X.
1. Issa went from one city to another, strengthening by the word of God the courage of the Israelites,
who were bear to succumbing under their weight of woe, and
thousands of the people followed him to hear his teachings.
2. But the chiefs of the cities were afraid of him and they
informed the principal governor, residing in Jerusalem, that a man
called Issa had arrived in the country, who by his sermons had
arrayed the people against the authorities, and that multitudes,
listening assiduously to him, neglected their labor; and, they
added, he said that in a short time they would be free of their
invader rulers.
3. Then Pilate, the Governor of Jerusalem, gave orders that
they should lay hold of the preacher Issa and bring him before the
judges. In order, however, not to excite the anger of the populace, Pilate directed that he should be judged
by the priests and scribes, the Hebrew elders, in their temple.
4. Meanwhile, Issa, continuing his preachings, arrived at
Jerusalem, and the people, who already knew his fame, having
learned of his coming, went out to meet him.
5. They greeted him respectfully and opened to him the doors of
their temple, to hear from his mouth what he had said in other
cities of Israel.
6. And Issa said to them: "The human race perishes,
because of the lack of faith; for the darkness and the tempest
have caused the flock to go astray and they have lost their
shepherds.
7. "But the tempests do not rage forever and the darkness
will not hide the light eternally; soon the sky will become
serene, the celestial light will again overspread the earth, and the
strayed flock will re-unite around their shepherd.
8. "Wander not in the darkness, seeking the way, lest ye
fall into the ditch; but gather together, sustain one another, put
your faith in your God and wait for the first glimmer of light to
re-appear.
9. "He who sustains his neighbor, sustains himself; and he
who protects his family, protects all his people and his country.
10. "For, be assured that the day is near when you will be
delivered from the darkness; you will be re-united into one family
and your enemy will tremble with fear, he who is ignorant of the
favor of the great God."
11. The priests and the elders who heard him, filled with
admiration for his language, asked him if it was true that he had sought to raise the people
against the authorities of the country, as had been reported to
the governor Pilate.
12. "Can one raise against estrayed men, to whom darkness
has hidden their road and their door?" answered Issa. "I
have but forewarned the unhappy, as I do here in this temple, that
they should no longer advance on the dark road, for an abyss opens
before their feet.
13. "The power of this earth is not of long duration and
is subject to numberless changes. It would be of no avail for a
man to rise in revolution against it, for one phase of it al ways
succeeds another, and it is thus that it will go on until the
extinction of human life.
14. "But do you not see that the powerful, and the rich, sow among the children of Israel a spirit of
rebellion against the eternal power of Heaven?"
15. Then the elders asked him: "Who art thou, and from
what country hast thou come to us? We have not formerly heard thee
spoken of and do not even know thy name!"
16. "I am an Israelite," answered Issa; "and on
the day of my birth have seen the walls of Jerusalem, and have
heard the sobs of my brothers reduced to slavery, and the
lamentations of my sisters carried away by the Pagans;
17. "And my soul was afflicted when I saw that my brethren
had forgotten the true God. When a child I left my father's house
to go and settle among other people.
18. "But, having heard it said that my brethren suffered
even greater miseries now, I have come back to the land of my
fathers, to recall my brethren to the faith of their ancestors,
which teaches us patience upon earth in order to attain the
perfect and supreme bliss above."
19. Then the wise old men put to him again this question:
"We are told that thou disownest the laws of Mossa, and that
thou teachest the people to forsake the temple of God?"
20. Whereupon Issa: "One does not demolish that which has
been given by our Heavenly Father, and which has been destroyed by
sinners. I have but enjoined the people to purify the heart of all
stains, for it is the veritable temple of God.
21. "As regards the laws of Mossa, I have endeavored to
re-establish them in the hearts of men; and I say unto you that ye
ignore their true meaning, for it is not vengeance but pardon which
they teach. Their sense has been perverted."
XI.
1. When the priests and the elders heard Issa, they decided
among themselves not to give judgment against him, for he had done
no harm to any one, and, presenting themselves before Pilate--who
was made Governor of Jerusalem by the Pagan king of the country of
Romeles--they spake to him thus:
2. "We have seen the man whom thou chargest with inciting
our people to revolt; we have heard his discourses and know that
he is our countryman;
3. "But the chiefs of the cities have made to you false
reports, for he is a just man, who teaches the people the word of God. After interrogating him, we
have allowed him to go in peace."
4. The governor thereupon became very angry, and sent his
disguised spies to keep watch upon Issa and report to the
authorities the least word he addressed to the people.
5. In the meantime, the holy Issa continued to visit the
neighboring cities and preach the true way of the Lord, enjoining
the Hebrews patience and promising them speedy deliverance.
6. And all the time great numbers of the people followed him
wherever he went, and many did not leave him at all, but attached
themselves to him and served him.
