(The following text was
downloaded from Jim Birke’s website, and reformatted.)
Jesus’ words are in red, John’s are violet; most of the other dialogue is in blue.
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The Aquarian Gospel
of Jesus, the Christ
Transcribed from The Book of
God’s Remembrance (Akashic Records)
by Levi H. Dowling (1844-1911)
SECTION .I
ALEPH
Birth and Early Life of Mary, Mother of Jesus
CHAPTER 1
Palestine. Birth of Mary,
Joachim's feast. Mary is blessed by the priests.
A priest’s prophecy. Mary abides in the temple. Is betrothed to Joseph.
AUGUSTUS Caesar reigned and Herod Antipas was ruler of Jerusalem.
2) Three provinces comprised the land of Palestine: Judea, Samaria and
Galilee.
3) Joachim was a master of the Jewish law, a man of wealth; he lived in
Nazareth of Galilee; and Anna, of the tribe of Judah, was his wife.
4) To them was born a child, a goodly female child, and they were glad; and
Mary was the name they gave the child.
5) Joachim made a feast in honor of the child; but he invited not the rich,
the honored and the great; he called the poor, the halt, the lame, the blind,
and to each one he gave a gift of raiment, food or other needful thing.
6) He said,
The Lord has given me this wealth; I am his steward
by his grace, and if I give not to his children when in need, then he will
make this wealth a curse.
7) Now, when the child was three years old her parents took her to
Jerusalem, and in the temple she received the blessings of the priests.
8) The high priest was a prophet and a seer, and when he saw the child he
said,
9) Behold, this child will be the mother of an
honored prophet and a master of the law; she shall abide within this holy
temple of the Lord.
10) And Mary did abide within the temple of the Lord; and Hillel, chief
of the Sanhedrin, taught her all the precepts of the Jews, and she delighted
in the law of God.
11) When Mary reached the age of womanhood she was betrothed to Joseph, son of
Jacob, and a carpenter of Nazareth.
12) And Joseph was an upright man, and a devoted Essene.
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SECTION II
BETH
Birth and Infancy of the Harbinger, and of Jesus
CHAPTER 2
Zacharias and Elizabeth.
Prophetic messages of Gabriel to Zacharias,
Elizabeth and Mary. Birth of John. Prophecy of Zacharias.
NEAR Hebron in the hills of Judah, Zacharias and Elizabeth abode.
2) They were devout and just, and every day they read the Law, the Prophets
and the Psalms which told of one to come, strong to redeem; and they were
waiting for the king.
3) Now, Zacharias was a priest, and in his turn he led the temple service in
Jerusalem.
4) It came to pass as Zacharias stood before the Lord and burned the incense
in the Holy Place, that Gabriel came and stood before his face.
5) And Zacharias was afraid; he thought that some great evil was about to come
upon the Jews.
6) But Gabriel said,
O man of God, fear not; I bring to you and all the
world, a message of good will, and peace on earth.
7) Behold, the Prince of Peace, the king you seek, will quickly come.
8) Your wife will bear to you a son, a holy son, of whom the prophet wrote,
9) Behold, I send Elijah unto you again
before the coming of the Lord; and he will level down the hills and fill the
valleys up, and pave the way for him who shall redeem.
10) From the beginning of the age your son
has borne the name of John, the mercy of the Lord; his name is John.
11) He will be honored in the sight of God, and he will drink no wine, and
from his birth he will be filled with Holy Breath.
12) And Gabriel stood before Elizabeth as she was in the silence of her
home, and told her all the words that he had said to Zacharias in Jerusalem.
13) When he had done the service of his course, the priest went home, and with
Elizabeth rejoiced.
14) Five months passed by and Gabriel came to Mary in her home in Nazareth and
said,
15) Hail Mary, hail! Once blessed in the name of
God; twice blessed in the name of Holy Breath; thrice blessed in the name of
Christ; for you are worthy, and will bear a son who shall be called Immanuel.
16) His name is Jesus, for he saves his people from their sins.
17) When Joseph's daily task was done he came, and Mary told him all
the words that Gabriel spoke to her, and they rejoiced; for they believed that
he, the man of God, had spoken words of truth.
18) And Mary went with haste to tell Elizabeth about the promises of Gabriel;
together they rejoiced.
19) And in the home of Zacharias and Elizabeth did Mary tarry ninety days;
then she returned to Nazareth.
20) To Zacharias and Elizabeth a son was born, and Zacharias said,
21) Most blessed be the name of God, for he has
opened up the fount of blessings for his people, Israel.
22) His promises are verified; for he has brought to pass the words which holy
prophets spoke in olden times.
23) And Zacharias looked upon infant John, and said,
24) You shall be called the prophet of the Holy One;
and you will go before his face, and will prepare his way.
25) And you will give a knowledge of salvation unto Israel; and you will
preach the gospel of repentance and the blotting out of sins.
26) Behold, for soon the Day Star from on high will visit us, to light the way
for those who sit within the darkness of the shadow-land, and guide our feet
unto the ways of peace.
CHAPTER 3
Birth of Jesus. Masters
honor the child. The shepherds rejoice.
Zacharias and Elizabeth visit Mary. Jesus is circumcised.
THE time was nearly due for Jesus to be born, and Mary longed to see
Elizabeth, and she and Joseph turned their faces toward the Judean hills.
2) And when upon their way they came to Bethlehem the day was done, and they
must tarry for the night.
3) But Bethlehem was thronged with people going to Jerusalem; the inns and
homes were filled with guests, and Joseph and his wife could find no place to
rest but in a cave where animals were kept; and there they slept.
4) At midnight came a cry,
a child is born in yonder cave among the beasts.
And lo, the promised son of man was born.
5) And strangers took the little one and wrapped him in the dainty robes that
Mary had prepared and laid him in a trough from which the beasts of burden
fed.
6) Three persons clad in snow-white robes came in and stood before the child
and said,
7) All strength, all wisdom and all love be yours,
Immanuel.
8) Now, on the hills of Bethlehem were many flocks of sheep with
shepherds guarding them.
9) The shepherds were devout, were men of prayer, and they were waiting for a
strong deliverer to come.
10) And when the child of promise came, a man in snow-white robe appeared to
them, and they fell back in fear. The man stood forth and said,
11) Fear not! behold I bring you joyful news. At
midnight in a cave in Bethlehem was born the prophet and the king that you
have long been waiting for.
12) And then the shepherds all were glad; they felt that all the hills
were filled with messengers of light, who said,
13) All glory be to God on high; peace, peace on
earth, good will to men.
14) And then the shepherds came with haste to Bethlehem and to the
cave, that they might see and honor him whom men had called Immanuel.
15) Now, when the morning came, a shepherdess whose home was near, prepared a
room for Mary, Joseph and the child; and here they tarried many days.
16) And Joseph sent a messenger in haste to Zacharias and Elizabeth to say,
The child is born in Bethlehem.
17) And Zacharias and Elizabeth took John and came to Bethlehem with words of
cheer.
18) And Mary and Elizabeth recounted all the wondrous things that had
transpired. The people joined with them in praising God.
19) According to the custom of the Jews, the child was circumcised; and when
they asked, What will you call the child? the mother said,
His name is Jesus, as the man of God declared.
CHAPTER 4
Consecration of Jesus.
Mary offers sacrifices. Simeon and Anna prophesy.
Anna is rebuked for worshipping the child. The family returns to Bethlehem.
NOW, Mary took her son, when he was forty days of age, up to the temple
in Jerusalem, and he was consecrated by the priest.
2) And then she offered purifying sacrifices for herself, according to the
custom of the Jews; a lamb and two young turtle doves.
3) A pious Jew named Simeon was in the temple serving God.
4) From early youth he had been looking for Immanuel to come, and he had
prayed to God that he might not depart until his eyes had seen Messiah in the
flesh.
5) And when he saw the infant Jesus he rejoiced and said,
I now am ready to depart in peace, for I have seen
the king.
6) And then he took the infant in his arms and said,
Behold, this child will bring a sword upon my
people, Israel, and all the world; but he will break the sword and then the
nations will learn war no more.
7) The master's cross I see upon the forehead of
this child, and he will conquer by this sign.
8) And in the temple was a widow, four and eighty years of age, and she
departed not, but night and day she worshipped God.
9) And when she saw the infant Jesus she exclaimed,
Behold Immanuel! Behold the signet cross of the
Messiah on his brow!
10) And then the woman knelt to worship him, as God with us, Immanuel; but
one, a master, clothed in white, appeared and said,
11) Good woman, stay; take heed to what you do; you
may not worship man; this is idolatry.
12) This child is man, the son of man, and worthy of all praise. You shall
adore and worship God; him only shall you serve.
13) The woman rose and bowed her head in thankfulness and worshipped
God.
14) And Mary took the infant Jesus and returned to Bethlehem.
CHAPTER 5
Three magian priests honor
Jesus. Herod is alarmed. Calls a council of the Jews.
Is told that prophets had foretold the coming of a king. Herod resolves to
kill the child.
Mary and Joseph take Jesus and flee into Egypt.
BEYOND the river Euphrates the magians lived; and they were wise, could
read the language of the stars, and they divined that one, a master soul, was
born; they saw his star above Jerusalem.
2) And there were three among the magian priests who longed to see the master
of the coming age; and they took costly gifts and hastened to the West in
search of him, the newborn king, that they might honor him.
3) And one took gold, the symbol of nobility; another myrrh, the symbol of
dominion and of power; gum-thus the other took, the symbol of the wisdom of
the sage.
4) Now when the magians reached Jerusalem the people were amazed, and wondered
who they were and why they came.
5) And when they asked,
Where is the child that has been born a king?
the very throne of Herod seemed to shake.
6) And Herod sent a courtier forth to bring the magians to his court.
7) And when they came they asked again,
Where is the newborn king?
And then they said,
While yet beyond the Euphrates we saw his star
arise, and we have come to honor him.
8) And Herod blanched with fear. He thought,
perhaps, the priests were plotting to restore the
kingdom of the Jews,
and so he said within himself,
I will know more about this child that has been
born a king.
9) And so he told the magian priests to tarry in the city for a while
and he would tell them all about the king.
10) He called in council all the Jewish masters of the law and asked,
What have the Jewish prophets said concerning such a
one?
11) The Jewish masters answered him and said,
The prophets long ago foretold that one would come
to rule the tribes of Israel; that this Messiah would be born in Bethlehem.
12) They said,
The prophet Micah wrote,
O Bethlehem Judea, a little place among the Judean
hills, yet out of you will one come forth to rule my people, Israel; yea, one
who lived in olden times, in very ancient days.
13) Then Herod called the magian priests again and told them what the
masters of the Jewish law had said; and then he sent them on the way to
Bethlehem.
14) He said,
Go search, and if you find the child that has been
born a king, return and tell me all, that I may go and honor him.
15) The magians went their way and found the child with Mary in the shepherd's
home.
16) They honored him; bestowed upon him precious gifts and gave him gold,
gum-thus and myrrh.
17) These magian priests could read the hearts of men; they read the
wickedness of Herod's heart, and knew that he had sworn to kill the new born
king.
18) And so they told the secret to the parents of the child, and bid them flee
beyond the reach of harm.
19) And then the priests went on their homeward way; they went not through
Jerusalem.
20) And Joseph took the infant Jesus and his mother in the night and fled to
Egypt land, and with Elihu and Salome in ancient Zoan they abode.
CHAPTER 6
Herod learns of the mission of John. The infants of Bethlehem are massacred by Herod's order. Elizabeth escapes with John. Because Zacharias cannot tell where his son is hidden, he is murdered. Herod dies.
NOW, when the magian priests did not return to tell him of the child
that had been born a king, King Herod was enraged.
2) And then his courtiers told him of another child in Bethlehem, one born to
go before and to prepare the people to receive the king.
3) This angered more and more the king; he called his guards and bid them go
to Bethlehem and slay the infant John, as well as Jesus who was born to be a
king.
4) He said,
Let no mistake be made, and that you may be sure to
slay these claimants to my throne, slay all the male children in the town not
yet two years of age.
5) The guards went forth and did as Herod bade them do.
6) Elizabeth knew not that Herod sought to slay her son, and she and John were
yet in Bethlehem; but when she knew, she took the infant John and hastened to
the hills.
7) The murderous guards were near; they pressed upon her hard; but then she
knew the secret caves in all the hills, and into one she ran and hid herself
and John until the guards were gone.
8) Their cruel task was done; the guards returned and told the story to the
king.
9) They said,
We know that we have slain the infant king; but John
his harbinger, we could not find.
10) The king was angry with his guards because they failed to slay the
infant John; He sent them to the tower in chains.
11) And other guards were sent to Zacharias, father of the harbinger, while he
was serving in the Holy Place, to say,
The King demands that you shall tell where is your
son.
12) But Zacharias did not know, and he replied,
I am a minister of God, a servant in the Holy Place;
how could I know where they have taken him?
13) And when the guards returned and told the King what Zacharias said,
he was enraged and said,
14) My guards, go back and tell that wily priest
that he is in my hands; that if he does not tell the truth, does not reveal
the hiding place of John, his son, then he shall die.
15) The guards went back and told the priest just what the king had
said.
16) And Zacharias said,
I can but give my life for truth; and if the king
does shed my blood the Lord will save my soul.
17) The guards again returned and told the king what Zacharias said.
18) Now, Zacharias stood before the alter in the Holy Place engaged in prayer.
19) A guard approached and with a dagger thrust him through; he fell and died
before the curtain of the sanctuary of the Lord.
20) And when the hour of salutation came, for Zacharias daily blessed the
priests, he did not come.
21) And after waiting long the priests went to the Holy Place and found the
body of the dead.
22) And there was grief, deep grief, in all the land.
23) Now Herod sat upon his throne; he did not seem to move; his courtiers
came; the king was dead. His sons reigned in his stead.
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SECTION III
GIMEL
Education of Mary and Elizabeth in Zoan
CHAPTER 7
Archelaus reigns. Mary and
Elizabeth with their sons are in Zoan and are
taught by Elihu and Salome. Elihu's introductory lesson. Tells of an
interpreter.
THE son of Herod, Archelaus, reigned in Jerusalem. He was a selfish,
cruel king; he put to death all those who did not honor him.
2) He called in council all the wisest men and asked about the infant claimant
to his throne.
3) The council said that John and Jesus both were dead; then he was satisfied.
4) Now Joseph, Mary and their son were down in Egypt in Zoan, and John was
with his mother in the Judean Hills.
5) Elihu and Salome sent messengers in haste to find Elizabeth and John. They
found them and they brought them to Zoan.
6) Now, Mary and Elizabeth were marveling much because of their deliverance.
7) Elihu said,
It is not strange; there are no (random) happenings;
law governs all events.
8) From olden times it was ordained that you should be with us, and in this
sacred school be taught.
9) Elihu and Salome took Mary and Elizabeth out to the sacred grove
nearby where they were wont to teach.
10) Elihu said to Mary and Elizabeth,
You may esteem yourselves thrice blest, for you are
chosen mothers of long promised sons,
11) Who are ordained to lay in solid rock a sure foundation stone on which the
temple of the perfect man shall rest - a temple that shall never be destroyed.
12) We measure time by cycle ages, and the gate to every age we deem a
milestone in the journey of the (human) race.
13) An age has passed; the gate unto another age flies open at the touch of
time. This is the preparation age of soul, the kingdom of Immanuel, of God in
man;
14) And these, your sons, will be the first to tell the news, and preach the
gospel of good will to men, and peace on earth.
15) A mighty work is theirs; for carnal men want not the light, they love the
dark, and when the light shines in the dark they comprehend it not.
16) We call these sons Revealers of the Light; but they must have the light
before they can reveal the light.
17) And you must teach your sons, and set their souls on fire with love and
holy zeal, and make them conscious of their missions to the sons of men.
18) Teach them that God and man are one; but that through carnal thoughts and
words and deeds, man tore himself away from God; debased himself.
19) Teach that the Holy Breath would make them one again, restoring harmony
and peace;
20) That naught can make them one but Love; that God so loved the world that
he has clothed his son in flesh that man may comprehend.
21) The only Savior of the world is love, and Jesus, son of Mary, comes to
manifest that love to men.
22) Now, love cannot manifest until its way has been prepared, and naught can
rend the rocks and bring down lofty hills and fill the valleys up, and thus
prepare the way, but purity.
23) But purity in life men do not comprehend; and so, it too, must come in
flesh.
24) And you, Elizabeth, are blest because your son is purity made flesh, and
he shall pave the way for love.
25) This age will comprehend but little of the works of Purity and Love; but
not a word is lost, for in the Book of God's Remembrance a registry is made of
every thought, and word, and deed;
26) And when the world is ready to receive, lo, God will send a messenger to
open up the book and copy from its sacred pages all the messages of Purity and
Love.
27) Then every man of earth will read the words of life in language of his
native land, and men will see the light, walk in the light and be the light.
28) And man again will be at one with God.
CHAPTER 8
Elihu's lessons. The unity
of life. The two selfs. The devil. Love - the savior of men.
The David of the light. Goliath of the dark.
AGAIN Elihu met his pupils in the sacred grove and said,
2) No man lives unto himself; for every living thing
is bound by cords to every other living thing.
3) Blest are the pure in heart; for they will love and not demand love in
return.
4) They will not do to other men what they would not have other men do unto
them.
5) There are two selfs; the higher and the lower self.
6) The higher self is human spirit clothed with soul, made in the form of God.
7) The lower self, the carnal self, the body of desires, is a reflection of
the higher self, distorted by the murky ethers of the flesh.
8) The lower self is an illusion, and will pass away; the higher self is God
in man, and will not pass away.
9) The lower self is the embodiment of truth reversed, and so is falsehood
manifest.
10) The higher self is justice, mercy, love and right; the lower self is what
the higher self is not.
11) The lower self breeds hatred, slander, lewdness, murders, theft, and
everything that harms; the higher self is mother of the virtues and the
harmonies of life.
12) The lower self is rich in promises, but poor in blessedness and peace; it
offers pleasure, joy and satisfying gains; but gives unrest and misery and
death.
13) It gives men apples that are lovely to the eye and pleasant to the smell;
their cores are full of bitterness and gall.
14) If you would ask me what to study I would say, yourselves; and when you
will have studied them, and then would ask me what to study next, I would
reply, yourselves.
15) He who knows well his lower self, knows the illusions of the world, knows
of the things that pass away; and he who knows his higher self, knows God;
knows well the things that cannot pass away.
16) Thrice blessed is the man who has made purity and love his very own; he
has been ransomed from the perils of the lower self and is himself his higher
self.
17) Men seek salvation from an evil that they deem a living monster of the
nether world; and they have gods that are but demons in disguise; all
powerful, yet full of jealousy and hate and lust;
18) Whose favors must be bought with costly sacrifice of fruits, and of the
lives of birds, and animals, and human kind.
19) And yet these gods possess no ears to hear, no eyes to see, no heart to
sympathize, no power to save.
20) This evil is myth; these gods are made of air, clothed with shadows of a
thought.
21) The only devil from which men must be redeemed is self, the lower self. If
man would find his devil he must look within; his name is self.
22) If man would find his savior he must look within; and when the demon self
has been dethroned the savior, Love, will be exulted to the throne of power.
23) The David of the light is Purity, who slays the strong Goliath of the
dark, and seats the savior, Love, upon the throne.
CHAPTER 9
Salome's lessons. The man
and the woman. Philosophy of human moods.
The triune God. The Septonate. The God Tao.
SALOME taught the lesson of the day. She said,
All times are not alike. Today the words of man may
have the greatest power; tomorrow woman teaches best.
2) In all the ways of life the man and woman should walk hand in hand; the one
without the other is but half; each has a work to do.
3) But all things teach; each has a time and a season for its own. The sun,
the moon have lessons of their own for men; but each one teaches at the
appointed time.
4) The lessons of the sun fall down on human hearts like withered leaves upon
a stream, if given in the season of the moon and all the stars.
5) Today one walks in gloom, downhearted and oppressed; tomorrow that same one
is filled with joy.
6) Today the heavens seem full of blessedness and hope; tomorrow hope has
fled, and every plan and purpose comes to naught.
7) Today one wants to curse the very ground on which he treads; tomorrow he is
full of love and praise.
8) Today one hates and scorns and envies and is jealous of the child he loves;
tomorrow he has risen above his carnal self, and breathes forth gladness and
good will.
9) A thousand times men wonder why these heights and depths, these light
hearts and these sad, are found in every life.
10) They do not know that there are teachers everywhere, each busy with a
God-appointed task, and driving home to human hearts the truth.
11) But this is true, and every one receives the lessons that he needs.
12) And Mary said,
Today I am in exultation great; my thoughts and all my life seem lifted up;
why am I thus inspired?
13) Salome replied,
This is a day of exultation; day of worship and of praise; a day when, in a
measure, we may comprehend our Father-God.
14) Then let us study God, the One, the Three, the Seven.
15) Before the worlds were formed all things were One; just Spirit, Universal
Breath.
16) And Spirit breathed, and that which was not manifest became the Fire and
Thought of Heaven, the Father-God, the Mother-God.
17) And when the Fire and Thought of heaven in union breathed, their son,
their only son, was born. This son is Love whom men have called the Christ.
18) Men call the Thought of heaven the Holy Breath.
19) And when the Triune God breathed forth, lo, seven Spirits stood before the
throne. These are Elohim, creative spirits of the universe.
20) And these are they who said, Let us make man; and in their image man was
made.
21) In early ages of the world the dwellers in the farther East said, Tao is
the name of Universal Breath; and in the ancient books we read,
22) No manifesting form has Tao Great, and yet he made and keeps the heavens
and earth.
23) No passion has our Tao Great, and yet he causes sun and moon and all the
stars to rise and set.
24) No name has Tao Great, and yet he makes all things to grow; he brings in
season both the seed time and the harvest time.
25) And Tao Great was One; the One became the Two; the Two became the Three,
the Three evolved the Seven, which filled the universe with manifests.
26) And Tao Great gives unto all, the evil and the good, the rain, the dew,
the sunshine and the flowers; from his rich stores he feeds them all.
27) And in the same old book we read of man: He has a spirit knit to Tao
Great; a soul which lives within the seven Breaths of Tao Great; a body of
desires that springs up from the soil of flesh.
28) Now spirit loves the pure, the good, the true; the body of desires extols
the selfish self; the soul becomes the battle ground between the two.
29) And blessed is the man whose spirit is triumphant and whose lower self is
purified; whose soul is cleansed, becoming fit to be the council chamber of
the manifests of Tao Great.
30) Thus closed the lesson of Salome.
CHAPTER 10
Elihu's lessons. The
Brahmic religion. Life of Abram. Jewish sacred books.
The Persian religion.
ELIHU taught; he said,
In ancient times a people in the East were
worshippers of God, the One, whom they called Brahm.
2) Their laws were just; they lived in peace; they saw the light within; they
walked in wisdom's ways.
3) But priests with carnal aims arose, who changed the laws to suit the carnal
mind; bound heavy burdens on the poor, and scorned the rules of right; and so
the Brahms became corrupt.
4) But in the darkness of the age a few great masters stood unmoved; they
loved the name of Brahm; they were great beacon lights before the world.
5) And they preserved inviolate the wisdom of their holy Brahm, and you may
read this wisdom in their sacred books.
6) And in Chaldea, Brahm was known. A pious Brahm named Terah lived in Ur; his
son was so devoted to the Brahmic faith that he was called A-Brahm; and he was
set apart to be the father of the Hebrew race.
7) Now, Terah took his wife and sons and all his flocks and herds to Haran in
the West; here Terah died.
8) And Abram took the flocks and herds, and with his kindred journeyed farther
west;
9) And when he reached the Oaks of Morah in the land of Canaan, he pitched his
tents and there abode.
10) A famine swept the land and Abram took his kindred and his flocks and
herds and came to Egypt, and in these fertile plains of Zoan pitched his tent,
and here abode.
11) And men still mark the place where Abram lived-across the plain.
12) You ask why Abram came to Egypt land? This is the cradle-land of the
initiate; all secret things belong to Egypt land; and this is why the masters
come.
13) In Zoan Abram taught his science of the stars, and in that sacred temple
over there he learned the wisdom of the wise.
14) And when his lessons all were learned, he took his kindred and his flocks
and herds and journeyed back to Canaan, and in the plains of Mamre pitched his
tent, and there he lived, and there he died.
15) And records of his life and works and of his sons, and of the tribes of
Israel, are well preserved in Jewish sacred books.
16) In Persia Brahm was known, and feared. Men saw him as the One, the
causeless Cause of all that is, and he was sacred unto them, as Tao to the
dwellers of the farther East.
17) The people lived in peace, and justice ruled.
18) But, as in other lands, in Persia priests arose imbued with self and self
desires, who outraged Force, Intelligence and Love;
19) Religion grew corrupt, and birds and beasts and creeping things were set
apart as gods.
20) In course of time a lofty soul, whom men called Zarathustra, came in
flesh.
21) He saw the causeless Spirit, high and lifted up; he saw the weakness of
all man appointed gods.
22) He spoke and all of Persia heard; and when he said, One God, one people
and one shrine, the altars of the idols fell, and Persia was redeemed.
23) But men must see their Gods with human eyes, and Zarathustra said,
24) The greatest of the Spirits standing near the throne is the Ahura Mazda,
who manifests in brightness of the sun.
25) And all the people saw Ahura Mazda in the sun, and they fell down and
worshipped him in temples of the sun.
26) And Persia is the magian land where live the priests who saw the star
arise to mark the place where Mary's son was born, and were the first to greet
him as the Prince of Peace.
27) The precepts and the laws of Zarathustra are preserved in the Avesta which
you can read and make your own.
28) But you must know that words are naught till they are made alive; until
the lessons they contain become a part of head and heart.
29) Now truth is one; but no one knows the truth until he is the truth. It is
recorded in an ancient book.
30) Truth is the leavening power of God; it can transmute the all of life into
itself; and when the all of life is truth, then man is truth.
CHAPTER 11
Elihu's lessons. Buddhism and the precepts of Buddha. The mysteries of Egypt.
AGAIN Elihu taught; he said,
The Indian priests became corrupt; Brahm was
forgotten in the streets; the rights of men were trampled in the dust.
2) And then a mighty master came, a Buddha of enlightenment, who turned away
from wealth and all the honors of the world, and found the Silence in the
quiet groves and caves; and he was blest.
3) He preached a gospel of the higher life, and taught man how to honor man.
4) He had no doctrine of the gods to teach; he just knew man, and so his creed
was justice, love and righteousness.
5) I quote for you a few of many of the helpful words which Buddha spoke:
6) Hate is a cruel word. If men hate you regard it not; and you can turn the
hate of men to love and mercy and goodwill, and mercy is as large as all the
heavens.
7) And there is good enough for all. With good destroy the bad; with generous
deeds make avarice ashamed; with truth make straight the crooked lines that
error draws, for error is but truth distorted, gone astray.
8) And pain will follow him who speaks or acts with evil thoughts, as does the
wheel the foot of him who draws the cart.
9) He is a greater man who conquers self than he who kills a thousand men in
war.
10) He is the noble man who is himself what he believes what other men should
be.
11) Return to him who does you wrong your purest love, and he will cease from
doing wrong; for love will purify the heart of him who is beloved as truly as
it purifies the heart of him who loves.
12) The words of Buddha are recorded in the Indian sacred books; attend to
them, for they are part of the instructions of the Holy Breath.
13) The land of Egypt is the land of secret things.
14) The mysteries of the ages lie lock-bound in our temples and our shines.
15) The masters of all times and climes come here to learn; and when your sons
have grown to manhood they will finish all their studies in Egyptian schools.
16) But I have said enough. Tomorrow at the rising of the sun we meet again.
CHAPTER 12
Salome's lessons. Prayer
. Elihu's concluding lessons.
Sums up the three years' course of study.
The pupils return to their homes.
NOW, when the morning sun arose the masters and their pupils all were in
the sacred grove.
2) Salome was the first to speak; she said,
Behold the sun! It manifests the power of God who
speaks to us through sun and moon and stars;
3) Through mountain, hill and vale; through flower, and plant and tree.
4) God sings for us through bird, and harpsichord, and human voice; he speaks
to us through wind and rain and thunder roll; why should we not bow down and
worship at his feet?
5) God speaks to hearts apart; and hearts apart must speak to him; and this is
prayer.
6) It is not prayer to shout at God, to stand, or sit, or kneel and tell him
all about the sins of men.
7) It is not prayer to tell the Holy One how great he is, how good he is, how
strong and how compassionate.
8) God is not man to be bought up by praise of man.
9) Prayer is the ardent wish that every way of life be light; that every act
be crowned with good; that every living thing be prospered by our ministry.
10) A noble deed, a helpful word is prayer; a fervent, an effectual prayer.
11) The fount of prayer is in the heart; by thought, not words, the heart is
carried up to God, where it is blest, Then let us pray.
12) They prayed, but not a word was said; but in that holy Silence every heart
was blest.
13) And then Elihu spoke. He said to Mary and Elizabeth,
Our words are said; you need not tarry longer here;
the call has come; the way is clear, you may return unto your native land.
14) A mighty work is given you to do; you shall direct the minds that will
direct the world.
15) Your sons are set apart to lead men up to righteous thoughts, and words,
and deeds;
16) To make men know the sinfulness of sin; to lead them from the adoration of
the lower self, and all illusive things, and make them conscious of the self
that lives with Christ in God.
17) In preparation for their work your sons must walk in many thorny paths.
18) Fierce trials and temptations they will meet, like other men; their loads
will not be light, and they will weary be, and faint.
19) And they will know the pangs of hunger and of thirst; and without cause
they will be mocked, imprisoned, scourged.
20) To many countries they will go, and at the feet of many masters they will
sit, for they must learn like other men.
21) But we have said enough. The blessings of the Three and of the Seven, who
stand before the throne, will surely rest upon you evermore.
22) Thus closed the lessons of Elihu and Salome. Three years they
taught their pupils in the sacred grove, and if their lessons all were written
in a book, lo, it would be a mighty book; of what they said we have the sum.
23) Now, Mary, Joseph and Elizabeth with Jesus and his harbinger, set forth
upon their homeward way. They went not by Jerusalem, for Archelaus reigned.
24) They journeyed by the Bitter Sea, and when they reached Engedi hills they
rested in the home of Joshua, a near of kin; and here Elizabeth and John
abode.
25) But Joseph, Mary and their son went by the Jordan way, and after certain
days they reached their home in Nazareth.
![]()
SECTION IV
DALETH
Childhood and Early Education of John the Harbinger
CHAPTER 13
Elizabeth in Engedi.
Teaches her son. John becomes the pupil of Matheno,
who reveals to him the meaning of sin and the law of forgiveness.
ELIZABETH was blest; she spent her time with John, and gave to him the
lessons that Elihu and Salome had given her.
2) And John delighted in the wildness of his home and in the lessons that he
learned.
3) Now in the hills were many caves. The cave of David was a-near in which the
Hermit of Engedi lived.
4) This hermit was Matheno, priest of Egypt, master from the temple of Sakara.
5) When John was seven years of age Matheno took him to the wilderness and in
the cave of David they abode.
6) Matheno taught, and John was thrilled with what the master said, and day by
day Matheno opened up to him the mysteries of life.
7) John loved the wilderness; he loved his master and his simple fare. Their
food was fruits, and nuts, wild honey and the carob bread.
8) Matheno was an Israelite, and he attended all the Jewish feasts.
9) When John was nine years old Matheno took him to a great feast in
Jerusalem.
10) The wicked Archelaus had been deposed and exiled to a distant land because
of selfishness and cruelty, and John was not afraid.
11) John was delighted with his visit to Jerusalem. Matheno told him all about
the service of the Jews; the meaning of their rites.
12) John could not understand how sin could be forgiven by killing animals and
birds and burning them before the Lord.
13) Matheno said,
The God of heaven and earth does not require
sacrifice. This custom with its cruel rites was borrowed from the idol
worshippers of other lands.
14) No sin was ever blotted out by sacrifice of animal, of bird, or man.
15) Sin is the rushing forth of man into fens of wickedness. If one would get
away from sin he must retrace his steps, and find his way out of the fens of
wickedness.
16) Return and purify your hearts by love and righteousness and you shall be
forgiven.
17) This is the burden of the message that the harbinger shall bring to men.
18) What is forgiveness? John
inquired.
19) Matheno said,
It is the paying up of debts. A man who wrongs
another man can never be forgiven until he rights the wrong.
20) The Vedas says that none can right the wrong but him who does the wrong.
21) John said,
If this be true where is the power to forgive
except the power that rests in man himself? Can man forgive himself?
22) Matheno said,
The door is wide ajar; you see the way of man's
return to right, and the forgiveness of his sins.
CHAPTER 14
Matheno's lessons. The
doctrine of universal law.
The power of man to choose and to attain.
The benefits of antagonisms. Ancient sacred books.
The place of John and Jesus in the world's history.
MATHENO and his pupil, John, were talking of the sacred books of olden
times, and of the golden precepts they contained, and John exclaimed,
2) These golden precepts are sublime; what need
have we of other sacred books?
3) Matheno said,
The Spirits of the Holy One cause every thing to
come and go in proper time.
4) The sun has his own time to set, the moon to rise, to wax and wane, the
stars to come and go, the rain to fall, the winds to blow;
5) The seed times and the harvest times to come; man to be born and man to
die.
6) These mighty Spirits cause the nations to be born; they rock them in their
cradles, nurture them to greatest power, and when their tasks are done they
wrap them in their winding sheets and lay them in their tombs.
7) Events are many in a nation's life, and in the life of man, that are not
pleasant for the time; but in the end the truth appears: whatever comes is for
the best.
8) Man was created for a noble part; but he could not be made a free man
filled with wisdom, truth and might,
9) If he were hedged about, confined in straits from which he could not pass,
then he would be a toy, a mere machine.
10) Creative spirits gave to man a will; and so he has the power to choose.
11) He may attain the greatest heights, or sink to deepest depths; for what he
wills to gain he has the power to gain.
12) If he desires strength he has the power to gain that strength; but he must
overcome resistances to reach the goal; no strength is ever gained in
idleness.
13) So, in the whirl of many-sided conflicts man is placed where he must
strive to extricate himself.
14) In every conflict man gains strength; with every conquest he attains to
greater heights. With every day he finds new duties and new cares.
15) Man is not carried over dangerous pits, nor helped to overcome his foes.
He is himself his army, and his sword and shield; and he is captain of his
hosts.
16) The Holy Ones just light his way. Man never has been left without a beacon
light to guide.
17) And he has ever had a lighted lamp in hand that he may see the dangerous
rocks, the turbid streams and treacherous pits.
18) And so the Holy Ones have judged; when men have needed added light a
master soul has come to earth to give the light.
19) Before the Vedic days the world had many sacred books to light the way;
and when man needed greater light the Vedas, the Avesta and the books of Tao
Great appeared to show the way to greater heights.
20) And in the proper place the Hebrew Bible, with its Law, its Prophets and
its Psalms, appeared for man's enlightenment.
21) But years have passed and men have need of greater light.
22) And now the Day Star from on high begins to shine; and Jesus is the
flesh-made messenger to show that light to men.
23) And you, my pupil, you have been ordained to harbinger the coming day.
24) But you must keep that purity of heart you now possess; and you must light
your lamp directly from the coals that burn upon the altar of the Holy Ones.
25) And then your lamp will be transmuted to a boundless flame, and you will
be a living torch whose light will shine wherever man abides.
26) But in the ages yet to come, man will attain to greater heights, and
lights still more intense will come.
27 And then, at last, a mighty master soul will come to earth to light the way
up to the throne of perfect man.
CHAPTER 15
Death and burial of
Elizabeth. Matheno's lessons. The ministry of death.
The mission of John. Institution of the rite of baptism.
Matheno takes John to Egypt, and places him in the temple at Sakara,
where he remains eighteen years.
WHEN John was twelve years old his mother died, and neighbors laid her
body in a tomb among her kindred in the Hebron burying ground, and near to
Zacharias' tomb.
2) And John was deeply grieved; he wept. Matheno said,
It is not well to weep because of death.
3) Death is no enemy of man; it is a friend who, when the work of life is
done, just cuts the cord that binds the human boat to earth, that it may sail
on smoother seas.
4) No language can describe a mother's worth, and yours was tried and true.
But she was not called hence until her tasks were done.
5) The calls of death are always for the best, for we are solving problems
there as well as here; and one is sure to find himself where he can solve his
problems best.
6) It is but selfishness that makes one wish to call again to earth departed
souls.
7) Then let your mother rest in peace. Just let her noble life be strength and
inspiration unto you.
8) A crisis in your life has come, and you must have a clear conception of the
work that you are called to do.
9) The sages of the ages call you harbinger. The prophets look to you and say,
He is Elijah come again.
10) Your mission here is that of harbinger; for you will go before Messiah's
face to pave his way, and make the people ready to receive their king.
11) This readiness is purity of heart; none but the pure in heart can
recognize the king.
12) To teach men to be pure in heart, you must yourself be pure in heart, and
word, and deed.
13) In infancy the vow for you was made and you became a Nazarite. The razor
shall not touch your face nor head, and you shall taste not wine nor fiery
drinks.
14) Men need a pattern for their lives; they love to follow, not to lead.
15) The man who stands upon the corners of the paths and points the way, but
does not go, is just a pointer; and a block of wood can do the same.
16) The teacher treads the way; on every span of ground he leaves his
footprints clearly cut, which all can see and be assured that he, their master
went that way.
17) Men comprehend the inner life by what they see and do. They come to God
through ceremonies and forms.
18) And so when you would make men know that sins are washed away by purity in
life, a rite symbolic may be introduced.
19) In water wash the bodies of the people who would turn away from sin and
strive for purity in life.
20) This rite of cleansing is a preparation rite and they who thus are
cleansed comprise the Church of Purity.
21) And you shall say, You men of Israel, hear; Reform and wash; become the
sons of purity, and you shall be forgiven
22) This rite of cleansing and this church are but symbolic of the cleansing
of the soul by purity in life, and of the kingdom of the soul, which does not
come from outward show, but is the church within.
23) Now, you may never point the way and tell the multitudes to do what you
have never done; but you must go before and show the way.
24) You are to teach that men must wash; so you must lead the way, your body
must be washed, symbolic of the cleansing of the soul.
25) John said,
Why need I wait? May I not go at once and wash?
26) Matheno said,
'Tis well,
and then they went down to the Jordan ford, and east of Jericho, just
where the hosts of Israel crossed when first they entered Canaan, they tarried
for a time.
27) Matheno taught the harbinger, and he explained to him the inner meaning of
the cleansing rite and how to wash himself and how to wash the multitude.
28) And in the river Jordan John was washed; then they returned unto the
wilderness.
29) Now in Engedi's hills Matheno's work was done and he and John went down to
Egypt. They rested not until they reached the temple of Sakara in the valley
of the Nile.
30) For many years Matheno was a master in this temple of the Brotherhood, and
when he told about the life of John and of his mission to the sons of men, the
hierophant with joy received the harbinger and he was called the Brother
Nazarite.
31) For eighteen years John lived and wrought within these temple gates; and
here he conquered self, became a master mind and learned the duties of the
harbinger.
![]()
SECTION V
HE
Childhood and Early Education of Jesus
CHAPTER 16
The home of Joseph. Mary
teaches her son. Jesus' grandparents give a feast
in his honor. Jesus has a dream. His grandmother's interpretation. His
birthday gift.
THE home of Joseph was on Marmion Way in Nazareth; here Mary taught her
son the lessons of Elihu and Salome.
2) And Jesus greatly loved the Vedic hymns and the Avesta; but more than all
he loved to read the Psalms of David and the pungent words of Solomon.
3) The Jewish books of prophecy were his delight; and when he reached his
seventh year he needed not the books to read, for he had fixed in memory every
word.
4) Joachim and his wife, grandparents of child Jesus, made a feast in honor of
the child, and all their near of kin were guests.
5) And Jesus stood before the guests and said,
I had a dream, and in my dream I stood before a
sea, upon a sandy beach.
6) The waves upon the sea were high; a storm was raging on the deep.
7) Someone gave me a wand. I took the wand and touched the sand, and every
grain of sand became a living thing; the beach was all a mass of beauty and of
song.
8) I touched the waters at my feet, and they were changed to trees, and
flowers, and singing birds, and every thing was praising God.
9) And someone spoke, I did not see the one who spoke, I heard the voice,
which said,
There is no death.
10) Grandmother Anna loved the child; she laid her hand on Jesus' head and
said,
I saw you stand beside the sea; I saw you touch the
sand and waves; I saw them turn to living things and then I knew the meaning
of the dream.
11) The sea of life rolls high; the storms are great. The multitude of men are
idle, listless, waiting, like dead sand upon the beach.
12) Your wand is truth. With this you touch the multitudes, and every man
becomes a messenger of holy light and life.
13) You touch the waves upon the sea of life; their turmoils cease; the very
winds become a song of praise.
14) There is no death, because the wand of truth can change the driest bones
to living things, and bring the loveliest flowers from stagnant ponds, and
turn the most discordant notes to harmony and praise.
15) Joachim said,
My son, today you pass the seventh milestone of your
way of life, for you are seven years of age, and we will give to you, as a
remembrance of this day, whatever you desire; choose that which will afford
you most delight.
16) And Jesus said,
I do not want a gift, for I am satisfied. If I
could make a multitude of children glad upon this day I would be greatly
pleased.
17) Now, there are many hungry boys and girls in Nazareth who would be pleased
to eat with us this feast and share with us the pleasures of this day.
18) The richest gift that you can give to me is your permission to go out and
find these needy ones and bring them here that they may feast with us.
19) Joachim said,
'Tis well; go out and find the needy boys and girls
and bring them here; we will prepare enough for all.
20) And Jesus did not wait; he ran; he entered every dingy hut and
cabin of the town; he did not waste his words; he told his mission everywhere.
21) And in a little time one hundred and three-score of happy, ragged boys and
girls were following him up Marmion Way.
22) The guests made way; the banquet hall was filled with Jesus' guests, and
Jesus and his mother helped to serve.
23) And there was food enough for all, and all were glad; and so the birthday
gift of Jesus was a crown of righteousness.
CHAPTER 17
Jesus talks with the rabbi
of the synagogue of Nazareth.
He criticizes the narrowness of Jewish thought.
NOW, Rabbi Barachia of the synagogue of Nazareth, was aid to Mary in the
teaching of her son.
2) One morning after service in the synagogue the rabbi said to Jesus as he
sat in silent thought,
Which is the greatest of the Ten Commands?
3) And Jesus said,
I do not see a greatest of the Ten Commands. I
see a golden cord that runs through all the Ten Commands that binds them fast
and makes them one.
4) This cord is love, and it belongs to every word of all the Ten Commands.
5) If one is full of love he can do nothing else than worship God; for God is
love.
6) If one is full of love, he cannot kill; he cannot falsely testify; he
cannot covet; can do naught but honor God and man.
7) If one is full of love he does not need commands of any kind.
8) And Rabbi Barachia said,
Your words are seasoned with the salt of wisdom that
is from above. Who is the teacher who has opened up this truth to you?
9) And Jesus said,
I do not know that any teacher opened up this
truth for me. It seems to me that truth was never shut; that it was always
opened up, for truth is one and it is everywhere.
10) And if we open up the windows of our minds the truth will enter in and
make herself at home; for truth can find her way through any crevice, any
window, any open door.
11) The rabbi said,
What hand is strong enough to open up the windows
and the doors of mind so truth can enter in?
12) And Jesus said,
It seems to me that love, the golden cord that
binds the Ten Commands in one, is strong enough to open any human door so that
the truth can enter in and cause the heart to understand.
13) Now, in the evening Jesus and his mother sat alone, and Jesus said,
14) The rabbi seems to think that God is partial
in his treatment of the sons of men; that Jews are favored and are blest above
all other men.
15) I do not see how God can have his favorites and be just.
16) Are not Samaritans and Greeks and Romans just as much the children of the
Holy One as are the Jews?
17) I think the Jews have built a wall about themselves, and they see nothing
on the other side of it.
18) They do not know that flowers are blooming over there; that sowing times
and reaping times belong to anybody but the Jews.
19) It surely would be well if we could break down these barriers down so that
the Jews might see that God has other children that are just as greatly blest.
20) I want to go from Jewry land and meet my kin in other countries of my
Fatherland.
CHAPTER 18
Jesus at a feast in
Jerusalem. Is grieved by the cruelties of the sacrificers.
Appeals to Hillel, who sympathizes with him. He remains in the temple a year.
THE great feast of the Jews was on, and Joseph, Mary and their son, and
many of their kin, went to Jerusalem. The child was ten years old.
2) And Jesus watched the butchers kill the lambs and birds and burn them on
the altar in the name of God.
3) His tender heart was shocked at this display of cruelty; he asked the
serving priest,
What is the purpose of this slaughter of the
beasts and birds? Why do you burn their flesh before the Lord?
4) The priest replied,
This is our sacrifice for sin. God has commanded us
to do these things, and said that in these sacrifices all our sins are blotted
out.
5) And Jesus said,
Will you be kind enough to tell when God
proclaimed that sins are blotted out by sacrifice of any kind?
6) Did not David say that God requires not a sacrifice for sin? that it is a
sin itself to bring before his face burnt offerings, as offerings for sin? Did
not Isaiah say the same?
7) The priest replied,
My child you are beside yourself. Do you know more
about the laws of God than all the priests of Israel? This is no place for
boys to show their wit.
