P1603:2, 142:7.1
After the busy period of teaching and personal work of Passover week in Jerusalem,
Jesus spent the next Wednesday at Bethany with his apostles, resting. That
afternoon, Thomas asked a question which elicited a long and instructive answer.
Said Thomas: "Master, on the day we were set apart as ambassadors of the kingdom,
you told us many things, instructed us regarding our personal mode of life,
but what shall we teach the multitude? How are these people to live after
the kingdom more fully comes? Shall your disciples own slaves? Shall your
believers court poverty and shun property? Shall mercy alone prevail so that
we shall have no more law and justice?" Jesus and the twelve spent all afternoon
and all that evening, after supper, discussing Thomas's questions. For the
purposes of this record we present the following summary of the Master's instruction:
P1603:3, 142:7.2
Jesus sought first to make plain to his apostles that he himself was on earth
living a unique life in the flesh, and that they, the twelve, had been called
to participate in this bestowal experience of the Son of Man; and as such
coworkers, they, too, must share in many of the special restrictions and obligations
of the entire bestowal experience. There was a veiled intimation that the
Son of Man was the only person who had ever lived on earth who could simultaneously
see into the very heart of God and into the very depths of man's soul.
P1603:4, 142:7.3
Very plainly Jesus explained that the kingdom of heaven was an evolutionary
experience, beginning here on earth and progressing up through successive
life stations to Paradise. In the course of the evening he definitely stated
that at some future stage of kingdom development he would revisit this world
in spiritual power and divine glory.
P1603:5, 142:7.4
He next explained that the "kingdom idea" was not the best way to illustrate
man's relation to God; that he employed such figures of speech because the
Jewish people were expecting the kingdom, and because John had preached in
terms of the coming kingdom. Jesus said: "The people of another age will better
understand the gospel of the kingdom when it is presented in terms expressive
of the family relationship -- when man understands religion as the teaching
of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, sonship with God." Then
the Master discoursed at some length on the earthly family as an illustration
of the heavenly family, restating the two fundamental laws of living: the
first commandment of love for the father, the head of the family, and the
second commandment of mutual love among the children, to love your brother
as yourself. And then he explained that such a quality of brotherly affection
would invariably manifest itself in unselfish and loving social service.
P1603:6, 142:7.5
Following that, came the memorable discussion of the fundamental characteristics
of family life and their application to the relationship existing between
God and man. Jesus stated that a true family is founded on the following seven
facts:
P1604:1, 142:7.6
1. The fact of existence. The relationships of nature and the phenomena
of mortal likenesses are bound up in the family: Children inherit certain
parental traits. The children take origin in the parents; personality existence
depends on the act of the parent. The relationship of father and child is
inherent in all nature and pervades all living existences.
P1604:2, 142:7.7
2. Security and pleasure. True fathers take great pleasure in providing
for the needs of their children. Many fathers are not content with supplying
the mere wants of their children but enjoy making provision for their pleasures
also.
P1604:3, 142:7.8
3. Education and training. Wise fathers carefully plan for the education
and adequate training of their sons and daughters. When young they are prepared
for the greater responsibilities of later life.
P1604:4, 142:7.9
4. Discipline and restraint. Farseeing fathers also make provision
for the necessary discipline, guidance, correction, and sometimes restraint
of their young and immature offspring.
P1604:5, 142:7.10
5. Companionship and loyalty. The affectionate father holds intimate
and loving intercourse with his children. Always is his ear open to their
petitions; he is ever ready to share their hardships and assist them over
their difficulties. The father is supremely interested in the progressive
welfare of his progeny.
P1604:6, 142:7.11
6. Love and mercy. A compassionate father is freely forgiving; fathers
do not hold vengeful memories against their children. Fathers are not like
judges, enemies, or
creditors. Real families are built upon tolerance, patience,
and forgiveness.
P1604:7, 142:7.12
7. Provision for the future. Temporal fathers like to leave an inheritance
for their sons. The family continues from one generation to another. Death
only ends one generation to mark the beginning of another. Death terminates
an individual life but not necessarily the family.
P1604:8, 142:7.13
For hours the Master discussed the application of these features of family
life to the relations of man, the earth child, to God, the Paradise Father.
And this was his conclusion: "This entire relationship of a son to the Father,
I know in perfection, for all that you must attain of sonship in the eternal
future I have now already attained. The Son of Man is prepared to ascend to
the right hand of the Father, so that in me is the way now open still wider
for all of you to see God and, ere you have finished the glorious progression,
to become perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect."
P1604:9, 142:7.14
When the apostles heard these startling words, they recalled the pronouncements
which John made at the time of Jesus' baptism, and they also vividly recalled
this experience in connection with their preaching and teaching subsequent
to the Master's death and resurrection.
P1604:10, 142:7.15
Jesus is a divine Son, one in the Universal Father's full confidence. He had
been with the Father and comprehended him fully. He had now lived his earth
life to the full satisfaction of the Father, and this incarnation in the flesh
had enabled him fully to comprehend man. Jesus was the perfection of man;
he had attained just such perfection as all true believers are destined to
attain in him and through him. Jesus revealed a God of perfection to man and
presented in himself the perfected son of the realms to God.
P1605:1, 142:7.16
Although Jesus discoursed for several hours, Thomas was not yet satisfied,
for he said: "But, Master, we do not find that the Father in heaven always
deals kindly and mercifully with us. Many times we grievously suffer on earth,
and not always are our prayers answered. Where do we fail to grasp the meaning
of your teaching?"
P1605:2, 142:7.17
Jesus replied: "Thomas, Thomas, how long before you will acquire the ability
to listen with the ear of the spirit? How long will it be before you discern
that this kingdom is a spiritual kingdom, and that my Father is also a spiritual
being? Do you not understand that I am teaching you as spiritual children
in the spirit family of heaven, of which the
fatherhead is an infinite and
eternal spirit? Will you not allow me to use the earth family as an illustration
of divine relationships without so literally applying my teaching to material
affairs? In your minds cannot you separate the spiritual realities of the
kingdom from the material, social, economic, and political problems of the
age? When I speak the language of the spirit, why do you insist on translating
my meaning into the language of the flesh just because I presume to employ
commonplace and literal relationships for purposes of illustration? My children,
I implore that you cease to apply the teaching of the kingdom of the spirit
to the sordid affairs of slavery, poverty, houses, and lands, and to the material
problems of human equity and justice. These temporal matters are the concern
of the men of this world, and while in a way they affect all men, you have
been called to represent me in the world, even as I represent my Father. You
are spiritual ambassadors of a spiritual kingdom, special representatives
of the spirit Father. By this time it should be possible for me to instruct
you as full-grown men of the spirit kingdom. Must I ever address you only
as children? Will you never grow up in spirit perception? Nevertheless, I
love you and will bear with you, even to the very end of our association in
the flesh. And even then shall my spirit go before you into all the world."