P1548:1, 139:0.1
It is an eloquent testimony to the charm and righteousness of Jesus' earth
life that, although he repeatedly dashed to pieces the hopes of his apostles
and tore to shreds their every ambition for personal
exaltation, only one deserted him.
P1548:2, 139:0.2
The apostles learned from Jesus about the kingdom of heaven, and Jesus learned
much from them about the kingdom of men, human nature as it lives on Urantia
and on the other evolutionary worlds of time and space. These twelve men represented
many different types of human temperament, and they had not been made alike
by schooling. Many of these Galilean fishermen carried heavy strains of
gentile blood as a result of the forcible conversion of the gentile population
of Galilee one hundred years previously.
P1548:3, 139:0.3
Do not make the mistake of regarding the apostles as being altogether ignorant
and unlearned. All of them, except the Alpheus twins, were graduates of the
synagogue schools, having been thoroughly trained in the Hebrew scriptures
and in much of the current knowledge of that day. Seven were graduates of
the Capernaum synagogue schools, and there were no better Jewish schools in
all Galilee.
P1548:4, 139:0.4
When your records refer to these messengers of the kingdom as being "ignorant
and unlearned," it was intended to convey the idea that they were laymen,
unlearned in the lore of the rabbis and untrained in the methods of rabbinical
interpretation of the Scriptures. They were lacking in so-called higher education.
In modern times they would certainly be considered uneducated, and in some
circles of society even uncultured. One thing is certain: They had not all
been put through the same rigid and stereotyped educational
curriculum. From
adolescence on they had enjoyed separate experiences of learning how to live.