7. And Issa said: "Put not your faith in miracles
performed by the hands of men, for He who rules nature is alone
capable of doing supernatural things, while man is impotent to arrest the wrath
of the winds or cause the rain to fall.
8. "One miracle, however, is within the power of man to
accomplish. It is, when his heart is filled with sincere faith, he
resolves to root out from his mind all evil promptings and
desires, and when, in order to attain this end, he ceases to walk
the path of iniquity.
9. "All the things done without God are only gross errors,
illusions and seductions, serving but to show how much the heart
of the doer is full of presumption, falsehood and impurity.
10. "Put not your faith in oracles. God alone knows the
future. He who has recourse to the diviners soils the temple of
his heart and shows his lack of faith in his Creator.
11. "Belief in the diviners and their miracles destroys
the innate simplicity of man and his childlike purity. An infernal
power takes hold of him who so errs, and forces him to commit
various sins and give himself to the worship of idols.
12. "But the Lord our God, to whom none can be equalled,
is one omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent; He alone possesses
all wisdom and all light.
13. "To Him ye must address yourselves, to be comforted in
your afflictions, aided in your works, healed in your sickness and
whoso asks of Him, shall not ask in vain.
14. "The secrets of nature are in the hands of God, for
the whole world, before it was made manifest, existed in the bosom
of the divine thought, and has become material and visible by the
will of the Most High.
15. "When ye pray to him, become again like little
children, for ye know neither the past, nor the present, nor the
future, and God is the Lord of Time."
XII.
1. "Just man," said to him the disguised spies of the
Governor of Jerusalem, "tell us if we must continue to do the
will of Cæsar, or expect our near deliverance?"
2. And Issa, who recognized the questioners as the apostate
spies sent to follow him, replied to them: "I have not told
you that you would be delivered from Cæsar; it is the soul sunk
in error which will gain its deliverance.
3. "There cannot be a family without a head, and there
cannot be order in a people without a Cæsar, whom ye should implicitly obey, as he will be
held to answer for his acts before the Supreme Tribunal."
4. "Does Cæsar possess a divine right?" the spies
asked him again; "and is he the best of mortals?"
5. "There is no one 'the best' among human beings; but
there are many bad, who--even as the sick need physicians--require
the care of those chosen for that mission, in which must be used
the means given by the sacred law of our Heavenly Father;
6. "Mercy and justice are the high prerogatives of Cæsar,
and his name will be illustrious if he exercises them.
7. "But he who acts otherwise, who transcends the limits
of power he has over those under his rule, and even goes so far as
to put their lives in danger, offends the great Judge and derogates from his own dignity in the eyes of men."
8. Upon this, an old woman who had approached the group, to
better hear Issa, was pushed aside by one of the disguised men,
who placed himself before her.
9. Then said Issa: "It is not good for a son to push away
his mother, that he may occupy the place which belongs to her.
Whoso doth not respect his mother--the most sacred being after his
God--is unworthy of the name of son.
10. "Hearken to what I say to you: Respect woman; for in
her we see the mother of the universe, and all the truth of divine
creation is to come through her.
12. "She is the fount of everything good and beautiful, as
she is also the germ of life and death. Upon her man depends in
all his existence, for she is his moral and natural support in his
labors.
12. "In pain and suffering she brings you forth; in the
sweat of her brow she watches over your growth, and until her
death you cause her greatest anxieties. Bless her and adore her,
for she is your only friend and support on earth.
13. "Respect her; defend her. In so doing you will gain
for yourself her love; you will find favor before God, and for her
sake many sins will be remitted to you.
14. "Love your wives and respect them, for they will be
the mothers of to-morrow and later the grandmothers of a whole
nation.
"Be submissive to the wife; her love ennobles man, softens
his hardened heart, tames the wild beast in him and changes it to a lamb.
16. "Wife and mother are the priceless treasures which God
has given to you. They are the most beautiful ornaments of the
universe, and from them will be born all who will inhabit the
world.
17. "Even as the Lord of Hosts separated the light from
the darkness, and the dry land from the waters, so does woman
possess the divine gift of calling forth out of man's evil nature
all the good that is in him.
18. "Therefore I say unto you, after God, to woman must
belong your best thoughts, for she is the divine temple where you
will most easily obtain perfect happiness.
19. "Draw from this temple your moral force. There you
will forget your sorrows and your failures, and recover the love necessary to aid your
fellow-men.
20. "Suffer her not to be humiliated, for by humiliating
her you humiliate yourselves, and lose the sentiment of love,
without which nothing can exist here on earth.
21. "Protect your wife, that she may protect you--you and
all your household. All that you do for your mothers, your wives,
for a widow, or for any other woman in distress, you will do for
your God."
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