Part 8 (1/2)

A great roar went up from the congregation. All his old friends got up from their seats and rushed to the front of the synagogue. They took hold of Jesus and dragged him out of the building. At the edge of the town there was a high cliff, and they took him there to throw him down on the rocks below. But Jesus slipped out of their hands, and turned around. Calmly he walked through the crowd. n.o.body had the courage to touch him again.

Jesus never went back to Nazareth any more. Once, when he was preaching in another town, someone came and told him that his mother and his brothers had come to take him home. They thought that he ought to stop this nonsense of pretending to be the Messiah.

But Jesus would not go home with them, for they did not believe in him. It was better to stay with his disciples. He was at home with those who trusted him.

”My mother?” he said. ”My brothers?”

He looked around at his disciples, and said: ”These are my mother and brothers--my own disciples. Anybody who obeys the will of G.o.d is my brother and my sister and my mother, all in one. That's the kind of family I want!”

Back in Nazareth n.o.body thought that Jesus was of much account. But in other places he meant everything to people who needed help. The Pharisees were often glad to see him go away. But the poor and the sick could never see enough of him.

Once there came to Jesus a man who was sick with the dreaded leprosy.

A leper's skin was deathly white, and his flesh was rotting, and he was sure to die of the disease. n.o.body needed help more than a leper did, but no one would even touch him.

The people back in Nazareth were too proud to admit that the carpenter's son from down the street might be the Messiah. But a leper did not have any pride. This leper came to Jesus, and fell on his face before him, crying out, ”Lord, if you will do it, you can make me clean from this disease!”

[Ill.u.s.tration]

Then Jesus did what everybody else was afraid to do. He reached down and put his hand on the sick man, and said:

”I will. Be clean.”

At once the man was healed of his leprosy. Jesus told him to go and give thanks to G.o.d, and not to tell anyone what had happened. But the leper could not help telling. Jesus became still more famous as the man who healed the sick.

Another time he made a blind man see again. The Pharisees tried to get this man to say that the person who cured him had not been sent from G.o.d. But the man who had been blind knew better. When the Pharisees tried to threaten him, he did not give an inch. He said:

”Who ever heard of anyone opening the eyes of the blind since the world began? But this man did it. How could he have made me see, if he hadn't come from G.o.d?”

When Jesus heard of this, he went and found the man who had been blind, and asked him,

”Do you believe that I am the Son of G.o.d?”

The man answered,

”Yes, Lord, I believe.”

The blind man had found his Messiah.

Then there was a man who was paralyzed so that he could not move. His friends wanted to bring him to Jesus, but there were so many people standing around the house where Jesus was teaching that they could not get near him. But somehow or other they must get the sick man there.

Like many of the houses in Palestine, this house had a flat roof, with a stairway leading up to it. They placed their friend on a mat, carried him up the stairs, and cut a hole in the roof. After fastening a rope to each corner of the mat, they gently lowered it to the floor, right at Jesus' feet.

Jesus was glad when he saw the faith they had in him. He looked at the helpless man, and said,

”Man, your sins are forgiven you.”

There were scribes and Pharisees standing there, waiting, as usual, to find fault with Jesus. They began to talk among themselves. They said:

”Who is this who is talking as if he were G.o.d? Such blasphemy! Who can forgive sins, except G.o.d himself?”