Leaving Capernaum behind Him, with
its crowds of invalids seeking healing, and fighting
off the demands that would have rendered Him a professional
healer instead of a Teacher and preacher of the Message
of Truth, Jesus passed on to other parts of the land,
taking with Him the band of disciples and faithful
followers who now traveled with Him.
But He did not altogether relinquish
His healing work. He merely made it an incident
of His ministry, and did not allow it to interfere
with His preaching and teaching. The Gospel narratives
show a number of remarkable cures made by Him at this
time, and the few recorded cases are, of course, merely
occasional incidents that stand out in the minds of
the people among hundreds of less noticeable cases.
The cure of the leper is one of such
remarkable cases. Leprosy was a foul disease
much dreaded by the people of Oriental countries.
And the unfortunate person afflicted by it became
an outcast and pariah from whom all others fled as
from an unclean and impure thing.
There was a leper in the part of the
country in which Jesus was traveling and teaching.
He heard of the wonderful gift of healing accredited
to the young preacher, and he determined to get into
His presence and beg His aid. How the leper managed
to get through the crowds and into the presence of
Jesus is not known, but it must have required great
strategy on his part, for such people were not permitted
to pass in and among crowds of other people. But
in some way the leper contrived to come face to face
with Jesus as the latter walked alone in meditation,
away from his followers.
The loathsome creature raised its
repulsive form, the picture of human misery and woe,
and confronting the Master, demanded from Him the
exercise of the Gift of Healing. No doubt of His
power was in the leper’s mind his
face shone with faith and expectation. Jesus gazed
earnestly into the distorted features that shone with
the fire of a fervent faith such as is rarely seen
on the face of man, and touched with this testimony
to His power and motives, He moved toward the leper,
defying the laws of the country, which forbade the
same. Not only this, but He even laid His hands
upon the unclean flesh, defying all the laws of reason
in so doing, and fearlessly passed His hand over the
leper’s face, crying aloud, “Be thou clean!”
The leper felt a strange thrill running
through his veins and over his nerves, and every atom
of his body seemed to be tingling with a peculiar
burning and smarting sensation. Even as he looked
he saw the color of his flesh changing and taking
on the hue of the flesh of the healthy person.
The numbness departed from the affected portion of
his body, and he could actually feel the thrill and
tingle of the life currents that were at work with
incredible speed building up new cells, tissue and
muscle. And still Jesus held His hands against
the flesh of the leper, allowing the life current
of highly vitalized prana to pour from His
organism into that of the leper, just as a storage
battery of great power replenishes and recharges an
electrical appliance. And back of it all was
the most potent, trained Will of the Master Occultist
directing the work.
And then He bade the healed man depart
and comply with the laws regarding purification and
change of garments, including the appearance before
the priests to receive a certificate of cleanliness.
And He also bade him that nothing should be said regarding
the nature or particulars of the cure. For some
good reason He wished to escape the notoriety or fame
that the report of such a wonderful cure would be
sure to excite.
But alas! this was asking too much
of human nature, and the healed leper, running with
great leaps and bounds, began shouting and crying
aloud the glad tidings of his marvelous cure, that
all men might know what a great blessing had come
to him. In spite of the injunction laid upon
him, he began to sing aloud the praises of the Master
who had manifested such an unheard-of power over the
foul disease that had held him in its grasp until
a few hours before. With wild gestures and gleaming
eyes he told the story again and again, and it was
taken up and repeated from person to person, until
the whole town and countryside were familiar with
the great news. Imagine such an event occurring
in a small country town in our own land today, and
you will realize what an excitement must have been
occasioned in that home place of the leper.
And then occurred that which Jesus
had doubtless seen when He forbade the leper to repeat
the news of the cure. The whole region became
excited and immense crowds gathered around Him and
His disciples, crying aloud for new wonders and miracles.
The curious sensation-seekers were there in full force,
crowding out those whom He wished to reach by His
teachings. And more than this, great numbers of
sick and crippled people crowded around Him crying
for aid and cure. The scenes of Capernaum were
repeated. Even the lepers began flocking in,
in defiance of law and custom, and the authorities
were beside themselves with anger and annoyance.
Not only the temporal authorities and the priests
were arrayed against Him, as of old, but now He managed
to arouse the opposition of the physicians of those
days, who saw their practice ruined by this man whom
they called a charlatan and deceiver threatening and
destroying the health of the people, whose physical
welfare was safe only in their (the physicians’)
hands and keeping.
And so Jesus was compelled to close
His ministry at this place and move on to another
village.
