P1579:4, 140:8.2
1. Doing the Father's will. Jesus' teaching to trust in the overcare
of the heavenly Father was not a blind and passive fatalism. He quoted with
approval, on this afternoon, an old Hebrew saying: "He who will not work shall
not eat." He pointed to his own experience as sufficient commentary on his
teachings. His precepts about trusting the Father must not be adjudged by
the social or economic conditions of modern times or any other age. His instruction
embraces the ideal principles of living near God in all ages and on all worlds.
P1579:5, 140:8.3
Jesus made clear to the three the difference between the requirements of apostleship
and discipleship. And even then he did not forbid the exercise of prudence
and foresight by the twelve. What he preached against was not forethought
but anxiety, worry. He taught the active and alert submission to God's will.
In answer to many of their questions regarding frugality and thriftiness,
he simply called attention to his life as carpenter, boatmaker,
and fisherman, and to his careful organization of the twelve. He sought to
make it clear that the world is not to be regarded as an enemy; that the circumstances
of life constitute a divine dispensation working along with the children of
God.
P1579:6, 140:8.4
Jesus had great difficulty in getting them to understand his personal practice
of nonresistance. He absolutely refused to defend himself, and it appeared
to the apostles that he would be pleased if they would pursue the same policy.
He taught them not to resist evil, not to combat injustice or injury, but
he did not teach passive tolerance of wrongdoing. And he made it plain on
this afternoon that he approved of the social punishment of evildoers and
criminals, and that the civil government must sometimes employ force for the
maintenance of social order and in the execution of justice.
P1579:7, 140:8.5
He never ceased to warn his disciples against the evil practice of retaliation;
he made no allowance for revenge, the idea of getting even. He deplored
the holding of grudges. He disallowed the idea of an eye for an eye and a
tooth for a tooth. He discountenanced the whole
concept of private and personal revenge, assigning these matters to civil
government, on the one hand, and to the judgment of God, on the other. He
made it clear to the three that his teachings applied to the individual,
not the state. He summarized his instructions up to that time regarding
these matters, as:
P1579:8, 140:8.6
Love your enemies -- remember the moral claims of human brotherhood.
P1579:9, 140:8.7
The futility of evil: A wrong is not righted
by vengeance. Do not make the mistake of fighting evil with its own weapons.
P1579:10, 140:8.8
Have faith -- confidence in the eventual triumph of divine justice and eternal
goodness.
P1580:1, 140:8.9 2.
Political attitude. He cautioned his apostles to be discreet in their
remarks concerning the strained relations then existing between the Jewish
people and the Roman government; he forbade them to become in any way embroiled
in these difficulties. He was always careful to avoid the political snares
of his enemies, ever making reply, "Render to Caesar the things which are
Caesar's and to God the things which are God's." He refused to have his attention
diverted from his mission of establishing a new way of salvation; he would
not permit himself to be concerned about anything else. In his personal life
he was always duly observant of all civil laws and regulations; in all his
public teachings he ignored the civic, social, and economic realms. He told
the three apostles that he was concerned only with the principles of man's
inner and personal spiritual life.
P1580:2, 140:8.10
Jesus was not, therefore, a political reformer. He did not come to reorganize
the world; even if he had done this, it would have been applicable only to
that day and generation. Nevertheless, he did show man the best way of living,
and no generation is exempt from the labor of discovering how best to adapt
Jesus' life to its own problems. But never make the mistake of identifying
Jesus' teachings with any political or economic theory, with any social or
industrial system.
P1580:3, 140:8.11
3. Social attitude. The Jewish rabbis had long debated the question:
Who is my neighbor? Jesus came presenting the idea of active and spontaneous
kindness, a love of one's fellow men so genuine that it expanded the neighborhood
to include the whole world, thereby making all men one's neighbors. But with
all this, Jesus was interested only in the individual, not the mass. Jesus
was not a sociologist, but he did labor to break down all forms of selfish
isolation. He taught pure sympathy, compassion. Michael of Nebadon is a mercy-dominated
Son; compassion is his very nature.
P1580:4, 140:8.12
The Master did not say that men should never entertain their friends at meat,
but he did say that his followers should make feasts for the poor and the
unfortunate. Jesus had a firm sense of justice, but it was always tempered
with mercy. He did not teach his apostles that they were to be imposed upon
by social parasites or professional alms-seekers.
The nearest he came to making sociological pronouncements
was to say, "Judge not, that you be not judged."
