CONTACT
US
The Urantia Book
Fellowship
PO Box 4583
Grand Central Station
New York, NY 10163
1-877-288-3772
|
The
Story of Everything
An
abridged edition of The Urantia Book
Paper
123: The Early Childhood of Jesus
When Jesus was just
over three years old, Joseph and Mary returned to their Nazareth home.
Joseph built a workshop close to the village spring. He made yokes
and plows and worked with leather, rope, and canvas. Jesus' brother
James was born in April, 3 BC. His sister Miriam was born in July,
2 BC.
Jesus' Thought Adjuster,
which had previously served with Machiventa Melchizedek, arrived when
Jesus was four and a half years old. When Jesus turned five, Joseph
assumed responsibility for his son's education and started teaching
Jesus from a Greek copy of the Hebrew scriptures.
In the summer of 1 BC,
Zacharias and Elizabeth brought John to visit Nazareth. Meeting his
cousin prompted Jesus to become interested in the history of Israel
and the Jewish rites and feasts. About this time Joseph began his
career as a builder, working in Cana, Bethlehem, Magdala, Nain, Sepphoris,
Capernaum, Endor and Nazareth. Jesus often accompanied Joseph in his
work.
During this year, Joseph
and Mary started to have concerns about how Jesus said his prayers.
Jesus insisted on talking to his heavenly Father in the same way that
he talked to Joseph. Since Jesus knew that this departure from reverent
prayer was disconcerting to Mary, the boy would first say his prayers
as he was taught, and then have "a little talk" with his Father. He
learned to adjust his feelings and impulses to the demands of home
and family. Joseph explained the reasons for curtailment of personal
desires in deference to the welfare of the family, and when Jesus
understood the situation he always willingly cooperated.
Jesus was a normal but
inquisitive child. He liked to look at flowers and plants and stars.
Jesus enjoyed playing with other children with wooden blocks and wood
shavings in the carpentry shop. He administered a charity fund from
the proceeds of a dovecote that Mary kept. Jesus was not immune from
accidents. When he was seven, his fall from an outdoor staircase during
a sandstorm caused Mary great anxiety.
His brother Joseph was
born in March, 1 AD. In August Jesus entered formal school where he
spent the next six years learning to read, write, and speak Hebrew.
It was customary for a child to choose a birthday text at the onset
of the school career. The passage Jesus chose was from Isaiah: "The
spirit of the Lord God is upon me, for the Lord has anointed me; he
has sent me to bring good news to the meek, to bind up the brokenhearted,
to proclaim liberty to the captives, and to set the spiritual prisoners
free."
Joseph and Jesus enjoyed
going for walks on Sabbath afternoons. When he was eight, Jesus learned
to milk the cow, make cheese, and operate a loom. He enjoyed playing
with clay at the potter's shop with his friend Jacob. Jesus did his
school work so well that he was given a week off every month, which
he usually spent either at an uncle's farm or on the shores of the
Sea of Galilee. He developed a keen sense of numbers, distances, and
proportions. Jesus liked music, and arranged to trade dairy products
for lessons on the harp. In school he asked many questions, particularly
about geography and astronomy.
A third brother, Simon,
was born in April of 2 AD.
Nahor, a rabbi from
Jerusalem, advised Joseph and Mary to send Jesus to Jerusalem for
his education. Mary supported the plan, but Joseph hesitated. When
Jesus was asked his opinion of the matter, he told Nahor that he felt
he should remain at home with his parents because they loved him and
could guide him more safely than strangers.
Read the complete
unabridged version of Paper 123
|