of the kingdom of heaven; these we have opened to
all who have the faith to enter, and these portals
of mercy shall not be closed by the prejudice and
arrogance of false teachers and untrue shepherds who
are like whited sepulchres which, while outwardly
they appear beautiful, are inwardly full of dead
men's bones and all manner of spiritual
uncleanness."
And when Jesus had
finished speaking at Nathaniel's table, he went out
of the house without partaking of food. And of the
Pharisees who heard these words, some became
believers in his teaching and entered into the
kingdom,
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but the larger
number persisted in the way of darkness, becoming
all the more determined to lie in wait for him that
they might catch some of his words which could be
used to bring him to trial and judgment before the
Sanhedrin at Jerusalem.
There were just
three things to which the Pharisees paid particular
attention:
1. The practice of
strict tithing.
2. Scrupulous
observance of the laws of purification.
3. Avoidance of
association with all non-Pharisees.
At this time Jesus
sought to expose the spiritual barrenness of the
first two practices, while he reserved his remarks
designed to rebuke the Pharisees' refusal to engage
in social intercourse with non-Pharisees for another
and subsequent occasion when he would again be
dining with many of these same men.
2. THE
TEN LEPERS
The next day Jesus
went with the twelve over to Amathus, near the
border of Samaria, and as they approached the city,
they encountered a group of ten lepers who sojourned
near this place. Nine of this group were Jews, one a
Samaritan. Ordinarily these Jews would have
refrained from all association or contact with this
Samaritan, but their common affliction was more than
enough to overcome all religious prejudice. They had
heard much of Jesus and his earlier miracles of
healing, and since the seventy made a practice of
announcing the time of Jesus' expected arrival when
the Master was out with the twelve on these tours,
the ten lepers had been made aware that he was
expected to appear in this vicinity at about this
time; and they were, accordingly, posted here on the
outskirts of the city where they hoped to attract
his attention and ask for healing. When the lepers
saw Jesus drawing near them, not daring to approach
him, they stood afar off and cried to him: "Master,
have mercy on us; cleanse us from our affliction.
Heal us as you have healed others."
Jesus had just
been explaining to the twelve why the gentiles of
Perea, together with the less orthodox Jews, were
more willing to believe the gospel preached by the
seventy than were the more orthodox and
tradition-bound Jews of Judea. He had called their
attention to the fact that their message had
likewise been more readily received by the
Galileans, and even by the Samaritans. But the
twelve apostles were hardly yet willing to entertain
kind feelings for the long-despised Samaritans.
Accordingly, when
Simon Zelotes observed the Samaritan among the
lepers, he sought to induce the Master to pass on
into the city without even hesitating to exchange
greetings with them. Said Jesus to Simon: "But what
if the Samaritan loves God as well as the Jews?
Should we sit in judgment on our fellow men? Who can
tell? if we make these ten men whole, perhaps the
Samaritan will prove more grateful even than the
Jews. Do you feel certain about your opinions,
Simon?" And Simon quickly replied, "If you cleanse
them, you will soon find out." And Jesus replied:
"So shall it be, Simon, and you will soon know the
truth regarding the gratitude of men and the loving
mercy of God."
Jesus, going near
the lepers, said: "If you would be made whole, go
forthwith and show yourselves to the priests as
required by the law of Moses." And
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as they went,
they were made whole. But when the Samaritan saw
that he was being healed, he turned back and, going
in quest of Jesus, began to glorify God with a loud
voice. And when he had found the Master, he fell on
his knees at his feet and gave thanks for his
cleansing. The nine others, the Jews, had also
discovered their healing, and while they also were
grateful for their cleansing, they continued on
their way to show themselves to the priests.
As the Samaritan
remained kneeling at Jesus' feet, the Master,
looking about at the twelve, especially at Simon
Zelotes, said: "Were not ten cleansed? Where, then,
are the other nine, the Jews? Only one, this alien,
has returned to give glory to God." And then he said
to the Samaritan, "Arise and go your way; your faith
has made you whole."
