P1401:1, 127:4.1
By this time Jesus and Mary were getting along much better. She regarded him
less as a son; he had become to her more a father to her children. Each day's
life swarmed with practical and immediate difficulties. Less frequently they
spoke of his lifework, for, as time passed, all their thought was mutually
devoted to the support and
upbringing of their family of four boys and three
girls.
P1401:2, 127:4.2
By the beginning of this year Jesus had fully won his mother to the acceptance
of his methods of child training -- the positive injunction to do good in
the place of the older Jewish method of forbidding to do evil. In his home
and throughout his
public-teaching career Jesus invariably employed the positive
form of exhortation. Always and everywhere did he say, "You shall do this
-- you ought to do that." Never did he employ the negative mode of teaching
derived from the ancient taboos. He refrained from placing emphasis on evil
by forbidding it, while he exalted the good by commanding its performance.
Prayer time in this household was the occasion for discussing anything and
everything relating to the welfare of the family.
P1401:3, 127:4.3
Jesus began wise discipline upon his brothers and sisters at such an early
age that little or no punishment was ever required to secure their prompt
and wholehearted obedience. The only exception was Jude, upon whom on sundry
occasions Jesus found it necessary to impose penalties for his
infractions
of the rules of the home. On three occasions when it was deemed wise to punish
Jude for self-confessed and deliberate violations of the family rules of conduct,
his punishment was fixed by the unanimous decree of the older children and
was assented to by Jude himself before it was inflicted.
P1401:4, 127:4.4
While Jesus was most methodical and systematic in everything he did, there
was also in all his administrative rulings a refreshing elasticity of interpretation
and an individuality of adaptation that greatly impressed all the children
with the spirit of justice which actuated their father-brother. He never arbitrarily
disciplined his brothers and sisters, and such uniform fairness and personal
consideration greatly endeared Jesus to all his family.
P1401:5, 127:4.5
James and Simon grew up trying to follow Jesus' plan of
placating their bellicose
and sometimes irate playmates by persuasion and nonresistance, and they were
fairly successful; but Joseph and Jude, while assenting to such teachings
at home, made haste to defend themselves when assailed by their comrades;
in particular was Jude guilty of
violating the spirit of these teachings.
But nonresistance was not a rule of the family. No penalty was attached
to the violation of personal teachings.
P1401:6, 127:4.6
In general, all of the children, particularly the girls, would consult Jesus
about their childhood troubles and confide in him just as they would have
in an affectionate father.
P1401:7, 127:4.7
James was growing up to be a well-balanced and even-tempered youth, but he
was not so spiritually inclined as Jesus. He was a much better student than
Joseph, who, while a faithful worker, was even less spiritually minded. Joseph
was a plodder and not up to the intellectual level of the other children.
Simon was a well-meaning boy but too much of a dreamer. He was slow in getting
settled down in life and was the cause of considerable anxiety to Jesus and
Mary. But he was always a good and well-intentioned lad. Jude was a firebrand.
He had the highest of ideals, but he was unstable in temperament. He had all
and more of his mother's determination and aggressiveness, but he lacked much
of her sense of proportion and discretion.
P1402:1, 127:4.8
Miriam was a well-balanced and level-headed daughter with a keen appreciation
of things noble and spiritual. Martha was slow in thought and action but a
very dependable and efficient child. Baby Ruth was the sunshine of the home;
though thoughtless of speech, she was most sincere of heart. She just about
worshiped her big brother and father. But they did not spoil her. She was
a beautiful child but not quite so comely as Miriam, who was the belle of
the family, if not of the city.
P1402:2, 127:4.9
As time passed, Jesus did much to
liberalize and modify the family teachings
and practices related to Sabbath observance and many other phases of religion,
and to all these changes Mary gave hearty assent. By this time Jesus had become
the unquestioned head of the house.
P1402:3, 127:4.10
This year Jude started to school, and it was necessary for Jesus to sell his
harp in order to defray these expenses. Thus disappeared the last of his recreational
pleasures. He much loved to play the harp when tired in mind and weary in
body, but he comforted himself with the thought that at least the harp was
safe from seizure by the tax collector.