P1429:3, 130:2.1
Jesus and his friends tarried in Caesarea beyond the time expected because
one of the huge steering
paddles of the vessel on which they intended to embark
was discovered to be in danger of
cleaving. The captain decided to remain
in port while a new one was being made. There was a shortage of skilled
woodworkers
for this task, so Jesus volunteered to assist. During the evenings Jesus and
his friends strolled about on the beautiful wall which served as a promenade
around the port. Ganid greatly enjoyed Jesus' explanation of the water system
of the city and the technique whereby the tides were utilized to flush the
city's streets and
sewers. This youth of India was much impressed with the
temple of Augustus, situated upon an elevation and surmounted by a colossal
statue of the Roman emperor. The second afternoon of their stay the three
of them attended a performance in the enormous amphitheater which could seat
twenty thousand persons, and that night they went to a Greek play at the theater.
These were the first exhibitions of this sort Ganid had ever witnessed, and
he asked Jesus many questions about them. On the morning of the third day
they paid a formal visit to the governor's palace, for Caesarea was the capital
of Palestine and the residence of the Roman procurator.
P1429:4, 130:2.2
At their inn there also lodged a merchant from Mongolia, and since this
Far-
Easterner
talked Greek fairly well, Jesus had several long visits with him. This man
was much impressed with Jesus' philosophy of life and never forgot his words
of wisdom regarding "the living of the heavenly life while on earth by means
of daily submission to the will of the heavenly Father." This merchant was
a Taoist, and he had thereby become a strong believer in the doctrine of a
universal Deity. When he returned to Mongolia, he began to teach these advanced
truths to his neighbors and to his business associates, and as a direct result
of such activities, his eldest son decided to become a Taoist priest. This
young man exerted a great influence in behalf of advanced truth throughout
his lifetime and was followed by a son and a grandson who likewise were devotedly
loyal to the doctrine of the One God -- the Supreme Ruler of Heaven.
P1430:1, 130:2.3
While the eastern branch of the early Christian church, having its headquarters
at Philadelphia, held more faithfully to the teachings of Jesus than did the
Jerusalem brethren, it was regrettable that there was no one like Peter to
go into China, or like Paul to enter India, where the spiritual soil was then
so favorable for planting the seed of the new gospel of the kingdom. These
very teachings of Jesus, as they were held by the
Philadelphians, would have
made just such an immediate and effective appeal to the minds of the spiritually
hungry Asiatic peoples as did the preaching of Peter and Paul in the West.
P1430:2, 130:2.4
One of the young men who worked with Jesus one day on the steering paddle
became much interested in the words which he dropped from hour to hour as
they toiled in the
shipyard. When Jesus intimated that the Father in heaven
was interested in the welfare of his children on earth, this young Greek,
Anaxand, said: "If the Gods are interested in me, then why do they not remove
the cruel and unjust foreman of this workshop?" He was startled when Jesus
replied, "Since you know the ways of kindness and value justice, perhaps the
Gods have brought this erring man near that you may lead him into this better
way. Maybe you are the salt which is to make this brother more agreeable to
all other men; that is, if you have not lost your savor. As it is, this man
is your master in that his evil ways unfavorably influence you. Why not assert
your mastery of evil by virtue of the power of goodness and thus become the
master of all relations between the two of you? I predict that the good in
you could overcome the evil in him if you gave it a fair and living chance.
There is no adventure in the course of mortal existence more enthralling than
to enjoy the exhilaration of becoming the material life partner with spiritual
energy and divine truth in one of their triumphant struggles with error and
evil. It is a marvelous and transforming experience to become the living channel
of spiritual light to the mortal who sits in spiritual darkness. If you are
more blessed with truth than is this man, his need should challenge you. Surely
you are not the coward who could stand by on the seashore and watch a fellow
man who could not swim perish! How much more of value is this man's soul
floundering
in darkness compared to his body drowning in water!"
P1430:3, 130:2.5
Anaxand was mightily moved by Jesus' words. Presently he told his superior
what Jesus had said, and that night they both sought Jesus' advice as to the
welfare of their souls. And later on, after the Christian message had been
proclaimed in Caesarea, both of these men, one a Greek and the other a Roman,
believed Philip's preaching and became prominent members of the church which
he founded. Later this young Greek was appointed the steward of a Roman centurion,
Cornelius, who became a believer through Peter's ministry. Anaxand continued
to minister light to those who sat in darkness until the days of Paul's imprisonment
at Caesarea, when he perished, by accident, in the great slaughter of twenty
thousand Jews while he ministered to the suffering and dying.
P1431:1, 130:2.6
Ganid was, by this time, beginning to learn how his tutor spent his leisure
in this unusual personal ministry to his fellow men, and the young Indian
set about to find out the motive for these incessant activities. He asked,
"Why do you occupy yourself so continuously with these visits with strangers?"
And Jesus answered: "Ganid, no man is a stranger to one who knows God. In
the experience of finding the Father in heaven you discover that all men are
your brothers, and does it seem strange that one should enjoy the exhilaration
of meeting a newly discovered brother? To become acquainted with one's brothers
and sisters, to know their problems and to learn to love them, is the supreme
experience of living."
P1431:2, 130:2.7
This was a conference which lasted well into the night, in the course of which
the young man requested Jesus to tell him the difference between the will
of God and that human mind act of choosing which is also called will. In substance
Jesus said: The will of God is the way of God, partnership with the choice
of God in the face of any potential alternative. To do the will of God, therefore,
is the progressive experience of becoming more and more like God, and God
is the source and destiny of all that is good and beautiful and true. The
will of man is the way of man, the sum and substance of that which the mortal
chooses to be and do. Will is the deliberate choice of a self-conscious being
which leads to
decision-conduct based on intelligent reflection.
P1431:3, 130:2.8
That afternoon Jesus and Ganid had both enjoyed playing with a very intelligent
shepherd dog, and Ganid wanted to know whether the dog had a soul, whether
it had a will, and in response to his questions Jesus said: "The dog has a
mind which can know material man, his master, but cannot know God, who is
spirit; therefore the dog does not possess a spiritual nature and cannot enjoy
a spiritual experience. The dog may have a will derived from nature and augmented
by training, but such a power of mind is not a spiritual force, neither is
it comparable to the human will, inasmuch as it is not reflective --
it is not the result of discriminating higher and moral meanings or choosing
spiritual and eternal values. It is the possession of such powers of spiritual
discrimination and truth choosing that makes mortal man a moral being, a creature
endowed with the attributes of spiritual responsibility and the potential
of eternal survival." Jesus went on to explain that it is the absence of such
mental powers in the animal which makes it forever impossible for the animal
world to develop language in time or to experience anything equivalent to
personality survival in eternity. As a result of this day's instruction Ganid
never again entertained belief in the transmigration of the souls of men into
the bodies of animals.
P1431:4, 130:2.9
The next day Ganid talked all this over with his father, and it was in answer
to Gonod's question that Jesus explained that "human wills which are fully
occupied with passing only upon temporal decisions having to do with the material
problems of animal existence are doomed to perish in time. Those who make
wholehearted moral decisions and unqualified spiritual choices are thus progressively
identified with the indwelling and divine spirit, and thereby are they increasingly
transformed into the values of eternal survival -- unending progression of
divine service."
P1431:5, 130:2.10
It was on this same day that we first heard that momentous truth which, stated
in modern terms, would signify: "Will is that manifestation of the human mind
which enables the subjective consciousness to express itself
objectively and
to experience the phenomenon of aspiring to be Godlike." And it is in this
same sense that every reflective and spiritually minded human being can become
creative.