P1366:4, 124:1.3
The most serious trouble as yet to come up at school occurred in late winter
when Jesus dared to challenge the chazan regarding the teaching that all images,
pictures, and drawings were idolatrous in nature. Jesus delighted in drawing
landscapes as well as in modeling a great variety of objects in potter's clay.
Everything of that sort was strictly forbidden by Jewish law, but up to this
time he had managed to disarm his parents' objection to such an extent that
they had permitted him to continue in these activities.
P1366:5, 124:1.4
But trouble was again stirred up at school when one of the more backward pupils
discovered Jesus drawing a charcoal picture of the teacher on the floor of
the
schoolroom. There it was, plain as day, and many of the elders had viewed
it before the committee went to call on Joseph to demand that something be
done to suppress the
lawlessness of his eldest son. And though this was not
the first time complaints had come to Joseph and Mary about the doings of
their versatile and aggressive child, this was the most serious of all the
accusations which had thus far been lodged against him. Jesus listened to
the indictment of his artistic efforts for some time, being seated on a large
stone just outside the back door. He resented their blaming his father for
his alleged misdeeds; so in he marched, fearlessly confronting his accusers.
The elders were thrown into confusion. Some were inclined to view the episode
humorously, while one or two seemed to think the boy was
sacrilegious if not
blasphemous. Joseph was nonplused, Mary indignant, but Jesus insisted on being
heard. He had his say, courageously defended his viewpoint, and with consummate
self-control announced that he would abide by the decision of his father in
this as in all other matters controversial. And the committee of elders departed
in silence.
P1367:1, 124:1.5
Mary endeavored to influence Joseph to permit Jesus to model in clay at home,
provided he promised not to carry on any of these questionable activities
at school, but Joseph felt impelled to rule that the rabbinical interpretation
of the second commandment should prevail. And so Jesus no more drew or
modeled
the likeness of anything from that day as long as he lived in his father's
house. But he was unconvinced of the wrong of what he had done, and to give
up such a favorite pastime constituted one of the great trials of his young
life.
P1367:2, 124:1.6
In the latter part of June, Jesus, in company with his father, first climbed
to the summit of Mount Tabor. It was a clear day and the view was superb.
It seemed to this
nine-year-old lad that he had really gazed upon the entire
world excepting India, Africa, and Rome.
P1367:3, 124:1.7
Jesus' second sister, Martha, was born Thursday night, September 13. Three
weeks after the coming of Martha, Joseph, who was home for
awhile, started
the building of an addition to their house, a combined workshop and bedroom.
A small workbench was built for Jesus, and for the first time he possessed
tools of his own. At odd times for many years he worked at this bench and
became highly expert in the making of yokes.
P1367:4, 124:1.8
This winter and the next were the coldest in Nazareth for many decades. Jesus
had seen snow on the mountains, and several times it had fallen in Nazareth,
remaining on the ground only a short time; but not until this winter had he
seen ice. The fact that water could be had as a solid, a liquid, and a vapor
-- he had long pondered over the escaping steam from the boiling pots -- caused
the lad to think a great deal about the physical world and its constitution;
and yet the personality embodied in this growing youth was all this while
the actual creator and organizer of all these things throughout a far-flung
universe.
P1367:5, 124:1.9
The climate of Nazareth was not severe. January was the coldest month, the
temperature averaging around 50° F. During July and August, the
hottest
months, the temperature would vary from 75° to 90° F. From the mountains
to the Jordan and the Dead Sea valley the climate of Palestine ranged from
the frigid to the
torrid. And so, in a way, the Jews were prepared to live
in about any and all of the world's varying climates.
P1367:6, 124:1.10
Even during the
warmest summer months a cool sea
breeze usually blew from
the west from 10:00 A.M. until about 10:00 P.M.
But every now and then terrific hot winds from the eastern desert would blow
across all Palestine. These hot blasts usually came in February and March,
near the end of the rainy season. In those days the rain fell in refreshing
showers from November to April, but it did not rain steadily. There were only
two seasons in Palestine, summer and winter, the dry and rainy seasons. In
January the flowers began to bloom, and by the end of April the whole land
was one vast flower garden.
P1367:7, 124:1.11
In May of this year, on his uncle's farm, Jesus for the first time helped
with the harvest of the grain. Before he was thirteen, he had managed to find
out something about practically everything that men and women worked at around
Nazareth except metal working, and he spent several months in a
smith's shop
when older, after the death of his father.
P1368:1, 124:1.12
When work and caravan travel were slack, Jesus made many trips with his father
on pleasure or business to near-by Cana, Endor, and Nain. Even as a lad he
frequently visited Sepphoris, only a little over three miles from Nazareth
to the northwest, and from 4 B.C. to about A.D.
25 the capital of Galilee and one of the residences of Herod Antipas.
P1368:2, 124:1.13
Jesus continued to grow physically, intellectually, socially, and spiritually.
His trips away from home did much to give him a better and more generous understanding
of his own family, and by this time even his parents were beginning to learn
from him as well as to teach him. Jesus was an original thinker and a skillful
teacher, even in his youth. He was in constant collision with the so-called
"oral law," but he always sought to adapt himself to the practices of his
family. He got along fairly well with the children of his age, but he often
grew discouraged with their
slow-acting minds. Before he was ten years old,
he had become the leader of a group of seven lads who formed themselves into
a society for promoting the acquirements of manhood -- physical, intellectual,
and religious. Among these boys Jesus succeeded in introducing many new games
and various improved methods of physical recreation.