PAPER 194
- BESTOWAL OF THE SPIRIT OF TRUTH
ABOUT one o'clock,
as the one hundred and twenty believers were engaged
in prayer, they all became aware of a strange
presence in the room. At the same time these
disciples all became conscious of a new and profound
sense of spiritual joy, security, and confidence.
This new consciousness of spiritual strength was
immediately followed by a strong urge to go out and
publicly proclaim the gospel of the kingdom and the
good news that Jesus had risen from the dead.
Peter
stood up and declared that this must be the coming
of the Spirit of Truth which the Master had promised
them and proposed that they go to the temple and
begin the proclamation of the good news committed to
their hands. And they did just what Peter suggested.
These
men had been trained and instructed that the gospel
which they should preach was the fatherhood of God
and the sonship of man, but at just this moment of
spiritual ecstasy and personal triumph, the best
tidings, the greatest news, these men could think of
was the fact of the risen Master. And so they
went forth, endowed with power from on high,
preaching glad tidings to the people--even salvation
through Jesus--but they unintentionally stumbled
into the error of substituting some of the facts
associated with the gospel for the gospel message
itself. Peter unwittingly led off in this mistake,
and others followed after him on down to Paul, who
created a new religion out of the new version of the
good news.
The
gospel of the kingdom is: the fact of the fatherhood
of God, coupled with the resultant truth of the
sonship-brotherhood of men. Christianity, as it
developed from that day, is: the fact of God as the
Father of the Lord Jesus Christ, in association with
the experience of believer-fellowship with the risen
and glorified Christ.
It is
not strange that these spirit-infused men should
have seized upon this opportunity to express their
feelings of triumph over the forces which had sought
to destroy their Master and end the influence of his
teachings. At such a time as this it was easier to
remember their personal association with Jesus and
to be thrilled with the assurance that the Master
still lived, that their friendship had not ended,
and that the spirit had indeed come upon them even
as he had promised.
These
believers felt themselves suddenly translated into
another world, a new existence of joy, power, and
glory. The Master had told them the kingdom would
come with power, and some of them thought they were
beginning to discern what he meant.
And when
all of this is taken into consideration, it is not
difficult to understand how these men came to preach
a new gospel about Jesus in the place of
their former message of the fatherhood of God and
the brotherhood of men.
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1. THE
PENTECOST SERMON
The
apostles had been in hiding for forty days. This day
happened to be the Jewish festival of Pentecost, and
thousands of visitors from all parts of the world
were in Jerusalem. Many arrived for this feast, but
a majority had tarried in the city since the
Passover. Now these frightened apostles emerged from
their weeks of seclusion to appear boldly in the
temple, where they began to preach the new message
of a risen Messiah. And all the disciples were
likewise conscious of having received some new
spiritual endowment of insight and power.
It was
about two o'clock when Peter stood up in that very
place where his Master had last taught in this
temple, and delivered that impassioned appeal which
resulted in the winning of more than two thousand
souls. The Master had gone, but they suddenly
discovered that this story about him had great power
with the people. No wonder they were led on into the
further proclamation of that which vindicated their
former devotion to Jesus and at the same time so
constrained men to believe in him. Six of the
apostles participated in this meeting: Peter,
Andrew, James, John, Philip, and Matthew. They
talked for more than an hour and a half and
delivered messages in Greek, Hebrew, and Aramaic, as
well as a few words in even other tongues with which
they had a speaking acquaintance.
The
leaders of the Jews were astounded at the boldness
of the apostles, but they feared to molest them
because of the large numbers who believed their
story.
By half past four
o'clock more than two thousand new believers
followed the apostles down to the pool of Siloam,
where Peter, Andrew, James, and John baptized them
in the Master's name. And it was dark when they had
finished with baptizing this multitude.
