The ministry of Jesus went on in about
the same channels. Wandering here and there throughout
the country, preaching and teaching in this town and
that village, gathering around Him new followers, Jesus
continued His work. He adapted Himself to His
audience, giving to each what it needed, and not making
the mistake of speaking over the heads of the people.
He gave the general public the broad general teachings
that they required, but He reserved the Inner Teachings
for the Inner Circle of His followers whom He knew
to be fit to receive the same. In this He showed
a deep knowledge of men, and a strict accordance with
the established custom of the mystics, who never make
the mistake of giving the higher spiritual mathematics
to the students who are learning the addition, subtraction
and division rules of the occult. He cautioned
His apostles regarding this point of teaching, even
going so far as warning them positively and strongly
against “casting pearls before swine.”
One night He was in a boat crossing
the lake of Gennesaret, in company with some of His
fisherman followers. Tired out by the strenuous
work of the day, He wrapped Himself up in His robe
and fell into a deep sleep, from which He was later
awakened by a noise and commotion among the crew and
passengers. A terrible lake storm had sprung up,
and the little vessel was tossing and pitching about
among the waves in a manner which gave concern to
even the experienced fishermen who manned her.
The sails had been torn off, carrying away with them
a portion of the mast, and the boat refused to respond
to her rudder, the steering gear being rendered useless.
The crew became panic-stricken and rushing to Jesus
besought Him to save them from death in the storm.
“Master! Master! Help ere we perish.
The boat is foundering! Save us, Master!”
The Master arose and, using His occult
power, caused the winds to cease their tempestuous
activity, and the waves to become calm. He followed
the Oriental occultists’ custom of voicing His
commands in words, not that the words had any virtue
in themselves, but because they served a vehicle for
His concentrated thought and focused will which He
was using in his manifestation of occult power.
With this knowledge of the process, occultists smile
when they read the naïve account of the occurrence
in the Gospels, where Jesus is described as addressing
and rebuking the rebellious winds and then gently and
kindly soothing the waters with words of “Peace,
be still!” The fishermen who witnessed the occurrence,
and from whom the reports thereof spread among the
people, not understanding the nature of occult manifestations,
thought that He was addressing the winds as actual
entities, rebuking them and bidding them cease their
vicious work, and soothing the sea in the same manner.
They did not comprehend the mental
processes back of the words, and in their simplicity
thought that He was actually rebuking the wind and
soothing the waters. All occultists know that
in “treating” material conditions the
process is rendered much easier and simpler if we will
but think of and “speak to” the condition
as if it had intelligence and actual being, thus more
easily directing the forces.
Obeying the thought and will of the
Master, the winds abated their fury and the waters
ceased their troubling. Gradually the boat rested
easily upon the bosom of the lake, and the crew breathed
freely once more, and then began their work of righting
the mast and steering gear. And they wondered
as they worked and asked each other “What manner
of man is this, whom even the winds and the waters
obey?” And Jesus, looking sadly at them, voiced
that cry of the mystic who knows of the inherent and
latent powers of man over material conditions, awaiting
the exercise of the Will that may be exercised only
in response to a great Faith. He answered them,
saying, “Oh, ye of little Faith. What had
you to fear?”
To the mystic it seems strange that
people are able to read the Gospel accounts of the
above and similar events and yet see no more in them
than a mere recital of miracles wrought by some supernatural
power. To the reader who has learned the fundamental
truths, the New Testament record of the wonder-working
of Jesus, even as imperfect as that record is, is
full of advanced occult instructions stated so plainly
that it seems as if even the casual reader must recognize
it. But no, the old rule is still in force each
reads only that for which he is ready each
must bring something to a book, before he may expect
to take anything away from it to him that
hath shall be given. Ever the same old mystic
truth, manifest ever and ever, at all times and in
all places. It is a fundamental law of the mind.
The journey across the lake was attended
by another manifestation of occult power which is
often passed over by the church teachers without comment,
or at least with a labored endeavor to “explain”
the evident meaning of the narrative. The modern
materialistic trend of thought has invaded even the
churches and has caused the preachers and teachers
to endeavor to escape the accusation of “believing
in spirits” and similar phenomena of the Astral
World.
