Difference between revisions of "132:4 Personal Ministry"

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132:4.1 [[Jesus]] did not [[devote]] all his [[leisure]] while in [[Rome]] to this [[work]] of [[preparing]] men and women to become [[future]] [[disciples]] in the oncoming kingdom. He spent much time gaining an [[intimate]] [[knowledge]] of all [[races]] and [[classes]] of men who lived in this, the largest and most [[cosmopolitan]] [[city]] of the world. In each of these numerous human [[contacts]] Jesus had a double [[purpose]]: He [[desired]] to [[learn]] their [[reactions]] to the life they were living in the [[flesh]], and he was also minded to say or do something to make that life richer and more [[worth]] while. His religious [[teachings]] during these weeks were no [[different]] than those which characterized his later life as teacher of [[the Apostles|the twelve]] and preacher to the multitudes.
 
132:4.1 [[Jesus]] did not [[devote]] all his [[leisure]] while in [[Rome]] to this [[work]] of [[preparing]] men and women to become [[future]] [[disciples]] in the oncoming kingdom. He spent much time gaining an [[intimate]] [[knowledge]] of all [[races]] and [[classes]] of men who lived in this, the largest and most [[cosmopolitan]] [[city]] of the world. In each of these numerous human [[contacts]] Jesus had a double [[purpose]]: He [[desired]] to [[learn]] their [[reactions]] to the life they were living in the [[flesh]], and he was also minded to say or do something to make that life richer and more [[worth]] while. His religious [[teachings]] during these weeks were no [[different]] than those which characterized his later life as teacher of [[the Apostles|the twelve]] and preacher to the multitudes.
  
132:4.2 Always the burden of his [[message]] was: the [[fact]] of the heavenly Father's [[love]] and the [[truth]] of his [[mercy]], coupled with the good news that man is a [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_40#40:6._THE_FAITH_SONS_OF_GOD faith-son] of this same [[God]] of [[love]]. Jesus' usual [[technique]] of [[social]] [[contact]] was to draw people out and into talking with him by asking them questions. The interview would usually begin by his asking them questions and end by their asking him questions. He was equally adept in teaching by either asking or answering questions. ''As a rule, to those he taught the most, he said the least.'' Those who derived most [[benefit]] from his [[personal]] [[ministry]] were overburdened, [[anxious]], and dejected [[mortals]] who gained much relief because of the [[opportunity]] to unburden their [[souls]] to a [[sympathetic]] and understanding [[listener]], and he was all that and more. And when these maladjusted [[human beings]] had told [[Jesus]] about their [[trouble]]s, always was he able to offer [[practical]] and immediately helpful suggestions looking toward the correction of their real difficulties, albeit he did not neglect to speak [[words]] of present [[comfort]] and immediate consolation. And invariably would he tell these distressed [[mortals]] about the [[love]] of God and impart the [[information]], by various and sundry [[methods]], that they were the [[children]] of this loving [[Father in heaven]].
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132:4.2 Always the burden of his [[message]] was: the [[fact]] of the heavenly Father's [[love]] and the [[truth]] of his [[mercy]], coupled with the good news that man is a [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_40#40:6._THE_FAITH_SONS_OF_GOD faith-son] of this same [[God]] of [[love]]. Jesus' usual [[technique]] of [[social]] [[contact]] was to draw people out and into talking with him by asking them questions. The interview would usually begin by his asking them questions and end by their asking him questions. He was equally adept in teaching by either asking or answering questions. ''As a rule, to those he taught the most, he said the least.'' Those who derived most [[benefit]] from his [[personal]] [[ministry]] were overburdened, [[anxious]], and dejected [[mortals]] who gained much relief because of the [[opportunity]] to unburden their [[souls]] to a [[sympathetic]] and understanding [[listener]], and he was all that and more. And when these maladjusted [[human beings]] had told [[Jesus]] about their [[trouble]]s, always was he able to offer [[practical]] and immediately helpful suggestions looking toward the correction of their real difficulties, albeit he did not neglect to speak [[words]] of present [[comfort]] and immediate consolation. And invariably would he tell these distressed [[mortals]] about the [[love]] of God and impart the [[information]], by various and sundry [[methods]], that they were the [[children]] of this loving [[Father in heaven]].
  
