Jesus Holds A most Important Conference With The Six
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137:5.1 Though many of the guests
remained for the full week of wedding festivities, Jesus, with his newly chosen
disciple-apostles—James, John,
Andrew,
Peter,
Philip,
and Nathaniel—departed
very early the next morning for Capernaum, going away
without taking leave of anyone. Jesus' family and all his friends in Cana were much distressed because he so suddenly left them, and Jude, Jesus' youngest brother, set out in search of him.
Jesus and his apostles went directly to the home of Zebedee at Bethsaida. On this journey Jesus talked over many things of
importance to the coming kingdom with his newly chosen associates and especially warned them to make no mention of the turning of the water into wine.
He also advised them to avoid the cities of Sepphoris and Tiberias in their future work.
137:5.2 After supper that
evening, in this home of Zebedee and Salome, there was held one of the most
important conferences of all Jesus' earthly career. Only the six apostles were
present at this meeting; Jude arrived as they were about to separate. These six
chosen men had journeyed from Cana to Bethsaida with Jesus, walking, as it were,
on air. They were alive with expectancy and thrilled with the thought of having
been selected as close associates of the Son of Man. But when Jesus set out to
make clear to them who he was and what was to be his mission on earth and how it
might possibly end, they were stunned. They could not grasp what he was telling
them. They were speechless; even Peter was crushed beyond expression. Only the
deep-thinking Andrew dared to make reply to Jesus' words of counsel. When Jesus
perceived that they did not comprehend his message, when he saw that their ideas
of the
Jewish Messiah
were so completely crystallized, he sent them to their
rest while he walked and talked with his brother Jude. And before Jude took
leave of Jesus, he said with much feeling: "My father-brother, I never have
understood you. I do not know of a certainty whether you are what my mother has
taught us, and I do not fully comprehend the coming kingdom, but I do know you
are a mighty man of God. I heard the voice at the
Jordan,
and I am a believer in
you, no matter who you are." And when he had spoken, he departed, going to his
own home at
Magdala.
137:5.3 That night Jesus did not sleep. Donning his evening
wraps, he sat out on the lake
shore thinking, thinking until the dawn of the next day. In the long hours of
that night of meditation Jesus came clearly to comprehend that he never would be
able to make his followers see him in any other light than as the long-expected
Messiah. At last he recognized that there was no way to
launch his message of the kingdom except as the fulfillment of John's prediction and as the one for
whom the Jews were looking. After all, though he was not the Davidic type of
Messiah, he was truly the fulfillment of the prophetic utterances of the more
spiritually minded of the olden seers. Never again did he wholly deny that he
was the Messiah. He decided to leave the final untangling of this complicated
situation to the outworking of the Father's will.
137:5.4 The next morning Jesus joined his friends at breakfast,
but they were a cheerless group. He visited with them and at the end of the meal gathered them about him, saying: "It is
my Father's will
that we tarry hereabouts for a season. You have heard John say that he came to
prepare the way for the kingdom; therefore it behooves us to await the completion of John's preaching. When the forerunner of the Son of Man shall
have finished his work, we will begin the proclamation of the good tidings of the kingdom."
He directed his apostles to return to their nets
while he made ready to go with Zebedee to the boatshop, promising to see them
the next day at the synagogue, where he was to speak, and
appointing a
conference with them that Sabbath afternoon.
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