When the company reached the coast
of Gergesa, on the opposite side of the lake, it disembarked
and Jesus and His disciples pressed in toward the
coast towns. As they passed among the cliffs lining
the shore, they perceived two uncanny wandering figures
which, gibbering, followed them along. The two
maniacs, for such they were, approached the party,
and one of them began to address the Master in a strange
manner, beseeching Him to relieve the two of the devils
possessing them. He called aloud, “O Master,
thou Son of the Living God, have mercy upon us, and
drive away the unclean things that we have allowed
to enter into us.”
The Gospels say nothing regarding
the cause of this demoniac obsession, and the preachers
prefer to pass over it rapidly, or else to treat it
as a delusion of the insane, notwithstanding the direct
statement of the New Testament narrative and its sequel
or concluding statement. But the occult traditions
have it that these two men were victims of their dabbling
into certain phases of psychic phenomena, i.e.,
the “raising up of spirits” by the arts
of Black Magic. In other words, these men had
been experimenting along the lines of Jewish Necromancy,
or Invocation and Evocation of Disembodied Astral
Intelligences by means of Conjuration. They had
raised up Astral Intelligences that had then refused
to retire to their own plane, but which had taken
possession of the physical organisms of their invokers
and had remained in possession, causing the men to
be regarded as maniacs, which resulted in their becoming
outcasts among the caves with which the cliffs abounded,
the same places being also the tombs of the dead.
We do not wish to go into details here regarding this
matter, but we wish to give the occult explanation
of this little understood “miracle” of
Jesus, which, however, is clearly understood by all
occultists.
Jesus fully understood the nature
of the trouble, and began at once to drive out these
invading Astral Intelligences by means of his occult
power. In a few moments, a cry was heard from
the hills near by, and a great herd of swine were
seen rushing down the hill, and in a moment were over
the precipice and were soon drowned. The Gospel
narrative is perfectly plain on this subject it
states that the legions of devils had passed from
the men into the swine and the latter had plunged in
terror into the water and were drowned. Jesus
had distinctly and positively spoken to the demons,
calling them “unclean spirits,” and bidding
them “come out” of the men. And all
advanced students of Occultism understand why the
pigs were used as intermediate instruments of the
driving back of the Astral Intelligences to their
own plane of life, which reason, however, is not in
place or keeping in this work intended for general
public reading.
The maniacs were restored to their
normal condition, and the traditions say that the
Master instructed them regarding the evil courses
which they had been pursuing, and bade them desist
from their nefarious practices which had wrought such
evil consequences upon them.
The church and its preachers, with
but few exceptions, have seen fit to ignore the frequent
Biblical allusions to “devils,” “demons,”
etc.; their position being practically that the
writers of the events of Jesus’ ministry (whom
they otherwise consider to have been “inspired”)
must have been superstitious, credulous people believing
in “the absurd demonology of their times.”
They ignore the fact that Jesus Himself repeatedly
spoke to these intelligences, bidding them depart
from the people whom they had been obsessing.
Does the church wish to hold that the Master was also
an ignorant, credulous peasant, sharing popular superstitions?
It would seem so. We must except the Catholic
Church from this criticism, for its authorities have
recognized the true state of affairs and have warned
its followers against indulging in the dark practices
of Necromancy or Invocation of Astral Intelligences.
Occult science informs its students
of the various planes of life, each of which contains
its inhabitants. It teaches that on the Astral
Plane there are disembodied entities which should not
be transplanted to our plane. And it warns all
against the dark practices, so common in ancient times
and in the Middle Ages, of invoking and evoking these
undesirable denizens of that plane. It is to be
regretted that some of the modern Psychic Researchers
ignore these plain warnings, for some of them are
laying themselves open to grave consequences by reason
of their wilful folly. We urge upon our readers
to refrain from this dabbling in the phenomena of
the Astral Plane. Some writer has well compared
“Psychism” to a great machine, in the cog-wheels
of which persons may become entangled only to be afterward
drawn into the machine itself. Keep away from
the wheels!
This “miracle” of Jesus
aroused great excitement, and it was urged against
Him that He was going about the country driving devils
into people’s flocks and herds, causing their
destruction. The priests fomented the popular
feeling, and encouraged the distrust, hatred and fear
which the orthodox portion of the community was beginning
to entertain toward the Master. The seeds of
Calvary were being sown among the people. And
their awful fruit was latent in them. Hate and
bigotry were the essence of both seed and fruit.
Jesus returned to Capernaum, and once
more the little town was crowded with people seeking
instruction and crying to be healed. The news
of his wonderful healing power spread far and near,
and people were carried on litters for many miles
in order that they might be touched by the hands of
the Master.