132:4.3 In this [[manner]], during the [[sojourn]] in [[Rome]], Jesus personally came into [[affectionate]] and uplifting [[contact]] with upward of five hundred [[mortals]] of the realm. He thus gained a [[knowledge]] of the [[different]] [[races]] of [[mankind]] which he could never have acquired in [[Jerusalem]] and hardly even in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria Alexandria]. He always regarded this six months as one of the richest and most informative of any like period of his [[earth]] life.
+
132:4.3 In this [[manner]], during the [[sojourn]] in [[Rome]], Jesus personally came into [[affectionate]] and uplifting [[contact]] with upward of five hundred [[mortals]] of the realm. He thus gained a [[knowledge]] of the [[different]] [[races]] of [[mankind]] which he could never have acquired in [[Jerusalem]] and hardly even in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria Alexandria]. He always regarded this six months as one of the richest and most informative of any like period of his [[earth]] life.
  
 
132:4.4 As might have been [[expected]], such a [[versatile]] and aggressive man could not thus [[function]] for six months in the world's metropolis without being approached by numerous [[persons]] who desired to secure his [[services]] in connection with some [[business]] or, more often, for some project of [[teaching]], social reform, or religious [[movement]]. More than a dozen such proffers were made, and he utilized each one as an [[opportunity]] for imparting some [[thought]] of [[spiritual]] ennoblement by well-chosen [[words]] or by some obliging [[service]]. Jesus was very fond of doing things—even little things—for all sorts of people.
 
132:4.4 As might have been [[expected]], such a [[versatile]] and aggressive man could not thus [[function]] for six months in the world's metropolis without being approached by numerous [[persons]] who desired to secure his [[services]] in connection with some [[business]] or, more often, for some project of [[teaching]], social reform, or religious [[movement]]. More than a dozen such proffers were made, and he utilized each one as an [[opportunity]] for imparting some [[thought]] of [[spiritual]] ennoblement by well-chosen [[words]] or by some obliging [[service]]. Jesus was very fond of doing things—even little things—for all sorts of people.
  
132:4.5 He talked with a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_senate Roman senator] on [[politics]] and [[statesmanship]], and this one contact with [[Jesus]] made such an impression on this legislator that he spent the rest of his life vainly trying to induce his [[colleagues]] to [[change]] the [[course]] of the ruling [[policy]] from the [[idea]] of the government supporting and feeding the people to that of the people [[supporting]] the [[government]]. [[Jesus]] spent one evening with a [[wealthy]] slaveholder, talked about man as a [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_40#40:5._MORTALS_OF_TIME_AND_SPACE son of God], and the next day this man, Claudius, gave [[freedom]] to one hundred and seventeen [[slaves]]. He [[visited]] at dinner with a [[Greek]] [[physician]], telling him that his patients had [[minds]] and [[souls]] as well as [[bodies]], and thus led this able doctor to attempt a more far-reaching [[ministry]] to his fellow men. He talked with all sorts of people in every walk of life. The only place in [[Rome]] he did not visit was the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_baths public baths]. He refused to accompany his [[friends]] to the baths because of the [[sex]] [[promiscuity]] which there prevailed.
+
132:4.5 He talked with a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_senate Roman senator] on [[politics]] and [[statesmanship]], and this one contact with [[Jesus]] made such an impression on this legislator that he spent the rest of his life vainly trying to induce his [[colleagues]] to [[change]] the [[course]] of the ruling [[policy]] from the [[idea]] of the government supporting and feeding the people to that of the people [[supporting]] the [[government]]. [[Jesus]] spent one evening with a [[wealthy]] slaveholder, talked about man as a [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_40#40:5._MORTALS_OF_TIME_AND_SPACE son of God], and the next day this man, Claudius, gave [[freedom]] to one hundred and seventeen [[slaves]]. He [[visited]] at dinner with a [[Greek]] [[physician]], telling him that his patients had [[minds]] and [[souls]] as well as [[bodies]], and thus led this able doctor to attempt a more far-reaching [[ministry]] to his fellow men. He talked with all sorts of people in every walk of life. The only place in [[Rome]] he did not visit was the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_baths public baths]. He refused to accompany his [[friends]] to the baths because of the [[sex]] [[promiscuity]] which there prevailed.
  
132:4.6 To a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_soldier Roman soldier], as they walked along the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiber Tiber], he said: " Be [[brave]] of [[heart]] as well as of hand. Dare to do [[justice]] and be big enough to show [[mercy]]. Compel your lower [[nature]] to [[obey]] your higher nature as you obey your superiors. [[Revere]] [[goodness]] and exalt [[truth]]. [[Choose]] the [[beautiful]] in place of the ugly. [[Love]] your fellows and reach out for [[God]] with a whole heart, for God is y[[our Father]] in heaven. "
+
132:4.6 To a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_soldier Roman soldier], as they walked along the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiber Tiber], he said: " Be [[brave]] of [[heart]] as well as of hand. Dare to do [[justice]] and be big enough to show [[mercy]]. Compel your lower [[nature]] to [[obey]] your higher nature as you obey your superiors. [[Revere]] [[goodness]] and exalt [[truth]]. [[Choose]] the [[beautiful]] in place of the ugly. [[Love]] your fellows and reach out for [[God]] with a whole heart, for God is y[[our Father]] in heaven. "
  
