P1629:2, 145:2.1
The next Sabbath, at the afternoon service in the synagogue, Jesus preached
his sermon on "The Will of the Father in Heaven." In the morning Simon Peter
had preached on "The Kingdom." At the Thursday evening meeting of the synagogue
Andrew had taught, his subject being "The New Way." At this particular time
more people believed in Jesus in Capernaum than in any other one city on earth.
P1629:3, 145:2.2
As Jesus taught in the synagogue this Sabbath afternoon, according to custom
he took the first text from the law, reading from the Book of Exodus: "And
you shall serve the Lord, your God, and he shall bless your bread and your
water, and all sickness shall be taken away from you." He chose the second
text from the Prophets, reading from Isaiah: "Arise and shine, for your light
has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you. Darkness may cover
the earth and gross darkness the people, but the spirit of the Lord shall
arise upon you, and the divine glory shall be seen with you. Even the gentiles
shall come to this light, and many great minds shall surrender to the brightness
of this light."
P1629:4, 145:2.3
This sermon was an effort on Jesus' part to make clear the fact that religion
is a personal experience. Among other things, the Master said:
P1629:5, 145:2.4
"You well know that, while a kindhearted father loves his family as a whole,
he so regards them as a group because of his strong affection for each individual
member of that family. No longer must you approach the Father in heaven as
a child of Israel but as a child of God. As a group, you are indeed
the children of Israel, but as individuals, each one of you is a child of
God. I have come, not to reveal the Father to the children of Israel, but
rather to bring this knowledge of God and the revelation of his love and mercy
to the individual believer as a genuine personal experience. The prophets
have all taught you that Yahweh cares for his people, that God loves Israel.
But I have come among you to proclaim a greater truth, one which many of the
later prophets also grasped, that God loves you -- every one of you
-- as individuals. All these generations have you had a national or racial
religion; now have I come to give you a personal religion.
P1630:1, 145:2.5
"But even this is not a new idea. Many of the spiritually minded among you
have known this truth, inasmuch as some of the prophets have so instructed
you. Have you not read in the Scriptures where the Prophet Jeremiah says:
`In those days they shall no more say, the fathers have eaten sour grapes
and the children's teeth are set on edge. Every man shall die for his own
iniquity; every man who eats sour grapes, his teeth shall be set on edge.
Behold, the days shall come when I will make a new covenant with my people,
not according to the covenant which I made with their fathers when I brought
them out of the land of Egypt, but according to the new way. I will even write
my law in their hearts. I will be their God, and they shall be my people.
In that day they shall not say, one man to his neighbor, do you know the Lord?
Nay! For they shall all know me personally, from the least to the greatest.'
P1630:2, 145:2.6
"Have you not read these promises? Do you not believe the Scriptures? Do you
not understand that the prophet's words are fulfilled in what you behold this
very day? And did not Jeremiah exhort you to make religion an affair of the
heart, to relate yourselves to God as individuals? Did not the prophet tell
you that the God of heaven would search your individual hearts? And were you
not warned that the natural human heart is deceitful above all things and
oftentimes desperately wicked?
P1630:3, 145:2.7
"Have you not read also where Ezekiel taught even your fathers that religion
must become a reality in your individual experiences? No more shall you use
the proverb which says, `The fathers have eaten sour grapes and the children's
teeth are set on edge.' `As I live,' says the Lord God, `behold all souls
are mine; as the soul of the father, so also the soul of the son. Only the
soul that sins shall die.' And then Ezekiel foresaw even this day when he
spoke in behalf of God, saying: `A new heart also will I give you, and a new
spirit will I put within you.'
P1630:4, 145:2.8
"No more should you fear that God will punish a nation for the sin of an individual;
neither will the Father in heaven punish one of his believing children for
the sins of a nation, albeit the individual member of any family must often
suffer the material consequences of family mistakes and group transgressions.
Do you not realize that the hope of a better nation -- or a better world --
is bound up in the progress and enlightenment of the individual?"
P1630:5, 145:2.9
Then the Master portrayed that the Father in heaven, after man discerns this
spiritual freedom, wills that his children on earth should begin that eternal
ascent of the Paradise career which consists in the creature's conscious response
to the divine urge of the indwelling spirit to find the Creator, to know God
and to seek to become like him.
P1630:6, 145:2.10
The apostles were greatly helped by this sermon. All of them realized more
fully that the gospel of the kingdom is a message directed to the individual,
not to the nation.
P1630:7, 145:2.11
Even though the people of Capernaum were familiar with Jesus' teaching, they
were astonished at his sermon on this Sabbath day. He taught, indeed, as one
having authority and not as the scribes.
P1630:8, 145:2.12
Just as Jesus finished speaking, a young man in the congregation who had been
much agitated by his words was seized with a violent epileptic attack and
loudly cried out. At the end of the seizure, when recovering consciousness,
he spoke in a
dreamy state, saying: "What have we to do with you, Jesus of
Nazareth? You are the holy one of God; have you come to destroy us?" Jesus
bade the people be quiet and, taking the young man by the hand, said, "Come
out of it" -- and he was immediately awakened.
P1631:1, 145:2.13
This young man was not possessed of an unclean spirit or demon; he was a victim
of ordinary epilepsy. But he had been taught that his affliction was due to
possession by an evil spirit. He believed this teaching and behaved accordingly
in all that he thought or said concerning his ailment. The people all believed
that such phenomena were directly caused by the presence of unclean spirits.
Accordingly they believed that Jesus had cast a demon out of this man. But
Jesus did not at that time cure his epilepsy. Not until later on that day,
after sundown, was this man really healed. Long after the day of Pentecost
the Apostle John, who was the last to write of Jesus' doings, avoided all
reference to these so-called acts of "casting out devils," and this he did
in view of the fact that such cases of demon possession never occurred after
Pentecost.
P1631:2, 145:2.14
As a result of this commonplace incident the report was rapidly spread through
Capernaum that Jesus had cast a demon out of a man and miraculously healed
him in the synagogue at the conclusion of his afternoon sermon. The Sabbath
was just the time for the rapid and effective spreading of such a startling
rumor. This report was also carried to all the smaller settlements around
Capernaum, and many of the people believed it.
P1631:3, 145:2.15
The cooking and the housework at the large Zebedee home, where Jesus and the
twelve made their headquarters, was for the most part done by Simon Peter's
wife and her mother. Peter's home was near that of Zebedee; and Jesus and
his friends stopped there on the way from the synagogue because Peter's wife's
mother had for several days been sick with chills and fever. Now it chanced
that, at about the time Jesus stood over this sick woman, holding her hand,
smoothing her brow, and speaking words of comfort and encouragement, the fever
left her. Jesus had not yet had time to explain to his apostles that no miracle
had been wrought at the synagogue; and with this incident so fresh and vivid
in their minds, and recalling the water and the wine at Cana, they seized
upon this coincidence as another miracle, and some of them rushed out to spread
the news abroad throughout the city.
P1631:4, 145:2.16
Amatha, Peter's
mother-in-law, was suffering from
malarial fever. She was
not miraculously healed by Jesus at this time. Not until several hours later,
after sundown, was her cure effected in connection with the extraordinary
event which occurred in the front yard of the Zebedee home.
P1631:5, 145:2.17
And these cases are typical of the manner in which a wonder-seeking generation
and a miracle-minded people unfailingly seized upon all such
coincidences
as the pretext for proclaiming that another miracle had been wrought by Jesus.