THE RETURN
As soon as Jesus came again among men, He
learned that the Tetrarch (second husband of Herodias) had imprisoned John in
the fortress of Machaerus. The voice crying in the wilderness was stilled and
pilgrims to the Jordan saw no more the long shadow of the wild Baptizer fall
across the water.
He had done his work and was now to give way to a more
powerful voice. John waited in the blackness of the prison until his bloody
head was carried on a golden platter to the banquet—almost the last dish served
to that evil woman, betrayer of men.
Now Jesus understands that His day is at
hand, and crossing Samaria He returns into Galilee to announce at once the
coming of the Kingdom. He does not go to Jerusalem, the city of the great king,
the capital. Jesus comes to destroy that Jerusalem of stone and arrogance,
proud on its three hills, hard of heart like the stones. The men whom Jesus
comes to combat are precisely those who glory in great cities, in the capitals,
in the Jerusalem’s of the world.
At Jerusalem live the powerful of the world, the Romans,
masters of the world and of Judea, with their soldiers in arms. Jerusalem is
ruled by the representatives of the Caesars; of Tiberius, the drunken assassin,
the perfidious heir of Augustus, the hypocritical pleasure-lover, and of Julius
the adulterous spendthrift. At Jerusalem live the High Priests, the old custodians
of the Temple, the Pharisees, Sadducees, Scribes, the Levites and their guards,
the descendants of those who pursued and killed the prophets, the terrifiers
of the Law, the bigots of the letter, the haughty depositories of arid
fanaticism. At Jerusalem are the treasurers of God, the treasurers of Caesar,
the guardians of the treasure, the lovers of wealth; the Publicans with their
excise men and parasites, the rich with their servants and their concubines,
the merchants with their crowded shops; money bags clinking with shekels in the
warmth of the bosom above the heart. Sounds like some other cities in this world.
Jesus comes to combat all these. He comes
to conquer the masters of the earth—the
earth which belongs to all; to confound the masters of the word—the word which
should be spoken freely wherever God wishes; to condemn the masters of gold,
base, perishable and fatal elements. He comes to overthrow the kingdom of the
soldiers of Rome who oppress bodies; the kingdom of the priests of the Temple
who oppress souls; the kingdom of the gatherers of money who oppress the poor.
He comes to save bodies, souls, the poor; He teaches liberty, in opposition to
Rome; setting at naught the doctrines of the Temple, He teaches love; He
teaches poverty against all the ideals of the rich.
He does not wish to begin His message in
Jerusalem where His enemies, gathered together, are the strongest. He wishes to
surround the city, take it from the outside, arrive there, later with a
following behind Him, when already the Kingdom of Heaven has begun slowly to
lay siege to it. The Conquest of Jerusalem will be the last test, the supreme
trial, the great battle, the tremendous battle between the greater than the
Prophets and Jerusalem, slayer of Prophets. If He should go to Jerusalem now
(where He will enter presently as a king and whence He will be buried as a
criminal) He would be taken prisoner at once and would not be able to sow His
word on less ungrateful, less stony soil.
Jerusalem like all
capitals of this world—great sewers to which flow the refuse, the outcasts, the rubbish of
the nations—is inhabited by a mob of frivolous, elegant, idle, skeptical and
indifferent people, by a ceremonious aristocratic class who have kept only the tradition
of ritual and the sterile rancor of their decadence; by an aristocracy of
property owners and speculators who belong to the herd of Mammon, and by a
rebellious, restless, ignorant crowd, controlled only by the superstition of
the Temple and the fear of the foreigner's sword. Jerusalem was not fit soil
for the sowing of Jesus.
A man from the provinces,—therefore healthy and
solitary—He goes back to His province. He wishes to carry the tidings of good
news to those who were to be the first to receive Him, to the poor and the
humble because the tidings are especially for them, because they have long been
waiting for them, and because more than any others, they will rejoice for
Jesus’ coming into the world for the poor. Therefore leaving Jerusalem, He
arrives in Galilee, enters into the synagogue and begins to teach.
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