P1395:5, 127:1.1
The incarnated Son passed through infancy and experienced an uneventful childhood.
Then he emerged from that testing and trying transition stage between childhood
and young manhood -- he became the adolescent Jesus.
P1395:6, 127:1.2
This year he attained his full physical growth. He was a virile and comely
youth. He became increasingly sober and serious, but he was kind and sympathetic.
His eye was kind but searching; his smile was always engaging and
reassuring.
His voice was musical but authoritative; his greeting cordial but unaffected.
Always, even in the most commonplace of contacts, there seemed to be in evidence
the touch of a twofold nature, the human and the divine. Ever he displayed
this combination of the sympathizing friend and the authoritative teacher.
And these personality traits began early to become manifest, even in these
adolescent years.
P1395:7, 127:1.3
This physically strong and robust youth also acquired the full growth of his
human intellect, not the full experience of human thinking but the fullness
of capacity for such intellectual development. He possessed a healthy and
well-proportioned body, a keen and analytical mind, a kind and sympathetic
disposition, a somewhat fluctuating but aggressive temperament, all of which
were becoming organized into a strong, striking, and attractive personality.
P1396:1, 127:1.4
As time went on, it became more difficult for his mother and his brothers
and sisters to understand him; they stumbled over his sayings and misinterpreted
his doings. They were all
unfitted to comprehend their eldest brother's life
because their mother had given them to understand that he was destined to
become the deliverer of the Jewish people. After they had received from Mary
such intimations as family secrets, imagine their confusion when Jesus would
make frank denials of all such ideas and intentions.
P1396:2, 127:1.5
This year Simon started to school, and they were compelled to sell another
house. James now took charge of the teaching of his three sisters, two of
whom were old enough to begin serious study. As soon as Ruth grew up, she
was taken in hand by Miriam and Martha. Ordinarily the girls of Jewish families
received little education, but Jesus maintained (and his mother agreed) that
girls should go to school the same as boys, and since the synagogue school
would not receive them, there was nothing to do but conduct a home school
especially for them.
P1396:3, 127:1.6
Throughout this year Jesus was closely confined to the workbench. Fortunately
he had plenty of work; his was of such a superior grade that he was never
idle no matter how slack work might be in that region. At times he had so
much to do that James would help him.
P1396:4, 127:1.7
By the end of this year he had just about made up his mind that he would,
after rearing his family and seeing them married, enter publicly upon his
work as a teacher of truth and as a revealer of the heavenly Father to the
world. He knew he was not to become the expected Jewish Messiah, and he concluded
that it was next to useless to discuss these matters with his mother; he decided
to allow her to entertain whatever ideas she might choose since all he had
said in the past had made little or no impression upon her and he recalled
that his father had never been able to say anything that would change her
mind. From this year on he talked less and less with his mother, or anyone
else, about these problems. His was such a peculiar mission that no one living
on earth could give him advice concerning its prosecution.
P1396:5, 127:1.8
He was a real though youthful father to the family; he spent every possible
hour with the youngsters, and they truly loved him. His mother grieved to
see him work so hard; she sorrowed that he was day by day toiling at the carpenter's
bench earning a living for the family instead of being, as they had so
fondly
planned, at Jerusalem studying with the rabbis. While there was much about
her son that Mary could not understand, she did love him, and she most thoroughly
appreciated the willing manner in which he shouldered the responsibility of
the home.