919 lines
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Plaintext
919 lines
57 KiB
Plaintext
Urantia Book Paper 136 Baptism And The Forty Days
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SPIRITWEB ORG, PROMOTING SPIRITUAL CONSCIOUSNESS ON THE INTERNET.
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Subjects Archive The Urantia Book Urantia Book PART IV: The Life and Teachings
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of Jesus : The Bestowal Of Michael On Urantia The Times Of Michael's Bestowal
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Birth And Infancy Of Jesus The Early Childhood Of Jesus The Later Childhood Of
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Jesus Jesus At Jerusalem The Two Crucial Years The Adolescent Years Jesus'
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Early Manhood The Later Adult Life Of Jesus On The Way To Rome The World's
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Religions The Sojourn At Rome The Return From Rome The Transition Years John
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The Baptist Baptism And The Forty Days Tarrying Time In Galilee Training The
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Kingdom's Messengers The Twelve Apostles The Ordination Of The Twelve Beginning
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The Public Work The Passover At Jerusalem Going Through Samaria At Gilboa And
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In The Decapolis Four Eventful Days At Capernaum First Preaching Tour Of
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Galilee The Interlude Visit To Jerusalem Training Evangelists At Bethsaida The
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Second Preaching Tour The Third Preaching Tour Tarrying And Teaching By The
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Seaside Events Leading Up To The Capernaum Crisis The Crisis At Capernaum Last
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Days At Capernaum Fleeing Through Northern Galilee The Sojourn At Tyre And
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Sidon At Caesarea-philippi The Mount Of Transfiguration The Decapolis Tour
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Rodan Of Alexandria Further Discussions With Rodan At The Feast Of Tabernacles
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Ordination Of The Seventy At Magadan At The Feast Of Dedication The Perean
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Mission Begins Last Visit To Northern Perea The Visit To Philadelphia The
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Resurrection Of Lazarus Last Teaching At Pella The Kingdom Of Heaven On The Way
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To Jerusalem Going Into Jerusalem Monday In Jerusalem ...
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Paper 136 Baptism And The Forty Days
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Introduction
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JESUS began his public work at the height of the popular interest in John's
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preaching and at a time when the Jewish people of Palestine were eagerly
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looking for the appearance of the Messiah. There was a great contrast between
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John and Jesus. John was an eager and earnest worker, but Jesus was a calm and
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happy laborer; only a few times in his entire life was he ever in a hurry.
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Jesus was a comforting consolation to the world and somewhat of an example;
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John was hardly a comfort or an example. He preached the kingdom of heaven but
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hardly entered into the happiness thereof. Though Jesus spoke of John as the
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greatest of the prophets of the old order, he also said that the least of those
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who saw the great light of the new way and entered thereby into the kingdom of
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heaven was indeed greater than John.
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When John preached the coming kingdom, the burden of his message was: Repent!
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flee from the wrath to come. When Jesus began to preach, there remained the
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exhortation to repentance, but such a message was always followed by the
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gospel, the good tidings of the joy and liberty of the new kingdom.
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1. CONCEPTS OF THE EXPECTED MESSIAH
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The Jews entertained many ideas about the expected deliverer, and each of these
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different schools of Messianic teaching was able to point to statements in the
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Hebrew scriptures as proof of their contentions. In a general way, the Jews
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regarded their national history as beginning with Abraham and culminating in
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the Messiah and the new age of the kingdom of God. In earlier times they had
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envisaged this deliverer as "the servant of the Lord," then as "the Son of
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Man," while latterly some even went so far as to refer to the Messiah as the
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"Son of God." But no matter whether he was called the "seed of Abraham" or "the
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son of David," all were agreed that he was to be the Messiah, the "anointed
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one." Thus did the concept evolve from the "servant of the Lord" to the "son of
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David," "Son of Man," and "Son of God."
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In the days of John and Jesus the more learned Jews had developed an idea of
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the coming Messiah as the perfected and representative Israelite, combining in
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himself as the "servant of the Lord" the threefold office of prophet, priest,
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and king.
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The Jews devoutly believed that, as Moses had delivered their fathers from
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Egyptian bondage by miraculous wonders, so would the coming Messiah deliver the
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Jewish people from Roman domination by even greater miracles of power and
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marvels of racial triumph. The rabbis had gathered together almost five hundred
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passages from the Scriptures which, notwithstanding their apparent con-
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top of page - 1510
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tradictions, they averred were prophetic of the coming Messiah. And amidst all
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these details of time, technique, and function, they almost completely lost
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sight of the personality of the promised Messiah. They were looking for a
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restoration of Jewish national glory--Israel's temporal exaltation--rather than
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for the salvation of the world. It therefore becomes evident that Jesus of
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Nazareth could never satisfy this materialistic Messianic concept of the Jewish
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mind. Many of their reputed Messianic predictions, had they but viewed these
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prophetic utterances in a different light, would have very naturally prepared
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their minds for a recognition of Jesus as the terminator of one age and the
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inaugurator of a new and better dispensation of mercy and salvation for all
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nations.
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The Jews had been brought up to believe in the doctrine of the Shekinah. But
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this reputed symbol of the Divine Presence was not to be seen in the temple.
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They believed that the coming of the Messiah would effect its restoration. They
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held confusing ideas about racial sin and the supposed evil nature of man. Some
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taught that Adam's sin had cursed the human race, and that the Messiah would
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remove this curse and restore man to divine favor. Others taught that God, in
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creating man, had put into his being both good and evil natures; that when he
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observed the outworking of this arrangement, he was greatly disappointed, and
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that "He repented that he had thus made man." And those who taught this
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believed that the Messiah was to come in order to redeem man from this inherent
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evil nature.
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The majority of the Jews believed that they continued to languish under Roman
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rule because of their national sins and because of the halfheartedness of the
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gentile proselytes. The Jewish nation had not wholeheartedly repented;
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therefore did the Messiah delay his coming. There was much talk about
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repentance; wherefore the mighty and immediate appeal of John's preaching,
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"Repent and be baptized, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." And the kingdom
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of heaven could mean only one thing to any devout Jew: The coming of the
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Messiah.