Pentecost was the great festival of baptism, the
time for fellowshipping the proselytes of the gate,
those gentiles who desired to serve Yahweh. It was,
therefore, the more easy for large numbers of both
the Jews and believing gentiles to submit to baptism
on this day. In doing this, they were in no way
disconnecting themselves from the Jewish faith. Even
for some time after this the believers in Jesus were
a sect within Judaism. All of them, including the
apostles, were still loyal to the essential
requirements of the Jewish ceremonial system.
2. THE
SIGNIFICANCE OF PENTECOST
Jesus
lived on earth and taught a gospel which redeemed
man from the superstition that he was a child of the
devil and elevated him to the dignity of a faith son
of God. Jesus' message, as he preached it and lived
it in his day, was an effective solvent for man's
spiritual difficulties in that day of its statement.
And now that he has personally left the world, he
sends in his place his Spirit of Truth, who is
designed to live in man and, for each new
generation, to restate the Jesus message so that
every new group of mortals to appear upon the face
of the earth shall have a new and up-to-date version
of the gospel, just such personal enlightenment and
group guidance as will prove to be an effective
solvent for man's ever-new and varied spiritual
difficulties.
The
first mission of this spirit is, of course, to
foster and personalize truth, for it is the
comprehension of truth that constitutes the highest
form of human
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liberty. Next, it
is the purpose of this spirit to destroy the
believer's feeling of orphanhood. Jesus having been
among men, all believers would experience a sense of
loneliness had not the Spirit of Truth come to dwell
in men's hearts.
This
bestowal of the Son's spirit effectively prepared
all normal men's minds for the subsequent universal
bestowal of the Father's spirit (the Adjuster) upon
all mankind. In a certain sense, this Spirit of
Truth is the spirit of both the Universal Father and
the Creator Son.
Do not make the
mistake of expecting to become strongly
intellectually conscious of the outpoured Spirit of
Truth. The spirit never creates a consciousness of
himself, only a consciousness of Michael, the Son.
From the beginning Jesus taught that the spirit
would not speak of himself. The proof, therefore, of
your fellowship with the Spirit of Truth is not to
be found in your consciousness of this spirit but
rather in your experience of enhanced fellowship
with Michael.
The
spirit also came to help men recall and understand
the words of the Master as well as to illuminate and
reinterpret his life on earth.
Next,
the Spirit of Truth came to help the believer to
witness to the realities of Jesus' teachings and his
life as he lived it in the flesh, and as he now
again lives it anew and afresh in the individual
believer of each passing generation of the
spirit-filled sons of God.
Thus it
appears that the Spirit of Truth comes really to
lead all believers into all truth, into the
expanding knowledge of the experience of the living
and growing spiritual consciousness of the reality
of eternal and ascending sonship with God.
Jesus
lived a life which is a revelation of man submitted
to the Father's will, not an example for any man
literally to attempt to follow. This life in the
flesh, together with his death on the cross and
subsequent resurrection, presently became a new
gospel of the ransom which had thus been paid in
order to purchase man back from the clutch of the
evil one--from the condemnation of an offended God.
Nevertheless, even though the gospel did become
greatly distorted, it remains a fact that this new
message about Jesus carried along with it many of
the fundamental truths and teachings of his earlier
gospel of the kingdom. And, sooner or later, these
concealed truths of the fatherhood of God and the
brotherhood of men will emerge to effectually
transform the civilization of all mankind.
But
these mistakes of the intellect in no way interfered
with the believer's great progress in growth in
spirit. In less than a month after the bestowal of
the Spirit of Truth, the apostles made more
individual spiritual progress than during their
almost four years of personal and loving association
with the Master. Neither did this substitution of
the fact of the resurrection of Jesus for the
saving gospel truth of sonship with God in
any way interfere with the rapid spread of their
teachings; on the contrary, this overshadowing of
Jesus' message by the new teachings about his person
and resurrection seemed greatly to facilitate the
preaching of the good news.
The term
"baptism of the spirit," which came into such
general use about this time, merely signified the
conscious reception of this gift of the Spirit of
Truth and the personal acknowledgment of this new
spiritual power as an augmentation of all spiritual
influences previously experienced by God-knowing
souls.
