P1364:4, 123:6.1
This was an interesting year at school. Although Jesus was not an unusual
student, he was a diligent pupil and belonged to the more progressive third
of the class, doing his work so well that he was excused from attendance one
week out of each month. This week he usually spent either with his fisherman
uncle on the shores of the Sea of Galilee near Magdala or on the farm of another
uncle (his mother's brother) five miles south of Nazareth.
P1364:5, 123:6.2
Although his mother had become unduly anxious about his health and safety,
she gradually became reconciled to these trips away from home. Jesus' uncles
and aunts were all very fond of him, and there ensued a lively competition
among them to secure his company for these monthly visits throughout this
and immediately subsequent years. His first week's sojourn on his uncle's
farm (since infancy) was in January of this year; the first week's fishing
experience on the Sea of Galilee occurred in the month of May.
P1364:6, 123:6.3
About this time Jesus met a teacher of mathematics from Damascus, and learning
some new techniques of numbers, he spent much time on mathematics for several
years. He developed a keen sense of numbers, distances, and proportions.
P1364:7, 123:6.4
Jesus began to enjoy his brother James very much and by the end of this year
had begun to teach him the alphabet.
P1364:8, 123:6.5
This year Jesus made arrangements to exchange dairy products for lessons on
the harp. He had an unusual liking for everything musical. Later on he did
much to promote an interest in vocal music among his youthful associates.
By the time he was eleven years of age, he was a skillful
harpist and greatly
enjoyed entertaining both family and friends with his extraordinary interpretations
and able
improvisations.
P1365:1, 123:6.6
While Jesus continued to make enviable progress at school, all did not run
smoothly for either parents or teachers. He persisted in asking many embarrassing
questions concerning both science and religion, particularly regarding geography
and astronomy. He was especially insistent on finding out why there was a
dry season and a rainy season in Palestine. Repeatedly he sought the explanation
for the great difference between the temperatures of Nazareth and the Jordan
valley. He simply never ceased to ask such intelligent but perplexing questions.
P1365:2, 123:6.7
His third brother, Simon, was born on Friday evening, April 14, of this year,
A.D. 2.
P1365:3, 123:6.8
In February, Nahor, one of the teachers in a Jerusalem academy of the rabbis,
came to Nazareth to observe Jesus, having been on a similar mission to Zacharias's
home near Jerusalem. He came to Nazareth at the instigation of John's father.
While at first he was somewhat shocked by Jesus' frankness and
unconventional
manner of relating himself to things religious, he attributed it to the remoteness
of Galilee from the centers of Hebrew learning and culture and advised Joseph
and Mary to allow him to take Jesus back with him to Jerusalem, where he could
have the advantages of education and training at the center of Jewish culture.
Mary was half persuaded to consent; she was convinced her eldest son was to
become the Messiah, the Jewish deliverer; Joseph hesitated; he was equally
persuaded that Jesus was to grow up to become a man of destiny, but what that
destiny would prove to be he was profoundly uncertain. But he never really
doubted that his son was to fulfill some great mission on earth. The more
he thought about Nahor's advice, the more he questioned the wisdom of the
proposed sojourn in Jerusalem.
P1365:4, 123:6.9
Because of this difference of opinion between Joseph and Mary, Nahor requested
permission to lay the whole matter before Jesus. Jesus listened attentively,
talked with Joseph, Mary, and a neighbor, Jacob the stone mason, whose son
was his favorite playmate, and then, two days later, reported that since there
was such a difference of opinion among his parents and advisers, and since
he did not feel competent to assume the responsibility for such a decision,
not feeling strongly one way or the other, in view of the whole situation,
he had finally decided to "talk with my Father who is in heaven"; and while
he was not perfectly sure about the answer, he rather felt he should remain
at home "with my father and mother," adding, "they who love me so much should
be able to do more for me and guide me more safely than strangers who can
only view my body and observe my mind but can hardly truly know me." They
all marveled, and Nahor went his way, back to Jerusalem. And it was many years
before the subject of Jesus' going away from home again came up for consideration.