8) But Jesus heeded not his taunts; he went to Hillel, chief of the Sanhedrin,
and he said to him,
9) Rabboni, I would like to talk with you; I am
disturbed about this service of the pascal feast. I thought the temple was the
house of God where love and kindness dwell.
10) Do you not hear the bleating of those lambs, the pleading of those doves
that men are killing over there? Do you not smell that awful stench that comes
from burning flesh?
11) Can man be kind and just, and still be filled with cruelty?
12) A God that takes delight in sacrifice, in blood and burning flesh, is not
my Father-God.
13) I want to find a God of love, and you, my master, you are wise, and surely
you can tell me where to find the God of love.
14) But Hillel could not give an answer to the child. His heart was
stirred with sympathy. He called the child to him; he laid his hand upon his
head and wept.
15) He said,
There is a God of love, and you shall come with me;
and hand in hand we will go forth and find the God of love.
16) And Jesus said,
Why need we go? I thought that God was
everywhere. Can we not purify our hearts and drive out cruelty, and every
wicked thought, and make within, a temple where the God of love can dwell?
17) The master of the great Sanhedrin felt as though he was himself the
child, and that before him stood Rabboni, master of the higher law.
18) He said within himself,
This child is surely a prophet sent from God.
19) Then Hillel sought the parents of the child, and asked that Jesus
might abide with them, and learn the precepts of the law, and all the lessons
of the temple priests.
20) His parents gave consent, and Jesus did abide within the holy temple in
Jerusalem, and Hillel taught him every day.
21) And every day the master learned from Jesus many lessons of the higher
life.
22) The child remained with Hillel in the temple for a year, and then returned
unto his home in Nazareth; and there he wrought with Joseph as a carpenter.
CHAPTER 19
Jesus at the age of twelve
in the temple. Disputes with the doctors of the law.
Reads from a book of prophecy. By request of Hillel he interprets the
prophecies.
AGAIN the great feast in Jerusalem was on, and Joseph, Mary and their
son were there. The child was twelve years old.
2) And there were Jews and proselytes from many countries in Jerusalem.
3) And Jesus sat among the priests and doctors in the temple hall.
4) And Jesus opened up a book of prophecy and read:
5) Woe, woe to Ariel, the town where David dwelt!
I will dismantle Ariel, and she shall groan and weep:
6) And I will camp against her round about with hostile posts;
7) And I will bring her low and she shall speak out of the earth; with muffled
voice like a familiar spirit shall she speak; yea she shall only whisper forth
her speech;
8) And foes unnumbered, like the grains of dust, shall come upon her suddenly.
9) The Lord of Hosts will visit her with thunder and with tempest, and with
storm; with earthquake, and with devouring flames.
10) Lo, all these people have deserted me. They draw to me with speech, and
with their lips they honor me; their hearts are far removed from me; their
fear for me is that inspired by man.
11) And I will breath upon my people, Israel; the wisdom of their wise men
shall be lost; the understanding of their prudent men shall not be found.
12) My people seek to hide their counsel from the Lord, so that their works
may not be seen. They fain would cover up their works with darkness of the
night, and say, Who sees us now? Who knows us now?
13) Poor, foolish men! shall that which has been made say of its maker, He is
naught, I made myself?
14) Or shall the pot speak out and say to him, who made the pot, You have no
skill; you do not know?
15) But this will not forever be; the time will come when Lebanon will be a
fruitful field, and fruitful fields will be transformed to groves.
16) And on that day the deaf will hear the words of God; the blind will read
the Book of God's Remembrance.
17) And suffering ones will be relieved, and they will have abundant joy; and
every one that needs will be supplied; and it will come to pass that all the
foolish will be wise.
18) The people will return and sanctify the Holy One, and in their heart of
hearts, lo, they will reverence him.
19) When Jesus had thus read he put aside the book and said,
You masters of the law, will you make plain for
us the prophet's words?
20) Now, Hillel sat among the masters of the law, and he stood forth
and said,
Perhaps our young rabboni who has read the word will
be interpreter.
21) And Jesus said,
The Ariel of the prophet is our own Jerusalem.
22) By selfishness and cruelty this people has become a stench unto the
Elohim.
23) The prophet saw these days from far, and of these times he wrote.
24) Our doctors, lawyers, priests and scribes oppress the poor, while they
themselves in luxury live.
25) The sacrifices and the offerings of Israel are but abomination unto God.
They only sacrifice that God requires is self.
26) Because of this injustice and this cruelty of man to man, the Holy One has
spoken of this commonwealth:
27) Lo, I will overturn, yes, I will overturn, it shall be overturned, and it
shall be no more until he comes whose right it is and I will give it unto him.
28) In all the world there is one law of right, and he who breaks that law
will suffer grief; for God is just.
29) And Israel has gone far astray; has not regarded justice, nor the rights
of man, and God demands that Israel shall reform, and turn again to ways of
holiness.
30) And if our people will not hear the voice of God, lo, nations from afar
will come and sack Jerusalem, and tear our temple down, and take our people
captive into foreign lands.
31) But this will not forever be; though they be scattered far and wide, and
wander here and there among the nations of the earth, like sheep that have no
shepherd guide.
32) The time will come when God will bring again the captive hosts; for Israel
shall return and dwell in peace.
33) And after many years our temple shall be built again, and one whom God
will honor, one in whom the pure in heart delights will come and glorify the
house of God, and reign in righteousness.
34) When Jesus had thus said, he stepped aside, and all the people were
amazed and said,
This surely is the Christ.
CHAPTER 20
After the feast. The
homeward journey . The missing Jesus. The search for him.
His parents find him in the temple. He goes with them to Nazareth.
Symbolic meaning of carpenter's tools.
THE great feast of the pasch was ended and the Nazarenes were journeying
towards their homes.
2) And they were in Samaria, and Mary said,
Where is my son?
No one had seen the boy.
3) And Joseph sought among their kindred who were on their way to Galilee; but
they had seen him not.
4) Then Joseph, Mary, and a son of Zebedee, returned and sought through all
Jerusalem, but they could find him not.
5) And then they went up to the temple courts and asked the guards,
Have you seen Jesus, a fair-haired boy, with deep
blue eyes, twelve years of age, about these courts?
6) The guards replied,
Yes, he is in the temple now disputing with the
doctors of the law.
7) And they went in, and found him as the guards had said.
8) And Mary said,
Why Jesus, why do you treat your parents thus? Lo,
we have sought two days for you. We feared that some great harm had overtaken
you.
9) And Jesus said,
Do you not know that I must be about my Father's
work?
10) But he went round and pressed the hand of every doctor of the law
and said, I trust that we may meet again.
11) And then he went forth with his parents on their way to Nazareth; and when
they reached their home he wrought with Joseph as a carpenter.
12) One day as he was bringing forth the tools for work he said,
13) These tools remind me of the ones we handle
in the workshop of the mind where things are made of thought and where we
build up character.
14) We use the square to measure all our lines, to straighten out the crooked
places of the way, and make the corners of our conduct square.
15) We use the compass to draw circles round our passions and desires to keep
them in the bounds of righteousness.
16) We use the axe to cut away the knotty, useless and ungainly parts and make
the character symmetrical.
17) We use the hammer to drive home the truth, and pound it in until it is a
part of every part.
18) We use the plane to smooth the rough, uneven surfaces of joint, and block,
and board that go to build the temple for the truth.
19) The chisel, line, the plummet and the saw all have their uses in the
workshop of the mind.
20) And then this ladder with its trinity of steps, faith, hope and love; on
it we climb up to the dome of purity in life.
21) And on the twelve-step ladder we ascend until we reach the pinnacle of
that which life is spent to build--the Temple of Perfected Man.
![]()
SECTION VI
VAU
Life and Works of Jesus in India
CHAPTER 21
Ravanna sees Jesus in the
temple and is captivated. Hillel tells him about the boy.
Ravanna finds Jesus in Nazareth and gives a feast in his honor.
Ravanna becomes patron of Jesus,
and takes him to India to study the Brahmic religion.
A ROYAL prince of India, Ravanna of Orissa in the south, was at the
Jewish feast.
2) Ravanna was a man of wealth; and he was just, and with a band of Brahmic
priests sought wisdom in the West.
3) When Jesus stood among the Jewish priests and read and spoke, Ravanna heard
and was amazed.
4) And when he asked who Jesus was, from whence he came and what he was, chief
Hillel said,
5) We call this child the Day Star from on high, for
he has come to bring to men a light, the light of life; to lighten up the way
of men and to redeem his people, Israel.
6) And Hillel told Ravanna all about the child; about the prophecies
concerning him; about the wonders of the night when he was born; about the
visit of the magian priests;
7) About the way in which he was protected from the wrath of evil men; about
his flight to Egypt-land, and how he then was serving with his father as a
carpenter in Nazareth.
8) Ravanna was entranced, and asked to know the way to Nazareth, that he might
go and honor such a one as son of God.
9) And with his gorgeous train he journeyed on the way and came to Nazareth of
Galilee.
10) He found the object of his search engaged in building dwellings for the
sons of men.
11) And when he first saw Jesus he was climbing up a twelve step ladder, and
he carried in his hands a compass, square and axe.
12) Ravanna said,
All hail, most favored son of heaven!
13) And at the inn Ravanna made a feast for all the people of the town;
and Jesus and his parents were honored guests.
14) For certain days Ravanna was a guest in Joseph's home on Marmion Way; he
sought to learn the secret of the wisdom of the son; but it was all to great
for him.
15) And then he asked that he might be the patron of the child; might take him
to the East where he could learn the wisdom of the Brahms.
16) And Jesus longed to go that he might learn; and after many days his
parents gave consent.
17) Then, with proud heart, Ravanna with his train, began the journey towards
the rising sun; and after many days they crossed the Sind, and reached the
province of Orissa, and the palace of the prince.
18) The Brahmic priests were glad to welcome home the prince; with favor they
received the Jewish boy.
19) And Jesus was accepted as a pupil in the temple Jagannath; and here
learned the Vedas and the Manic laws.
20) The Brahmic masters wondered at the clear conceptions of the child, and
often were amazed when he explained to them the meaning of the laws.
CHAPTER 22
The friendship of Jesus and
Lamaas. Jesus explains to Lamaas the meaning of
truth, man, power, understanding, wisdom, salvation and faith.
AMONG the priests of Jagannath was one who loved the Jewish boy. Lamaas
Bramas was the name by which the priest was known.
2) One day as Jesus and Lamaas walked alone in plaza Jagannath, Lamaas said,
My Jewish master, what is truth?
3) And Jesus said,
Truth is the only thing that changes not.
4) In all the world there are two things; the one is truth; the other
falsehood is; and truth is that which is, and falsehood that which seems to
be.
5) Now truth is aught, and has no cause, and yet it is the cause of
everything.
6) Falsehood is naught, and yet it is the manifest of aught.
7) Whatever has been made will be unmade; that which begins must end.
8) All things that can be seen by human eyes are manifests of aught, are
naught, and so must pass away.
9) The things we see are but reflexes just appearing, while the ethers vibrate
so and so, and when conditions change they disappear.
10) The Holy Breath is truth; is that which was, and is, and evermore shall
be; it cannot change nor pass away.
11) Lamaas said,
You answer well; now, what is man?
12) And Jesus said,
Man is the truth and falsehood strangely mixed.
13) Man is the Breath made flesh; so truth and falsehood are conjoined in him;
and they strive, and naught goes down and man as truth abides.
14) Again Lamaas asked,
What do you say of power?
15) And Jesus said,
It is a manifest; is the result of force; it is
but naught; it is illusion, nothing more. Force changes not, but power changes
as the ethers change.
16) Force is the will of God and is omnipotent, and power is that will in
manifest, directed by the Breath.
17) There is power in the winds, a power in the waves, a power in the
lightning's stroke, a power in the human arm, a power in the eye.
18) The ethers cause these powers to be, and thought of Elohim, of angel, man,
or other thinking thing, directs the force; when it has done its work the
power is no more.
19) Again Lamaas asked,
Of understanding what have you to say?
20) And Jesus said,
It is the rock on which man builds himself; it is
the gnosis of the aught and of the naught, of falsehood and of truth.
21) It is the knowledge of the lower self; the sensing of the powers of man
himself.
22) Again Lamaas asked,
Of wisdom what have you to say?
23) And Jesus said,
It is the consciousness that man is aught; that
God and man are one;
24) That naught is naught; that power is but illusion; that heaven and earth
and hell are not above, around, below, but in; which in the light of aught
becomes the naught, and God is all.
25) Lamaas asked,
Pray, what is faith?
26) And Jesus said,
Faith is the surety of the omnipotence of God and
man; the certainty that man will reach the deific life.
27) Salvation is a ladder reaching from the heart of man to heart of God.
28) It has three steps; Belief is first, and this is what man thinks, perhaps,
is truth.
29) And faith is next, and this is what man knows is truth.
30) Fruition is the last, and this is man himself, the truth.
31) Belief is lost in faith; and in fruition is lost; and man is saved when he
has reached deific life; when he and God are one.
CHAPTER 23
Jesus and Lamaas among the
sudras and visyas. In Benares.
Jesus becomes a pupil of Udraka. The lessons of Udraka.
NOW, Jesus with his friend Lamaas went through all the regions of
Orissa, and the valley of the Ganges, seeking wisdom from the sudras and the
visyas and the masters.
2) Benares of the Ganges was a city rich in culture and in learning; here the
two rabbonis tarried many days.
3) And Jesus sought to learn the Hindu art of healing, and became the pupil of
Udraka, greatest of the Hindu healers.
4) Udraka taught the uses of the waters, plants and earths; of heat and cold;
sunshine and shade; of light and dark.
5) He said,
The laws of nature are the laws of health, and he
who lives according to these laws is never sick.
6) Transgression of these laws is sin, and he who sins is sick.
7) He who obeys the laws, maintains an equilibrium in all his parts, and thus
insures true harmony; and harmony is health, while discord is disease.
8) That which produces harmony in all the parts of man is medicine, insuring
health.
9) The body is a harpsichord, and when its strings are too relaxed, or are too
tense, the instrument is out of tune, the man is sick.
10) Now, everything in nature has been made to meet the wants of man; so
everything is found in medical arcanes.
11) And when the harpsichord of man is out of tune the vast expanse of nature
may be searched for remedy; there is a cure for every ailment of the flesh.
12) Of course the will of man is remedy supreme; and by the vigorous exercise
of will, man way make tense a chord that is relaxed, or may relax one that is
too tense, and thus may heal himself.
13) When man has reached the place where he has faith in God, in nature and
himself, he knows the Word of power; his word is balm for every wound, is cure
for all the ills of life.
14) The healer is the man who can inspire faith. The tongue may speak to human
ears, but souls are reached by souls that speak to souls.
15) He is the forceful man whose soul is large, and who can enter into souls,
inspiring hope in those who have no hope, and faith in those who have no faith
in God, in nature, nor in man.
16) There is no universal balm for those who tread the common walks of life.
17) A thousand things produce inharmony and make men sick; a thousand things
may tune the harpsichord, and make men well.
18) That which is medicine for one is poison for another one; so one is healed
by what would kill another one.
19) An herb may heal the one; a drink of water may restore another one; a
mountain breeze may bring to life one seeming past all help;
20) A coal of fire, or bit of earth, may cure another one; and one may wash in
certain streams, or pools, and be made whole.
21) The virtue from the hand or breath may heal a thousand more; but love is
queen. Thought, reinforced by love, is God's great sovereign balm.
22) But many of the broken chords in life, and discords that so vex the soul,
are caused by evil spirits of the air that men see not; that lead men on
through ignorance to break the laws of nature and of God.
23) These powers act like demons, and they speak; they rend the man; they
drive him to despair.
24) But he who is a healer, true, is master of the soul, and can, by force of
will, control these evil ones.
25) Some spirits of the air are master spirits and are strong, too strong for
human power alone; but man has helpers in the higher realms that may be
importuned, and they will help to drive the demons out.
26) Of what this great physician said, this is the sum. And Jesus bowed
his head in recognition of the wisdom of this master soul, and went his way.
CHAPTER 24
The Brahmic doctrine of
castes. Jesus repudiates it and teaches human equality.
The priests are offended and drive him from the temple.
He abides with the sudras and teaches them.
FOUR years the Jewish boy abode in temple Jagannath.
2) One day he sat among the priests and said to them,
Pray, tell me all about your views of castes; why
do you say that all men are not equal in the sight of God?
3) A master of their laws stood forth and said,
The Holy One whom we call Brahm, made men to suit
himself, and men should not complain.
4) In the beginning days of human life Brahm spoke, and four men stood before
his face.
5) Now, from the mouth of Parabrahm the first man came; and he was white, was
like the Brahm himself; a brahman he was called.
6) And he was high and lifted up; above all want he stood; he had no need of
toil.
7) And he was called the priest of Brahm, the holy one to act for Brahm in all
affairs of earth.
8) The second man was red, and from the hand of Parabrahm he came; and he was
called shatriya.
9) And he was made to be the king, the ruler and the warrior, whose highest
ordained duty was protection of the priest.
10) And from the inner parts of Parabrahm the third man came; and he was
called a visya.
11) He was a yellow man, and his it was to till the soil, and keep the flocks
and herds.
12) And from the feet of Parabrahm the fourth man came; and he was black; and
he was called the sudras, one of low estate.
13) The sudras is the servant of the race of men; he has no rights that others
need respect; he may not hear the Vedas read, and it means death to him to
look into the face of priest, or king, and naught but death can free him from
his state of servitude.
14) And Jesus said,
Then Parabrahm is not a God of justice and of
right; for with his own strong hand he has exulted one and brought another
low.
15) And Jesus said no more to them, but looking up to heaven he said,
16) My Father-God, who was, and is, and evermore
shall be; who holds within thy hands the scales of justice and of right;
17) Who in the boundlessness of love has made all men to equal be. The white,
the black, the yellow, and the red can look up in thy face and say, Our
Father-God.
18) Thou Father of the human race, I praise thy name.
19) And all the priests were angered by the words which Jesus spoke;
they rushed upon him, seized him, and would have done him harm.
20) But then Lamaas raised his hand and said,
You priests of Brahm, beware! you know not what you
do; wait till you know the God this youth adores.
21) I have beheld this boy at prayer when light above the light of the sun
surrounded him. Beware! his God may be more powerful than Brahm.
22) If Jesus speaks the truth, if he is right, you cannot force him to desist;
if he is wrong and you are right, his words come to naught, for right is
might, and in the end it will prevail.
23) And then the priests refrained from doing Jesus harm; but one spoke
out and said,
24) Within this holy place has not this reckless
youth done violence to Parabrahm? The law is plain; it says,
He who reviles the name of Brahm shall die.
25) Lamaas pled for Jesus' life; and then the priests just seized a scourge of
cords and drove him from the place.
26) And Jesus went his way and found shelter with the black and yellow men,
the servants and the tiller of the soil.
27) To them he first made known the gospel of equality; he told them of the
Brotherhood of Man, the Fatherhood of God.
28) The common people heard him with delight, and learned to pray, Our
Father-God who art in heaven.
CHAPTER 25
Jesus teaches the sudras
and farmers.
Relates a parable of a nobleman and his unjust sons.
Makes known the possibilities of all men.
WHEN Jesus saw the sudras and the farmers in such multitudes draw near
to hear his words, he spoke a parable to them; he said:
2) A nobleman possessed a great estate; he had
four sons, and he would have them all grow strong by standing forth and making
use of all the talents they possess.
3) And so he gave to each a share of his great wealth, and bade them go their
way.
4) The eldest son was full of self; he was ambitious, shrewd and quick of
thought.
5) He said within himself, I am the oldest son, and these, my brothers, must
be servants at my feet.
6) And then he called his brothers forth; and one he made a puppet king; gave
him a sword and charged him to defend the whole estate.
7) To one he gave the use of lands and flowing wells, and flocks and herds,
and bade him till the soil, and tend the flocks and herds and bring to him the
choicest of his gains.
8) And to the other one he said, You are the youngest son; the broad estate
has been assigned; you have no part nor lot in anything that is.
9) And he took a chain and bound his brother to a naked rock upon a desert
plain, and said to him,
10) You have been born a slave; you have no rights, and you must be contented
with your lot, for there is no release for you until you die and go from
hence.
11) Now, after certain years the day of reckoning came; the nobleman called up
his sons to render their accounts.
12) And when he knew that one, his eldest son, had seized the whole estate and
made his brothers slaves,
13) He seized him, tore his priestly robes away and put him in a prison cell,
where he was forced to stay until he had atoned for all the wrongs that he had
done.
14) And then, as though they were but toys, he threw in air the throne and
armor of the puppet king; he broke his sword, and put him in a prison cell.
15) And then he called his farmer son and asked him why he had not rescued
from his galling chains his brother on the desert plains.
16) And when the son made answer not, the father took unto himself the flocks
and herds, the fields and flowing wells,
17) And sent his farmer son to live out on the desert sands, until he had
atoned for all the wrongs that he had done.
18) And then the father went and found his youngest son in cruel chains; with
his own hands he broke the chains and bade his son to go in peace.
19) Now, when the sons had all paid up their debts they came again and stood
before the bar of right.
20) They all had learned their lessons, learned them well; and then the father
once again divided the estate.
21) He gave to each a share, and bade them recognize the law of equity and
right, and live in peace.
22) And one, a sudras, spoke and said,
May we who are but slaves, who are cut down like
beasts to satisfy the whims of priests - may we have hope that one will come
to break our chains and set us free?
23) And Jesus said,
The Holy One has said, that all his children
shall be free; and every soul is child of God.
24) The sudras shall be free as priest; the farmer shall walk hand in hand
with king; for all the world will own the brotherhood of man.
25) O men, arise! be conscious of your powers, for he who wills need not
remain a slave.
26) Just live as you would have your brother live; unfold each day as does the
flower; for earth is yours, and heaven is yours, and God will bring you to
your own.
27) And all the people cried,
Show us the way that like the flower we may unfold
and come unto our own.
CHAPTER 26
Jesus at Katak. The car of
Jagannath.
Jesus reveals to the people the emptiness of Brahmic rites,
and how to see God in man. Teaches them the divine law of sacrifice.
IN all the cities of Orissa Jesus taught. At Katak, by the river side,
he taught, and thousands of the people followed him.
2) One day a car of Jagannath was hauled along by scores of frenzied men, and
Jesus said,
3) Behold, a form without a spirit passes by; a body with no soul; a temple
with no altar fires.
4) This car of Krishna is an empty thing, for
Krishna is not there.
5) This car is but an idol of a people drunk on wine of carnal things.
6) God lives not in the noise of tongues; there is no way to him from any idol
shrine.
7) God's meeting place with man is in the heart, and in a still small voice he
speaks; and he who hears is still.
8) And all the people said,
Teach us to know the Holy One who speaks within the
heart, God of the still small voice.
9) And Jesus said,
The Holy Breath cannot be seen with mortal eyes;
nor can men see the Spirits of the Holy;
10) But in their image man was made, and he who looks into the face of man,
looks at the image of the God who speaks within.
11) And when man honors man he honors God, and what man does for man, he does
for God.
12) And you must bear in mind that when man harms in thought, or word or deed
another man, he does a wrong to God.
13) If you would serve the God who speaks within the heart, just serve your
near of kin, and those that are no kin, the stranger at your gates, the foe
who seeks to do you harm;
14) Assist the poor, and help the weak; do harm to none, and covet not what is
not yours;
15) Then, with your tongue the Holy One will speak; and he will smile behind
your tears, will light your countenance with joy, and fill your hearts with
peace.
16) And then the people asked.
To whom shall we bring gifts? Where shall we offer
sacrifice?
17) And Jesus said,
Our Father-God asks not for needless waste of
plant, of grain, of dove, of lamb.
18) That which you burn on any shrine you throw away. No blessings can attend
the one who takes the food from hungry mouths to be destroyed by fire.
19) When you would offer sacrifice unto our God, just take your gift of grain,
or meat and lay it on the table of the poor.
20) From it an incense will arise to heaven, which will return to you with
blessedness.
21) Tear down your idols; they can hear you not; turn all your sacrificial
altars into fuel for the flames.
22) Make human hearts your altars, and burn your sacrifices with the fire of
love.
23) And all the people were entranced, and would have worshiped Jesus as a
God; but Jesus said,
24) I am your brother man just come to show the way to God; you shall not
worship man; praise God, the Holy One.
CHAPTER 27
Jesus attends a feast in
Behar. Preaches a revolutionary sermon on human equality.
Relates the parable of the broken blades.
THE fame of Jesus as a teacher spread through all the land, and people
came from near and far to hear his words of truth.
2) At Behar, on the sacred river of the Brahms, he taught for many days.
3) And Ach, a wealthy man of Behar, made a feast in honor of his guest, and he
invited every one to come.
4) And many came; among them thieves, extortioners, and courtesans. And Jesus
sat with them and taught; but they who followed him were much aggrieved
because he sat with thieves and courtesans.
5) And they upbraided him; they said,
Rabboni, master of the wise, this day will be an
evil day for you.
6) The news will spread that you consort with courtesans and thieves, and men
will shun you as they shun an asp.
7) And Jesus answered them and said,
A master never screens himself for sake of
reputation or of fame.
8) These are but worthless baubles of the day; they rise and sink, like empty
bottles on a stream; they are illusions and will pass away;
9) They are the indices to what the thoughtless think; they are the noise that
people make; and shallow men judge merit by noise.
10) God and all master men judge men by what they are and not by what they
seem to be; not by their reputation and their fame.
11) These courtesans and thieves are children of my Father-God; their soul are
just as precious in his sight as yours, or of the Brahmic priests.
12) And they are working out the same life sums that you, who pride yourselves
on your respectability and moral worth, are working out.
13) And some of them have solved much harder sums than you have solved, you
men who look at them with scorn.
14) Yes, they are sinners, and confess their guilt, while you are guilty, but
are shrewd enough to have polished coat to cover up your guilt.
15) Suppose you men who scorn these courtesans, these drunkards and these
thieves, who know that you are pure in heart and life, that you are better far
than they, stand forth that men may know just who you are.
16) The sin lies in the wish, in the desire, not in the act.
17) You covet other people's wealth; you look at charming forms, and deep
within your hearts you lust for them.
18) Deceit you practice every day, and wish for gold, for honor and for fame,
just for your selfish selves.
19) The man who covets is a thief, and she who lusts is courtesan. You who are
none of these speak out.
20) Nobody spoke; the accusers held their peace.
21) And Jesus said,
The proof this day is all against those who have accused.
22) The pure in heart do not accuse. The vile in heart who want to cover up
their guilt with holy smoke of piety are ever loathing drunkard, thief and
courtesan.
23) This loathing and this scorn is mockery, for if the tinseled coat of
reputation could be torn away, the loud professor would be found to revel in
his lust, deceit and many forms of secret sin.
24) The man who spends his time in pulling other people's weeds can have no
time to pull his own, and all the choicest flowers of life will soon be choked
and die, and nothing will remain but darnel, thistles, burs.
25) And Jesus spoke a parable: he said,
Behold, a farmer had great fields of ripened grain, and when he looked he saw
that blades of many stalks of wheat were bent and broken down.
26) And when he sent his reapers forth he said, We will not save the stalks of
wheat that have the broken blades.
27) Go forth and cut and burn the stalks with broken blades.
28) And after many days he went to measure up his grain, but not a kernel
could be find.
29) And then he called the harvesters and said to them, Where is my grain?
30) They answered him and said, We did according to your word; we gathered up
and burned the stalks with broken blades, and not a stalk was left to carry to
the barn.
31) And Jesus said,
If God saves only those who have no broken blades, who have been perfect in
his sight, who will be saved?
32) And the accusers hung their heads in shame; and Jesus went his way.
CHAPTER 28
Udraka gives a feast in
Jesus' honor.
Jesus speaks on the unity of God and the brotherhood of life.
Criticizes the priesthood. Becomes the guest of a farmer.
BENARES is the sacred city of the Brahms, and in Benares Jesus taught;
Udraka was his host.
2) Udraka made a feast in honor of his guest, and many high born Hindu priests
and scribes were there.
3) And Jesus said to them,
With much delight I speak to you concerning life
- the brotherhood of life.
4) The universal God is one, yet he is more than one; all things are God; all
things are one.
5) By the sweet breaths of God all life is bound in one; so if you touch a
fiber of a living thing you send a thrill from the center to the outer bounds
of life.
6) And when you crush beneath your foot the meanest worm, you shake the throne
of God, and cause the sword of right to tremble in its sheath.
7) The bird sings out its song for men, and men vibrate in unison to help it
sing.
8) The ant constructs her home, the bee its sheltering comb, the spider weaves
her web, and flowers breath to them a spirit in their sweet perfumes that
gives them strength to toil.
9) Now, men and birds and beasts and creeping things are deities, made flesh;
and how dare men kill anything?
10) 'Tis cruelty that makes the world awry. When men have learned that when
they harm a living thing they harm themselves, they surely will not kill, nor
cause a thing that God has made to suffer pain.
11) A lawyer said,
I pray you, Jesus, tell who is this God you speak
about; where are his priests, his temples and his shrines?
12) And Jesus said,
The God I speak about is everywhere; he cannot be
compassed with walls, nor hedged about with bounds of any kind.
13) All people worship God, the One; but all the people see him not alike.
14) This universal God is wisdom, will and love.
15) All men see not the Triune God. One sees him as the God of might; another
as the God of thought; another as the God of love.
16) A man's ideal is his God, and so, as man unfolds. Man's God today,
tomorrow is not God.
17) The nations of the earth see God from different points of view, and so he
does not seem the same to every one.
18) Man names the part of God he sees, and this to him is all of God; and
every nation sees a part of God, and every nation has a name for God.
19) You Brahmans call him Parabrahm; in Egypt he is Thoth; and Zeus is his
name in Greece; Jehovah is his Hebrew name; but everywhere he is the causeless
Cause, the rootless Root from which all things have grown.
20) When men become afraid of God, and take him for a foe, they dress up other
men in fancy garbs and call them priests.
21) And charge them to restrain the wrath of God by prayers; and when they
fail to win his favor by their prayers, to buy him off with sacrifice of
animal, or bird.
22) When man sees God as one with him, as Father-God, he needs no middle man,
no priest to intercede;
23) He goes straight up to him and says, My Father-God! and then he lays his
hand in God's own hand, and all is well.
24) And this is God. You are, each one, a priest, just for yourself; and
sacrifice of blood God does not want.
25) Just give your life in sacrificial service to the all of life, and God is
pleased.
26) When Jesus had thus said he stood aside; the people were amazed,
but strove among themselves.
27) Some said,
He is inspired by Holy Brahm;
and others said,
He is insane;
and others said,
He is obsessed; he speaks as devils speak.
28) But Jesus tarried not. Among the guests was one, a tiller of the
soil, a generous soul, a seeker after truth, who loved the words that Jesus
spoke, and Jesus went with him, and in his home abode.
CHAPTER 29
Ajainin, a priest from
Lahore, comes to Benares to see Jesus,
and abides in the temple. Jesus refuses an invitation to visit the temple.
Ajainin visits him at night in the farmer's home, and accepts his philosophy.
AMONG Benares' temple priests was one, a guest, Ajainin, from Lahore.
2) By merchantmen Ajainin heard about the Jewish boy, about his words of
wisdom, and he girt himself and journeyed from Lahore that he might see the
boy, and hear him speak.
3) The Brahmic priests did not accept the truth that Jesus brought, and they
were angered much by what he said at the Udraka feast.
4) But they had never seen the boy, and they desired much to hear him speak,
and they invited him to be a temple guest.
5) But Jesus said to them,
The light is most abundant, and it shines for
all; if you would see the light come to the light.
6) If you would hear the message that the Holy One has given me to give to
men, come unto me.
7) Now, when the priests were told what Jesus said they were enraged.
8) Ajainin did not share their wrath, and he sent forth another messenger with
costly gifts to Jesus at the farmer's home; he sent this message with the
gifts:
9) I pray you master, listen to my words; The
Brahmic law forbids that any priest shall go into the home of any one of low
estate; but you can come to us;
10) And I am sure these priests will gladly hear you speak. I pray that you
will come and dine with us this day.
11) And Jesus said,
The Holy One regards all men alike; the dwelling
of my host is good enough for any council of the sons of men.
12) If pride of cast keeps you away, you are not worthy of the light. My
Father-God does not regard the laws of man.
13) Your presents I return; you cannot buy the knowledge of the Lord with
gold, or precious gifts.
14) These words of Jesus angered more and more the priests, and they
began to plot and plan how they might drive him from the land.
15) Ajainin did not join with them in plot and plan; he left the temple in the
night, and sought the home where Jesus dwelt.
16) And Jesus said,
There is no night where shines the sun; I have no
secret messages to give; in light all secrets are revealed.
17) Ajainin said,
I came from far-away Lahore, that I might learn
about this ancient wisdom, and this kingdom of the Holy One of which you
speak.
18) Where is the kingdom? where the king? Who are the subjects? what its laws?
19) And Jesus said,
This kingdom is not far away, but man with mortal eyes can see it not; it is
within the heart.
20) You need not seek the king in earth, or sea, or sky; he is not there, and
yet is everywhere. He is the Christ of God; is universal love.
21) The gate of this dominion is not high, and he who enters it must fall down
on his knees. It is not wide, and none can carry carnal bundles through.
22) The lower self must be transmuted into spirit-self; the body must be
washed in living streams of purity.
23) Ajainin asked,
Can I become a subject of this king?
24) And Jesus said,
You are yourself a king, and you may enter
through the gate and be a subject of the King of kings.
25) But you must lay aside your priestly robes; must cease to serve the Holy
One for gold; must give your life, and all you have, in willing service to the
sons of men.
26) And Jesus said no more; Ajainin went his way; and while he could
not comprehend the truth that Jesus spoke, he saw what he had never seen
before.
27) The realm of faith he never had explored; but in his heart the seeds of
faith and universal brotherhood had found good soil.
28) And as he journeyed to his home he seemed to sleep, to pass through
darkest night, and when he woke the Sun of Righteousness had arisen; he had
found the king.
29) Now, in Benares Jesus tarried many days and taught.
CHAPTER 30
Jesus receives news of the
death of his father. He writes a letter to his mother.
The letter. He sends it on its way by a merchant.
ONE day as Jesus stood beside the Ganges busy with his work, a caravan,
returning from the West, drew near.
2) And one, approaching Jesus, said,
We come to you from your native land and bring
unwelcome news.
3) Your father is no more on earth; your mother grieves; and none can comfort
her. She wonders whether you are still alive or not; she longs to see you once
again.
4) And Jesus bowed his head in silent thought; and then he wrote. Of what he
wrote this is the sum:
5) My mother, noblest of
womankind; A man just from my native land has brought me word that father is
no more in flesh, and that you grieve, and are disconsolate.
6) My mother, all is well; is well for father and is well for you.
7) His work in this earth-round is done, and it is nobly done.
8) In all the walks of life men cannot charge him with deceit, dishonesty, nor
wrong intent.
9) Here in this round he finished many heavy tasks, and he has gone from hence
prepared to solve the problems of the round of soul.
10) Our Father-God is with him there, as he was with him here; and there his
angel guards his footsteps lest he goes astray.
11) Why should you weep? Tears cannot conquer grief. There is no power in
grief to mend a broken heart.
12) The plane of grief is idleness; the busy soul can never grieve; it has no
time for grief.
13) When grief come trooping through the heart, just lose yourself; plunge
deep into the ministry of love, and grief is not.
14) Yours is a ministry of love, and all the world is calling out for love.
15) Then let the past go with the past; rise from the cares of carnal things
and give your life for those who live.
16) And if you lose your life in serving life you are sure to find in it the
morning sun, the evening dews, in song of bird, in flowers, and in the stars
of night.
17) In just a little while your problems of this earth-round will be solved;
and when your sums are all worked out it will be pleasure unalloyed for you to
enter wider fields of usefulness, to solve the greater problems of the soul.
18) Strive, then, to be content, and I will come to you some day and bring you
richer gifts than gold or precious stones.
19) I'm sure that John will care for you, supplying all your needs; and I am
with you all the way, Jehoshua.
20) And by the hand of one, a merchant, going to Jerusalem, he sent
this letter on its way.
CHAPTER 31
Brahmic priests are enraged
because of Jesus' teaching
and resolve to drive him from India.
Lamaas pleads for him. Priests employ a murderer to kill him. Lamaas warns
him
and he flees to Nepal.
THE words and works of Jesus caused unrest through all the land.
2) The common people were his friends, believed in him and followed him in
thongs.
3) The priests and rulers were afraid of him, his very name sent terror to
their hearts.
4) He preached the brotherhood of life, the righteousness of equal rights, and
taught the uselessness of priests, and sacrificial rites.
5) He shook the very sand on which the Brahmic system stood; he made the
Brahmic idols seem so small, and sacrifice so fraught with sin, that shrines
and wheels of prayer were all forgot.
6) The priests declared that if this Jewish boy should tarry longer in the
land a revolution would occur; the common people would arise and kill the
priests, and tear the temples down.
7) And so they sent a call abroad, and priests from every province came.
Benares was on fire with Brahmic zeal.
8) Lamaas from the temple Jagannath, who knew the inner life of Jesus well,
was in their midst, and heard the rantings of the priests,
9) And he stood forth and said,
My brother priests, take heed, be careful what you
do; this is a record-making day.
10) The world is looking on; the very life of Brahmic thought is now on trial.
11) If we are reason-blind; if prejudice be king today; if we resort to
beastly force, and dye our hands in blood that may, in sight of Brahm, be
innocent and pure,
12) His vengeance may fall down on us; the very rock on which we stand may
burst beneath our feet; and our beloved priesthood, and our laws and shrines
will go into decay.
13) But they would let him speak no more. The wrathful priests rushed
up and beat him, spit upon him, called him traitor, threw him, bleeding, to
the street.
14) And then confusion reigned; the priests became a mob; the sight of human
blood led on to fiendish acts and called for more.
15) The rulers, fearing war, sought Jesus, and they found him calmly teaching
in the market place.
16) They urged him to depart, that he might save his life; but he refused to
go.
17) And then the priests sought cause for his arrest; but he had done no
crime.
18) And then false charges were preferred; but when the soldiers went to bring
him to the judgement hall they were afraid, because the people stood in his
defense.
19) The priests were baffled, and they resolved to take his life by stealth.
20) They found a man who was a murderer by trade, and sent him out by night to
slay the object of their wrath.
21) Lamaas heard about their plotting and their plans, and sent a messenger to
warn his friend; and Jesus hastened to depart.
22) By night he left Benares, and with haste he journeyed to the north; and
everywhere, the farmers, merchants and sudras helped him on his way.
23) And after many days he reached the mighty Himalayas, and in the city of
Kapivastu he abode.
24) The priests of Buddha opened wide their temple doors for him.
CHAPTER 32
Jesus and Barata. Together they read the sacred books. Jesus takes exception to the Buddhist doctrine of evolution and reveals the true origin of man. Meets Vidyapati, who becomes his co-laborer.
AMONG the Buddhist priests was one who saw a lofty wisdom in the words
that Jesus spoke. It was Barata Arabo.
2) Together Jesus and Barata read the Jewish Psalms and Prophets; read the
Vedas, the Avesta and the wisdom of Gautama.
3) And as they read and talked about the possibilities of man, Barata said,
4) Man is the marvel of the universe. He is part of
everything for he has been a living thing on every plane of life.
5) Time was when man was not; and he was a bit of formless substance in the
moulds of time; and then a protoplast.
6) By universal law all things tend upward to a state of perfectness. The
protoplast evolved, becoming worm, then reptile, bird and beast, and then at
last it reached the form of man.
7) Now, man himself is mind, and mind is here to gain perfection by
experience; and mind is often manifest in fleshy form, and in the form best
suited to its growth. So mind may manifest as worm, or bird, or beast, or man.
8) The time will come when everything of life will be evolved unto the state
of perfect man.
9) And after man is man in perfectness, he will evolve to higher forms of
life.
10) And Jesus said,
Barata Arabo, who taught you this, that mind,
which is the man, may manifest in flesh of beast, or bird, or creeping thing?
11) Barata said,
From times which man remembers not our priests have
told us so, and so we know.
12) And Jesus said,
Enlightened Arabo, are you a master mind and do
not know that man knows naught by being told?
13) Man may believe what others say; but thus he never knows. If man would
know, he must himself be what he knows.
14) Do you remember, Arabo, when you were ape, or bird, or worm?
15) Now, if you have no better proving of your plea than that the priests have
told you so, you do not know; you simply guess.
16) Regard not, then, what any man has said; let us forget the flesh, and go
with mind into the land of fleshless things; mind never does forget.
17) And backward through the ages master minds can trace themselves; and thus
they know.
18) Time never was when man was not.
19) That which begins will have an end. If man was not, the time will come
when he will not exist.
20) From God's own Record Book we read: The Triune God breathed forth, and
seven Spirits stood before his face. (The Hebrews call these seven Spirits,
Elohim.)
21) And these are they who, in their boundless power, created everything that
is, or was.
22) These Spirits of the Triune God moved on the face of boundless space and
seven ethers were, and every ether had its form of life.
23) These forms of life were but the thoughts of God, clothed in the substance
of their ether planes.
24) (Men call these ether planes the planes of protoplast, of earth, of plant,
of beast, of man, of angel and of cherubim.)
25) These planes with all their teeming thoughts of God, are never seen by
eyes of man in flesh; they are composed of substance far too fine for fleshy
eyes to see, and still they constitute the soul of things;
26) And with the eyes of soul all creatures see these ether planes, and all
forms of life.
27) Because all forms of life on every plane are thoughts of God, all
creatures think, and every creature is possessed of will, and, in its measure,
has the power to choose,
28) And in their native planes all creatures are supplied with nourishment
from the ethers of their planes.
29) And so it was with every living thing until the will became a sluggish
will, and then the ethers of the protoplast, the earth, the plant, the beast,
the man, began to vibrate very slow.
30) The ethers all became more dense, and all the creatures of these planes
were clothed with coarser garbs, the garbs of flesh, which men can see; and
thus this coarser manifest, which men call physical, appeared.
31) And this is what is called the fall of man; but man fell not alone, for
protoplast, and earth, and plant and beast were all included in the fall.
32) The angels and the cherubim fell not; their wills were ever strong, and so
they held the ethers of their planes in harmony with God.
33) Now, when the ethers reached the rate of atmosphere, and all the creatures
of these planes must get their food from atmosphere, the conflict came; and
that which the finite man has called survival of the best, became the law,
34) The stronger ate the bodies of the weaker manifests; and here is where the
carnal law of evolution had its rise.
35) And now man, in his utter shamelessness, strikes down and eats the beasts,
the beast consumes the plant, the plant thrives on the earth, the earth
absorbs the protoplast.
36) In yonder kingdom of the soul this carnal evolution is not known, and the
great work of master minds is to restore the heritage of man, to bring him
back to his estate that he has lost, when he again will live upon the ethers
of his native plane.
37) The thoughts of God change not; the manifests of life on every plane
unfold into perfection of their kind; and as the thoughts of God can never
die, there is no death to any being of the seven ethers of the seven Spirits
of the Triune God.
38) And so an earth is never plant; a beast, or bird, or creeping thing is
never man, and man is not, and cannot be, a beast, or bird, or creeping thing.
39) The time will come when all these seven manifests will be absorbed, and
man, and beast, and plant, and earth and protoplast will be redeemed.
40) Barata was amazed; the wisdom of the Jewish sage was a revelation
unto him.
41) Now, Vidyapati, wisest of the Indian sages, chief of temple Kapavistu,
heard Barata speak to Jesus of the origin of man, and heard the answer of the
Hebrew prophet, and he said,
42) You priests of Kapavistu, hear me speak: We
stand today upon a crest of time. Six times ago a master soul was born who
gave a glory light to man, and now a master sage stands here in temple
Kapavistu.
43) This Hebrew prophet is the rising star of wisdom, deified. He brings to us
a knowledge of the secrets things of God; and all the world will hear his
words, will heed his words, and glorify his name.
44) You priests of temple Kapavistu, stay! be still and listen when he speaks;
he is the Living Oracle of God.
45 And all the priests gave thanks, and praised the Buddha of enlightenment.
CHAPTER 33
Jesus teaches the common people at a spring. Tells them how to attain unto
happiness.
Relates the parable of the rocky field and the hidden treasure.
IN silent meditation Jesus sat beside a flowing spring. It was a holy
day, and many people of the servant caste were near the place.
2) And Jesus saw the hard drawn lines of toil on every brow, in every hand.
There was no look of joy in any face. Not one of all the group could think of
anything but toil.
3) And Jesus spoke to one and said,
Why are you all so sad? Have you no happiness in
life?
4) The man replied, We scarcely know the meaning of that word. We toil to
live, and hope for nothing else but toil, and bless the day when we can cease
our toil and lay us down to rest in Buddha's city of the dead.
5) And Jesus' heart was stirred with pity and with love for these poor
toilers, and he said,
6) Toil should not make a person sad; men should be happiest when they toil.
When hope and love are back of toil, then all of life is filled with joy and
peace, and this is heaven. Do you not know that such a heaven is for you?
7) The man replied, Of heaven we have heard; but then it is so far away, and
we must live so many lives before we can reach that place!
8) And Jesus said, My brother, man, your thoughts are wrong; your heaven is
not far away; and it is not a place of metes and bounds, is not a country to
be reached; it is a state of mind.
