P1413:6, 128:5.1
This was Jesus' first year of comparative freedom from family responsibility.
James was very successful in managing the home with Jesus' help in counsel
and finances.
P1413:7, 128:5.2
The week following the Passover of this year a young man from Alexandria came
down to Nazareth to arrange for a meeting, later in the year, between Jesus
and a group of Alexandrian Jews at some point on the Palestinian coast. This
conference was set for the middle of June, and Jesus went over to Caesarea
to meet with five prominent Jews of Alexandria, who besought him to establish
himself in their city as a religious teacher, offering as an
inducement to
begin with, the position of assistant to the chazan in their chief synagogue.
P1414:1, 128:5.3
The spokesmen for this committee explained to Jesus that Alexandria was destined
to become the headquarters of Jewish culture for the entire world; that the
Hellenistic trend of Jewish affairs had virtually
outdistanced the Babylonian
school of thought. They reminded Jesus of the ominous rumblings of rebellion
in Jerusalem and throughout Palestine and assured him that any uprising of
the Palestinian Jews would be equivalent to national suicide, that the iron
hand of Rome would crush the rebellion in three months, and that Jerusalem
would be destroyed and the temple demolished, that not one stone would be
left upon another.
P1414:2, 128:5.4
Jesus listened to all they had to say, thanked them for their confidence,
and, in declining to go to Alexandria, in substance said, "My hour has not
yet come." They were nonplused by his apparent indifference to the honor they
had sought to confer upon him. Before taking leave of Jesus, they presented
him with a purse in token of the esteem of his Alexandrian friends and in
compensation for the time and expense of coming over to Caesarea to confer
with them. But he likewise refused the money, saying: "The house of Joseph
has never received alms, and we cannot eat another's bread as long as I have
strong arms and my brothers can labor."
P1414:3, 128:5.5
His friends from Egypt set sail for home, and in subsequent years, when they
heard rumors of the Capernaum boatbuilder who was creating such a commotion
in Palestine, few of them surmised that he was the babe of Bethlehem grown
up and the same
strange-acting Galilean who had so unceremoniously declined
the invitation to become a great teacher in Alexandria.
P1414:4, 128:5.6
Jesus returned to Nazareth. The remainder of this year was the most uneventful
six months of his whole career. He enjoyed this temporary respite from the
usual program of problems to solve and difficulties to surmount. He communed
much with his Father in heaven and made tremendous progress in the mastery
of his human mind.
P1414:5, 128:5.7
But human affairs on the worlds of time and space do not run smoothly for
long. In December James had a private talk with Jesus, explaining that he
was much in love with Esta, a young woman of Nazareth, and that they would
sometime like to be married if it could be arranged. He called attention to
the fact that Joseph would soon be eighteen years old, and that it would be
a good experience for him to have a chance to serve as the acting head of
the family. Jesus gave consent for James's marriage two years later, provided
he had, during the intervening time, properly trained Joseph to assume direction
of the home.
P1414:6, 128:5.8
And now things began to happen -- marriage was in the air. James's success
in gaining Jesus' assent to his marriage emboldened Miriam to approach her
brother-father with her plans. Jacob, the younger stone mason, onetime self-appointed
champion of Jesus, now business associate of James and Joseph, had long sought
to gain Miriam's hand in marriage. After Miriam had laid her plans before
Jesus, he directed that Jacob should come to him making formal request for
her and promised his blessing for the marriage just as soon as she felt that
Martha was competent to assume her duties as eldest daughter.
P1414:7, 128:5.9
When at home, he continued to teach the evening school three times a week,
read the Scriptures often in the synagogue on the Sabbath, visited with his
mother, taught the children, and in general conducted himself as a worthy
and respected citizen of Nazareth in the commonwealth of Israel.