Another case which attracted much
attention was that which occurred in Galilee when
He was preaching in a house. In the midst of His
discourse both He and His audience were startled by
the sight of a figure on a bed being lowered down
among the crowd of listeners from the roof surrounding
the open court in the center of the house. It
was a poor paralyzed man whom friends had contrived
to hoist up and then lower down before Jesus in such
a manner as could not escape the attention of the
Master. It is related that the piteous appeal
of the sufferer, and the faith which had inspired
such great energy on the part of his friends, attracted
the interest and sympathy of Jesus, and He paused
in His discourse and made another of those instantaneous
cures which are possible only to the most advanced
adepts in the science of spiritual healing.
Then came the scene of the Wells of
Bethesda a region abounding in “healing
waters” to which the sick and afflicted came
to regain their health. The crowds of sick were
being carried to the springs by friends or paid attendants,
who pushed aside the weaker ones and fought their
way to the wells. Jesus walked among the crowds,
and at last His attention was attracted toward a poor
fellow who lay upon his cot away off from the waters.
He had no friends to carry him nearer, nor money for
paid attendants. And he had not strength enough
to crawl there himself. He filled the air with
his moans and cries and bewailings of his unfortunate
lot. Jesus walked up to him, and holding his
attention by a firm look of authority and power, cried
to him suddenly in a voice that demanded obedience,
“Take up thy bed and walk!” The man, startled
into obedience, did as directed, and much to his surprise,
and that of the crowd gathered around, found that he
was able to move about freely a well man.
This cure also aroused not only the
greatest interest but also the antagonism of the ecclesiastical
authorities. It appears that the cure had been
made on the Sabbath day, and that it was against the
ecclesiastical law to heal the sick in any way upon
that day; and also that the patient had performed
manual work on the Sabbath in carrying his bed upon
the orders of the Healer. And the good pious folk,
urged on by the priests, began to abuse and condemn
the Healer and patient, after the manner of the formal
pietists of all lands and times, even of our own.
Clinging to the letter of the law, these people overlook
its spirit bound by the forms, they fail
to see the meaning lying back of all forms and ceremonies.
Braving the storm that was arising
around Him, Jesus boldly walked to the Temple.
He was plunged in a sea of conflicting opinions and
voices. On the one hand was the healed man and
those who sympathized with him, in earnest argument
concerning the righteousness of the deed. But
arrayed against these few were the good folk of the
place who loudly denounced the Sabbath-breaker and
demanded His punishment. Were the ancient laws
of Moses to be thus defied by this presumptuous Nazarene,
whose religious ideas were sadly lacking in orthodoxy?
Surely not! Punish the upstart! And again
Jesus was in actual peril of bodily hurt, or perhaps
even death, owing to the religious bigotry of the
orthodox people.
Jesus was ever a foe to the stupid
formalism and ignorant fanaticism regarding “holy
days,” which is ever a characteristic of certain
classes of mind among people. On the above occasion,
as well as upon other occasions, and notably upon
the occasion of the Sabbath when He directed His hungry
disciples to pick corn to satisfy their hunger, Jesus
opposed the strict, ironclad law of Sabbath observance.
He was ever filled with the idea that the “Sabbath
was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath.”
There was nothing Puritanical about the Master, and
in view of His attitude regarding this matter it is
surprising to witness the attitude of some in our
own time who, wearing His livery, oppose these teachings
of His in theory and practice.
And so, driven out once more by the
intolerance and bigotry of the public, Jesus returned
again to Galilee, His land of retreat and rest, and
the scene of much of His best work. Galilee was
filled with His many followers and admirers, and He
was less in danger of disturbance and persecution
there than in the neighborhood of Jerusalem. Large
congregations attended His ministry there, and His
converts were numbered by the thousand. The village
contained many persons healed by His power, and His
name was a household word.
And upon His return He entered into
a new stage of His work. He had decided to divide
His ministry among His twelve most advanced disciples,
as it had now reached proportions beyond His ability
to personally control. And, as was customary
to Him upon all great occasions, He sought the solitudes
for meditation and spiritual strength before finally
investing His twelve Apostles with the high authority
of their mission. He spent the night on one of
the hills near Capernaum, from which He descended
the following morning, wearied in body from want of
rest, but strong in soul and spirit.
Then He gathered the Twelve around
Him, and in a secret meeting divulged to them certain
deep truths and secrets, adding certain instructions
regarding healing work, and calling upon them for the
highest allegiance to Him and His work.