P1580:5, 140:8.13
He made it clear that indiscriminate kindness may be blamed for many social
evils. The following day Jesus definitely instructed Judas that no apostolic
funds were to be given out as alms except upon his request or upon the joint
petition of two of the apostles. In all these matters it was the practice
of Jesus always to say, "Be as wise as serpents but as harmless as doves."
It seemed to be his purpose in all social situations to teach patience, tolerance,
and forgiveness.
P1581:1, 140:8.14
The family occupied the very center of Jesus' philosophy of life -- here and
hereafter. He based his teachings about God on the family, while he sought
to correct the Jewish tendency to overhonor ancestors.
He exalted family life as the highest human duty but made it plain that family
relationships must not interfere with religious obligations. He called attention
to the fact that the family is a temporal institution; that it does not survive
death. Jesus did not hesitate to give up his family when the family ran counter
to the Father's will. He taught the new and larger brotherhood of man -- the
sons of God. In Jesus' time divorce practices were lax in Palestine and throughout
the Roman Empire. He repeatedly refused to lay down laws regarding marriage
and divorce, but many of Jesus' early followers had strong opinions on divorce
and did not hesitate to attribute them to him. All of the New Testament writers
held to these more stringent and advanced ideas about divorce except John
Mark.
P1581:2, 140:8.15
4. Economic attitude. Jesus worked, lived, and traded in the world
as he found it. He was not an economic reformer, although he did frequently
call attention to the injustice of the unequal distribution of wealth. But
he did not offer any suggestions by way of remedy. He made it plain to the
three that, while his apostles were not to hold property, he was not preaching
against wealth and property, merely its unequal and unfair distribution. He
recognized the need for social justice and industrial fairness, but he offered
no rules for their attainment.
P1581:3, 140:8.16
He never taught his followers to avoid earthly possessions, only his twelve
apostles. Luke, the physician, was a strong believer in social equality, and
he did much to interpret Jesus' sayings in harmony with his personal beliefs.
Jesus never personally directed his followers to adopt a communal mode of
life; he made no pronouncement of any sort regarding such matters.
P1581:4, 140:8.17
Jesus frequently warned his listeners against covetousness, declaring that
"a man's happiness consists not in the abundance of his material possessions."
He constantly reiterated, "What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole
world and lose his own soul?" He made no direct attack on the possession of
property, but he did insist that it is eternally essential that spiritual
values come first. In his later teachings he sought to correct many erroneous
Urantia views of life by narrating numerous parables which he presented in
the course of his public ministry. Jesus never intended to formulate economic
theories; he well knew that each age must evolve its own remedies for existing
troubles. And if Jesus were on earth today, living his life in the flesh,
he would be a great disappointment to the majority of good men and women for
the simple reason that he would not take sides in present-day political, social,
or economic disputes. He would remain grandly
aloof while teaching you how to perfect your inner spiritual life so as to
render you manyfold more competent to attack the solution of your purely human
problems.
P1581:5, 140:8.18
Jesus would make all men Godlike and then stand by sympathetically while these
sons of God solve their own political, social, and economic problems. It was
not wealth that he denounced, but what wealth does to the majority of its
devotees. On this Thursday afternoon Jesus first told his associates that
"it is more blessed to give than to receive."
P1581:6, 140:8.19
5. Personal religion. You, as did his apostles, should the better understand
Jesus' teachings by his life. He lived a perfected life on Urantia, and his
unique teachings can only be understood when that life is visualized in its
immediate background. It is his life, and not his lessons to the twelve or
his sermons to the multitudes, that will assist most in revealing the Father's
divine character and loving personality.
P1582:1, 140:8.20
Jesus did not attack the teachings of the Hebrew prophets or the Greek moralists.
The Master recognized the many good things which these great teachers stood
for, but he had come down to earth to teach something additional, "the
voluntary conformity of man's will to God's will." Jesus did not want simply
to produce a religious man, a mortal wholly occupied with religious
feelings and actuated only by spiritual impulses. Could you have had but one
look at him, you would have known that Jesus was a real man of great experience
in the things of this world. The teachings of Jesus in this respect have been
grossly perverted and much misrepresented all
down through the centuries of the Christian era; you have also held perverted
ideas about the Master's meekness and humility. What he aimed at in his life
appears to have been a superb self-respect. He only advised man to
humble himself that he might become truly exalted; what he really aimed at
was true humility toward God. He placed great value upon sincerity -- a pure
heart. Fidelity was a cardinal virtue in his estimate of character, while
courage was the very heart of his teachings. "Fear not" was his watchword,
and patient endurance his ideal of strength of character. The teachings of
Jesus constitute a religion of valor, courage, and heroism. And this is just
why he chose as his personal representatives twelve commonplace men, the majority
of whom were rugged, virile, and manly fishermen.