9) God never made a heaven for man; he never made a hell; we are creators and
we make our own.
10) Now, cease to seek for heaven in the sky; just open up the windows of your
hearts, and, like a flood of light, a heaven will come and bring a boundless
joy; then toil will be no cruel task.
11) The people were amazed, and gathered close to hear this strange young
master speak,
12) Imploring him to tell them more about the Father-God; about the heaven
that men can make on earth; about the boundless joy.
13) And Jesus spoke a parable; he said, A certain man possessed a field; the
soil was hard and poor.
14) By constant toil he scarcely could provide enough of food to keep his
family from want.
15) One day a miner who could see beneath the soil, in passing on his way, saw
this poor man and his unfruitful field.
16) He called the weary toiler and he said, My brother, know you not that just
below the surface of your barren field rich treasures lie concealed?
17) You plough and sow and reap in scanty way, and day by day you tread upon a
mine of gold and precious stones.
18) This wealth lies not upon the surface of the ground; but if you will dig
away the rocky soil, and delve down deep into the earth, you need no longer
till the soil for naught.
19) The man believed. The miner surely knows; he said, and I will find the
treasures hidden in my field.
20) And then he dug away the rocky soil, and deep down in the earth he found a
mine of gold.
21) And Jesus said, The sons of men are toiling hard on desert plains, and
burning sands and rocky soils; are doing what there fathers did, not dreaming
they can do aught else.
22) Behold, a master comes, and tells them of a hidden wealth; that underneath
the rocky soil of carnal things are treasures that no man can count;
23) That in the heart the richest gems abound; that he who wills may open the
door and find them all.
24) And then the people said,
Make known to us the way that we may find the wealth
that lays within the heart.
25) And Jesus opened up the way; the toilers saw another side of life,
and toil became a joy.
CHAPTER 34
The Jubilee in Kapavistu.
Jesus teaches in the plaza and the people are astonished.
He relates the parable of the unkept vineyard and the vine dresser. The
priests are angered by his words.
IT was a gala day in sacred Kapavistu; a throng of Buddhist worshippers
had met to celebrate a Jubilee.
2) And priests and masters from all parts of India were there; they taught;
but they embellished little truth with many words.
3) And Jesus went into an ancient plaza and taught; he spoke of
Father-Mother-God; he told about the brotherhood of life.
4) The priests and all the people were astounded at his words and said,
Is this not Buddha come again in flesh? No other one
could speak with such simplicity and power.
5) And Jesus spoke a parable; he said,
There was a vineyard all unkept; the vines were
high, the growth of leaves and branches great.
6) The leaves were broad and shut the sunlight from the vines; the grapes were
sour, and few, and small.
7) The pruner came; with his sharp knife he cut off every branch, and not a
leaf remained; just root and stalk, and nothing more.
8) The busy neighbors came with one accord and were amazed, and said to him
who pruned, You foolish man! the vineyard is despoiled.
9) Such desolation! There is no beauty left, and when the harvest time shall
come the gathers will find no fruit.
10) The pruner said, Content yourselves with what you think, and come again at
harvest time and see.
11) And when the harvest time came on the busy neighbors came again; they were
surprised.
12) The naked stalks had put forth branch and leaf, and heavy clusters of
delicious grapes weighed every branch to earth.
13) The gatherers rejoiced as, day by day, they carried the rich fruitage to
the press.
14) Behold the vineyard of the Lord! the earth is spread with human vines.
15) The gorgeous forms and rites of men are branches, and their words are
leaves; and these have grown so great that sunlight can no longer reach the
heart; there is no fruit.
16) Behold, the pruner comes, and with a two-edged knife he cuts away the
branches and the leaves of words,
17) And naught is left but unclothed stalks of human life.
18) The priests and they of pompous show, rebuke the pruner, and would stay
him in his work.
19) They see no beauty in the stalks of human life; no promises of fruit.
20) The harvest time will come and they who scorned the pruner will look on
again and be amazed, for they will see the human stalks that seemed so
lifeless, bending low with precious fruit.
21) And they will hear the harvesters rejoice, because the harvest is so
great.
22) The priests were not well pleased with Jesus' words; but they
rebuked him not; they feared the multitude.
CHAPTER 35
Jesus and Vidyapati consider the needs of the incoming age of the world.
THE Indian sage and Jesus often met and talked about the needs of
nations and of men; about the sacred doctrines, forms and rites best suited to
the coming age.
2) One day they sat together in a mountain pass, and Jesus said,
The coming age will surely not require priests,
and shrines, and sacrifice of life.
3) There is no power in sacrifice of beast, or bird, to help a man to holy
life.
4) And Vidyapati said,
All forms and rites are symbols of the things that
men must do within the temple of the soul.
5) The Holy One requires man to give his life in willing sacrifice for men,
and all the so-called offerings on altars and on shrines that have been made
since time began, were made to teach man how to give himself to save his
brother man; for man can never save himself except he lose his life in saving
other men.
6) The perfect age will not require forms and rites and carnal sacrifice. The
coming age is not the perfect age, and men will call for object lessons and
symbolic rites.
7) And in the great religion you shall introduce to men, some simple rites of
washings and remembrances will be required; but cruel sacrifice of animals,
and birds the gods require not.
8) And Jesus said,
Our God must loathe the tinseled show of priests
and priestly things.
9) When men array themselves in showy garbs to indicate that they are servants
of the gods, and strut about like gaudy birds to be admired by men, because of
piety or any other thing, the Holy One must surely turn away in sheer disgust.
10) All people are alike the servants of our Father-God, are kings and
priests.
11) Will not the coming age demand complete destruction of the priestly caste,
as well as every other caste, and inequality among the sons of men?
12) And Vidyapati said,
The coming age is not the age of spirit life and men
will pride themselves in wearing priestly robes, and chanting pious chants to
advertise themselves as saints.
13) The simple rites that you will introduce will be extolled by those who
follow you, until the sacred service of the age will far outshine in
gorgeousness the priestly service of the Brahmic age.
14) This is a problem men must solve.
15) The perfect age will come when every man will be a priest and men will not
array themselves in special garb to advertise their piety.
![]()
SECTION VII
ZAIN
Life and Works of Jesus in Tibet and Western India
CHAPTER 36
Jesus in Lassa. He meets
Meng-ste who aids him in reading the ancient manuscripts.
He goes to Ladak. Heals a child. Relates the parable of the king's son.
IN Lassa of Tibet there was a master's temple, rich in manuscripts of
ancient lore.
2) The Indian sage had read these manuscripts, and he revealed to Jesus many
of the secret lessons they contained; but Jesus wished to read them for
himself.
3) Now, Meng-ste, greatest sage of all the farther East, was in this temple of
Tibet.
4) The path across Emodus heights was difficult; but Jesus started on his way,
and Vidyapati sent with him a trusted guide.
5) And Vidyapati sent a message to Meng-ste, in which he told about the Hebrew
sage, and spoke for him a welcome by the temple priests.
6) Now, after many days, and perils great, the guide and Jesus reached the
Lassa temple in Tibet.
7) And Meng-ste opened wide the temple doors, and all the priests and masters
gave a welcome to the Hebrew sage.
8) And Jesus had access to all the sacred manuscripts, and, with the help of
Meng-ste, read them all.
9) And Meng-ste often talked with Jesus of the coming age, and of the sacred
service best adapted to the people of the age.
10) In Lassa Jesus did not teach. When he finished all his studies in the
temple schools he journeyed toward the West. In many villages he tarried for a
time and taught.
11) At last he reached the pass, and in the Ladak city, Leh, he was received
with favor by the monks, the merchants, and the men of low estate.
12) And in the monastery he abode, and taught; and then he sought the common
people in the marts of trade; and there he taught.
13) Not far away a woman lived, whose infant son was sick nigh unto death. The
doctors had declared,
There is no hope; the child must die.
14) The woman heard that Jesus was a teacher sent from God, and she
believed that he had power to heal her son.
15) And so she clasped the dying infant in her arms and ran with haste and
asked to see the man of God.
16) When Jesus saw her faith he lifted up his eyes to heaven and said,
17) My Father-God, let power divine o'ershadow
me, and let the Holy Breath fill full this child that it may live.
18) And in the presence of the multitude he laid his hand upon the
child and said,
19) Good woman you are blest; your faith has
saved your son.
And then the child was well.
20) The people were astonished and they said, This surely is the Holy One made
flesh, for man alone cannot rebuke a fever thus and save a child from death.
21) Then many of the people brought their sick, and Jesus spoke the Word, and
they were healed.
22) Among the Ladaks Jesus tarried many days; he taught them how to heal; how
sins are blotted out, and how to make on earth a heaven of joy.
23) The people loved him for his words and works, and when he must depart they
grieved as children grieve when mother goes away.
24) And on the morning when he started on his way the multitudes were there to
press his hand
25) To them he spoke a parable; he said,
A certain king so loved the people of his land
that he sent forth his only son with precious gifts for all.
26) The son went everywhere and scattered forth the gifts with lavish hand.
27) But there were priests who ministered at shrines of foreign gods, who were
not pleased because the king did not through them bestow the gifts.
28) And so they sought to cause the people all to hate the son. They said,
These gifts are not of any worth; they are but counterfeits.
29) And so the people threw the precious gems, and gold and silver in the
streets. They caught the son and beat him, spit upon him, drove him from their
midst.
30) The son resented not their insults and their cruelties; but thus he
prayed, My Father-God, forgive these creatures of thy hand; they are but
slaves; they know not what they do.
31) And while they yet were beating him he gave them food, and blest them with
a boundless love.
32) In certain cities was the son received with joy, and he would gladly have
remained to bless the homes; but he could tarry not, for he must carry gifts
to every one in all the king's domain.
33) And Jesus said, My Father-God is king of all mankind, and he has sent me
forth with all the bounties of his matchless love and boundless wealth.
34) To all the people of all lands, lo, I must bear these gifts--this water
and this bread of life.
35) I go my way, but we will meet again; for in my Fatherland is room for all;
I will prepare a place for you.
36) And Jesus raised his hand in silent benediction; then he went his
way.
CHAPTER 37
Jesus is presented with a camel. He goes to Lahore where he abides with Ajainin, whom he teaches. Lesson of the wandering musicians. Jesus resumes his journey.
A CARAVAN of merchantmen were journeying through the Kashmir vale as
Jesus passed that way, and they were going to Lahore, the city of the and, the
five-stream land.
2) The merchantmen had heard the prophet speak, had seen his mighty works in
Leh, and they were glad to see him once again.
3) And when they knew that he was going to Lahore and then across the Sind,
through Persia and the farther West, and that he had no beast on which to
ride,
4) They freely gave to him a noble bactrian beast, well saddled and equipped,
and Jesus journeyed with the caravan.
5) And when he reached Lahore, Ajainin and some other Brahmic priests,
received him with delight.
6) Ajainin was the priest who came to Jesus in the night time in Benares many
months before, and heard his words of truth.
7) And Jesus was Ajainin's guest; he taught Ajainin many things; revealed to
him the secrets of the healing art.
8) He taught him how he could control the spirits of the air, the fire, the
water and the earth; and he explained to him the secret doctrine of
forgiveness, and the blotting out of sins.
9) One day Ajainin sat with Jesus in the temple porch; a band of wandering
singers and musicians paused before the court to sing and play.
10) Their music was most rich and delicate, and Jesus said,
Among the high-bred people of the land we hear no
sweeter music than that these uncouth children of the wilderness bring here to
us.
11) From whence this talent and this power? In one short life they could not
gain such grace of voice, such knowledge of the laws of harmony and tone.
12) Men call them prodigies. There are no prodigies. All things result from
natural law.
13) These people are not young. A thousand years would not suffice to give
them such divine expressiveness, and such purity of voice and touch.
14) Ten thousand years ago these people mastered harmony. In days of old they
trod the busy thoroughfares of life, and caught the melody of birds, and
played on harps of perfect form.
15) And they have come again to learn still other lessons from the varied
notes of manifests.
16) These wandering people form a part of heaven's orchestra, and in the land
of perfect things the very angels will delight to hear them play and sing.
17) And Jesus taught the common people of Lahore; he healed their sick,
and showed to them the way to rise to better things by helpfulness.
18) He said,
We are not rich by what we get and hold; the only
things we keep are those we give away.
19) If you would live the perfect life, give forth your life in service for
your kind, and for the forms of life that men esteem the lower forms of life.
20) But Jesus could not tarry longer in Lahore; he bade the priests and
other friends farewell; and then he took his camel and he went his way toward
the Sind.
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SECTION VIII
CHETH
Life and Works of Jesus in Persia
CHAPTER 38
Jesus crosses Persia. Teaches and heals in many places. Three magian priests meet him as he nears Persepolis. Kaspar, and two other Persian masters, meet him in Persepolis. The seven masters sit in silence seven days.
FOUR-AND-TWENTY years of age was Jesus when he entered Persia on his
homeward way.
2) In many a hamlet, town and neighborhood he paused a while and taught and
healed.
3) The priests and ruling classes did not welcome him, because he censured
them for cruelty to those of low estate.
4) The common people followed him in throngs.
5) At times the chiefs made bold to try to hinder him, forbidding him to teach
or heal the sick. But he regarded not their angry threats; he taught, and
healed the sick.
6) In time he reached Persepolis, the city where the kings of Persia were
entombed; the city of the learned magi, Hor, and Lun, and Mer, the three wise
men.
7) Who, four-and-twenty years before, had seen the star of promise rise above
Jerusalem, and who had journeyed to the West to find the new-born king;
8) And were the first to honor Jesus as the master of the age, and gave him
gifts of gold, gum-thus and myrrh.
9) These magi knew, by ways that masters always know, when Jesus neared
Persepolis; and then they girt themselves, and went to meet him on the way.
10) And when they met, a light much brighter than the light of day surrounded
them, and men who saw the four stand in the way declared they were
transfigured; seeming more like gods than men.
11) Now, Hor and Lun were aged men, and Jesus placed them on his beast to ride
into Persepolis; whilst he and Mer led on the way.
12) And when they reached the magi's home they all rejoiced. And Jesus told
the thrilling story of his life, and Hor and Lun and Mer spoke not; they only
looked to heaven, and in their hearts praised God.
13) Three wise men from the North were in Persepolis; and they were Kaspar,
Zara and Melzone; and Kaspar was the wisest master of the Magian land. These
three were at the home of Hor and Lun and Mer when Jesus came.
14) For seven days these seven men spoke not; they sat in silence in the
council hall in close communion with the Silent Brotherhood.
15) They sought for light, for revelation and for power. The laws and precepts
of the coming age required all the wisdom of the masters of the world.
CHAPTER 39
Jesus attends a feast in
Persepolis.
Speaks to the people, reviewing the magian philosophy.
Explains the origin of evil. Spends the night in prayer.
A FEAST in honor of the magian God was being held, and many men were
gathered in Persepolis.
2) And on the great day of the feast the ruling magian master said, Within
these sacred walls is liberty; whoever wills to speak may speak.
3) And Jesus, standing in the midst of all the people, said,
My brothers, sisters, children of our Father-God:
4) Most blest are you among the sons of men today, because you have such just
conceptions of the Holy One and man.
5) Your purity in worship and in life is pleasing unto God; and to your
master, Zarathustra, praise is due.
6) Well say you all, There is one God from whose great being there came forth
the seven Spirits that created heaven and earth; and manifest unto the sons of
men are these great Spirits in the sun, and moon, and stars.
7) But in your sacred books we read that two among these seven are of superior
strength; that one of these created all the good; the other one created all
that evil is.
8) I pray you, honored masters, tell me how that evil can be born of that
which is all good?
9) A magus rose and said,
If you will answer me, your problem will be solved.
10) We all do recognize the fact that evil is. Whatever is, must have a cause,
If God, the One, made not this evil, then, where is the God who did?
11) And Jesus said,
Whatever God, the One, has made is good, and like
the great first Cause, the seven Spirits all are good, and everything that
comes from their creative hands is good.
12) Now, all created things have colors, tones and forms their own; but
certain tones, though good and pure themselves, when mixed, produce
inharmonies, discordant tones.
13) And certain things, though good and pure, when mixed, produce discordant
things, yea, poisonous things, that men call evil things.
14) So evil is the inharmonious blending of the colors, tones, or forms of
good.
15) Now, man is not all-wise, and yet has will his own. He has the power, and
he uses it, to mix God's good things in a multitude of ways, and every day he
makes discordant sounds, and evil things.
16) And every tone and form, be it of good, or ill, becomes a living thing, a
demon, sprite, or spirit of a good or vicious kind.
17) Man makes his evil thus; and then becomes afraid of him and flees; his
devil is emboldened, follows him away and casts him into torturing fires.
18) The devil and the burning fires are both the works of man, and none can
put the fires out and dissipate the evil one, but man who made them both.
19) Then Jesus stood aside, and not a magus answered him.
20) And he departed from the throng and went into a secret place to pray.
CHAPTER 40
Jesus teaches the magians.
Explains the Silence and how to enter it.
Kaspar extols the wisdom of Jesus. Jesus teaches in the groves of Cyrus.
NOW, in the early morning Jesus came again to teach and heal. A light
not comprehended shown about, as though some mighty spirit overshadowed him.
2) A magus noted this and asked him privately to tell from whence his wisdom
came, and what the meaning of the light.
3) And Jesus said,
There is a Silence where the
soul may meet its God, and there the fount of wisdom is, and all who enter are
immersed in light, and filled with wisdom, love and power.
4) The magus said,
Tell me about this Silence and this light,
that I may go and there abide.
5)And Jesus said,
The Silence is not circumscribed; is not a place closed in with wall, or rocky
steeps, nor guarded by the sword of man.
6) Men carry with them all the time the secret place where they might meet
their God.
7) It matters not where men abide, on mountain top, in deepest vale, in marts
of trade, or in the quiet home; they may at once, at any time, fling wide the
door, and find the Silence, find the house of God; it is within the soul.
8) One may not be so much disturbed by noise of business, and the words and
thoughts of men if he goes all alone into the valley or the mountain pass.
9) And when life's heavy load is pressing hard, it is far better to go out and
seek a quiet place to pray and meditate.
10) The Silence is the kingdom of the soul, which is not seen by human eyes.
11) When in the Silence, phantom forms mat flit before the mind; but they are
all subservient to the will; the master soul may speak and they are gone.
12) If you would find this Silence of the soul you must yourself prepare the
way. None but the pure in heart may enter here.
13) And you must lay aside all tenseness of the mind, all business cares, all
fears, all doubts and troubled thoughts.
14) Your human will must be absorbed by the divine; then you will come into a
consciousness of holiness.
15) You are in the Holy Place, and you will see upon a living shrine the
candle of the Lord aflame.
16) And when you see it burning there, look deep into the temple of your
brain, and you will see it all aglow.
17) In every part, from head to foot. are candles all in place, just waiting
to be lighted by the flaming torch of love.
18) And when you see the candles all aflame, just look, and you will see, with
eyes of soul, the waters of the fount of wisdom rushing on; and you may drink,
and there abide.
19) And then the curtains part, and you are in the Holiest of All, where rests
the Ark of God, whose covering is the Mercy Seat.
20) Fear not to lift the sacred board; the Tables of the Law are in the Ark
concealed.
21) Take them and read them well; for they contain all precepts and commands
that men will ever need.
22) And in the Ark, the magic wand of prophecy lies waiting for your hand; it
is the key to all the hidden meanings of the present, future, past.
23) And then, behold, the manna there, the hidden bread of life; and he who
eats shall never die.
24) The cherubim have guarded well for every soul this treasure box, and
whosoever will may enter in and find his own.
25) Now Kaspar heard the Hebrew master speak and he exclaimed,
Behold, the wisdom of the gods has come to men!
26) And Jesus went his way, and in the sacred groves of Cyrus, where
the multitudes were met, he taught and healed the sick.
CHAPTER 41
Jesus stands by a healing
fountain. Reveals the fact that faith is the potent factor
in healing and many are healed by faith. A little child teaches a great
lesson of faith.
A FLOWING spring that people called the Healing Fount was near
Persepolis.
2) And all the people thought that at a certain time of the year their deity
came down and gave a virtue to the waters of the fount, and that the sick who
then would plunge into the fount and wash would be made whole.
3) About the fount a multitude of people were in waiting for the Holy One to
come and potentise the waters of the fount.
4) The blind, the lame, the deaf, the dumb, and those obsessed were there.
5) And Jesus, standing in the midst of them, exclaimed,
Behold the spring of life! These waters that will
fail are honored as the special blessing of your God.
6) From whence do healing virtues come? Why is your God so partial with his
gifts? Why does he bless this spring today, and then tomorrow take his
blessings all away?
7) A deity of power could fill these waters full of healing virtue every day.
8) Hear me, you sick, disconsolate: The virtue of this fount is not a special
gift of God.
9) Faith is the healing power of every drop of all the waters of this spring.
10) He who believes with all his heart that he will be made whole by washing
in this fount will be made whole when he has washed; and he may wash at any
time.
11) Let every one who has this faith in God and in himself plunge in these
waters now and wash.
12) And many of the people plunged into the crystal fount; and they were
healed.
13) And then there was a rush, for all the people were inspired with faith,
and each one strove to be among the first to wash, lest all the virtue be
absorbed.
14) And Jesus saw a little child, weak, faint and helpless, sitting all alone
beyond the surging crowd; and there was none to help her to the fount.
15) And Jesus said,
My little one, why do you sit and wait? Why not
arise and hasten to the fount and wash, and be made well?
16) The child replied,
I need not haste; the blessings of my Father in the
sky are measured not in tiny cups; they never fail; their virtues are the same
for evermore.
17) When these whose faith is weak must haste to wash for fear their faith
will fail, have all been cured, these waters will be just as powerful for me.
18) Then I can go and stay a long, long time within the blessed waters of the
spring.
19) And Jesus said,
Behold a master soul! She came to earth to teach to
men the power of faith.
20) And then he lifted up the child and said,
Why wait for anything? The very air we breathe is
filled with balm of life. Breathe in this balm of life in faith and be made
whole.
21) The child breathed in the balm of life in faith, and she was well.
22) The people marveled much at what they heard and saw; they said, This man
must surely be the god of health made flesh.
23) And Jesus said,
The fount of life is not a little pool; it is as
wide as are the spaces of the heavens.
24) The waters of the fount are love; the potency is faith, and he who plunges
deep into the living springs, in living faith, may wash away his guilt and be
made whole, and freed from sin.
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SECTION IX
TETH
Life and Works of Jesus in Assyria
CHAPTER 42
Jesus bids the magians
farewell. Goes to Assyria. Teaches the people in Ur of Chaldea.
Meets Ashbina, with whom he visits many towns and cities, teaching and healing
the sick.
IN Persia Jesus' work was done and he resumed his journey towards his
native land.
2) The Persian sage went with him to the Euphrates; then with a pledge that
they would meet again in Egypt land the masters said,
Farewell.
3) And Kaspar went his way unto his home beside the Caspian Sea; and Jesus
soon was in Chaldea, cradle land of Israel.
4) In Ur, where Abraham was born, he tarried for a time; and when he told the
people who he was, and why he came, they came from near and far to speak to
him.
5) He said to them,
We all are kin. Two thousand years and more ago,
our Father Abraham lived here in Ur, and then he worshipped God the One, and
taught the people in these sacred groves.
6) And he was greatly blessed; becoming father of the mighty hosts of Israel.
7) Although so many years have passed since Abraham and Sarah walked these
ways, a remnant of their kindred still abides in Ur.
8) And in there hearts the God of Abraham is still adored, and faith and
justice are the rocks on which they build.
9) Behold this land! It is no more the fruitful land that Abraham loved so
well; the rains come not as in the former times; the vine is not productive
now, and withered are the figs.
10) But this shall not forever be; the time will come when all your deserts
will rejoice; when flowers will bloom; when all your vines will bend their
heads with luscious fruit; shepherds will again be glad.
11) And Jesus preached to them the gospel of goodwill, and peace on
earth. He told them of the brotherhood of life, and of the inborn powers of
man, and of the kingdom of the soul.
12) And as he spoke, Ashbina, greatest sage of all Assyria, stood before his
face.
13) The people knew the sage, for he had often taught them in their sacred
halls and groves, and they rejoiced to see his face.
14) Ashbina said,
My children of Chaldea, hear! Behold, for you are
greatly blest today, because a prophet of the living God has come to you.
15) Take heed to what this master says, for he gives forth the words that God
has given him.
16) And Jesus and the sage went through the towns and cities of Chaldea and of
the lands between the Tigris and the Euphrates;
17) And Jesus healed a multitude of people who were sick.
CHAPTER 43
Jesus and Ashbina visit
Babylon and remark its desolation. The two masters remain in company seven
days;
then Jesus resumes his homeward journey. Arrives in Nazareth. His mother
gives a feast in his honor.
His brothers are displeased. Jesus tells his mother and aunt the story of his
journeys.
THE ruined Babylon was near, and Jesus and the sage went through her
gates and walked among her fallen palaces.
2) They trod the streets where Israel once was held in base captivity.
3) They saw where Judah's sons and daughters hung their harps upon the
willows, and refused to sing.
4) They saw where Daniel and the Hebrew children stood as living witnesses of
faith.
5) And Jesus lifted up his hand and said,
Behold the grandeur of the works of man!
6) The king of Babylon destroyed the temple of the Lord in old Jerusalem; he
burned the holy city, bound in chains my people and my kin, and brought them
here as slaves.
7) But retribution comes; for whatsoever men shall do to other men the
righteous Judge will do to them.
8) The sun of Babylon has gone down; the songs of pleasure will be heard no
more within her walls.
9) And every kind of creeping thing and unclean bird will, in these ruins,
find their homes.
10) And in the temple Belus, Jesus and Ashbina stood in silent thought.
11) Then Jesus spoke and said,
Behold this monument of folly and of shame.
12) Man tried to shake the very throne of God, and he assayed to build a tower
to reach to heaven, when, lo, his very speech was snatched away, because in
lofty words he boasted of his power.
13) And on these heights the heathen Baal stood - the god wrought out by hands
of man.
14) Upon yon altar, birds, and beasts, and men, yea children have been burned
in awful sacrifice to Baal.
15) But now the gory priests are dead; the very rocks have shuddered and have
fallen down; the place is desolate.
16) Now, in the plains of Shinar Jesus tarried yet for seven days, and,
with Ashbina, meditated long upon the needs of men, and how the sages could
best serve the coming age.
17) Then Jesus went his way, and after many days he crossed the Jordan to his
native land. At once he sought his home in Nazareth.
18) His mother's heart was filled with joy; she made a feast for him, inviting
all her kindred and her friends.
19) But Jesus' brothers were not pleased that such attention should be paid to
one they deemed a sheer adventurer, and they went not in to the feast.
20) They laughed their brother's claims to scorn; they called him indolent,
ambitious, vain; a worthless fortune hunter; searcher of the world for fame,
who, after many years returns to mother's home with neither gold, nor any
other wealth.
21) And Jesus called aside his mother and her sister, Miriam, and told them of
his journey to the East.
22) He told them of the lessons he had learned, and of the works that he had
done. To others he told not the story of his life.
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SECTION X
JOD
Life and Works of Jesus in Greece
CHAPTER 44
Jesus visits Greece and is
welcomed by the Athenians. Meets Apollo.
Addresses the Grecian masters in the Amphitheatre. The address.
THE Greek philosophy was full of pungent truth, and Jesus longed to
study with the masters in the schools of Greece.
2) And so he left his home in Nazareth and crossed the Carmel hills, and at
the port took ship, and soon was in the Grecian capital.
3) Now, the Athenians had heard of him as teacher and philosopher, and they
were glad to have him come to them that they might hear his words of truth.
4) Among the masters of the Greeks was one, Apollo, who was called, Defender
of the Oracle, and recognized in many lands as Grecian sage.
5) Apollo opened up for Jesus all the doors of Grecian lore, and in the
Areopagus he heard the wisest masters speak.
6) But Jesus brought to them a wisdom greater far than theirs; and so he
taught.
7) Once in the Amphitheatre he stood, and when Apollo bade him speak he said,
8) Athenian masters, hear! In ages long ago, men,
wise in nature's laws, sought out and found the place on which your city
stands.
9) Full well you know that there are parts of earth where its great beating
heart throws heavenward etheric waves that meet the ethers from above:
10) Where spirit-light and understanding, like the stars of night, shine
forth.
11) Of all the parts of earth there is no place more sensitized, more truly
spirit-blest, than that where Athens stands.
12) Yea, all of Greece is blest. No other land has been the homeland of such
mighty men of thought as grace your scrolls of fame.
13) A host of sturdy giants of philosophy, of poetry, of science, and of art,
were born upon the soil of Greece, and rocked to manhood in your cradle of
pure thought.
14) I come not here to speak of science, of philosophy, or art; of these you
are the world's best masters now.
15) But all your high accomplishments are but stepping stones to worlds beyond
the realm of sense; are but illusive shadows flitting on the walls of time.
16) But I would tell you of a life beyond, within; a real life that cannot
pass away.
17) In science and philosophy there is no power strong enough to fit a soul to
recognize itself, or to commune with God.
18) I would not stay the flow of your great streams of thought; but I would
turn them to the channels of the soul.
19) Unaided by the Spirit-breath, the work of intellection tends to solve the
problems of the things we see, and nothing more.
20) The senses were ordained to bring into the mind mere pictures of the
things that pass away; they do not deal with real things; they do not
comprehend eternal law.
21) But man has something in his soul, a something that will tear the veil
apart that he may see the world of real things.
22) We call this something, spirit consciousness; it sleeps in every soul, and
cannot be awakened till the Holy Breath becomes a welcome guest.
23) This Holy Breath knocks at the door of every soul, but cannot enter in
until the will of man throws wide the door.
24) There is no power in intellect to turn the key; philosophy and science
both have toiled to get a glimpse behind the veil; but they have failed.
25) The secret spring that throws ajar the door of soul is touched by nothing
else than purity in life, by prayer and holy thought.
26) Return, O mystic stream of Grecian thought, and mingle your clear waters
with the flood of Spirit-life; and then the spirit consciousness will sleep no
more, and man will know, and God will bless.
27) When Jesus had thus said he stepped aside. The Grecian masters were
astonished at the wisdom of his words; they answered not.
CHAPTER 45
Jesus teaches the Greek
masters. Goes with Apollo to Delphi
and hears the Oracle speak.
It testifies for him. He abides with Apollo, and is recognized as the living
Oracle of God.
Explains to Apollo the phenomenon of oraclular speech.
FOR many days the Grecian masters listened to the clear incisive words
that Jesus spoke, and while they could not fully comprehend the things he
said, they were delighted and accepted his philosophy.
2) One day as Jesus and Apollo walked beside the sea, a Delphic courier came
in haste and said,
Apollo, master, come; the Oracle would speak to you.
3) Apollo said to Jesus,
Sir, if you would see the Delphic Oracle, and hear
it speak, you may accompany me.
And Jesus did accompany him.
4) The masters went in haste; and when they came to Delphi, great excitement
reigned.
5) And when Apollo stood before the Oracle it spoke and said:
6) Apollo, sage of Greece, the bell strikes
twelve; the midnight of the ages now has come.
7) Within the womb of nature ages are conceived; they gestate and are born in
glory with the rising sun, and when the agic sun goes down the age
disintegrates and dies.
8) The Delphic age has been an age of glory and renown; the gods have spoken
to the sons of men through oracles of wood, and gold, and precious stone.
9) The Delphic sun has set; the Oracle will go into decline; the time is near
when men will hear its voice no more.
10) The gods will speak to man by man. The living Oracle now stands within
these sacred groves; the Logos from on high has come.
11) From henceforth will decrease my wisdom and my power; from henceforth will
increase the wisdom and the power of him, Immanuel.
12) Let all the masters stay; let every creature hear and honor him, Immanuel.
13) And then the Oracle spoke not again for forty days, and priests and people
were amazed. They came from near and far to hear the Living Oracle speak forth
the wisdom of the gods.
14) And Jesus and the Grecian sage returned, and in Apollo's home the Living
Oracle spoke forth for forty days.
15) One day Apollo said to Jesus as they sat alone,
This sacred Delphic Oracle has spoken many a helpful
word for Greece.
16) Pray tell me what it is that speaks. Is it an angel, man, or living god?
17) And Jesus said,
It is not angel, man, nor god that speaks. It is
the matchless wisdom of the master minds of Greece, united in a master mind.
18) This giant mind has taken to itself the substances of soul, and thinks,
and hears, and speaks.
19) It will remain a living soul while master minds feed it with thought, with
wisdom and with faith and hope.
20) But when the master minds of Greece shall perish from the land, this giant
master mind will cease to be, and then the Delphic Oracle will speak no more.
CHAPTER 46
A storm on the sea. Jesus
rescues many drowning men. The Athenians pray to idols.
Jesus rebukes their idolatry and tells how God helps. His last meeting with
the Greeks. Sails on the vessel Mars.
IT was a holy day and Jesus walked upon the Athens beach.
2) A storm was on and ships were being tossed about like toys upon the bosom
of the sea.
3) The sailors and the fishermen were going down to watery graves; the shores
were strewn with bodies of the dead.
4) And Jesus halted not, but with a mighty power he rescued many a helpless
one, oft bringing back to life the seeming dead.
5) Now, on these shores were altars sacred to the gods supposed to rule the
seas.
6) And men and women, heedless of the cries of drowning men were crowding all
about these altars calling on their gods for help.
7) At length the storm was done, and all the sea was calm, and men could think
again; and Jesus said,
8) You worshippers of wooden gods, how has the
fury of this storm been lessened by your frantic prayers?
9) Where is the strength of these poor, weather-beaten gods with painted
swords and crowns?
10) A god that could abide in such a little house could hardly hold a frantic
fly, and who could hope that he could hold at bay the Lords of winds and
waves?
11) The mighty powers of worlds unseen do not give forth their help till men
have done their best; they only help when men can do no more.
12) And you have agonized and prayed around these shrines, and let men sink to
death who might have been, by your assistance, saved.
13) The God that saves dwells in your souls, and manifests by making use of
your own feet, and legs, and arms, and hands.
14) Strength never comes through idleness; nor through a waiting for another
one to bear your loads, or do the work that you are called to do.
15) But when you do your best to bear your loads, and do your work, you offer
unto God a sacrifice well pleasing in his sight.
16) And then the Holy One breathes deep upon your glowing sacrificial coals,
and makes them blaze aloft to fill your souls with light, and strength and
helpfulness.
17) The most efficient prayer that men can offer to a god of any kind is
helpfulness to those in need of help; for what you do for other men the Holy
One will do for you.
18) And thus God helps.
19) His work in Greece was done, and Jesus must go on his way to Egypt
in the South. Apollo, with the highest masters of the land and many people
from the varied walks of life, stood on the shore to see the Hebrew sage
depart; and Jesus said,
20) The son of man has been in many lands; has
stood in temples of a multitude of foreign gods; has preached the gospel of
good will and peace on earth to many people, tribes and tongues;
21) Has been received with favor in a multitude of homes; but Greece is, of
them all, the royal host.
22) The breadth of Grecian thought; the depth of her philosophy; the height of
her unselfish aspirations have well fitted her to be the champion of the cause
of human liberty and right.
23) The fates of war have subjugated Greece, because she trusted in the
strength of flesh, and bone and intellect, forgetful of the spirit-life that
binds a nation to its source of power.
24) But Greece will not forever sit within the darkness of the shadow land as
vassal of a foreign king.
25) Lift up your heads, you men of Greece; the time will come when Greece will
breathe the ethers of the Holy Breath, and be a mainspring of the spirit power
of earth.
26) But God must be your shield, your buckler, and your tower of strength.
27) And then he said,
Farewell.
Apollo raised his hand in silent benediction, and the people wept.
28) Upon the Cretan vessel, Mars, the Hebrew sage sailed from the Grecian
port.
![]()
SECTION XI
CAPH
Life and Works of Jesus in Egypt
CHAPTER 47
Jesus with Elihu and Salome
in Egypt. Tells the story of his journeys.
Elihu and Salome praise God.
Jesus goes to the temple in Heliopolis and is received as a pupil.
AND Jesus came to Egypt land and all was well. He tarried not upon the
coast; he went at once to Zoan, home of Elihu and Salome, who five and twenty
years before had taught his mother in their sacred school.
2) And there was joy when met these three. When last the son of Mary saw these
sacred groves he was a babe;
3) And now a man grown strong by buffeting of every kind; a teacher who had
stirred the multitudes in many lands.
4) And Jesus told the aged teachers all about his life; about his journeyings
in foreign lands; about the meetings with the masters and about his kind
receptions by the multitudes.
5) Elihu and Salome heard his story with delight; they lifted up their eyes to
heaven and said,
6) Our Father-God, let now thy servants go in peace,
for we have seen the glory of the Lord;
7) And we have talked with him, the messenger of love, and of the covenant of
peace on earth, good will to men.
8) Through him shall all the nations of the earth be blest; through him,
Immanuel.
9) And Jesus stayed in Zoan many days; and then went forth unto the
city of the sun, that men call Heliopolis, and sought admission to the temple
of the sacred brotherhood.
10) The council of the brotherhood convened, and Jesus stood before the
hierophant; he answered all the questions that were asked with clearness and
with power.
11) The hierophant exclaimed,
Rabboni of the rabbinate, why come you here? Your
wisdom is the wisdom of the gods; why seek for wisdom in the halls of men?
12) And Jesus said,
In every way of earth-life I would walk; in every
hall of learning I would sit; the heights that any man has gained, these I
would gain;
13) What any man has suffered I would meet, that I may know the griefs, the
disappointments and the sore temptations of my brother man; that I may know
just how to succor those in need.
14) I pray you, brothers, let me go into your dismal crypts; and I would pass
the hardest of your tests.
15) The master said,
Take then the vow of secret brotherhood.
And Jesus took the vow of secret brotherhood.
16) Again the master spoke; he said,
The greatest heights are gained by those who reach
the greatest depths; and you shall reach the greatest depths.
17) The guide then led the way and in the fountain Jesus bathed; and
when he had been clothed in proper garb he stood again before the hierophant.
CHAPTER 48
Jesus receives from the hierophant his mystic name and number.
Passes the first brotherhood test, and receives his first degree, SINCERITY.
THE master took down from the wall a scroll on which was written down
the number and the name of every attribute and character. He said,
2) The circle is the symbol of the perfect man, and
seven is the number of the perfect man;
3) The Logos is the perfect word; that which creates; that which destroys, and
that which saves.
4) This Hebrew master is the Logos of the Holy One, the Circle of the human
race, the Seven of time.
5) And in the record book the scribe wrote down,
The Logos-Circle-Seven;
and thus was Jesus known.
6) The master said,
The Logos will give heed to what I say: No man can
enter into light till he has found himself. Go forth and search till you have
found your soul and then return.
7) The guide led Jesus to a room in which the light was faint and
mellow, like the light of early dawn.
8) The chamber walls were marked with mystic signs, with hieroglyphs and
sacred texts; and in this chamber Jesus found himself alone where he remained
for many days.
9) He read the sacred texts; thought out the meaning of the hieroglyphs and
sought the import of the master's charge to find himself.
10) A revelation came; he got acquainted with his soul; he found himself; then
he was not alone.
11) One night he slept and at the midnight hour, a door that he had not
observed, was opened, and a priest in somber garb came in and said,
12) My brother, pardon me for coming in at this
unseemly hour; but I have come to save your life.
13) You are the victim of a cruel plot. The priests of Heliopolis are jealous
of your fame, and they have said that you shall never leave these gloomy
crypts alive.
14) The higher priests do not go forth to teach the world, and you are doomed
to temple servitude.
15) Now, if you would be free, you must deceive these priests; must tell them
you are here to stay for life;
16) And then, when you have gained all that you wish to gain, I will return,
and by a secret way will lead you forth that you may go in peace.
17) And Jesus said,
My brother man, would you come here to teach
deceit? Am I within these holy walls to learn the wiles of vile hypocrisy?
18) Nay, man, my Father scorns deceit, and I am here to do his will.
19) Deceive these priests! Not while the sun shall shine. What I have said,
that I have said; I will be true to them, to God, and to myself.
20) And then the tempter left, and Jesus was again alone; but in a little time
a white-robed priest appeared and said,
21) Well done! The Logos has prevailed. This is the
trial chamber of hypocrisy.
And then he led the way, and Jesus stood before the judgment seat.
22) And all the brothers stood; the hierophant came forth and laid his hand on
Jesus' head, and placed within his hands a scroll, on which was written just
one word, SINCERITY; and not a word was
said.
23) The guide again appeared, and led the way, and in a spacious room replete
with everything a student craves was Jesus bade to rest and wait.
CHAPTER 49
Jesus passes the second brotherhood test, and receives the second degree, JUSTICE.
THE Logos did not care to rest; he said,
Why wait in this luxurious room? I need not rest;
my Father's work upon me presses hard.
2) I would go on and learn my lessons all. If there are trials, let them come,
for every victory over self gives added strength.
3) And then the guide led on, and in a chamber, dark as night, was
Jesus placed and left alone; and days were spent in this deep solitude.
4) And Jesus slept, and in the dead of night a secret door was opened, and, in
priest's attire, two men came in; each carried in his hand a little flickering
lamp.
5) Approaching Jesus, one spoke out and said,
Young man, our hearts are grieved because of what
you suffer in these fearful dens, and we have come as friends to bring you
light, and show the way to liberty.
6) We once, like you, were in these dens confined, and thought that through
these weird, uncanny ways we could attain to blessedness and power;
7) But in a luckful moment we were undeceived, and, making use of all our
strength, we broke our chains, and then we learned that all this service is
corruption in disguise. These priests are criminals just hid away.
8) They boast in sacrificial rites; they offer to their gods, and burn them
while alive poor birds, and beasts; yea, children, women, men.
9) And now they keep you here, and, at a certain time, may offer you in
sacrifice.
10) We pray you, brother, break your chains; come, go with us; accept of
freedom while you may.
11) And Jesus said,
Your little tapers show the light you bring.
Pray, who are you? The words of man are worth no more than is the man himself.
12) These temple walls are strong and high; how gained you entrance to this
place?
13) The men replied,
Beneath these walls are many hidden ways, and we who
have been priests, spent months and years within these dens, know all of them.
14) Then you are traitors,
Jesus said.
A traitor is a fiend; he who betrays another man
is never man to trust.
15) If one has only reached the plane of treachery, he is a lover of deceit,
and will betray a friend to serve his selfish self.
16) Behold, you men, or whatsoe'er you be, your words fall lightly on my ears,
17) Could I prejudge these hundred priests, turn traitor to myself and them,
because of what you say when you confess your treachery?
18) No man can judge for me; and if I judge till testimony all is in I might
not judge aright.
19) Nay, men; by whatsoever way you came, return. My soul prefers the darkness
of the grave to little flickering lights like these you bring.
20) My conscience rules; what these, my brothers, have to say I'll hear, and
when the testimony all is in I will decide. You cannot judge for me, nor I for
you,
21) Be gone, you men, be gone, and leave me to this charming light; for while
the sun shines not, within my soul there is a light surpassing that of sun or
moon.
22) Then, with an angry threat that they would do him harm, the wily
tempters left, and Jesus was again alone.
23) Again the white-robed priest appeared, and led the way, and Jesus stood
again before the hierophant;
24) And not a word was said, but in his hands the master placed a scroll on
which the word suggestive, JUSTICE, was
inscribed.
25) And Jesus was the master of the phantom forms of prejudice and of
treachery.
.
CHAPTER 50
Jesus passes the third brotherhood test, and receives the third degree, FAITH.
THE Logos waited seven days, and then was taken to the Hall of Fame, a
chamber rich in furnishings, and lighted up with gold and silver lamps.
2) The colors of its ceilings, decorations, furnishings and walls were blue
and gold.
3) Its shelves were filled with books of master minds; the paintings and the
statues were the works of highest art.
4) And Jesus was entranced with all this elegance and these manifests of
thought. He read the sacred books, and sought the meanings of the symbols and
the hieroglyphs.
50 And when he was absorbed in deepest thought, a priest approached and said,
6) Behold the glory of this place: my brother, you
are highly blest. Few men of earth, so young, have reached such heights of
fame.
7) Now, if you do not waste your life in search for hidden things that men can
never comprehend, you may be founder of a school of thought that will insure
you endless fame;
8) For your philosophy is deeper far than that of Plato, and your teachings
please the common people more than those of Socrates.
9) Why seek for mystic light within these antiquated dens? Go forth and walk
with men, and think with men, and they will honor you.
10) And, after all, these weird initiations may be myths, and your Messiah
hopes but base illusions of the hour.
11) I would advise you to renounce uncertain things and choose the course that
leads to certain fame.
12) And thus the priest, a demon in disguise, sung siren songs of unbelief;
and Jesus meditated long and well on what he said.
13) The conflict was a bitter one, for king Ambition is a sturdy foe to fight.
14) For forty days the higher wrestled with the lower self, and then the fight
was won.
15) Faith rose triumphant; unbelief was not. Ambition covered up his face and
fled away, and Jesus said,
16) The wealth, the honor, and the fame of earth
are but the baubles of an hour.
17) When this short span of earthly life has all been measured out, man's
bursting baubles will be buried with his bones,
18) Yea, what a man does for his selfish self will make no markings on the
credit side of life.
19) The good that men for other men shall do becomes a ladder strong on which
the soul may climb to wealth, and power and fame of God's own kind, that
cannot pass away.
