PAPER 176
- TUESDAY EVENING ON MOUNT OLIVET
This Tuesday
afternoon, as Jesus and the apostles passed out of
the temple on their way to the Gethsemane camp,
Matthew, calling attention to the temple
construction, said: "Master, observe what manner of
buildings these are. See the massive stones and the
beautiful adornment; can it be that these buildings
are to be destroyed?" As they went on toward Olivet,
Jesus said: "You see these stones and this massive
temple; verily, verily, I say to you: In the days
soon to come there shall not be left one stone upon
another. They shall all be thrown down." These
remarks depicting the destruction of the sacred
temple aroused the curiosity of the apostles as they
walked along behind the Master; they could conceive
of no event short of the end of the world which
would occasion the destruction of the temple.
In order to avoid
the crowds passing along the Kidron valley toward
Gethsemane, Jesus and his associates were minded to
climb up the western slope of Olivet for a short
distance and then follow a trail over to their
private camp near Gethsemane located a short
distance above the public camping ground. As they
turned to leave the road leading on to Bethany, they
observed the temple, glorified by the rays of the
setting sun; and while they tarried on the mount,
they saw the lights of the city appear and beheld
the beauty of the illuminated temple; and there,
under the mellow light of the full moon, Jesus and
the twelve sat down. The Master talked with them,
and presently Nathaniel asked this question: "Tell
us, Master, how shall we know when these events are
about to come to pass?"
1. THE
DESTRUCTION OF JERUSALEM
In answering
Nathaniel's question, Jesus said: "Yes, I will tell
you about the times when this people shall have
filled up the cup of their iniquity; when justice
shall swiftly descend upon this city of our fathers.
I am about to leave you; I go to the Father. After I
leave you, take heed that no man deceive you, for
many will come as deliverers and will lead many
astray. When you hear of wars and rumors of wars, be
not troubled, for though all these things will
happen, the end of Jerusalem is not yet at hand. You
should not be perturbed by famines or earthquakes;
neither should you be concerned when you are
delivered up to the civil authorities and are
persecuted for the sake of the gospel. You will be
thrown out of the synagogue and put in prison for my
sake, and some of you will be killed. When you are
brought up before governors and rulers, it shall be
for a testimony of your faith and to show your
steadfastness in the gospel of the kingdom. And when
you stand before judges, be not anxious beforehand
as to what you should say, for the spirit will teach
you in that very
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hour what you
should answer your adversaries. In these days of
travail, even your own kinsfolk, under the
leadership of those who have rejected the Son of
Man, will deliver you up to prison and death. For a
time you may be hated by all men for my sake, but
even in these persecutions I will not forsake you;
my spirit will not desert you. Be patient! doubt not
that this gospel of the kingdom will triumph over
all enemies and, eventually, be proclaimed to all
nations."
Jesus paused while
he looked down upon the city. The Master realized
that the rejection of the spiritual concept of the
Messiah, the determination to cling persistently and
blindly to the material mission of the expected
deliverer, would presently bring the Jews in direct
conflict with the powerful Roman armies, and that
such a contest could only result in the final and
complete overthrow of the Jewish nation. When his
people rejected his spiritual bestowal and refused
to receive the light of heaven as it so mercifully
shone upon them, they thereby sealed their doom as
an independent people with a special spiritual
mission on earth. Even the Jewish leaders
subsequently recognized that it was this secular
idea of the Messiah which directly led to the
turbulence which eventually brought about their
destruction.
Since Jerusalem
was to become the cradle of the early gospel
movement, Jesus did not want its teachers and
preachers to perish in the terrible overthrow of the
Jewish people in connection with the destruction of
Jerusalem; wherefore did he give these instructions
to his followers. Jesus was much concerned lest some
of his disciples become involved in these
soon-coming revolts and so perish in the downfall of
Jerusalem.
Then Andrew
inquired: "But, Master, if the Holy City and the
temple are to be destroyed, and if you are not here
to direct us, when should we forsake Jerusalem?"
Said Jesus: "You may remain in the city after I have
gone, even through these times of travail and bitter
persecution, but when you finally see Jerusalem
being encompassed by the Roman armies after the
revolt of the false prophets, then will you know
that her desolation is at hand; then must you flee
to the mountains. Let none who are in the city and
around about tarry to save aught, neither let those
who are outside dare to enter therein. There will be
great tribulation, for these will be the days of
gentile vengeance. And after you have deserted the
city, this disobedient people will fall by the edge
of the sword and will be led captive into all
nations; and so shall Jerusalem be trodden down by
the gentiles. In the meantime, I warn you, be not
deceived. If any man comes to you, saying, `Behold,
here is the Deliverer,' or `Behold, there is he,'
believe it not, for many false teachers will arise
and many will be led astray; but you should not be
deceived, for I have told you all this beforehand."