Jesus looked again
at his apostles as the stranger departed. And the
apostles all looked at Jesus, save Simon Zelotes,
whose eyes were downcast. The twelve said not a
word. Neither did Jesus speak; it was not necessary
that he should.
Though all ten of
these men really believed they had leprosy, only
four were thus afflicted. The other six were cured
of a skin disease which had been mistaken for
leprosy. But the Samaritan really had leprosy.
Jesus enjoined the
twelve to say nothing about the cleansing of the
lepers, and as they went on into Amathus, he
remarked: "You see how it is that the children of
the house, even when they are insubordinate to their
Father's will, take their blessings for granted.
They think it a small matter if they neglect to give
thanks when the Father bestows healing upon them,
but the strangers, when they receive gifts from the
head of the house, are filled with wonder and are
constrained to give thanks in recognition of the
good things bestowed upon them." And still the
apostles said nothing in reply to the Master's
words.
3. THE
SERMON AT GERASA
As Jesus and the
twelve visited with the messengers of the kingdom at
Gerasa, one of the Pharisees who believed in him
asked this question: "Lord, will there be few or
many really saved?" And Jesus, answering, said:
"You have been
taught that only the children of Abraham will be
saved; that only the gentiles of adoption can hope
for salvation. Some of you have reasoned that, since
the Scriptures record that only Caleb and Joshua
from among all the hosts that went out of Egypt
lived to enter the promised land, only a
comparatively few of those who seek the kingdom of
heaven shall find entrance thereto.
"You also have
another saying among you, and one that contains much
truth: That the way which leads to eternal life is
straight and narrow, that the door which leads
thereto is likewise narrow so that, of those who
seek salvation, few can find entrance through this
door. You also have a teaching that the way which
leads to destruction is broad, that the entrance
thereto is wide, and that there are many who choose
to go this way. And this proverb is not without its
meaning. But I declare that salvation is first a
matter of your personal choosing. Even if the door
to the way of life is narrow, it is wide enough to
admit all who sincerely seek to enter, for I am that
door. And the Son will never refuse entrance to any
child of the universe who, by faith, seeks to find
the Father through the Son.
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"But herein is
the danger to all who would postpone their entrance
into the kingdom while they continue to pursue the
pleasures of immaturity and indulge the
satisfactions of selfishness: Having refused to
enter the kingdom as a spiritual experience, they
may subsequently seek entrance thereto when the
glory of the better way becomes revealed in the age
to come. And when, therefore, those who spurned the
kingdom when I came in the likeness of humanity seek
to find an entrance when it is revealed in the
likeness of divinity, then will I say to all such
selfish ones: I know not whence you are. You had
your chance to prepare for this heavenly
citizenship, but you refused all such proffers of
mercy; you rejected all invitations to come while
the door was open. Now, to you who have refused
salvation, the door is shut. This door is not open
to those who would enter the kingdom for selfish
glory. Salvation is not for those who are unwilling
to pay the price of wholehearted dedication to doing
my Father's will. When in spirit and soul you have
turned your backs upon the Father's kingdom, it is
useless in mind and body to stand before this door
and knock, saying, `Lord, open to us; we would also
be great in the kingdom.' Then will I declare that
you are not of my fold. I will not receive you to be
among those who have fought the good fight of faith
and won the reward of unselfish service in the
kingdom on earth. And when you say, `Did we not eat
and drink with you, and did you not teach in our
streets?' then shall I again declare that you are
spiritual strangers; that we were not fellow
servants in the Father's ministry of mercy on earth;
that I do not know you; and then shall the Judge of
all the earth say to you: `Depart from us, all you
who have taken delight in the works of iniquity.'
"But fear not;
every one who sincerely desires to find eternal life
by entrance into the kingdom of God shall certainly
find such everlasting salvation. But you who refuse
this salvation will some day see the prophets of the
seed of Abraham sit down with the believers of the
gentile nations in this glorified kingdom to partake
of the bread of life and to refresh themselves with
the water thereof. And they who shall thus take the
kingdom in spiritual power and by the persistent
assaults of living faith will come from the north
and the south and from the east and the west. And,
behold, many who are first will be last, and those
who are last will many times be first."
