Chapter 39 - Tuesday Morning in the Temple

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CHAPTER 39

TUESDAY MORNING IN THE TEMPLE

ABOUT seven o'clock on this Tuesday morning Jesus met with the apostles, the women's corps, and some two-dozen other prominent disciples at the home of Simon. At this meeting he said farewell to Lazarus, giving him that instruction which led him so soon to flee to Philadelphia in Perea. Jesus also said good-bye to the aged Simon, and gave his parting advice to the women's corps, as he never again formally addressed them.

This morning he greeted each of the twelve with a personal salutation.

To Andrew he said:

  • "Be not dismayed by the events just ahead. Keep a firm hold on your brethren and see that they do not find you downcast."

To Peter he said:

  • "Put not your trust in the arm of flesh nor in weapons of steel. Establish yourself on the spiritual foundations of the eternal rocks."

To James he said:

  • "Falter not because of outward appearances. Remain firm in your faith, and you shall soon know of the reality of that which you believe."

To John he said:

  • "Be gentle. Love even your enemies. Be tolerant. And remember that I have trusted you with many things."

To Nathaniel he said:

  • "Judge not by appearances. Remain firm in your faith when all appears to vanish. Be true to your commission as an ambassador of the kingdom."

To Philip he said:

  • "Be unmoved by the events now impending. Remain unshaken, even when you cannot see the way. Be loyal to your oath of consecration."

To Matthew he said:

  • "Forget not the mercy that received you into the kingdom. Let no man cheat you of your eternal reward. As you have withstood the inclinations of the mortal nature, be willing to be steadfast."

To Thomas he said:

  • "No matter how difficult it may be, just now you must walk by faith and not by sight. Doubt not that I am able to finish the work I have begun, and that I shall eventually see all of my faithful ambassadors in the kingdom beyond."

To the Alpheus twins he said:

  • "Do not allow the things that you cannot understand to crush you. Be true to the affections of your hearts and put not your trust in either great men or the changing attitude of the people. Stand by your brethren."

And to Simon Zelotes he said:

  • "Simon, you may be crushed by disappointment, but your spirit shall rise above all that may come upon you. What you have failed to learn from me, my spirit will teach you. Seek the true realities of the spirit and cease to be attracted by unreal and material shadows."

And to Judas Iscariot he said:

  • "Judas, I have loved you and have prayed that you would love your brethren. Be not weary in well doing; and I would warn you to beware the slippery paths of flattery and the poison darts of ridicule."

When he had concluded these greetings, he departed for Jerusalem with Andrew, Peter, James, and John. The other apostles set about the establishment of the Gethsemane camp, where they were to go that night. About halfway down the slope of Olivet Jesus paused and visited more than an hour with the four apostles.


Divine Forgiveness

Simon Peter:

  • "Master, James and I are not in accord regarding your teachings having to do with the forgiveness of sin. James claims you teach that the Father forgives us even before we ask him, and I maintain that repentance and confession must precede the forgiveness. Which of us is right? What do you say?"

After a short silence Jesus looked significantly at all four and answered:

  • "My brethren, you err in your opinions because you do not comprehend the nature of those intimate and loving relations between the creature and the Creator, between man and God. You fail to grasp that understanding sympathy which the wise parent entertains for his immature and sometimes erring child. It is indeed doubtful whether intelligent and affectionate parents are ever called upon to forgive an average and normal child. Understanding relationships associated with attitudes of love effectively prevent all those estrangements that later necessitate the readjustment of repentance by the child with forgiveness by the parent.
  • "A part of every father lives in the child. The father enjoys priority and superiority of understanding in all matters connected with the child-parent relationship. The parent is able to view the immaturity of the child in the light of the more advanced parental maturity, the riper experience of the older partner. With the earthly child and the heavenly Father, the divine parent possesses infinity and divinity of sympathy and capacity for loving understanding. Divine forgiveness is inevitable. It is inherent and inalienable in God's infinite understanding, in his perfect knowledge of all that concerns the mistaken judgment and erroneous choosing of the child. Divine justice is so eternally fair that it unfailingly embodies understanding mercy.
  • "When a wise man understands the inner impulses of his fellows, he will love them. And when you love your brother, you have already forgiven him. This capacity to understand man's nature and forgive his apparent wrongdoing is Godlike. If you are wise parents, this is the way you will love and understand your children, even forgive them when transient misunderstanding has apparently separated you. The child, being immature and lacking in the fuller understanding of the depth of the child-father relationship, must frequently feel a sense of guilty separation from a father's full approval, but the true father is never conscious of any such separation. Sin is an experience of creature consciousness. It is not a part of God's consciousness.
  • "Your inability or unwillingness to forgive your fellows is the measure of your immaturity, your failure to attain adult sympathy, understanding, and love. You hold grudges and nurse vengefulness in direct proportion to your ignorance of the inner nature and true longings of your children and your fellow beings. Love is the outworking of the divine and inner urge of life. It is founded on understanding, nurtured by unselfish service, and perfected in wisdom."