The apostles sat
in silence in the moonlight for a considerable time
while these astounding predictions of the Master
sank into their bewildered minds. And it was in
conformity with this very warning that practically
the entire group of believers and disciples fled
from Jerusalem upon the first appearance of the
Roman troops, finding a safe shelter in Pella to the
north.
Even after this
explicit warning, many of Jesus' followers
interpreted these predictions as referring to the
changes which would obviously occur in Jerusalem
when the reappearing of the Messiah would result in
the establishment of the New Jerusalem and in the
enlargement of the city to become the world's
capital. In their minds these Jews were determined
to connect the destruction of the temple with the
"end of the world." They believed this New Jerusalem
would fill all Palestine; that the end of the world
would be followed by the immediate
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appearance of the
"new heavens and the new earth." And so it was not
strange that Peter should say: "Master, we know that
all things will pass away when the new heavens and
the new earth appear, but how shall we know when you
will return to bring all this about?"
When Jesus heard
this, he was thoughtful for some time and then said:
"You ever err since you always try to attach the new
teaching to the old; you are determined to
misunderstand all my teaching; you insist on
interpreting the gospel in accordance with your
established beliefs. Nevertheless, I will try to
enlighten you."
2. THE
MASTER'S SECOND COMING
On several
occasions Jesus had made statements which led his
hearers to infer that, while he intended presently
to leave this world, he would most certainly return
to consummate the work of the heavenly kingdom. As
the conviction grew on his followers that he was
going to leave them, and after he had departed from
this world, it was only natural for all believers to
lay fast hold upon these promises to return. The
doctrine of the second coming of Christ thus became
early incorporated into the teachings of the
Christians, and almost every subsequent generation
of disciples has devoutly believed this truth and
has confidently looked forward to his sometime
coming.
If they were to
part with their Master and Teacher, how much more
did these first disciples and the apostles grasp at
this promise to return, and they lost no time in
associating the predicted destruction of Jerusalem
with this promised second coming. And they continued
thus to interpret his words notwithstanding that,
throughout this evening of instruction on Mount
Olivet, the Master took particular pains to prevent
just such a mistake.
In further answer
to Peter's question, Jesus said: "Why do you still
look for the Son of Man to sit upon the throne of
David and expect that the material dreams of the
Jews will be fulfilled? Have I not told you all
these years that my kingdom is not of this world?
The things which you now look down upon are coming
to an end, but this will be a new beginning out of
which the gospel of the kingdom will go to all the
world and this salvation will spread to all peoples.
And when the kingdom shall have come to its full
fruition, be assured that the Father in heaven will
not fail to visit you with an enlarged revelation of
truth and an enhanced demonstration of
righteousness, even as he has already bestowed upon
this world him who became the prince of darkness,
and then Adam, who was followed by Melchizedek, and
in these days, the Son of Man. And so will my Father
continue to manifest his mercy and show forth his
love, even to this dark and evil world. So also will
I, after my Father has invested me with all power
and authority, continue to follow your fortunes and
to guide in the affairs of the kingdom by the
presence of my spirit, who shall shortly be poured
out upon all flesh. Even though I shall thus be
present with you in spirit, I also promise that I
will sometime return to this world, where I have
lived this life in the flesh and achieved the
experience of simultaneously revealing God to man
and leading man to God. Very soon must I leave you
and take up the work the Father has intrusted to my
hands, but be of good courage, for I will sometime
return. In the meantime, my Spirit of the Truth of a
universe shall comfort and guide you.
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"You behold me
now in weakness and in the flesh, but when I return,
it shall be with power and in the spirit. The eye of
flesh beholds the Son of Man in the flesh, but only
the eye of the spirit will behold the Son of Man
glorified by the Father and appearing on earth in
his own name.
"But the times of
the reappearing of the Son of Man are known only in
the councils of Paradise; not even the angels of
heaven know when this will occur. However, you
should understand that, when this gospel of the
kingdom shall have been proclaimed to all the world
for the salvation of all peoples, and when the
fullness of the age has come to pass, the Father
will send you another dispensational bestowal, or
else the Son of Man will return to adjudge the age.