This was indeed a
new and strange version of the old and familiar
proverb of the straight and narrow way.
Slowly the
apostles and many of the disciples were learning the
meaning of Jesus' early declaration: "Unless you are
born again, born of the spirit, you cannot enter the
kingdom of God." Nevertheless, to all who are honest
of heart and sincere in faith, it remains eternally
true: "Behold, I stand at the doors of men's hearts
and knock, and if any man will open to me, I will
come in and sup with him and will feed him with the
bread of life; we shall be one in spirit and
purpose, and so shall we ever be brethren in the
long and fruitful service of the search for the
Paradise Father." And so, whether few or many are to
be saved altogether depends on whether few or many
will heed the invitation: "I am the door, I am the
new and living way, and whosoever wills may enter to
embark upon the endless truth-search for eternal
life."
Even the apostles
were unable fully to comprehend his teaching as to
the necessity for using spiritual force for the
purpose of breaking through all material resistance
and for surmounting every earthly obstacle which
might chance to stand in the way of grasping the
all-important spiritual values of the new life in
the spirit as the liberated sons of God.
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4.
TEACHING ABOUT ACCIDENTS
While most
Palestinians ate only two meals a day, it was the
custom of Jesus and the apostles, when on a journey,
to pause at midday for rest and refreshment. And it
was at such a noontide stop on the way to
Philadelphia that Thomas asked Jesus: "Master, from
hearing your remarks as we journeyed this morning, I
would like to inquire whether spiritual beings are
concerned in the production of strange and
extraordinary events in the material world and,
further, to ask whether the angels and other spirit
beings are able to prevent accidents."
In answer to
Thomas's inquiry, Jesus said: "Have I been so long
with you, and yet you continue to ask me such
questions? Have you failed to observe how the Son of
Man lives as one with you and consistently refuses
to employ the forces of heaven for his personal
sustenance? Do we not all live by the same means
whereby all men exist? Do you see the power of the
spiritual world manifested in the material life of
this world, save for the revelation of the Father
and the sometime healing of his afflicted children?
"All too long have
your fathers believed that prosperity was the token
of divine approval; that adversity was the proof of
God's displeasure. I declare that such beliefs are
superstitions. Do you not observe that far greater
numbers of the poor joyfully receive the gospel and
immediately enter the kingdom? If riches evidence
divine favor, why do the rich so many times refuse
to believe this good news from heaven?
"The Father causes
his rain to fall on the just and the unjust; the sun
likewise shines on the righteous and the
unrighteous. You know about those Galileans whose
blood Pilate mingled with the sacrifices, but I tell
you these Galileans were not in any manner sinners
above all their fellows just because this happened
to them. You also know about the eighteen men upon
whom the tower of Siloam fell, killing them. Think
not that these men who were thus destroyed were
offenders above all their brethren in Jerusalem.
These folks were simply innocent victims of one of
the accidents of time.
"There are three
groups of events which may occur in your lives:
"1. You may share
in those normal happenings which are a part of the
life you and your fellows live on the face of the
earth.
"2. You may chance
to fall victim to one of the accidents of nature,
one of the mischances of men, knowing full well that
such occurrences are in no way prearranged or
otherwise produced by the spiritual forces of the
realm.
"3. You may reap
the harvest of your direct efforts to comply with
the natural laws governing the world.
"There was a
certain man who planted a fig tree in his yard, and
when he had many times sought fruit thereon and
found none, he called the vinedressers before him
and said: `Here have I come these three seasons
looking for fruit on this fig tree and have found
none. Cut down this barren tree; why should it
encumber the ground?' But the head gardener answered
his master: `Let it alone for one more year so that
I may dig around it and put on fertilizer, and then,
next year, if it bears no fruit, it shall be cut
down.' And when they had thus complied with the laws
of fruitfulness, since the tree was living and good,
they were rewarded with an abundant yield.
