P1407:6, 128:1.1
With the attainment of adult years Jesus began in earnest and with full self-consciousness
the task of completing the experience of mastering the knowledge of the life
of his lowest form of intelligent creatures, thereby finally and fully earning
the right of unqualified rulership of his self-created universe. He entered
upon this stupendous task fully realizing his dual nature. But he had already
effectively combined these two natures into one -- Jesus of Nazareth.
P1407:7, 128:1.2
Joshua ben Joseph knew full well that he was a man, a mortal man, born of
woman. This is shown in the selection of his first title, the Son of Man.
He was truly a partaker of flesh and blood, and even now, as he presides in
sovereign authority over the destinies of a universe, he still bears among
his numerous well-earned titles that of Son of Man. It is literally true that
the creative Word -- the Creator Son -- of the Universal Father was "made
flesh and dwelt as a man of the realm on Urantia." He labored, grew weary,
rested, and slept. He hungered and satisfied such cravings with food; he
thirsted
and
quenched his thirst with water. He experienced the full gamut of human
feelings and emotions; he was "in all things tested, even as you are," and
he suffered and died.
P1407:8, 128:1.3
He obtained knowledge, gained experience, and combined these into wisdom,
just as do other mortals of the realm. Until after his baptism he availed
himself of no supernatural power. He employed no agency not a part of his
human endowment as a son of Joseph and Mary.
P1408:1, 128:1.4
As to the attributes of his prehuman existence, he emptied himself. Prior
to the beginning of his public work his knowledge of men and events was wholly
self-limited. He was a true man among men.
P1408:2, 128:1.5
It is forever and gloriously true: "We have a high ruler who can be touched
with the feeling of our infirmities. We have a Sovereign who was in all points
tested and tempted like as we are, yet without sin." And since he himself
has suffered, being tested and tried, he is abundantly able to understand
and minister to those who are confused and distressed.
P1408:3, 128:1.6
The Nazareth carpenter now fully understood the work before him, but he chose
to live his human life in the channel of its natural flowing. And in some
of these matters he is indeed an example to his mortal creatures, even as
it is recorded: "Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus, who,
being of the nature of God, thought it not strange to be equal with God. But
he made himself to be of little import and, taking upon himself the form of
a creature, was born in the likeness of mankind. And being thus fashioned
as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death, even the death
of the cross."
P1408:4, 128:1.7
He lived his mortal life just as all others of the human family may live theirs,
"who in the days of the flesh so frequently offered up prayers and supplications,
even with strong feelings and tears, to him who is able to save from all evil,
and his prayers were effective because he believed." Wherefore it
behooved
him in every respect to be made like his brethren that he might become
a merciful and understanding sovereign ruler over them.
P1408:5, 128:1.8
Of his human nature he was never in doubt; it was self-evident and always
present in his consciousness. But of his divine nature there was always room
for doubt and conjecture, at least this was true right up to the event of
his baptism. The self-realization of divinity was a slow and, from the human
standpoint, a natural evolutionary revelation. This revelation and self-realization
of divinity began in Jerusalem when he was not quite thirteen years old with
the first supernatural occurrence of his human existence; and this experience
of effecting the self-realization of his divine nature was completed at the
time of his second supernatural experience while in the flesh, the episode
attendant upon his baptism by John in the Jordan, which event marked the beginning
of his public career of ministry and teaching.
P1408:6, 128:1.9
Between these two celestial visitations, one in his thirteenth year and the
other at his baptism, there occurred nothing supernatural or superhuman in
the life of this incarnated Creator Son. Notwithstanding this, the babe of
Bethlehem, the lad, youth, and man of Nazareth, was in reality the incarnated
Creator of a universe; but he never once used aught of this power, nor did
he utilize the guidance of celestial personalities, aside from that of his
guardian seraphim, in the living of his human life up to the day of his baptism
by John. And we who thus testify know whereof we speak.
P1408:7, 128:1.10
And yet, throughout all these years of his life in the flesh he was truly
divine. He was actually a Creator Son of the Paradise Father. When once he
had espoused his public career, subsequent to the technical completion of
his purely mortal experience of sovereignty acquirement, he did not hesitate
publicly to admit that he was the Son of God. He did not hesitate to declare,
"I am Alpha and
Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last."
He made no protest in later years when he was called Lord of Glory, Ruler
of a Universe, the Lord God of all creation, the Holy One of Israel, the Lord
of all, our Lord and our God, God with us, having a name above every name
and on all worlds, the Omnipotence of a universe, the Universe Mind of this
creation, the One in whom are hid all treasures of wisdom and knowledge, the
fullness of Him who fills all things, the eternal Word of the eternal God,
the One who was before all things and in whom all things consist, the Creator
of the heavens and the earth, the Upholder of a universe, the Judge of all
the earth, the Giver of life eternal, the True Shepherd, the Deliverer of
the worlds, and the Captain of our salvation.
P1409:1, 128:1.11
He never objected to any of these titles as they were applied to him subsequent
to the emergence from his purely human life into the later years of his self-consciousness
of the ministry of divinity in humanity, and for humanity, and to humanity
on this world and for all other worlds. Jesus objected to but one title as
applied to him: When he was once called Immanuel, he merely replied, "Not
I, that is my elder brother."
P1409:2, 128:1.12
Always, even after his emergence into the larger life on earth, Jesus was
submissively subject to the will of the Father in heaven.
P1409:3, 128:1.13
After his baptism he thought nothing of permitting his sincere believers and
grateful followers to worship him. Even while he wrestled with poverty and
toiled with his hands to provide the necessities of life for his family, his
awareness that he was a Son of God was growing; he knew that he was the maker
of the heavens and this very earth whereon he was now living out his human
existence. And the hosts of celestial beings throughout the great and onlooking
universe likewise knew that this man of Nazareth was their beloved Sovereign
and Creator-father. A profound suspense pervaded the universe of Nebadon throughout
these years; all celestial eyes were continuously focused on Urantia -- on
Palestine.
P1409:4, 128:1.14
This year Jesus went up to Jerusalem with Joseph to celebrate the Passover.
Having taken James to the temple for consecration, he deemed it his duty to
take Joseph. Jesus never exhibited any degree of partiality in dealing with
his family. He went with Joseph to Jerusalem by the usual Jordan valley route,
but he returned to Nazareth by the east Jordan way, which led through Amathus.
Going down the Jordan, Jesus narrated Jewish history to Joseph and on the
return trip told him about the experiences of the reputed tribes of
Ruben,
Gad, and Gilead that traditionally had dwelt in these regions east of the
river.
P1409:5, 128:1.15
Joseph asked Jesus many leading questions concerning his life mission, but
to most of these inquiries Jesus would only reply, "My hour has not yet come."
However, in these intimate discussions many words were dropped which Joseph
remembered during the stirring events of subsequent years. Jesus, with Joseph,
spent this Passover with his three friends at Bethany, as was his custom when
in Jerusalem attending these festival
commemorations.