P1468:1, 133:0.1
When preparing to leave Rome, Jesus said good-bye to none of his friends.
The scribe of Damascus appeared in Rome without announcement and disappeared
in like manner. It was a full year before those who knew and loved him gave
up hope of seeing him again. Before the end of the second year small groups
of those who had known him found themselves drawn together by their common
interest in his teachings and through mutual memory of their good times with
him. And these small groups of Stoics, Cynics, and mystery cultists continued
to hold these irregular and informal meetings right up to the time of the
appearance in Rome of the first preachers of the Christian religion.
P1468:2, 133:0.2
Gonod and Ganid had purchased so many things in Alexandria and Rome that they
sent all their belongings on ahead by pack train to Tarentum, while the three
travelers walked leisurely across Italy over the great Appian Way. On this
journey they encountered all sorts of human beings. Many noble Roman citizens
and Greek
colonists lived along this road, but already the progeny of great
numbers of inferior slaves were beginning to make their appearance.
P1468:3, 133:0.3
One day while resting at lunch, about halfway to Tarentum, Ganid asked Jesus
a direct question as to what he thought of India's caste system. Said Jesus:
"Though human beings differ in many ways, the one from another, before God
and in the spiritual world all mortals stand on an equal footing. There are
only two groups of mortals in the eyes of God: those who desire to do his
will and those who do not. As the universe looks upon an inhabited world,
it likewise discerns two great classes: those who know God and those who do
not. Those who cannot know God are reckoned among the animals of any given
realm. Mankind can appropriately be divided into many classes in accordance
with differing qualifications, as they may be viewed physically, mentally,
socially,
vocationally, or morally, but as these different classes of mortals
appear before the judgment bar of God, they stand on an equal footing; God
is truly no respecter of persons. Although you cannot escape the recognition
of differential human abilities and endowments in matters intellectual, social,
and moral, you should make no such distinctions in the spiritual brotherhood
of men when assembled for worship in the presence of God."