P1409:6, 128:2.1
This was one of several years during which Jesus' brothers and sisters were
facing the trials and tribulations peculiar to the problems and readjustments
of adolescence. Jesus now had brothers and sisters ranging in ages from seven
to eighteen, and he was kept busy helping them to adjust themselves to the
new awakenings of their intellectual and emotional lives. He had thus to grapple
with the problems of adolescence as they became manifest in the lives of his
younger brothers and sisters.
P1410:1, 128:2.2
This year Simon graduated from school and began work with Jesus' old boyhood
playmate and ever-ready defender, Jacob the stone mason. As a result of several
family conferences it was decided that it was unwise for all the boys to take
up carpentry. It was thought that by
diversifying their trades they would
be prepared to take contracts for putting up entire buildings. Again, they
had not all kept busy since three of them had been working as full-time carpenters.
P1410:2, 128:2.3
Jesus continued this year at house finishing and
cabinetwork but spent most
of his time at the caravan repair shop. James was beginning to alternate with
him in attendance at the shop. The latter part of this year, when carpenter
work was slack about Nazareth, Jesus left James in charge of the repair shop
and Joseph at the home bench while he went over to Sepphoris to work with
a smith. He worked six months with metals and acquired considerable skill
at the anvil.
P1410:3, 128:2.4
Before taking up his new employment at Sepphoris, Jesus held one of his periodic
family conferences and solemnly installed James, then just past eighteen years
old, as acting head of the family. He promised his brother hearty support
and full co-operation and exacted formal promises of obedience to James from
each member of the family. From this day James assumed full financial responsibility
for the family, Jesus making his weekly payments to his brother. Never again
did Jesus take the reins out of James's hands. While working at Sepphoris
he could have walked home every night if necessary, but he purposely remained
away, assigning weather and other reasons, but his true motive was to train
James and Joseph in the bearing of the family responsibility. He had begun
the slow process of weaning his family. Each Sabbath Jesus returned to Nazareth,
and sometimes during the week when occasion required, to observe the working
of the new plan, to give advice and offer helpful suggestions.
P1410:4, 128:2.5
Living much of the time in Sepphoris for six months afforded Jesus a new opportunity
to become better acquainted with the gentile viewpoint of life. He worked
with gentiles, lived with gentiles, and in every possible manner did he make
a close and painstaking study of their habits of living and of the gentile
mind.
P1410:5, 128:2.6
The moral standards of this home city of Herod Antipas were so far below those
of even the caravan city of Nazareth that after six months' sojourn at Sepphoris
Jesus was not averse to finding an excuse for returning to Nazareth. The group
he worked for were to become engaged on public work in both Sepphoris and
the new city of Tiberias, and Jesus was disinclined to have anything to do
with any sort of employment under the supervision of Herod Antipas. And there
were still other reasons which made it wise, in the opinion of Jesus, for
him to go back to Nazareth. When he returned to the repair shop, he did not
again assume the personal direction of family affairs. He worked in association
with James at the shop and as far as possible permitted him to continue oversight
of the home. James's management of family
expenditures and his administration
of the home budget were undisturbed.
P1410:6, 128:2.7
It was by just such wise and thoughtful planning that Jesus prepared the way
for his eventual withdrawal from active participation in the affairs of his
family. When James had had two years' experience as acting head of the family
-- and two full years before he (James) was to be married -- Joseph was placed
in charge of the household funds and intrusted with the general management
of the home.