20) Give me the poverty of men, the consciousness of duty done in love, the
approbation of my God, and I will be content.
21) And then he lifted up his eyes to heaven and said,
22) My Father-God, I thank thee for this hour. I
ask not for the glory of myself; I fain would be a keeper of thy temple gates,
and serve my brother man.
23) Again was Jesus called to stand before the hierophant; again no
word was said, but in his hands the master placed a scroll on which was
written, FAITH.
24) And Jesus bowed his head in humble thanks; then went his way.
.
CHAPTER 51
Jesus passes the fourth brotherhood test, and receives the fourth degree, PHILANTHROPHY.
WHEN other certain days had passed, the guide led Jesus to the Hall of
Mirth, a hall most richly furnished, and replete with everything a carnal
heart could wish.
2) The choicest viands and the most delicious wines were on the boards; and
maids, in gay attire, served all with grace and cheerfulness.
3) And men and women, richly clad, were there; and they were wild with joy;
they sipped from every cup of mirth.
4) And Jesus watched the happy throng in silence for a time, and then a man in
garb of sage came up and said, Most happy is the man
who, like the bee, can gather sweets from every flower.
5) The wise man is the one who seeks for pleasure, and can find it everywhere.
6) At best man's span of life on earth is short, and then he dies and goes, he
knows not where.
7) Then let us eat, and drink, and dance, and sing, and get the joys of life,
for death comes on apace.
8) It is but foolishness to spend a life for other men. Behold, all die and
lie together in the grave, where none can know and none can show forth
gratitude.
9) But Jesus answered not; upon the tinseled guests in all their rounds
of mirth he gazed in silent thought.
10) And then among the guests he saw a man whose clothes were coarse; who
showed in face and hands the lines of toil and want.
11) The giddy throng found pleasure in abusing him; they jostled him against
the wall, and laughed at his discomfiture.
12) And then a poor, frail woman came, who carried in her face and form the
marks of sin and shame; and without mercy she was spit upon, and jeered, and
driven from the hall.
13) And then a little child, with timid ways and hungry mien, came in and
asked for just a morsel of their food.
14) But she was driven out uncared for and unloved; and still the merry dance
went on.
15) And when the pleasure seekers urged that Jesus join them in their mirth,
he said,
16) How could I seek for pleasure for myself
while others are in want? How can you think that while the children cry for
bread, while those in haunts of sin call out for sympathy and love that I can
fill myself to full with the good things of life?
17) I tell you, nay; we all are kin, each one a part of the great human heart.
18) I cannot see myself apart from that poor man that you so scorned, and
crowded to the wall;
19) Nor from the one in female garb who came up from the haunts of vice to ask
for sympathy and love, who was by you so ruthlessly pushed back into her den
of sin;
20) Nor from that little child that you drove from your midst to suffer in the
cold, bleak winds of night.
21) I tell you, men, what you have done to these, my kindred, you have done to
me.
22) You have insulted me in your own home; I cannot stay. I will go forth and
find that child, that woman and that man, and give them help until my life's
blood all has ebbed away.
23) I call it pleasure when I help the helpless, feed the hungry, clothe the
naked, heal the sick, and speak good words of cheer to those unloved,
discouraged and depressed.
24) And this that you call mirth is but a phantom of the night; but flashes of
the fire of passion, painting pictures on the walls of time.
25) And while the Logos spoke the white-robed priest came in and said
to him, The council waits for you.
26) Then Jesus stood again before the bar; again no word was said; the
hierophant placed in his hands a scroll, on which was writ,
PHILANTHROPY.
27) And Jesus was a victor over selfish self.
CHAPTER 52
Jesus spends forty days in
the temple groves.
Passes the fifth brotherhood test and receives the fifth degree, HEROISM.
THE sacred temple groves were rich in statues, monuments and shrines;
here Jesus loved to walk and meditate.
2) And after he had conquered self he talked with nature in these groves for
forty days.
3) And then the guide took chains and bound him hand and foot; and then cast
him into a den of hungry beasts, of unclean birds, and creeping things.
4) The den was dark as night; the wild beasts howled; the birds in fury
screamed; the reptiles hissed.
5) And Jesus said,
Who was it that did bind me thus? Why did I
meekly sit to be bound down with chains?
6) I tell you, none has power to bind a human soul. Of what are fetters made?
7) And in his might he rose, and what he thought were chains were only
worthless cords that parted at his touch.
8) And then he laughed and said,
The chains that bind men to the carcasses of
earth are forged in fancy's shop; are made of air, and welded in illusion's
fires.
9) If man will stand erect, and use the power of will, his chains will fall,
like worthless rags; for will and faith are stronger than the stoutest chains
that men have ever made.
10) And Jesus stood erect among the hungry beasts, and birds, and said,
What is this darkness that envelops me?
11) "Tis but the absence of the light. And what is light? 'Tis but the breath
of God vibrating in the rhythm of rapid thought.
12) And then he said,
Let there be light;
and with a mighty will he stirred the ethers up, and their vibrations reached
the plane of light; and there was light.
13) The darkness of that den of night became the brightness of a newborn day.
14) And then he looked to see the beasts, and birds, and creeping things; lo,
they were not.
15) And Jesus said,
Of what are souls afraid? Fear is the chariot in
which man rides to death;
16) And when he finds himself within the chamber of the dead, he learns that
he has been deceived; his chariot was a myth, and death a fancy child.
17) But some day all man's lessons will be learned, and from the den of
unclean beasts, and birds, and creeping things he will arise to walk in light.
18) And Jesus saw a ladder made of gold, on which he climbed, and at
the top the white-robed priest awaited him.
19) Again he stood before the council bar; again no word was said; again the
hierophant reached forth his hand to bless.
20) He placed in Jesus' hand another scroll, and on this one was written,
HEROISM.
21) The Logos had encountered fear and all his phantom host, and in the
conflict he achieved the victory.
CHAPTER 53
Jesus passes the sixth brotherhood test and receives the sixth degree, LOVE DIVINE.
IN all the land there is no place more grandly furnished than the Beauty
Parlors of the temple of the sun.
2) Few students ever entered these rich rooms; the priests regarded them with
awe, and called them Halls of Mysteries.
3) When Jesus had attained the victory over fear, he gained the right to enter
here.
4) The guide led on the way, and after passing many richly furnished rooms
they reached the Hall of Harmony; and here was Jesus left alone.
5) Among the instruments of music was a harpsichord, and Jesus sat in
thoughtful mood inspecting it, when, quietly, a maiden of entrancing beauty
came into the hall.
6) She did not seem to notice Jesus as he sat and mused, so busy with his
thoughts.
7) She found her place beside the harpsichord; she touched the chords most
gently, and she sung the songs of Israel.
8) And Jesus was entranced; such beauty he had never seen; such music he had
never heard.
9) The maiden sung her songs; she did not seem to know that anyone was near;
she went her way.
10) And Jesus, talking with himself, said out, What is the meaning of this
incident? I did not know that such entrancing beauty and such queen-like
loveliness were ever found among the sons of men.
11) I did not know that voice of angel ever graced a human form, or that
seraphic music ever came from human lips.
12) For days he sat entranced; the current of his thoughts was changed; he
thought of nothing but the singer and her songs.
13) He longed to see her once again; and after certain days she came; she
spoke and laid her hand upon his head.
14) Her touch thrilled all his soul, and for the time, forgotten was the work
that he was sent to do.
15) Few were the words the maiden said; she went her way; but then the heart
of Jesus had been touched.
16) A love-flame had been kindled in his soul, and he was brought to face the
sorest trial of his life.
17) He could not sleep nor eat. Thoughts of the maiden came; they would not
go. His carnal nature called aloud for her companionship.
18) And then he said,
Lo, I have conquered every foe that I have met,
and shall I now be conquered by this carnal love?
19) My Father sent me here to show the power of love divine, that love that
reaches every living thing.
20) Shall this pure, universal love be all absorbed by carnal love? Shall I
forget all creatures else, and lose my life in this fair maiden, though she is
the highest type of beauty, purity and love?
21) Into its very depths his soul was stirred, and long he wrestled
with this angel-idol of his heart.
22) But when the day was almost lost, his higher ego rose in might; he found
himself again, and then he said,
23) Although my heart shall break I will not fail
in this my hardest task; I will be victor over carnal love.
24) And when again the maiden came, and offered him her hand and heart, he
said,
25) Fair one, your very presence thrills me with
delight; your voice is benediction to my soul; my human self would fly with
you, and be contented in your love;
26) But all the world is craving for a love that I have come to manifest.
27) I must, then, bid you go; but we will meet again; our ways on earth will
not be cast apart.
28) I see you in the hurrying throngs of earth as minister of love; I hear
your voice in song, that wins the hearts of men to better things.
29) And then in sorrow and in tears the maiden went away, and Jesus was again
alone.
30) And instantly the great bells of the temple rang; the singers sung a new,
new song; the grotto blazed with light.
31) The hierophant himself appeared, and said, All hail! triumphant Logos,
hail! The conqueror of carnal love stands on the heights.
32) And then he placed in Jesus' hands a scroll on which was written,
LOVE DIVINE.
33) Together they passed through the grotto of the beautiful, and in the
banquet hall a feast was served, and Jesus was the honored guest.
CHAPTER 54
Jesus becomes a private
pupil of the hierophant and is taught the mysteries of Egypt.
In passing the seventh test, he works in the Chamber of the Dead.
THE senior course of study now was opened up and Jesus entered and
became a pupil of the hierophant.
2) He learned the secrets of the mystic lore of Egypt land; the mysteries of
life and death and of the worlds beyond the circle of the sun.
3) When he had finished all the studies of the senior course, he went into the
Chamber of the Dead, that he might learn the ancient methods of preserving
from decay the bodies of the dead; and here he wrought.
4) And carriers brought the body of a widow's only son to be embalmed; the
weeping mother followed close; her grief was great.
5) And Jesus said,
Good woman, dry your tears; you follow but an
empty house; your son is in it not.
6) You weep because your son is dead. Death is a cruel word; your son can
never die.
7) He had a task assigned to do in garb of flesh; he came; he did his work,
and then he laid the flesh aside; he did not need it more.
8) Beyond your human sight he has another work to do, and he will do it well,
and then pass on to other tasks, and, by and by, he will attain the crown of
perfect life.
9) And what your son has done, and what he yet must do, we all must do.
10) Now, if you harbor grief, and give your sorrows vent they will grow
greater every day. They will absorb your very life until at last you will be
naught but grief, wet down with bitter tears.
11) Instead of helping him, you grieve your son by your deep grief. He seeks
your solace now as he has ever done; is glad when you are glad; is saddened
when you grieve.
12) Go bury deep your woes, and smile at grief, and lose yourself in helping
others dry their tears.
13) With duty done comes happiness and joy; and gladness cheers the hearts of
those who have passed on.
14) The weeping woman turned, and went her way to find a happiness in
helpfulness; to bury deep her sorrows in a ministry of joy.
15) Then other carriers came and brought the body of a mother to the Chamber
of the Dead; and just one mourner followed; she a girl of tender years.
16) And as the cortege neared the door, the child observed a wounded bird in
sore distress, a cruel hunter's dart had pierced its breast.
17) And she left following the dead, and went to help the living bird.
18) With tenderness and love she folded to her breast the wounded bird, then
hurried to her place.
19) And Jesus said to her,
Why did you leave your dead to save a wounded
bird?
20) The maiden said, This lifeless body needs
no help from me; but I can help while yet life is; my mother taught me this.
21) My mother taught that grief and selfish love, and hopes and fears are but
reflexes from the lower self;
22) That what we sense are but small waves upon the rolling billows of a life.
23) These all will pass away; they are unreal.
24) Tears flow from hearts of flesh; the spirit never weeps; and I am longing
for the day when I will walk in light, where tears are wiped away.
25) My mother taught that all emotions are the sprays that rise from human
loves, and hopes, and fears; that perfect bliss cannot be ours till we have
conquered these.
26) And in the presence of that child did Jesus bow his head in
reverence. He said,
27) For days and months and years I've sought to
learn this highest truth that man can learn on earth, and here a child, fresh
brought to earth, has told it all in one short breath.
28) No wonder David said, O Lord, our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all
the earth!
29) Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength.
30) And then he laid his hand upon the maiden's head, and said,
I'm sure the blessings of my Father-God will rest
upon you, child, for evermore.
CHAPTER 55
Having passed the seventh
brotherhood test, Jesus receives the seventh,
and highest degree, THE CHRIST. He leaves the temple a conqueror.
THE work of Jesus in the Chamber of the Dead was done, and in the temple
purple room he stood before the hierophant,
2) And he was clothed in purple robes; and all the brothers stood. The
hierophant arose and said,
3) This is a royal day for all the hosts of Israel.
In honor of their chosen son we celebrate the great Passover Feast.
4) And then he said to Jesus,
Brother, man, most excellent of men, in all the
temple tests you have won out.
5) Six times before the bar of right you have been judged; six times you have
received the highest honors man can give; and now you stand prepared to take
the last degree.
6) Upon your brow I place this diadem, and in the Great Lodge of the heavens
and earth you are THE CHRIST.
7) This is your Passover rite. You are a neophyte no more; but now a master
mind.
8) Now, man can do no more; but God himself will speak, and will confirm your
title and degree.
9) Go on your way, for you must preach the gospel of good will to men and
peace on earth; must open up the prison doors and set the captives free.
10) And while the hierophant yet spoke the temple bells rang out; a
pure white dove descended from above and sat on Jesus' head.
11) And then a voice that shook the very temple said,
THIS IS THE CHRIST; and every living
creature said, AMEN.
12) The great doors of the temple swung ajar; the Logos journeyed on his way a
conqueror.
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SECTION XII
LAMED
The Council of the Seven Sages of the World
CHAPTER 56
The seven sages of the world meet in Alexandria. The purposes of the meeting. The opening addresses.
IN every age since time began have seven sages lived.
2) At first of every age these sages meet to note the course of nations,
peoples, tribes and tongues;
3) To note how far toward justice, love and righteousness the race has gone;
4) To formulate the code of laws, religious postulates and plans of rule best
suited to the coming age.
5) An age had passed, and lo, another age had come; the sages must convene.
6) Now, Alexandria was the center of the world's best thought, and here in
Philo's home the sages met.
7) From China came Meng-ste; from India Vidyapati came; from Persia Kaspar
came; and from Assyria Ashbina came; from Greece Apollo; Matheno was the
Egyptian sage, and Philo was the chief of Hebrew thought.
8) The time was due; the council met and sat in silence seven days.
9) And then Meng-ste arose and said,
The wheel of time has turned once more; the race is
on a higher plane of thought.
10) The garments that or fathers wove have given out; the cherubim have woven
a celestial cloth; have placed it in our hands and we must make for men new
garbs.
11) The sons of men are looking up for greater light. No longer do they care
for gods hewn out of wood, or made of clay. They seek a God not made with
hands.
12) They see the beams of coming day, and yet they comprehend them not.
13) The time is ripe, and we must fashion well these garments for the race.
14) And let us make for men new garbs of justice, mercy, righteousness and
love, that they may hide their nakedness when shines the light of coming day.
15) And Vidyapati said,
Our priests have all gone mad; they saw a demon in
the wilds and at him cast their lamps and they are broken up, and not a gleam
of light has any priest for men.
16) The night is dark; the heart of India calls for light.
17) The priesthood cannot be reformed; it is already dead; its greatest needs
are graves and funeral chants.
18) The new age calls for liberty; the kind that makes each man a priest,
enables him to go alone, and lay his offerings on the shrine of God.
19) And Kaspar said,
In Persia people walk in fear; they do the good for
fear to do the wrong.
20) The devil is the greatest power in our land, and though a myth, he dandles
on his knee both youth and age.
21) Our land is dark, and evil prospers in the dark.
22) Fear rides on every passing breeze, and lurks in every form of life.
23) The fear of evil is a myth, is an illusion and a snare; but it will live
until some mighty power shall come to raise the ethers to the plane of light.
24) When this shall come to pass the magian land will glory in the light. The
soul of Persia calls for light.
CHAPTER 57
Meeting of the sages, continued. Opening addresses. Seven days' silence.
ASHBINA said,
Assyria is the land of doubt; the chariot of my
people, that in which they mostly ride, is labeled Doubt.
2) Once Faith walked forth in Babylon; and she was bright and fair; but she
was clothed in such white robes that men became afraid of her.
3) And every wheel began to turn, and Doubt made war on her, and drove her
from the land; and she came back no more.
4) In form men worship God, the One; in heart they are not sure that God
exists.
5) Faith worships at the shrine of one not seen; but Doubt must see her God.
6) The greatest need of all Assyria is faith - a faith that seasons every
thing that is, with certainty.
7) And then Apollo said,
The greatest needs of Greece are true concepts of
God.
8) Theogony in Greece is rudderless, for every thought may be a god, and
worshipped as a god.
9) The plane of thought is broad, and full of sharp antagonists; and so the
circle of the gods is filled with enmity, with wars and base intrigues.
10) Greece needs a master mind to stand above the gods; to raise the thoughts
of men away from many gods to God the One.
11) We know that light is coming o'er the hills. God speed the light.
12) Matheno said,
Behold this land of mystery! this Egypt of the dead!
13) Our temples long have been the tombs of all the hidden things of time; our
temples, crypts and caves are dark.
14) In light there are no secret things. The sun reveals all hidden truth.
There are no mysteries in God.
15) Behold the rising sun! His beams are entering every door; yea, every
crevice of the mystic crypt of Mizraim.
16) We hail the light! All Egypt craves the light.
17) And Philo said,
The need of Hebrew thought and life is liberty.
18) The Hebrew prophets, seers, and givers of the law, were men of power, men
of holy thought, and they bequeathed to us a system of philosophy that is
ideal; one strong enough and good enough to lead our people to the goal of
perfectness.
19) But carnal minds repudiated holiness; a priesthood filled with selfishness
arose, and purity in heart became a myth; the people were enslaved.
20) The priesthood is the curse of Israel; but when he comes, who is to come,
he will proclaim emancipation for the slaves; my people will be free.
21) Behold, for God has made incarnate wisdom, love and light, which he has
called Immanuel.
22) To him is given the keys to open up the dawn; and here, as man, he walks
with us.
23) And then the council chamber door was opened and the Logos stood
among the sages of the world.
24) Again the sages sat in silence seven days.
CHAPTER 58
Meeting of the sages, continued. Presentation of the seven universal postulates.
NOW, when the sages were refreshed they opened up the Book of Life and
read.
2) They read the story of the life of man; of all his struggles, losses,
gains; and in the light of past events and needs, they saw what would be best
for him in coming years.
3) They knew the kind of laws and precepts suited best to his estate; they saw
the highest God-ideal that the race could comprehend.
4) Upon the seven postulates these sages were to formulate, the great
philosophy of life and worship of the coming age must rest.
5) Now Meng-ste was the oldest sage; he took the chair of chief, and said,
6) Man is not far enough advanced to live by faith;
he cannot comprehend the things his eyes see not.
7) He yet is child, and during all the coming age he must be taught by
pictures, symbols, rites and forms.
8) His God must be a human God; he cannot see a God by faith.
9) And then he cannot rule himself; the king must rule; the man must serve.
10) The age that follows this will be the age of man, the age of faith.
11) In that blest age the human race will see without the aid of carnal eyes;
will hear the soundless sound; will know the Spirit-God.
12) The age we enter is the Preparation age, and all the schools and
governments and worship rites must be designed in simple way that men may
comprehend.
13) And man cannot originate; he builds by patterns that he sees; so in this
council we must carve out pattern for the coming age.
14) And we must formulate the gnosis of the Empire of the soul, which rests on
seven postulates.
15) Each sage in turn shall form a postulate; and these shall be the basis of
the creeds of men until the perfect age shall come.
16) Then Meng-ste wrote the first:
17) All things are thought; all life is thought
activity. The multitude of beings are but phases of the one great thought made
manifest. Lo, God is Thought, and Thought is God.
18) Then Vidyapati wrote the second postulate:
19) Eternal Thought is one; in essence it is two -
Intelligence and Force; and when they breathe a child is born; this child is
Love.
20) And thus the Triune God stands forth, whom men call Father-Mother-Child.
21) This Triune God is one; but like the one of light, in essence he is seven.
22) And when the Triune God breathes forth, lo, seven Spirits stand before his
face; these are creative attributes.
23) Men call them lesser gods, and in their image they made man.
24) And Kaspar wrote the third:
25) Man was a thought of God, formed in the image of
the Septonate, clothed in the substances of soul.
26) And his desires were strong; he sought to manifest on every plane of life,
and for himself he made a body of the ethers of the earthly forms, and so
descended to the plane of earth.
27) In this descent he lost his birthright; lost his harmony with God, and
made discordant all the notes of life.
28) Inharmony and evil are the same; so evil is the handiwork of man.
29) Ashbina wrote the fourth:
30) Seeds do not germinate in light; they do not
grow until they find the soil, and hide themselves away from light.
31) Man was evolved a seed of everlasting life; but in the ethers of the
Triune God the light was far too great for seeds to grow;
32) And so man sought the soil of carnal life, and in the darksomeness of
earth he found a place where he could germinate and grow.
33) The seed has taken root and grown full well.
34) The tree of human life is rising from the soil of earthy things, and,
under natural law, is reaching up to perfect form.
35) There are no supernatural acts of God to lift a man from carnal life to
spirit blessedness; he grows as grows the plant, and in due time is perfected.
36) The quality of soul that makes it possible for man to rise to spirit life
is purity.
CHAPTER 59
Meeting of the sages, continued. The remaining postulates. The sages bless Jesus. Seven days' silence.
APOLLO wrote the fifth:
2) The soul is drawn to perfect light by four white
steeds, and these are Will, and Faith, and Helpfulness and Love.
3) That which one wills to do, he has the power to do.
4) A knowledge of that power is faith; and when faith moves, the soul begins
its flight.
5) A selfish faith leads not to light. There is no lonely pilgrim on the way
to light. Men only gain the heights by helping others gain the heights.
6) The steed that leads the way to spirit life is Love; is pure unselfish
Love.
7) Matheno wrote the sixth:
8) The universal Love of which Apollo speaks is
child of Wisdom and of Will divine, and God has sent if forth to earth in
flesh that man may know.
9) The universal Love of which the sages speak is Christ.
10) The greatest mystery of all times lies in the way that Christ lives in the
heart.
11) Christ cannot live in clammy dens of carnal things. The seven battles must
be fought, the seven victories won before the carnal things, like fear, and
self, emotions and desire, are put away.
12) When this is done the Christ will take possession of the soul; the work is
done, and man and God are one.
13) And Philo wrote the seventh:
14) A perfect man! To bring before the Triune God a
being such as this was nature made.
15) This consummation is the highest revelation of the mystery of life.
16) When all the essences of carnal things have been transmuted into soul, and
all the essences of soul have been returned to Holy Breath, and man is made a
perfect God, the drama of Creation will conclude. And this is all.
17) And all the sages said,
Amen.
18) Then Meng-ste said,
The Holy One has sent to us a man illumined by the
efforts of unnumbered years, to lead the thoughts of men.
19) This man, approved by all the master minds of heaven and earth, this man
from Galilee, this Jesus, chief of all the sages of the world, we gladly
recognize.
20) In recognition of this wisdom that he brings to men, we crown him with the
Lotus wreath.
21) We send him forth with all the blessing of the seven sages of the world.
22) Then all the sages laid their hands on Jesus' head, and said with one
accord, Praise God!
23) For wisdom, honor, glory, power, riches, blessing, strength, are yours, O
Christ, for evermore.
24) And every living creature said,
Amen.
25 And then the sages sat in silence seven days.
CHAPTER 60
Jesus addresses the seven sages. The address. Jesus goes to Galilee.
THE seven days of silence passed and Jesus, sitting with the sages said:
2) The history of life is well condensed in these
immortal postulates. These are the seven hills on which the holy city shall be
built.
3) These are the seven sure foundation stones on which the Universal Church
shall stand.
4) In taking up the work assigned for me to do I am full conscious of the
perils of the way; the cup will be a bitter one to drink and human nature well
might shrink.
5) But I have lost my will in that of Holy Breath, and so I go my way to speak
and act by Holy Breath.
6) The words I speak are not my own; they are the words of him whose will I
do.
7) Man is not far enough advanced in sacred thought to comprehend the
Universal Church, and so the work that God has given me to do is not the
building of that Church.
8) I am a model maker, sent to make a pattern of the Church that is to be - a
pattern that the age may comprehend.
9) My task as model builder lies within my native land, and there, upon the
postulate that Love is son of God, that I am come to manifest that Love, the
Model Church will stand.
10) And from the men of low estate I will select twelve men, who represent the
twelve immortal thoughts; and these will be the Model Church.
11) The house of Judah, my own kindred in the flesh, will comprehend but
little of my mission to the world.
12) And they will spurn me, scorn my work, accuse me falsely, bind me, take me
to the judgment seat of carnal men who will convict and slay me on the cross.
13) But men can never slay the truth; though banished it will come again in
greater power; for truth will subjugate the world.
14) The Model Church will live. Though carnal man will prostitute its sacred
laws, symbolic rites and forms, for selfish ends, and make it but an outward
show, the few will find through it the kingdom of the soul.
15) And when the better age shall come the Universal Church will stand upon
the seven postulates, and will be built according to the pattern given.
16) The time has come; I go my way unto Jerusalem, and by the power of living
faith, and by the strength that you have given.
17) And in the name of God, our Father-God, the kingdom of the soul shall be
established on the seven hills.
18) And all the peoples, tribes and tongues of earth shall enter in.
19) The Prince of Peace will take his seat upon the throne of power; the
Triune God will then be All in All.
20) And all the sages said,
Amen.
21) And Jesus went his way, and after many days, he reached Jerusalem; and
then he sought his home in Galilee.
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SECTION XIII
MEM
The Ministry of John the Harbinger
CHAPTER 61
John, the harbinger,
returns to Hebron. Lives as a hermit in the wilds.
Visits Jerusalem and speaks to the people.
IT came to pass when John, the son of Zacharias and Elizabeth, had
finished all his studies in the Egyptian schools, that he returned to Hebron,
where he abode for certain days.
2) And then he sought the wilderness and made his home in David's cave where,
many years before, he was instructed by the Egyptian sage.
3) Some people called him Hermit of Engedi; and others said, He is the Wild
Man of the Hills.
4) He clothed himself with skins of beasts; his food was carobs, honey, nuts
and fruits.
5) When John was thirty years of age he went into Jerusalem, and in the market
place he sat in silence seven days.
6) The common people and the priests, the scribes and Pharisees came out in
multitudes to see the silent hermit of the hills; but none were bold enough to
ask him who he was.
7) But when his silent fast was done he stood forth in the midst of all and
said:
8) Behold the king has come; the prophets told of
him; the wise men long have looked for him.
9) Prepare, O Israel, prepare to meet your king.
10) And that was all he said, and then he disappeared, and no one knew
where he had gone.
11) And there was great unrest through all Jerusalem. The rulers heard the
story of the hermit of the hills.
12) And they sent couriers forth to talk with him that they might know about
the coming king; but they could find him not.
13) And after certain days he came again into the market place, and all the
city came to hear him speak; he said:
14) Be not disturbed, you rulers of the state; the
coming king is no antagonist; he seeks no place on any earthly throne.
15) He comes the Prince of Peace, the king of righteousness and love; his
kingdom is within the soul.
16) The eyes of men shall see it not and none can enter but the pure in heart.
17) Prepare, O Israel, prepare to meet your king.
18) Again the hermit disappeared; the people strove to follow him, but he had
drawn a veil about his form and men could see him not.
19) A Jewish feast day came; Jerusalem was filled with Jews and proselytes
from every part of Palestine, and John stood in the temple court and said,
20) Prepare, O Israel, prepare to meet your king.
21) Lo, you have lived in sin; the poor cry in your streets, and you regard
them not.
22) Your neighbors, who are they? You have defrauded friend and foe alike.
23) You worship God with voice and lip; your hearts are far away, and set on
gold.
24) Your priests have bound upon the people burdens far to great to bear; they
live in ease upon the hard earned wages of the poor.
25) Your lawyers, doctors, scribes are useless cumberers of the ground; they
are but tumors on the body of the state;
26) They toil not neither do they spin, yet they consume the profits of your
marts of trade.
27) Your rulers are adulterers, extortioners and thieves, regarding not the
rights of any man;
28) And robbers ply their calling in the sacred halls; the holy temple you
have sold to thieves; their dens are in the sacred places set apart for
prayer.
29) Hear! hear! you people of Jerusalem! Reform; turn from your evil ways or
God will turn from you and heathen from afar will come, and what is left of
all your honor and your fame will pass in one short hour.
30) Prepare, Jerusalem, prepare to meet your king.
31) He said no more; he left the court and no one saw him go.
32) The priests, the doctors and the scribes were all in rage. They sought for
John intent to do him harm. They found him not.
33) The common people stood in his defense; they said,
The hermit speaks the truth.
34) And then the priests, the doctors and the scribes were sore afraid;
they said no more; they hid themselves away.
CHAPTER 62
John, the harbinger, again
visits Jerusalem. Speaks to the people.
Promises to meet them at Gilgal in seven days. Goes to Bethany and attends a
feast.
NEXT day John went again into the temple courts and said,
2) Prepare, O Israel, prepare to meet your king.
3) The chief priests and the scribes would know the meaning of his
words; they said.
4) Bold man, what is the purport of this message
that you bring to Israel? If you be seer and prophet tell us plainly who has
sent you here?
5) And John replied,
I am the voice of one who cries out in the
wilderness, Prepare the way, make straight the paths, for, lo, the Prince of
Peace will come to rule in love.
6) Your prophet Malachi wrote down the words of God:
7) And I will send Elijah unto you before the retribution day shall come, to
turn again the hearts of men to God, and if they will not turn, lo, I will
smite them with a curse.
8) You men of Israel; you know your sins. As I passed by I saw a wounded bird
prone in your streets, and men of every class were beating it with clubs; and
then I saw that Justice was its name.
9) I looked again and saw that its companion had been killed; the pure white
wings of Righteousness were trampled in the dust.
10) I tell you men, your awfulness of guilt has made a cesspool of iniquity
that sends a fearful stench to heaven.
11) Reform, O Israel, reform; prepare to meet your king.
12) And then John turned away and as he went he said,
13) In seven days, lo, I will stand at Gilgal, by
the Jordan ford, where Israel first crossed into the promised land.
14) And then he left the temple court to enter it no more; but many
people followed him as far as Bethany, and there he tarried at the home of
Lazarus, his kin.
15) The anxious people gathered all about the home and would not go; then John
came forth and said,
16) Reform, O Israel, reform; prepare to meet your
king.
17) The sins of Israel do not all lie at the door of priest and scribe. O
think you not that all the sinners of Judea are found among the rulers and the
men of wealth.
18) It is no sign that man is good and pure because he lives in want.
19) The listless, shiftless vagabonds of earth are mostly poor and have to beg
for bread.
20) I saw the very men that cheered because I told the priests and scribes of
their injustice unto man, throw stones and beat poor Justice in the streets.
21) I saw them trample on the poor dead bird of Righteousness;
22) And you who follow after me, you commoners, are not one whit behind the
scribes and priests in crime.
23) Reform, you men of Israel; the king has come; prepare to meet your king.
24) With Lazarus and his sisters, John remained for certain days.
25) In honor of the Nazarite a feast was spread, and all the people stood
about the board.
26) And when the chief men of the town poured out the sparkling wine and
offered John a cup, he took it, held it high in air, and said,
27) Wine makes glad the carnal heart, and it makes
sad the human soul; it plunges deep in bitterness and gall the deathless
spirit of the man.
28) I took the vow of Nazar when a child, and not a drop has ever passed my
lips.
29) And if you would make glad the coming king, then shun the cup as you would
shun a deadly thing.
30) And then he threw the sparking wine out in the street.
CHAPTER 63
John, the harbinger, visits
Jericho. Meets the people at Gilgal. Announces his mission.
Introduces the rite of baptism. Baptizes many people. Returns to Bethany and
teaches. Returns to the Jordan.
AND John went down to Jericho; there he abode with Alpheus.
2) And when the people heard that he was there they came in throngs to hear
him speak.
3) He spoke to none; but when the time was due he went down to the Jordan
ford, and to the multitudes he said.
4) Reform and in the fount of purity wash all your
sins away; the kingdom is at hand.
5) Come unto me and in the waters of this stream be washed, symbolic of the
inner cleansing of the soul.
6) And, lo, the multitudes came down, and in the Jordan they were
washed, and every man confessed his sins.
7) For many months, in all the regions round about, John pled for purity and
righteousness, and after many days he went again to Bethany; and there he
taught.
8) At first few but the honest seekers came; but, by and by, the selfish and
the vicious came with no contrition; came because the many came.
9) And when John saw the unrepentant Pharisees and Sadducees come unto him, he
said,
10) You children of the vipers, stay; are you
disturbed by news of coming wrath?
11) Go to, and do the things that prove repentance genuine.
12) Is it enough for you to say that you are heirs of Abraham? I tell you, no.
13) The heirs of Abraham are just as wicked in the sight of God when they do
wrong as any heathen man.
14) Behold the axe! and every tree that bears not wholesome fruit is cut down
at the roots and cast into the fire.
15) And then the people asked,
What must we do?
16) And John replied,
Accept the ministry of helpfulness for all
mankind; spend not upon your selfish selves all that you have.
17) Let him who has two coats give one to him who has no coat; give part of
all the food you have to those in need.
18) And when the publicans came up and asked,
What must we do?
John answered them,
19) Be honest in your work; do not increase for
selfish gain the tribute you collect; take nothing more than what your king
demands.
20) And when the soldiers came and asked,
What must we do?
The harbinger replied,
21) Do violence to none; exact no wrongful thing,
and be contented with the wages you receive.
22) Among the Jews were many who had been waiting for the Christ to
come, and they regarded John as Christ.
23) But to their questions John replied,
In water I do cleanse, symbolic of the cleansing
of the soul; but when he comes who is to come, lo, he will cleanse in Holy
Breath and purify in fire.
24) His fan is in his hand, and he will separate the wheat and chaff; will
throw the chaff away, but garner every grain of wheat. This is the Christ.
25) Behold he comes! and he will walk with you, and you will know him not.
26) He is the king; the latchet of his shoes I am not worthy to unloose.
27) And John left Bethany and went again unto the Jordan ford.
CHAPTER 64
Jesus comes to Galilee, and
is baptized by John.
The Holy Breath testifies on his messiahship.
THE news reached Galilee, and Jesus with the multitude went down to
where the harbinger was preaching at the ford.
2) When Jesus saw the harbinger he said.
Behold the man of God! Behold the greatest of the
seers! Behold, Elijah has returned!
3) Behold the messenger whom God has sent to open up the way! The kingdom is
at hand.
4) When John saw Jesus standing with the throng he said,
Behold the king who cometh in the name of God!
5) And Jesus said to John,
I would be washed in water as a symbol of the
cleansing of the soul.
6) And John replied,
you do not need to wash, for you are pure in
thought, and word, and deed. And if you need to wash I am not worthy to
perform the rite.
7) And Jesus said,
I come to be a pattern for the sons of men, and
what I bid them do, that I must do; and all men must be washed, symbolic of
the cleansing of the soul.
8) This washing we establish as a rite - baptism rite we call it now, and so
it shall be called.
9) Your work, prophetic harbinger, is to prepare the way, and to reveal the
hidden things.
10) The multitudes are ready for the words of life, and I come to be made
known by you to all the world, as prophet of the Triune God, and as the chosen
one to manifest the Christ to men.
11) Then John led Jesus down into the river at the ford and he baptized
him in the sacred name of him who sent him forth to manifest the Christ to
men.
12) And as they came out of the stream, the Holy Breath, in form of dove, came
down and sat on Jesus' head.
13) A voice from heaven said,
This is the well-beloved son of
God, the Christ, the love of God made manifest.
14) John heard the voice, and understood the message of the voice.
15) Now Jesus went his way, and John preached to the multitude.
16) As many as confessed their sins, and turned from evil ways to ways of
right, the harbinger baptized, symbolic of the blotting out of sins by
righteousness.
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SECTION XIV
NUN
The Christine Ministry of Jesus - Introductory Epoch
CHAPTER 65
Jesus goes to the
wilderness for self-examination, where he remains forty days.
Is subjected to three temptations. He overcomes. Returns to the camps of
John and begins teaching.
THE harbinger had paved the way; the Logos had been introduced to men as
love made manifest, and he must now begin his Christine ministry.
2) And he went forth into the wilderness to be alone with God that he might
look into his inner heart, and note its strength and worthiness.
3) And with himself he talked; he said,
My lower self is strong; by many ties I am bound
down to carnal life.
4) Have I the strength to overcome and give my life a willing sacrifice for
men?
5) When I shall stand before the face of men, and they demand a proof of my
messiahship, what will I say?
6) And then the tempter came and said,
If you be son of God, command these stones to
turn to bread.
7) And Jesus said,
Who is it that demands a test? It is no sign that
one is son of God because he does a miracle; the devils can do mighty things.
8) Did not the black magicians do great things before the Pharaohs?
9) My words and deeds in all the walks of life shall be the proof of my
messiahship.
10) And then the tempter said,
If you will go into Jerusalem, and from the
temple pinnacle cast down yourself to earth, the people will believe that you
are the Messiah sent from God.
11) This you can surely do; for did not David say, He gives his angels charge
concerning you, and with their will they uphold lest you should fall?
12) And Jesus said,
I may not tempt the Lord, my God.
13) And then the tempter said,
Look forth upon the world; behold its honors and
its fame! Behold its pleasures and its wealth!
14) If you will give your life for these they shall be yours.
15) But Jesus said,
Away from me all tempting thoughts. My heart is
fixed; I spurn this carnal self with all its vain ambition and its pride.
16) For forty days did Jesus wrestle with his carnal self; his higher
self prevailed. He then was hungry, but his friends had found him and they
ministered to him.
17) Then Jesus left the wilderness and in the consciousness of Holy breath, he
came unto the camps of John and taught.
CHAPTER 66
Six of John's disciples
follow Jesus and become his disciples. He teaches them.
They sit in the Silence.
AMONG the followers of John were many men from Galilee. The most devout
were Andrew, Simon, James, and John, with Philip and his brother of Bethsaida.
2) One day as Andrew, Philip and a son of Zebedee, were talking with the
harbinger, the Logos came, and John exclaimed,
Behold the Christ!
3) And then the three disciples followed Jesus, and he asked,
What do you seek?
4) And the disciples asked,
Where do you live? And Jesus answered,
Come and see.
5) And Andrew called his brother Simon, saying,
Come with me, for I have found the Christ.
6) When Jesus looked in Simon's face he said,
Behold a rock! and Peter is your name.
7) And Philip found Nathaniel sitting by a tree, and said,
My brother, come with me, for I have found the
Christ! In Nazareth he abides.
8) Nathaniel said,
Can anything of good come out of Nazareth?
And Philip answered,
Come and see.
9) When Jesus saw Nathaniel come he said,
Behold an Israelite indeed in whom there is no
guile!
10) Nathaniel said,
How can you speak about me thus?
11) And Jesus said,
I saw you as you sat beneath the fig tree over
there, before your brother called.
12) Nathaniel lifted up his hands and said,
This surely is the Christ, the king, for whom the
harbinger has often testified.
13) And John went forth and found his brother James, and brought him to
the Christ.
14) The six disciples went with Jesus to the place where he abode.
15) And Peter said,
We long have sought for Christ. We came from Galilee
to John; we thought that he was Christ, but he confessed to us that he was
not;
16) That he was but the harbinger sent forth to clear the way, and make the
pathway easy for the coming king; and when you came he said, Behold the
Christ!
17) And we would gladly follow where you go. Lord, tell us what to do.
18) And Jesus said,
The foxes of the earth have homes, the birds have
nests; I have no place to lay my head.
19) He who would follow me must give up all cravings of the self and lose his
life in saving life.
20) I come to save the lost, and man is saved when he is rescued from himself.
But men are slow to comprehend this doctrine of the Christ.
21) And Peter said,
I cannot speak for any other man, but for myself I
speak: I will leave all and follow where you lead.
22) And then the others spoke and said, You have the words of truth; you came
from God, and if we follow in your footsteps we cannot miss the way.
23) Then Jesus and the six disciples sat a long, long time in silent
thought.
CHAPTER 67
Jesus visits John at the
Jordan. Delivers his first Christine address to the people.
The address. He goes with his disciples to Bethany.
NOW, on the morrow Jesus came again and stood with John beside the ford;
and John prevailed on him to speak, and standing forth he said.
2) You men of Israel, Hear! The kingdom is at
hand.
3) Behold the great key-keeper of the age stands in your midst; and with the
spirit of Elijah he has come.
4) Behold, for he has turned the key; the mighty gates fly wide and all who
will may greet the king.
5) Behold these multitudes of women, children, men! they throng the avenues,
they crowd the outer courts; each seems to be intent to be the first to meet
the king.
6) Behold, the censor comes and calls, Whoever will may come; but he who comes
must will to prune himself of every evil thought;
7) Must overcome desire to gratify the lower self; must give his life to save
the lost.
8) The nearer to the kingdom gate you come, more spacious is the room; the
multitudes have gone.
9) If men could come unto the kingdom with their carnal thoughts, their
passions and desires, there scarcely would be room for all.
10) But when they cannot take these through the narrow gate they turn away;
the few are ready to go in and see the king.
11) Behold, John is a mighty fisher, fishing for the souls of men. He throws
his great net out into the sea of human life; he draws it in and it is full.
12) But what a medley catch! a catch of crabs, and lobsters, sharks and
creeping things, with now and then a fish of better kind.
13) Behold the thousands come to hear the Wild Man of the hills; they come in
crowds that he may wash them in the crystal flood, and with their lips they do
confess their sins.
14) But when the morrow comes we find them in their haunts of vice again,
reviling John, and cursing God, and heaping insults on the king.
15) But blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see the king.
16) And blessed are the strong in heart, for they shall not be cast about by
every wind that blows;
17) But while the fickle and the thoughtless have gone back to Egypt land for
leeks and carnal herbs to satisfy their appetites, the pure in heart have
found the king.
18) But even those whose faith is weak, and who are naught but carnal
manifests, will some day come again, and enter in with joy to see the king.
19) O men of Israel, take heed to what this prophet has to say! Be strong in
mind; be pure in heart; be vigilant in helpfulness; the kingdom is at hand.
20) When Jesus had thus said he went his way, and with his six
disciples came to Bethany; and they abode with Lazarus many days.
CHAPTER 68
Jesus speaks to the people
in Bethany. Tells them how to become pure in heart.
Goes to Jerusalem and in the temple reads from a prophetic book. Goes to
Nazareth.
THE news soon spread abroad that Jesus, king of Israel, had come to
Bethany, and all the people of the town came forth to greet the king.
2) And Jesus, standing in the midst of them, exclaimed,
Behold, indeed, the king has come, but Jesus is
not king.
3) The kingdom truly is at hand; but men can see it not with carnal eyes; they
cannot see the king upon the throne.
4) This is the kingdom of the soul; its throne is not an earthly throne; its
king is not a man.
5) When human kings found kingdoms here, they conquer other kings by force of
arms; one kingdom rises on the ruins of another one.
6) But when our Father-God sets up the kingdom of the soul, he pours his
blessings forth, like rain, upon the thrones of earthly kings who rule in
righteousness.
7) It is not rule that God would overthrow; his sword is raised against
injustice, wantonness and crime.
8) Now, while the kings of Rome do justice, and love mercy and walk humbly
with their God, the benediction of the Triune God will rest upon them all.
9) They need not fear a messenger whom God sends forth to earth.
10) I am not sent to sit upon a throne to rule as Caesar rules; and you may
tell the ruler of the Jews that I am not a claimant for his throne.
11) Men call me Christ, and God has recognized the name; but Christ is not a
man. The Christ is universal love, and Love is king.
12) This Jesus is but man who has been fitted by temptations overcome, by
trials multiform, to be the temple through which Christ can manifest to men.
13) Then hear, you men of Israel, hear! Look not upon the flesh; it is not
king. Look to the Christ within, who shall be formed in every one of you, as
he is formed in me.
14) When you have purified your hearts by faith, the king will enter in, and
you will see his face.
15) And then the people asked, What must we do that we may make our bodies fit
abiding places for the king?
16) And Jesus said, Whatever tends to purity in thought, and word, and deed
will cleanse the temple of the flesh.
17) There are no rules that can apply to all, for men are specialists in sin;
each has his own besetting sin,
18) And each must study for himself how he can best transmute his tendency to
evil things to that of righteousness and love.
19) Until men reach the higher plane, and get away from selfishness, this rule
will give the best results:
20) Do unto other men what you would have them do to you.
21) And many of the people said,
We know that Jesus is the Christ, the king who was
to come, and blessed be his name.
22) Now, Jesus and his six disciples turned their faces toward
Jerusalem, and many people followed them.
23) But Matthew, son of Alpheus, ran on before, and when he reached Jerusalem,
he said,
Behold the Christines come! The multitudes came
forth to see the king.
24) But Jesus did not speak to any one until he reached the temple
court, and then he opened up a book and read:
25) Behold, I send my messenger, and he will pave
the way, and Christ, for whom you wait, will come unto his temple unannounced.
Behold, for he will come, says God, the Lord of hosts.