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There was one feature of the bestowal of Michael which was utterly foreign to
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the Jewish conception of the Messiah, and that was the union of the two
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natures, the human and the divine. The Jews had variously conceived of the
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Messiah as perfected human, superhuman, and even as divine, but they never
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entertained the concept of the union of the human and the divine. And this was
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the great stumbling block of Jesus' early disciples. They grasped the human
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concept of the Messiah as the son of David, as presented by the earlier
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prophets; as the Son of Man, the superhuman idea of Daniel and some of the
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later prophets; and even as the Son of God, as depicted by the author of the
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Book of Enoch and by certain of his contemporaries; but never had they for a
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single moment entertained the true concept of the union in one earth
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personality of the two natures, the human and the divine. The incarnation of
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the Creator in the form of the creature had not been revealed beforehand. It
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was revealed only in Jesus; the world knew nothing of such things until the
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Creator Son was made flesh and dwelt among the mortals of the realm.
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2. THE BAPTISM OF JESUS
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Jesus was baptized at the very height of John's preaching when Palestine was
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aflame with the expectancy of his message--"the kingdom of God is at
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hand"--when all Jewry was engaged in serious and solemn self-examination. The
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Jew-
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ish sense of racial solidarity was very profound. The Jews not only believed
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that the sins of the father might afflict his children, but they firmly
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believed that the sin of one individual might curse the nation. Accordingly,
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not all who submitted to John's baptism regarded themselves as being guilty of
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the specific sins which John denounced. Many devout souls were baptized by John
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for the good of Israel. They feared lest some sin of ignorance on their part
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might delay the coming of the Messiah. They felt themselves to belong to a
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guilty and sin-cursed nation, and they presented themselves for baptism that
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they might by so doing manifest fruits of race penitence. It is therefore
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evident that Jesus in no sense received John's baptism as a rite of repentance
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or for the remission of sins. In accepting baptism at the hands of John, Jesus
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was only following the example of many pious Israelites.
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When Jesus of Nazareth went down into the Jordan to be baptized, he was a
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mortal of the realm who had attained the pinnacle of human evolutionary
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ascension in all matters related to the conquest of mind and to
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self-identification with the spirit. He stood in the Jordan that day a
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perfected mortal of the evolutionary worlds of time and space. Perfect
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synchrony and full communication had become established between the mortal mind
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of Jesus and the indwelling spirit Adjuster, the divine gift of his Father in
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Paradise. And just such an Adjuster indwells all normal beings living on
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Urantia since the ascension of Michael to the headship of his universe, except
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that Jesus' Adjuster had been previously prepared for this special mission by
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similarly indwelling another superhuman incarnated in the likeness of mortal
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flesh, Machiventa Melchizedek.
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Ordinarily, when a mortal of the realm attains such high levels of personality
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perfection, there occur those preliminary phenomena of spiritual elevation
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which terminate in eventual fusion of the matured soul of the mortal with its
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associated divine Adjuster. And such a change was apparently due to take place
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in the personality experience of Jesus of Nazareth on that very day when he
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went down into the Jordan with his two brothers to be baptized by John. This
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ceremony was the final act of his purely human life on Urantia, and many
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superhuman observers expected to witness the fusion of the Adjuster with its
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indwelt mind, but they were all destined to suffer disappointment. Something
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new and even greater occurred. As John laid his hands upon Jesus to baptize
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him, the indwelling Adjuster took final leave of the perfected human soul of
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Joshua ben Joseph. And in a few moments this divine entity returned from
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Divinington as a Personalized Adjuster and chief of his kind throughout the
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entire local universe of Nebadon. Thus did Jesus observe his own former divine
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spirit descending on its return to him in personalized form. And he heard this
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same spirit of Paradise origin now speak, saying, "This is my beloved Son in
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whom I am well pleased." And John, with Jesus' two brothers, also heard these
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words. John's disciples, standing by the water's edge, did not hear these
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words, neither did they see the apparition of the Personalized Adjuster. Only
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the eyes of Jesus beheld the Personalized Adjuster.
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When the returned and now exalted Personalized Adjuster had thus spoken, all
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was silence. And while the four of them tarried in the water, Jesus, looking up
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to the near-by Adjuster, prayed: "My Father who reigns in heaven, hallowed be
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your name. Your kingdom come! Your will be done on earth, even as it is in
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heaven." When he had prayed, the "heavens were opened," and the Son of Man
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top of page - 1512
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saw the vision, presented by the now Personalized Adjuster, of himself as a Son
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of God as he was before he came to earth in the likeness of mortal flesh, and
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as he would be when the incarnated life should be finished. This heavenly
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vision was seen only by Jesus.
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It was the voice of the Personalized Adjuster that John and Jesus heard,
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speaking in behalf of the Universal Father, for the Adjuster is of, and as, the
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Paradise Father. Throughout the remainder of Jesus' earth life this
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Personalized Adjuster was associated with him in all his labors; Jesus was in
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constant communion with this exalted Adjuster.
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When Jesus was baptized, he repented of no misdeeds; he made no confession of
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sin. His was the baptism of consecration to the performance of the will of the
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heavenly Father. At his baptism he heard the unmistakable call of his Father,
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the final summons to be about his Father's business, and he went away into
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private seclusion for forty days to think over these manifold problems. In thus
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retiring for a season from active personality contact with his earthly
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associates, Jesus, as he was and on Urantia, was following the very procedure
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that obtains on the morontia worlds whenever an ascending mortal fuses with the
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inner presence of the Universal Father.
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This day of baptism ended the purely human life of Jesus. The divine Son has
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found his Father, the Universal Father has found his incarnated Son, and they
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speak the one to the other.
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(Jesus was almost thirty-one and one-half years old when he was baptized. While
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Luke says that Jesus was baptized in the fifteenth year of the reign of
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Tiberius Caesar, which would be A.D. 29 since Augustus died in A.D. 14, it
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should be recalled that Tiberius was coemperor with Augustus for two and
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one-half years before the death of Augustus, having had coins struck in his
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honor in October, A.D. 11. The fifteenth year of his actual rule was,
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therefore, this very year of A.D. 26, that of Jesus' baptism. And this was also
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the year that Pontius Pilate began his rule as governor of Judea.)
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3. THE FORTY DAYS
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Jesus had endured the great temptation of his mortal bestowal before his
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baptism when he had been wet with the dews of Mount Hermon for six weeks. There
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on Mount Hermon, as an unaided mortal of the realm, he had met and defeated the
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Urantia pretender, Caligastia, the prince of this world. That eventful day, on
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the universe records, Jesus of Nazareth had become the Planetary Prince of
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Urantia. And this Prince of Urantia, so soon to be proclaimed supreme Sovereign
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of Nebadon, now went into forty days of retirement to formulate the plans and
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determine upon the technique of proclaiming the new kingdom of God in the
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hearts of men.