"And now
concerning the travail of Jerusalem, about which I
have spoken to you, even this generation will not
pass away until my words are fulfilled; but
concerning the times of the coming again of the Son
of Man, no one in heaven or on earth may presume to
speak. But you should be wise regarding the ripening
of an age; you should be alert to discern the signs
of the times. You know when the fig tree shows its
tender branches and puts forth its leaves that
summer is near. Likewise, when the world has passed
through the long winter of material-mindedness and
you discern the coming of the spiritual springtime
of a new dispensation, should you know that the
summertime of a new visitation draws near.
"But what is the
significance of this teaching having to do with the
coming of the Sons of God? Do you not perceive that,
when each of you is called to lay down his life
struggle and pass through the portal of death, you
stand in the immediate presence of judgment, and
that you are face to face with the facts of a new
dispensation of service in the eternal plan of the
infinite Father? What the whole world must face as a
literal fact at the end of an age, you, as
individuals, must each most certainly face as a
personal experience when you reach the end of your
natural life and thereby pass on to be confronted
with the conditions and demands inherent in the next
revelation of the eternal progression of the
Father's kingdom."
Of all the
discourses which the Master gave his apostles, none
ever became so confused in their minds as this one,
given this Tuesday evening on the Mount of Olives,
regarding the twofold subject of the destruction of
Jerusalem and his own second coming. There was,
therefore, little agreement between the subsequent
written accounts based on the memories of what the
Master said on this extraordinary occasion.
Consequently, when the records were left blank
concerning much that was said that Tuesday evening,
there grew up many traditions; and very early in the
second century a Jewish apocalyptic about the
Messiah written by one Selta, who was attached to
the court of the Emperor Caligula, was bodily copied
into the Matthew Gospel and subsequently added (in
part) to the Mark and Luke records. It was in these
writings of Selta that the parable of the ten
virgins appeared. No part of the gospel record ever
suffered such confusing misconstruction as this
evening's teaching. But the Apostle John never
became thus confused.
As these thirteen
men resumed their journey toward the camp, they were
speechless and under great emotional tension. Judas
had finally confirmed his decision to abandon his
associates. It was a late hour when David Zebedee,
John Mark, and a number of the leading disciples
welcomed Jesus and the twelve to the new camp, but
the apostles did not want to sleep; they wanted to
know more about the destruction of Jerusalem, the
Master's departure, and the end of the world.
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3. LATER
DISCUSSION AT THE CAMP
As they gathered
about the campfire, some twenty of them, Thomas
asked: "Since you are to return to finish the work
of the kingdom, what should be our attitude while
you are away on the Father's business?" As Jesus
looked them over by the firelight, he answered:
"And even you,
Thomas, fail to comprehend what I have been saying.
Have I not all this time taught you that your
connection with the kingdom is spiritual and
individual, wholly a matter of personal experience
in the spirit by the faith-realization that you are
a son of God? What more shall I say? The downfall of
nations, the crash of empires, the destruction of
the unbelieving Jews, the end of an age, even the
end of the world, what have these things to do with
one who believes this gospel, and who has hid his
life in the surety of the eternal kingdom? You who
are God-knowing and gospel-believing have already
received the assurances of eternal life. Since your
lives have been lived in the spirit and for the
Father, nothing can be of serious concern to you.
Kingdom builders, the accredited citizens of the
heavenly worlds, are not to be disturbed by temporal
upheavals or perturbed by terrestrial cataclysms.
What does it matter to you who believe this gospel
of the kingdom if nations overturn, the age ends, or
all things visible crash, since you know that your
life is the gift of the Son, and that it is
eternally secure in the Father? Having lived the
temporal life by faith and having yielded the fruits
of the spirit as the righteousness of loving service
for your fellows, you can confidently look forward
to the next step in the eternal career with the same
survival faith that has carried you through your
first and earthly adventure in sonship with God.
"Each generation
of believers should carry on their work, in view of
the possible return of the Son of Man, exactly as
each individual believer carries forward his
lifework in view of inevitable and ever-impending
natural death. When you have by faith once
established yourself as a son of God, nothing else
matters as regards the surety of survival. But make
no mistake! this survival faith is a living faith,
and it increasingly manifests the fruits of that
divine spirit which first inspired it in the human
heart. That you have once accepted sonship in the
heavenly kingdom will not save you in the face of
the knowing and persistent rejection of those truths
which have to do with the progressive spiritual
fruit-bearing of the sons of God in the flesh. You
who have been with me in the Father's business on
earth can even now desert the kingdom if you find
that you love not the way of the Father's service
for mankind.
