P1361:1, 123:4.1
This was, indeed, an eventful year in Jesus' life. Early in January a great
snowstorm occurred in Galilee. Snow fell two feet deep, the heaviest snowfall
Jesus saw during his lifetime and one of the deepest at Nazareth in a hundred
years.
P1361:2, 123:4.2
The play life of Jewish children in the times of Jesus was rather circumscribed;
all too often the children played at the more serious things they observed
their elders doing. They played much at weddings and funerals, ceremonies
which they so frequently saw and which were so spectacular. They danced and
sang but had few organized games, such as children of later days so much enjoy.
P1361:3, 123:4.3
Jesus, in company with a neighbor boy and later his brother James, delighted
to play in the far corner of the family carpenter shop, where they had great
fun with the
shavings and the blocks of wood. It was always difficult for
Jesus to comprehend the harm of certain sorts of play which were forbidden
on the Sabbath, but he never failed to conform to his parents' wishes. He
had a capacity for humor and play which was afforded little opportunity for
expression in the environment of his day and generation, but up to the age
of fourteen he was cheerful and lighthearted most of the time.
P1361:4, 123:4.4
Mary maintained a
dovecote on top of the animal house adjoining the home,
and they used the profits from the sale of doves as a special charity fund,
which Jesus administered after he
deducted the tithe and turned it over to
the officer of the synagogue.
P1361:5, 123:4.5
The only real accident Jesus had up to this time was a fall down the back-yard
stone stairs which led up to the
canvas-roofed bedroom. It happened during
an unexpected July sandstorm from the east. The hot winds, carrying blasts
of fine sand, usually blew during the rainy season, especially in March and
April. It was extraordinary to have such a storm in July. When the storm came
up, Jesus was on the housetop playing, as was his habit, for during much of
the dry season this was his accustomed
playroom. He was blinded by the sand
when descending the stairs and fell. After this accident Joseph built a
balustrade
up both sides of the stairway.
P1361:6, 123:4.6
There was no way in which this accident could have been prevented. It was
not chargeable to neglect by the midway temporal guardians, one primary and
one secondary midwayer having been assigned to the watchcare of the lad; neither
was it chargeable to the guardian seraphim. It simply could not have been
avoided. But this slight accident, occurring while Joseph was absent in Endor,
caused such great anxiety to develop in Mary's mind that she unwisely tried
to keep Jesus very close to her side for some months.
P1361:7, 123:4.7
Material accidents, commonplace occurrences of a physical nature, are not
arbitrarily interfered with by celestial personalities. Under ordinary circumstances
only midway creatures can intervene in material conditions to safeguard the
persons of men and women of destiny, and even in special situations these
beings can so act only in obedience to the specific mandates of their superiors.
P1361:8, 123:4.8
And this was but one of a number of such minor accidents which subsequently
befell this inquisitive and adventurous youth. If you envisage the average
childhood and youth of an aggressive boy, you will have a fairly good idea
of the youthful career of Jesus, and you will be able to imagine just about
how much anxiety he caused his parents, particularly his mother.
P1361:9, 123:4.9
The fourth member of the Nazareth family, Joseph, was born Wednesday morning,
March 16, A.D. 1.