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Thursday, September 24, 2015

THE TWELVE

THE TWELVE

Fate knows no better way to punish the great for their great­ness than by sending them disciples. Every disciple, just because he is a disciple, cannot understand all that his master says, but at very best only half, and that according to the kind of mind he has. Thus without wishing to falsify the teaching of his master, he deforms it, vulgarizes it, belittles it, and corrupts it.

The disciple nearly always has companions and is jealous of them; he would like to be at least first among those who are second; and accordingly he maligns and plots against his fel­lows; and each one believes that he is, or at least wishes others to believe that he is, the only perfect interpreter of the master.

The disciple knows that he is a disciple and sometimes it shames him to be one who eats at another's table. Then he twists and turns the master's thought to make it seem that he has a thought of his own, different and original. Or else, and this is the most graceless and servile manner of being a disciple, he teaches exactly the opposite of what he was taught.

In every disciple, even in those who seem most loyal, there is the seed of a Judas. A disciple is a parasite, a middleman who robs the seller and tricks the buyer; a dependent who, in­vited to dine, nibbles at the hors d'oeuvres, licks the sauces, picks at the fruit, but does not attack the bones because he has no teeth, or only milk teeth, to crack them and suck out the meaty marrow. The disciple paraphrases sentences, ob­scures mysteries, complicates what is clear, multiplies diffi­culties, comments on syllables, charades principles, clouds evi­dence, magnifies non-essentials, weakens the essential, dilutes the strong wine, and retails this hodgepodge as tonic distilled and ideal. Instead of a torch which gives light and fire, he is a smoky wick giving no light even to himself. (The News Media today as they attempt to understand Christ or even His disciples)

And yet no one has been able to dispense with these pupils and followers, nor even to wish to. For the great man is so foreign to the multitude, so distant, so alone, that he needs to feel some one near him. He cannot teach without the illusion that some one understands his words, receives his ideas, and trans­mits them to others far away before his death and after his death. This wanderer who has no home of his own needs a friendly home. To this uprooted man who cannot have a family of his own flesh and blood, the children of his spirit are dear. The prophet is a captain whose soldiers’ spring up only after his blood has soaked into the ground, and yet he longs to feel a little army about him during his life-time. Here is one of the most tragic elements in all greatness: disciples are offensive and dangerous, but disciples, even false ones, cannot be dispensed with. Prophets suffer if they do not find them; they suffer, perhaps more, when they have found them.

A man's thought is bound with a thousand threads to his soul even more closely than a child to a parent's heart. It is infinitely precious, delicate, fragile, and the newer it is, the harder it is for other men to understand. It is a tremendous responsibility, a continued torture and suffering to confide it to another, to graft it on another's thought, to give it into the hands of the man incapable of respecting it, this gift so rare, a thought new in human life. And yet every great man longs to share with all men what he has received; and to achieve this sharing with humanity is more than he can do single-handed. Then, too, pride alludes itself even in noble breasts: and vanity needs caressing words, needs praise, even offensive, praise, needs assent, even verbal, consecration even from the mediocre, victories even if they are only apparent.

Christ has none of this smallness of the great, and yet in or­der to share all the burdens of mankind, He accepted with the other trials of earthly life the burden of disciples. Before be­ing tormented by His enemies, He gave himself over to be tor­mented by His friends. The priests killed him, once and once only; the disciples made Him suffer every day of their life with Him. The anguish of His passion would not have been completely intolerable if it had not included the deser­tion of the Apostles in addition to the Sadducees, the guards, the Romans, the crowd.

We know who the Apostles were. A Galilean, He chose them from among the Galileans. A poor man, He chose them from among the poor; a simple man, but of a divine sim­plicity transcending all philosophies, He called simple men whose simplicity kept them like lumps. He did not wish to choose them from among the rich, because He had come to combat the rich; nor among the scribes and doctors, because He had come to overturn their law; nor among the philoso­phers, because there were no philosophers living in Palestine, and had there been, they would have tried to extinguish His supernatural mysticism under the opposition’s bushel.

He knew that these souls were rough but had integrity, were ignorant but passionate, and that He could in the end mold them according to His desire, bring them up to His level, fash­ion them like clay from the river, which is only mud, and yet when modeled and baked in the kiln, becomes eternal beauty. But flame from the Holy Ghost was needed for that trans­formation; until the day of the Pentecost their imperfect na­ture had too often the upper hand. To the Twelve much should be pardoned because almost always they had faith in Him; because they tried to love Him as He wished to be loved; and, above all, because after having deserted Him in the Garden of Gethsemane, they never forgot Him and left to all eternity the memory of His word and of His life.