132:4.7 To the speaker at [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_forum the forum] he said: " Your [[eloquence]] is pleasing, your [[logic]] is admirable, your [[voice]] is pleasant, but your teaching is hardly true. If you could only enjoy the [[inspiring]] [[satisfaction]] of [[knowing]] [[God]] as your spiritual [[Father]], then you might employ your [[Rhetoric|powers of speech]] to [[liberate]] your fellows from the [[bondage]] of [[darkness]] and from the [[slavery]] of [[ignorance]]. " This was the Marcus who heard [[Peter, the Apostle|Peter]] preach in [[Rome]] and became his successor. When they [[crucified]] Simon Peter, it was this man who defied the Roman persecutors and boldly continued to preach the new gospel.
+
132:4.7 To the speaker at [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_forum the forum] he said: " Your [[eloquence]] is pleasing, your [[logic]] is admirable, your [[voice]] is pleasant, but your teaching is hardly true. If you could only enjoy the [[inspiring]] [[satisfaction]] of [[knowing]] [[God]] as your spiritual [[Father]], then you might employ your [[Rhetoric|powers of speech]] to [[liberate]] your fellows from the [[bondage]] of [[darkness]] and from the [[slavery]] of [[ignorance]]. " This was the Marcus who heard [[Peter, the Apostle|Peter]] preach in [[Rome]] and became his successor. When they [[crucified]] Simon Peter, it was this man who defied the Roman persecutors and boldly continued to preach the new gospel.
  
 
132:4.8 Meeting a [[poor]] man who had been falsely [[accused]], [[Jesus]] went with him before the [[magistrate]] and, having been granted special permission to appear in his behalf, made that superb [[Speech|address]] in the course of which he said: " [[Justice]] makes a nation great, and the greater a [[nation]] the more solicitous will it be to see that injustice shall not befall even its most [[humble]] [[citizen]]. Woe upon any nation when only those who [[possess]] [[money]] and [[influence]] can secure ready [[justice]] before its [[courts]]! It is the [[sacred]] [[duty]] of a magistrate to acquit the [[innocent]] as well as to [[punish]] the [[guilty]]. Upon the impartiality, [[fairness]], and [[integrity]] of its [[courts]] the [[endurance]] of a nation depends. Civil government is founded on [[justice]], even as true [[religion]] is founded on [[mercy]]. " The judge reopened the case, and when the [[evidence]] had been sifted, he discharged the prisoner. Of all [[Jesus]]' activities during these days of [[personal]] [[ministry]], this came the nearest to being a [[public]] [[appearance]].
 
132:4.8 Meeting a [[poor]] man who had been falsely [[accused]], [[Jesus]] went with him before the [[magistrate]] and, having been granted special permission to appear in his behalf, made that superb [[Speech|address]] in the course of which he said: " [[Justice]] makes a nation great, and the greater a [[nation]] the more solicitous will it be to see that injustice shall not befall even its most [[humble]] [[citizen]]. Woe upon any nation when only those who [[possess]] [[money]] and [[influence]] can secure ready [[justice]] before its [[courts]]! It is the [[sacred]] [[duty]] of a magistrate to acquit the [[innocent]] as well as to [[punish]] the [[guilty]]. Upon the impartiality, [[fairness]], and [[integrity]] of its [[courts]] the [[endurance]] of a nation depends. Civil government is founded on [[justice]], even as true [[religion]] is founded on [[mercy]]. " The judge reopened the case, and when the [[evidence]] had been sifted, he discharged the prisoner. Of all [[Jesus]]' activities during these days of [[personal]] [[ministry]], this came the nearest to being a [[public]] [[appearance]].
  
<center>[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_132 Go to Paper 132]</center>
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<center>[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Paper_132 Go to Paper 132]</center>
<center>[http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Urantia_Text_-_Contents Go to Table of Contents]</center>
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<center>[https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=The_Urantia_Text_-_Contents Go to Table of Contents]</center>
  
 
[[Category:Paper 132 - The Sojourn at Rome]]
 
[[Category:Paper 132 - The Sojourn at Rome]]
 
[[Category: Influence]]
 
[[Category: Influence]]
 
[[Category: Listening]]
 
[[Category: Listening]]

Latest revision as of 22:57, 12 December 2020

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132:4.1 Jesus did not devote all his leisure while in Rome to this work of preparing men and women to become future disciples in the oncoming kingdom. He spent much time gaining an intimate knowledge of all races and classes of men who lived in this, the largest and most cosmopolitan city of the world. In each of these numerous human contacts Jesus had a double purpose: He desired to learn their reactions to the life they were living in the flesh, and he was also minded to say or do something to make that life richer and more worth while. His religious teachings during these weeks were no different than those which characterized his later life as teacher of the twelve and preacher to the multitudes.