Questions by the Jewish Rulers

When Jesus arrived in the temple court and began to teach, he had uttered but few words when a group of the younger students from the academies, who had been rehearsed for this purpose, came forward and by their spokesman addressed Jesus:

  • "Master, we know you are a righteous teacher, and we know that you proclaim the ways of truth, and that you serve only God, for you fear no man, and that you are no respecter of persons. We are only students, and we would know the truth about a matter that troubles us. Our difficulty is this: Is it lawful for us to give tribute to Caesar? Shall we give or shall we not give?"

Jesus, perceiving their hypocrisy and craftiness, said to them:

  • "Why do you thus come to tempt me? Show me the tribute money, and I will answer you."

And when they handed him a denarius, he looked at it and said:

  • "Whose image and superscription does this coin bear?"

And when they answered him:

  • "Caesar's,"

Jesus said:

  • "Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's and render to God the things that are God's."


The Sadducees and the Resurrection

Before Jesus could get started with his teaching, another group came forward to question him, this time a company of the learned and crafty Sadducees.

Their spokesman said:

  • "Master, Moses said that if a married man should die, leaving no children, his brother should take the wife and raise up seed for the deceased brother. Now there occurred a case where a man with six brothers died childless. His next brother took his wife but also soon died, leaving no children. “Likewise did the second brother take the wife, but he also died leaving no offspring. And so on until all six of the brothers had had her, and all six of them passed on without leaving children. And then, after them all, the woman herself died. Now, what we would like to ask you is this: In the resurrection whose wife will she be since all seven of these brothers had her?"

Jesus condescended to reply to their mischievous question. He said:

  • "You all do err in asking such questions because you know neither the Scriptures nor the living power of God. You know that the sons of this world can marry and are given in marriage, but you do not seem to understand that they who are accounted worthy to attain the worlds to come, through the resurrection of the righteous, neither marry nor are given in marriage. Those who experience the resurrection from the dead are more like the angels of heaven, and they never die. These resurrected ones are eternally the sons of God. They are the children of light resurrected into the progress of eternal life. And even your Father Moses understood this, for, in connection with his experiences at the burning bush, he heard the Father say, `I am the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.' And so, along with Moses, do I declare that my Father is not the God of the dead but of the living. In him you all do live, reproduce, and possess your mortal existence."


The Great Commandment

Then came forward one of the groups of the Pharisees to ask harassing questions, and the spokesman, signaling to Jesus, said:

  • "Master, I am a lawyer, and I would like to ask you which, in your opinion, is the greatest commandment?"

Jesus answered:

  • "There is but one commandment, and that one is the greatest of all, and that commandment is: `Hear O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one; and you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, with all your mind and with all your strength.' This is the first and great commandment. And the second commandment is like this first; indeed, it springs directly there from, and it is: `You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' There is no other commandment greater than these. On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets."

Said the lawyer:

  • "Of a truth, Master, you have well said that God is one and there is none beside him. That to love him with all the heart, understanding, and strength, and also to love one's neighbor as one's self, is the first and great commandment. We are agreed that this great commandment is much more to be regarded than all the burnt offerings and sacrifices."

When the lawyer answered thus discreetly, Jesus looked down upon him and said:

  • "My friend, I perceive that you are not far from the kingdom of God."

When no more questions were forthcoming, Jesus said to the Pharisees:

  • "Since you ask no more questions, I would like to ask you one. What do you think of the Deliverer? That is, whose son is he?"

After a brief pause one of the scribes answered:

  • "The Messiah is the son of David."

And since Jesus knew that there had been much debate, even among his own disciples, as to whether or not he was the son of David, he asked this further question:

  • "If the Deliverer is indeed the son of David, how is it that, in the Psalm which you accredit to David, he himself, speaking in the spirit, says, `The Lord said to my lord, sit on my right hand until I make your enemies the footstool of your feet.' If David calls him Lord, how then can he be his son?"

They never answered this question that Jesus put to them. But after the Master's death they attempted to escape the difficulty by changing the interpretation of this Psalm so as to make it refer to Abraham instead of the Messiah.


The Inquiring Greeks

About noontime, as Philip was purchasing supplies for the new camp being established near Gethsemane, he was accosted by a delegation of strangers, a group of believing Greeks from Alexandria, Athens, and Rome, whose spokesman said:

  • "You have been pointed out to us by those who know you; so we come to you, Sir, with the request to see Jesus, your Master."

Since Philip had about finished the purchasing of supplies, he and Andrew returned with the Greeks to the home of Joseph, where Jesus received them.