Since
the bestowal of the Spirit of Truth, man is subject
to the teaching and guidance of a threefold spirit
endowment: the spirit of the Father, the Thought
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Adjuster; the
spirit of the Son, the Spirit of Truth; the spirit
of the Spirit, the Holy Spirit.
In a
way, mankind is subject to the double influence of
the sevenfold appeal of the universe spirit
influences. The early evolutionary races of mortals
are subject to the progressive contact of the seven
adjutant mind-spirits of the local universe Mother
Spirit. As man progresses upward in the scale of
intelligence and spiritual perception, there
eventually come to hover over him and dwell within
him the seven higher spirit influences. And these
seven spirits of the advancing worlds are:
1. The
bestowed spirit of the Universal Father--the Thought
Adjusters.
2. The
spirit presence of the Eternal Son--the spirit
gravity of the universe of universes and the certain
channel of all spirit communion.
3. The
spirit presence of the Infinite Spirit--the
universal spirit-mind of all creation, the spiritual
source of the intellectual kinship of all
progressive intelligences.
4. The
spirit of the Universal Father and the Creator
Son--the Spirit of Truth, generally regarded as the
spirit of the Universe Son.
5. The
spirit of the Infinite Spirit and the Universe
Mother Spirit--the Holy Spirit, generally regarded
as the spirit of the Universe Spirit.
6. The
mind-spirit of the Universe Mother Spirit--the seven
adjutant mind-spirits of the local universe.
7. The
spirit of the Father, Sons, and Spirits--the
new-name spirit of the ascending mortals of the
realms after the fusion of the mortal spirit-born
soul with the Paradise Thought Adjuster and after
the subsequent attainment of the divinity and
glorification of the status of the Paradise Corps of
the Finality.
And so
did the bestowal of the Spirit of Truth bring to the
world and its peoples the last of the spirit
endowment designed to aid in the ascending search
for God.
3. WHAT
HAPPENED AT PENTECOST
Many
queer and strange teachings became associated with
the early narratives of the day of Pentecost. In
subsequent times the events of this day, on which
the Spirit of Truth, the new teacher, came to dwell
with mankind, have become confused with the foolish
outbreaks of rampant emotionalism. The chief mission
of this outpoured spirit of the Father and the Son
is to teach men about the truths of the Father's
love and the Son's mercy. These are the truths of
divinity which men can comprehend more fully than
all the other divine traits of character. The Spirit
of Truth is concerned primarily with the revelation
of the Father's spirit nature and the Son's moral
character. The Creator Son, in the flesh, revealed
God to men; the Spirit of Truth, in the heart,
reveals the Creator Son to men. When man yields the
"fruits of the spirit" in his life, he is simply
showing forth the traits which the Master manifested
in his own earthly life. When Jesus was on earth, he
lived his life as one personality--Jesus of
Nazareth. As the indwelling spirit of the "new
teacher," the Master has, since Pentecost, been able
to live his life anew in the experience of every
truth-taught believer.
Many
things which happen in the course of a human life
are hard to understand, difficult to reconcile with
the idea that this is a universe in which truth
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prevails and in
which righteousness triumphs. It so often appears
that slander, lies, dishonesty, and
unrighteousness--sin--prevail. Does faith, after
all, triumph over evil, sin, and iniquity? It does.
And the life and death of Jesus are the eternal
proof that the truth of goodness and the faith of
the spirit-led creature will always be vindicated.
They taunted Jesus on the cross, saying, "Let us see
if God will come and deliver him." It looked dark on
that day of the crucifixion, but it was gloriously
bright on the resurrection morning; it was still
brighter and more joyous on the day of Pentecost.
The religions of pessimistic despair seek to obtain
release from the burdens of life; they crave
extinction in endless slumber and rest. These are
the religions of primitive fear and dread. The
religion of Jesus is a new gospel of faith to be
proclaimed to struggling humanity. This new religion
is founded on faith, hope, and love.