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After his baptism he entered upon the forty days of adjusting himself to the
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changed relationships of the world and the universe occasioned by the
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personalization of his Adjuster. During this isolation in the Perean hills he
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determined upon the policy to be pursued and the methods to be employed in the
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new and changed phase of earth life which he was about to inaugurate.
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Jesus did not go into retirement for the purpose of fasting and for the
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affliction of his soul. He was not an ascetic, and he came forever to destroy
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all such notions regarding the approach to God. His reasons for seeking this
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retirement
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top of page - 1513
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were entirely different from those which had actuated Moses and Elijah, and
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even John the Baptist. Jesus was then wholly self-conscious concerning his
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relation to the universe of his making and also to the universe of universes,
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supervised by the Paradise Father, his Father in heaven. He now fully recalled
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the bestowal charge and its instructions administered by his elder brother,
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Immanuel, ere he entered upon his Urantia incarnation. He now clearly and fully
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comprehended all these far-flung relationships, and he desired to be away for a
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season of quiet meditation so that he could think out the plans and decide upon
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the procedures for the prosecution of his public labors in behalf of this world
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and for all other worlds in his local universe.
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While wandering about in the hills, seeking a suitable shelter, Jesus
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encountered his universe chief executive, Gabriel, the Bright and Morning Star
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of Nebadon. Gabriel now re-established personal communication with the Creator
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Son of the universe; they met directly for the first time since Michael took
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leave of his associates on Salvington when he went to Edentia preparatory to
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entering upon the Urantia bestowal. Gabriel, by direction of Immanuel and on
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authority of the Uversa Ancients of Days, now laid before Jesus information
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indicating that his bestowal experience on Urantia was practically finished so
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far as concerned the earning of the perfected sovereignty of his universe and
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the termination of the Lucifer rebellion. The former was achieved on the day of
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his baptism when the personalization of his Adjuster demonstrated the
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perfection and completion of his bestowal in the likeness of mortal flesh, and
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the latter was a fact of history on that day when he came down from Mount
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Hermon to join the waiting lad, Tiglath. Jesus was now informed, upon the
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highest authority of the local universe and the superuniverse, that his
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bestowal work was finished in so far as it affected his personal status in
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relation to sovereignty and rebellion. He had already had this assurance direct
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from Paradise in the baptismal vision and in the phenomenon of the
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personalization of his indwelling Thought Adjuster.
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While he tarried on the mountain, talking with Gabriel, the Constellation
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Father of Edentia appeared to Jesus and Gabriel in person, saying: "The records
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are completed. The sovereignty of Michael No. 611,121 over his universe of
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Nebadon rests in completion at the right hand of the Universal Father. I bring
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to you the bestowal release of Immanuel, your sponsor-brother for the Urantia
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incarnation. You are at liberty now or at any subsequent time, in the manner of
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your own choosing, to terminate your incarnation bestowal, ascend to the right
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hand of your Father, receive your sovereignty, and assume your well-earned
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unconditional rulership of all Nebadon. I also testify to the completion of the
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records of the superuniverse, by authorization of the Ancients of Days, having
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to do with the termination of all sin-rebellion in your universe and endowing
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you with full and unlimited authority to deal with any and all such possible
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upheavals in the future. Technically, your work on Urantia and in the flesh of
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the mortal creature is finished. Your course from now on is a matter of your
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own choosing."
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When the Most High Father of Edentia had taken leave, Jesus held long converse
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with Gabriel regarding the welfare of the universe and, sending greetings to
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Immanuel, proffered his assurance that, in the work which he was about to
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undertake on Urantia, he would be ever mindful of the counsel he had received
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in connection with the prebestowal charge administered on Salvington.
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top of page - 1514
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Throughout all of these forty days of isolation James and John the sons of
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Zebedee were engaged in searching for Jesus. Many times they were not far from
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his abiding place, but never did they find him.
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4. PLANS FOR PUBLIC WORK
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Day by day, up in the hills, Jesus formulated the plans for the remainder of
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his Urantia bestowal. He first decided not to teach contemporaneously with
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John. He planned to remain in comparative retirement until the work of John
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achieved its purpose, or until John was suddenly stopped by imprisonment. Jesus
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well knew that John's fearless and tactless preaching would presently arouse
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the fears and enmity of the civil rulers. In view of John's precarious
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situation, Jesus began definitely to plan his program of public labors in
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behalf of his people and the world, in behalf of every inhabited world
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throughout his vast universe. Michael's mortal bestowal was on Urantial but for
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all worlds of Nebadon.
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The first thing Jesus did, after thinking through the general plan of
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co-ordinating his program with John's movement, was to review in his mind the
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instructions of Immanuel. Carefully he thought over the advice given him
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concerning his methods of labor, and that he was to leave no permanent writing
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on the planet. Never again did Jesus write on anything except sand. On his next
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visit to Nazareth, much to the sorrow of his brother Joseph, Jesus destroyed
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all of his writing that was preserved on the boards about the carpenter shop,
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and which hung upon the walls of the old home. And Jesus pondered well over
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Immanuel's advice pertaining to his economic, social, and political attitude
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toward the world as he should find it.
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Jesus did not fast during this forty days' isolation. The longest period he
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went without food was his first two days in the hills when he was so engrossed
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with his thinking that he forgot all about eating. But on the third day he went
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in search of food. Neither was he tempted during this time by any evil spirits
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or rebel personalities of station on this world or from any other world.
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These forty days were the occasion of the final conference between the human
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and the divine minds, or rather the first real functioning of these two minds
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as now made one. The results of this momentous season of meditation
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demonstrated conclusively that the divine mind has triumphantly and spiritually
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dominated the human intellect. The mind of man has become the mind of God from
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this time on, and though the selfhood of the mind of man is ever present,
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always does this spiritualized human mind say, "Not my will but yours be done."
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The transactions of this eventful time were not the fantastic visions of a
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starved and weakened mind, neither were they the confused and puerile
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symbolisms which afterward gained record as the "temptations of Jesus in the
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wilderness." Rather was this a season for thinking over the whole eventful and
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varied career of the Urantia bestowal and for the careful laying of those plans
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for further ministry which would best serve this world while also contributing
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something to the betterment of all other rebellion-isolated spheres. Jesus
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thought over the whole span of human life on Urantia, from the days of Andon
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and Fonta, down through Adam's default, and on to the ministry of the
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Melchizedek of Salem.
