P1362:1, 123:5.1
Jesus was now seven years old, the age when Jewish children were supposed
to begin their formal education in the synagogue schools. Accordingly, in
August of this year he entered upon his eventful school life at Nazareth.
Already this lad was a fluent reader, writer, and speaker of two languages,
Aramaic and Greek. He was now to acquaint himself with the task of learning
to read, write, and speak the Hebrew language. And he was truly eager for
the new school life which was ahead of him.
P1362:2, 123:5.2
For three years -- until he was ten -- he attended the elementary school of
the Nazareth synagogue. For these three years he studied the rudiments of
the Book of the Law as it was recorded in the Hebrew tongue. For the following
three years he studied in the advanced school and committed to memory, by
the method of repeating aloud, the deeper teachings of the sacred law. He
graduated from this school of the synagogue during his thirteenth year and
was turned over to his parents by the synagogue rulers as an educated "son
of the commandment" -- henceforth a responsible citizen of the commonwealth
of Israel, all of which entailed his attendance at the Passovers in Jerusalem;
accordingly, he attended his first Passover that year in company with his
father and mother.
P1362:3, 123:5.3
At Nazareth the pupils sat on the floor in a semicircle, while their teacher,
the chazan, an officer of the synagogue, sat facing them. Beginning with the
Book of
Leviticus, they passed on to the study of the other books of the law,
followed by the study of the Prophets and the Psalms. The Nazareth synagogue
possessed a complete copy of the Scriptures in Hebrew. Nothing but the Scriptures
was studied prior to the twelfth year. In the summer months the hours for
school were greatly shortened.
P1362:4, 123:5.4
Jesus early became a master of Hebrew, and as a young man, when no visitor
of prominence happened to be sojourning in Nazareth, he would often be asked
to read the Hebrew scriptures to the faithful assembled in the synagogue at
the regular Sabbath services.
P1362:5, 123:5.5
These synagogue schools, of course, had no
textbooks. In teaching, the chazan
would utter a statement while the pupils would in unison repeat it after him.
When having access to the written books of the law, the student learned his
lesson by reading aloud and by constant repetition.
P1362:6, 123:5.6
Next, in addition to his more formal schooling, Jesus began to make contact
with human nature from the four quarters of the earth as men from many lands
passed in and out of his father's repair shop. When he grew older, he mingled
freely with the
caravans as they tarried near the spring for rest and nourishment.
Being a fluent speaker of Greek, he had little trouble in conversing with
the majority of the caravan travelers and conductors.
P1362:7, 123:5.7
Nazareth was a caravan way station and crossroads of travel and largely gentile
in population; at the same time it was widely known as a center of liberal
interpretation of Jewish traditional law. In Galilee the Jews mingled more
freely with the gentiles than was their practice in Judea. And of all the
cities of Galilee, the Jews of Nazareth were most liberal in their interpretation
of the social restrictions based on the fears of contamination as a result
of contact with the gentiles. And these conditions gave rise to the common
saying in Jerusalem, "Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?"
P1363:1, 123:5.8
Jesus received his moral training and spiritual culture chiefly in his own
home. He secured much of his intellectual and theological education from the
chazan. But his real education -- that equipment of mind and heart for the
actual test of grappling with the difficult problems of life -- he obtained
by mingling with his fellow men. It was this close association with his fellow
men, young and old, Jew and gentile, that afforded him the opportunity to
know the human race. Jesus was highly educated in that he thoroughly understood
men and devotedly loved them.
P1363:2, 123:5.9
Throughout his years at the synagogue he was a brilliant student, possessing
a great advantage since he was conversant with three languages. The Nazareth
chazan, on the occasion of Jesus' finishing the course in his school, remarked
to Joseph that he feared he "had learned more from Jesus' searching questions"
than he had "been able to teach the lad."
P1363:3, 123:5.10
Throughout his course of study Jesus learned much and derived great inspiration
from the regular Sabbath sermons in the synagogue. It was customary to ask
distinguished visitors, stopping over the Sabbath in Nazareth, to address
the synagogue. As Jesus grew up, he heard many great thinkers of the entire
Jewish world expound their views, and many also who were hardly orthodox Jews
since the synagogue of Nazareth was an advanced and liberal center of Hebrew
thought and culture.
P1363:4, 123:5.11
When entering school at seven years (at this time the Jews had just inaugurated
a compulsory education law), it was customary for the pupils to choose their
"birthday text," a sort of golden rule to guide them throughout their studies,
one upon which they often
expatiated at their graduation when thirteen years
old. The text which Jesus chose was from the Prophet Isaiah: "The spirit of
the Lord God is upon me, for the Lord has anointed me; he has sent me to bring
good news to the meek, to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to
the captives, and to set the spiritual prisoners free."
P1363:5, 123:5.12
Nazareth was one of the twenty-four priest centers of the Hebrew nation. But
the Galilean priesthood was more liberal in the interpretation of the traditional
laws than were the Judean scribes and rabbis. And at Nazareth they were also
more liberal regarding the observance of the Sabbath. It was therefore the
custom for Joseph to take Jesus out for walks on Sabbath afternoons, one of
their favorite
jaunts being to climb the high hill near their home, from which
they could obtain a panoramic view of all Galilee. To the northwest, on clear
days, they could see the long ridge of Mount Carmel running down to the sea;
and many times Jesus heard his father relate the story of Elijah, one of the
first of that long line of Hebrew prophets, who reproved Ahab and exposed
the priests of Baal. To the north Mount Hermon raised its snowy peak in majestic
splendor and
monopolized the
skyline, almost 3,000 feet of the upper slopes
glistening white with perpetual snow. Far to the east they could discern the
Jordan valley and, far beyond, the rocky hills of Moab. Also to the south
and the east, when the sun shone upon their marble walls, they could see the
Greco-Roman cities of the Decapolis, with their
amphitheaters and pretentious
temples. And when they lingered toward the going down of the sun, to the west
they could make out the sailing vessels on the distant Mediterranean.
P1364:1, 123:5.13
From four directions Jesus could observe the caravan trains as they wended
their way in and out of Nazareth, and to the south he could overlook the broad
and fertile plain country of Esdraelon, stretching off toward Mount Gilboa
and Samaria.
P1364:2, 123:5.14
When they did not climb the heights to view the distant landscape, they strolled
through the countryside and studied nature in her various moods in accordance
with the seasons. Jesus' earliest training, aside from that of the home hearth,
had to do with a reverent and sympathetic contact with nature.
P1364:3, 123:5.15
Before he was eight years of age, he was known to all the mothers and young
women of Nazareth, who had met him and talked with him at the spring, which
was not far from his home, and which was one of the social centers of contact
and gossip for the entire town. This year Jesus learned to milk the family
cow and care for the other animals. During this and the following year he
also learned to make cheese and to weave. When he was ten years of age, he
was an expert loom operator. It was about this time that Jesus and the neighbor
boy Jacob became great friends of the potter who worked near the flowing spring;
and as they watched Nathan's deft fingers mold the clay on the potter's wheel,
many times both of them determined to be potters when they grew up. Nathan
was very fond of the lads and often gave them clay to play with, seeking to
stimulate their creative imaginations by suggesting competitive efforts in
modeling various objects and animals.