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
4.
JOHN ZEBEDEE
139:4.1
When he became an apostle, John was twenty-four years old and was
the youngest of the twelve. He was unmarried and lived with his
parents at Bethsaida; he was a fisherman and worked with his brother
James in partnership with Andrew and Peter. Both before and after
becoming an apostle, John functioned as the personal agent of Jesus
in dealing with the Master's family, and he continued to bear this
responsibility as long as Mary the mother of Jesus lived.
139:4.2
Since John was the youngest of the twelve and so closely associated
with Jesus in his family affairs, he was very dear to the Master,
but it cannot be truthfully said that he was "the disciple whom
Jesus loved." You would hardly suspect such a magnanimous
personality as Jesus to be guilty of showing favoritism, of loving
one of his apostles more than the others. The fact that John was one
of the three personal aides of Jesus lent further color to this
mistaken idea, not to mention that John, along with his brother
James, had known Jesus longer than the others.
139:4.3
Peter, James, and John were assigned as personal aides to Jesus soon
after they became apostles. Shortly after the selection of the
twelve and at the time Jesus appointed Andrew to act as director of
the group, he said to him: "And now I desire that you assign two or
three of your associates to be with me and to remain by my side, to
comfort me and to minister to my daily needs." And Andrew thought
best to select for this special duty the next three first-chosen
apostles. He would have liked to volunteer for such a blessed
service himself, but the Master had already given him his
commission; so he immediately directed that Peter, James, and John
attach themselves to Jesus.
139:4.4
John Zebedee had many lovely traits of character, but one which was
not so lovely was his inordinate but usually well-concealed conceit.
His long association with Jesus made many and great changes in his
character. This conceit was greatly lessened, but after growing old
and becoming more or less childish, this self-esteem reappeared to a
certain extent, so that, when engaged in directing Nathan in the
writing of the Gospel which now bears his name, the aged apostle did
not hesitate repeatedly to refer to himself as the "disciple whom
Jesus loved." In view of the fact that John came nearer to being the
chum of Jesus than any other earth mortal, that he was his chosen
personal representative in so many matters, it is not strange that
he should have come to regard himself as the "disciple whom Jesus
loved" since he most certainly knew he was the disciple whom Jesus
so frequently trusted.
139:4.5
The strongest trait in John's character was his dependability; he
was prompt and courageous, faithful and devoted. His greatest
weakness was this characteristic conceit. He was the youngest member
of his father's family and the youngest of the apostolic group.
Perhaps he was just a bit spoiled; maybe he had been humored
slightly too much. But the John of after years was a very different
type of person than the self-admiring and arbitrary young man who
joined the ranks of Jesus' apostles when he was twenty-four.
139:4.6
Those characteristics of Jesus which John most appreciated were the
Master's love and unselfishness; these traits made such an
impression on him that his whole subsequent life became dominated by
the sentiment of love and brotherly devotion. He talked about love
and wrote about love. This "son of thunder" became the "apostle of
love"; and at Ephesus, when the aged bishop was no longer able to
stand in the pulpit and preach but had to be carried to church in a
chair, and when at the close of the service he was asked to say a
few words to the believers, for years his only utterance was, "My
little children, love one another."
139:4.7
John was a man of few words except when his temper was aroused. He
thought much but said little. As he grew older, his temper became
more subdued, better controlled, but he never overcame his
disinclination to talk; he never fully mastered this reticence. But
he was gifted with a remarkable and creative imagination.
139:4.8
There was another side to John that one would not expect to find in
this quiet and introspective type. He was somewhat bigoted and
inordinately intolerant. In this respect he and James were much
alike -- they both wanted to call down fire from heaven on the heads
of the disrespectful Samaritans. When John encountered some
strangers teaching in Jesus' name, he promptly forbade them. But he
was not the only one of the twelve who was tainted with this kind of
self-esteem and superiority consciousness.
139:4.9
John's life was tremendously influenced by the sight of Jesus' going
about without a home as he knew how faithfully he had made provision
for the care of his mother and family. John also deeply sympathized
with Jesus because of his family's failure to understand him, being
aware that they were gradually withdrawing from him. This entire
situation, together with Jesus' ever deferring his slightest wish to
the will of the Father in heaven and his daily life of implicit
trust, made such a profound impression on John that it produced
marked and permanent changes in his character, changes which
manifested themselves throughout his entire subsequent life.
139:4.10
John had a cool and daring courage which few of the other apostles
possessed. He was the one apostle who followed right along with
Jesus the night of his arrest and dared to accompany his Master into
the very jaws of death. He was present and near at hand right up to
the last earthly hour and was found faithfully carrying out his
trust with regard to Jesus' mother and ready to receive such
additional instructions as might be given during the last moments of
the Master's mortal existence. One thing is certain, John was
thoroughly dependable. John usually sat on Jesus' right hand when
the twelve were at meat. He was the first of the twelve really and
fully to believe in the resurrection, and he was the first to
recognize the Master when he came to them on the seashore after his
resurrection.
139:4.11
This son of Zebedee was very closely associated with Peter in the
early activities of the Christian movement, becoming one of the
chief supporters of the Jerusalem church. He was the right-hand
support of Peter on the day of Pentecost.
139:4.12
Several years after the martyrdom of James, John married his
brother's widow. The last twenty years of his life he was cared for
by a loving granddaughter.
139:4.13
John was in prison several times and was banished to the Isle of
Patmos for a period of four years until another emperor came to
power in Rome. Had not John been tactful and sagacious, he would
undoubtedly have been killed as was his more outspoken brother
James. As the years passed, John, together with James the Lord's
brother, learned to practice wise conciliation when they appeared
before the civil magistrates. They found that a "soft answer turns
away wrath." They also learned to represent the church as a
"spiritual brotherhood devoted to the social service of mankind"
rather than as "the kingdom of heaven." They taught loving service
rather than ruling power -- kingdom and king.
139:4.14
When in temporary exile on Patmos, John wrote the Book of
Revelation, which you now have in greatly abridged and distorted
form. This Book of Revelation contains the surviving fragments of a
great revelation, large portions of which were lost, other portions
of which were removed, subsequent to John's writing. It is preserved
in only fragmentary and adulterated form.
139:4.15
John traveled much, labored incessantly, and after becoming bishop
of the Asia churches, settled down at Ephesus. He directed his
associate, Nathan, in the writing of the so-called "Gospel according
to John," at Ephesus, when he was ninety-nine years old. Of all the
twelve apostles, John Zebedee eventually became the outstanding
theologian. He died a natural death at Ephesus in A.D. 103 when he
was one hundred and one years of age.
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