About this time there came to Him
one Jairus, a man of eminence in the community and
in the church. Jairus had a little daughter about
twelve years of age, who was taken seriously ill,
and who had been given up as incurable by the physicians.
With his daughter lying at death’s
door, Jairus hastened to the scene of the Master’s
meetings, and, throwing himself at His feet, besought
Him to heal his beloved child ere she passed beyond
the dark portals of the unknown. The Master,
feeling compassion for the father’s great grief,
paused in His teaching and started toward Jairus’
home. His mind charged with the concentration
of healing thought, and His organism filled with the
vital forces aroused to perform the task, He felt
some one touch the hem of His garment in search of
healing power, and He at once recognized the occurrence,
saying, “The power hath been drawn from me.
Who touched my garment?” As they approached the
house of Jairus, the servants came running out with
wild cries and lamentations, announcing that the child
had died while awaiting the coming of the Healer.
The father broke down at this terrible news, coming
at the very moment of his greatest hope. But Jesus
bade him to have faith and still believe. Then,
accompanied by three of His disciples John,
Peter and James He entered the chamber of
death. Waving back the weeping family and the
neighbors who had gathered, “Stand back,”
He cried, “the child is not dead she
but sleepeth.”
An indignant cry went up from the
orthodox relatives and friends at these words of the
Master. How dared He so mock the very presence
of the dead, whom the physicians had left, and over
whom the priests had already begun the last sacred
rites? But, heeding them not, the Master passed
His hands over the child’s head, and took her
little cold palms within his own. Then began
a strange happening. The little chest began to
heave, and the white wan cheeks began to show traces
of color. Then the arms and hands began to move,
and the wasted limbs drew slightly up. Then,
opening her eyes with a wondering look, the child gazed
at the Healer and smiled gently at Him. Then
the Master, with a look of gentle tenderness, withdrew
from the room, after ordering that nourishing food
be brought for the child.
Then began the usual dispute.
Some declared that another had been raised from the
dead, while others declared that the child had but
been in a trance and would have awakened anyway.
Had not even the Healer declared that she only slept?
But Jesus heeded not the disputants, but returned
to the scene of His work.
The work went on in its accustomed
way. He began to send His apostles away on longer
and more extended tours, having fully instructed them
in the occult methods of healing. Great success
attended their efforts and the best reports came in
from all sides. The authorities recognized to
a still greater extent the growing influence of the
young Master, and His actions were still more closely
watched by the spies. Reports of His teachings
and work were carried to Herod, who, recognizing in
them the same note that had been struck by John the
Baptist, who had been put to death, perceived that
though men might die, the spirit of their teachings
would still live on. No wonder the guilty ruler
should cry in terror, “This verily is the spirit
of John, whom I put to death, risen from the grave
to wreak vengeance upon me!” And the authorities
reported to Rome that here was a young fanatic, whom
many believed to be the Messiah and coming King of
the Jews, who had thousands of followers all over
the land. And word came back from Rome, in due
time, to watch carefully over the man, who was undoubtedly
striving to incite an insurrection, and to imprison
Him or put Him to death as soon as the evidence was
sufficient to convict Him.
Jesus about this time was near a small
fishing town called Bethseda, on the lake about seven
miles from Capernaum. Near this place His boat
landed at a place on the beach where He had hoped to
take a few days’ rest. But, alas, a great
crowd had hastened to the place of disembarkation,
and now gathered around Him, demanding teaching and
healing. Putting aside His mental and physical
fatigue, He attended to the wants of the crowd.
Healing now, and then teaching, He threw Himself into
His work with fervor and zeal. There were over
five thousand people gathered together around Him,
and toward evening the cry went up that there was
not sufficient food in the camp to begin to feed the
multitude. A great tumult arose among the crowd,
and complaints and even curses began to be heard.
The spiritual wants were forgotten, and the physical
began to manifest itself in a most insistent manner.
What was to be done?
He called together those of His company
who had been entrusted with the care of the food which
the little company carried with it. And, to His
sorrow, He learned that the entire stock of food consisted
of five loaves of bread and two fishes. And the
little band carried practically no money with it,
for they depended upon the hospitality of the country
and the offerings by the faithful. The disciples
advised that the Master order the crowd to disperse
and return to Bethseda for food. But Jesus felt
loath to do this, particularly when there were so
many invalids in the gathering who had traveled so
many miles to see Him, and who had not yet been healed.
