P1368:4, 124:2.2
He entered the advanced school of the synagogue in August. At school he was
constantly creating trouble by the questions he persisted in asking. Increasingly
he kept all Nazareth in more or less of a hubbub. His parents were loath to
forbid his asking these disquieting questions, and his chief teacher was greatly
intrigued by the lad's curiosity, insight, and hunger for knowledge.
P1368:5, 124:2.3
Jesus' playmates saw nothing supernatural in his conduct; in most ways he
was altogether like themselves. His interest in study was somewhat above the
average but not wholly unusual. He did ask more questions at school than others
in his class.
P1368:6, 124:2.4
Perhaps his most unusual and outstanding trait was his unwillingness to fight
for his rights. Since he was such a well-developed lad for his age, it seemed
strange to his playfellows that he was disinclined to defend himself even
from injustice or when subjected to personal abuse. As it happened, he did
not suffer much on account of this trait because of the friendship of Jacob,
a neighbor boy, who was one year older. He was the son of the stone mason,
a business associate of Joseph. Jacob was a great admirer of Jesus and made
it his business to see that no one was permitted to impose upon Jesus because
of his aversion to physical combat. Several times older and uncouth youths
attacked Jesus,
relying upon his reputed
docility, but they always suffered
swift and certain retribution at the hands of his self-appointed champion
and ever-ready defender, Jacob the stone mason's son.
P1369:1, 124:2.5
Jesus was the generally accepted leader of the Nazareth lads who stood for
the higher ideals of their day and generation. He was really loved by his
youthful associates, not only because he was fair, but also because he possessed
a rare and understanding sympathy that betokened love and bordered on discreet
compassion.
P1369:2, 124:2.6
This year he began to show a marked preference for the company of older persons.
He delighted in talking over things cultural, educational, social, economic,
political, and religious with older minds, and his depth of reasoning and
keenness of observation so charmed his adult associates that they were always
more than willing to visit with him. Until he became responsible for the support
of the home, his parents were constantly seeking to influence him to associate
with those of his own age, or more nearly his age, rather than with older
and
better-informed individuals for whom he evinced such a preference.
P1369:3, 124:2.7
Late this year he had a fishing experience of two months with his uncle on
the Sea of Galilee, and he was very successful. Before attaining manhood,
he had become an expert fisherman.
P1369:4, 124:2.8
His physical development continued; he was an advanced and privileged pupil
at school; he got along fairly well at home with his younger brothers and
sisters, having the advantage of being three and one-half years older than
the oldest of the other children. He was well thought of in Nazareth except
by the parents of some of the
duller children, who often spoke of Jesus as
being too pert, as lacking in proper humility and youthful reserve. He manifested
a growing tendency to direct the play activities of his youthful associates
into more serious and thoughtful channels. He was a born teacher and simply
could not refrain from so functioning, even when supposedly engaged in play.
P1369:5, 124:2.9
Joseph early began to instruct Jesus in the diverse means of gaining a livelihood,
explaining the advantages of agriculture over industry and trade. Galilee
was a more beautiful and prosperous district than Judea, and it cost only
about one fourth as much to live there as in Jerusalem and Judea. It was a
province of agricultural villages and thriving industrial cities, containing
more than two hundred towns of over five thousand population and thirty of
over fifteen thousand.
P1369:6, 124:2.10
When on his first trip with his father to observe the fishing industry on
the lake of Galilee, Jesus had just about made up his mind to become a fisherman;
but close association with his father's vocation later on influenced him to
become a carpenter, while still later a combination of influences led him
to the final choice of becoming a religious teacher of a new order.