To
Jesus, mortal life had dealt its hardest, cruelest,
and bitterest blows; and this man met these
ministrations of despair with faith, courage, and
the unswerving determination to do his Father's
will. Jesus met life in all its terrible reality and
mastered it--even in death. He did not use religion
as a release from life. The religion of Jesus does
not seek to escape this life in order to enjoy the
waiting bliss of another existence. The religion of
Jesus provides the joy and peace of another and
spiritual existence to enhance and ennoble the life
which men now live in the flesh.
If
religion is an opiate to the people, it is not the
religion of Jesus. On the cross he refused to drink
the deadening drug, and his spirit, poured out upon
all flesh, is a mighty world influence which leads
man upward and urges him onward. The spiritual
forward urge is the most powerful driving force
present in this world; the truth-learning believer
is the one progressive and aggressive soul on earth.
On the
day of Pentecost the religion of Jesus broke all
national restrictions and racial fetters. It is
forever true, "Where the spirit of the Lord is,
there is liberty." On this day the Spirit of Truth
became the personal gift from the Master to every
mortal. This spirit was bestowed for the purpose of
qualifying believers more effectively to preach the
gospel of the kingdom, but they mistook the
experience of receiving the outpoured spirit for a
part of the new gospel which they were unconsciously
formulating.
Do not
overlook the fact that the Spirit of Truth was
bestowed upon all sincere believers; this gift of
the spirit did not come only to the apostles. The
one hundred and twenty men and women assembled in
the upper chamber all received the new teacher, as
did all the honest of heart throughout the whole
world. This new teacher was bestowed upon mankind,
and every soul received him in accordance with the
love for truth and the capacity to grasp and
comprehend spiritual realities. At last, true
religion is delivered from the custody of priests
and all sacred classes and finds its real
manifestation in the individual souls of men.
The
religion of Jesus fosters the highest type of human
civilization in that it creates the highest type of
spiritual personality and proclaims the sacredness
of that person.
The
coming of the Spirit of Truth on Pentecost made
possible a religion which is neither radical nor
conservative; it is neither the old nor the new; it
is to be dominated neither by the old nor the young.
The fact of Jesus' earthly life provides a fixed
point for the anchor of time, while the bestowal of
the Spirit of
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Truth provides
for the everlasting expansion and endless growth of
the religion which he lived and the gospel which he
proclaimed. The spirit guides into all truth;
he is the teacher of an expanding and always-growing
religion of endless progress and divine unfolding.
This new teacher will be forever unfolding to the
truth-seeking believer that which was so divinely
folded up in the person and nature of the Son of
Man.
The
manifestations associated with the bestowal of the
"new teacher," and the reception of the apostles'
preaching by the men of various races and nations
gathered together at Jerusalem, indicate the
universality of the religion of Jesus. The gospel of
the kingdom was to be identified with no particular
race, culture, or language. This day of Pentecost
witnessed the great effort of the spirit to liberate
the religion of Jesus from its inherited Jewish
fetters. Even after this demonstration of pouring
out the spirit upon all flesh, the apostles at first
endeavored to impose the requirements of Judaism
upon their converts. Even Paul had trouble with his
Jerusalem brethren because he refused to subject the
gentiles to these Jewish practices. No revealed
religion can spread to all the world when it makes
the serious mistake of becoming permeated with some
national culture or associated with established
racial, social, or economic practices.
The
bestowal of the Spirit of Truth was independent of
all forms, ceremonies, sacred places, and special
behavior by those who received the fullness of its
manifestation. When the spirit came upon those
assembled in the upper chamber, they were simply
sitting there, having just been engaged in silent
prayer. The spirit was bestowed in the country as
well as in the city. It was not necessary for the
apostles to go apart to a lonely place for years of
solitary meditation in order to receive the spirit.
For all time, Pentecost disassociates the idea of
spiritual experience from the notion of especially
favorable environments.