26) And then he closed the book; he said no more; he left the temple
halls, and with his six disciples, went his way to Nazareth,
27) And they abode with Mary, Jesus' mother, and her sister, Miriam.
CHAPTER 69
Jesus and the ruler of the
synagogue of Nazareth. Jesus teaches not in public,
and the people are amazed.
NEXT day as Peter walked about in Nazareth, he met the ruler of the
synagogue who asked,
Who is this Jesus lately come to Nazareth?
2) And Peter said,
This Jesus is the Christ of whom our prophets wrote;
he is the king of Israel. His mother, Mary, lives on Marion Way.
3) The ruler said,
Tell him to come up to the synagogue, for I would
hear his plea.
4) And Peter ran and told to Jesus what the ruler said; but Jesus
answered not; he went not to the synagogue.
5) Then in the evening time the ruler came up Marmion Way, and in the home of
Mary found he Jesus and his mother all alone.
6) And when the ruler asked for proof of his messiahship, and why he went not
to the synagogue when he was bidden, Jesus said,
7) I am not slave to any man; I am not called
unto this ministry by priest. It is not mine to answer when men call. I come
the Christ of God; I answer unto God alone.
8) Who gave you right to ask for proof of my messiahship? My proof lies in my
words and works, and so if you will follow me you will not lack for proof.
9) And then the ruler went his way; he asked himself,
What manner of a man is this to disregard the ruler
of the synagogue?
10) The people of the town came out in throngs to see the Christ, and
hear him speak; but Jesus said,
11) A prophet has no honor in his native town,
among his kin.
12) I will not speak in Nazareth until the words I speak, and works I do in
other towns, have won the faith of men.
13) Until men know that God has christed me to manifest eternal love.
14) Good will to you, my kin; I bless you with a boundless love, and I bespeak
for you abundant joy and happiness.
15) He said no more, and all the people marvelled much because he would
not speak in Nazareth.
CHAPTER 70
Jesus and his disciples at
a marriage feast in Cana. Jesus speaks on marriage.
He turns water into wine. The people are amazed.
IN Cana, Galilee, there was a marriage feast, and Mary and her sister
Miriam, and Jesus and his six disciples were among the guests.
2) The ruler of the feast had heard that Jesus was a master sent from God, and
he requested him to speak.
3) And Jesus said,
There is no tie more sacred than the marriage
tie.
4) The chain that binds two souls in love is made in heaven, and man can never
sever it in twain.
5) The lower passions of the twain may cause a union of the twain, a union as
when oil and water meet.
6) And then a priest may forge a chain, and bind the twain. This is not
marriage genuine; it is a counterfeit.
7) The twain are guilty of adultery; the priest is party to the crime.
And that was all that Jesus said.
8) As Jesus stood apart in silent thought his mother came and said to him,
The wine has failed; what shall we do?
9) And Jesus said,
Pray what is wine? It is but water with the
flavoring of grapes.
10) And what are grapes? They are but certain kinds of thought made manifest,
and I can manifest that thought, and water will be wine.
11) He called the servants, and he said to them,
Bring in six water pots of stone, a pot for each
of these, my followers, and fill them up with water to the brims.
12) The servants brought the water pots, and filled them to their
brims.
13) And Jesus with a mighty thought stirred up the ethers till they reached
the manifest, and, lo, the water blushed, and turned to wine.
14) The servants took the wine and gave it to the ruler of the feast who
called the bridegroom in and said to him,
15) This wine is best of all; most people when they
give a feast bring in the best wine at first; but, lo, you have reserved the
best until last.
16) And when the ruler and the guests were told that Jesus, by the
power of thought, had turned the water into wine, they were amazed;
17) They said,
This man is more than man; he surely is the christed
one who prophets of the olden times declared would come.
18) And many of the guests believed on him, and gladly would have
followed him.
CHAPTER 71
Jesus, his six disciples
and his mother, go to Capernaum. Jesus teaches the people,
revealing the difference between the kings of earth and the kings of heaven.
THE city of Capernaum was by the sea of Galilee, and Peter's home was
there. The homes of Andrew, John and James were near,
2) These men were fishermen, and must return to tend their nets, and they
prevailed on Jesus and his mother to accompany them, and soon with Philip and
Nathaniel they were resting by the sea in Peter's home.
3) The news spread through the city and along the shore that Judah's king had
come, and multitudes drew near to press his hand.
4) And Jesus said,
I cannot show the king, unless you see with eyes
of soul, because the kingdom of the king is in the soul.
5) And every soul a kingdom is. There is a king for every man.
6) This king is love, and when this love becomes the greatest power in life,
it is the Christ; so Christ is king.
7) And every one may have this Christ dwell in his soul, as Christ dwells in
my soul.
8) The body is the temple of the king, and men may call a holy man a king.
9) He who will cleanse his mortal form and make it pure, so pure that love and
righteousness may dwell unsullied side by side within its walls, is king.
10) The kings of earth are clothed in royal robes, and sit in state that men
may stand in awe of them.
11) A king of heaven may wear a fisher's garb; may sit in mart of trade; may
till the soil, or be a gleaner in the field; may be a slave in mortal chains;
12) May be adjudged a criminal by men; may languish in a prison cell; may die
upon a cross.
13) Men seldom see what others truly are. The human senses sense what seems to
be, and that which seems to be and that which is, may be diverse in every way.
14) The carnal man beholds the outer man, which is the temple of the king, and
worships at his shrine.
15) The man of God is pure in heart; he sees the king; he sees with eyes of
soul:
16) And when he rises to the plane of Christine consciousness, he knows that
he himself is king, is love, is Christ, and so is son of God.
17) You men of Galilee, prepare to meet your king.
18) And Jesus taught the people many lessons as he walked with them
beside the sea.
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SECTION XV
SAMECH
The First Annual Epoch of the Christine Ministry of Jesus
CHAPTER 72
Jesus in Jerusalem. Drives
the merchants out of the temple.
The priests resent, and he defends himself from the standpoint of a loyal
Jew. He speaks to the people.
THE Jewish paschal feast time came and Jesus left his mother in
Capernaum and journeyed to Jerusalem.
2) And he abode with one a Sadducee, whose name was Jude.
3) And when he reached the temple courts the multitudes were there to see the
prophet whom the people thought had come to break the yoke of Rome, restore
the kingdom of the Jews, and rule on David's throne.
4) And when the people saw him come they said,
All hail! behold the king!
5) But Jesus answered not; he saw the money changers in the house of
God, and he was grieved.
6) The courts had been converted into marts of trade, and men were selling
lambs and doves for offerings in sacrifice.
7) And Jesus called the priests and said,
Behold, for paltry gain you have sold out the
temple of the Lord.
8) This house ordained for prayer is now a den of thieves. Can good and evil
dwell together in the courts of God? I tell you, no.
9) And then he made a scourge of cords and drove the merchants out; he
overturned their boards, and threw their money on the floor.
10) He opened up the cages of the captive birds, and cut the cords that bound
the lambs, and set them free.
11) The priests and scribes rushed out, and would have done him harm, but they
were driven back; the common people stood in his defense.
12) And then the rulers said,
Who is this Jesus you call king?
13) The people said,
He is the Christ of whom our prophets wrote; he is
the king who will deliver Israel.
14) The rulers said to Jesus,
Man, if you be king, or Christ, then show us signs.
Who gave you right to drive these merchants out?
15) And Jesus said,
There is no loyal Jew who would not give his life
to save this temple from disgrace; in this I acted simply as a loyal Jew, and
you yourselves will bear me witness to this truth.
16) The signs of my messiahship will follow me in words and deeds.
17) And you may tear the temple down (and you will tear it down) and in three
days it will be built again more glorious than before.
18) Now Jesus meant that they might take his life; tear down his body,
temple of the Holy Breath, and he would rise again.
19) The Jews knew not the meaning of his words; they laughed his claims to
scorn. They said,
20) A multitude of men were forty and six years in
building up this house, and this young stranger claims that he will build it
up in three score hours; his words are idle, and his claims are naught.
21) And then they took the scourge with which he drove the merchants
out, and would have driven him away; but Philo, who had come from Egypt to
attend the feast, stood forth and said,
22) You men of Israel, hear! This man is more than
man; take heed to what you do. I have, myself, heard Jesus speak, and all the
winds were still.
23) And I have seen him touch the sick, and they were healed. He stands a sage
above the sages of the world;
24) And you will see his star arise, and it will grow until it is the
full-orbed Sun of Righteousness.
25) Do not be hasty, men; just wait and you will have the proofs of his
messiahship.
26) And then the priests laid down the scourge, and Jesus said,
27) Prepare, O Israel, prepare to meet your king!
But you can never see the king while you press sin as such a precious idol to
your hearts.
28) The king is God; the pure in heart alone can see the face of God and live.
29) And then the priests cried out,
This fellow claims to be the God. Is not this
sacrilege! away with him!
30) But Jesus said,
No man has ever heard me say, I am a king. Our
Father-God is king. With every loyal Jew I worship God.
31) I am the candle of the Lord aflame to light the way; and while you have
the light walk in the light.
CHAPTER 73
Jesus again visits the
temple, and is favorably received by the people.
Tells the parable of a king and his sons. Defines messiahship.
NEXT day the multitudes were surging through the temple courts, intent
on hearing Jesus speak.
2) And when he came the people said,
All hail! behold the king!
3) And Jesus spoke a parable; he said,
A king had vast domains; his people all were kin,
and lived in peace.
4) Now, after many years the king said to his people, Take these lands and all
I have; enhance their values; rule yourselves, and live in peace.
5) And then the people formed their states; selected governors and petty
kings.
6) But pride, ambition, selfish greed, and base ingratitude grew fast, and
kings began to war.
7) They wrote in all their statute books that might is right; and then the
strong destroyed the weak, and chaos reigned through all the vast domain.
8) A long time passed, and then the king looked out on his domain. He saw his
people in their cruel wars; he saw them sick and sore distressed; he saw the
strong enslave the weak,
9) And then he said, What shall I do? Shall I send forth a scourge? shall I
destroy my people all?
10) And then his heart was stirred with pity and he said, I will not send a
scourge; I will send forth my only son, heir to the throne, to teach the
people love, and peace, and righteousness.
11) He sent his son; the people scorned him and maltreated him, and nailed him
to a cross.
12) He was entombed; but death was far too weak to hold the prince, and he
arose.
13) He took a form man could not kill; and then he went again to teach the
people love, and peace and righteousness.
14) And thus God deals with men.
15) A lawyer came and asked,
What does messiah mean? and who has right to make
messiah of a man?
16) And Jesus said,
Messiah is one sent from God to seek and save the
lost. Messiahs are not made by men.
17) In first of every age Messiah comes to light the way; to heal up broken
hearts; to set the prisoners free. Messiah and the Christ are one.
18) Because a man claims to be Christ is not a sign that he is Christ.
19) A man may cause the streams to flow from flinty rocks; may bring storms at
will; may stay tempestuous winds; may heal the sick and raise the dead, and
not be sent from God.
20) All nature is subservient to the will of man, and evil men, as well as
good, have all the powers of mind, and may control the elements.
21) The head gives not the proof of true messiahship, for man by means of
intellect, can never know of God, nor bring himself to walk in light.
22) Messiah lives not in the head, but in the heart, the seat of mercy and of
love.
23) Messiah never works for selfish gains; he stands above the carnal self;
his words and deeds are for the universal good.
24) Messiah never tries to be a king, to wear a crown and sit upon an earthly
throne.
25) The king is earthy, of the earth; Messiah is the man from heaven.
26) And then the lawyer asked,
Why do you pose as king?
27) And Jesus said,
No man has ever heard me say that I am king. I
could not sit in Caesar's place and be the Christ.
28) Give unto Caesar what belongs to him; give unto God the treasures of your
heart.
CHAPTER 74
Jesus heals on the Sabbath,
and is censured by the Pharisees. Restores a drowned child.
Rescues a wounded dog. Cares for a homeless child. Speaks on the law of
kindness.
IT was the Sabbath day, and Jesus stood among the surging masses of the
people in the temple courts and sacred halls.
2) The blind, the deaf, the dumb, and those obsessed were there, and Jesus
spoke the Word, and they were healed.
3) On some he laid his hands, and they were healed; to others he just spoke
the Word, and they were full restored to health; but others had to go and wash
in certain pools; and others he anointed with a holy oil.
4) A doctor asked him why he healed in divers ways, and he replied,
5) Disease is discord in the human form, and
discords are produced in many ways.
6) The body is a harpsichord; sometimes the strings are too relaxed, and then
inharmony results.
7) Sometimes we find the strings too tense, and then another form of discord
is induced.
8) Disease is many-formed, and there are many ways to cure, to tune anew the
mystic harpsichord.
9) Now when the Pharisees were told that Jesus healed the people on the
Sabbath day they were enraged, and they commanded him to quit the place.
10) But Jesus said,
Was man designed to fit the Sabbath, or was the
Sabbath day designed to fit the man?
11) If you had fallen in a pit and, lo, the Sabbath day had come, and I should
pass your way, would you cry out.
12) Let me alone; it is a sin to help me on the Sabbath day; I'll swelter in
this filth until another day?
13) You Pharisees, you hypocrites! you know you would be glad to have my help
upon the Sabbath day, or any other day.
14) These people all have fallen into pits, and they are calling loud for me
to help them out, and man and God would curse me should I pass along and heed
them not.
15) And then the Pharisees returned to say their prayers, and curse the
man of God because he heeded not their words.
16) Now, in the evening Jesus stood beside a pool; a playful child had fallen
in, and it was drowned, and friends were bearing it away.
17) But Jesus called the carriers to stop; and then he stretched himself upon
the lifeless form, and breathed into its mouth the breath of life.
18) And then he called aloud unto the soul that had gone out, and it returned;
the child revived and lived.
19) And Jesus saw a wounded dog; it could not move; it lay beside the way and
groaned with pain. He took it in his arms and bore it to the home where he
abode.
20) He poured the healing oil into the wounds; he cared for it as though it
were a child till it was strong and well.
21) And Jesus saw a little boy who had no home, and he was hungry; when he
called for bread the people turned away.
22) And Jesus took the child and gave him bread; he wrapped him in his own
warm coat, and found for him a home.
23) To those who followed him the master said,
If man would gain again his lost estate he must
respect the brotherhood of life.
24) Whoever is not kind to every form of life - to man, to beast, to bird, and
creeping thing - cannot expect the blessings of the Holy One; for as we give,
so God will give to us.
CHAPTER 75
Nicodemus visits Jesus in
the night. Jesus reveals to him the meaning of
the new birth and the kingdom of heaven.
NICODEMUS was a ruler of the Jews, and He was earnest, learned and
devout.
2) He saw the master's signet in the face of Jesus as he talked, but was not
brave enough to publicly confess his faith in him;
3) So in the night he went to talk with Jesus at the home of Jude.
4) When Jesus saw him come he said,
Full blessed are the pure in heart;
5) Twice blessed are the fearless, pure in heart;
6) Thrice blessed are the fearless, pure in heart who dare to make confession
of their faith before the highest courts.
7) And Nicodemus said,
Hail, master, hail! I know you are a teacher come
from God, for man alone could never teach as you have taught; could never do
the works that you have done.
8) And Jesus said,
Except a man be born again he cannot see the
king; he cannot comprehend the words I speak.
9) And Nicodemus said,
How can a man be born again? Can he go back into the
womb and come again to life?
10) And Jesus said,
The birth of which I speak is not the birth of
flesh.
11) Except a man be born of water and the Holy Breath, he cannot come into the
kingdom of the Holy One.
12) That which is born of flesh is child of man; that which is born of Holy
Breath is child of God.
13) The winds blow where they please; men hear their voices, and may note
results; but they know not from whence they come, nor where they go; and so is
every one that is born of Holy Breath.
14) The ruler said,
I do not understand; pray tell me plainly what you
mean.
15) And Jesus said,
The kingdom of the Holy One is in the soul; men
cannot see it with their carnal eyes; with all their reasoning powers they
comprehend it not.
16) It is a life deep hid in God; its recognition is the work of inner
consciousness.
17) The kingdoms of the world are kingdoms of the sight; the kingdom of the
Holy One is that of faith; its king is love.
18) Men cannot see the love of God unmanifest, and so our Father-God has
clothed this love with flesh - flesh of a son of man.
19) And that the world may see and know this love made manifest, the son of
man must needs be lifted up.
20) As Moses in the wilderness raised up the serpent for the healing of the
flesh, the son of man must be raised up.
21) That all men bitten by the serpent of the dust, the serpent of this carnal
life, may live.
22) He who believes in him shall have eternal life.
23) For God so loved the world that he sent forth his only son to be raised up
that men may see the love of God.
24) God did not send his son to judge the world; he sent him forth to save the
world; to bring men to the light.
25) But men love not the light, for light reveals their wickedness; men love
the dark.
26) Now, every one who loves the truth comes to the light; he does not fear to
have his works made manifest.
27) The light had come, and Nicodemus went his way; he knew the meaning of the
birth of Holy Breath; he felt the presence of the Spirit in his soul.
28) And Jesus tarried in Jerusalem for many days and taught and healed the
sick.
29) The common people gladly listened to his words, and many left their all of
carnal things and followed him.
CHAPTER 76
Jesus in Bethlehem.
Explains the Empire of Peace to the shepherds.
An unusual light appears. The shepherds recognize Jesus as the Christ.
THE Logos went to Bethlehem, and many people followed him.
2) He found the shepherd's home where he was cradled when a babe; here he
abode.
3) He went up to the hills where more than thirty years before the shepherds
watched their flocks and heard the messenger of peace exclaim:
4) At midnight in a cave in Bethlehem the Prince
of Peace is born.
5) And shepherds still were there, and sheep still fed upon the
hills.
6) And in the valley near great flocks of snow-white doves were flying to and
fro.
7) And when the shepherds knew that Jesus, whom the people called the king,
had come, they came from near and far to speak to him.
8) And Jesus said to them,
Behold the life of innocence and peace!
9) White is the symbol of the virtuous and pure! the lamb of innocence; the
dove of peace;
10) And it was meet that love should come in human form amid such scenes as
these.
11) Our father Abraham walked through these vales, and on these very hills he
watched his flocks and herds.
12) And here it was that one, the Prince of Peace, the king of Salim, came;
the Christ in human form; a greater far than Abraham was he.
13) And here it was that Abraham gave to this king of Salim, tithes of all he
had.
14) This Prince of Peace went forth in battle everywhere. He had no sword; no
armor of defense; no weapons of offence;
15) And yet he conquered men, and nations trembled at his feet.
16) The hosts of Egypt quailed before this sturdy king of right; the kings of
Egypt placed their crowns upon his head,
17) And gave into his hands the sceptre of all Egypt land, and not a drop of
blood was shed, and not a captive placed in chains;
18) But everywhere the conqueror threw wide the prison doors and set the
captives free.
19) And, once again, the Prince of Peace has come, and from these blessed
hills he goes again to fight.
20) And he is clothed in white; his sword is truth, his shield is faith; his
helmet is innocence; his breath is love; his watchword peace.
21) But this is not a carnal war; it is not man at war with man; but it is
right against the wrong.
22) And love is captain, love is warrior, love is armor, love is all, and love
shall win.
23) And then again the hills of Bethlehem were clothed with light, again the
messenger exclaimed,
24) Peace, peace on earth, good will to men.
25) And Jesus taught the people; healed the sick; revealed the
mysteries of the kingdom of the Holy One.
26) And many said,
He is the Christ; the king who was to come has come;
Praise God.
CHAPTER 77
Jesus in Hebron. Goes to Bethany. Advises Ruth regarding certain family troubles.
WITH three disciples Jesus went to Hebron where he tarried seven days
and taught.
2) And then he went to Bethany and in the home of Lazarus he taught.
3) The evening came; the multitudes were gone, and Jesus, Lazarus, and his
sisters, Martha, Ruth and Mary, were alone.
4) And Ruth was sore distressed. Her home was down in Jericho; her husband was
the keeper of an inn; his name was Asher-ben.
5) Now, Asher was a Pharisee of strictest mien and thought, and he regarded
Jesus with disdain.
6) And when his wife confessed her faith in Christ, he drove her from his
home.
7) But Ruth resisted not; she said,
If Jesus is the Christ he knows the way, and I am
sure He is the Christ.
8) My husband may become enraged and slay my human form; he cannot kill the
soul, and in the many mansions of my Fatherland I have a dwelling-place.
9) And Ruth told Jesus all; and then she said,
What shall I do?
10) And Jesus said,
Your husband is not willingly at fault; he is
devout; he prays to God, our Father-God.
11) His zeal for his religion is intense; in this he is sincere; but it has
driven him insane, and he believes it right to keep his home unsullied by the
heresy of Christ.
12) He feels assured that he has done the will of God in driving you away.
13) Intolerance is ignorance matured.
14) The light will come to him some day, and then he will repay for all your
heartaches, griefs and tears.
15) And Ruth, you must not think that you are free from blame.
16) If you had walked in wisdom's ways, and been content to hold your peace,
this grief would not have come to you.
17) It takes a long, long time for light to break into the shell of prejudice,
and patience is the lesson you have need to learn.
18) The constant dropping of the water wears away the hardest stone.
19) The sweet and holy incense of a godly life will melt intolerance much
quicker than the hottest flame, or hardest blow.
20) Just wait a little time, and then go home with sympathy and love. Talk not
of Christ, nor of the kingdom of the Holy One.
21) Just live a godly life; refrain from harshness in your speech, and you
will lead your husband to the light.
22) And it was so.
CHAPTER 78
Jesus in Jericho. Heals a
servant of Asher. Goes to the Jordan and speaks to the people.
Establishes baptism as a pledge of discipleship. Baptizes six disciples, who
in turn baptize many people.
AND Jesus went to Jericho, and at the inn of Asher he abode.
2) A servant at the inn was sick, nigh unto death; the healers could not cure.
3)And Jesus came and touched the dying girl, and said,
Malone, arise!
and in a moment pain was gone; the fever ceased; the maid was well.
4) And then the people brought their sick, and they were healed.
5) But Jesus did not tarry long in Jericho; he went down to the Jordan ford
where John was wont to teach.
6) The multitudes were there and Jesus said to them,
Behold, the time has come; the kingdom is at
hand.
7) None but the pure in heart can come into the kingdom of the Holy One; but
every son and daughter of the human race is called upon to turn from evil and
become the pure in heart.
8) The resolution to attain and enter through the Christine gate into the
kingdom of the Holy One will constitute discipleship, and every one must make
a pledge of his discipleship.
9) John washed your bodies in the stream, symbolic of the cleansing of the
soul, in preparation for the coming of the king, the opening of the Christine
gate into the kingdom of the Holy One.
10) John did a mighty work; but now the Christine gate is opened up, and
washing is established as the pledge of your discipleship.
11) Until this age shall close this pledge shall be a rite, and shall be
called, Baptism rite; and it shall be a sign to men, and seal to God of men's
discipleship.
12) You men of every nation, hear! Come unto me; the Christine gate is opened
up; turn from your sins and be baptized, and you shall enter through the gate
and see the king.
13) The six disciples who had followed Jesus stood a-near, and Jesus
led them forth and in the Jordan he baptized them in the name of Christ; and
then he said to them,
14) My friends, you are the first to enter
through the Christine gate into the kingdom of the Holy One.
15) As I baptized you in the name of Christ, so you shall, in that sacred
name, baptize all men and women who will confess their faith in Christ, and
shall renounce their sins.
16) And, lo, the multitudes came down, renounced their sins, confessed their
faith in Christ, and were baptized.
CHAPTER 79
John, the harbinger, at
Salim. A lawyer inquires about Jesus.
John explains to the multitude the mission of Jesus.
NOW, John the harbinger, was at the Salim Springs where water was
abundant, and washed the bodies of the people who confessed their sins.
2) A Jewish lawyer went to John and said,
Has not this man from Galilee, he whom you washed
and called the Christ, become your foe?
3) They say that he is at the Jordan ford; that he is building up a church, or
something else, and that he washes people just as you have done.
4) And John replied,
This Jesus is indeed the Christ whose way I came
to pave. He is not foe of mine.
5) The bridegroom hath the bride; his friends are near, and when they hear his
voice they all rejoice.
6) The kingdom of the Holy One is bride, and Christ the groom; and I, the
harbinger, am full of joy because they prosper so abundantly.
7) I have performed the work that I was sent to do; the work of Jesus just
begins.
8) Then turning to the multitudes he said, Christ is the king of
righteousness; Christ is the love of God; yea, he is God; one of the holy
persons of the Triune God.
9) Christ lives in every heart of purity.
10) Now, Jesus who is preaching at the Jordan ford, has been subjected to the
hardest tests of human life, and he has conquered all the appetites and
passions of the carnal man,
11) And by the highest court of heaven, has been declared a man of such
superior purity and holiness that he can demonstrate the presence of the
Christ on earth.
12) Lo, love divine, which is the Christ, abides in him, and he is pattern for
the race.
13) And every man can see in him what every man will be when he has conquered
all the passions of the selfish self.
14) In water I have washed the bodies of the people who have turned from sin,
symbolic of the cleansing of the soul;
15) But Jesus bathes for ever in the living waters of the Holy Breath.
16) And Jesus comes to bring the savior of the world to men; Love is the
savior of the world.
17) And all who put their trust in Christ, and follow Jesus as a pattern and a
guide, have everlasting life.
18) But they who do not trust the Christ, and will not purify their hearts so
that the Christ can dwell within, can never enter life.
CHAPTER 80
Lamaas comes from India to
see Jesus. He listens to the teachings of John at Salim.
John tells him of the divine mission of Jesus. Lamaas finds Jesus at the
Jordan.
The masters recognize each other.
LAMAAS, priest of Brahm, who was a friend of Jesus when he was in the
temple of Jagannath, had heard of Jesus and his mighty works in many lands;
and he had left his home and come to Palestine in search of him.
2) And as he journeyed towards Jerusalem he heard of John, the harbinger, who
was esteemed a prophet of the living God.
3) Lamaas found the harbinger at Salim Springs; for many days he was a silent
listener to the pungent truths he taught.
4) And he was present when the Pharisee told John of Jesus and his mighty
works.
5) He heard the answer of the harbinger; heard him bless the name of Jesus;
whom he called the Christ.
6) And then he spoke to John; he said,
Pray tell me more about this Jesus whom you call the
Christ.
7) And John replied,
this Jesus is the love of God made manifest.
8) Lo, men are living on the lower planes - the planes of greed and
selfishness; for self they fight; they conquer with the sword.
9) In every land the strong enslave and kill the weak. All kingdoms rise by
force of arms; for force is king.
10) This Jesus comes to overthrow this iron rule of force, and seat Love on
the throne of power.
11) And Jesus fears no man. He preaches boldly in the courts of kings, and
everywhere, that victories won by force of arms are crimes;
12) That every worthy end may be attained by gentleness and love just as the
Prince of Peace, Melchisedec, the priest of God, won gallant victories in war
without the shedding of a drop of blood.
13) You ask where are the temples of the Christ? He ministers at shrines not
made with hands; his temples are the hearts of holy men who are prepared to
see the king.
14) The groves of nature are his synagogues; his forum is the world.
15) He has no priests dressed up in puppet style to be admired by men; for
every son of man is priest of Love.
16) When man has purified his heart by faith, he needs no middle man to
intercede.
17) He is on friendly terms with God; is not afraid of him, and he is able,
and is bold enough, to lay his body on the altar of the Lord.
18) Thus every man is priest, and is himself a living sacrifice.
19) You need not seek the Christ, for when your heart is purified the Christ
will come, and will abide with you for evermore.
20) And then Lamaas journeyed on; he came to Jesus as he taught beside the
ford.
21) And Jesus said,
Behold the Star of India!
22) Lamaas said,
Behold the Sun of Righteousness!
And he confessed his faith in Christ, and followed him.
CHAPTER 81
The Christines journey
toward Galilee. They tarry for a time
at Jacob's well and Jesus teaches a woman of Samaria.
THE Christine gate into the kingdom of the Holy One was opened up, and
Jesus and the six disciples and Lamaas left the Jordan ford and turned their
faces toward Galilee.
2) Their way lay through Samaria and as they journeyed on they came to Sychar,
which was near the plot of ground that Jacob gave to Joseph when a youth.
3) And Jacob's well was there, and Jesus sat beside the well in silent
thought, and his disciples went into the town to purchase bread.
4) A woman of the town came out to fill her pitcher from the well; and Jesus
was athirst, and when he asked the woman for a drink she said,
5) I am a woman of Samaria, and you a Jew; do you
not know that there is enmity between Samaritans and Jews? They traffic not;
then why ask me the favour of a drink?
6) And Jesus said,
Samaritans and Jews are all the children of one
God, our Father-God, and they are kin.
7) It is but prejudice born of the carnal mind that breeds this enmity and
hate.
8) While I was born a Jew, I recognise the brotherhood of life. Samaritans are
just as dear to me as Jew or Greek.
9) And then, had you but known the blessings that our Father-God has sent to
men by me, you would have asked me for a drink.
10) And I would gladly have given you a cup of water from the Fount of Life,
and you would never thirst again.
11) The woman said,
This well is deep, and you have naught with which to
draw; how could you get the water that you speak about?
12) And Jesus said,
The water that I speak about comes not from
Jacob's well; it flows from the springs that never fail.
13) Lo, everyone who drinks from Jacob's well will thirst again; but they who
drink the water that I give will never thirst again;
14) For they themsleves become a well, and from their inner parts the
sparkling waters bubble up into eternal life.
15) The woman said,
Sir, I would drink from that rich well of life. Give
me to drink, that I may thirst no more.
16) And Jesus said,
Go call your husband from the town that he may
share with you this living cup.
17) The woman said,
I have no husband, sir.
18) And Jesus answered her and said,
You scarcely know what husband means; you seem to
be a gilded butterfly that flits from flower to flower.
19) To you there is no sacredness in marriage ties, and you affintise with any
man.
20) And you have lived with five of them who were esteemed as husbands by your
friends.
21) The woman said,
Do I not speak unto a prophet and a seer? Will you
not condescend to tell me who you are?
22) And Jesus said,
I need not tell you who I am, for you have read
the Law, the Prophets and the Psalms that tell of me.
23) I am one come to break away the wall that separates the sons of men. In
Holy Breath there is no Greek, no Jew, and no Samaritan; no bond, nor free;
for all are one.
24) The woman asked,
Why do you say that only in Jerusalem man ought to
pray, and that they should not worship in our holy mount?
25) And Jesus said,
What you have said, I do not say. One place is
just as sacred as another place.
26) The hour has come when men must worship God within the temple of the
heart; for God is not within Jerusalem, nor in your holy mount in any way that
he is not in every heart.
27) Our God is Spirit; they who worship him must worship him in spirit and in
truth.
28) The woman said,
We know that when Messiah comes that he will lead us
in the ways of truth.
29 And Jesus said,
Behold the Christ has come; Messiah speaks to
you.
CHAPTER 82
While Jesus is teaching, his disciples come and marvel because he speaks with a Samaritan. Many people from Sychar come to see Jesus. He speaks to them. With his disciples he goes to Sychar and remains for certain days.
WHILE Jesus yet was talking to the woman at the well, the six disciples
came from Sychar with the food.
2) And when they saw him talking to a woman of Samaria, and one they thought a
courtesan, they were amazed; yet no one asked him why he spoke with her.
3) The woman was so lost in thought and so intent on what the master said,
that she forgot her errand to the well; she left her pitcher and ran quickly
to the town.
4) She told the people all about the prophet she had met at Jacob's well; she
said,
He told me every thing I ever did.
5) And when the people would know more about the man, the woman said,
Come out and see. And multitudes went out to Jacob's well.
6) When Jesus saw them come he said to those who followed him,
You need not say, It is four months before the
harvest time;
7) Behold, the harvest time is now. Lift up your eyes and look; the fields are
golden with the ripened grain.
8) Lo, many sowers have gone forth to sow the seeds of life; the seed has
grown; the plants have strengthened in the summer sun; the grain has ripened,
and the master calls for men to reap.
9) And you shall go out in the fields and reap what other men have sown; but
when the reckoning day shall come the sowers and the reapers all together will
rejoice.
10 And Philip said to Jesus,
Stay now your work a time and sit beneath this olive
tree and eat a portion of this food; you must be faint for you have eaten
naught since early day.
11) But Jesus said,
I am not faint, for I have food to eat you know
not of.
12) Then the disciples said among themselves,
Who could have brought him aught to eat?
13) They did not know that he had power to turn the very ethers into
bread.
14) And Jesus said,
The master of the harvest never sends his reapers
forth and feeds them not.
15) My Father who has sent me forth into the harvest field of human life will
never suffer me to want; and when he calls for you to serve, lo, he will give
you food, will clothe and shelter you.
16) Then turning to the people of Samaria, he said,
Think not it strange that I, a Jew, should speak
to you, for I am one with you.
17) The universal Christ who was and is, and evermore shall be, is manifest in
me; but Christ belongs to every man.
18) God scatters forth his blessings with a lavish hand, and he is not more
kind to one than to another one of all the creatures of his hand.
19) I just came up from Judah's hills, and God's same sun was shining and his
flowers were blooming, and in the night his stars were just as bright as they
are here.
20) God cannot cast a child away; the Jew, the Greek and the Samaritan are
equal in his sight.
21) And why should men and women fret and quarrel, like children in their
plays?
22) The lines that separate the sons of men are made of straw, and just a
single breath of love would blow them all away.
23) The people were amazed at what the stranger said, and many said,
The Christ that was to come has surely come.
24) And Jesus went with them into the town, and tarried certain days.
CHAPTER 83
Jesus teaches the people of
Sychar. Casts a wicked spirit out of one obsessed.
Sends the spirit to its own place. Heals many people. The priests are
disturbed
by the presence of Jesus in Sychar, but he speaks to them and wins their
favor.
IN Sychar Jesus taught the people in the market place.
2) A man obsessed was brought to him. The wicked spirit that possessed the man
was full of violence and lust, and often threw his victim to the ground.
3) And Jesus spoke aloud and said,
Base spirit, loose your hold upon the vitals of
this man, and go back to your own.
4) And then the spirit begged that he might go into the body of a dog
that stood near by.
5) But Jesus said,
Why harm the helpless dog? Its life is just as
dear to it as mine to me.
6) It is not yours to throw the burden of your sin on any living thing.
7) By your own deeds and evil thoughts you have brought all these perils on
yourself. You have hard problems to be solved; but you must solve them for
yourself.
8) By thus obsessing man, you make your own conditions doubly sad. Go back
into your own domain; refrain from harming anything, and by and by, you will
yourself be free.
9) The wicked spirit left the man and went unto his own. The man looked
up in thankfulness and said,
Praise God.
10) And many of the people brought their sick, and Jesus spoke the
Word, and they were healed.
11) The ruler of the synagogue and all the priests were much disturbed when
told that Jesus from Jerusalem was preaching in the town.
12) They thought that he had come to proselyte and stir up strife among
Samaritans.
13) And so they sent an officer to bring him to the synagogue that he might
give a reason for his presence in the town.
14) But Jesus said to him who came,
Go back and tell the priests and ruler of the
synagogue that I am not engaged in crime.
15) I come to bind up broken hearts, to heal the sick, and cast the evil
spirits out of those obsessed.
16) Tell them their prophets spoke of me; that I come to break no law, but to
fulfill the highest law.
17) The man returned and told the priests and ruler of the synagogue
what Jesus said.
18) The ruler was amazed, and with the priests went to the market place where
Jesus was.
19) And when he saw them, Jesus said,
Behold the honored men of all Samaria! the men
ordained to lead the people in the way of right.
20) And I am come to help, and not to hinder in their work.
21) There are two classes of the sons of men; they who would build the human
race upon the sure foundation stones of justice, truth, equality and right,
22) And they who would destroy the holy temple, where the Spirit dwells, and
bring their fellows down to beggary and crime.
23) The holy brotherhood of right must stand united in the stirring conflicts
of the hour.
24) No matter whether they be Jews, Samaritans, Assyrians, or Greeks, they
must tramp down beneath their feet all strife, all discord, jealousy and hate,
and demonstrate the brotherhood of man.
25) Then to the ruler of the synagogue he spoke: he said,
United in the cause of right we stand; divided we
will fall.
26) And then he took the ruler by the hand; a love light filled their
souls; and all the people were amazed.
CHAPTER 84
The Christines resume their journey. They tarry a while in the city of Samaria. Jesus speaks in the synagogue. Heals a woman by mental power. He disappears, but later joins his disciples as they journey towards Nazareth.
THE Christines turned their faces toward the land of Galilee; but when
they reached the city of Samaria, the multitudes pressed hard about them,
begging them to tarry in their city for a while.
2) And then they went up to the synagogue, and Jesus opened up the book of
Moses, and he read:
3) In thee and in thy seed shall all the nations
of the earth be blest.
4) And then he closed the book and said, These words were spoken by the Lord
of hosts unto our father Abraham, and Israel has been blessedness to all the
world.
5) We are his seed; but not a tithe of the great work that we were called to
do has yet been done.
6) The Lord of hosts has set apart the Israelites to teach the unity of God
and man; but one can never teach that which he does not demonstrate in life.
7) Our God is Spirit, and in him all wisdom, love and strength abide.
8) In every man these sacred attributes are budding forth, and in due time
they will unfold; the demonstration will completed be, and man will comprehend
the fact of unity.
9) And you, ruler of the synagogue, and you, these priests, are honoured
servants of the Lord of hosts.
10) All men are looking unto you for guidance in the ways of life; example is
another name for priest; so what you would that people be, that you must be.
11) A simple godly life may win ten thousand souls to purity and right.
12) And all the people said,
Amen.
13) Then Jesus left the synagogue, and at the hour of evening prayer he
went up to the sacred grove, and all the people turned their faces toward
their holy mount and prayed.
14) And Jesus prayed.
15) And as he sat in silent mood a voice of soul spoke to his soul imploring
help.
16) And Jesus saw a woman on a couch in sore distress; for she was sick nigh
unto death.
17) She could not speak, but she had heard that Jesus was a man of God, and in
her heart she called on him for help.
18) And Jesus helped; he did not speak; but like a flash of light, a mighty
virtue from his soul filled full the body of the dying one, and she arose, and
joined her kindred while they prayed.
19) Her kindred were astonished and they said to her,
How were you healed?
And she replied,
20) I do not know; I simply asked the man of God in
thought for healing power, and in a moment I was well.
21) The people said,
The gods have surely come to earth; for man has not
the power to heal by thought.
22) But Jesus said,
The greatest power in heaven and earth is
thought.
23) God made the universe by thought; he paints the lily and the rose with
thought.
24) Why think it strange that I should send a healing thought and change the
ethers of disease and death to those of health and life?
25) Lo, you shall see far greater things than this, for by the power of holy
thought, my body will be changed from carnal flesh to spirit form; and so will
yours.
26) When Jesus had thus said he disappeared, and no one saw him go.
27) His own disciples did not comprehend the change; they knew not where their
master went, and they went on their way.
28) But as they walked and talked about the strange event, lo, Jesus came and
walked with them to Nazareth of Galilee.
CHAPTER 85
John, the harbinger,
censures Herod for his wickedness.
Herod sends him to prison in Machaerus. Jesus tells why God permitted the
imprisonment of John.
HEROD ANTIPAS, the tetrarch of Paraca and of Galilee was dissipated,
selfish and tyrannical.
2) He drove his wife away from home that he might take as wife Herodias, the
wife of one, a near of kin, a woman, like himself, immoral and unjust.
3) The city of Tiberius, upon the shores of Galilee, was Herod's home.
4) Now John, the harbinger, had left the Salim Springs to teach the people by
the sea of Galilee; and he rebuked the wicked ruler and his stolen wife for
all their sins.
5) Herodias was enraged because the preacher dared accuse her and her husband
of their crimes;
6) And she prevailed on Herod to arrest the harbinger and cast him in a
dungeon in the castle of Machaerus that stood beside the Bitter Sea.
7) And Herod did as she required; then she lived in peace in all her sins, for
none were bold enough to censure her again.
8) The followers of John were warned to speak not of the trial and
imprisonment of John.
9) By order of the court, they were restrained from teaching in the public
halls.
10) They could not talk about this better life that Herod called the Heresy of
John.
11) When it was known that John had been imprisoned by the tetrarch court, the
friends of Jesus thought it best that he should not remain in Galilee.
12) But Jesus said,
I have no need of fear; my time has not yet come;
no man can stay me till my work is done.
13) And when they asked why God permitted Herod to imprison John, he
said,
14) Behold yon stalk of wheat! When it has
brought the grain to perfectness, it is of no more worth; it falls, becoming
part of earth again from which it came.
15) John is a stalk of golden wheat; he brought unto maturity the richest
grain of all the earth; his work is done.
16) If he had said another word it might have marred the symmetry of what is
now a noble life.
17) And when my work is done the rulers will do unto me what they have done to
John, and more.
18) All these events are part of God's own plan. The innocent will suffer
while the wicked are in power; but woe to them who cause the suffering of the
innocents.
CHAPTER 86
The Christines are in
Nazareth. Jesus speaks in the synagogue. He offends the people
and they attempt to kill him. He mysteriously disappears, and returns to the
synagogue.
THE Christines were in Nazareth. It was the Sabbath day, and Jesus went
up to the synagogue.
2) The keeper of the books gave one to Jesus and he opened it and read:
3) The Spirit of the Lord has overshadowed me; he
has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor; to set the captives free; to
open sightless eyes;
4) To bring relief to those oppressed and bruised, and to proclaim, The year
of jubilee has come.
5) When he had read these words he closed the book and said,
This scripture is fulfilled before your eyes this
day. The year of jubilee has come; the time when Israel shall bless the world.
6) And then he told them many things about the kingdom of the Holy One;
about the hidden way of life; about forgiveness of sins.
7) Now, many people knew not who the speaker was: And others said,
Is not this Joseph's son? Does not his mother live
on Marmion way?
8) And one spoke out and said,
This is the man who did such mighty works in Cana,
in Capernaum, and in Jerusalem.
9) And then the people said,
Physician heal yourself. Do here among your kindred
all the mighty works that you have done in other towns.
10) And Jesus said,
No prophet is received with honor by the people
of his native land; and prophets are not sent to every one.
11) Elijah was a man of God; he had the power and he closed the gates of
heaven, and it did not rain for forty months; and when he spoke the Word, the
rain come on, the earth brought forth again.
12) And there were many widows in the land; but this Elijah went to none but
Zarephath, and she was blessed.
13) And when Elisha lived, lo, many lepers were in Israel, but none were
cleansed save one - the Syrian who had faith.
14) You have no faith; you seek for signs to satisfy your curious whims; but
you shall see not till you open up your eyes of faith.
15) And then the people were enraged; they rushed upon him, bound him
down with cords, and took him to a precipice not far away, intent to cast him
down to death;
16) But when they thought they held him fast, he disappeared; unseen he passed
among the angry men, and went his way.
17) The people were confounded and they said, What manner of a man is this?
18) And when they came again to Nazareth, they found him teaching in the
synagogue.
19) They troubled him no more for they were sore afraid.
CHAPTER 87
The Christines go to Cana.
Jesus heals a nobleman's child.
The Christines go to Capernaum.
Jesus provides a spacious home for his mother.
He announces his intention to choose twelve apostles.
IN Nazareth Jesus taught no more; he went with his disciples up to Cana,
where, at a marriage feast, he once turned water into wine.
2) And here he met a man of noble birth whose home was in Capernaum, whose son
was sick.
3) The man had faith in Jesus' power to heal, and when he learned that he had
come to Galilee he went in haste to meet him on the way.
4) The man met Jesus at the seventh hour, and he entreated him to hasten to
Capernaum to save his son.
5) But Jesus did not go; he stood aside in silence for a time, and then he
said,
Your faith has proved a healing balm; your son is
well.
6) The man believed and went his way toward Capernaum and as he went he
met a servant from his home who said,
7) My lord, You need not haste; your son is well.
8) The father asked,
When did my son begin to mend?
9) The servant said,
On yesterday about the seventh hour the fever left.
10) And then the father knew it was the healing balm that Jesus sent
that saved his son.
11) In Cana Jesus tarried not; he went his way with his disciples to
Capernaum, where he secured a spacious house where, with his mother, he could
live, where his disciples might repair to hear the Word.
12) He called the men who had confessed their faith in him to meet him in his
home, which his disciples called, The school of Christ; and when they came he
said to them,
13) This gospel of the Christ must be proclaimed
in all the world.
14) This Christine vine will be a mighty vine whose branches will comprise the
peoples, tribes and tongues of all the earth.
15) I am the vine; twelve men shall be the branches of the stock, and these
shall send forth branches everywhere;
16) And from among the people who have followed me, the Holy Breath will call
the twelve.
17) Go now and do your work as you have done your work; but listen for the
call.
18) Then the disciples went unto their daily tasks, to do their work as
they had done, and Jesus went alone into the Hammoth hills to pray.
19) Three days and nights he spent communing with the Silent Brotherhood;
then, in the power of Holy breath he came to call the twelve.
CHAPTER 88
Jesus walks by the sea.
Stands in a fishing boat and speaks to the people.
Under his direction the fishermen secure a great catch of fish.
He selects and calls his twelve apostles.
BESIDE the sea of Galilee the Christine master walked, and multitudes of
people followed him.
2) The fishing boats had just come in, and Peter and his brother waited in
their boats; their helpers were ashore repairing broken nets.
