P1468:4, 133:1.1
A very interesting incident occurred one afternoon by the roadside as they
neared Tarentum. They observed a rough and
bullying youth brutally attacking
a smaller lad. Jesus hastened to the assistance of the assaulted youth, and
when he had rescued him, he tightly held on to the offender until the smaller
lad had made his escape. The moment Jesus released the little bully, Ganid
pounced upon the boy and began
soundly to
thrash him, and to Ganid's astonishment
Jesus promptly interfered. After he had restrained Ganid and permitted the
frightened boy to escape, the young man, as soon as he got his breath, excitedly
exclaimed: "I cannot understand you, Teacher. If mercy requires that you rescue
the smaller lad, does not justice demand the punishment of the larger and
offending youth?" In answering, Jesus said:
P1469:1, 133:1.2
"Ganid, it is true, you do not understand. Mercy ministry is always the work
of the individual, but justice punishment is the function of the social, governmental,
or universe administrative groups. As an individual I am beholden to show
mercy; I must go to the rescue of the assaulted lad, and in all consistency
I may employ sufficient force to restrain the aggressor. And that is just
what I did. I achieved the deliverance of the assaulted lad; that was the
end of mercy ministry. Then I forcibly detained the aggressor a sufficient
length of time to enable the weaker party to the dispute to make his escape,
after which I withdrew from the affair. I did not proceed to sit in judgment
on the aggressor, thus to pass upon his motive -- to adjudicate all that entered
into his attack upon his fellow -- and then undertake to execute the punishment
which my mind might dictate as just recompense for his wrongdoing. Ganid,
mercy may be lavish, but justice is precise. Cannot you discern that no two
persons are likely to agree as to the punishment which would satisfy the demands
of justice? One would impose forty lashes, another twenty, while still another
would advise solitary confinement as a just punishment. Can you not see that
on this world such responsibilities had better rest upon the group or be administered
by chosen representatives of the group? In the universe, judgment is vested
in those who fully know the antecedents of all wrongdoing as well as its motivation.
In civilized society and in an organized universe the administration of justice
presupposes the passing of just sentence consequent upon fair judgment, and
such prerogatives are vested in the juridical groups of the worlds and in
the all-knowing administrators of the higher universes of all creation."
P1469:2, 133:1.3
For days they talked about this problem of manifesting mercy and administering
justice. And Ganid, at least to some extent, understood why Jesus would not
engage in personal combat. But Ganid asked one last question, to which he
never received a fully satisfactory answer; and that question was: "But, Teacher,
if a stronger and
ill-tempered creature should attack you and threaten to
destroy you, what would you do? Would you make no effort to defend yourself?"
Although Jesus could not fully and satisfactorily answer the lad's question,
inasmuch as he was not willing to disclose to him that he (Jesus) was living
on earth as the exemplification of the Paradise Father's love to an onlooking
universe, he did say this much:
P1469:3, 133:1.4
"Ganid, I can well understand how some of these problems perplex you, and
I will endeavor to answer your question. First, in all attacks which might
be made upon my person, I would determine whether or not the aggressor was
a son of God -- my brother in the flesh -- and if I thought such a creature
did not possess moral judgment and spiritual reason, I would unhesitatingly
defend myself to the full capacity of my powers of resistance, regardless
of consequences to the
attacker. But I would not thus assault a fellow man
of sonship status, even in self-defense. That is, I would not punish him in
advance and without judgment for his assault upon me. I would by every possible
artifice seek to prevent and dissuade him from making such an attack and to
mitigate it in case of my failure to abort it. Ganid, I have absolute confidence
in my heavenly Father's overcare; I am consecrated to doing the will of my
Father in heaven. I do not believe that real harm can befall me; I
do not believe that my lifework can really be jeopardized by anything my enemies
might wish to visit upon me, and surely we have no violence to fear from our
friends. I am absolutely assured that the entire universe is friendly to me
-- this all-powerful truth I insist on believing with a wholehearted trust
in spite of all appearances to the contrary."
P1470:1, 133:1.5
But Ganid was not fully satisfied. Many times they talked over these matters,
and Jesus told him some of his boyhood experiences and also about Jacob the
stone mason's son. On learning how Jacob appointed himself to defend Jesus,
Ganid said: "Oh, I begin to see! In the first place very seldom would any
normal human being want to attack such a kindly person as you, and even if
anyone should be so unthinking as to do such a thing, there is pretty sure
to be near at hand some other mortal who will fly to your assistance, even
as you always go to the rescue of any person you observe to be in distress.
In my heart, Teacher, I agree with you, but in my head I still think that
if I had been Jacob, I would have enjoyed punishing those rude fellows who
presumed to attack you just because they thought you would not defend yourself.
I presume you are fairly safe in your journey through life since you spend
much of your time helping others and ministering to your fellows in distress
-- well, most likely there'll always be someone on hand to defend you." And
Jesus replied: "That test has not yet come, Ganid, and when it does, we will
have to abide by the Father's will." And that was about all the lad could
get his teacher to say on this difficult subject of self-defense and nonresistance.
On another occasion he did draw from Jesus the opinion that organized society
had every right to employ force in the execution of its just mandates.