Pentecost, with its spiritual endowment, was
designed forever to loose the religion of the Master
from all dependence upon physical force; the
teachers of this new religion are now equipped with
spiritual weapons. They are to go out to conquer the
world with unfailing forgiveness, matchless good
will, and abounding love. They are equipped to
overcome evil with good, to vanquish hate by love,
to destroy fear with a courageous and living faith
in truth. Jesus had already taught his followers
that his religion was never passive; always were his
disciples to be active and positive in their
ministry of mercy and in their manifestations of
love. No longer did these believers look upon Yahweh
as "the Lord of Hosts." They now regarded the
eternal Deity as the "God and Father of the Lord
Jesus Christ." They made that progress, at least,
even if they did in some measure fail fully to grasp
the truth that God is also the spiritual Father of
every individual.
Pentecost endowed mortal man with the power to
forgive personal injuries, to keep sweet in the
midst of the gravest injustice, to remain unmoved in
the face of appalling danger, and to challenge the
evils of hate and anger by the fearless acts of love
and forbearance. Urantia has passed through the
ravages of great and destructive wars in its
history. All participants in these terrible
struggles met with defeat. There was but one victor;
there was only one who came out of these embittered
struggles with an enhanced reputation--that was
Jesus of Nazareth and his gospel of overcoming evil
with good. The secret of a better civilization is
bound up in the Master's teachings of the
brotherhood of man, the good will of love and mutual
trust.
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Up to
Pentecost, religion had revealed only man seeking
for God; since Pentecost, man is still searching for
God, but there shines out over the world the
spectacle of God also seeking for man and sending
his spirit to dwell within him when he has found
him.
Before
the teachings of Jesus which culminated in
Pentecost, women had little or no spiritual standing
in the tenets of the older religions. After
Pentecost, in the brotherhood of the kingdom woman
stood before God on an equality with man. Among the
one hundred and twenty who received this special
visitation of the spirit were many of the women
disciples, and they shared these blessings equally
with the men believers. No longer can man presume to
monopolize the ministry of religious service. The
Pharisee might go on thanking God that he was "not
born a woman, a leper, or a gentile," but among the
followers of Jesus woman has been forever set free
from all religious discriminations based on sex.
Pentecost obliterated all religious discrimination
founded on racial distinction, cultural differences,
social caste, or sex prejudice. No wonder these
believers in the new religion would cry out, "Where
the spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty."
Both the
mother and brother of Jesus were present among the
one hundred and twenty believers, and as members of
this common group of disciples, they also received
the outpoured spirit. They received no more of the
good gift than did their fellows. No special gift
was bestowed upon the members of Jesus' earthly
family. Pentecost marked the end of special
priesthoods and all belief in sacred families.
Before
Pentecost the apostles had given up much for Jesus.
They had sacrificed their homes, families, friends,
worldly goods, and positions. At Pentecost they gave
themselves to God, and the Father and the Son
responded by giving themselves to man--sending their
spirits to live within men. This experience of
losing self and finding the spirit was not one of
emotion; it was an act of intelligent self-surrender
and unreserved consecration.
Pentecost was the call to spiritual unity among
gospel believers. When the spirit descended on the
disciples at Jerusalem, the same thing happened in
Philadelphia, Alexandria, and at all other places
where true believers dwelt. It was literally true
that "there was but one heart and soul among the
multitude of the believers." The religion of Jesus
is the most powerful unifying influence the world
has ever known.
Pentecost was designed to lessen the
self-assertiveness of individuals, groups, nations,
and races. It is this spirit of self-assertiveness
which so increases in tension that it periodically
breaks loose in destructive wars. Mankind can be
unified only by the spiritual approach, and the
Spirit of Truth is a world influence which is
universal.
The
coming of the Spirit of Truth purifies the human
heart and leads the recipient to formulate a life
purpose single to the will of God and the welfare of
men. The material spirit of selfishness has been
swallowed up in this new spiritual bestowal of
selflessness. Pentecost, then and now, signifies
that the Jesus of history has become the divine Son
of living experience. The joy of this outpoured
spirit, when it is consciously experienced in human
life, is a tonic for health, a stimulus for mind,
and an unfailing energy for the soul.