The Gospel narratives have but very
little to say regarding Jesus’ work in the instruction
of the Twelve for their future mission. And the
average student of the narratives goes on without thinking
of the marvelous mental and spiritual development
that must have been manifested by the Apostles during
their transition from humble fishermen, and men of
similar vocations, to highly developed teachers of
advanced spiritual truths. To the occultist especially
this ordinary view seems astounding, for he realizes
the many arduous steps necessary to be trodden by
the feet of the Neophyte before he becomes an Initiate,
and the higher steps awaiting the Initiate before he
may become a Master. And such a one realizes
the mighty task that Jesus performed in developing
and unfolding the spiritual natures of such a body
of men until they become worthy to be His chosen representatives
and teachers. The occult traditions have it that
Jesus had pursued a systematic course of instruction
of His chosen disciples, bringing them up rapidly
through degree after degree of mystic attainment and
occult knowledge, until finally they were ready for
the finishing touches at His hands. And the occasion
that we are now considering was the time when the
final degrees were imparted to them.
It must be remembered that the Apostles
were endowed with the mastery of the occult forces
of nature which enabled them to perform the “miracles”
of healing similar to those of Jesus. And it must
not be supposed for a moment that an occult Master
of so high a degree of attainment as that reached
by Jesus would have allowed His disciples to use such
mighty power without also instructing them fully in
the nature of the forces they were using, and of the
best methods of employing the same. And such
knowledge could not be imparted without the fundamental
truths of nature being understood by them, which understanding
was possible only to those who had grasped the great
Basic Truths of the Science of Being.
In short, the traditions are that
the Twelve Apostles were gradually initiated into
the great degrees of the Occult Brotherhoods of which
and in which Jesus was a Master. He gathered together
a great store of occult information and mystic lore,
and condensing the same into a plain, practical, simple
system, He imparted it fully and thoroughly to those
whom He had elected to be His chief co-workers and
His successors after His death, which He knew full
well was not far off.
These facts must be fully understood
by the student of Mystic Christianity who wishes to
grasp the secret of the early Christian Church after
the death of Christ. The wonderful headway manifested
by the movement could not have been given by mere
followers and believers in the Master. It usually
follows that when the great head of an organization
dies the movement disintegrates or loses power unless
he has been able to “communicate his spirit”
to some chosen followers. And this Jesus did.
And it was only to men who thoroughly grasped the
fundamental truths and principles of His teachings
that such “spirit” could have been imparted.
There was an exoteric teaching for
the multitude, and an esoteric teaching for the Twelve.
There are many Scriptural passages which go to show
this fact, which was well known to the early Fathers
of the Church. And upon the occasion which we
have mentioned the last great Basic Truths were explained
to the Twelve, and from that time henceforward they
were regarded and treated as Masters by Jesus, and
not as mere students, as had been the case before that
time. And arising from that final instruction
came the Sermon of the Mount.
The Sermon of the Mount, that most
wonderful and complete of any of the public utterances
of Jesus, was delivered almost immediately after the
Choosing of the Twelve Apostles. And it was intended
even more for them than for the multitudes gathered
around to hear His preaching. He knew that the
Twelve could interpret it by reason of the Inner Teachings
that they had received from Him. And almost forgetting
the congregation gathered around and about Him, He
elucidated the Inner teachings for the benefit of
the Chosen Few.
The Sermon of the Mount can be understood
only by means of the Master Key of the Inner Teachings,
which opens the door of the mind to an understanding
of the hard sayings and veiled mystic import of many
of His precepts. We shall devote considerable
space in one of our later lessons of this series to
a consideration of the Inner Meaning of this great
sermon and teaching, and therefore shall not go into
details regarding it in the present lesson, deeming
it better to proceed with the story of the Master’s
Work.
A few days after the delivery of the
Sermon of the Mount, the Master left Capernaum and
traveled from town to town visiting His various centers
of teaching, as was His custom. On the journey
Jesus performed a feat of occult power that proved
Him to be one of the Highest Adepts of the Occult
Brotherhoods, for to none other would such a manifestation
have been possible. Even some of the highest Oriental
Masters would have refused to undertake the task that
He set before Himself to do.
The company was leisurely proceeding
on its way, when nearing a small town they met a funeral
procession coming in their direction. Preceded
by the band of women chanting the mournful dirges according
to the Galileean custom, the cortege slowly wended
its way. The etiquette of the land required strangers
to join in the mourning when they came in contact
with a funeral procession, and the company assumed
a mournful and respectful demeanor, and many joined
in the dirge which was being chanted by the procession.