And so He decided to give the company its food by
means of His power.
He bade His people divide the multitude
into little groups of fifty people, who were then
instructed to be seated for a meal. Then He ordered
the scanty supply of available food to be brought before
Him, and, placing His hands over it, He offered a
blessing, then ordered His people to serve the throng.
They began to serve out the food with looks of wonder
and amazement. Had the Master lost His senses?
But in some way the food seemed miraculously to increase
and multiply, until at last all of the five thousand
had been fully supplied and their hunger appeased.
And then, after all had been served and had eaten,
the scraps and fragments which were gathered up filled
many wicker baskets and were distributed to the poorer
people in the company for tomorrow’s use.
But trouble arose. The people,
with well filled stomachs, feeling that here indeed
was royal bounty and the power with which to feed them
forever free of charge, began to wax enthusiastic and
shouts ascended. “The Messiah! King
of the Jews! Provider of the People! Son
of David! Ruler over Israel!” were the
words which soon swept the crowd off of its feet.
And then some of the bolder ones, or else the hired
spies who wished to place Him in a compromising position,
began to suggest that the crowd form itself into an
army and march from city to city with Jesus at its
head, until at last they would place Him upon the
throne of Israel at Jerusalem. Jesus, recognizing
the peril to His mission, managed to dissuade the
hot-heads from their plans, but still fearing that
the authorities might come down upon the assemblage,
ordered that the Twelve take the boat and put out for
the other side of the lake. He sent them off
as a precaution, but He, Himself, remained with the
crowd and faced the threatened danger.
He retired to the hills near by and
spent the night in meditation. Then early in
the morning, He noticed that a storm was rising over
the lake and that the tiny boat containing His disciples
would be in great danger. In a few moments they
might be overwhelmed. He wished to be with them
to comfort and re-assure them. No boat being handy,
he stepped boldly out upon the water and walked rapidly
toward the direction in which He knew the boat must
be. Scarcely conscious of the occult power of
levitation that He was using to overcome the power
of gravitation, He moved rapidly toward His followers.
Soon He overtook them, and they, seeing a white figure
moving swiftly over the water toward them, were affrighted,
believing it to be a spirit or ghost. “It
is I, be not afraid!” called out the Master to
them. Then Peter cried out, “Lord, if Thou
it be, direct me to walk to Thee also on the waves!”
And the Master, smiling, so directed him. And
Peter, whose latent occult power was aroused by his
great faith in the Master, sprang over the side and
took several steps toward Him. But, suddenly
losing his faith and courage, his power also left him,
and he began to sink beneath the waves. But the
Master grasped his hand and led him in safety to the
boat and both entered it. Then the crew fell to
and with great enthusiasm righted the boat and proceeded
to the shore near Capernaum.
In the case of Peter and his experience
in walking on the water, we have a striking instance
of the well known power of the mental attitude of
Faith in the manifestation of occult power. All
occultists know this, and without feeling an implicit
faith in the Power with them, they do not attempt
certain forms of manifestation. They know that
with Faith miracles may be performed which are impossible
otherwise. So long as Peter held his Faith he
was able to counteract certain laws of nature by means
of other laws not so well known. But as soon
as Fear took the place of Faith his power left him.
This is an invariable occult principle, and in the
recital of this story of Peter on the water is to
be found a whole volume of occult instruction to
those who are able to read it.
Arriving safely on the shores of the
lake, Jesus resumed His work while the ever-present
gathering of people went on in its accustomed way.
But on the opposite shore of the lake the crowd who
had been fed on the loaves and fishes were in an angry
mood. They cried out that they had been deserted
by their leader, and that the expected loaves and
fishes the free meals that they had expected
would continue had been denied them.
They also complained bitterly that the reign of miracles
had not continued. And they began to revile the
Master that they had acclaimed the night before.
And so Jesus experienced the ingratitude and the unreasonable
words of the public just as all great teachers have
done. The seekers after the loaves and the fishes,
demanding to be fed and clothed without their own work the
seekers after miracles, demanding fresh wonder-workings have
ever been the bane of the great Teachers of the Truth.
It is a hard and bitter truth, but all teachers and
true lovers of the Truth must learn to meet and understand
it. The mob which reveres a spiritual Master today
is equally ready to rend him to pieces tomorrow.
