P1455:1, 132:0.1
Since Gonod carried greetings from the princes of India to Tiberius, the Roman
ruler, on the third day after their arrival in Rome the two Indians and Jesus
appeared before him. The morose emperor was unusually
cheerful on this day and chatted long with the
trio. And when they had gone from his presence, the emperor, referring to
Jesus, remarked to the aide standing on his right, "If I had that fellow's
kingly bearing and gracious manner, I would be a real emperor, eh?"
P1455:2, 132:0.2
While at Rome, Ganid had regular hours for study and for visiting places of
interest about the city. His father had much business to transact, and desiring
that his son grow up to become a worthy successor in the management of his
vast commercial interests, he thought the time had come to introduce the boy
to the business world. There were many citizens of India in Rome, and often
one of Gonod's own employees would accompany him as interpreter so that Jesus
would have whole days to himself; this gave him time in which to become thoroughly
acquainted with this city of two million inhabitants. He was frequently to
be found in the forum, the center of political, legal, and business life.
He often went up to the
Capitolium and pondered the bondage of ignorance in
which these Romans were held as he beheld this magnificent temple dedicated
to Jupiter,
Juno, and
Minerva. He also spent much time on
Palatine hill, where
were located the emperor's residence, the temple of
Apollo, and the Greek
and Latin libraries.
P1455:3, 132:0.3
At this time the Roman Empire included all of southern Europe, Asia Minor,
Syria, Egypt, and northwest Africa; and its inhabitants embraced the citizens
of every country of the Eastern Hemisphere. His desire to study and mingle
with this cosmopolitan aggregation of Urantia mortals was the chief reason
why Jesus consented to make this journey.
P1455:4, 132:0.4
Jesus learned much about men while in Rome, but the most valuable of all the
manifold experiences of his six months' sojourn in that city was his contact
with, and influence upon, the religious leaders of the empire's capital. Before
the end of the first week in Rome Jesus had sought out, and had made the acquaintance
of, the worth-while leaders of the Cynics, the Stoics, and the mystery cults,
in particular the Mithraic group. Whether or not it was apparent to Jesus
that the Jews were going to reject his mission, he most certainly foresaw
that his messengers were presently coming to Rome to proclaim the kingdom
of heaven; and he therefore set about, in the most amazing manner, to prepare
the way for the better and more certain reception of their message. He selected
five of the leading Stoics, eleven of the Cynics, and sixteen of the
mystery-cult
leaders and spent much of his spare time for almost six months in intimate
association with these religious teachers. And this was his method of instruction:
Never once did he attack their errors or even mention the flaws in their teachings.
In each case he would select the truth in what they taught and then proceed
so to embellish and illuminate this truth in their minds that in a very short
time this enhancement of the truth effectively crowded out the associated
error; and thus were these Jesus-taught men and women prepared for the subsequent
recognition of additional and similar truths in the teachings of the early
Christian missionaries. It was this early acceptance of the teachings of the
gospel preachers which gave that powerful impetus to the rapid spread of Christianity
in Rome and from there throughout the empire.
P1456:1, 132:0.5
The significance of this remarkable doing can the better be understood when
we record the fact that, out of this group of thirty-two Jesus-taught religious
leaders in Rome, only two were unfruitful; the thirty became pivotal individuals
in the establishment of Christianity in Rome, and certain of them also aided
in turning the chief Mithraic temple into the first Christian church of that
city. We who view human activities from behind the scenes and in the light
of nineteen centuries of time recognize just three factors of paramount value
in the early setting of the stage for the rapid spread of Christianity throughout
Europe, and they are:
P1456:5, 132:0.6
Through all their experiences, neither Stephen nor the thirty chosen ones
ever realized that they had once talked with the man whose name became the
subject of their religious teaching. Jesus' work in behalf of the original
thirty-two was entirely personal. In his labors for these individuals the
scribe of Damascus never met more than three of them at one time, seldom more
than two, while most often he taught them singly. And he could do this great
work of religious training because these men and women were not tradition
bound; they were not victims of a settled preconception as to all future religious
developments.
P1456:6, 132:0.7
Many were the times in the years so soon to follow that Peter, Paul, and the
other Christian teachers in Rome heard about this scribe of Damascus who had
preceded them, and who had so obviously (and as they supposed unwittingly)
prepared the way for their coming with the new gospel. Though Paul never really
surmised the identity of this scribe of Damascus, he did, a short time before
his death, because of the similarity of personal
descriptions, reach the conclusion
that the "tentmaker of Antioch" was also the "scribe of Damascus." On one
occasion, while preaching in Rome, Simon Peter, on listening to a description
of the Damascus scribe, surmised that this individual might have been Jesus
but quickly dismissed the idea, knowing full well (so he thought) that the
Master had never been in Rome.