And yet our hearts ache if we look at them closely in the Gospels, those disciples of whom we have some knowledge. They were not always worthy of their unique and highest contentment, those men who were so inestimably fortunate as to live with Christ, to walk, to eat with Him, to sleep in the same room, to look into His face, to touch His hand, to kiss Him, to hear His words from His very mouth; those twelve fortunate men, whom throughout the centuries millions of souls have se­cretly envied. And of these twelve eleven had wives with which they would share their learnings from their Teacher.

We see them, hard of head and of heart, not able to under­stand the clearest parables of the Master; not always capable of understanding, even after His death, who Jesus had been and what sort of a new Kingdom was proclaimed by Him; often lacking in faith, in love, in brotherly affection; eager for pay; envying each other; impatient for the revenge which would repay them for their long wait; intolerant of those who were not one with them; vindictive towards those who would not receive them, lethargic, doubtful, materialistic, greedy, cowardly.

One of them denies Him three times; one of them delays giving Him due reverence until He is in the sepulcher; one does not believe in His mission because He comes from Naza­reth; one is not willing to admit His resurrection; one sells Him to His enemies, and gives Him over with His last kiss to those who come to arrest Him. Others, when Christ's teach­ings were on a too-lofty level, "went back and walked no more with Him." (John 6:66)

Many times Jesus was forced to reprove them for their slow­ness of mind. He told them the parable of the sower, and they did not understand its meaning. "Know ye not this parable, and how then will ye know all parables?" (Mark 4:13) He warns them against the leaven of the Pharisees and the Sadducees, and they think that He is speaking of material bread. (Matt 16:6) "Why reason ye because ye have no bread, perceive ye not yet, neither under­stand? Have ye your heart yet hardened? Having eyes see ye not, and having ears hear ye not?" (Vs. 9) Like the common people they constantly feel that Jesus should be the worldly Messiah, political, warlike, come to restore the temporal throne of David. Even when He is about to ascend into Heaven they continue to ask Him: "Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the Kingdom to Israel?" (Acts 1:6) And after the resurrection, the two disciples of Emmaus say: "But we trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel." (Luke 24:21)

They disputed among themselves to know who should have the chief place in the new Kingdom and Jesus reproved them: "What was it that ye disputed among yourselves by the way?" (Mark 9:33) But they held their peace, for by the way they had disputed among themselves who should be the greatest. (*The church today is looking for leadership in their bodies when Christ is looking for servants – at the complete opposite from the churches today) And He sat down and called the Twelve and saith unto them: "If any man desires to be first, the same shall be last of all and the servant of all." (Mark 9:35) Jealous of their privileges they denounced to Jesus one who was casting out devils in His name: "Forbid him not," answered Jesus, "for there is no man which shall do a miracle in my name that can lightly speak evil of me. For he that is not against us is on our part." (Mark 9:39-40) After a talk at Capernaum many murmured at his words and said: "This is a hard saying; who can hear it?" (John 6:60) and they left Him.

And yet Jesus spared no warnings to those who wished to follow Him. A Scribe said to Him that he would follow Him everywhere. "And Jesus saith unto him: The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests; but the Son of Man hath nowhere to lay his head." (Matt. 8:20) Another who was a disciple wished first to bury his father, "But Jesus said unto him, Fol­low me; and let the dead bury their dead." (Matt. 8:22) And still an­other, "Lord, I will follow thee; but let me first go bid them farewell which are at home at my house. And Jesus said unto him, No man, having put his hand to the plow, and looking back, is fit for the Kingdom of God." (Luke 9:61-62)

A rich young man came to Him who observed all the Com­mandments. "Then Jesus beholding him loved him, and said unto him, one thing thou lack: go thy way, sell whatso­ever thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treas­ure in heaven: and come take up the cross, and follow me. And he was sad at that saying, and went away grieved: for he had great possessions." (Matt. 19:21-22)

To be with Him, a man must desire to leave his home, his dead, his family, his money,—all the ordinary loves, all the ordinary good things of life. What is given in exchange is so great that it will repay every renunciation. But few are capable of this renunciation, and some after they have believed, falter.

Renunciation was easier for the Twelve, almost all poor men, yet even they did not always succeed in being as Jesus wished them.

"Simon, Simon," He said one day to Peter, "behold, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat." (Luke 22:31) In spite of the sorting of Christ, some evil seeds remained among his grain.

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