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Gabriel had reminded Jesus that there were two ways in which he might manifest
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himself to the world in case he should choose to tarry on Urantia for
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top of page - 1515
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a time. And it was made clear to Jesus that his choice in this matter would
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have nothing to do with either his universe sovereignty or the termination of
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the Lucifer rebellion. These two ways of world ministry were:
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1. His own way--the way that might seem most pleasant and profitable from the
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standpoint of the immediate needs of this world and the present edification of
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his own universe.
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2. The Father's way--the exemplification of a farseeing ideal of creature life
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visualized by the high personalities of the Paradise administration of the
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universe of universes.
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It was thus made clear to Jesus that there were two ways in which he could
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order the remainder of his earth life. Each of these ways had something to be
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said in its favor as it might be regarded in the light of the immediate
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situation. The Son of Man clearly saw that his choice between these two modes
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of conduct would have nothing to do with his reception of universe sovereignty;
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that was a matter already settled and sealed on the records of the universe of
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universes and only awaited his demand in person. But it was indicated to Jesus
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that it would afford his Paradise brother, Immanuel, great satisfaction if he,
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Jesus, should see fit to finish up his earth career of incarnation as he had so
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nobly begun it, always subject to the Father's will. On the third day of this
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isolation Jesus promised himself he would go back to the world to finish his
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earth career, and that in a situation involving any two ways he would always
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choose the Father's will. And he lived out the remainder of his earth life
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always true to that resolve. Even to the bitter end he invariably subordinated
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his sovereign will to that of his heavenly Father.
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||
|
||
The forty days in the mountain wilderness were not a period of great temptation
|
||
but rather the period of the Master's great decisions. During these days of
|
||
lone communion with himself and his Father's immediate presence--the
|
||
Personalized Adjuster (he no longer had a personal seraphic guardian)--he
|
||
arrived, one by one, at the great decisions which were to control his policies
|
||
and conduct for the remainder of his earth career. Subsequently the tradition
|
||
of a great temptation became attached to this period of isolation through
|
||
confusion with the fragmentary narratives of the Mount Hermon struggles, and
|
||
further because it was the custom to have all great prophets and human leaders
|
||
begin their public careers by undergoing these supposed seasons of fasting and
|
||
prayer. It had always been Jesus' practice, when facing any new or serious
|
||
decisions, to withdraw for communion with his own spirit that he might seek to
|
||
know the will of God.
|
||
|
||
In all this planning for the remainder of his earth life, Jesus was always torn
|
||
in his human heart by two opposing courses of conduct:
|
||
|
||
1. He entertained a strong desire to win his people--and the whole world--to
|
||
believe in him and to accept his new spiritual kingdom. And he well knew their
|
||
ideas concerning the coming Messiah.
|
||
|
||
2. To live and work as he knew his Father would approve, to conduct his work in
|
||
behalf of other worlds in need, and to continue, in the establishment of the
|
||
kingdom, to reveal the Father and show forth his divine character of love.
|
||
|
||
Throughout these eventful days Jesus lived in an ancient rock cavern, a shelter
|
||
in the side of the hills near a village sometime called Beit Adis. He drank
|
||
from the small spring which came from the side of the hill near this rock
|
||
shelter.
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1516
|
||
|
||
5. THE FIRST GREAT DECISION
|
||
|
||
On the third day after beginning this conference with himself and his
|
||
Personalized Adjuster, Jesus was presented with the vision of the assembled
|
||
celestial hosts of Nebadon sent by their commanders to wait upon the will of
|
||
their beloved Sovereign. This mighty host embraced twelve legions of seraphim
|
||
and proportionate numbers of every order of universe intelligence. And the
|
||
first great decision of Jesus' isolation had to do with whether or not he would
|
||
make use of these mighty personalities in connection with the ensuing program
|
||
of his public work on Urantia.
|
||
|
||
Jesus decided that he would not utilize a single personality of this vast
|
||
assemblage unless it should become evident that this was his Father's will.
|
||
Notwithstanding this general decision, this vast host remained with him
|
||
throughout the balance of his earth life, always in readiness to obey the least
|
||
expression of their Sovereign's will. Although Jesus did not constantly behold
|
||
these attendant personalities with his human eyes, his associated Personalized
|
||
Adjuster did constantly behold, and could communicate with, all of them.
|
||
|
||
Before coming down from the forty days' retreat in the hills, Jesus assigned
|
||
the immediate command of this attendant host of universe personalities to his
|
||
recently Personalized Adjuster, and for more than four years of Urantia time
|
||
did these selected personalities from every division of universe intelligences
|
||
obediently and respectfully function under the wise guidance of this exalted
|
||
and experienced Personalized Mystery Monitor. In assuming command of this
|
||
mighty assembly, the Adjuster, being a onetime part and essence of the Paradise
|
||
Father, assured Jesus that in no case would these superhuman agencies be
|
||
permitted to serve, or manifest themselves in connection with, or in behalf of,
|
||
his earth career unless it should develop that the Father willed such
|
||
intervention. Thus by one great decision Jesus voluntarily deprived himself of
|
||
all superhuman co-operation in all matters having to do with the remainder of
|
||
his mortal career unless the Father might independently choose to participate
|
||
in some certain act or episode of the Son's earth labors.
|
||
|
||
In accepting this command of the universe hosts in attendance upon Christ
|
||
Michael, the Personalized Adjuster took great pains to point out to Jesus that,
|
||
while such an assembly of universe creatures could be limited in their space
|
||
activities by the delegated authority of their Creator, such limitations were
|
||
not operative in connection with their function in time. And this limitation
|
||
was dependent on the fact that Adjusters are nontime beings when once they are
|
||
personalized. Accordingly was Jesus admonished that, while the Adjuster's
|
||
control of the living intelligences placed under his command would be complete
|
||
and perfect as to all matters involving space, there could be no such perfect
|
||
limitations imposed regarding time. Said the Adjuster: "I will, as you have
|
||
directed, enjoin the employment of this attendant host of universe
|
||
intelligences in any manner in connection with your earth career except in
|
||
those cases where the Paradise Father directs me to release such agencies in
|
||
order that his divine will of your choosing may be accomplished, and in those
|
||
instances where you may engage in any choice or act of your divine-human will
|
||
which shall only involve departures from the natural earth order as to time. In
|
||
all such events I am powerless, and your creatures here assembled in perfection
|
||
and unity of power are
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1517
|
||
|
||
likewise helpless. If your united natures once entertain such desires, these
|
||
mandates of your choice will be forthwith executed. Your wish in all such
|
||
matters will constitute the abridgment of time, and the thing projected is
|
||
existent. Under my command this constitutes the fullest possible limitation
|
||
which can be imposed upon your potential sovereignty. In my self-consciousness
|
||
time is nonexistent, and therefore I cannot limit your creatures in anything
|
||
related thereto."