And still more trouble arose from
this mistaken kindness which led Jesus to feed the
crowd by His occult powers, which, by the way, He
knew to be in opposition to the well-established custom
of the Occult Brotherhoods. The formalists, Pharisees
and Scribes, having heard of the occurrence, gathered
about the Master and accused Him of violating one
of the forms and ceremonies prescribed by the ecclesiastical
authorities the rite which required the
faithful to wash their hands before beginning a meal.
They accused Him of heresy and false teaching, which
tended to lead the people away from their accustomed
ceremonies and observances. Jesus waxed indignant
and, turning on His critics, hurled burning replies
upon them. “Ye hypocrites!” He cried,
“You cling to the commandments of men and neglect
the commandments of God! You cleanse your hands
but not your souls! You are the blind leaders
of the blind, and both yourselves and your followers
fall in the mire and ditches! Away with you and
your hypocrisy!” But the adverse comment aroused
by His actions would not down, and, discouraged and
disheartened by the evidences of the barrenness of
the soil in which He had been sowing the precious
seeds of the Truth, He gathered together His followers
and departed into Tyre and Sidon, a quieter region,
that He might rest and meditate over new plans and
work. He could see the beginning of the end.
To understand the nature of the position
of the Master at this time, it must be remembered
that His strong hold had ever been with the masses
of the people, who were His enthusiastic admirers.
So long as He remained entrenched in the heart of
the populace, the temporal and ecclesiastical authorities
dared not attack Him without a popular uprising of
no mean proportions. But now that they had managed
to wean away His public from Him they pressed Him
harder and harder with their persécutions and
complaints. And so at last they had managed to
render Him almost an unpopular outcast. They
forced Him away from the larger towns, and now He
was wandering among the less populous regions of the
country, and even there the spies and agents of the
authorities hunted Him down, seeking to further entrap
and compromise Him.
About this time Jesus revealed to
His apostles the facts of His Divine origin which
was now plain to Him. He also told them of the
fate which awaited Him, and which He had willingly
chosen. He told them not to expect the fruits
of His work at this time, for He was but sowing the
seeds of the fruit which would not grow and bear fruit
for many centuries. He gave them the Mystic secret
of the nature of His work, which is taught to the
Initiates of the Occult Brotherhoods even unto this
day. But even these chosen men scarcely grasped
the true import of His teachings, and once He was
rendered almost broken hearted at over-hearing a discussion
among them regarding high offices which they hoped
to acquire.
Jesus now felt that the time had come
for Him to move on to Jerusalem to meet there the
crowning act of His strange career. And, knowing
full well that such a course would be virtually thrusting
His head into the very jaws of the lion of ecclesiastical
and temporal authority, He set His feet firmly on
the road which led to Jerusalem, the capital city,
and the center of ecclesiastical influence. And
that road was a hard one to travel, for, as He neared
the capital, His enemies increased in number and the
opposition to Him grew stronger. At one village
He had been denied the right of shelter, an indignity
almost unknown in Oriental lands. In another place
a large rock was hurled at Him and wounded Him severely.
The mob had turned against Him and was repaying His
kind services with abuse and personal violence.
And this is ever the lot of the teacher of the Truth
who scatters the sacred pearls of Truth before the
swine of the unworthy multitude of people. Over
and over again has this fact been brought home to those
who would labor for the good of the world. And
still we hear the querulous complaint that the Inner
Teaching is reserved for the Few why not
scatter it broadcast among the people? The stake,
the rack, the stones, the prison cell, the cross and
their modern prototypes these are the silent
answers to the question.
Moving on toward Jerusalem the little
company reached Perea, a number of miles from Bethany,
at which latter place dwelt a family of His friends the
two sisters, Martha and Mary, and their brother Lazarus.
At this place He was met by a messenger from Bethany,
who bore the sad news that His friend Lazarus was
sick unto death, and who also begged the Master to
return to Bethany and cure the man. But this Jesus
refused to do, and allowed several days to pass without
answering the summons. At the end of the several
days He started toward Bethany, telling His disciples
that Lazarus was dead. And reaching Bethany they
found that it was indeed so Lazarus was
dead and in the tomb.
Jesus was received with scowling antagonism.
The people seemed to say, “Here is this heretical
imposter again. He feared to come even to the
aid of His dying friend. His power has failed
Him and He now stands discredited and exposed!”
Then came Martha, who reproached the Master with His
indifference and delay. He answered her that Lazarus
should rise again, but she doubted His word.