But Jesus invaded the privacy of the
procession in a manner shocking to those who held
closely to the familiar forms and customs. Stepping
up to the bier, He stood in front of it and bade the
carriers halt and set it down. A murmur of indignation
ran through the ranks of the mourners, and some strode
forward to rebuke the presumptuous stranger who dared
to violate the dignity of the funeral in this way.
But something in His face held them back. Then
a strange feeling passed over the crowd. Jesus
was known to a number of the mourners, and some of
those who had witnessed some of His wonder-workings
began to whisper that strange things were about to
happen, and the ranks were broken as the people flocked
around the Master at the bier.
The corpse was that of a young man,
and his widowed mother stood beside the pale figure
stretched upon the bier, and spreading her arms in
front of it, she seemed to ward off the profaning touch
of the strange man who confronted it. But the
stranger looked upon her with a look of transcendent
love, and in a voice vibrant with the tenderest feeling
said unto her, “Mother, weep not cease
thy mourning.” Amazed, but impressed, she
turned an appealing gaze to Him who had thus bidden
her. Her mother love and instinct caught a new
expression in His eyes, and her heart bounded with
a wonderful hope of something, she knew not what.
What did the Nazarene mean? Her boy was dead,
and even God Himself never disturbed the slumber of
the body from which the spirit had flown. But
still what meant that expression why that
leap and throbbing of her heart?
Then with a gesture of authority the
Master caused the crowd to draw back from the bier,
until at last there remained only the corpse, the
mother and Himself in a cleared space in the center.
Then a strange and wonderful scene began. With
His gaze fixed upon the face of the corpse, and in
an attitude that indicated a supreme effort of His
will, the Master was seen to be making some mighty
effort which called into play the highest forces at
His command. The Apostles, having been instructed
by Him in Occult power, recognized the nature of the
manifestation, and their faces paled, for they knew
that He was not only pouring out His vital force into
the body in order to recharge it with prana,
but that He was also essaying one of the highest and
most difficult of occult feats that of summoning
back from the Astral Plane the higher vehicles and
the Astral Body the very soul of the youth and
forcing it once more into its mortal frame, which He
had recharged with vital energy and strength.
They knew that He, by the mightiest effort of His
will, was reversing the process of death. And
with a full appreciation of the real nature of the
wonder that was being worked before them, their limbs
trembled beneath them and their breath came from them
in gasps.
Then cried the people, “What
saith this man to the corpse?” “Arise,
youth! Open thine eyes! Breathe freely!
Arise, I say unto thee arise!” Did
this stranger dare to defy God’s own decree?
The corpse opened its eyes and stared
around in wild amaze, the glare not fully faded away!
Its chest heaved in great agonizing gasps as if fighting
again for life! Then its arms were lifted up then
its legs began to move now it raised itself
upright and began to babble meaningless words now
the look of recognition came into its eyes, and its
arms clasped themselves around the mother’s neck,
while sob after sob broke from its lips! The
dead lived the corpse had come to life.
The people fell back overcome with
the awful terror of the sight, and the funeral procession
scattered in all directions, until only the sobbing
mother and the youth remained, weeping in their mutual
love and joy, and forgetting even the Master and His
followers in their great flood of affection.
And, leaving them thus, Jesus and
His followers passed away on their pilgrimage.
But the fame of the miracle spread from town to town,
even up to the great capital, Jerusalem. And
men wondered or doubted, according to their natures,
while the temporal and ecclesiastical authorities
began to again ask themselves and each other whether
this man were not a dangerous person and an enemy
to established custom and order.
In one of His journeys Jesus found
Himself invited to the house of a leading citizen
of the town in which He was preaching. This citizen
was one of the class known as Pharisees, whose characteristics
were an extreme devotion and adherence to forms and
ceremonies and a bigoted insistence upon the observance
of the letter of the law. The Pharisees were
the ultra-orthodox center of an orthodox people.
They were the straight-laced brethren who walked so
erect that they leaned backward. They were the
people who thanked God that they were not like unto
other men. They were the “uncommonly good”
members of church and society. The very name
stands even unto this day as a synonym for “pious
sham.”
Just why this Pharisee had invited
the Master to dine with him is not easily understood.
It is likely that it was a combination of curiosity
and a desire to entrap his guest into statements and
admissions that might be used against him. At
any rate, the invitation was given and accepted.