Prayer
did not bring the spirit on the day of Pentecost,
but it did have much to do with determining the
capacity of receptivity which characterized the
individual
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believers. Prayer
does not move the divine heart to liberality of
bestowal, but it does so often dig out larger and
deeper channels wherein the divine bestowals may
flow to the hearts and souls of those who thus
remember to maintain unbroken communion with their
Maker through sincere prayer and true worship.
4.
BEGINNINGS OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
When
Jesus was so suddenly seized by his enemies and so
quickly crucified between two thieves, his apostles
and disciples were completely demoralized. The
thought of the Master, arrested, bound, scourged,
and crucified, was too much for even the apostles.
They forgot his teachings and his warnings. He
might, indeed, have been "a prophet mighty in deed
and word before God and all the people," but he
could hardly be the Messiah they had hoped would
restore the kingdom of Israel.
Then
comes the resurrection, with its deliverance from
despair and the return of their faith in the
Master's divinity. Again and again they see him and
talk with him, and he takes them out on Olivet,
where he bids them farewell and tells them he is
going back to the Father. He has told them to tarry
in Jerusalem until they are endowed with
power--until the Spirit of Truth shall come. And on
the day of Pentecost this new teacher comes, and
they go out at once to preach their gospel with new
power. They are the bold and courageous followers of
a living Lord, not a dead and defeated leader. The
Master lives in the hearts of these evangelists; God
is not a doctrine in their minds; he has become a
living presence in their souls.
"Day by
day they continued steadfastly and with one accord
in the temple and breaking bread at home. They took
their food with gladness and singleness of heart,
praising God and having favor with all the people.
They were all filled with the spirit, and they spoke
the word of God with boldness. And the multitudes of
those who believed were of one heart and soul; and
not one of them said that aught of the things which
he possessed was his own, and they had all things in
common."
What has
happened to these men whom Jesus had ordained to go
forth preaching the gospel of the kingdom, the
fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man? They
have a new gospel; they are on fire with a new
experience; they are filled with a new spiritual
energy. Their message has suddenly shifted to the
proclamation of the risen Christ: "Jesus of
Nazareth, a man God approved by mighty works and
wonders; him, being delivered up by the determinate
counsel and foreknowledge of God, you did crucify
and slay. The things which God foreshadowed by the
mouth of all the prophets, he thus fulfilled. This
Jesus did God raise up. God has made him both Lord
and Christ. Being, by the right hand of God, exalted
and having received from the Father the promise of
the spirit, he has poured forth this which you see
and hear. Repent, that your sins may be blotted out;
that the Father may send the Christ, who has been
appointed for you, even Jesus, whom the heaven must
receive until the times of the restoration of all
things."
The
gospel of the kingdom, the message of Jesus, had
been suddenly changed into the gospel of the Lord
Jesus Christ. They now proclaimed the facts of his
life, death, and resurrection and preached the hope
of his speedy return to this
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world to finish
the work he began. Thus the message of the early
believers had to do with preaching about the facts
of his first coming and with teaching the hope of
his second coming, an event which they deemed to be
very near at hand.
Christ
was about to become the creed of the rapidly forming
church. Jesus lives; he died for men; he gave the
spirit; he is coming again. Jesus filled all their
thoughts and determined all their new concept of God
and everything else. They were too much enthused
over the new doctrine that "God is the Father of the
Lord Jesus" to be concerned with the old message
that "God is the loving Father of all men," even of
every single individual. True, a marvelous
manifestation of brotherly love and unexampled good
will did spring up in these early communities of
believers. But it was a fellowship of believers in
Jesus, not a fellowship of brothers in the family
kingdom of the Father in heaven. Their good will
arose from the love born of the concept of Jesus'
bestowal and not from the recognition of the
brotherhood of mortal man. Nevertheless, they were
filled with joy, and they lived such new and unique
lives that all men were attracted to their teachings
about Jesus. They made the great mistake of using
the living and illustrative commentary on the gospel
of the kingdom for that gospel, but even that
represented the greatest religion mankind had ever
known.