They sat near while he spoke to his apostles and a number of leading disciples assembled at this luncheon:

  • "My Father sent me to this world to reveal his loving-kindness to the children of men, but those to whom I first came have refused to receive me. True, indeed, many of you have believed my gospel for yourselves, but the children of Abraham and their leaders are about to reject me, and in so doing they will reject Him who sent me. I have freely proclaimed the gospel of salvation to this people. I have told them of sonship with joy, liberty, and life more abundant in the spirit. My Father has done many wonderful works among these fear-ridden sons of men. But truly did the Prophet Isaiah refer to this people when he wrote: `Lord, who has believed our teachings? And to whom has the Lord been revealed?' Truly have the leaders of my people deliberately blinded their eyes that they see not, and hardened their hearts lest they believe and be saved. All these years have I sought to heal them of their unbelief that they might be recipients of the Father's eternal salvation, I know that not all have failed me; some of you have indeed believed my message. In this room now are a full score of men who were once members of the Sanhedrin, or who were high in the councils of the nation, albeit even some of you still shrink from open confession of the truth lest they cast you out of the synagogue. Some of you are tempted to love the glory of men more than the glory of God. But I am constrained to show forbearance since I fear for the safety and loyalty of even some of those who have been so long near me, and who have lived so close by my side.
  • "In this banquet chamber I perceive there are assembled Jews and gentiles in about equal numbers, and I would address you as the first and last of such a group that I may instruct in the affairs of the kingdom before I go to my Father."


Attention to the Greeks

These Greeks had been in faithful attendance upon Jesus' teaching in the temple. On Monday evening they had held a conference at the home of Nicodemus, which lasted until the dawn of day, and thirty of them had elected to enter the kingdom.

As Jesus stood before them, he perceived the end of one dispensation and the beginning of another.

Turning his attention to the Greeks, the Master said:

  • "He who believes this gospel believes not merely in me but in Him who sent me. When you look upon me, you see not only the Son of Man but also Him who sent me. I am the light of the world, and whosoever will believe my teaching shall no longer abide in darkness. If you gentiles will hear me, you shall receive the words of life and shall enter forthwith into the joyous liberty of the truth of sonship with God. If my fellow countrymen, the Jews, choose to reject me and to refuse my teachings, I will not sit in judgment on them, for I came not to judge the world but to offer it salvation. Nevertheless, they who reject me and refuse to receive my teaching shall be brought to judgment in due season by my Father and those whom he has appointed to sit in judgment on such as reject the gift of mercy and the truths of salvation. Remember, all of you that I speak not of myself, but that I have faithfully declared to you that which the Father commanded I should reveal to the children of men. And these words that the Father directed me to speak to the world are words of divine truth, everlasting mercy, and eternal life.
  • "But to both Jew and gentile I declare the hour has about come when the Son of Man will be glorified. You well know that, except a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it abides alone. But if it dies in good soil, it springs up again to life and bears much fruit. He who selfishly loves his life stands in danger of losing it. But he who is willing to lay down his life for my sake and for the sake of this gospel shall enjoy a more abundant existence on earth and in heaven, life eternal.
  • "I know my hour is approaching, and I am troubled. I perceive that my people are determined to spurn the kingdom, but I am rejoiced to receive these truth-seeking gentiles who come here today inquiring for the way of light. Nevertheless, my heart aches for my people, and my soul is distraught by that which lies just before me. What shall I say as I look ahead and discern what is about to befall me? Shall I say, Father save me from this awful hour? For this very purpose have I come into the world and even to this hour, rather will I say, and pray that you will join me: Father, glorify your name, your will be done."


Message from the Father

When Jesus had thus spoken, the Personalized Adjuster of his indwelling during pre-baptismal times appeared before him, and as he paused noticeably, this now mighty spirit of the Father's representation spoke to Jesus of Nazareth, saying:

  • "I have glorified my name in your bestowals many times, and I will glorify it once more."

While the Jews and gentiles here assembled heard no voice, they could not fail to discern that the Master had paused in his speaking while a message came to him from some superhuman source.

They all said, every man to the one who was by him:

  • "An angel has spoken to him."

Then Jesus continued to speak:

  • "All this has not happened for my sake but for yours. I know of a certainty that the Father will receive me and accept my mission in your behalf, but it is needful that you be encouraged and made ready for the fiery trial that is just ahead. Let me assure you that victory shall eventually crown our united efforts to enlighten the world and liberate mankind. The old order is bringing itself to judgment. The Prince of this world I have cast down and all men shall become free by the light of the spirit that I will pour out upon all flesh after I have ascended to my Father in heaven.
  • "And now I declare to you, that if I be lifted up on earth and in your lives, I will draw all men to myself and into the fellowship of my Father. You have believed that the Deliverer would abide on earth forever. But I declare that the Son of Man will be rejected by men and that he will go back to the Father. Only a little while will I be with you. Only a little while will the living light be among this darkened generation. Walk while you have this light so that the oncoming darkness and confusion may not overtake you. He who walks in the darkness knows not where he goes. But if you will choose to walk in the light, you shall all indeed become liberated sons of God. And now, all of you, come with me while we go back to the temple and I speak farewell words to the chief priests, the scribes, the Pharisees, the Sadducees, the Herodians, and the benighted rulers of Israel."

Having thus spoken, Jesus led the way over the narrow streets of Jerusalem back to the temple. They had just heard the Master say that this was to be his farewell discourse in the temple, and they followed him in silence and in deep meditation.