3) And Jesus went into a boat and Peter pushed it out a little ways from
shore; and Jesus standing in the boat spoke to the multitude. He said,
4) Isaiah, prophet of the Lord of hosts, looked
forward and he saw this day; he saw the people standing by the sea, and he
exclaimed,
5) The land of Zebulon and Napthali, land beyond the Jordan and toward the
sea, the Gentile Galilee,
6) The people were in darkness, knowing not the way; but, lo, they saw the Day
Star rise; a light streamed forth; they saw the way of life; they walked
therein.
7) And you are blest beyond all people of the earth today, because you first
may see the light, and may become the children of the light.
8) Then Jesus said to Peter,
Bring your nets aboard, and put out in the deep.
9) And Peter did as Jesus bade him do; but in a faithless way he said,
This is a useless trip; there are no fish upon this
shore of Galilee today; with Andrew I have toiled all night, and taken naught.
10) But Jesus saw beneath the surface of the sea; he saw a multitude of
fish. He said to Peter,
11) Cast out your net upon the right side of the
boat.
12) And Peter did as Jesus said, and, lo, the net was filled; it scarce
was strong enough to hold the multitude of fish.
13) And Peter called to John and James, who were near by, for help; and when
the net was hauled to boat, both boats were well nigh filled with fish.
14) When Peter saw the heavy catch, he was ashamed of what he said; ashamed
because he had no faith, and he fell down at Jesus' feet, and said,
Lord, I believe!
15) And Jesus said,
Behold the catch! from henceforth you shall fish
no more for fish;
16) You shall cast forth the Christine net into the sea of human life, upon
the right side of the boat; you shall ensnare the multitudes to holiness and
peace.
17) Now, when they reached the shore the Christine master called to
Peter, Andrew, James and John and said,
18) You fishermen of Galilee, the masters have a
mighty work for us to do; I go, and you may follow me.
And they left all and followed him.
19) And Jesus walked along the shore, and seeing Philip and Nathaniel walking
on the beach he said to them.
20) You teachers of Bethsaida, who long have
taught the people Greek philosophy, the masters have a higher work for you and
me to do; I go and you may follow me;
and then they followed him.
21) A little farther on there stood a Roman tribute house, and Jesus saw the
officer in charge; his name was Matthew, who once abode in Jericho;
22) The youth who once ran on before the Lord into Jerusalem and said, Behold
the Christines come.
23) And Matthew was a man of wealth, and learned in wisdom of the Jews, the
Syrians and the Greeks.
24) And Jesus said to him,
Hail, Matthew, trusted servant of the Caesars,
hail! the masters call us to the tribute house of souls; I go and you may
follow me.
And Matthew followed him.
25) Ischariot and his son, whose name was Judas, were employed by Matthew and
were at the tribute house.
26) And Jesus said to Judas,
Stay your work; the masters call us to a duty in
the savings bank of souls; I go and you may follow me.
And Judas followed him.
27) And Jesus met a lawyer who heard about the Christine master and had come
from Antioch to study in the school of Christ.
28) This man was Thomas, man of doubt, and yet a Greek philosopher of culture
and of power.
29) But Jesus saw in him the lines of faith, and said to him,
The masters have a need of men who can interpret
law; I go, and you may follow me.
And Thomas followed him.
30) And when the evening came and Jesus was at home, behold, there came his
kindred, James and Jude, the sons of Alpheus and Miriam.
31) And these were men of faith, and they were carpenters of Nazareth.
32) And Jesus said to them,
Behold, for you have toiled with me, and with my
father Joseph, building houses for the homes of men. The masters call us now
to aid in building homes for souls; homes built without the sound of hammer,
axe, or saw;
33) I go, and you may follow me.
And James and Jude exclaimed,
Lord, we will follow you.
34) And on the morrow Jesus sent a message unto Simon, leader of the Zelotes,
a strict exponent of the Jewish law.
35 And in the message Jesus said,
The masters call for men to demonstrate the faith
of Abraham; I go, and you may follow me.
And Simon followed him.
CHAPTER 89
The twelve apostles are at
Jesus' home and are consecrated to their work. Jesus instructs them.
He goes to the synagogue on the Sabbath and teaches. He casts an unclean
spirit out of one obsessed.
He heals Peter's mother-in-law.
NOW, on the day before the Sabbath day, the twelve disciples who had
received the call were met with one accord in Jesus' home.
2) And Jesus said to them,
This is the day to consecrate yourselves unto the
work of God; so let us pray.
3) Turn from the outer to the inner self; close all the doors of carnal self
and wait.
4) The Holy Breath will fill this place, and you will be baptized in Holy
Breath.
5) And then they prayed; a light more brilliant than the noonday sun
filled all the room, and tongues of flame from every head rose high in air.
6) The atmosphere of Galilee was set astir; a sound like distant thunder
rolled above Capernaum, and men heard songs, as though ten thousand angels
joined in full accord.
7) And then the twelve disciples heard a voice, a still, small voice, and just
one word was said, a word they dared not speak; it was the Sacred name of God.
8) And Jesus said to them,
By this omnific Word you may control the
elements, and all the powers of air.
9) And when within your souls you speak this Word, you have the keys of life
and death; of things that are; of things that were; of things that are to be.
10) Behold you are the twelve great branches of the Christine vine; the twelve
foundation stones; the twelve apostles of the Christ.
11) As lambs I send you forth among wild beasts; but the omnific Word will be
your buckler and your shield.
12) And then again the air was filled with song, and every living creature
seemed to say,
Praise God! Amen!
13) The next day was the Sabbath day; and Jesus went with his disciples
to the synagogue, and there he taught.
14) The people said,
He teaches not as do the scribes and Pharisees; but
as a man who knows, and has authority to speak.
15) As Jesus spoke, a man obsessed came in; the evil spirits that
obsessed the man were of the baser sort; they often threw their victim to the
ground, or in the fire.
16) And when the spirits saw the Christine master in the synagogue they knew
him, and they said,
17) You son of God, why are you here? would you
destroy us by the Word before our time? we would have naught to do with you;
let us alone.
18) But Jesus said to them,
By the omnific Word I speak; Come out; torment
this man no more; go to your place.
19) And then the unclean spirits threw the man upon the floor, and,
with a fiendish cry, they went away.
20) And Jesus lifted up the man and said to him,
If you will keep your mind fully occupied with
good, the evil spirits cannot find a place to stay;
21) They only come to empty heads and hearts. Go on your way and sin no more.
22) The people were astonished at the words that Jesus spoke, the work
he did. They asked among themselves,
23) Who is this man? From whence comes all this
power that even unclean spirits fear, and flee away?
24) The Christine master left the synagogue; with Peter, Andrew, James
and John, he went to Peter's house where one, a near of kin, was sick.
25) And Peter's wife came in; it was her mother who was sick.
26) And Jesus touched the woman as she lay upon her couch; he spoke the Word;
the fever ceased and she arose and ministered to them.
27) The neighbors heard what had occurred, and then brought their sick, and
those obsessed, and Jesus laid his hands on them, and they were healed.
CHAPTER 90
Jesus goes alone to a
mountain to pray. His disciples find him.
He calls the twelve and they journey through Galilee teaching and healing.
At Tiberius Jesus heals a leper. The Christines return to Capernaum. In his
own home Jesus heals a palsied man and makes known the philosophy of healing
and the forgiveness of sins.
THE Christine master disappeared; no one saw him go, and Peter, James
and John set forth to search for him; they found him at his trysting-place out
on the Hammoth hills.
2) And Peter said,
The city of Capernaum is wild; the people crowd the
streets and every public place is filled.
3) The men, the women and the children everywhere are asking for the man who
heals by will.
4) Your home and our homes are filled with people who are sick; they call for
Jesus who is called the Christ. What will we say to them?
5) And Jesus said,
A score of other cities call, and we must take
the bread of life to them. Go call the other men and let us go.
6) And Jesus and the twelve went to Bethsaida where Philip and
Nathaniel dwelt; and there they taught.
7) The multitudes believed on Christ, confessed their sins and were baptized,
and came into the kingdom of the Holy One.
8) The Christine master and the twelve went everywhere through all the towns
of Galilee, and taught, baptizing all who came in faith, and who confessed
their sins.
9) They opened up blind eyes, unstopped deaf ears, drove forth the evil ones
from those obsessed, and healed disease of every kind.
10) And they were in Tiberius by the sea, and as they taught a leper came
a-near and said,
Lord, I believe, and if you will but speak the Word
I will be clean.
11) And Jesus said to him,
I will; be clean.
And soon the leprosy was gone; the man was clean.
12) And Jesus charged the man, say naught to anyone, but go and show yourself
unto the priests and offer for your cleansing what the law demands.
13) The man was wild with joy; but then he went not to the priests, but in the
marts of trade, and everywhere he told what had been done.
14) And then the sick in throngs pressed hard upon the healer and the twelve,
imploring to be healed.
15) And they were so importunate that little could be done, and so the
Christines left the crowded thoroughfares, and went to desert places where
they taught the multitudes that followed them.
16) Now, after many days the Christines came back to Capernaum. When it was
noised around that Jesus was at home, the people came; they filled the house
till there was no more room, not even at the door.
17) And there were present scribes and Pharisees and doctors of the law from
every part of Galilee, and from Jerusalem, and Jesus opened up for them the
way of life.
18) Four men brought one, a palsied man upon a cot, and when they could not
pass the door they took the sick man to the roof, and opened up a way, then
let him down before the healer's face.
19) When Jesus saw their faith, he said unto the palsied man,
My son, be of good cheer; your sins are all
forgiven.
20) And when the scribes and Pharisees heard what he said, they said,
Why does this man speak thus? who can forgive the
sins of men but God?
21) And Jesus caught their thought; he knew they questioned thus among
themselves; he said to them,
22) Why reason thus among yourselves? What
matters it if I should say, Your sins are blotted out; or say, Arise, take up
your bed and walk?
23) But just to prove that men may here forgive the sins of men, I say,
(and then he spoke unto the palsied man)
24) Arise, take up your bed, and go your way.
25) And in the presence of them all the man arose, took up his bed, and went
his way.
26) The people could not comprehend the things they heard and saw. They said
among themselves,
This is a day we never can forget; we have seen
wondrous things today.
27) And when the multitudes had gone the twelve remained, and Jesus
said to them,
28) The Jewish festival draws near; next week we
will go to Jerusalem, that we may meet our brethren from afar, and open up to
them the way that they may see the king.
29) The Christines sought the quiet of their homes, where they remained
in prayer for certain days.
![]()
SECTION XVI
AIN
The Second Annual Epoch of the Christine Ministry of Jesus
CHAPTER 91
Jesus at the feast in
Jerusalem. Heals an impotent man.
Gives a practical lesson in healing. Affirms that all men are the sons of
God.
THE feast time came and Jesus and the twelve went to Jerusalem.
2) Upon the day before the Sabbath day they reached Mount Olives and they
tarried at an inn before Mount Olives on the north.
3) And in the early morning of the Sabbath day they went in through the sheep
gate to Jerusalem.
4) The healing fountain of Bethesda, near the gate, was thronged about with
people who were sick;
5) For they believed that at a certain time an angel came and poured a healing
virtue in the pool, and those who entered first and bathed, would be made
whole.
6) And Jesus and the twelve were standing near the pool.
7) And Jesus saw a man near by who had been stricken eight and thirty years;
without a hand to help he could not move.
8) And Jesus said to him,
My brother, man, would you be healed?
9) The man replied,
I earnestly desire to be healed; but I am helpless
and when the angel comes and pours the healing virtues in the pool,
10) Another who can walk, steps in the fountain first and I am left unhealed.
11) And Jesus said, Who sends an angel
here to potentise this pool for just a favored few?
12) I know it is not God, for he deals just the same with every one.
13) One has no better chance in heaven's healing fountain than another one.
14) The fount of health is in your soul; it has a door locked fast; the key is
faith;
15) And every one can have this key and may unlock the door and plunge into
the healing fount and be made whole.
16) And then the man looked up in hopeful mood and said,
Give me this key of faith.
17) And Jesus said,
Do you believe what I have said? According to
your faith it shall be done. Arise, take up your bed and walk.
18) The man at once arose and walked away; he only said,
Praise God.
19) And when the people asked,
Who made you whole? the man replied,
I do not know. A stranger at the pool just spoke a
word and I was well.
20) The many did not see when Jesus healed the man, and with the twelve
he went his way up to the temple courts.
21) And in the temple Jesus saw the man and said to him,
Behold you are made whole; from henceforth guard
your life aright;
22) Go on your way and sin no more, or something worse may fall on you.
23) And now the man knew who it was who made him whole.
24) He told the story to the priests and they were much enraged; they said,
The law forbids a man to heal upon the Sabbath
day.
25) But Jesus said,
My Father works on sabbath days and may not I?
26) He sends his rain, his sunshine and his dew; he makes his grass to grow,
his flowers to bloom; he speeds the harvests just the same on Sabbath days as
on the other days.
27) If it is lawful for the grass to grow and flowers to bloom on Sabbath days
it surely is not wrong to succour stricken men.
28) And then the priests were angered more and more because he claimed
to be a son of God.
29) A leading priest, Abihu, said,
This fellow is a menace to our nation and our laws;
he makes himself to be a son of God; it is not meet that he should live.
30) But Jesus said,
Abihu, Sir, you are a learned man; you surely
know the law of life. Pray tell who were the sons of God we read about in
Genesis, who took to wife the daughters of the sons of men?
31) Our father Adam; who was he? From whence came he? Had he a father? or did
he fall from heaven as a star?
32) We read that Moses said, He came from God. If Adam came from God pray, was
he offspring, was he son?
33) We are the children of this son of God; then tell me, learned priest, Who
are we if not sons of God?
34) The priest had urgent business and he went his way.
35) And Jesus said,
All men are sons of God and if they live a holy
life they always are at home with God.
36) They see and understand the works of God, and in his sacred name they can
perform these works.
37) The lightnings and the storms are messengers of God as well as the
sunshine, rain and dew.
38) The virtues of the heavens are in God's hands, and every loyal son may use
these virtues and these powers.
39) Man is the delegate of God to do his will on earth, and man can heal the
sick, control the spirits of the air, and raise the dead.
40) Because I have the power to do these things is nothing strange. All men
may gain the power to do these things; but they must conquer all the passions
of the lower self; and they can conquer if they will.
41) So man is God on earth, and he who honors God must honor man; for God and
man are one, as father and the child are one.
42) Behold, I say, The hour has come; the dead will hear the voice of man, and
live, because the son of man is son of God.
43) You men of Israel, hear! you live in death; you are locked up within the
tomb.
44) (There is no deeper death than ignorance and unbelief.)
45) But all will some day hear the voice of God made plain by voice of man,
and live. You all will know that you are sons of God, and by the sacred Word,
may do the works of God.
46) When you have come to life, that is, have come to realize that you are
sons of God, you who have lived the life of right, will open up your eyes on
fields of life.
47) But you who love the ways of sin will, in this resurrection, stand before
a judgment bar, and be condemned to pay
the debts you owe to men and to yourselves.
48) For whatsoever you have done amiss must be performed again, and yet again,
until you reach the stature of the perfect man.
49) But in due time the lowest and the highest will arise to walk in light.
50) Shall I accuse you unto God? No, for your prophet, Moses, has done that;
and if you hear not Moses' words you will not hearken unto me, for Moses wrote
of me.
CHAPTER 92
The Christines at a feast
in Lazarus' home. A fire rages in the town.
Jesus rescues a child from the flames and stays the fire by the Word.
He gives a practical lesson on how to redeem a drunken man.
NOW, Lazarus was at the feast and Jesus and the twelve went with him to
his home in Bethany.
2) And Lazarus and his sisters made a feast for Jesus and the twelve; and Ruth
and Asher came from Jericho; for Asher was no longer hostile to the Christ.
3) And while the guests sat at the board behold a cry,
The village is a-fire!
and all rushed out into the streets, and, lo, the homes of many neighbors were
in flames.
4) And in an upper room an infant lay asleep, and none could pass the flames
to save. The mother, wild with grief, was calling on the men to save her
child.
5) Then, with a voice that made the spirits of the fire pale and tremble,
Jesus said,
Peace, peace, be still!
6) And then he walked through smoke and flame, climbed up the falling
stair, and in a moment came again, and in his arms he brought the child. and
not a trace of fire was on himself, his raiment, or the child.
7) Then Jesus raised his hand, rebuked the spirits of the fire, commanding
them to cease their awful work, and be at rest.
8) And then, as though the waters of the sea were all at once poured on the
flames, the fire ceased to burn.
9) And when the fury of the fire was spent the multitudes were wild to see the
man who could control the fire, and Jesus said,
10) Man was not made for fire, but fire was made
for man.
11) When man comes to himself and comprehends the fact that he is son of God,
and knows that in himself lies all the powers of God, he is a master mind and
all the elements will hear his voice and gladly do his will.
12) Two sturdy asses bind the will of man; their names are Fear and Unbelief.
When these are caught and turned aside, the will of man will know no bounds;
then man has but to speak and it is done.
13) And then the guests returned and sat about the board. A little
child came in and stood by Jesus' side.
14) She laid her hand on Jesus' arm and said,
Please, Master Jesus, hear! my father is a drunken
man; my mother toils from morn till night and when she brings her wages home
my father snatches them away and squanders every cent for drink, and mother
and us little ones are hungry all the night.
15) Please, Master Jesus, come with me and touch my father's heart. He is so
good and kind when he is just himself; I know it is the wine that makes
another man of him.
16) And Jesus went out with the child; he found the wretched home; he
spoke in kindness to the mother and the little ones, and then upon a bed of
straw he found the drunken man.
17) He took him by the hand and raised him up and said,
My brother, man, made in the image of our
Father-God, will you arise and come with me?
18) Your neighbors are in sore distress; they have lost all they had in this
fierce fire, and men must build their homes again and you and I must lead the
way.
19) And then the man arose; the two went arm in arm to view the wrecks.
20) They heard the mothers and the children crying in the streets; they saw
their wretchedness.
21) And Jesus said,
My friend, here is work for you to do. Just lead
the way in helpfulness; I'm sure the men of Bethany will furnish you the means
and help.
22) The spark of hope that so long had been smoldering in the man was
fanned into a flame. He threw his ragged coat aside; he was himself again.
23) And then he called for help; not for himself, but for the homeless ones;
and everybody helped. The ruined homes were built again.
24) And then he saw his own poor den; his heart was stirred into its depths.
25) The pride of manhood filled his soul; he said,
This wretched den shall be a home.
He worked as he had never wrought before, and everybody helped.
26) And in a little while the den became a home indeed; the flowers of love
bloomed everywhere.
27) The mother and the little ones were filled with joy; the father never
drank again.
28) A man was saved, and no one ever said a word about neglect or drunkenness,
nor urged him to reform.
CHAPTER 93
The Christines go through a
field of ripe wheat, and the disciples eat of the wheat
Jesus exonerates them. The Christines return to Capernaum. Jesus heals
a withered hand on the Sabbath, and defends his deed.
ANOTHER Sabbath day had come and Jesus and the twelve walked through a
field of ripened wheat.
2) And they were hungry and they took the heads of wheat and in their hands
threshed out the grain and ate.
3) Among the men who followed them were Pharisees of strictest sect, and when
they saw the twelve thresh out the wheat and eat, they said to Jesus,
4) Sir, why do the twelve do that which is not
lawful on the Sabbath day?
5) And Jesus said,
Have you not heard what David did when he and
those who followed him had need of food?
6) How he went to the house of God and from the table in the Holy Place took
of the presence bread and ate, and gave to those who followed him?
7) I tell you, men, the needs of man are higher than the law of rites.
8) And in our sacred books we read how priests profane the Sabbath day in many
ways while they are serving in the Holy Place, and still are free from guilt.
9) The Sabbath day was made for man; man was not made to fit the Sabbath day.
10) The man is son of God and under the eternal law of right, which is the
highest law, he may annul the statute laws.
11) The law of sacrifice is but the law of man, and in our law we read that
God desires mercy first; and mercy stands above all statute laws.
12) The son of man is Lord of every law. Did not a prophet sum the duties of
the man when in the book he wrote: In mercy follow justice and walk humbly
with your God?
13) Then Jesus and the twelve returned to Galilee, and on the day
before the Sabbath day they reached the home of Jesus in Capernaum.
14) And on the Sabbath day they went up to the synagogue. The multitudes were
there and Jesus taught.
15) Among the worshippers was one, a man who had a withered hand. The scribes
and Pharisees observed that Jesus saw the man, and then they said,
16) What will he do? Will he attempt to heal upon
the Sabbath day?
17) And Jesus knew their thoughts and he called to the man who had the
withered hand and said,
Arise, stand forth before these men.
18) And Jesus said,
You scribes and Pharisees, speak out and answer
me: Is it a crime to save a life upon the Sabbath day?
19) If you had sheep and one of them fell in a pit upon the Sabbath day would
you do wrong to take it out?
20) Or would it please your God to let it suffer in the mire until another
day?
21) But his accusers held their peace.
22) And then he said to them,
Are sheep of greater value than a man?
23) The law of God is written on the rock of Right; and Justice wrote the law,
and Mercy was the pen.
24) And then he said,
Man, raise your hand and stretch it forth.
He raised his hand; it was restored.
25) The Pharisees were filled with rage. They called in secret council the
Herodians, and they began to plot and plan how they might bring about his
death.
26) They were afraid to publicly accuse, because the multitudes stood forth in
his defense.
27) And Jesus and the twelve went down and walked beside the sea, and many
people followed them.
CHAPTER 94
The Sermon on the Mount.
Jesus reveals to the twelve the secret of prayer .
The model prayer.
The law of forgiveness. The holy fast. The evil of deceit. Almsgiving.
NEXT morning ere the sun had risen Jesus and the twelve went to a
mountain near the sea to pray; and Jesus taught the twelve disciples how to
pray. He said,
2) Prayer is the deep communion of the soul with
God;
3) So when you pray do not deceive yourselves as do the hypocrites who love to
stand upon the streets and in the synagogues and pour out many words to please
the ears of men.
4) And they adorn themselves with pious airs that they may have the praise of
men. They seek the praise of men and their reward is sure.
5) But when you pray, go to the closet of your soul; close all the doors, and
in the holy silence, pray.
6) You need not speak a multitude of words, nor yet repeat the words again and
then again, as heathen do. Just say,
7) Our Father-God who
art in heaven; holy is thy name. Thy kingdom come; thy will be done on earth
as it is done in heaven.
8) Give us this day our needed bread;
9) Help us forget the debts that other people owe to us, that all our debts
may be discharged.
10) And shield us from the tempter's snares that are too great for us to bear;
11) And when they come, give us the strength to overcome.
12) If you would be discharged from
all the debts you owe to God and man, the debts you have incurred by wilfully
transgressing law,
13) You must pass by the debts of every man; for as you deal with other men
your God will deal with you.
14) And when you fast you may not advertise the deed.
15) When fast the hypocrites they paint their faces, look demure, assume a
pious pose, that they may seem to men to fast.
16) A fast is deed of soul, and like a prayer, it is a function of the silence
of the soul.
17) God never passes by unnoticed any prayer, or fast. He walks within the
silence, and his benedictions rest on every effort of the soul.
18) Deception is hypocrisy, and you shall not assume to be what you are not.
19) You may not clothe yourselves in special garb to advertise your piety, nor
yet assume the tone of voice that men conceive to be a holy voice.
20) And when you give to aid the needy ones, blow not a trumpet in the street,
nor synagogue to advertise your gift.
21) He who does alms for praise of men has his reward from men; but God
regardeth not.
22) In giving alms do not let the right hand know the secret of the left.
CHAPTER 95
The Sermon on the Mount,
continued. Jesus pronounces the eight beatitudes and the eight woes.
Speaks words of encouragement. Emphasizes the exalted character of the
apostolic work.
AND Jesus and the twelve went to the mountain top, and Jesus said,
2) Twelve pillars of the church, apostles of the
Christ; light-bearers of the sun of life and ministers of God to men:
3) In just a little while you must go forth alone, and preach the gospel of
the king, first to the Jews and then to all the world.
4) And you shall go, not with a scourge of cords to drive; you cannot drive
men to the king;
5) But you shall go in love and helpfulness and lead the way to right and
light.
6) Go forth and say, The kingdom is at hand.
7) Worthy are the strong in spirit; theirs the kingdom is.
8) Worthy are the meek; they shall possess the land.
9) Worthy they who hunger and thirst for right; they shall be satisfied.
10) Worthy are the merciful; and mercy shall be shown to them.
11) Worthy they who gain the mastery of self; they have the key of power.
12) Worthy are the pure in heart; and they shall see the king.
13) Worthy they who are maligned and wronged because they do the right; their
persecutors they shall bless.
14) Worthy is the trustful child of faith; he shall sit in the throne of
power.
15) Be not discouraged when the world shall persecute and call you crust; but
rather be exceeding glad.
16) The prophets and the seers, and all the good of earth, have been maligned.
17) If you are worthy of the crown of life you will be slandered, vilified and
crust on earth.
18) Rejoice when evil men shall drive you from their ways and cause your name
to be a hiss and by-word in the street.
19) I say, rejoice; but deal in mercy with the doers of the wrong; they are
but children at their play; they know not what they do.
20) Rejoice not over fallen foes. As you help men rise from the depth of sin,
so God will help you on to greater heights.
21) Woe to the rich is gold and lands; they have temptations multiform.
22) Woe unto men who walk at will in pleasure's paths; their ways are full of
snares and dangerous pits.
23) Woe to the proud; they stand upon a precipice; destruction waits for them.
24) Woe to the man of greed; for what he has is not his own; and lo, another
comes; his wealth is gone.
25) Woe to the hypocrite; his form is fair to look upon; his heart is filled
with carcasses and dead men's bones.
26) Woe to the cruel and relentless man; he is himself the victim of his
deeds.
27) The evil he would do to other men rebounds; the scourger is the scourged.
28) Woe to the libertine who preys upon the virtues of the weak. The hour
comes when he will be the weak, the victim of a libertine of greater power.
29) Woe unto you when all the world shall speak in praise of you. The world
speaks not in praise of men who live within the Holy Breath; It speaks in
praise of prophets false, and of illusions base.
30) You men who walk in Holy Breath are salt, the salt of earth; but if you
lose your virtue you are salt in name alone, worth nothing more than dust.
31) And you are light; are called to light the world.
32) A city on a hill cannot be hid; its lights are seen afar; and while you
stand upon the hills of life men see your light and imitate your works and
honor God.
33) Men do not light a lamp and hide it in a cask; they put it on a stand that
it may light the house.
34) You are the lamps of God; must not stand in the shade of earth illusions,
but in the open, high upon the stand.
35) I am not come to nullify the law, nor to destroy; but to fulfil.
36) The Law, the Prophets and the Psalms were written in the wisdom of the
Holy breath and cannot fail.
37) The heavens and earth that are will change and pass away; the word of God
is sure; it cannot pass until it shall accomplish that where-unto it hath been
sent.
38) Whoever disregards the law of God and teaches men to do the same, becomes
a debtor unto God and cannot see his face until he has returned and paid his
debt by sacrifice of life.
39) But he who hearkens unto God and keeps his law and does his will on earth,
shall rule with Christ.
40) The scribes and Pharisees regard the letter of the law; they cannot
comprehend the spirit of the law;
41) And if your righteousness does not exceed the righteousness of scribe and
Pharisee you cannot come into the kingdom of the soul.
42) It is not what man does that gives him right to enter through the gates;
his pass word is his character and his desire is his character.
43) The letter of the law deals with the acts of man; the spirit of the law
takes note of his desires.
CHAPTER 96
The Sermon on the Mount,
continued. Jesus considers the Ten Commandments.
The philosophy of Christ. The spirit of the Commandments. Jesus unfolds
the spiritual aspects of the first four Commandments.
GOD gave the Ten Commandments unto men;
upon the mountain Moses saw the words of God; he wrote them down on solid
rock; they cannot be destroyed.
2) These Ten Commandments show the justice side of God; but now the love of
God made manifest brings mercy on the wings of Holy Breath.
3) Upon the unity of God the law was built. In all the world there is one
force; Jehovah is Almighty God.
4) Jehovah wrote upon the heavens and Moses read,
5) I am Almighty God and you shall have no God but me.
6) There is one force, but many phases of that force; these phases men call
powers.
7) All powers are of God; and they are manifests of God; they are Spirits of
the God.
8) If men could seem to find another force and worship at its shrine, they
would but court illusion, vain,
9) A shadow of the One, Jehovah, God, and they who worship shadows are but
shadows on the wall; for men are what they court.
10) And God would have all men to be the substance, and in mercy he commanded,
You shall seek no God but me.
11) And finite men can never comprehend infinite things. Man cannot make an
image of the Infinite in force.
12) And when men make a God of stone or wood or clay they make an image of a
shade; and they who worship at the shrine of shades are shades.
13) So God in mercy said, You shall not carve out images of wood, or clay, or
stone.
14) Such idols are ideals, abased ideals, and men can gain no higher plane
than their ideals.
15) The God is Spirit, and in spirit men must worship if they would attain a
consciousness of God.
16) But man can never make a picture or an image of the Holy Breath.
17) The name of God man may not speak with carnal lips; with Holy Breath alone
can man pronounce the name.
18) In vanity men think they know the name of God; they speak it lightly and
irreverently, and thus they are accursed.
19) If men did know the sacred name and spoke it with unholy lips, they would
not live to speak it once again.
20) But God in mercy has not yet unveiled his name to those who cannot speak
with Holy Breath.
21) But they who speak the substitute in idle way are guilty in the sight of
God, who said,
22) You shall not take the name of God in vain.
23) The number of the Holy Breath is seven, and God holds in his hands the
sevens of time.
24) In forming worlds he rested on the seventh day, and every seventh day is
set apart as Sabbath day for men. God said,
25) The seventh is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God; remember it and keep it
wholly set apart for works of holiness; that is, for works not for the selfish
self, but for the universal self.
26) Men may do work for self upon the six days of the week; but on the Sabbath
of the Lord they must do naught for self.
27) This day is consecrated unto God; but man serves God by serving man.
CHAPTER 97
The Sermon on the Mount,
continued. Jesus unfolds to the twelve
the spiritual aspects of the fifth and sixth Commandments.
GOD is not force alone; for wisdom is his
counterpart.
2) When cherubim instructed man in wisdom's ways they said that wisdom is the
Mother of the race, as force is Father of the race.
3) The man who honors the almighty and omniscient God is blessed, and in the
tables of the law we read,
4) Pay homage to your Father and Mother of the race, that your days may be
prolonged upon the land that they have given you.
5) The letter of the law commands; you shall not kill; and he who kills must
stand before the judgement seat.
6) A person may desire to kill, yet if he does not kill he is not judged by
law.
7) The spirit of the law avers that he who shall desire to kill, or seeks
revenge, is angry with a man without sufficient cause, must answer to the
judge;
8) And he who calls his brother soulless vagabond shall answer to the council
of the just;
9) And he who calls his brother a degenerate, a dog, fans into life the
burning fires of hell within himself.
10) Now, in the higher law we read that if your brother is aggrieved by
something you have done, before you offer unto God your gifts, go forth and
find your brother and be reconciled to him.
11) It is not well to let the sun go down upon your wrath.
12) If he will not be reconciled when you have laid aside all selfish pleas,
have waived all selfish rights, you will be guiltless in the sight of God;
then go and offer unto God your gifts.
13) If you owe aught to any man and cannot pay; or if a man shall claim a
greater sum than is his due, it is not well that you dispute his claims.
14) Resistance is the sire of anger; there is no mercy and no reason in a
wrathful man.
15) I tell you it is better far to suffer loss than go to law, or call upon
the courts of men to judge of right and wrong.
16) The law of carnal man would say, Eye for eye and tooth for tooth; resist
encroachment on your rights.
17) But this is not the law of God. The Holy Breath would say, Resist not him
who would deprive you of your goods.
18) He who would take your coat by force is still a brother man and you should
gain his heart, which by resistance cannot be done;
19) Give him your coat and offer him still more and more; in time the man will
rise above the brute; you will have saved him from himself.
20) Refuse not him who calls for help and give to him who asks to borrow
aught.
21) And if a man shall strike you in a fitful, or an angry way, it is not well
to smite him in return.
22) Men call him coward who will not fight and thus defend his rights; but he
is much the greater man who is assailed, is smitten and does not smite;
23) Who is maligned and answers not, than he who smites the smiter and reviles
the one who slanders him.
24) It has been said in olden times that man shall love his friend and hate
his foe; but, lo, I say,
25) Be merciful unto your foes; bless those who slander you; do good to those
who do you harm and pray for those who trample on your rights.
26) Remember, you are children of the God who makes his sun to rise alike upon
the evil and the good, who sends his rain upon the unjust and the just.
27) If you do unto other men as they do unto you, you are but slaves, but
followers in the way to death.
28) But you, as children of the light, must lead the way.
29) Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
30) When you do good to those who have done good to you, you do no more than
other men; the publicans do that.
31) If you salute your friends and not your foes, you are like other men; the
publicans have set the pace.
32) Be perfect as your Father-God in heaven is.
CHAPTER 98
The Sermon on the Mount,
continued. Jesus reveals to the twelve the
spiritual aspects of the seventh, eight and tenth Commandments.
THE law forbids adultery; but in the eyes
of law adultery is an overt act, the satisfaction of the sensuous self outside
the marriage bonds.
2) Now, marriage in the sight of law is but a promise made by man and woman,
by the sanction of a priest, to live for aye in harmony and love.
3) No priest nor officer has power from God to bind two souls in wedded love.
4) What is the marriage tie? Is it comprised in what a priest or officer may
say?
5) Is it the scroll on which the officer or priest has written the permission
for the two to live in marriage bonds?
6) Is it the promise of the two that they will love each other until death?
7) Is love a passion that is subject to the will of man?
8) Can man pick up his love, as he would pick up precious gems, and lay it
down, or give it out to any one?
9) Can love be bought and sold like sheep?
10) Love is the power of God that binds two souls and makes them one; there is
no power on earth that can dissolve the bond.
11) The bodies may be forced apart by man or death for just a little time; but
they will meet again.
12) Now, in this bond of God we find the marriage tie; all other unions are
but bonds of straw, and they who live in them commit adultery.
13) The same as they who satisfy their lust without the sanction of an officer
or priest.
14) But more than this; the man or woman who indulges lustful thoughts commits
adultery.
15) Whom God has joined together man cannot part; whom man has joined together
live in sin.
16) Upon a table of the law, the great lawgiver wrote, Thou shalt not steal.
17) Before the eyes of law a man to steal must take a thing that can be seen
with eyes of flesh, without the knowledge or consent of him to whom the thing
belongs.
18) But, lo, I say that he who in his heart desires to possess that which is
not his own, and would deprive the owner of the thing without his knowledge or
consent, is in the sight of God, a thief.
19) The things that men see not with eyes of flesh are of more worth than are
the things that man can see.
20) A man's good name is worth a thousand mines of gold, and he who says a
word or does a deed that injures or defames that name has taken what is not
his own, and is a thief.
21) Upon a table of the law we also read: Thou shalt not covet anything.
22) To covet is an all-consuming wish to have what is not right for one to
have.
23) And such a wish, within the spirit of the law, is theft.
CHAPTER 99
The Sermon on the Mount,
continued. Jesus unfolds to the twelve
the spiritual aspects of the ninth Commandment.
THE law has said: Thou shalt not lie; but
in the eyes of law a man to lie must tell in words what is not true.
2) Now, in the light of spirit law, deceit in any form is nothing but a lie.
3) A man may lie by look or act; yea, even by his silence may deceive, and
thus be guilty in the eyes of Holy Breath.
4) It has been said in olden times: Thou shalt not swear by thine own life.
5) But, lo, I say, Swear not at all; not by the head, the heart, the eye, nor
hand; not by the sun, the moon, nor stars;
6) Not by the name of God, nor by the name of any spirit, good or bad.
7) You shall not swear by anything; for in an oath there is no gain.
8) A man whose word must be propped up by oath of any kind is not trustworthy
in the sight of God or man.
9) By oath you cannot make a leaf to fall, nor turn the color of a hair.
10) The man of worth just speaks and men know that he speaks the truth.
11) The man who pours out many words to make men think he speaks the truth, is
simply making smoke to hide a lie.
12) And there are many men with seeming double hearts; men who would serve two
masters at a time - two masters quite adverse.
13) Men feign to worship God upon the Sabbath day and then pay court to
Beelzebub on every other day.
14) No man can serve two masters at a time no more than he can ride two asses
at a time that go in different ways.
15) The man who feigns to worship God and Beelzebub is foe of God, a pious
devil and a curse of men.
16) And men cannot lay treasures up in heaven and earth at once.
17) Then, lo, I say, Lift up your eyes and see the safety vaults of heaven,
and there deposit every gem.
18) Where moth and rust cannot corrupt; where thieves cannot break in and
steal.
19) There are no safety vaults on earth; no place secure from moth, and rust
and thieves.
20) The treasures of the earth are but illusive things that pass away.
21) Be not deceived; your treasures are the anchor of the soul, and where your
treasures are your heart will be.
22) Fix not your heart upon the things of earth; be anxious not about the
things to eat, or drink or wear.
23) God cares for those who trust in him and serve the race.
24) Behold the birds! They praise God in their songs; the earth is made more
glorious by their ministry of joy; God keeps them in the hollow of his hand,
25) And not a sparrow falls to earth without his care; and every one that
falls shall rise again.
26) Behold the flowers of earth! they trust in God and grow; they make the
earth resplendent with their beauty and perfume.
27) Look at the lilies of the field, the messengers of holy love. No son of
man, not even Solomon in all his excellence, was ever clothed like one of
these.
28) And yet they simply trust in God; they feed from out his hand; they lay
their heads to rest upon his breast.
29) If God so clothes and feeds the flowers and birds that do his will, will
he not feed and clothe his children when they trust in him?
30) Seek first the kingdom of the soul, the righteousness of God, the good of
men, and murmer not; God will protect, and feed, and clothe.
CHAPTER 100
The Sermon on the Mount,
continued. Jesus formulates and presents
to the twelve a practical code of spiritual ethics.
THERE is a rule that carnal man has made,
and which he rigidly observes:
2) Do unto other men as they do unto you. As others judge, they judge; as
others give, they give.
3) Now, while you walk with men as men, judge not, and you shall not be
judged.
4) For as you judge you shall be judged, and as you give it shall be given to
you. If you condemn, you are condemned.
5) When you show mercy, men are merciful to you, and if you love in such a way
that carnal man can comprehend your love, you will be well beloved.
6) And so the wise man of this world does unto other men as he would have them
do to him.
7) The carnal man does good to other men for selfish gain, for he expects to
have his blessings multiplied and then returned; he does not stop to note the
end.
8) Man is himself the field; his deeds are seeds, and what he does to others
grows apace; the harvest time is sure.
9) Behold the yield! If he has sown the wind, he reaps the wind; if he has
sown the noxious seeds of scandal, theft and hate; of sensuality and crime,
10) The harvest is assured and he must reap what he has sown; yea, more; the
seeds produce an hundred fold.
11) The fruit of righteousness and peace and love and joy can never spring
from noxious seeds; the fruit is like the seed.
12) And when you sow, sow seeds of right, because it is the right, and not in
the way of trade, expecting rich rewards.
13) The carnal man abhors the spirit law, because it takes away his liberty to
live in sin; beneath its light he cannot satisfy his passions and desires.
14) He is at enmity with him who walks in Holy Breath. The carnal man has
killed the holy men of old, the prophets and the seers.
15) And he will buffet you; will charge you falsely, scourge you and imprison
you, and think he does the will of God to slay you in the streets.
16) But you may not prejudge nor censure him who does you wrong.
17) Each one has problems to be solved, and he must solve them for himself.
18) The man who scourges you may have a load of sin to bear; but how about
your own?
19) A little sin in one who walks in Holy Breath is greater in the sight of
God than monster sins in him who never knew the way.
20) How can you see the splinter in your brother's eye while you have chunks
within your own?
21) First take the chunks from out your eye and then you may behold the
splinter in your brother's eye and help him take it out,
22) And while your eyes are full of foreign things you cannot see the way, for
you are blind,
23) And when the blind lead forth the blind, both lose the way and fall into
the slough.
24) If you would lead the way to God you must be clear in sight, as well as
pure in heart.
CHAPTER 101
The Sermon on the Mount,
concluded. The concluding part of the code of ethics.
The Christines return to Capernaum.
THE fruitage of the tree of life is all too
fine to feed the carnal mind.
2) If you would throw a diamond to a hungry dog, lo, he would turn away, or
else attack you in a rage.
3) The incense that is sweet to God is quite offensive unto Beelzebub; the
bread of heaven is but chaff to men who cannot comprehend the spirit life.
4) The master must be wise and feed the soul with what it can digest.
5) If you have not the food for every man, just ask and you shall have; seek
earnestly and you shall find.
6) Just speak the Word and knock; the door will fly ajar.
7) No one has ever asked in faith and did not have; none ever sought in vain;
no one who ever knocked aright has failed to find an open door.
8) When men shall ask you for the bread of heaven, turn not away, nor give to
them the fruit of carnal trees.
9) If one, a son, would ask you for a loaf, would you give him a stone? If he
would ask you for a fish, would you give him a serpent of the dust?
10) What you would have your God give unto you, give unto men. The Measure of
your worth lies in your service unto men.
11) There is a way that leads unto the perfect life; few find it at a time.
12) It is a narrow way; it lies among the rocks and pitfalls of the carnal
life; but in the way there are no pitfalls and no rocks.
13) There is a way that leads to wretchedness and want. It is a spacious way
and many walk therein. It lies among the pleasure groves of carnal life.
14) Beware, for many claim to walk the way of life who walk the way of death.
15) But they are false in word and deed; false prophets they. They clothe
themselves in skins of sheep, while they are vicious wolves.
16) They cannot long conceal themselves; men know them by their fruits;
17) You cannot gather grapes from thorns, nor from the thistles, figs.
18) The fruit is daughter of the tree and, like the parent, so the child; and
every tree that bears not wholesome fruit is plucked up by the roots and cast
away,
19) Because a man prays long and loud is not a sign that he is saint. The
praying men are not all in the kingdom of the soul.
20) The man who lives the holy life, who does the will of God, abides within
the kingdom of the soul.
21) The good man from the treasures of his heart sends blessedness and peace
to all the world.
22) The evil man sends thoughts that blight and wither hope and joy and fill
the world with wretchedness and woe.
23) Men think and act and speak out of the abundance of the heart.
24) And when the judgement hour shall come a host of men will enter pleadings
for themselves and think to buy the favor of the judge with words.
25) And they will say, Lo, we have wrought a multitude of works in the Omnific
name,
26) Have we not prophesied? Have we not cured all manner of disease? Have we
not cast the evil spirits out of those obsessed?
27) And then the judge will say, I know you not. You rendered service unto God
in words when in your heart you worshipped Beelzebub.
28) The evil one may use the powers of life, and do a multitude of mighty
works. Depart from me, you workers of iniquity.
29) The man who hears the words of life and does them not is like the man who
builds his house upon the sand, which when the floods come on, is washed away
and all is lost.
30) But he who hears the words of life and in an honest, sincere heart
receives and treasures them and lives the holy life,
31) Is like the man who builds the house upon the rock; the floods may come,
the winds may blow, the storms may beat upon his house; it is not moved.
32) Go forth and build your life upon the solid rock of truth, and all the
powers of the evil one will shake it not.
33) And Jesus finished all his sayings on the mount and then he, with the
twelve, returned unto Capernaum.
CHAPTER 102
The Christines at the home
of Jesus. Jesus unfolds to them the secret doctrine.
They go through all Galilee and teach and heal.
Jesus brings to life the son of a widow at Nain.
They return to Capernaum.
THE twelve apostles went with Jesus to his home, and there abode for
certain days.
2) And Jesus told them many things about the inner life that may not now be
written in a book.
3) Now, in Capernaum, there lived a man of wealth, a Roman captain of a
hundred men, who loved the Jews and who had built for them a synagogue.
4) A servant of this man was paralysed, and he was sick nigh unto death.
5) The captain knew of Jesus and had heard that by the Sacred Word he healed
the sick, and he had faith in him.
6) He sent a message by the elders of the Jews to Jesus, and he pled for help.
7) And Jesus recognized the captain's faith and went at once to heal the sick;
the captain met him on the way and said to him,
8) Lo, Lord, it is not well that you should come
unto my house; I am not worthy of the presence of a man of God.
9) I am a man of war, my life is spent with those who ofttimes take the lives
of fellow men.
10) And surely he who comes to save would be dishonored if he came beneath my
roof.
11) If you will speak the Word I know my servant will be well.
12) And Jesus turned and said to those who followed him,
13) Behold the captain's faith; I have not seen
such faith, no, not in Israel.
14) Behold, the feast is spread for you; but while you doubt and wait, the
alien comes in faith and takes the bread of life.
15) Then turning to the man he said,
Go on your way; according to your faith so shall
it be; your servant lives.
16) It came to pass that at the time that Jesus spoke the Word the
palsied man arose, and he was well.
17) And then the Christines went abroad to teach. And as they came to Nain, a
city on the Hermon way, they saw a multitude about the gates.
18) It was a funeral train; a widow's son was dead, and friends were bearing
out the body to the tomb.