|
||
|
||
Thus did Jesus become apprised of the working out of his decision to go on
|
||
living as a man among men. He had by a single decision excluded all of his
|
||
attendant universe hosts of varied intelligences from participating in his
|
||
ensuing public ministry except in such matters as concerned time only. It
|
||
therefore becomes evident that any possible supernatural or supposedly
|
||
superhuman accompaniments of Jesus' ministry pertained wholly to the
|
||
elimination of time unless the Father in heaven specifically ruled otherwise.
|
||
No miracle, ministry of mercy, or any other possible event occurring in
|
||
connection with Jesus' remaining earth labors could possibly be of the nature
|
||
or character of an act transcending the natural laws established and regularly
|
||
working in the affairs of man as he lives on Urantia except in this expressly
|
||
stated matter of time. No limits, of course, could be placed upon the
|
||
manifestations of "the Father's will." The elimination of time in connection
|
||
with the expressed desire of this potential Sovereign of a universe could only
|
||
be avoided by the direct and explicit act of the will of this God-man to the
|
||
effect that time, as related to the act or event in question, should not be
|
||
shortened or eliminated. In order to prevent the appearance of apparent time
|
||
miracles, it was necessary for Jesus to remain constantly time conscious. Any
|
||
lapse of time consciousness on his part, in connection with the entertainment
|
||
of definite desire, was equivalent to the enactment of the thing conceived in
|
||
the mind of this Creator Son, and without the intervention of time.
|
||
|
||
Through the supervising control of his associated and Personalized Adjuster it
|
||
was possible for Michael perfectly to limit his personal earth activities with
|
||
reference to space, but it was not possible for the Son of Man thus to limit
|
||
his new earth status as potential Sovereign of Nebadon as regards time. And
|
||
this was the actual status of Jesus of Nazareth as he went forth to begin his
|
||
public ministry on Urantia.
|
||
|
||
6. THE SECOND DECISION
|
||
|
||
Having settled his policy concerning all personalities of all classes of his
|
||
created intelligences, so far as this could be determined in view of the
|
||
inherent potential of his new status of divinity, Jesus now turned his thoughts
|
||
toward himself. What would he, now the fully self-conscious creator of all
|
||
things and beings existent in this universe, do with these creator prerogatives
|
||
in the recurring life situations which would immediately confront him when he
|
||
returned to Galilee to resume his work among men? In fact, already, and right
|
||
where he was in these lonely hills, had this problem forcibly presented itself
|
||
in the matter of obtaining food. By the third day of his solitary meditations
|
||
the human body grew hungry. Should he go in quest of food as any ordinary man
|
||
would, or should he merely exercise his normal creative powers and produce
|
||
suitable bodily nourishment ready at hand? And this great decision of the
|
||
Master has been portrayed to you as a temptation--as a challenge by supposed
|
||
enemies that he "command that these stones become loaves of bread."
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1518
|
||
|
||
Jesus thus settled upon another and consistent policy for the remainder of his
|
||
earth labors. As far as his personal necessities were concerned, and in general
|
||
even in his relations with other personalities, he now deliberately chose to
|
||
pursue the path of normal earthly existence; he definitely decided against a
|
||
policy which would transcend, violate, or outrage his own established natural
|
||
laws. But he could not promise himself, as he had already been warned by his
|
||
Personalized Adjuster, that these natural laws might not, in certain
|
||
conceivable circumstances, be greatly accelerated. In principle, Jesus decided
|
||
that his lifework should be organized and prosecuted in accordance with natural
|
||
law and in harmony with the existing social organization. The Master thereby
|
||
chose a program of living which was the equivalent of deciding against miracles
|
||
and wonders. Again he decided in favor of "the Father's will"; again he
|
||
surrendered everything into the hands of his Paradise Father.
|
||
|
||
Jesus' human nature dictated that the first duty was self-preservation; that is
|
||
the normal attitude of the natural man on the worlds of time and space, and it
|
||
is, therefore, a legitimate reaction of a Urantia mortal. But Jesus was not
|
||
concerned merely with this world and its creatures; he was living a life
|
||
designed to instruct and inspire the manifold creatures of a far-flung
|
||
universe.
|
||
|
||
Before his baptismal illumination he had lived in perfect submission to the
|
||
will and guidance of his heavenly Father. He emphatically decided to continue
|
||
on in just such implicit mortal dependence on the Father's will. He purposed to
|
||
follow the unnatural course--he decided not to seek self-preservation. He chose
|
||
to go on pursuing the policy of refusing to defend himself. He formulated his
|
||
conclusions in the words of Scripture familiar to his human mind: "Man shall
|
||
not live by bread alone but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God."
|
||
In reaching this conclusion in regard to the appetite of the physical nature as
|
||
expressed in hunger for food, the Son of Man made his final declaration
|
||
concerning all other urges of the flesh and the natural impulses of human
|
||
nature.
|
||
|
||
His superhuman power he might possibly use for others, but for himself, never.
|
||
And he pursued this policy consistently to the very end, when it was jeeringly
|
||
said of him: "He saved others; himself he cannot save"--because he would not.
|
||
|
||
The Jews were expecting a Messiah who would do even greater wonders than Moses,
|
||
who was reputed to have brought forth water from the rock in a desert place and
|
||
to have fed their forefathers with manna in the wilderness. Jesus knew the sort
|
||
of Messiah his compatriots expected, and he had all the powers and prerogatives
|
||
to measure up to their most sanguine expectations, but he decided against such
|
||
a magnificent program of power and glory. Jesus looked upon such a course of
|
||
expected miracle working as a harking back to the olden days of ignorant magic
|
||
and the degraded practices of the savage medicine men. Possibly, for the
|
||
salvation of his creatures, he might accelerate natural law, but to transcend
|
||
his own laws, either for the benefit of himself or the overawing of his fellow
|
||
men, that he would not do. And the Master's decision was final.
|
||
|
||
Jesus sorrowed for his people; he fully understood how they had been led up to
|
||
the expectation of the coming Messiah, the time when "the earth will yield its
|
||
fruits ten thousandfold, and on one vine there will be a thousand branches, and
|
||
each branch will produce a thousand clusters, and each cluster will produce a
|
||
thousand grapes, and each grape will produce a gallon of wine." The Jews
|
||
believed the Messiah would usher in an era of miraculous plenty. The Hebrews
|
||
had long been nurtured on traditions of miracles and legends of wonders.
