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
5.
PHILIP THE CURIOUS
139:5.1
Philip was the fifth apostle to be chosen, being called when Jesus
and his first four apostles were on their way from John's rendezvous
on the Jordan to Cana of Galilee. Since he lived at Bethsaida,
Philip had for some time known of Jesus, but it had not occurred to
him that Jesus was a really great man until that day in the Jordan
valley when he said, "Follow me." Philip was also somewhat
influenced by the fact that Andrew, Peter, James, and John had
accepted Jesus as the Deliverer.
139:5.2
Philip was twenty-seven years of age when he joined the apostles; he
had recently been married, but he had no children at this time. The
nickname which the apostles gave him signified "curiosity." Philip
was always wanting to be shown. He never seemed to see very far into
any proposition. He was not necessarily dull, but he lacked
imagination. This lack of imagination was the great weakness of his
character. He was a commonplace and matter-of-fact individual.
139:5.3
When the apostles were organized for service, Philip was made
steward; it was his duty to see that they were at all times supplied
with provisions. And he was a good steward. His strongest
characteristic was his methodical thoroughness; he was both
mathematical and systematic.
139:5.4
Philip came from a family of seven, three boys and four girls. He
was next to the oldest, and after the resurrection he baptized his
entire family into the kingdom. Philip's people were fisherfolk. His
father was a very able man, a deep thinker, but his mother was of a
very mediocre family. Philip was not a man who could be expected to
do big things, but he was a man who could do little things in a big
way, do them well and acceptably. Only a few times in four years did
he fail to have food on hand to satisfy the needs of all. Even the
many emergency demands attendant upon the life they lived seldom
found him unprepared. The commissary department of the apostolic
family was intelligently and efficiently managed.
139:5.5
The strong point about Philip was his methodical reliability; the
weak point in his make-up was his utter lack of imagination, the
absence of the ability to put two and two together to obtain four.
He was mathematical in the abstract but not constructive in his
imagination. He was almost entirely lacking in certain types of
imagination. He was the typical everyday and commonplace average
man. There were a great many such men and women among the multitudes
who came to hear Jesus teach and preach, and they derived great
comfort from observing one like themselves elevated to an honored
position in the councils of the Master; they derived courage from
the fact that one like themselves had already found a high place in
the affairs of the kingdom. And Jesus learned much about the way
some human minds function as he so patiently listened to Philip's
foolish questions and so many times complied with his steward's
request to "be shown."
139:5.6
The one quality about Jesus which Philip so continuously admired was
the Master's unfailing generosity. Never could Philip find anything
in Jesus which was small, niggardly, or stingy, and he worshiped
this ever-present and unfailing liberality.
139:5.7
There was little about Philip's personality that was impressive. He
was often spoken of as "Philip of Bethsaida, the town where Andrew
and Peter live." He was almost without discerning vision; he was
unable to grasp the dramatic possibilities of a given situation. He
was not pessimistic; he was simply prosaic. He was also greatly
lacking in spiritual insight. He would not hesitate to interrupt
Jesus in the midst of one of the Master's most profound discourses
to ask an apparently foolish question. But Jesus never reprimanded
him for such thoughtlessness; he was patient with him and
considerate of his inability to grasp the deeper meanings of the
teaching. Jesus well knew that, if he once rebuked Philip for asking
these annoying questions, he would not only wound this honest soul,
but such a reprimand would so hurt Philip that he would never again
feel free to ask questions. Jesus knew that on his worlds of space
there were untold billions of similar slow-thinking mortals, and he
wanted to encourage them all to look to him and always to feel free
to come to him with their questions and problems. After all, Jesus
was really more interested in Philip's foolish questions than in the
sermon he might be preaching. Jesus was supremely interested in
men, all kinds of men.
139:5.8
The apostolic steward was not a good public speaker, but he was a
very persuasive and successful personal worker. He was not easily
discouraged; he was a plodder and very tenacious in anything he
undertook. He had that great and rare gift of saying, "Come." When
his first convert, Nathaniel, wanted to argue about the merits and
demerits of Jesus and Nazareth, Philip's effective reply was, "Come
and see." He was not a dogmatic preacher who exhorted his hearers to
"Go" -- do this and do that. He met all situations as they arose in
his work with "Come" -- "come with me; I will show you the way." And
that is always the effective technique in all forms and phases of
teaching. Even parents may learn from Philip the better way of
saying to their children not
"Go do this and go do that," but rather, "Come with us while we show
and share with you the better way."
139:5.9
The inability of Philip to adapt himself to a new situation was well
shown when the Greeks came to him at Jerusalem, saying: "Sir, we
desire to see Jesus." Now Philip would have said to any Jew asking
such a question, "Come." But these men were foreigners, and Philip
could remember no instructions from his superiors regarding such
matters; so the only thing he could think to do was to consult the
chief, Andrew, and then they both escorted the inquiring Greeks to
Jesus. Likewise, when he went into Samaria preaching and baptizing
believers, as he had been instructed by his Master, he refrained
from laying hands on his converts in token of their having received
the Spirit of Truth. This was done by Peter and John, who presently
came down from Jerusalem to observe his work in behalf of the mother
church.
139:5.10
Philip went on through the trying times of the Master's death,
participated in the reorganization of the twelve, and was the first
to go forth to win souls for the kingdom outside of the immediate
Jewish ranks, being most successful in his work for the Samaritans
and in all his subsequent labors in behalf of the gospel.
139:5.11
Philip's wife, who was an efficient member of the women's corps,
became actively associated with her husband in his evangelistic work
after their flight from the Jerusalem persecutions. His wife was a
fearless woman. She stood at the foot of Philip's cross encouraging
him to proclaim the glad tidings even to his murderers, and when his
strength failed, she began the recital of the story of salvation by
faith in Jesus and was silenced only when the irate Jews rushed upon
her and stoned her to death. Their eldest daughter, Leah, continued
their work, later on becoming the renowned prophetess of Hierapolis.
139:5.12
Philip, the onetime steward of the twelve, was a mighty man in the
kingdom, winning souls wherever he went; and he was finally
crucified for his faith and buried at Hierapolis.
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