"As individuals,
and as a generation of believers, hear me while I
speak a parable: There was a certain great man who,
before starting out on a long journey to another
country, called all his trusted servants before him
and delivered into their hands all his goods. To one
he gave five talents, to another two, and to another
one. And so on down through the entire group of
honored stewards, to each he intrusted his goods
according to their several abilities; and then he
set out on his journey. When their lord had
departed, his servants set themselves at work to
gain profits from the wealth intrusted to them.
Immediately he who had received five talents began
to trade with them and very soon had made a profit
of another five talents. In like manner he who had
received two talents soon had gained two more. And
so did all of these servants make gains for their
master
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except he who
received but one talent. He went away by himself and
dug a hole in the earth where he hid his lord's
money. Presently the lord of those servants
unexpectedly returned and called upon his stewards
for a reckoning. And when they had all been called
before their master, he who had received the five
talents came forward with the money which had been
intrusted to him and brought five additional
talents, saying, `Lord, you gave me five talents to
invest, and I am glad to present five other talents
as my gain.' And then his lord said to him: `Well
done, good and faithful servant, you have been
faithful over a few things; I will now set you as
steward over many; enter forthwith into the joy of
your lord.' And then he who had received the two
talents came forward, saying: `Lord, you delivered
into my hands two talents; behold, I have gained
these other two talents.' And his lord then said to
him: `Well done, good and faithful steward; you also
have been faithful over a few things, and I will now
set you over many; enter you into the joy of your
lord.' And then there came to the accounting he who
had received the one talent. This servant came
forward, saying, `Lord, I knew you and realized that
you were a shrewd man in that you expected gains
where you had not personally labored; therefore was
I afraid to risk aught of that which was intrusted
to me. I safely hid your talent in the earth; here
it is; you now have what belongs to you.' But his
lord answered: `You are an indolent and slothful
steward. By your own words you confess that you knew
I would require of you an accounting with reasonable
profit, such as your diligent fellow servants have
this day rendered. Knowing this, you ought,
therefore, to have at least put my money into the
hands of the bankers that on my return I might have
received my own with interest.' And then to the
chief steward this lord said: `Take away this one
talent from this unprofitable servant and give it to
him who has the ten talents.'
"To every one who
has, more shall be given, and he shall have
abundance; but from him who has not, even that which
he has shall be taken away. You cannot stand still
in the affairs of the eternal kingdom. My Father
requires all his children to grow in grace and in a
knowledge of the truth. You who know these truths
must yield the increase of the fruits of the spirit
and manifest a growing devotion to the unselfish
service of your fellow servants. And remember that,
inasmuch as you minister to one of the least of my
brethren, you have done this service to me.
"And so should you
go about the work of the Father's business, now and
henceforth, even forevermore. Carry on until I come.
In faithfulness do that which is intrusted to you,
and thereby shall you be ready for the reckoning
call of death. And having thus lived for the glory
of the Father and the satisfaction of the Son, you
shall enter with joy and exceedingly great pleasure
into the eternal service of the everlasting
kingdom."
Truth is living;
the Spirit of Truth is ever leading the children of
light into new realms of spiritual reality and
divine service. You are not given truth to
crystallize into settled, safe, and honored forms.
Your revelation of truth must be so enhanced by
passing through your personal experience that new
beauty and actual spiritual gains will be disclosed
to all who behold your spiritual fruits and in
consequence thereof are led to glorify the Father
who is in heaven. Only those faithful servants who
thus grow in the knowledge of the truth, and who
thereby develop the capacity for divine appreciation
of spiritual realities, can ever hope to "enter
fully into the joy of their Lord." What a sorry
sight for
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successive
generations of the professed followers of Jesus to
say, regarding their stewardship of divine truth:
"Here, Master, is the truth you committed to us a
hundred or a thousand years ago. We have lost
nothing; we have faithfully preserved all you gave
us; we have allowed no changes to be made in that
which you taught us; here is the truth you gave us."
But such a plea concerning spiritual indolence will
not justify the barren steward of truth in the
presence of the Master. In accordance with the truth
committed to your hands will the Master of truth
require a reckoning.
In the next world
you will be asked to give an account of the
endowments and stewardships of this world. Whether
inherent talents are few or many, a just and
merciful reckoning must be faced. If endowments are
used only in selfish pursuits and no thought is
bestowed upon the higher duty of obtaining increased
yield of the fruits of the spirit, as they are
manifested in the ever-expanding service of men and
the worship of God, such selfish stewards must
accept the consequences of their deliberate
choosing.