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1519
|
||
|
||
He was not a Messiah coming to multiply bread and wine. He came not to minister
|
||
to temporal needs only; he came to reveal his Father in heaven to his children
|
||
on earth, while he sought to lead his earth children to join him in a sincere
|
||
effort so to live as to do the will of the Father in heaven.
|
||
|
||
In this decision Jesus of Nazareth portrayed to an onlooking universe the folly
|
||
and sin of prostituting divine talents and God-given abilities for personal
|
||
aggrandizement or for purely selfish gain and glorification. That was the sin
|
||
of Lucifer and Caligastia.
|
||
|
||
This great decision of Jesus portrays dramatically the truth that selfish
|
||
satisfaction and sensuous gratification, alone and of themselves, are not able
|
||
to confer happiness upon evolving human beings. There are higher values in
|
||
mortal existence--intellectual mastery and spiritual achievement--which far
|
||
transcend the necessary gratification of man's purely physical appetites and
|
||
urges. Man's natural endowment of talent and ability should be chiefly devoted
|
||
to the development and ennoblement of his higher powers of mind and spirit.
|
||
|
||
Jesus thus revealed to the creatures of his universe the technique of the new
|
||
and better way, the higher moral values of living and the deeper spiritual
|
||
satisfactions of evolutionary human existence on the worlds of space.
|
||
|
||
7. THE THIRD DECISION
|
||
|
||
Having made his decisions regarding such matters as food and physical
|
||
ministration to the needs of his material body, the care of the health of
|
||
himself and his associates, there remained yet other problems to solve. What
|
||
would be his attitude when confronted by personal danger? He decided to
|
||
exercise normal watchcare over his human safety and to take reasonable
|
||
precaution to prevent the untimely termination of his career in the flesh but
|
||
to refrain from all superhuman intervention when the crisis of his life in the
|
||
flesh should come. As he was formulating this decision, Jesus was seated under
|
||
the shade of a tree on an overhanging ledge of rock with a precipice right
|
||
there before him. He fully realized that he could cast himself off the ledge
|
||
and out into space, and that nothing could happen to harm him provided he would
|
||
rescind his first great decision not to invoke the interposition of his
|
||
celestial intelligences in the prosecution of his lifework on Urantia, and
|
||
provided he would abrogate his second decision concerning his attitude toward
|
||
self-preservation.
|
||
|
||
Jesus knew his fellow countrymen were expecting a Messiah who would be above
|
||
natural law. Well had he been taught that Scripture: "There shall no evil
|
||
befall you, neither shall any plague come near your dwelling. For he shall give
|
||
his angels charge over you, to keep you in all your ways. They shall bear you
|
||
up in their hands lest you dash your foot against a stone." Would this sort of
|
||
presumption, this defiance of his Father's laws of gravity, be justified in
|
||
order to protect himself from possible harm or, perchance, to win the
|
||
confidence of his mistaught and distracted people? But such a course, however
|
||
gratifying to the sign-seeking Jews, would be, not a revelation of his Father,
|
||
but a questionable trifling with the established laws of the universe of
|
||
universes.
|
||
|
||
Understanding all of this and knowing that the Master refused to work in
|
||
defiance of his established laws of nature in so far as his personal conduct
|
||
was concerned, you know of a certainty that he never walked on the water nor
|
||
did anything else which was an outrage to his material order of administering
|
||
the
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1520
|
||
|
||
world; always, of course, bearing in mind that there had, as yet, been found no
|
||
way whereby he could be wholly delivered from the lack of control over the
|
||
element of time in connection with those matters put under the jurisdiction of
|
||
the Personalized Adjuster.
|
||
|
||
Throughout his entire earth life Jesus was consistently loyal to this decision.
|
||
No matter whether the Pharisees taunted him for a sign, or the watchers at
|
||
Calvary dared him to come down from the cross, he steadfastly adhered to the
|
||
decision of this hour on the hillside.
|
||
|
||
8. THE FOURTH DECISION
|
||
|
||
The next great problem with which this God-man wrestled and which he presently
|
||
decided in accordance with the will of the Father in heaven, concerned the
|
||
question as to whether or not any of his superhuman powers should be employed
|
||
for the purpose of attracting the attention and winning the adherence of his
|
||
fellow men. Should he in any manner lend his universe powers to the
|
||
gratification of the Jewish hankering for the spectacular and the marvelous? He
|
||
decided that he should not. He settled upon a policy of procedure which
|
||
eliminated all such practices as the method of bringing his mission to the
|
||
notice of men. And he consistently lived up to this great decision. Even when
|
||
he permitted the manifestation of numerous time-shortening ministrations of
|
||
mercy, he almost invariably admonished the recipients of his healing ministry
|
||
to tell no man about the benefits they had received. And always did he refuse
|
||
the taunting challenge of his enemies to "show us a sign" in proof and
|
||
demonstration of his divinity.
|
||
|
||
Jesus very wisely foresaw that the working of miracles and the execution of
|
||
wonders would call forth only outward allegiance by overawing the material
|
||
mind; such performances would not reveal God nor save men. He refused to become
|
||
a mere wonder-worker. He resolved to become occupied with but a single
|
||
task--the establishment of the kingdom of heaven.
|
||
|
||
Throughout all this momentous dialog of Jesus' communing with himself, there
|
||
was present the human element of questioning and near-doubting, for Jesus was
|
||
man as well as God. It was evident he would never be received by the Jews as
|
||
the Messiah if he did not work wonders. Besides, if he would consent to do just
|
||
one unnatural thing, the human mind would know of a certainty that it was in
|
||
subservience to a truly divine mind. Would it be consistent with "the Father's
|
||
will" for the divine mind to make this concession to the doubting nature of the
|
||
human mind? Jesus decided that it would not and cited the presence of the
|
||
Personalized Adjuster as sufficient proof of divinity in partnership with
|
||
humanity.
|
||
|
||
Jesus had traveled much; he recalled Rome, Alexandria, and Damascus. He knew
|
||
the methods of the world--how people gained their ends in politics and commerce
|
||
by compromise and diplomacy. Would he utilize this knowledge in the furtherance
|
||
of his mission on earth? No! He likewise decided against all compromise with
|
||
the wisdom of the world and the influence of riches in the establishment of the
|
||
kingdom. He again chose to depend exclusively on the Father's will.
