P1705:1, 152:6.1
While resting at the home of a wealthy believer in the Gennesaret region,
Jesus held informal conferences with the twelve every afternoon. The ambassadors
of the kingdom were a serious, sober, and chastened group of disillusioned
men. But even after all that had happened, and as subsequent events disclosed,
these twelve men were not yet fully delivered from their
inbred and long-cherished
notions about the coming of the Jewish Messiah. Events of the preceding few
weeks had moved too swiftly for these astonished fishermen to grasp their
full significance. It requires time for men and women to effect radical and
extensive changes in their basic and fundamental concepts of social conduct,
philosophic attitudes, and religious convictions.
P1705:2, 152:6.2
While Jesus and the twelve were resting at Gennesaret, the multitudes dispersed,
some going to their homes, others going on up to Jerusalem for the Passover.
In less than one month's time the enthusiastic and open followers of Jesus,
who numbered more than fifty thousand in Galilee alone, shrank to less than
five hundred. Jesus desired to give his apostles such an experience with the
fickleness of popular acclaim that they would not be tempted to rely on such
manifestations of transient religious hysteria after he should leave them
alone in the work of the kingdom, but he was only partially successful in
this effort.
P1705:3, 152:6.3
The second night of their sojourn at Gennesaret the Master again told the
apostles the parable of the sower and added these words: "You see, my children,
the appeal to human feelings is transitory and utterly disappointing; the
exclusive appeal to the intellect of man is likewise empty and barren; it
is only by making your appeal to the spirit which lives within the human mind
that you can hope to achieve lasting success and accomplish those marvelous
transformations of human character that are presently shown in the abundant
yielding of the genuine fruits of the spirit in the daily lives of all who
are thus delivered from the darkness of doubt by the birth of the spirit into
the light of faith -- the kingdom of heaven."
P1705:4, 152:6.4
Jesus taught the appeal to the emotions as the technique of arresting and
focusing the intellectual attention. He designated the mind thus aroused and
quickened as the gateway to the soul, where there resides that spiritual nature
of man which must recognize truth and respond to the spiritual appeal of the
gospel in order to afford the permanent results of true character transformations.
P1705:5, 152:6.5
Jesus thus endeavored to prepare the apostles for the impending shock -- the
crisis in the public attitude toward him which was only a few days distant.
He explained to the twelve that the religious rulers of Jerusalem would conspire
with Herod Antipas to effect their destruction. The twelve began to realize
more fully (though not finally) that Jesus was not going to sit on David's
throne. They saw more fully that spiritual truth was not to be advanced by
material wonders. They began to realize that the feeding of the five thousand
and the popular movement to make Jesus king was the apex of the miracle-seeking,
wonder-working expectance of the people and the height of Jesus' acclaim by
the populace. They vaguely discerned and dimly foresaw the approaching times
of spiritual sifting and cruel adversity. These twelve men were slowly awaking
to the realization of the real nature of their task as ambassadors of the
kingdom, and they began to gird themselves for the trying and testing ordeals
of the last year of the Master's ministry on earth.
P1706:1, 152:6.6
Before they left Gennesaret, Jesus instructed them regarding the miraculous
feeding of the five thousand, telling them just why he engaged in this extraordinary
manifestation of creative power and also assuring them that he did not thus
yield to his sympathy for the multitude until he had ascertained that it was
"according to the Father's will."