19) It was the widow's only son, and she was wild with grief. And Jesus said
to her,
Weep not, I am the life; your son shall live.
20) And Jesus raised his hand; the bearers of the dead stood still.
21) And Jesus touched the bier and said,
Young man, return.
22) The soul returned; the body of the dead was filled with life; the
man sat up and spoke.
23) The people were astonished at the scene, and every one exclaimed,
Praise God.
24) A Jewish priest stood forth and said,
Behold a mighty prophet has appeared;
and all the people said,
Amen.
25) The Christines journeyed on; they taught, and healed the sick in
many towns of Galilee, and then they came again unto Capernaum.
CHAPTER 103
The Christines in Jesus'
home. Jesus teaches the twelve
and the foreign masters every morning.
Jesus receives messengers from John, the harbinger, and sends him
words of encouragement. He eulogizes the character of John.
THE home of Jesus was a school where in the early morning hours the
twelve apostles and the foreign priests were taught the secret things of God.
2) And there were present priests from China, India, and from Babylon; from
Persia, Egypt and from Greece,
3) Who came to sit at Jesus' feet to learn the wisdom that he brought to men,
that they might teach their people how to live the holy life.
4) And Jesus taught them how to teach; he told them of the trials of the way,
and how to make these trials serve the race.
5) He taught them how to live the holy life that they might conquer death;
6) He taught them what the end of mortal life will be, when man has reached
the consciousness that he and God are one.
7) The after midday hours were given to the multitudes who came to learn the
way of life and to be healed; and many did believe and were baptized.
8) Now, in his prison by the Bitter Sea the harbinger had heard of all the
mighty works that Jesus did.
9) His prison life was hard, and he was sore distressed, and he began to
doubt.
10) And to himself he said,
I wonder if this Jesus is the Christ of whom the
prophets wrote!
11) Was I mistaken in my work? Was I, indeed, one sent from God to pave the
way for him who shall redeem our people, Israel?
12) And then he sent some of his friends, who came to see him in his
prison cell, up to Capernaum that they might learn about this man, and bring
him word.
13) The men found Jesus in his home, and said,
Behold the harbinger sent us to ask, Are you the
Christ? or is he yet to come?
14) But Jesus answered not; he simply bade the men to tarry certain
days that they might see and hear.
15) They saw him heal the sick, and cause the lame to walk, the deaf to hear,
the blind to see;
16) They saw him cast the evil spirits out of those obsessed; they saw him
raise the dead.
17) They heard him preach the gospel to the poor.
18) Then Jesus said to them,
Go on your way; return to John and tell him all
that you have seen and heard; then he will know.
They went their way.
19) The multitudes were there, and Jesus said to them,
Once you were crowding Jordan's fords; you filled
the wilderness.
20) What did you go to see? The trees of Juda, and the flowers of Heth? Or did
you go to see a man in kingly garb? Or did you go to see a prophet and a seer?
21) I tell you, men, you know not whom you saw. A prophet? Yea, and more; a
messenger whom God had sent to pave the way for what you see and hear this
day.
22) Among the men of earth a greater man has never lived than John.
23) Behold I say, This man whom Herod bound in chains and cast into a prison
cell is God's Elijah come again to earth.
24) Elijah, who did not pass the gate of death, whose body of this flesh was
changed, and he awoke in Paradise.
25) When John came forth and preached the gospel of repentance for the
cleansing of the soul, the common folks believed and were baptized.
26) The lawyers and the Pharisees accepted not the teachings of this man; were
not baptized.
27) Behold, neglected opportunities will never come again.
28) Behold, the people are unstable as the waters of the sea; they seek to be
excused from righteousness.
29) John came and ate no bread, and drank no wine. He lived the simplest life
apart from men, and people said, He is obsessed.
30) Another comes who eats and drinks and lives in homes like other men, and
people say, He is a glutton, an inebriate, a friend of publicans and those who
sin.
31) Woe unto you, you cities of the vale of Galilee, where all the mighty
works of God are done! Woe to Chorazan and Bethsaida!
32) If half the mighty works that have been done in you were done in Tyre and
in Sidon they would have long ago repented of their sins, and sought the way
of right.
33) And when the judgement day shall come, lo, Tyre and Sidon will be called
more worthy than will you.
34) Because they slighted not their gifts, while you have thrown away the
pearl of greatest price.
35) Woe unto you Capernaum! Behold, you are exalted now, but you shall be
abased;
36) For if the mighty works that have been done in you had but been done
within the cities of the plain - of Sodom and Zeboim - they would have heard
and turned to God; would not have been destroyed.
37) They perished in their ignorance; they had no light; but you have heard;
you have the evidence.
38) The light of life has shown above your hills and all the shores of Galilee
have been ablaze with light;
39) The glory of the Lord has shown in every street and synagogue and home;
but you have spurned the light.
40) And, lo, I say, The judgment day will come and God will deal in greater
mercy with the cities of the plains than he will deal with you.
CHAPTER 104
Jesus teaches the
multitudes. Attends a feast in Simon's house.
A wealthy courtesan anoints him with precious balm.
Simon rebukes him and he preaches a sermon on false respectability.
AND Jesus looked upon the multitudes who pressed about for selfish gain.
2) The men of learning and of wealth, of reputation and of power, were there;
but they knew not the Christ.
3) Their eyes were blinded by the tinseled glitter of their selfish selves;
they could not see the king.
4) And though they walked within the light, they groped about in dark - a
darkness like the night of death.
5) And Jesus cast his eyes to heaven and said,
6) I thank thee, Holy One of heaven and earth,
that while the light is hidden from the wise and great, it is revealed to
babes.
7) Then turning to the multitudes he said,
I come to you not in the name of man, nor in a
strength my own;
8) The wisdom and the virtue that I bring to you are from above; they are the
wisdom and the virtue of the God whom we adore.
9) The words I speak are not my words; I give to you what I receive.
10) Come unto me all you who labor and pull heavy loads and I will give you
aid.
11) Put on the yoke of Christ with me; it does not chafe; it is an easy yoke.
12) Together we will pull the load of life with ease; and so rejoice.
13) A Pharisee, whose name was Simon, made a feast, and Jesus was the
honored guest.
14) And as they sat about the board, a coutesan who had been cured of her
desire to sin by what she had received and seen in Jesus' ministry, came
uninvited to the feast.
15) She brought an alabaster box of costly balm and as the guests reclined she
came to Jesus in her joy, because she had been freed from sin.
16) Her tears fell fast, she kissed his feet, and dried them with her hair,
and she anointed them with balm.
17) And Simon thought, he did not speak aloud,
This man is not a prophet or he would know the
kind of woman that approaches him, and would drive her away.
18) But Jesus knew his thoughts, and said to him,
My host, I have a word to say to you.
19) And Simon said,
Say on.
20) And Jesus said,
Sin is a monster of iniquity; it may be small; it
may be large; it may be something left undone.
21) Behold, one person leads a life of sin and is at last redeemed; another,
in a careless mood, forgets to do the things he ought to do but he reforms and
is forgiven. Now, which of these has merited the higher praise?
22) And Simon said,
The one who overcame the errors of a life.
23) And Jesus said,
You speak the truth.
24) Behold this woman who has bathed my feet with
tears and dried them with her hair and covered them with balm!
25) For years she led a life of sin, but when she heard the words of life she
sought forgiveness and she found.
26) But when I came into your house as guest you gave me not a bowl of water
that I might wash my hands and feet, which every loyal Jew must do before he
feasts.
27) Now, tell me, Simon, which of these, this woman or yourself, is worthy of
most praise?
28) But Simon answered not.
29) Then to the woman Jesus said,
Your sins are all forgiven; your faith has saved
you; go in peace.
30) And then the guests who sat around the board, began to say within
themselves,
What manner of a man is this who says, Thy sins
are all forgiven?
CHAPTER 105
Under the patronage of a number of wealthy women, the Christines make a grand missionary tour. In his teaching, Jesus lauds sincerity and rebukes hypocrisy. He speaks concerning the sin against the Holy Breath.
NOW, many women who possessed much wealth, and abode in other towns of
Galilee, implored that Jesus and the twelve, together with the masters from
the foreign lands, would thither go and preach and heal.
2) Among these anxious ones were Mary Magdalene, who was obsessed by seven
homeless spirits of the air, which had been driven out by the Omnific Word
which Jesus spoke;
3) Susanna, who owned vast estates at Caesarea-Philippi;
4) Johanna, wife of Chuza, one of Herod's court;
5) And Rachel from the coast of Tyre;
6) And others from beyond the Jordan and the sea of Galilee.
7) And they provided ample means and three times seven men went forth.
8) They preached the gospel of the Christ and they baptized the multitudes who
made confession of their faith; they healed the sick and raised the dead.
9) And Jesus wrought and taught from early morn until the day had gone, and
then into the night, he did not stop to eat.
10) His friends became alarmed lest he should fail from loss of strength, and
they laid hold of him and would, by force, have taken him away to a place of
rest.
11) But he rebuked them not; he said,
Have you not read that God will give his angels
charge concerning me?
12) That they would hold me fast and suffer not that I should come to want?
13) I tell you, men, while I am giving out my strength unto these anxious,
waiting throngs I find myself at rest within the arms of God,
14) Whose blessed messengers bring down to me the bread of life.
15) There is a tide just once in human life.
16) These people now are willing to receive the truth; their opportunity is
now; our opportunity is now,
17) And if we do not teach them while we may, the tide will ebb;
18) They may not care again to hear the truth; then tell me, Who will bear the
guilt?
19) And so he taught and healed.
20) Among the multitudes were men of every shade of thought. They were divided
in their views concerning everything that Jesus said.
21) Some saw in him a God, and would have worshipped him; and others saw in
him a devil of the nether world and would have cast him in a pit.
22) And some were trying hard to lead a double life; like little lions of the
ground that take upon themselves the color of the thing they rest upon.
23) These people without anchorage of any sort, are friends or foes as seemed
to serve them best.
24) And Jesus said,
No man can serve two masters at a time. No man
can be a friend and foe at once.
25) All men are rising up, or sinking down; are building up, or tearing down.
26) If you are gathering not the precious grain, then you are throwing it
away.
27) He is a coward who would feign to be a friend, or foe, to please another
man.
28) You men, do not deceive yourselves in thought; your hearts are known;
29) Hypocrisy will blight a soul as surely as the breath of Beelzebub. An
honest evil man is more esteemed by guardians of the soul than a dishonest
pious man.
30) If you would curse the son of man, just curse him out aloud.
31) A curse is poison to the inner man, and if you hold and swallow down a
curse it never will digest; lo, it will poison every atom of your soul.
32) And if you sin against a son of man, you may be pardoned and your guilt be
cleansed by acts of kindness and of love;
33) But if you sin against the Holy Breath by disregarding her when she would
open up the doors of life for you;
34) By closing up the windows of the soul when she would pour the light of
love into your hearts, and cleanse them with the fires of God;
35) Your guilt shall not be blotted out in this, nor in the life to come.
36) An opportunity has gone to come no more, and you must wait until the ages
roll again.
37) Then will the Holy Breath again breathe on your fires of life, and fan
them to a living flame.
38) Then she will open up the doors again, and you may let her in to sup with
you for evermore, or you may slight her once again, and then again.
39) You men of Israel, your opportunity is now.
40) Your tree of life is an illusive tree; it has a generous crop of leaves;
its boughs hang low with fruit.
41) Behold, your words are leaves; your deeds the fruit.
42) Behold, for men have plucked the apples of your tree of life, and found
them full of bitterness; and worms have eaten to the core.
43) Behold that fig tree by the way so full of leaves and worthless fruit!
44) Then Jesus spoke a word that nature spirits know, and lo, the fig
tree stood a mass of withered leaves.
45) And then he spoke again,
Behold, for God will speak the Word, and you will
stand a withered fig tree in the setting sun.
46) You men of Galilee, send forth and call the pruner in before it is too
late, and let him prune away your worthless branches and illusive leaves, and
let the sunshine in.
47) The sun is life, and it can change your worthlessness to worth.
48) Your tree of life is good; but you have nurtured it so long with dews of
self, and mists of carnal things that you have shut the sunshine out.
49) I tell you, men, that you must give account to God for every idle word you
speak and every evil deed you do.
CHAPTER 106
The Christines are in
Magdala. Jesus heals a man who was blind, dumb and obsessed. He teaches the
people. While he speaks, his mother, brothers and Miriam come to him. He
teaches a lesson on family relationships.
He introduces Miriam to the people and she sings her songs of victory.
MAGDALA is beside the sea, and here the teachers taught.
2) A man obsessed, and who was blind and dumb, was brought, and Jesus spoke
the Word, and lo, the evil spirits went away; the man spoke out, his eyes were
opened and he saw.
3) This was the greatest work that men had seen the master do, and they were
all amazed.
4) The Pharisees were there, and they were full of jealous rage (yes,
full of jealous rage); they sought a cause whereby they might
condemn.
5) They said,
Yes, it is true that Jesus does a multitude of
mighty works; but men should know that he is leagued with Beelzebub.
6) He is a sorcerer, a black magician of the Simon Cerus type; he works as
Jannes and as Jambres did in Moses' day.
7) For Satan, prince of evil spirits, is his stay by night and day and in the
name of Satan he casts the demons out, and in his name he heals the sick and
raises up the dead.
8) But Jesus knew their thoughts; he said to them,
You men are masters, and you know the law;
whatever is arrayed against itself must fall; a house divided cannot stand;
9) A kingdom warring with itself is brought to naught.
10) If Satan casts the devil out, how can his kingdom stand?
11) If I, by Beelzebub, cast devils out, by whom do you cast devils out?
12) But if I, in the holy name of God, cast devils out, and make the lame to
walk, the deaf to hear, the blind to see, the dumb to speak, has not God's
kingdom come to you?
13) The Pharisees were dumb; they answered not.
14) As Jesus spoke a messenger approached and said to him,
Your mother and your brothers wish to speak with
you.
15) And Jesus said,
Who is my mother? and my brothers, who are they?
16) And then he spoke a word aside unto the foreign masters and the
twelve; he said,
17) Behold, men recognize their mothers, fathers,
sisters, brothers here in flesh; but when the veil is rent and men walk in the
realms of soul,
18) The tender lines of love that bind the groups of fleshly kin in families
will fade away.
19) Not that the love for anyone will be the less; but men will see in all the
motherhood, the fatherhood, the sisterhood, the brotherhood of man.
20) The family groups of earth will all be lost in universal love and
fellowship divine.
21) Then to the multitudes he said,
Whoever lives the life and does the will of God is child of God and is my
mother, father, sister, friend.
22) And then he went aside to speak to mother and his other kindred in
the flesh.
23) But he saw more than these. The maiden who once thrilled his very soul
with love; a love beyond the love of any fleshly kin;
24) Who was the sorest tempter in the temple Heliopolis beside the Nile, who
sung for him the sacred songs, was there.
25) The recognition was of kindred souls, and Jesus said,
26) Behold, for God has brought to us a power men
cannot comprehend, a power of purity and love;
27) To make more light the burdens of the hour, to be a balm for wounded
souls;
28) To win the multitude to better ways by sacred song and holy life.
29) Behold, for Miriam who stood beside the sea and sung the song of victory
when Moses led the way, will sing again.
30) And all the choirs of heaven will join and sing the glad refrain:
31) Peace, peace on earth; good will to men!
32) And Miriam stood before the waiting throngs and sung again the
songs of victory, and all the people said, Amen.
CHAPTER 107
A Pharisee demands of Jesus
signs of his messiahship. Jesus rebukes him,
because he does not recognize the signs that are being continually given.
Jesus exhorts the people to receive the light that they may become the light.
A PHARISEE elated with himself stood forth among the multitudes and said
to Jesus,
2) Sir, we would have you demonstrate. If you are
truly Christ who was to come, then you can surely do what black magicians
cannot do.
3) Lo, they can talk, and hold the multitudes with words of power; and they
can heal the sick and drive the demons out of those obsessed;
4) They can control the storms; and fire and earth and air will hear and
answer when they speak.
5) Now, if you will ascend and from that tower fly across the sea, we will
believe that you are sent from God.
6) And Jesus said,
No black magician ever lived a holy life; you
have a demonstration of the Christ-life every day.
7) But lo, you evil and adulterous scribes and Pharisees, you cannot see a
spirit sign, because your spirit eyes are full of carnal self.
8) You seek a sign to please your curiosity. You walk the very lowest planes
of carnal life and cry, Phenomena! show us a sign and then we will believe.
9) I was not sent to earth to buy up faith as men buy fish and fruit and
rubbish in the streets.
10) Men seem to think it quite a favor done to me when they confess their
faith in me and in the holy Christ.
11) What does it matter unto me as man if you believe or disbelieve?
12) Faith is not something you can buy with coin; it is not something you can
sell for gold.
13) Once Mart, a beggar, followed me and cried, Give me a silver piece; then I
will believe in you.
14) And you are like this beggar man; you offer to exchange your faith for
signs.
15) But I will give to all the world one sign as surety that the Christ abides
with me.
16) You all have read the parable of Jonah and the fish, wherein it is
recorded that the prophet spent three days and nights within the stomach of
the mighty fish, and then came forth.
17) The son of man will spend three days and nights within the heart of earth
and then come forth again, and men will see and know.
18) Behold, the light may be so bright that men cannot see anything.
19) The Spirit light has shown so brightly over Galilee that you who hear me
now are blind.
20) You may have read the words of prophet Azrael; he said, The light shall
shine out brightly in the darkness of the night, and men shall comprehend it
not.
21) That time has come; the light shines forth; you see it not.
22) The Queen of Sheba sat in darkest night and still she yearned for light.
23) She came to hear the words of wisdom from the lips of Solomon, and she
believed;
24) And she became a living torch, and when she reached her home, lo, all
Arabia was filled with light.
25) A greater far than Solomon is here; the Christ is here; the Day Star has
risen, and you reject the light.
26) And you remember Nineveh, the wicked city of Assyria, which God had marked
to be destroyed by shock and flame unless the people turned and walked in ways
of right.
27) And Jonah raised his voice and said, In forty days shall Nineveh be razed,
and her wealth shall be destroyed.
28) The people heard and they believed; and they reformed and turned to ways
of right, and lo, their city was not razed; was not destroyed.
29) You men of Galilee, I tell you that Arabia and Nineveh will testify
against you in the judgment day.
30) Behold, for every one to whom I speak has in him all the fires of God; but
they are lying dead.
31) The will is bridled by the flesh desires, and it brings not the ethers of
the fires to vibrate into light.
32) Look, therefore, to your soul and note, Is not the light within you dark
as night?
33) There is no breath but Holy Breath that e'er can fan your fires of life
into a living flame and make them light.
34) And Holy Breath can raise the ethers of the fires to light in none but
hearts of purity and love.
35) Hear, then, you men of Galilee, Make pure the heart, admit the Holy
Breath, and then your bodies will be full of light.
36) And like a city on a hill, your light will shine afar, and thus your light
may light the way for other men.
CHAPTER 108
Jesus rebukes the people
for selfishness. The Christines attend a feast,
and Jesus is censured by the Pharisee because he washed not before he ate.
Jesus exposes the hypocrisy of the ruling classes and pronounces upon them
many woes.
THE multitudes were wild with selfish thought; none recognized the
rights and needs of any other one.
2) The stronger pushed the weak aside, and trampled on them in their haste to
be the first to get a blessing for himself.
3) And Jesus said,
Behold the cage of beasts untamed; a den of
stinging vipers, maddened by their fiendish greed of selfish gain!
4) I tell you, men, the benefits that come to men who see no further than
themselves are baubles in the morning light;
5) They are unreal; they pass away. The selfish soul is fed today; the food
does not assimilate; the soul grows not, and then it must be fed again, and
then again.
6) Behold, a selfish man obsessed by just one spirit of the air; by the
Omnific Word the spirit is cast out;
7) It wanders through dry places, seeking rest and finding none.
8) And then it comes again; the selfish man has failed to close and lock the
door;
9) The unclean spirit finds the house all swept and cleaned; it enters in and
takes with it full seven other spirits more unclean than is itself; and there
they dwell.
10) The last state of the man is more than sevenfold more wretched than the
first.
11) And so it is with you who snatch the blessings that belong to other men.
12) While Jesus spoke a certain woman who stood near exclaimed,
Most blessed is the mother of this man of God!
13) And Jesus said,
Yes, blest is she; but doubly blest are they who
hear, receive and live the word of God.
14) A Pharisee of wealth prepared a feast, and Jesus and the twelve,
together with the masters from afar, were guests.
15) And Jesus did not wash his hands according to the strictest Pharisaic
rules, before he ate; when this the Pharisee observed he marvelled much.
16) And Jesus said,
My host, why do you marvel that I did not wash my
hands?
17) The Pharisees wash well their hands and feet; they cleanse the body every
day when, lo, within is every form of filth.
18) Their hearts are full of wickedness, extortions and deceit.
19) Did not the God who made the outside of the body make the inside, too?
20) And then he said,
Woe unto you, you Pharisees! for you tithe mint
and rue, and every herb, and pass by judgment and the love of God.
21) Woe unto you, you Pharisees! you love the highest seats in synagogues and
courts, and bid for salutations in the market place.
22) Woe unto you, you tinseled gentry of the land! no man would ever think you
servants of the Lord of hosts by what you do.
23) A lawyer sitting near remarked,
Rabboni, your words are harsh, and then in what you
say you censure us; and why?
24) And Jesus said,
Woe unto you, you masters of the law! you heap
great burdens on the sons of men, yea, loads by far too great for them to
bear, and you will never help to bear a feather's weight yourselves.
25) Woe unto you! you build the tombs of prophets and of seers; they whom your
fathers killed; and you are parties to the crimes.
26) And now behold, for God has sent again to you his holy men - apostles,
prophets, seers; and you are persecuting them.
27) The time is near when you will plead against them in the courts; will
spurn them on the streets; will cast them into prison cells, and kill them
with a fiend's delight.
28) I tell you, men, the blood of all the holy men of God that has been shed
from righteous Abel down to that of Zacharias, father of holy John,
29) Who was struck down beside the altar in the Holy Place;
30) The blood of all these holy men has made more red the hands of this
ungodly generation.
31) Woe unto you, you masters of the law! you snatch the keys of knowledge
from the hands of men;
32) You close the doors; you enter not yourselves, and suffer not the willing
ones to enter in.
33) His words provoked the Pharisees, the lawyers and the scribes, and they,
resenting, poured upon him torrents of abuse.
34) The truths he spoke came like a thunderbolt from heaven; the rulers
counseled how they might ensnare him by his words; they sought a legal way to
shed his blood.
CHAPTER 109
The Christines go to a
place apart to pray. Jesus warns them against the leaven of the
Pharisees and reveals the fact that all thoughts and deeds are recorded in
God's Book of Remembrance. Man's responsibility and God's care.
NOW, when the feast was finished, Jesus, with the foreign masters and
the twelve, with Mary, Miriam and a band of loyal women who believed in
Christ, went to a place apart to pray.
2) And when their silence ended Jesus said,
Be on your guard; the leaven of the Pharisees is
being thrown in every measure of the meal of life.
3) It is a poison that will taint whatever it may touch; and it will blight
the soul as sure as the fumes of Diabolos; it is hypocrisy.
4) The Pharisees seem fair in speech, but they are diabolical in heart.
5) And then they seem to think that thought is something they can lock within
themselves.
6) They do not seem to know that every thought and wish is photographed and
then preserved within the Book of Life to be revealed at any time the masters
will.
7) That which is thought, or wished, or done in darkest night shall be
proclaimed in brightest day;
8) That which is whispered in the ear within the secret place shall be made
known upon the streets.
9) And in the judgment day when all the books are opened up, these men, and
every other man, shall be a-judged, not by what they've said or done,
10) But by the ways in which they used the thoughts of God, and how the ethers
of eternal love were made to serve;
11) For men may make these ethers serve the carnal self, or serve the holy
self within.
12) Behold, these men may kill the body of this flesh; but what of that? the
flesh is but a transitory thing, and soon, by natural law, will pass;
13) Their slaughter only hastens nature's work a little time.
14) And when they kill the flesh, they reach their bounds of power; they
cannot kill the soul.
15) But nature is the keeper of the soul as of the flesh, and in the harvest
time of soul, the trees of life are all inspected by the judge;
16) And every tree that bears no fruit of good is plucked up by the roots and
cast into the flames.
17) Who then shall you regard? Not him who has the power to kill the flesh,
and nothing more.
18) Regard the mighty one who has the power to dissolve both soul and body in
the flames of nature's fire.
19) But man is king; he may direct his thoughts, his loves, his life, and gain
the prize of everlasting life.
20) And you are not abandoned in your struggle for the crown of life. Your
Father lives, and you shall live.
21) God has a care for every living thing. He numbers stars, and suns, and
moons;
22) He numbers angels, men and every thing below; the birds, the flowers, the
trees;
23) The very petals of the rose he knows by name, and every one is numbered in
his Book of Life;
24) And every hair upon your head, and every drop of blood within your veins,
he knows by number and by rhythm.
25) He hears the birdling's call, the cricket's chirp, the glow worm's song;
and not a sparrow falls to earth without his knowledge and consent.
26) A sparrow seems a thing of little worth; yea, five of them are worth two
farthings in the market place, and yet God cares for every one of them.
27) Will he not care much more for you who bear his image in your soul?
28) Fear not to make confession of the Christ before the sons of men, and God
will own you as his sons and daughters in the presence of the host of heaven.
29) If you deny the Christ before the sons of men, then God will not receive
you as his own before the hosts of heaven.
30) And more I say, Fear not when men shall bring you up before the rulers of
the land to answer for your faith.
31) Behold, the Holy Breath shall teach you in your hour of need what you
should say, and what is best left unsaid.
32) And then the Christines went again to teach the multitudes.
CHAPTER 110
Miriam sings a song of
victory. The song. Jesus reveals the symbolic
character of the journey of Israel from Egypt to Canaan.
AND Miriam stood before the surging crowd, and casting up her eyes to
heaven she sung anew the song of victory:
2) Bring forth the harp, the vina and the lyre;
bring forth the highest sounding cymbal, all ye choirs of heaven. Join in the
song, the new, new song.
3) The Lord of hosts has stooped to hear the cries of men, and lo, the citadel
of Beelzebub is shaking as a leaf before the wind.
4) The sword of Gideon is again unsheathed.
5) The Lord, with his own hand has pulled far back the curtains of the night;
the sun of truth is flooding heaven and earth;
6) The demons of the dark, of ignorance and death, are fleeing fast; are
disappearing as the dew beneath the morning sun.
7) God is our strength and song; is our salvation and our hope, and we will
build anew a house for him;
8) Will cleanse our hearts, and purify their chambers, every one. We are the
temple of the Holy Breath.
9) We need no more a tent within the wilderness; no more a temple built with
hands.
10) We do not seek the Holy Land, nor yet Jerusalem.
11) We are the tent of God; we are his temple built without the sound of edged
tools.
12) We are the Holy Land; we are the New Jerusalem; Allelujah, praise the
Lord!
13) And when the song was done the multitudes exclaimed,
Praise God.
14) And Jesus said,
Behold the way!
15) The sons of men have groped for ages in the darkness of Egyptian night.
16) The Pharaohs of sense have bound them with their chains.
17) But God has whispered through the mists of time and told them of a land of
liberty and love.
18) And he has sent his Logos forth to light the way.
19) The Red Sea rolls between the promised land and Egypt's sands.
20) The Red Sea is the carnal mind.
21) Behold, the Logos reaches out his hand; the sea divides; the carnal mind
is reft in twain; the sons of men walk through dry shod.
22) The Pharaohs of sense would stay them in their flight; the waters of the
sea return; the Pharaohs of sense are lost and men are free.
23) For just a little while men tread the wilderness of Sin; the Logos leads
the way;
24) And when at last men stand upon the Jordan's brink, these waters stay, and
men step forth into their own.
CHAPTER 111
Jesus teaches. A man requests him to compel his brother to deal justly. Jesus reveals the divine law, the power of truth and the universality of possessions. Relates the parable of the rich man and his abundant harvest.
AND Jesus taught the multitudes; and while he spoke a man stood forth
and said,
2) Rabboni, hear my plea: My father died and left a
large estate; my brother seized it all, and now refuses me my share.
3) I pray that you will bid him do the right, and give what is mine.
4) And Jesus said,
I am not come to be a judge in such affairs; I am
no henchman of the court.
5) God sent me not to force a man to do the right.
6) In every man there is a sense of right; but many men regard it not.
7) The fumes that rise from selfishness have formed a crust about their sense
of right that veils their inner light, so that they cannot comprehend nor
recognize the rights of other men.
8) This veil you cannot tear away by force of arms, and there is naught that
can dissolve this crust but knowledge and love of God.
9) While men are in the mire, the skies seem far away; when men are on the
mountain top, the skies are near, and they can almost touch the stars.
10) Then Jesus turned and to the twelve he said,
Behold the many in the mire of carnal life!
11) The leaven of truth will change the miry clay to solid rock, and men can
walk and find the path that leads up to the mountain top.
12) You cannot haste; but you can scatter forth this leaven with a generous
hand.
13) When men have learned the truth that bears upon its face the law of right,
then they will haste to give every man his dues.
14) Then to the people Jesus said, Take heed, and covet not. The wealth of men
does not consist in what they seem to have - in lands, in silver and in gold.
15) These things are only borrowed wealth. No man can corner up the gifts of
God.
16) The things of nature are the things of God, and what is God's belongs to
every man alike.
17) The wealth of soul lies in the purity of life, and in the wisdom that
descends from heaven.
18) Behold, a rich man's ground brought forth abundantly; his barns were far
too small to hold his grain, and to himself he said,
19) What shall I do? I must not give my grain away; I must not let it go to
waste; and then he said,
20) This will I do; I will tear down these little barns and build up larger
ones; there I will store away my grain and I will say,
21) My soul take now your ease; you have enough for many years; eat, drink and
fill yourself and be content.
22) But God looked down and saw the man; he saw his selfish heart and said,
23) You foolish man, this night your soul will quit its house of flesh; then
who will have your garnered wealth?
24) You men of Galilee, lay not up treasures in the vaults of earth;
accumulated wealth will blight your soul.
25) God does not give men wealth to hoard away in secret vaults. Men are but
stewards of God's wealth, and they must use it for the common good.
26) To every steward who is true to self, to other men, to every thing that
is, the Lord will say, Well done.
CHAPTER 112
The Christines in the home
of Mary of Magdala. Jesus calls his disciples, "Little Flock,"
and charges them to place their affections on divine things.
He teaches them regarding the inner life.
AND Jesus left the multitudes and went with his disciples up to Mary's
home; and as they sat about the board to dine he said,
2) My little flock, fear not; it is your Father's
will that you shall rule the kingdom of the soul.
3) A ruler in the house of God is servant of the Lord of Hosts, and man cannot
serve God except by serving men.
4) A servant in the house of God cannot be servant in the house of wealth; nor
in the synagogue of sense.
5) If you are tied to lands, or bonds, or wealth of earth, your hearts are
knit to things of earth; for where your treasures are there are your hearts.
6) Dispose of all your wealth, distribute it among the poor, and put your
trust in God, and you nor yours will ever come to want.
7) This is a test of faith, and God will not accept the service of the
faithless one.
8) The time is ripe; your Master comes upon the clouds; the eastern sky is
glowing with his presence now.
9) Put on reception robes; gird up your loins; trim up your lamps and fill
them well with oil, and be prepared to meet your Lord; when you are ready, he
will come.
10) Thrice blessed are the servants who are ready to receive their Lord.
11) Behold, for he will gird himself, and will prepare a sumptuous feast for
every one, and he himself will serve.
12) It matters not when he shall come; it may be at the second watch; it may
be at the third; but blessed are the servants who are ready to receive.
13) You cannot leave your door ajar and go to sleep, and wait in blissful
ignorance of the fleeting time;
14) For thieves will surely come and take away your goods and bind and carry
you away to robbers' dens.
15) And if you are not carried forth, the Master when he comes will not regard
a sleeping guard as friend, but as a foe.
16) Beloved, these are times when every man must be awake and at his post, for
none can tell the hour nor the day when man shall be revealed.
17) And Peter said,
Lord is this parable for us, or for the multitudes?
18) And Jesus,
Why need you ask? God is not a man that he should
show respect for one and cast another off.
19) Whoever will may come and gird himself, and trim his lamp, and find a
turret in the tower of life where he may watch, and be prepared to meet the
Lord.
20) But you, as children of the light, have come, and you have learned the
language of the court, and may stand forth and lead the way.
21) But you may wait, and think that you are ready to receive the Lord, and
still he does not come.
22) And you may grow impatient and begin to long for carnal ways again, and
may begin to exercise your rule;
23) To beat, and otherwise maltreat the servants of the house, and fill
yourselves with wine and meat.
24) And what will say the Lord when he shall come?
25) Behold, for he will cast the faithless servant from his house; and many
years will come and go before he can be cleansed, and be thought worthy to
receive his Lord.
26) The servant who has come into the light, who knows the Master's will and
does it not; the trusted guard who goes to sleep within the turret of the
tower of life,
27) Shall feel the lash of justice many times, while he who does not know his
Master's will and does it not, will not receive the graver punishment.
28) The man who comes and stands before the open door of opportunity and does
not enter in, but goes his way,
29) Will come again and find the door made fast, and when he calls, the door
will open not,
30) The guard will say, you had the pass-word once, but you threw it away and
now the Master knows you not; depart.
31) And verily I say to you, To whom much has been given, much is required; to
whom a little has been given, a little only is required.
CHAPTER 113
In answer to a question of
Lamaas, Jesus teaches a lesson on the reign of peace
and the way to it through antagonisms. The signs of the times.
Guidance of the Holy Breath. The Christines go to Bethsaida.
NOW, after they had dined, the guests and Jesus all were in a spacious
hall in Mary's home.
2) And then Lamaas said,
Pray, tell us Lord, is this the dawn of peace?
3) Have we come forth unto the time when men will war no more?
4) Are you, indeed, the Prince of Peace that holy men said would come?
5) And Jesus said,
Peace reigns today; it is the peace of death.
6) A stagnant pool abides in peace. When waters cease to move they soon are
ladened with the seeds of death; corruption dwells in every drop.
7) The living waters always leap and skip about like lambs in Spring.
8) The nations are corrupt; they sleep within the arms of death and they must
be aroused before it is too late.
9) In life we find antagonists at work. God sent me here to stir unto its
depths the waters of the sea of life.
10) Peace follows strife; I come to slay this peace of death. The prince of
peace must first be prince of strife.
11) This leaven of truth which I have brought to men will stir the demons up,
and nations, cities, families will be at war within themselves.
12) The five that have been dwelling in a home of peace will be divided now,
and two shall war with three;
13) The son will stand against his sire; the mother and the daughter will
contend; yea, strife will reign in every home.
14) The self and greed and doubt will rage into a fever heat, and then,
because of me, the earth will be baptized in human blood.
15) But right is king; and when the smoke is cleared away the nations will
learn war no more; the Prince of Peace will come to reign.
16) Behold, the signs of what I say are in the sky; but men can see them not.
17) When men behold a cloud rise in the west they say, A shower of rain will
come, and so it does; and when the wind blows from the south they say, The
weather will be hot; and it is so.
18) Lo, men can read the signs of earth and sky, but they cannot discern the
signs of Holy Breath; but you shall know.
19) The storm of wrath comes on; the carnal man will seek a cause to hale you
into court, and cast you into prison cells.
20) And when these times shall come let wisdom guide; do not resent.
Resentment makes more strong the wrath of evil men.
21) There is a little sense of justice and of mercy in the vilest men of
earth.
22) By taking heed to what you do and say and trusting in the guidance of the
Holy Breath, you may inspire this sense to grow.
23) You thus may make the wrath of men to praise the Lord.
24) The Christines went their way, and came unto Bethsaida and taught.
CHAPTER 114
A great storm on the sea
destroys many lives. Jesus makes an appeal for aid,
and the people give with a generous hand. In answer to a lawyer's question,
Jesus gives the philosophy of disasters.
AS Jesus taught, a man stood forth and said,
Rabboni, may I speak?
2) And Jesus said,
Say on.
And then the man spoke out and said,
3) A storm upon the sea last night wrecked many
fishing boats, and scores of men went down to death, and lo, their wives and
children are in need;
4) What can be done to help them in their sore distress?
5) And Jesus said,
A worthy plea. You men of Galilee, take heed. We
may not bring again to life these men, but we can succour those who looked to
them for daily bread.
6) You stewards of the wealth of God, an opportunity has come; unlock your
vaults; bring forth your hoarded gold; bestow it with a lavish hand.
7) This wealth was laid aside for just times as these; when it was needed not,
lo, it was yours to guard;
8) But now it is not yours, for it belongs to those who are in want, and if
you give it not you simply bring upon your heads the wrath of God.
9) It is not charity to give to those who need; it is but honesty; it is but
giving men their own.
10) Then Jesus turned to Judas, one of the twelve, who was the
treasurer of the band, and said,
11) Bring forth our treasure box; the money is not
ours now; turn every farthing to the help those in such distress.
12) Now, Judas did not wish to give the money all to those in want, and
so he talked with Peter, James and John.
13) He said,
Lo, I will save a certain part and give the rest;
that surely is enough for us, for we are strangers to the ones in want; we do
not even know their names.
14) But Peter said,
Why, Judas, man, how do you dare to think to trifle
with the strength of right?
15) The Lord has spoken true; this wealth does not belong to us in face of
this distress, and to refuse to give it is to steal.
16) You need not fear; we will not come to want.
17) Then Judas opened up the treasure box and gave the money all.
18) And there was gold and silver, food, and raiment in abundance for the
needs of the bereaved.
19) A lawyer said,
Rabboni, if God rules the worlds and all that in
them is, did he not bring about this storm? did he not slay these men?
20) Has he not brought this sore distress upon these people here? and was it
done to punish them for crimes?
21) And we remember well when once a band of earnest Jews from Galilee were in
Jerusalem, and at a feast and were, for fancied crimes against the Roman law,
22) Cut down within the very temple court by Pontius Pilate; and their blood
became their sacrifice.
23) Did God bring on this slaughter all because these men were doubly vile?
24) And then we bring to mind that once a tower called Siloam graced the
defenses of Jerusalem, and, seemingly, without a cause it tottered and it fell
to earth and eighteen men were killed.
25) Were these men vile? and were they slain as punishment for some great
crime?
26) And Jesus said,
We cannot look upon a single span of life and
judge of anything.
27) There is a law that men must recognize: Result depends on cause.
28) Men are not motes to float about within the air of one short life, and
then be lost in nothingness.
29) They are undying parts of the eternal whole that come and go, lo, many
times into the air of earth and of the great beyond, just to unfold the
God-like self.
30) A cause may be a part of one brief life; results may not be noted till
another life.
31) The cause of your results cannot be found within my life, nor can the
cause of my results be found in yours.
32) I cannot reap except I sow and I must reap whate'er I sow,
33) The law of all eternities is known to master minds:
34) Whatever men do unto other men the judge and executioner will do to them.
35) We do not note the execution of this law among the sons of men.
36) We note the weak dishonored, trampled on and slain by those men call the
strong.
37) We note that men with wood-like heads are seated in the chairs of state;
38) Are kings and judges, senators and priests, while men with giant
intellects are scavengers about the streets.
39) We note that women with a moiety of common sense, and not a whit of any
other kind, are painted up and dressed as queens,
40) Becoming ladies of the courts of puppet kings, because they have the form
of something beautiful; while God's own daughters are their slaves, or serve
as common laborers in the field.
41) The sense of justice cries aloud: This is a travesty on right.
42) So when men see no further than one little span of life it is no wonder
that they say, There is no God, or if there is a God he is a tyrant and should
die.
43) If you would judge aright of human life, you must arise and stand upon the
crest of time and note the thoughts and deeds of men as they have come up
through the ages past;
44) For we must know that man is not a creature made of clay to turn again to
clay and disappear.
45) He is a part of the eternal whole. There never was a time when he was not;
a time will never come when he will not exist.
46) And now we look; the men who now are slaves were tyrants once; the men who
now are tyrants have been slaves.
47) The men who suffer now once stood aloft and shouted with a fiend's delight
while others suffered at their hands.
48) And men are sick, and halt, and lame, and blind because they once
transgressed the laws of perfect life, and every law of God must be fulfilled.
49) Man may escape the punishment that seems but due for his mis-doings in
this life; but every deed and word and thought has its own metes and bounds,
50) Is cause, and has its own results, and if a wrong be done, the doer of the
wrong must make it right.
51) And when the wrongs have all been righted then will man arise and be at
one with God.
CHAPTER 115
Jesus teaches by the sea.
He relates the parable of the sower.
Tells why he teaches in parables. Explains the parable of the sower.
Relates the parable of the wheat and tares.
AND Jesus stood beside the sea and taught; the multitudes pressed close
upon him and he went into a boat that was near by and put a little ways from
shore, and then he spoke in parables; he said,
2) Behold, a sower took his seed and went into
his field to sow.
3) With lavish hand he scattered forth the seed and some fell in the hardened
paths that men had made,
4) And soon were crushed beneath the feet of other men; and birds came down
and carried all the seeds away.
5) Some seed fell on rocky ground where there was little soil; they grew and
soon the blades appeared and promised much;
6) But then there was no depth of soil, no chance for nourishment, and in the
heat of noonday sun they withered up and died.
7) Some seed fell where thistles grew, and found no earth in which to grow and
they were lost;
8) But other seed found lodgement in the rich and tender soil and grew apace,
and in the harvest it was found that some brought forth a hundred fold, some
sixty fold, some thirty fold.
9) They who have ears to hear may hear; they who have hearts to understand may
know.
10) Now, his disciples were beside him in the boat, and Thomas asked,
Why do you speak in parables?
11) And Jesus said,
My words, like every master's words, are dual in
their sense.
12) To you who know the language of the soul, my words have meanings far too
deep for other men to comprehend.
13) The other sense of what I say is all the multitude can understand; these
words are food for them; the inner thoughts are food for you.
14) Let every one reach forth and take the food that he is ready to receive.
15) And then he spoke that all might hear; he said, Hear you the meaning of
the parable:
16) Men hear my words and understand them not, and then the carnal self
purloins the seed, and not a sign of spirit life appears.
17) This is the seed that fell within the beaten paths of men.
18) And others hear the words of life, and with a fiery zeal receive them all;
they seem to comprehend the truth and promise well;
19) But troubles come; discouragements arise; there is no depth of thought;
their good intentions wither up and die.
20) These are the seeds that fell in stony ground.
21) And others hear the words of truth and seem to know their worth; but love
of pleasure, reputation, wealth and fame fill all the soil; the seeds are
nourished not and they are lost.
22) These are the seeds that fell among the thistles and the thorns.
23) But others hear the words of truth and comprehend them well; they sink
down deep into their souls; they live the holy life and all the world is
blest.
24) These are the seeds that fell in fertile soil, that brought forth fruit
abundantly.
25) You men of Galilee, take heed to how you hear and how you cultivate your
fields; for if you slight the offers of this day, the sower may not come to
you again in this or in the age to come.
26) Then Jesus spoke another parable; he said:
27) The kingdom I may liken to a field in which a
man sowed precious seed;
28) But while he slept an evil one went forth and sowed a measure full of
darnel seed; then went his way.
29) The soil was good, and so the wheat and darnel grew; and when the servants
saw the tares among the wheat, they found the owner of the field and said,
30) You surely sowed good seed; from whence these tares?
31) The owner said, Some evil one has sown the seed of tares.
32) The servants said, Shall we go out and pull up by the roots the tares and
burn them in the fire?
33) The owner said, No, that would not be well. The wheat and tares grow close
together in the soil, and while you pull the tares you would destroy the
wheat.
34) So we will let them grow together till the harvest time. Then to the
reapers I will say,
35) Go forth and gather up the tares and bind them up and burn them in the
fire, and gather all the wheat into my barns.
36) When he had spoken thus, he left the boat and went up to the house,
and his disciples followed him.
CHAPTER 116
The Christines are in
Philip's home. Jesus interprets the parable of the wheat and tares.
He explains the unfoldment of the kingdom by parables: the good seed;
the growth of the tree; the leaven; the hidden treasure. He goes to a
mountain to pray.
THE Christines were in Philip's home and Peter said to Jesus,
Lord, will you explain to us the meaning of the parables you spoke today? The
one about the wheat and tares, especially?
2) And Jesus said,
God's kingdom is a duality; it has an outer and
an inner form.
3) As seen by man it is composed of men, of those who make confession of the
name of Christ.
4) For various reasons various people crowd this outer kingdom of our God.
5) The inner kingdom is the kingdom of the soul, the kingdom of the pure in
heart.
6) The outer kingdom I may well explain in parables. Behold, for I have seen
you cast a great net out into the sea,
7) And when you hauled it in, lo, it was full of every kind of fish, some
good, some bad, some great, some small; and I have seen you save the good and
throw the bad away.
8) This outer kingdom is the net, and every kind of man is caught; but in the
sorting day the bad will all be cast away, the good reserved.
9) Hear, then, the meaning of the parable of the wheat and tares:
10) The sower is the son of man; the field, the world; the good seed are the
children of the light; the tares, the children of the dark; the enemy, the
carnal self; the harvest day, the closing of the age; the reapers are the
messengers of God.
11) The reckoning day will come to every man; then will the tares be gathered
up, and cast into the fire and be burned.
