P1411:1, 128:3.1
This year the financial pressure was slightly relaxed as four were at work.
Miriam earned considerable by the sale of milk and butter; Martha had become
an expert weaver. The purchase price of the repair shop was over one third
paid. The situation was such that Jesus stopped work for three weeks to take
Simon to Jerusalem for the Passover, and this was the longest period away
from daily toil he had enjoyed since the death of his father.
P1411:2, 128:3.2
They journeyed to Jerusalem by way of the Decapolis and through Pella, Gerasa,
Philadelphia, Heshbon, and Jericho. They returned to Nazareth by the coast
route, touching Lydda, Joppa, Caesarea, thence around Mount Carmel to Ptolemais
and Nazareth. This trip fairly well acquainted Jesus with the whole of Palestine
north of the Jerusalem district.
P1411:3, 128:3.3
At Philadelphia Jesus and Simon became acquainted with a merchant from Damascus
who developed such a great liking for the Nazareth couple that he insisted
they stop with him at his Jerusalem headquarters. While Simon gave attendance
at the temple, Jesus spent much of his time talking with this
well-educated
and much-traveled man of world affairs. This merchant owned over four thousand
caravan camels; he had interests all over the Roman world and was now on his
way to Rome. He proposed that Jesus come to Damascus to enter his Oriental
import business, but Jesus explained that he did not feel justified in going
so far away from his family just then. But on the way back home he thought
much about these distant cities and the even more remote countries of the
Far West and the Far East, countries he had so frequently heard spoken of
by the caravan passengers and conductors.
P1411:4, 128:3.4
Simon greatly enjoyed his visit to Jerusalem. He was duly received into the
commonwealth of Israel at the Passover consecration of the new sons of the
commandment. While Simon attended the Passover ceremonies, Jesus mingled with
the throngs of visitors and engaged in many interesting personal conferences
with numerous gentile proselytes.
P1411:5, 128:3.5
Perhaps the most notable of all these contacts was the one with a young Hellenist
named Stephen. This young man was on his first visit to Jerusalem and chanced
to meet Jesus on Thursday afternoon of Passover week. While they both strolled
about viewing the Asmonean palace, Jesus began the casual conversation that
resulted in their becoming interested in each other, and which led to a
four-hour
discussion of the way of life and the true God and his worship. Stephen was
tremendously impressed with what Jesus said; he never forgot his words.
P1411:6, 128:3.6
And this was the same Stephen who subsequently became a believer in the teachings
of Jesus, and whose boldness in preaching this early gospel resulted in his
being stoned to death by irate Jews. Some of Stephen's extraordinary boldness
in proclaiming his view of the new gospel was the direct result of this earlier
interview with Jesus. But Stephen never even faintly surmised that the Galilean
he had talked with some fifteen years previously was the very same person
whom he later proclaimed the world's Savior, and for whom he was so soon to
die, thus becoming the first martyr of the newly evolving Christian faith.
When Stephen yielded up his life as the price of his attack upon the Jewish
temple and its traditional practices, there stood by one named Saul, a citizen
of Tarsus. And when Saul saw how this Greek could die for his faith, there
were aroused in his heart those emotions which eventually led him to espouse
the cause for which Stephen died; later on he became the aggressive and indomitable
Paul, the philosopher, if not the sole founder, of the Christian religion.
P1412:1, 128:3.7
On the Sunday after Passover week Simon and Jesus started on their way back
to Nazareth. Simon never forgot what Jesus taught him on this trip. He had
always loved Jesus, but now he felt that he had begun to know his father-brother.
They had many heart-to-heart talks as they journeyed through the country and
prepared their meals by the wayside. They arrived home Thursday noon, and
Simon kept the family up late that night relating his experiences.
P1412:2, 128:3.8
Mary was much upset by Simon's report that Jesus spent most of the time when
in Jerusalem "visiting with the strangers, especially those from the far countries."
Jesus' family never could comprehend his great interest in people, his urge
to visit with them, to learn about their way of living, and to find out what
they were thinking about.
P1412:3, 128:3.9
More and more the Nazareth family became engrossed with their immediate and
human problems; not often was mention made of the future mission of Jesus,
and very seldom did he himself speak of his future career. His mother rarely
thought about his being a child of promise. She was slowly giving up the idea
that Jesus was to fulfill any divine mission on earth, yet at times her faith
was revived when she paused to recall the Gabriel visitation before the child
was born.