Unmistakably, a new fellowship was arising in the
world. "The multitude who believed continued
steadfastly in the apostles' teaching and
fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in
prayers." They called each other brother and sister;
they greeted one another with a holy kiss; they
ministered to the poor. It was a fellowship of
living as well as of worship. They were not communal
by decree but by the desire to share their goods
with their fellow believers. They confidently
expected that Jesus would return to complete the
establishment of the Father's kingdom during their
generation. This spontaneous sharing of earthly
possessions was not a direct feature of Jesus'
teaching; it came about because these men and women
so sincerely and so confidently believed that he was
to return any day to finish his work and to
consummate the kingdom. But the final results of
this well-meant experiment in thoughtless brotherly
love were disastrous and sorrow-breeding. Thousands
of earnest believers sold their property and
disposed of all their capital goods and other
productive assets. With the passing of time, the
dwindling resources of Christian "equal-sharing"
came to an end--but the world did not. Very
soon the believers at Antioch were taking up a
collection to keep their fellow believers at
Jerusalem from starving.
In these
days they celebrated the Lord's Supper after the
manner of its establishment; that is, they assembled
for a social meal of good fellowship and partook of
the sacrament at the end of the meal.
At first
they baptized in the name of Jesus; it was almost
twenty years before they began to baptize in "the
name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit."
Baptism was all that was required for admission into
the fellowship of believers. They had no
organization as yet; it was simply the Jesus
brotherhood.
This
Jesus sect was growing rapidly, and once more the
Sadducees took notice of them. The Pharisees were
little bothered about the situation, seeing that
none of the teachings in any way interfered with the
observance of the Jewish laws. But the Sadducees
began to put the leaders of the Jesus sect in jail
until they were prevailed upon to accept the counsel
of one of the leading rabbis, Gamaliel, who advised
them: "Refrain from these men and let them alone,
for
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if this counsel
or this work is of men, it will be overthrown; but
if it is of God, you will not be able to overthrow
them, lest haply you be found even to be fighting
against God." They decided to follow Gamaliel's
counsel, and there ensued a time of peace and quiet
in Jerusalem, during which the new gospel about
Jesus spread rapidly.
And so
all went well in Jerusalem until the time of the
coming of the Greeks in large numbers from
Alexandria. Two of the pupils of Rodan arrived in
Jerusalem and made many converts from among the
Hellenists. Among their early converts were Stephen
and Barnabas. These able Greeks did not so much have
the Jewish viewpoint, and they did not so well
conform to the Jewish mode of worship and other
ceremonial practices. And it was the doings of these
Greek believers that terminated the peaceful
relations between the Jesus brotherhood and the
Pharisees and Sadducees. Stephen and his Greek
associate began to preach more as Jesus taught, and
this brought them into immediate conflict with the
Jewish rulers. In one of Stephen's public sermons,
when he reached the objectionable part of the
discourse, they dispensed with all formalities of
trial and proceeded to stone him to death on the
spot.
Stephen,
the leader of the Greek colony of Jesus' believers
in Jerusalem, thus became the first martyr to the
new faith and the specific cause for the formal
organization of the early Christian church. This new
crisis was met by the recognition that believers
could not longer go on as a sect within the Jewish
faith. They all agreed that they must separate
themselves from unbelievers; and within one month
from the death of Stephen the church at Jerusalem
had been organized under the leadership of Peter,
and James the brother of Jesus had been installed as
its titular head.
And then
broke out the new and relentless persecutions by the
Jews, so that the active teachers of the new
religion about Jesus, which subsequently at Antioch
was called Christianity, went forth to the ends of
the empire proclaiming Jesus. In carrying this
message, before the time of Paul the leadership was
in Greek hands; and these first missionaries, as
also the later ones, followed the path of
Alexander's march of former days, going by way of
Gaza and Tyre to Antioch and then over Asia Minor to
Macedonia, then on to Rome and to the uttermost
parts of the empire. |