12) Then will the good shine forth as suns in the kingdom of the soul.
13) And Philip said,
Must men and women suffer in the flames because they
have not found the way of life?
14) And Jesus said,
The fire purifies. The chemist throws into the
fire the ores that hold all kinds of dross.
15) The useless metal seems to be consumed; but not a grain of gold is lost.
16) There is no man that has not in him gold that cannot be destroyed. The
evil things of men are all consumed in fire; the gold survives.
17) The inner kingdom of the soul I may explain in parables:
18) The son of man goes forth and scatters seeds of truth; God waters well the
soil; the seeds show life and grow; first comes the blade, and then the stalk,
and then the ear, and then the full wheat in the ear.
19) The harvest comes and, lo, the reapers bear the ripened sheaves into the
garner of the Lord.
20) Again, this kingdom of the soul is like a little seed that men may plant
in fertile soil.
21) (A thousand of these seeds would scarcely be a shekel's weight.)
22) The tiny seed begins to grow; it pushes through the earth, and after years
of growth it is a mighty tree and birds rest in its leafy bowers and men find
refuge 'neath its sheltering boughs from sun and storm.
23) Again, the truth, the spirit of the kingdom of the soul, is like a ball of
leaven that a woman hid in measures, three, of flour and in a little time the
whole was leavened.
24) Again, the kingdom of the soul is like a treasure hidden in a field which
one has found, and straightaway goes his way and sells all that he has and
buys the field.
25) When Jesus had thus said he went alone into a mountain pass near by
to pray.
CHAPTER 117
A royal feast is held in
Machaerus. John, the harbinger, is beheaded.
His body is buried in Hebron. His disciples mourn.
The Christines cross the sea in the night.
Jesus calms a raging storm.
A ROYAL feast was held in honor of the birthday of the tetrarch in
fortified Machaerus, east of the Bitter Sea.
2) The tetrarch, Herod, and his wife, Herodias, together with Salome were
there; and all the men and women of the royal court were there.
3) And when the feast was done, lo, all the guests and courtiers were drunk
with wine; they danced and leaped about like children in their play.
4) Salome, daughter of Herodias, came in and danced before the king. The
beauty of her form, her grace and winning ways entranced the silly Herod, then
half drunk with wine.
5) He called the maiden to his side and said,
Salome, you have won my heart, and you may ask and I
will give you anything you wish.
6) The maiden ran in childish glee and told her mother what the ruler
said.
7) Her mother said,
Go back and say, Give me the head of John, the
harbinger.
8) The maiden ran and told the ruler what she wished.
9) And Herod called his trusty executioner and said to him,
Go to the tower and tell the keeper that by my
authority you come to execute the prisoner known as John.
10) The man went forth and in a little while returned and on a platter
bore the lifeless head of John, and Herod offered it unto the maiden in the
presence of the guests.
11) The maiden stood aloof; her innocence was outraged when she saw the bloody
gift, and she would touch it not.
12) Her mother, steeped and hardened well in crime, came up and took the head
and held it up before the guests and said,
13) This is the fate of every man who dares to
scorn, or criticize, the acts of him who reigns.
14) The drunken rabble gazed upon the gruesome sight with fiendish joy.
15) The head was taken back unto the tower. The body had been given unto holy
men who had been friends of John; they placed it in a burial case and carried
it away.
16) They bore it to the Jordan, which they crossed just at the ford where John
first preached the word;
17) And through the passes of the Judean hills they carried it.
18) They reached the sacred grounds near Hebron, where the bodies of the
parents of the harbinger lay in their tombs;
19) And there they buried it; and then they went their way.
20) Now, when the news reached Galilee that John was dead the people met to
sing the sonnets of the dead.
21) And Jesus and the foreign masters and the twelve took ship to cross the
sea of Galilee.
22) A scribe, a faithful friend of John, stood by the sea; he called to Jesus
and he said,
Rabboni, let me follow where you go.
23) And Jesus said,
You seek a safe retreat from evil men. There is
no safety for your life with me;
24) For evil men will take my life as they have taken John's.
25) The foxes of the earth have safe retreats; the birds have nests secure
among the hidden rocks, but I have not a place where I may lay my head and
rest secure.
26) Then an apostle said,
Lord, suffer me to tarry here a while, that I may
take my father, who is dead, and lay him in the tomb.
27) But Jesus said,
The dead can care for those who die; the living
wait for those who live; come, follow me.
28) The evening came; three boats put out to sea and Jesus rested in
the foremost boat; he slept.
29) A storm came on; the boats were tossed about like toys upon the sea.
30) The waters swept the decks; the hardy boatmen were afraid lest all be
lost.
31) And Thomas found the master fast asleep; he called, and Jesus woke.
32) And Thomas said,
Behold the storm! have you no care for us? The boats
are going down.
33) And Jesus stood; he raised his hand; he talked unto the spirits of
the winds and waves as men would talk with men.
34) And, lo, the winds blew not; the waves came tremblingly and kissed his
feet; the sea was calm.
35) And then he said,
You men of faith, where is your faith? for you
can speak and winds and waves will hear and will obey.
36) And the disciples were amazed. They said,
Who is this man that even winds and waves obey his
voice?
CHAPTER 118
The Christines are in
Gadara. Jesus casts a legion of unclean spirits out of a man.
The spirits go into vicious animals which run into the sea, and are drowned.
The people are in fear and request Jesus to leave their coast. With his
disciples, he returns to Capernaum.
THE morning came; the Christines landed in the country of the Geracenes.
2) They went to Gadara, chief city of the Peracans, and here for certain days
they tarried and they taught.
3) Now, legends hold that Gadara is sacred to the dead, and all the hills
about are known as holy ground.
4) These are the burial grounds of all the regions round about; the hills are
full of tombs; and many dead from Galilee are here entombed.
5) Now, spirits of the lately dead that cannot rise to higher planes, remain
about the tombs that hold the flesh and bones of what was once their mortal
homes.
6) They sometimes take possession of the living, whom they torture in a
hundred ways.
7) And all through Gadara were men obsessed, and there was no one strong
enough to bring relief.
8) That they might meet these hidden foes and learn the way to dispossess the
evil ones the master took the foreign masters and the twelve into the tombs.
9) And as they neared the gates they met a man obsessed. A legion of the
unclean ones were in this man, and they had made him strong;
10) And none could bind him down, no, not with chains; for he could break the
stoutest chains, and go his way.
11) Now, unclean spirits cannot live in light; they revel in the dark.
12) When Jesus came he brought the light of life, and all the evil spirits
were disturbed.
13) The leader of the legion in the man called out,
Thou Jesus, thou Immanuel, we beg that thou wilt
not consign us to the depths. Torment us not before our time.
14) And Jesus said,
What is your number and your name?
15) The evil spirit said,
Our name is legion, and our number is the number
of the beast.
16) And Jesus spoke; and with a voice that shook the very hills, he
said,
Come forth; possess this man no more.
17) Now, all the hills were filled with unclean animals that fed, and
carried forth and spread the plague among the people of the land.
18) And when the evil spirits begged that they might not be driven forth
without a home, the master said,
19) Go forth and take possession of the unclean
quadrupeds.
20) And they, and all the evil spirits of the tombs went forth and took
possession of the breeders of the plague,
21) Which, wild with rage, ran down the steeps into the sea, and all were
drowned.
22) And all the land was freed of the contagion, and the unclean spirits came
no more.
23) But when the people saw the mighty works that Jesus did they were alarmed.
They said,
24) If he can free the country of the plague, and
drive the unclean spirits out, he is a man of such transcendent power that he
can devastate our land at will.
25) And then they came and prayed that he would not remain in Gadara.
26) And Jesus did not tarry longer there, and with the other masters and the
twelve, he went aboard the boats to go away.
27) The man who had been rescued from the unclean legion stood upon the shore
and said,
Lord let me go with you.
28) But Jesus said, It is not well; go
forth unto your home and tell the news that men may know what man can do when
he is tuned with God.
29) And then the man went forth through all Decapolis and told the
news.
30) The Christines sailed away, re-crossed the sea and came again into
Capernaum.
CHAPTER 119
The people of Capernaum
welcome Jesus. Matthew gives a feast. The Pharisees rebuke Jesus for eating
with sinners. He tells them that he is sent to save sinners.
He gives lessons on fasting and on the philosophy of good and evil.
THE news soon spread through all the land that Jesus was at home and
then the people came in throngs to welcome him.
2) And Matthew, one of the twelve, a man of wealth, whose home was in
Capernaum, spread forth a sumptuous feast, and Jesus and the foreign masters
and the twelve, and people of all shades of thought, were guests.
3) And when the Pharisees observed that Jesus sat and ate with publicans and
those of ill repute they said,
4) For shame! This man who claims to be man of God,
consorts with publicans and courtesans and with the common herd of men. For
shame!
5) When Jesus knew their thoughts he said,
They who are well cannot be healed; the pure need
not be saved.
6) They who are well are whole; they who are pure are saved.
7) They who love justice and do right need not repent; I came not unto them,
but to the sinner I am come.
8) A band of John's disciples who had heard that John was dead were
wearing badges for their dead;
9) Were fasting and were praying in their hearts, which when the Pharisees
observed they came to Jesus and they said,
10) Why fast the followers of John and your
disciples do not fast?
11) And Jesus said,
Lo, you are masters of the law; you ought to
know; perhaps you will make known your knowledge to these men.
12) What are the benefits derived from fasts?
The Pharisees were mute; they answered not.
13) Then Jesus said,
The vital force of men depends on what they eat
and drink.
14) Is spirit-life the stronger when the vital force is weak? Is sainthood
reached by starving, self imposed?
15) A glutton is a sinner in the sight of God, and he is not a saint who makes
himself a weakling and unfitted for the heavy tasks of life by scorning to
make use of God's own means of strength.
16) Lo, John is dead, and his devoted followers are fasting in their grief.
17) Their love for him impels them on to show respect, for they have thought,
and have been taught that it is sin to lightly treat the memory of the dead.
18) To them it is a sin, and it is well that they should fast.
19) When men defy their consciences and listen not to what they say, the heart
is grieved and they become unfitted for the work of life; and thus they sin.
20) The conscience may be taught. One man may do in conscience what another
cannot do.
21) What is a sin for me to do may not be sin for you to do. The place you
occupy upon the way of life determines what is sin.
22) There is no changeless law of good; for good and evil both are judged by
other things.
23) One man may fast and in his deep sincerity of heart is blest.
24) Another man may fast and in the faithlessness of such a task imposed is
cursed.
25) You cannot make a bed to fit the form of every man. If you can make a bed
to fit yourself you have done well.
26) Why should these men who follow me resort to fasting, or to anything that
would impair their strength? They need it all to serve the race.
27) The time will come when God will let you have your way, and you will do to
me what Herod did to John;
28) And in the awfulness of that sad hour these men will fast.
29) They who have ears to hear may hear; they who have hearts to feel may
understand.
CHAPTER 120
Nicodemus is at the feast. He asks Jesus, Cannot the Christine religion be introduced more successfully by reforming the Jewish service? Jesus answers in the negative and gives his reasons. Jesus heals a woman with hemorrhages. Heals Jairus' daughter. Disappears when the people would worship him.
NOW, Nicodemus, who once came to Jesus in the night to learn the way of
life, was one among the guests.
2) And standing forth he said,
Rabboni, it is true that Jewish laws and Jewish
practices do not agree.
3) The priesthood needs to be reformed; the rulers should become more merciful
and kind; the lawyers should become more just; the common people should not
bear such loads.
4) But could we not gain these reforms and not destroy the service of the
Jews?
5) Could you not harmonize your mighty work with that of Pharisee and scribe?
Might not the priesthood be a benefit to your divine philosophy?
6) But Jesus said,
You cannot put new wine in ancient skins, for
when it purifies itself, lo, it expands; the ancient bottles cannot bear the
strain; they burst, and all the wine is lost.
7) Men do not mend a worn-out garment with a piece of cloth unworn, which
cannot yield to suit the fabric, weak with age, and then a greater rent
appears.
8) Old wine may be preserved in ancient skins; but new wine calls for bottles
new.
9) This spirit-truth I bring is to this generation new, and if we put it in
the ancient skins of Jewish forms, lo, it will all be lost.
10) It must expand; the ancient bottles cannot yield and they would burst.
11) Behold the kingdom of the Christ! it is as old as God himself, and yet it
is as new as morning sun; it only can contain the truth of God.
12) And as he spoke a ruler of the synagogue, Jairus by name, came in and
bowed at Jesus' feet and said,
13) My master, hear my prayer! My child is very
sick, I fear that she will die; but this I know that if you will but come and
speak the Word my child will live.
14) (She was an only child, a girl twelve years of age.)
15) And Jesus tarried not; he went out with the man, and many people followed
them.
16) And as they went a woman who had been plagued with hemorrhage for many
years, had been a subject of experiment of doctors near and far, and all had
said, She cannot live, rose from her bed and rushed out in the way as Jesus
passed.
17) She said within herself,
If I can touch his garment, then I know I will be
well.
18) She touched him, and at once the bleeding ceased and she was
well.
19) And Jesus felt that healing power had gone from him, and speaking to the
multitude, he said,
20) Who was it touched my coat?
21) And Peter said, No one can tell; the
multitudes are pressing you; a score of people may have touched your coat.
22) But Jesus said, Some one in faith,
with healing thought, did touch my coat, for healing virtues have gone forth
from me.
23) And when the woman knew that what she did was known, she came and
knelt at Jesus' feet and told it all.
24) And Jesus said,
Your faith has made you whole, go on your way in
peace.
25) Now, as he spoke, a servant from the home of Jairus came and said,
My master, Jairus, trouble not the Lord to come;
your child is dead.
26) But Jesus said,
Jairus, man of faith, do not permit your faith to
waver in this trying hour.
27) What is it that the servant said? The child is dead? Lo, what is death?
28) It is the passing of the soul out of the house of flesh.
29) Man is the master of the soul and of its house. When man has risen up from
doubt and fear, lo, he can cleanse the empty house and bring the tenant back
again.
30) Then taking with him Peter, James and John, Jairus and the mother
of the child, he went into the chamber of the dead.
31) And when the doors were closed against the multitude, he spoke a word that
souls can understand, and then he took the maiden by the hand and said,
32) Talith cumi, child, arise!
The maiden's soul returned and she arose and asked for food.
33) And all the people of the city were amazed, and many would have worshipped
Jesus as a God.
34) But, like a phantom of the night, he disappeared and went his way.
CHAPTER 121
The Christines are in
Nazareth. Miriam sings a Christine song of praise.
Jesus teaches in the synagogue.
He heals a dumb man who is obsessed. The people do not believe in him.
The Pharisees call him a tool of Beelzebub. The Christines go to Cana.
IT was a gala day in Nazareth. The people there had met with one accord
to celebrate some great event.
2) And Jesus and the foreign masters and the twelve, and Mary, mother of the
Lord, and Miriam were there.
3) And when the people were assembled in the great hall of the town, the
graceful singer, Miriam, stood and sang a song of praise.
4) But few of all the multitude knew who the singer was; but instantly she won
all hearts.
5) For many days she sang the songs of Israel, and then she went her way.
6) The Sabbath came and Jesus went into the synagogue. He took the book of
Psalms and read:
7) Blest is the man who puts his trust in God,
respecting not the proud nor such as turn aside to lies.
8) O lord, my God, the works that thou hast done for us are wonderful; and
many are thy thoughts for us; we cannot count them all,
9) Thou dost not call for sacrifice, nor offerings of blood; burnt offerings
and offerings for sin thou dost not want;
10) And lo, I come to do thy will, O God, thy law is in my heart,
11) And I have preached the word of righteousness and peace unto the thronging
multitudes; I have declared the counsel of my God in full.
12) I have not hid thy righteousness within my heart; I have declared thy
faithfulness and grace.
13) I have not kept thy loving kindness and thy truth away from men; I have
declared them to the multitudes.
14) O Lord, make wide my lips that I may tell thy praise; I do not bring the
sacrifice of blood, nor yet burnt offerings for sin.
15) The sacrifices I would bring to thee, O God, are purity in life, a
contrite heart, a spirit full of faith and love, and these thou wilt receive.
16) And when he had thus read, he gave the book back to the keeper of the
books, and then he said,
17) Upon these ends of earth these messages of
God have come.
18) Our people have exalted sacrificial rites and have neglected mercy,
justice and the rights of men.
19) You Pharisees, you priests, you scribes, your God is surfeited with blood;
God does not heed your prayers; you stand before your burning victims; but you
stand in vain.
20) Turn you unto the testimonies of the law; reform and turn to God, and you
shall live.
21) Let not your altars be accursed again with smoke of innocence.
22) Bring unto God as sacrifice a broken and a contrite heart.
23) Lift from your fellow men the burdens that you have imposed.
24) And if you hearken not, and if you turn not from your evil ways, lo, God
will smite this nation with a curse.
25) And when he had thus said he stood aside, and all the people were
astonished, and they said,
26) Where did this man get all his knowledge and his
power? From whence did all this wisdom come?
27) Is not this Mary's son, whose home is out on Marmion Way?
28) Are not his brothers, Jude and James and Simon, known among our honored
men? Are not his sisters with us here?
29) But they were all offended by the words he spoke.
30) And Jesus said, A prophet has no honor in his
native land; he is not well received among his kin; his foes are in his home.
31) And Jesus wrought not many mighty works in Nazareth, because the
people had no faith in him. He did not tarry long.
32) But as he passed from thence two blind men followed him and cried,
Thou son of David, hear! Have mercy, Lord, and open
up our eyes that we may see.
33) And Jesus said,
Do you believe that I can open up your eyes and
make you see?
34) They said,
Yea, Lord, we know that if you speak the Word then
we can see.
35) And Jesus touched their eyes and spoke the Word; he said,
According to your faith so will it be.
36) And they were blest; they opened up their eyes and saw.
37) And Jesus said,
Tell not this thing to any one.
38) But they went forth and told the news through all the land.
39) As Jesus walked along the way a man who was obsessed, and who was dumb,
was brought to him.
40) And Jesus spoke the Word; the unclean spirit came out of the man; his
tongue was loosed; he spoke; he said, Praise God.
41) The people were amazed;
They said, This is a mighty deed; we never saw that
done before.
42) The Pharisees were also much amazed; but they cried out and said,
43) You men of Israel, take heed; this Jesus is a
tool of Beelzebub; he heals the sick and casts the spirits out in Satan's
name.
44) But Jesus answered not; he went his way.
45) And with the foreign masters and the twelve he went up to the town where
he once turned the water into wine, and tarried certain days.
CHAPTER 122
The Christines spend seven
days in prayer. Jesus gives his charge to the twelve
and sends them forth on their apostolic ministry, with instructions to meet
him in Capernaum.
THE Christines prayed in silence seven days; then Jesus called the
twelve aside and said,
2) Behold, the multitudes have thronged about us
everywhere; the people are bewildered; they wander here and there like sheep
without a fold.
3) They need a shepherd's care; they want a loving hand to lead them to the
light.
4) The grain is ripe; the harvest is abundant, but the harvesters are few.
5) The time is also ripe, and you must go alone through all the villages and
towns of Galilee and teach and heal.
6) And then he breathed upon the twelve and said,
Receive the Holy Breath.
7) And then he gave them each the Word of power, and said,
By this Omnific Word you shall cast spirits out,
shall heal the sick and bring the dead to life again.
8) And you shall go not in the way of the Assyrians, nor Greek; you shall not
go into Samaria; go only to your brethren of the scattered tribes.
9) And as you go proclaim, The kingdom of Christ has come.
10) You have abundantly received, and freely you shall give.
11) But you must go in faith; provide yourselves no crutch to lean upon.
12) Give all your gold and silver to the poor; take not two coats, nor extra
shoes; just take your wands.
13) You are God's husbandmen and he will never suffer you to want.
14) In every place you go search out the men of faith; with them abide until
you go from hence.
15) You go for me; you act for me. They who receive and welcome you, receive
and welcome me;
16) And they who shut their doors against your face, refuse to welcome me.
17) If you are not received in kindness in a town, bear not away an evil
thought; do not resist.
18) An evil thought of any kind will do you harm; will dissipate your power.
19) When you are not received with favor, go your way, for there are
multitudes of men who want the light.
20) Behold, I send you forth as sheep among a pack of wolves; and you must be
as wise as serpents and as harmless as the doves.
21) In all your language be discreet, for Pharisees and scribes will seek a
cause for your arrest in what you say.
22) And they will surely find a way by charges false to bring you into court.
23) And judges will declare that you are guilty of some crime, and sentence
you to scourgings and to prison cells.
24) But when you come to stand before the judge, be not afraid; be not
disturbed about the way to act, the words to speak.
25) The Holy Breath will guide you in that hour, and give the words that you
shall speak.
26) Of this be full assured; It is not you who speaks; it is the Holy Breath
that gives the words and moves the lips.
27) The gospel that you preach will not bring peace, but it will stir the
multitudes to wrath.
28) The carnal man abhors the truth, and he would give his life to crush the
tender plant before the harvest time.
29) And this will bring confusion in the homes that were the homes of stagnant
peace.
30) And brother will give brother up to death; the father will stand by and
see men execute his child; and in the courts the child will testify against
the sire, and gladly see its mother put to death.
31) And men will hate you just because you speak the name of Christ.
32) Thrice blessed is the man who shall be faithful in this coming day of
wrath!
33) Go now; when you are persecuted in a place, go seek another place.
34) And when you meet a foe too great for you, behold, the son of man is at
your door, and he can speak, and all the hosts of heaven will stand in your
defense.
35) But do not hold your present life in great esteem.
36) The time will come when men will take my life; you need not hope to be
immune, for they will slay you in the name of God.
37) Men call me Beelzebub and they will call you imps.
38) Be not afraid of what men say and do; they have no power over soul; they
may abuse and may destroy the body of the flesh; but that is all.
39) They do not know the God who holds the issues of the soul within his
hands, who can destroy the soul.
40) The Christ is king today, and men must recognize his power.
41) He who loves not the Christ, which is the love of God, before all else,
can never gain the prize of spirit consciousness.
42) And they who love their parents or their children more than they love the
Christ can never wear the name of Christ.
43) And he who loves his life more than he loves the Christ cannot please God.
44) And he who clings to life shall lose his life, while he who gives his life
for Christ will save his life.
45) When Jesus had thus said he sent the twelve away by twos, and bade
them meet him in Capernaum.
46 And they went out through all the towns of Galilee and taught and healed in
spirit and in power.
CHAPTER 123
Jesus gives his final charge to the foreign masters and sends them forth as apostles to the world. He goes alone to Tyre and abides in Rachel's home. Heals an obsessed child. Goes to Sidon and then to the mountains of Lebanon. Visits Mount Hermon, Caesarea-Philippi, Decapolis, Gadara and returns to Capernaum. Receives the twelve, who give an account of their work.
THE Christine master spent a time in prayer and then he called the
foreign masters, and he said to them,
2) Behold, I sent the twelve apostles unto
Israel, but you are sent to all the world.
3) Our God is one, is Spirit, and is truth, and every man is dear to him.
4) He is the God of every child of India, and the farther east; of Persia, and
the farther north; of Greece and Rome and of the farther west; of Egypt and
the farther south, and of the mighty lands across the seas, and of the islands
of the seas.
5) If God would send the bread of life to one and not to all who have arisen
to the consciousness of life and can receive the bread of life, then he would
be unjust and that would shake the very throne of heaven.
6) So he has called you from the seven centers of the world, and he has
breathed the breath of wisdom and of power into your souls, and now he sends
you forth as bearers of the light of life, apostles of the human race.
7) Go on your way, and as you go proclaim the gospel of the Christ.
8) And then he breathed upon the masters and he said, Receive the Holy Breath;
and then he gave to each the Word of power.
9) And each went on his way, and every land was blest.
10) Then Jesus went alone across the hills of Galilee and after certain days
he reached the coast of Tyre, and in the home of Rachel he abode.
11) He did not advertise his coming for he did not come to teach; he would
commune with God where he could see the waters of the Mighty Sea.
12) But Rachel told the news and multitudes of people thronged her home to see
the Lord.
13) A Grecian woman of Phenecia came; her daughter was obsessed. She said,
14) O Lord, have mercy on my home! My daughter is
obsessed; but this I know, if you will speak the Word she will be free. Thou
son of David, hear my prayer!
15) But Rachel said,
Good woman, trouble not the Lord. He did not come to
Tyre to heal; he came to talk with God beside the sea.
16) And Jesus said,
Lo, I was sent not to the Greek, nor to
Syro-phenicians; I come just to my people, Israel.
17) And then the woman fell down at his feet and said,
Lord, Jesus, I implore that you will save my child.
18) And Jesus said,
You know the common proverb well: It is not meet
that one should give the children's bread to dogs.
19) And then the woman said,
Yea, Jesus, this I know, but dogs may eat the crumbs
that fall down from their master's board.
20) And Jesus said,
Such faith I have not seen, no, not among the
Jews; she is not serf, nor dog.
21) And then he said to her,
According to your faith so let it be.
22) The woman went her way and when she came unto her child, lo, she
was healed.
23) And Jesus tarried many days in Tyre; and then he went his way and dwelt a
time in Sidon by the sea.
24) And then he journeyed on. In Lebanon hills and vales, and in its groves he
walked in silent thought.
25) His earthly mission fast was drawing to a close; he sought for strength,
and what he sought he found.
26) Mount Hermon stood beyond, and Jesus fain would kneel beside that mountain
famed in Hebrew song.
27) And then he stood upon Mount Hermon's lofty peaks, and lifting up his eyes
to heaven he talked with God.
28) And masters of the olden times revealed themselves and long they talked
about the kingdom of the Christ;
29) about the mighty works that had been done; about the coming conquest of
the cross; about the victory over death.
30) Then Jesus journeyed on; he went to Caesarea-Philippi, and in Susanna's
home he tarried certain days.
31) And then he went through all Decapolis to give encouragement to those who
knew him as the Christ, and to prepare them for the day of Calvary.
32) And then he went to Gadara, and many friends were there, to welcome him.
33) And Chuzas, steward of the house of Herod Antipas, was there, and Jesus
went aboard the royal ship with him and crossed the sea, and came unto
Capernaum.
34) And when the people knew that Jesus was at home they came to welcome him.
35) In just a little while the twelve apostles came and told the master all
about their journey over Galilee.
36) They said that by the sacred Word they had done many mighty works; and
Jesus said to them,
Well done.
![]()
SECTION XVII
PE
The Third Annual Epoch of the Christine Ministry of Jesus
CHAPTER 124
The Christines cross the
sea. Jesus gives to his disciples lessons on secret doctrines. Teaches the
people.
Feeds five thousand. The disciples start to recross the sea.
A storm arises. Jesus, walking on the waters,
comes to them. Trial of Peter's faith. They land in Gennesaret.
THE twelve apostles now had reached the stage of spirit consciousness,
and Jesus could reveal to them the deeper meanings of his mission to the
world.
2) Next week the great feast of the Jews would be observed, and Matthew said,
Shall we not gird ourselves and go unto Jerusalem?
3) But Jesus said,
We will not go up to the feast; the time is short
and I have many things to say to you; come you apart into a desert place and
rest a while.
4) And then they took their boats and crossed the sea, and came into a
desert place near Julius Bethsaida.
5) The people saw them go, and in vast multitudes they followed them.
6) And Jesus had compassion on the anxious throng, and he stood forth and
taught them all the day, because they sought a light and were like sheep
without a fold.
7) And as the night came on the twelve were doubting what the multitudes would
do, and Thomas said,
8) Lord, we are in a desert place; the multitudes
have naught to eat and they are faint from lack of food; what shall we do?
9) And Jesus said,
Go to and feed the multitudes.
10) And Judas said,
Shall we go down and buy two hundred pennies' worth
of bread for them to eat?
11) And Jesus said,
Go look into our larder and see how many loaves
we have.
12) And Andrew said,
We have no bread, but we have found a lad who has
five barley loaves and two small fish; but this would not be food enough for
one in ten.
13) But Jesus said,
Command these people all to sit upon the grass in
companies of twelve; and they all sat down in companies of twelve.
14) Then Jesus took the loaves and fish, and looking up to heaven he
spoke the sacred Word.
15) And then he broke the bread and gave it to the twelve; he also gave the
fish unto the twelve, and said,
Go to and feed the multitudes.
16) And all the people ate and were refreshed.
17) There were about five thousand men, a company of little ones, and women
not a few.
18) And when the people all were filled the master said,
19) Let not a crumb be lost; Go to and gather up
the pieces of the bread and fish for others that may want.
20) They gathered up the fragments and they filled twelve baskets full.
21) The people were bewildered by this wondrous act of power; they said,
And now we know that Jesus is the prophet that our
prophets said would come;
and then they said,
All hail the king!
22) When Jesus heard them say, All hail the king! he called the
twelve and bade them take their boats and go before him to the other side;
23) And he went all alone into a mountain pass to pray.
24) The twelve were on the sea and hoped to reach Capernaum in just a little
time, when all at once a fearful storm arose, and they were at the mercy of
the waves.
25) And in the fourth watch of the night the wind became a whirling wind, and
they were filled with fear.
26) And in the blinding storm they saw a form move on the waves; it seemed to
be a man, one spoke out and said, It is a ghost, a
sign of evil things.
27) But John discerned the form and said,
It is the Lord.
28) And then the wind blew not so hard, and Peter, standing in the
midst, exclaimed:
29) My Lord! my Lord! If this be truly you, bid me
to come to you upon the waves.
30) The form reached forth his hand and said,
Come on.
31) And Peter stepped upon the waves and they were solid as a rock; he
walked upon the waves.
32) He walked until he thought within himself,
What if the waves should break beneath my feet?
33) And then the waves did break beneath his feet, and he began to
sink, and in the fearfulness of soul he cried,
O save me, Lord, or I am lost!
34) And Jesus took him by the hand and said,
O you of little faith! why did you doubt?
And Jesus led the way unto the boat.
35) The storm had spent its force; the winds were still, and they were near
the shore, and when they landed they were in the valley of Gennesaret.
CHAPTER 125
The Christines are welcomed
in Gennesaret. Many follow Jesus for the loaves and fish.
He tells them of the bread of life. Speaks of his flesh and blood
as symbols of the bread and water of life.
The people are offended and many of his disciples follow him no more.
THE news soon spread through all the valley of Gennersaret that Jesus
and the twelve had come, and many people came to see.
2) They brought their sick and laid them at the master's feet, and all the day
he taught and healed.
3) The multitudes upon the other side who had been fed the day before and
other multitudes, went down to see the Lord; but when they found him not they
sought him in Capernaum.
4) And when they found him not at home, they went on to Gennesaret. They found
him there and said,
Rabboni, when came you to Gennesaret?
5) And Jesus said,
Why are you come across the sea? you came not for
the bread of life;
6) You came to gratify your selfish selves; you all were fed the other day
across the sea, and you are after more of loaves and fish.
7) The food you ate was nourishment for flesh that soon must pass away.
8) You men of Galilee, seek not for food that perishes, but seek for food that
feeds the soul; and, lo, I bring you food from heaven.
9) You ate the flesh of fish, and you were satisfied, and now I bring the
flesh of Christ for you to eat that you may live for evermore.
10) Our fathers ate the manna in the wilderness; and then they ate the flesh
of quail, and drank the waters of a flowing spring that Moses brought out from
the rock; but all of them are dead.
11) The manna and the quail were symbols of the flesh of Christ; the waters of
the rock were symbols of the blood.
12) But, lo, the Christ has come; he is the bread of life that God has given
to the world.
13) Whoever eats the flesh of Christ and drinks his blood shall never die; and
he will hunger nevermore; and he will thirst no more.
14) And they who eat this bread of heaven, and drink these waters from the
spring of life cannot be lost; these feed the soul, and purify the life.
15) Behold, for God has said, When man has purified himself I will exalt him
to the throne of power.
16) Then Jesus and the twelve went to Capernaum; and Jesus went into the
synagogue and taught.
17) And when the Jews, who heard him in Gennesaret, were come they said,
18) This fellow is beside himself. We heard him say,
I am the bread of life that comes from heaven; and we all know that he is but
a man, the son of man, who came from Nazareth; we know his mother, and his
other kin.
19) And Jesus knew their thoughts; he said to them,
Why murmur you, and reason thus among yourselves?
20) The Christ is everlasting life; he came from heaven; he has the keys of
heaven, and no man enters into heaven except he fills himself with Christ.
21) I came in flesh to do the will of God, and, lo, this flesh and blood are
filled with Christ; and so I am the living bread that comes from heaven;
22) And when you eat this flesh and drink this blood you will have everlasting
life; and if you will, you may become the bread of life.
23) And many of the people were enraged; they said,
How can this man give us his flesh to eat, his blood
to drink?
24) And his disciples were aggrieved because he said these things, and
many turned away and followed him no more.
25) They said,
This is a fearful thing for him to say, If you eat
not my flesh and drink my blood, you cannot enter into life.
26) They could not comprehend the parable he spoke.
27) And Jesus said,
You stumble and you fall before the truth; What
will you do when you shall see this flesh and blood transmuted into higher
form?
28) What will you say when you shall see the son of man ascending on the
clouds of heaven?
29) What will you say when you shall see the son of man sit on the throne of
God?
30) The flesh is naught; the spirit is the quickening power. The words I speak
are spirit; they are life.
31) When Jesus saw the many who had been so loud in their professions
of their faith in him, turn back and go away, he said unto the twelve.
32) Will you desert me in this hour and go away?
33) But Peter said, Lord,
we have no place else to go; you have the words of
everlasting life; we know that you are sent to us from God.
CHAPTER 126
Scribes and Pharisees visit
Jesus. They censure him for eating with unwashed hands.
He defends his acts and teaches a lesson on hypocrisy. Privately explains to
the twelve his public teachings.
A COMPANY of scribes and Pharisees came from Jerusalem to learn wherein
the power of Jesus lay.
2) But when they learned that he and his disciples heeded not the custom of
the Jews, regarding washing of the hands before they ate, they were amazed.
3) And Jesus said,
Hypocrisy is queen among you scribes and
Pharisees. Of you Isaiah wrote:
4) This people honor me with lips; their hearts are far away. In vain they
worship me; their doctrines are the dogmas and the creeds of men.
5) You men who pose as men of God, and still reject the laws of God and teach
the laws of men,
6) Stand forth and tell when God gave unto men the ceremonial laws that you
observe; and tell these people how the spirit life is sullied if one washes
not before he eats.
7) His critics answered not, and then he said,
8) Hear me, you men of Israel! Defilement is a
creature of the heart. The carnal mind lays hold of thought, and makes a
monstrous bride; this bride is sin; sin is a creature of the mind.
9) That which defiles a man is not the food he eats.
10) The bread and fish and other things we eat, are simply cups to carry to
the cells of flesh material for the building of the human house, and when
their work is done as refuse they are cast away.
11) The life of plant and flesh that goes to build the human house is never
food for soul. The spirit does not feed upon the carcasses of animal, or
plant.
12) God feeds the soul direct from heaven; the bread of life comes from above.
13) The air we breathe is charged with Holy Breath, and he who wills may take
this Holy Breath.
14) The soul discriminates, and he who wants the life of Christ may breathe it
in. According to your faith so let it be.
15) Man is not a part of his abiding place; the house is not the man.
16) The lower world builds up the house of flesh, and keeps it in repair; the
higher world provides the bread of spirit life.
17) The loveliest lilies grow from stagnant ponds and filthiest muck.
18) The law of flesh demands that one should keep the body clean.
19) The law of spirit call for purity in thought and word and deed.
20) Now, when the evening came and they were in the house, the twelve
had many things to say, and many questions to propound.
21) Nathaniel asked,
Was what you said about the house of flesh a
parable? If so, what does it mean?
22) And Jesus said, Can you not yet
discriminate? Do you not yet perceive that what a man takes in his mouth
defiles him not?
23) His food goes not into his soul; it is material for flesh and bone and
brawn.
24) To spirit everything is clean.
25) That which defiles a man wells up from carnal thoughts; and carnal
thoughts spring from the heart, and generate a host of evil things.
26) From out the heart comes murders, thefts and foolishness. All selfish acts
and sensual deeds spring from the heart.
27) To eat with unwashed hands does not defile the man.
28) And Peter said,
Lord, What you said today has grievously offended
scribe and Pharisee.
29) And Jesus said,
These scribes and Pharisees are not the scions of
the tree of life; they are not plants of God; they are the plants of men, and
every foreign plant shall be plucked up.
30) Let all these men alone; they are blind guides; they lead a multitude of
people who are blind.
31) The leaders and the led together walk; together they will fall into the
yawning pits.
CHAPTER 127
The Christines cross the
sea to Decapolis. Jesus finds a retired place where he privately
teaches the twelve. They remain three days, then go into a village by the
sea.
NOW, Jesus took the twelve and with them crossed the sea at night and
came unto the borders of Decapolis,
2) That he might find a secret place where, all alone, he could reveal to them
the things to come.
3) They went into a mountain pass and spent three days in prayer.
4) Then Jesus said,
Behold, the time is near when I will walk with
you in flesh no more.
5) Lo, I have taught that he who counts his life of so much worth that he
would give it not in willing sacrifice to save his brother man, is worthy not
to enter into life.
6) Lo, I am come as pattern for the sons of men, and I have not refrained from
helpfulness.
7) When I had passed the seven tests in Heliopolis, I consecrated life and all
I had, to save the world.
8) In the Judean wilderness I fought the strongest foes of men, and there I
reaffirmed my consecration to the service of my fellow man.
9) In troubles and in trials I have wavered not; when false accusers came, I
answered not.
10) God gave the saving Word to me, and I have often spoken it and healed the
sick, drove unclean spirits out, and raised the dead.
11) And I have shown you how to speak the Word; and I have given you the Word;
12) In just a little while we turn our faces toward Jerusalem, and one of you
who hear me now will then betray me into wicked hands.
13) The scribes and Pharisees will bring false charges up and hale me into
court, and, by consent of Rome, I will be crucified.
14) Then Peter said,
My Lord, it shall not be. The Roman soldiers will
tread on twelve dead men before they reach our Lord.
15) But Jesus said,
A saviour of the world cannot resist.
16) I came to save the world and I have taken up your names before the highest
courts of heaven, and you have been confirmed as saviours of the world.
17) And not a name, excepting that of him who shall betray, will ever be
disgraced.
18) I go my way, and though my flesh shall pass, my soul will stand beside you
all the way to guide and bless.
19) And wicked men will seize you in the streets, and as you kneel in prayer;
will charge you with some legal crime, and think they serve their God by
putting you to death.
20) But falter not; the load will heavy be, but with the consciousness of duty
done, the peace of God will lift the load, dispel the pain and light the way.
21) And we will meet where carnal executioners come not; there we will serve
the cruel men, who in their ignorance had tortured us to death.
22) Can we prevent this outrage and this slaughter of our lives? If not we are
but creatures of the ebb and flow of carnal things. It would not be a
sacrifice of life.
23) But we are masters of the things of time. Lo, we can speak, and all the
spirits of the fire, water, earth and air will stand in our defense.
24) We can command and many legions of the angel world would come and strike
our enemies to earth.
25) But it is best that not a power of heaven or earth should come to our
relief. And it is best that even God should veil his face and seem to hear us
not.
26) As I am pattern unto you, so you are patterns for the human race. We show
by non-resistance that we give our lives in willing sacrifice for man.
27) But my example will not end with death. My body will be laid within a tomb
in which no flesh has lain, symbolic of the purity of life in death.
28) And in the tomb I will remain three days in sweet communion with the
Christ, and with my Father-God and Mother-God.
29) And then, symbolic of the ascent of the soul to higher life, my flesh
within the tomb will disappear;
30) Will be transmuted into higher form, and, in the presence of you all, I
will ascend to God.
31) Then Jesus and the twelve went to a village by the sea.
CHAPTER 128
Jesus goes at night to a mountain to pray. His disciples and the villagers find him and he teaches them for three days. Feeds four thousand people. The Christines go to Caesarea-Philippi. They consider the personality of Christ. Peter is chosen as apostolic leader.
NOW, in the night while the disciples slept, lo, Jesus rose and went
alone into a mountain pass, six miles away, to pray.
2) And in the morning when the twelve awoke they could not find the Lord, and
all the people of the village sought, and when the sun had passed its highest
point they found him in the mountain pass.
3) And multitudes of people came and brought their sick, and Jesus taught and
healed.
4) And when the night came on the people would not go; they slept upon the
ground that they might be a-near the Lord.
5) Three days and nights the multitudes remained, and none had aught to eat.
6) And Jesus had compassion and he said,
If I should send the multitudes away they might
not reach their homes, for they are faint, for some have journeyed many miles.
7) And his disciples said,
Where shall we get enough of food to feed them all?
There are four thousand men, besides the women and the little ones.
8) And Jesus said,
How many loaves have you?
9) They answered,
Seven, and some little fish.
10) And Jesus said,
Go to, and seat the people as you seated them the
other day when all the multitudes were fed, in companies of twelve.
11) And when the people were sat down in companies of twelve the loaves
and fish were brought.
12) And Jesus looked to heaven and spoke the Word; and then he broke the seven
loaves in little bits, and likewise cut the fish.
13) And every bit of bread became a loaf, and every piece of fish became a
fish.
14) The twelve went forth and gave to every one; the people ate and they were
filled; and all the fragments that were left were gathered up, and there were
seven baskets full.
15) And then the people went their ways, and the twelve took boats and came to
Dalmanatha by the sea.
16) Here they remained for many days, and Jesus told the twelve about the
inner light that cannot fail;
17) About the kingdom of the Christ within the soul; about the power of faith;
about the secret of the resurrection of the dead; about immortal life, and how
the living may go forth and help the dead.
18) And then they went into their boats, and came unto the northern coast of
Galilee, and in Chorazin where the kin of Thomas lived, they left their boats
and journeyed on.
19) They came to Merom, where the crystal waters seem to catch the images of
heaven and to reflect the glory of the Lord of hosts.
20) And here they tarried certain days in silent thought.
21) And then they journeyed on, and came into the land of Caesarea-Philippi.
22) And as they walked and talked among themselves, the master said,
What do the people say about the son of man? Who
do they think I am?
23) And Matthew said,
Some say that you are David come again; some say
that you are Enoch, Solomon, or Seth.
24) And Andrew said,
I heard a ruler of the synagogue exclaim, This man
is Jeremiah, for he speaks like Jeremiah wrote.
25) Nathaniel said,
The foreign masters who were with us for a time,
declared that Jesus is Gautama come again.
26) James said,
I think that most the master Jews believe you are
the reappearance of Elijah on the earth.
27) And John spoke out and said,
When we were in Jerusalem I heard a seer exclaim,
This Jesus is none other than Melchizedek, the king of peace, who lived about
two thousand years ago, and said that he would come again.
28) And Thomas said,
The Tetrarch Herod thinks that you are John arisen
from the dead;
29) But then his conscience troubles him; the spirit of the murdered John
looms up before him in his dreams, and haunts him as a spectre of the night.
30) And Jesus asked,
Who do you think I am?
31) And Peter said,
You are the Christ, the love of God made manifest to
men.
32) And Jesus said,
Thrice blessed are you, Simon, Jonas' son. You
have declared a truth that God has given you.
33) You are a rock, and you shall be a pillar in the temple of the Lord of
hosts.
34) And your confession is the cornerstone of faith, a rock of strength, and
on this rock the Church of Christ is built.
35) Against it all the powers of hades and of death cannot prevail.
36) Behold, I give to you the keys to open up the doors of safety for the sons
of men.
37) The Holy Breath will come upon you and the ten, and in Jerusalem you shall
stand before the nations of the earth, and there proclaim the covenant of God
with men.
38) And you shall speak the words of Holy Breath, and whatsoever God requires
of men as earnest of their faith in Christ, you shall make known.
39) Then turning to the twelve he said,
What you have heard this day tell not to any man.
40) Then Jesus and the twelve went up and were Susanna's guests for
many days.
CHAPTER 129
Jesus teaches the people.
He takes Peter, James and John and
goes to a high mountain and is transfigured before them.
THE news soon spread that Jesus and the twelve were come, and many
people came to see.
2) And Jesus said,
Behold, you come to see, but that means naught.
If you would have the benedictions of the Christ, take up your cross and
follow me.
3) If you would give your life for selfish self, then you will lose your life.
4) If you will give your life in service of your fellow men, then you will
save your life.
5) This life is but a span, a bauble of today. There is a life that passes
not.
6) Where is your profit if you gain the world and lose your soul? What would
you take in payment for your soul?
7) If you would find the spirit life, the life of man in God, then you must
walk a narrow way and enter through a narrow gate.
8) The way is Christ, the gate is Christ, and you must come up by the way of
Christ. No man comes unto God but by the Christ.
9) The kingdom of the Christ will come; yea, some of you who hear me now will
not pass through the gates of death until you see the kingdom come in power.
10) For seven days the master and the twelve remained in
Caesarea-Philippi.
11) Then Jesus, taking Peter, James and John, went forth unto a mountain top
to pray.
12) And as he prayed a brilliant light appeared; his form became as radiant as
a precious stone;
13) His face shone like the sun; his garments seemed as white as snow; the son
of man became the son of God.
14) He was transfigured that the men of earth might see the possibilities of
man.
15) When first the glory came the three disciples were asleep; a master
touched their eyes and said,
Awake and see the glory of the Lord.
16) And th