The Master noted that certain little
ceremonies usually extended by the Hebrews to a guest
of equal standing were omitted by His host. His
head was not anointed with the ceremonial oil, as was
the custom in houses of this character when the guest
was honored as an equal or desirable addition to the
family gathering. Clearly He was regarded as
a curiosity or “freak” rather than as a
friend, and had been invited in such a spirit.
But He said nothing, and passed over the slight.
And the meal passed along smoothly up to a certain
point.
The host and his guests were reclining
easily, after the Oriental fashion, discussing various
topics, when a woman pressed her way into the banquet
hall. Her dress proclaimed her to be one of the
women of easy virtue abounding in all Oriental towns.
She was clad in showy apparel and her hair fell loosely
over her shoulders after the custom of the women of
her kind in that land. She fixed her eyes upon
the Master and moved slowly toward him, much to the
annoyance of the host, who feared a scene, for the
Master would most likely administer a rebuke to the
woman for presuming to intrude upon the presence of
Him, a spiritual teacher.
But the woman still pressed forward
toward Him, and at last, bending down low, her head
touching His feet, she burst into tears. She had
heard the Master preach some time before, and the seeds
of His teaching had taken root and had now blossomed
within her heart; and she had come to acknowledge
her allegiance and to render an offering to Him whom
she revered. The coming into His presence was
her token of a spiritual regeneration and a desire
to begin a new life. Her tears flowed over His
feet, and she dried them off with her long hair.
Then she kissed His feet, as a token of her allegiance
and worship.
From her neck hung a chain holding
a little box filled with precious perfumed oil, which
she esteemed highly, as did all the people of her
race. The oil was of the nature of attar of roses
and was the essential oil extracted from fragrant
blossoms. She broke the seal and poured the fragrant
oil over the hands and feet of the Master, who rebuked
her not, but who accepted the tribute even from such
a source. The host began to indulge in thoughts
not flattering to the intelligence of his guest, and
a scarcely concealed sneer appeared on his lips.
Then Jesus turned to His host and
with a smile said to him: “Simon, in thy
mind thou thinkest these words: ’If this
man be indeed a prophet, would he not know what manner
of woman this be who toucheth him, and would he not
rebuke her and drive her from him?’” And
the Pharisee was sorely confused, for the Master had
read his thought word for word by the method known
to occultists as telepathy. And then in gentle
raillery the Master called his host’s attention
to the fact that the woman had performed the service
which he, the host, had neglected to observe.
Had she not bathed and dried His feet, as the Pharisee
would have done had his guest been deemed worthy of
honor? Had she not anointed Him with precious
oil, as the host would have anointed an honored guest?
Had she not impressed upon even His feet the kiss that
etiquette required the host to impress upon the cheek
of the esteemed visitor to his house? And as
for the character of the woman, it had been fully
recognized and forgiven. “Much hath been
forgiven her, for she hath loved greatly.”
And, turning to the woman, He added, “Go in
peace, for thy sins are forgiven thee.”
And the woman departed with a new expression on her
face and a firm resolve in her heart, for the Master
had forgiven and blessed her.
But by this act Jesus brought upon
His head the hatred of the Pharisee and his friends.
He had dared rebuke the host in his own palace, and
had moreover arrogated to Himself the sacred rite to
pronounce remission of sins, a right vested solely
in the high-priest of the Temple, upon the performance
of certain ceremonies and sacrifices upon the altar.
He had flung defiance at vested ecclesiastical right
and functions, even in the house of one of the stanchest
adherents of formalism and authority a
Pharisee.
In this incident was shown not only
the broadness of Jesus’ views and the universality
of His love, as well as His courage in defying the
hated formalism, even in the palace of its stanchest
advocates, but also His attitude toward women.
The Jews as a race held women in but scant esteem.
They were not deemed worthy to sit with the men in
the synagogue. It was deemed unworthy of a man
to mention his female relations in general company.
They were regarded as inferior in every way to men,
and were treated as almost unclean in their most sacred
natural functions.
Toward fallen women especially Jesus
was ever considerate. He saw their temptation
and the social cruelty of their position. He resented
“the double standard” of virtue which allowed
a man to commit certain offenses and still be respected,
while the woman who committed the same offense was
damned socially, reviled and treated as a shameful
outcast. He was ever ready to voice a defense
for women of this kind, and seemed to be ever actuated
by the sense of injustice in the attitude of men toward
them, which finally voiced itself on a notable occasion
when called upon to pass judgment upon the woman taken
in adultery: “Let him among ye who is without
sin cast the first stone.” No wonder that
the outcast woman kissed His feet and poured out the
precious ointment upon Him. He was the Friend
to such as she.