|
||
|
||
Jesus was fully aware of the short cuts open to one of his powers. He knew many
|
||
ways in which the attention of the nation, and the whole world, could be
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1521
|
||
|
||
immediately focused upon himself. Soon the Passover would be celebrated at
|
||
Jerusalem; the city would be thronged with visitors. He could ascend the
|
||
pinnacle of the temple and before the bewildered multitude walk out on the air;
|
||
that would be the kind of a Messiah they were looking for. But he would
|
||
subsequently disappoint them since he had not come to re-establish David's
|
||
throne. And he knew the futility of the Caligastia method of trying to get
|
||
ahead of the natural, slow, and sure way of accomplishing the divine purpose.
|
||
Again the Son of Man bowed obediently to the Father's way, the Father's will.
|
||
|
||
Jesus chose to establish the kingdom of heaven in the hearts of mankind by
|
||
natural, ordinary, difficult, and trying methods, just such procedures as his
|
||
earth children must subsequently follow in their work of enlarging and
|
||
extending that heavenly kingdom. For well did the Son of Man know that it would
|
||
be "through much tribulation that many of the children of all ages would enter
|
||
into the kingdom." Jesus was now passing through the great test of civilized
|
||
man, to have power and steadfastly refuse to use it for purely selfish or
|
||
personal purposes.
|
||
|
||
In your consideration of the life and experience of the Son of Man, it should
|
||
be ever borne in mind that the Son of God was incarnate in the mind of a
|
||
first-century human being, not in the mind of a twentieth-century or
|
||
other-century mortal. By this we mean to convey the idea that the human
|
||
endowments of Jesus were of natural acquirement. He was the product of the
|
||
hereditary and environmental factors of his time, plus the influence of his
|
||
training and education. His humanity was genuine, natural, wholly derived from
|
||
the antecedents of, and fostered by, the actual intellectual status and social
|
||
and economic conditions of that day and generation. While in the experience of
|
||
this God-man there was always the possibility that the divine mind would
|
||
transcend the human intellect, nonetheless, when, and as, his human mind
|
||
functioned, it did perform as would a true mortal mind under the conditions of
|
||
the human environment of that day.
|
||
|
||
Jesus portrayed to all the worlds of his vast universe the folly of creating
|
||
artificial situations for the purpose of exhibiting arbitrary authority or of
|
||
indulging exceptional power for the purpose of enhancing moral values or
|
||
accelerating spiritual progress. Jesus decided that he would not lend his
|
||
mission on earth to a repetition of the disappointment of the reign of the
|
||
Maccabees. He refused to prostitute his divine attributes for the purpose of
|
||
acquiring unearned popularity or for gaining political prestige. He would not
|
||
countenance the transmutation of divine and creative energy into national power
|
||
or international prestige. Jesus of Nazareth refused to compromise with evil,
|
||
much less to consort with sin. The Master triumphantly put loyalty to his
|
||
Father's will above every other earthly and temporal consideration.
|
||
|
||
9. THE FIFTH DECISION
|
||
|
||
Having settled such questions of policy as pertained to his individual
|
||
relations to natural law and spiritual power, he turned his attention to the
|
||
choice of methods to be employed in the proclamation and establishment of the
|
||
kingdom of God. John had already begun this work; how might he continue the
|
||
message? How should he take over John's mission? How should he organize his
|
||
followers for effective effort and intelligent co-operation? Jesus was now
|
||
reaching the final decision which would forbid that he further regard himself
|
||
as the Jewish Messiah, at least as the Messiah was popularly conceived in that
|
||
day.
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1522
|
||
|
||
The Jews envisaged a deliverer who would come in miraculous power to cast down
|
||
Israel's enemies and establish the Jews as world rulers, free from want and
|
||
oppression. Jesus knew that this hope would never be realized. He knew that the
|
||
kingdom of heaven had to do with the overthrow of evil in the hearts of men,
|
||
and that it was purely a matter of spiritual concern. He thought out the
|
||
advisability of inaugurating the spiritual kingdom with a brilliant and
|
||
dazzling display of power--and such a course would have been permissible and
|
||
wholly within the jurisdiction of Michael--but he fully decided against such a
|
||
plan. He would not compromise with the revolutionary techniques of Caligastia.
|
||
He had won the world in potential by submission to the Father's will, and he
|
||
proposed to finish his work as he had begun it, and as the Son of Man.
|
||
|
||
You can hardly imagine what would have happened on Urantia had this God-man,
|
||
now in potential possession of all power in heaven and on earth, once decided
|
||
to unfurl the banner of sovereignty, to marshal his wonder-working battalions
|
||
in militant array! But he would not compromise. He would not serve evil that
|
||
the worship of God might presumably be derived therefrom. He would abide by the
|
||
Father's will. He would proclaim to an onlooking universe, "You shall worship
|
||
the Lord your God and him only shall you serve."
|
||
|
||
As the days passed, with ever-increasing clearness Jesus perceived what kind of
|
||
a truth-revealer he was to become. He discerned that God's way was not going to
|
||
be the easy way. He began to realize that the cup of the remainder of his human
|
||
experience might possibly be bitter, but he decided to drink it.
|
||
|
||
Even his human mind is saying good-bye to the throne of David. Step by step
|
||
this human mind follows in the path of the divine. The human mind still asks
|
||
questions but unfailingly accepts the divine answers as final rulings in this
|
||
combined life of living as a man in the world while all the time submitting
|
||
unqualifiedly to the doing of the Father's eternal and divine will.
|
||
|
||
Rome was mistress of the Western world. The Son of Man, now in isolation and
|
||
achieving these momentous decisions, with the hosts of heaven at his command,
|
||
represented the last chance of the Jews to attain world dominion; but this
|
||
earthborn Jew, who possessed such tremendous wisdom and power, declined to use
|
||
his universe endowments either for the aggrandizement of himself or for the
|
||
enthronement of his people. He saw, as it were, "the kingdoms of this world,"
|
||
and he possessed the power to take them. The Most Highs of Edentia had resigned
|
||
all these powers into his hands, but he did not want them. The kingdoms of
|
||
earth were paltry things to interest the Creator and Ruler of a universe. He
|
||
had only one objective, the further revelation of God to man, the establishment
|
||
of the kingdom, the rule of the heavenly Father in the hearts of mankind.
