P1428:1, 130:1.1
During their stay in Joppa, Jesus met Gadiah, a Philistine interpreter who
worked for one Simon a
tanner. Gonod's agents in Mesopotamia had transacted
much business with this Simon; so Gonod and his son desired to pay him a visit
on their way to Caesarea. While they tarried at Joppa, Jesus and Gadiah became
warm friends. This young Philistine was a truth seeker. Jesus was a truth
giver; he was the truth for that generation on Urantia. When a great
truth seeker and a great truth giver meet, the result is a great and liberating
enlightenment born of the experience of new truth.
P1428:2, 130:1.2
One day after the evening meal Jesus and the young Philistine strolled down
by the sea, and Gadiah, not knowing that this "scribe of Damascus" was so
well versed in the Hebrew traditions, pointed out to Jesus the ship landing
from which it was reputed that Jonah had embarked on his
ill-
fated voyage
to
Tarshish. And when he had concluded his remarks, he asked Jesus this question:
"But do you suppose the big fish really did swallow Jonah?" Jesus perceived
that this young man's life had been tremendously influenced by this tradition,
and that its contemplation had impressed upon him the folly of trying to run
away from duty; Jesus therefore said nothing that would suddenly destroy the
foundations of Gadiah's present motivation for practical living. In answering
this question, Jesus said: "My friend, we are all Jonahs with lives to live
in accordance with the will of God, and at all times when we seek to escape
the present duty of living by running away to far-off enticements, we thereby
put ourselves in the immediate control of those influences which are not directed
by the powers of truth and the forces of righteousness. The flight from duty
is the sacrifice of truth. The escape from the service of light and life can
only result in those distressing conflicts with the difficult whales of selfishness
which lead eventually to darkness and death unless such
God-forsaking Jonahs
shall turn their hearts, even when in the very depths of despair, to seek
after God and his goodness. And when such disheartened souls sincerely seek
for God -- hunger for truth and thirst for righteousness -- there is nothing
that can hold them in further captivity. No matter into what great depths
they may have fallen, when they seek the light with a whole heart, the spirit
of the Lord God of heaven will deliver them from their captivity; the evil
circumstances of life will
spew them out upon the dry land of fresh opportunities
for renewed service and wiser living."
P1428:3, 130:1.3
Gadiah was mightily moved by Jesus' teaching, and they talked long into the
night by the seaside, and before they went to their lodgings, they prayed
together and for each other. This was the same Gadiah who listened to the
later preaching of Peter, became a profound believer in Jesus of Nazareth,
and held a memorable argument with Peter one evening at the home of
Dorcas.
And Gadiah had very much to do with the final decision of Simon, the wealthy
leather merchant, to embrace Christianity.
P1428:4, 130:1.4
(In this narrative of the personal work of Jesus with his fellow mortals on
this tour of the Mediterranean, we shall, in accordance with our permission,
freely translate his words into modern phraseology current on Urantia at the
time of this presentation.)
P1429:1, 130:1.5
Jesus' last visit with Gadiah had to do with a discussion of good and evil.
This young Philistine was much troubled by a feeling of injustice because
of the presence of evil in the world alongside the good. He said: "How can
God, if he is infinitely good, permit us to suffer the sorrows of evil; after
all, who creates evil?" It was still believed by many in those days that God
creates both good and evil, but Jesus never taught such error. In answering
this question, Jesus said: "My brother, God is love; therefore he must be
good, and his goodness is so great and real that it cannot contain the small
and unreal things of evil. God is so positively good that there is absolutely
no place in him for negative evil. Evil is the immature choosing and the unthinking
misstep of those who are resistant to goodness,
rejectful of beauty, and disloyal
to truth. Evil is only the misadaptation of immaturity or the disruptive and
distorting influence of ignorance. Evil is the inevitable darkness which follows
upon the heels of the unwise rejection of light. Evil is that which is dark
and untrue, and which, when consciously embraced and willfully endorsed, becomes
sin.
P1429:2, 130:1.6
"Your Father in heaven, by endowing you with the power to choose between truth
and error, created the potential negative of the positive way of light and
life; but such errors of evil are really nonexistent until such a time as
an intelligent creature wills their existence by
mischoosing the way of life.
And then are such evils later exalted into sin by the knowing and deliberate
choice of such a willful and rebellious creature. This is why our Father in
heaven permits the good and the evil to go along together until the end of
life, just as nature allows the wheat and the tares to grow side by side until
the harvest." Gadiah was fully satisfied with Jesus' answer to his question
after their subsequent discussion had made clear to his mind the real meaning
of these momentous statements.