And how much like
all selfish mortals was this unfaithful servant with
the one talent in that he blamed his slothfulness
directly upon his lord. How prone is man, when he is
confronted with the failures of his own making, to
put the blame upon others, oftentimes upon those who
least deserve it!
Said Jesus that
night as they went to their rest: "Freely have you
received; therefore freely should you give of the
truth of heaven, and in the giving will this truth
multiply and show forth the increasing light of
saving grace, even as you minister it."
4. THE
RETURN OF MICHAEL
Of all the
Master's teachings no one phase has been so
misunderstood as his promise sometime to come back
in person to this world. It is not strange that
Michael should be interested in sometime returning
to the planet whereon he experienced his seventh and
last bestowal as a mortal of the realm. It is only
natural to believe that Jesus of Nazareth, now
sovereign ruler of a vast universe, would be
interested in coming back, not only once but even
many times, to the world whereon he lived such a
unique life and finally won for himself the Father's
unlimited bestowal of universe power and authority.
Urantia will eternally be one of the seven nativity
spheres of Michael in the winning of universe
sovereignty.
Jesus did, on
numerous occasions and to many individuals, declare
his intention of returning to this world. As his
followers awakened to the fact that their Master was
not going to function as a temporal deliverer, and
as they listened to his predictions of the overthrow
of Jerusalem and the downfall of the Jewish nation,
they most naturally began to associate his promised
return with these catastrophic events. But when the
Roman armies leveled the walls of Jerusalem,
destroyed the temple, and dispersed the Judean Jews,
and still the Master did not reveal himself in power
and glory, his followers began the formulation of
that belief which eventually associated the second
coming of Christ with the end of the age, even with
the end of the world.
Jesus promised to
do two things after he had ascended to the Father,
and after all power in heaven and on earth had been
placed in his hands. He promised, first, to send
into the world, and in his stead, another teacher,
the Spirit of Truth; and this he did on the day of
Pentecost. Second, he most certainly promised his
followers that he would sometime personally return
to this world. But he did
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not say how,
where, or when he would revisit this planet of his
bestowal experience in the flesh. On one occasion he
intimated that, whereas the eye of flesh had beheld
him when he lived here in the flesh, on his return
(at least on one of his possible visits) he would be
discerned only by the eye of spiritual faith.
Many of us are
inclined to believe that Jesus will return to
Urantia many times during the ages to come. We do
not have his specific promise to make these plural
visits, but it seems most probable that he who
carries among his universe titles that of Planetary
Prince of Urantia will many times visit the world
whose conquest conferred such a unique title upon
him.
We most positively
believe that Michael will again come in person to
Urantia, but we have not the slightest idea as to
when or in what manner he may choose to come. Will
his second advent on earth be timed to occur in
connection with the terminal judgment of this
present age, either with or without the associated
appearance of a Magisterial Son? Will he come in
connection with the termination of some subsequent
Urantian age? Will he come unannounced and as an
isolated event? We do not know. Only one thing we
are certain of, that is, when he does return, all
the world will likely know about it, for he must
come as the supreme ruler of a universe and not as
the obscure babe of Bethlehem. But if every eye is
to behold him, and if only spiritual eyes are to
discern his presence, then must his advent be long
deferred.
You would do well,
therefore, to disassociate the Master's personal
return to earth from any and all set events or
settled epochs. We are sure of only one thing: He
has promised to come back. We have no idea as to
when he will fulfill this promise or in what
connection. As far as we know, he may appear on
earth any day, and he may not come until age after
age has passed and been duly adjudicated by his
associated Sons of the Paradise corps.
The second advent
of Michael on earth is an event of tremendous
sentimental value to both midwayers and humans; but
otherwise it is of no immediate moment to midwayers
and of no more practical importance to human beings
than the common event of natural death, which so
suddenly precipitates mortal man into the immediate
grasp of that succession of universe events which
leads directly to the presence of this same Jesus,
the sovereign ruler of our universe. The children of
light are all destined to see him, and it is of no
serious concern whether we go to him or whether he
should chance first to come to us. Be you therefore
ever ready to welcome him on earth as he stands
ready to welcome you in heaven. We confidently look
for his glorious appearing, even for repeated
comings, but we are wholly ignorant as to how, when,
or in what connection he is destined to appear. |