P1440:1, 130:8.1
The first stop on the way to Italy was at the island of Malta. Here Jesus
had a long talk with a downhearted and discouraged young man named
Claudus.
This fellow had contemplated taking his life, but when he had finished talking
with the scribe of Damascus, he said: "I will face life like a man; I am through
playing the coward. I will go back to my people and begin all over again."
Shortly he became an enthusiastic preacher of the Cynics, and still later
on he joined hands with Peter in proclaiming Christianity in Rome and Naples,
and after the death of Peter he went on to Spain preaching the gospel. But
he never knew that the man who inspired him in Malta was the Jesus whom he
subsequently proclaimed the world's Deliverer.
P1440:2, 130:8.2
At Syracuse they spent a full week. The notable event of their stop here was
the rehabilitation of Ezra, the
backslidden Jew, who kept the
tavern where
Jesus and his companions stopped. Ezra was charmed by Jesus' approach and
asked him to help him come back to the faith of Israel. He expressed his hopelessness
by saying, "I want to be a true son of Abraham, but I cannot find God." Said
Jesus: "If you truly want to find God, that desire is in itself evidence that
you have already found him. Your trouble is not that you cannot find God,
for the Father has already found you; your trouble is simply that you do not
know God. Have you not read in the Prophet Jeremiah, `You shall seek me and
find me when you shall search for me with all your heart'? And again, does
not this same prophet say: `And I will give you a heart to know me, that I
am the Lord, and you shall belong to my people, and I will be your God'? And
have you not also read in the Scriptures where it says: `He looks down upon
men, and if any will say: I have sinned and perverted that which was right,
and it profited me not, then will God deliver that man's soul from darkness,
and he shall see the light'?" And Ezra found God and to the satisfaction of
his soul. Later, this Jew, in association with a well-to-do Greek proselyte,
built the first Christian church in Syracuse.
P1440:3, 130:8.3
At Messina they stopped for only one day, but that was long enough to change
the life of a small boy, a fruit vendor, of whom Jesus bought fruit and in
turn fed with the bread of life. The lad never forgot the words of Jesus and
the kindly look which went with them when, placing his hand on the boy's shoulder,
he said: "Farewell, my lad, be of good courage as you grow up to manhood and
after you have fed the body learn how also to feed the soul. And my Father
in heaven will be with you and go before you." The lad became a devotee of
the Mithraic religion and later on turned to the Christian faith.
P1440:4, 130:8.4
At last they reached Naples and felt they were not far from their destination,
Rome. Gonod had much business to transact in Naples, and aside from the time
Jesus was required as interpreter, he and Ganid spent their leisure visiting
and exploring the city. Ganid was becoming adept at
sighting those who appeared
to be in need. They found much poverty in this city and distributed many alms.
But Ganid never understood the meaning of Jesus' words when, after he had
given a coin to a street beggar, he refused to pause and speak
comfortingly
to the man. Said Jesus: "Why waste words upon one who cannot perceive the
meaning of what you say? The spirit of the Father cannot teach and save one
who has no capacity for sonship." What Jesus meant was that the man was not
of normal mind; that he lacked the ability to respond to spirit leading.
P1441:1, 130:8.5
There was no outstanding experience in Naples; Jesus and the young man thoroughly
canvassed the city and spread good cheer with many smiles upon hundreds of
men, women, and children.
P1441:2, 130:8.6
From here they went by way of Capua to Rome, making a stop of three days at
Capua. By the Appian Way they journeyed on beside their pack animals toward
Rome, all three being anxious to see this mistress of empire and the greatest
city in all the world.