Then came Mary, whose grief brought tears even from
the Master, who had seen so much of human suffering
as to have found his eyes refuse to weep.
Then asked the Master, “Where
have you laid him away?” and they took Him to
the tomb, followed by the curious mob hungering for
the sight of more wonders from the man whom they feared
even while hating and reviling Him. Jesus stood
before the dreary tomb and bade the men roll away
the stone that closed the mouth of the tomb. The
men hesitated, for they knew that a corpse lay within,
and they even perceived the characteristic odor of
the tomb issuing therefrom. But the Master insisting
upon it, they rolled away the stone and Jesus stood
full in front of the dark opening to the cavern.
He stood there for a few moments wrapt
in meditation and showing evidences of strong mental
concentration. His eyes took on a strange look,
and in every muscle He showed that He was summoning
to the task every particle of the power at His command.
He was throwing off the matters that had been occupying
His mind during the past weeks, that He might hold
his mind “one-pointed,” as the Oriental
occultists term it that He might concentrate
clearly and forcibly upon the task before Him.
Then, arousing His reserve force,
in a mighty effort, He cried loudly, in a voice of
authority and power, “Lazarus! Lazarus!
Come forth!”
The people gasped with horror at this
calling forth a corpse which was in the process of
disintegration and decay, and a cry of remonstrance
went up, but Jesus heeded it not. “Lazarus!
Lazarus! Come forth, I command thee!” he
cried again.
And then at the mouth of the cavern
could be seen something startling. It was a ghastly
figure, bound and clad in the grave-clothes of that
country, which was struggling to free itself and to
move toward the light. It was indeed Lazarus!
And, after tearing off the stained grave-clothes which
still retained the horrid stench of decaying matter,
his body was found to be sweet and clean and pure as
that of the infant. Jesus had performed a wonder-work
far beyond any manifestation He had heretofore shown
to the world.
The excitement occasioned by this
crowning wonder, coming to Jerusalem after a lull
in which it had thought that the Master had retired
into insignificant seclusion, aroused again into activity
the authorities, who now determined to make an end
to the matter and to suppress this pestilent charlatan
once and for all. Raising a decaying corpse from
the tomb, indeed! What new fraudulent marvels
would He not work next in order to delude the credulous
people and to bring them once more around his rebellious
standard? The man was dangerous without doubt,
and must be put where He could do no harm and
that at once.
Within a few hours after the receipt
of news that Lazarus had walked from the tomb, the
Sanhedrin, the great Jewish ecclesiastical council,
was in session, called hastily by its officers to take
vigorous action concerning this impious, heretical
imposter who had been allowed to mock at established
order and religion for too long a time. He must
be quieted ere he arouse the people once more.
The Roman authorities were warned by the Jewish ecclesiastics
that this dangerous man now approaching the capital
claimed to be the Jewish Messiah, and that His aims
were to overturn the Temple authorities first, and
then establish Himself as King of the Jews, and place
Himself at the head of a revolutionary army which
would attempt to defy and defeat the rule of mighty
Rome herself.
And so all the machinery was set in
motion, and the officers of the law were all on the
alert to take advantage of the first overt act of
Jesus and His followers, and to throw them into prison
as enemies of society, religion and of the state.
The Roman authorities were agitated at the reports
coming to them from the highest Jewish authorities,
and were prepared to crush the rebellion at the first
sign. The Jewish priests were in solemn convocation
and at the instigation of Caiaphas, the high priest
of the Jews, they determined that nothing but the
death of this false Messiah would put an end to the
agitation which threatened to drive them from power
and authority. And so the die was cast.
And meanwhile Jesus was resting in
Bethany, surrounded by great throngs who were pouring
into the place to see Lazarus, and to renew their
allegiance to the Master whom they had so basely forsaken.
Time-servers ever, the latest miracles had revived
their fading interest and waning faith, and they flocked
around the Master as noisy, enthusiastic and as full
of fulsome praise as ever. And yesterday they
had damned Him, and tomorrow they would cry “Crucify
Him!” For such is the nature of the multitude
of men. Of the multitudes of Jesus’ followers,
none remained to acknowledge allegiance in His hour
of arrest even among the chosen twelve,
one betrayed Him, one denied Him, and all fled
away when He was taken captive. And for such
the Son of Man lived and taught and suffered.
Surely His life was the greatest miracle of
all.