132:4.2 Always the burden of his message was: the fact of the heavenly Father's love and the truth of his mercy, coupled with the good news that man is a faith-son of this same God of love. Jesus' usual technique of social contact was to draw people out and into talking with him by asking them questions. The interview would usually begin by his asking them questions and end by their asking him questions. He was equally adept in teaching by either asking or answering questions. As a rule, to those he taught the most, he said the least. Those who derived most benefit from his personal ministry were overburdened, anxious, and dejected mortals who gained much relief because of the opportunity to unburden their souls to a sympathetic and understanding listener, and he was all that and more. And when these maladjusted human beings had told Jesus about their troubles, always was he able to offer practical and immediately helpful suggestions looking toward the correction of their real difficulties, albeit he did not neglect to speak words of present comfort and immediate consolation. And invariably would he tell these distressed mortals about the love of God and impart the information, by various and sundry methods, that they were the children of this loving Father in heaven.

132:4.3 In this manner, during the sojourn in Rome, Jesus personally came into affectionate and uplifting contact with upward of five hundred mortals of the realm. He thus gained a knowledge of the different races of mankind which he could never have acquired in Jerusalem and hardly even in Alexandria. He always regarded this six months as one of the richest and most informative of any like period of his earth life.

132:4.4 As might have been expected, such a versatile and aggressive man could not thus function for six months in the world's metropolis without being approached by numerous persons who desired to secure his services in connection with some business or, more often, for some project of teaching, social reform, or religious movement. More than a dozen such proffers were made, and he utilized each one as an opportunity for imparting some thought of spiritual ennoblement by well-chosen words or by some obliging service. Jesus was very fond of doing things—even little things—for all sorts of people.

132:4.5 He talked with a Roman senator on politics and statesmanship, and this one contact with Jesus made such an impression on this legislator that he spent the rest of his life vainly trying to induce his colleagues to change the course of the ruling policy from the idea of the government supporting and feeding the people to that of the people supporting the government. Jesus spent one evening with a wealthy slaveholder, talked about man as a son of God, and the next day this man, Claudius, gave freedom to one hundred and seventeen slaves. He visited at dinner with a Greek physician, telling him that his patients had minds and souls as well as bodies, and thus led this able doctor to attempt a more far-reaching ministry to his fellow men. He talked with all sorts of people in every walk of life. The only place in Rome he did not visit was the public baths. He refused to accompany his friends to the baths because of the sex promiscuity which there prevailed.

132:4.6 To a Roman soldier, as they walked along the Tiber, he said: " Be brave of heart as well as of hand. Dare to do justice and be big enough to show mercy. Compel your lower nature to obey your higher nature as you obey your superiors. Revere goodness and exalt truth. Choose the beautiful in place of the ugly. Love your fellows and reach out for God with a whole heart, for God is your Father in heaven. "

132:4.7 To the speaker at the forum he said: " Your eloquence is pleasing, your logic is admirable, your voice is pleasant, but your teaching is hardly true. If you could only enjoy the inspiring satisfaction of knowing God as your spiritual Father, then you might employ your powers of speech to liberate your fellows from the bondage of darkness and from the slavery of ignorance. " This was the Marcus who heard Peter preach in Rome and became his successor. When they crucified Simon Peter, it was this man who defied the Roman persecutors and boldly continued to preach the new gospel.

132:4.8 Meeting a poor man who had been falsely accused, Jesus went with him before the magistrate and, having been granted special permission to appear in his behalf, made that superb address in the course of which he said: " Justice makes a nation great, and the greater a nation the more solicitous will it be to see that injustice shall not befall even its most humble citizen. Woe upon any nation when only those who possess money and influence can secure ready justice before its courts! It is the sacred duty of a magistrate to acquit the innocent as well as to punish the guilty. Upon the impartiality, fairness, and integrity of its courts the endurance of a nation depends. Civil government is founded on justice, even as true religion is founded on mercy. " The judge reopened the case, and when the evidence had been sifted, he discharged the prisoner. Of all Jesus' activities during these days of personal ministry, this came the nearest to being a public appearance.

Go to Paper 132
Go to Table of Contents