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"In the matter of
sickness and health, you should know that these
bodily states are the result of material causes;
health is not the smile of heaven, neither is
affliction the frown of God.
"The Father's
human children have equal capacity for the reception
of material blessings; therefore does he bestow
things physical upon the children of men without
discrimination. When it comes to the bestowal of
spiritual gifts, the Father is limited by man's
capacity for receiving these divine endowments.
Although the Father is no respecter of persons, in
the bestowal of spiritual gifts he is limited by
man's faith and by his willingness always to abide
by the Father's will."
As they journeyed
on toward Philadelphia, Jesus continued to teach
them and to answer their questions having to do with
accidents, sickness, and miracles, but they were not
able fully to comprehend this instruction. One hour
of teaching will not wholly change the beliefs of a
lifetime, and so Jesus found it necessary to
reiterate his message, to tell again and again that
which he wished them to understand; and even then
they failed to grasp the meaning of his earth
mission until after his death and resurrection.
5. THE
CONGREGATION AT PHILADELPHIA
Jesus and the
twelve were on their way to visit Abner and his
associates, who were preaching and teaching in
Philadelphia. Of all the cities of Perea, in
Philadelphia the largest group of Jews and gentiles,
rich and poor, learned and unlearned, embraced the
teachings of the seventy, thereby entering into the
kingdom of heaven. The synagogue of Philadelphia had
never been subject to the supervision of the
Sanhedrin at Jerusalem and therefore had never been
closed to the teachings of Jesus and his associates.
At this very time, Abner was teaching three times a
day in the Philadelphia synagogue.
This very
synagogue later on became a Christian church and was
the missionary headquarters for the promulgation of
the gospel through the regions to the east. It was
long a stronghold of the Master's teachings and
stood alone in this region as a center of Christian
learning for centuries.
The Jews at
Jerusalem had always had trouble with the Jews of
Philadelphia. And after the death and resurrection
of Jesus the Jerusalem church, of which James the
Lord's brother was head, began to have serious
difficulties with the Philadelphia congregation of
believers. Abner became the head of the Philadelphia
church, continuing as such until his death. And this
estrangement with Jerusalem explains why nothing is
heard of Abner and his work in the Gospel records of
the New Testament. This feud between Jerusalem and
Philadelphia lasted throughout the lifetimes of
James and Abner and continued for some time after
the destruction of Jerusalem. Philadelphia was
really the headquarters of the early church in the
south and east as Antioch was in the north and west.
It was the
apparent misfortune of Abner to be at variance with
all of the leaders of the early Christian church. He
fell out with Peter and James (Jesus' brother) over
questions of administration and the jurisdiction of
the Jerusalem church; he parted company with Paul
over differences of philosophy and theology. Abner
was more Babylonian than Hellenic in his philosophy,
and he stubbornly resisted all attempts of Paul to
remake the teachings of Jesus so as
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to present less
that was objectionable, first to the Jews, then to
the Greco-Roman believers in the mysteries.
Thus was Abner
compelled to live a life of isolation. He was head
of a church which was without standing at Jerusalem.
He had dared to defy James the Lord's brother, who
was subsequently supported by Peter. Such conduct
effectively separated him from all his former
associates. Then he dared to withstand Paul.
Although he was wholly sympathetic with Paul in his
mission to the gentiles, and though he supported him
in his contentions with the church at Jerusalem, he
bitterly opposed the version of Jesus' teachings
which Paul elected to preach. In his last years
Abner denounced Paul as the "clever corrupter of the
life teachings of Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of the
living God."
During the later
years of Abner and for some time thereafter, the
believers at Philadelphia held more strictly to the
religion of Jesus, as he lived and taught, than any
other group on earth.
Abner lived to be
89 years old, dying at Philadelphia on the 21st day
of November, A.D. 74. And to the very end he was a
faithful believer in, and teacher of, the gospel of
the heavenly kingdom. |