|
||
|
||
The idea of battle, contention, and slaughter was repugnant to Jesus; he would
|
||
have none of it. He would appear on earth as the Prince of Peace to reveal a
|
||
God of love. Before his baptism he had again refused the offer of the Zealots
|
||
to lead them in rebellion against the Roman oppressors. And now he made his
|
||
final decision regarding those Scriptures which his mother had taught him, such
|
||
as: "The Lord has said to me, `You are my Son; this day have I begotten you.
|
||
Ask of me, and I will give you the heathen for your inheritance and the
|
||
uttermost parts of the earth for your possession. You shall break them with a
|
||
rod of iron; you shall dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel.'"
|
||
|
||
Jesus of Nazareth reached the conclusion that such utterances did not refer to
|
||
him. At last, and finally, the human mind of the Son of Man made a clean sweep
|
||
of all these Messianic difficulties and contradictions--Hebrew scriptures,
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1523
|
||
|
||
parental training, chazan teaching, Jewish expectations, and human ambitious
|
||
longings; once and for all he decided upon his course. He would return to
|
||
Galilee and quietly begin the proclamation of the kingdom and trust his Father
|
||
(the Personalized Adjuster) to work out the details of procedure day by day.
|
||
|
||
By these decisions Jesus set a worthy example for every person on every world
|
||
throughout a vast universe when he refused to apply material tests to prove
|
||
spiritual problems, when he refused presumptuously to defy natural laws. And he
|
||
set an inspiring example of universe loyalty and moral nobility when he refused
|
||
to grasp temporal power as the prelude to spiritual glory.
|
||
|
||
If the Son of Man had any doubts about his mission and its nature when he went
|
||
up in the hills after his baptism, he had none when he came back to his fellows
|
||
following the forty days of isolation and decisions.
|
||
|
||
Jesus has formulated a program for the establishment of the Father's kingdom.
|
||
He will not cater to the physical gratification of the people. He will not deal
|
||
out bread to the multitudes as he has so recently seen it being done in Rome.
|
||
He will not attract attention to himself by wonder-working, even though the
|
||
Jews are expecting just that sort of a deliverer. Neither will he seek to win
|
||
acceptance of a spiritual message by a show of political authority or temporal
|
||
power.
|
||
|
||
In rejecting these methods of enhancing the coming kingdom in the eyes of the
|
||
expectant Jews, Jesus made sure that these same Jews would certainly and
|
||
finally reject all of his claims to authority and divinity. Knowing all this,
|
||
Jesus long sought to prevent his early followers alluding to him as the
|
||
Messiah.
|
||
|
||
Throughout his public ministry he was confronted with the necessity of dealing
|
||
with three constantly recurring situations: the clamor to be fed, the
|
||
insistence on miracles, and the final request that he allow his followers to
|
||
make him king. But Jesus never departed from the decisions which he made during
|
||
these days of his isolation in the Perean hills.
|
||
|
||
10. THE SIXTH DECISION
|
||
|
||
On the last day of this memorable isolation, before starting down the mountain
|
||
to join John and his disciples, the Son of Man made his final decision. And
|
||
this decision he communicated to the Personalized Adjuster in these words, "And
|
||
in all other matters, as in these now of decision-record, I pledge you I will
|
||
be subject to the will of my Father." And when he had thus spoken, he journeyed
|
||
down the mountain. And his face shone with the glory of spiritual victory and
|
||
moral achievement.
|
||
|
||
top of page - 1524
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Subjects Archive The Urantia Book Urantia Book PART IV: The Life and Teachings
|
||
of Jesus : The Bestowal Of Michael On Urantia The Times Of Michael's Bestowal
|
||
Birth And Infancy Of Jesus The Early Childhood Of Jesus The Later Childhood Of
|
||
Jesus Jesus At Jerusalem The Two Crucial Years The Adolescent Years Jesus'
|
||
Early Manhood The Later Adult Life Of Jesus On The Way To Rome The World's
|
||
Religions The Sojourn At Rome The Return From Rome The Transition Years John
|
||
The Baptist Baptism And The Forty Days Tarrying Time In Galilee Training The
|
||
Kingdom's Messengers The Twelve Apostles The Ordination Of The Twelve Beginning
|
||
The Public Work The Passover At Jerusalem Going Through Samaria At Gilboa And
|
||
In The Decapolis Four Eventful Days At Capernaum First Preaching Tour Of
|
||
Galilee The Interlude Visit To Jerusalem Training Evangelists At Bethsaida The
|
||
Second Preaching Tour The Third Preaching Tour Tarrying And Teaching By The
|
||
Seaside Events Leading Up To The Capernaum Crisis The Crisis At Capernaum Last
|
||
Days At Capernaum Fleeing Through Northern Galilee The Sojourn At Tyre And
|
||
Sidon At Caesarea-philippi The Mount Of Transfiguration The Decapolis Tour
|
||
Rodan Of Alexandria Further Discussions With Rodan At The Feast Of Tabernacles
|
||
Ordination Of The Seventy At Magadan At The Feast Of Dedication The Perean
|
||
Mission Begins Last Visit To Northern Perea The Visit To Philadelphia The
|
||
Resurrection Of Lazarus Last Teaching At Pella The Kingdom Of Heaven On The Way
|
||
To Jerusalem Going Into Jerusalem Monday In Jerusalem Tuesday Morning In The
|
||
Temple The Last Temple Discourse Tuesday Evening On Mount Olivet Wednesday, The
|
||
Rest Day Last Day At The Camp The Last Supper The Farewell Discourse Final
|
||
Admonitions And Warnings In Gethsemane The Betrayal And Arrest Of Jesus Before
|
||
The Sanhedrin Court The Trial Before Pilate Just Before The Crucifixion The
|
||
Crucifixion The Time Of The Tomb The Resurrection Morontia Appearances Of Jesus
|
||
Appearances To The Apostles And Other Leaders Appearances In Galilee Final
|
||
Appearances And Ascension Bestowal Of The Spirit Of Truth After Pentecost The
|
||
Faith Of Jesus
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Ŀ
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||
<EFBFBD> // <20> <20> <20> <20> <20>
|
||
<EFBFBD> John The <20> Tarrying Time <20> Urantia Book <20> Search <20> SiteMap! <20>
|
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||
//
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
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<EFBFBD> <20> <20> <20> <20> <20> <20> SPIRITWEB ORG (info@spiritweb.org), <20> <20>
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