I tell you that
the children of yesteryear are walking in the funeral of the era
which they created for themselves. They are pulling a rotting rope
that may break soon and cause them to drop into a forgotten abyss. I
say that they are living in homes with weak foundations. As the
storm blows - and it is about to blow - their homes will fall upon
their heads and thus become their tombs. I say that all their
thoughts, their sayings, their quarrels, their compositions, their
books and all their works are nothing but chains dragging them
because they are too weak to pull the load.
But the children of tomorrow are the
ones called by life, and they follow it with steady steps and heads
high. They are the dawn of the new frontiers; no smoke will veil
their eyes and no jingle of chains will drown out their voices. They
are few in number but the difference is as between a grain of wheat
and a stack of hay. No one knows them but they know each other. They
are like the summits, which can see and hear each other - not like
caves, which cannot hear or see. They are the seed dropped by the
hand of God in the field, breaking through its pod and waving its
sapling leaves before the face of the sun. It shall grow into a
mighty tree; its roots in the heart of the Earth and its branches
high in the sky.
Kahlil Gibran
3.
JAMES ZEBEDEE
139:3.1
James, the older of the two apostle sons of Zebedee, whom Jesus
nicknamed "sons of thunder," was thirty years old when he became an
apostle. He was married, had four children, and lived near his
parents in the outskirts of Capernaum, Bethsaida. He was a
fisherman, plying his calling in company with his younger brother
John and in association with Andrew and Simon. James and his brother
John enjoyed the advantage of having known Jesus longer than any of
the other apostles.
139:3.2
This able apostle was a temperamental contradiction; he seemed
really to possess two natures, both of which were actuated by strong
feelings. He was particularly vehement when his indignation was once
fully aroused. He had a fiery temper when once it was adequately
provoked, and when the storm was over, he was always wont to justify
and excuse his anger under the pretense that it was wholly a
manifestation of righteous indignation. Except for these periodic
upheavals of wrath, James's personality was much like that of
Andrew. He did not have Andrew's discretion or insight into human
nature, but he was a much better public speaker. Next to Peter,
unless it was Matthew, James was the best public orator among the
twelve.
139:3.3
Though James was in no sense moody, he could be quiet and taciturn
one day and a very good talker and storyteller the next. He usually
talked freely with Jesus, but among the twelve, for days at a time
he was the silent man. His one great weakness was these spells of
unaccountable silence.
139:3.4
The outstanding feature of James's personality was his ability to
see all sides of a proposition. Of all the twelve, he came the
nearest to grasping the real import and significance of Jesus'
teaching. He, too, was slow at first to comprehend the Master's
meaning, but ere they had finished their training, he had acquired a
superior concept of Jesus' message. James was able to understand a
wide range of human nature; he got along well with the versatile
Andrew, the impetuous Peter, and his self-contained brother John.
139:3.5
Though James and John had their troubles trying to work together, it
was inspiring to observe how well they got along. They did not
succeed quite so well as Andrew and Peter, but they did much better
than would ordinarily be expected of two brothers, especially such
headstrong and determined brothers. But, strange as it may seem,
these two sons of Zebedee were much more tolerant of each other than
they were of strangers. They had great affection for one another;
they had always been happy playmates. It was these "sons of thunder"
who wanted to call fire down from heaven to destroy the Samaritans
who presumed to show disrespect for their Master. But the untimely
death of James greatly modified the vehement temperament of his
younger brother John.
139:3.6
That characteristic of Jesus which James most admired was the
Master's sympathetic affection. Jesus' understanding interest in the
small and the great, the rich and the poor, made a great appeal to
him.
139:3.7
James Zebedee was a well-balanced thinker and planner. Along with
Andrew, he was one of the more level-headed of the apostolic group.
He was a vigorous individual but was never in a hurry. He was an
excellent balance wheel for Peter.
139:3.8
He was modest and undramatic, a daily server, an unpretentious
worker, seeking no special reward when he once grasped something of
the real meaning of the kingdom. And even in the story about the
mother of James and John, who asked that her sons be granted places
on the right hand and the left hand of Jesus, it should be
remembered that it was the mother who made this request. And when
they signified that they were ready to assume such responsibilities,
it should be recognized that they were cognizant of the dangers
accompanying the Master's supposed revolt against the Roman power,
and that they were also willing to pay the price. When Jesus asked
if they were ready to drink the cup, they replied that they were.
And as concerns James, it was literally true -- he did drink the cup
with the Master, seeing that he was the first of the apostles to
experience martyrdom, being early put to death with the sword by
Herod Agrippa. James was thus the first of the twelve to sacrifice
his life upon the new battle line of the kingdom. Herod Agrippa
feared James above all the other apostles. He was indeed often quiet
and silent, but he was brave and determined when his convictions
were aroused and challenged.
139:3.9
James lived his life to the full, and when the end came, he bore
himself with such grace and fortitude that even his accuser and
informer, who attended his trial and execution, was so touched that
he rushed away from the scene of James's death to join himself to
the disciples of Jesus.
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