P1582:2, 140:8.21
Jesus had little to say about the social vices of his day; seldom did he make
reference to moral delinquency. He was a positive teacher of true virtue.
He studiously avoided the negative method of imparting instruction; he refused
to advertise evil. He was not even a moral reformer. He well knew, and so
taught his apostles, that the sensual urges of mankind are not suppressed
by either religious rebuke or legal prohibitions. His few denunciations were
largely directed against pride, cruelty, oppression, and hypocrisy.
P1582:3, 140:8.22
Jesus did not vehemently denounce even the Pharisees, as did John. He knew
many of the scribes and Pharisees were honest of heart; he understood their
enslaving bondage to religious traditions. Jesus laid great emphasis on "first
making the tree good." He impressed the three that he valued the whole life,
not just a certain few special virtues.
P1582:4, 140:8.23
The one thing which John gained from this day's teaching was that the heart
of Jesus' religion consisted in the acquirement of a compassionate character
coupled with a personality motivated to do the will of the Father in heaven.
P1582:5, 140:8.24
Peter grasped the idea that the gospel they were about to proclaim was really
a fresh beginning for the whole human race. He conveyed this impression subsequently
to Paul, who formulated therefrom his doctrine of Christ as "the second Adam."
P1582:6, 140:8.25
James grasped the thrilling truth that Jesus wanted his children on earth
to live as though they were already citizens of the completed heavenly kingdom.
P1582:7, 140:8.26
Jesus knew men were different, and he so taught his apostles. He constantly
exhorted them to refrain from trying to mold the disciples and believers according
to some set pattern. He sought to allow each soul to develop in its own way,
a perfecting and separate individual before God. In answer to one of Peter's
many questions, the Master said: "I want to set men free so that they can
start out afresh as little children upon the new and better life." Jesus always
insisted that true goodness must be unconscious, in bestowing charity not
allowing the left hand to know what the right hand does.
P1583:1, 140:8.27
The three apostles were shocked this afternoon when they realized that their
Master's religion made no provision for spiritual self-examination. All religions
before and after the times of Jesus, even Christianity, carefully provide
for conscientious self-examination. But not so with the religion of Jesus
of Nazareth. Jesus' philosophy of life is without religious introspection.
The carpenter's son never taught character building; he taught character
growth, declaring that the kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed.
But Jesus said nothing which would proscribe self-analysis
as a prevention of conceited egotism.
P1583:2, 140:8.28
The right to enter the kingdom is conditioned by faith, personal belief. The
cost of remaining in the progressive ascent of the kingdom is the pearl of
great price, in order to possess which a man sells all that he has.
P1583:3, 140:8.29
The teaching of Jesus is a religion for everybody, not alone for weaklings
and slaves. His religion never became crystallized (during his day) into creeds
and theological laws; he left not a line of writing behind him. His life and
teachings were bequeathed the universe as an inspirational and idealistic
inheritance suitable for the spiritual guidance and moral instruction of all
ages on all worlds. And even today, Jesus' teaching stands apart from all
religions, as such, albeit it is the living hope of every one of them.
P1583:4, 140:8.30
Jesus did not teach his apostles that religion is man's only earthly pursuit;
that was the Jewish idea of serving God. But he did insist that religion was
the exclusive business of the twelve. Jesus taught nothing to deter his believers
from the pursuit of genuine culture; he only detracted from the tradition-bound
religious schools of Jerusalem. He was liberal, bighearted, learned, and tolerant.
Self-conscious piety had no place in his philosophy of righteous living.
P1583:5, 140:8.31
The Master offered no solutions for the nonreligious problems of his own age
nor for any subsequent age. Jesus wished to develop spiritual insight into
eternal realities and to stimulate initiative in the originality of living;
he concerned himself exclusively with the underlying and permanent spiritual
needs of the human race. He revealed a goodness equal to God. He exalted love
-- truth, beauty, and goodness -- as the divine ideal and the eternal reality.
P1583:6, 140:8.32
The Master came to create in man a new spirit, a new will -- to impart a new
capacity for knowing the truth, experiencing compassion, and choosing goodness
-- the will to be in harmony with God's will, coupled with the eternal urge
to become perfect, even as the Father in heaven is perfect.