P1598:1, 142:3.1
The twelve apostles, most of whom had listened to this discussion of the character
of God, that night asked Jesus many questions about the Father in heaven.
The Master's answers to these questions can best be presented by the following
summary in modern phraseology:
P1598:2, 142:3.2
Jesus mildly upbraided the twelve, in substance saying: Do you not know the
traditions of Israel relating to the growth of the idea of Yahweh, and are
you ignorant of the teaching of the Scriptures concerning the doctrine of
God? And then did the Master proceed to instruct the apostles about the evolution
of the concept of Deity throughout the course of the development of the Jewish
people. He called attention to the following phases of the growth of the God
idea:
P1598:3, 142:3.3
1. Yahweh -- the god of the Sinai clans. This was the primitive concept
of Deity which Moses exalted to the higher level of the Lord God of Israel.
The Father in heaven never fails to accept the sincere worship of his children
on earth, no matter how crude their concept of Deity or by what name they
symbolize his divine nature.
P1598:4, 142:3.4
2. The Most High. This concept of the Father in heaven was proclaimed
by Melchizedek to Abraham and was carried far from Salem by those who subsequently
believed in this enlarged and expanded idea of Deity. Abraham and his brother
left Ur because of the establishment of sun worship, and they became believers
in Melchizedek's teaching of El Elyon -- the Most High God. Theirs was a composite
concept of God, consisting in a blending of their older Mesopotamian ideas
and the Most High doctrine.
P1598:5, 142:3.5
3. El Shaddai. During these early days many of the Hebrews worshiped
El Shaddai, the Egyptian concept of the God of heaven, which they learned
about during their captivity in the land of the Nile. Long after the times
of Melchizedek all three of these concepts of God became joined together to
form the doctrine of the creator Deity, the Lord God of Israel.
P1598:6, 142:3.6
4. Elohim. From the times of Adam the teaching of the Paradise Trinity
has persisted. Do you not recall how the Scriptures begin by
asserting that
"In the beginning the Gods created the heavens and the earth"? This indicates
that when that record was made the Trinity concept of three Gods in one had
found lodgment in the religion of our forebears.
P1598:7, 142:3.7
5. The Supreme Yahweh. By the times of Isaiah these beliefs about God
had expanded into the concept of a Universal Creator who was simultaneously
all-powerful and all-merciful. And this evolving and enlarging concept of
God virtually supplanted all previous ideas of Deity in our fathers' religion.
P1598:8, 142:3.8
6. The Father in heaven. And now do we know God as our Father in heaven.
Our teaching provides a religion wherein the believer is a son of God.
That is the good news of the gospel of the kingdom of heaven. Coexistent with
the Father are the Son and the Spirit, and the revelation of the nature and
ministry of these Paradise Deities will continue to enlarge and brighten throughout
the endless ages of the eternal spiritual progression of the ascending sons
of God. At all times and during all ages the true worship of any human being
-- as concerns individual spiritual progress -- is recognized by the indwelling
spirit as homage rendered to the Father in heaven.
P1599:1, 142:3.9
Never before had the apostles been so shocked as they were upon hearing this
recounting of the growth of the concept of God in the Jewish minds of previous
generations; they were too bewildered to ask questions. As they sat before
Jesus in silence, the Master continued: "And you would have known these truths
had you read the Scriptures. Have you not read in Samuel where it says: `And
the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel, so much so that he moved
David against them, saying, go number Israel and Judah'? And this was not
strange because in the days of Samuel the children of Abraham really believed
that Yahweh created both good and evil. But when a later writer narrated these
events, subsequent to the enlargement of the Jewish concept of the nature
of God, he did not dare attribute evil to Yahweh; therefore he said: `And
Satan stood up against Israel and provoked David to number Israel.' Cannot
you discern that such records in the Scriptures clearly show how the concept
of the nature of God continued to grow from one generation to another?
P1599:2, 142:3.10
"Again should you have discerned the growth of the understanding of divine
law in perfect keeping with these enlarging concepts of divinity. When the
children of Israel came out of Egypt in the days before the enlarged revelation
of Yahweh, they had ten commandments which served as their law right up to
the times when they were encamped before Sinai. And these ten commandments
were:
P1599:3, 142:3.11
"1. You shall worship no other god, for the Lord is a jealous God.
P1599:4, 142:3.12
"2. You shall not make molten gods.
P1599:5, 142:3.13
"3. You shall not neglect to keep the feast of unleavened bread.
P1599:6, 142:3.14
"4. Of all the males of men or cattle, the first-born are mine, says the Lord.
P1599:7, 142:3.15
"5. Six days you may work, but on the seventh day you shall rest.
P1599:8, 142:3.16
"6. You shall not fail to observe the feast of the first fruits and the feast
of the ingathering at the end of the year.
P1599:9, 142:3.17
"7. You shall not offer the blood of any sacrifice with leavened bread.
P1599:10, 142:3.18
"8. The sacrifice of the feast of the Passover shall not be left until morning.
P1599:11, 142:3.19
"9. The first of the first fruits of the ground you shall bring to the house
of the Lord your God.
P1599:12, 142:3.20
"10. You shall not
seethe a kid in its mother's milk.
P1599:13, 142:3.21
"And then, amidst the thunders and lightnings of Sinai, Moses gave them the
new Ten Commandments, which you will all allow are more worthy utterances
to accompany the enlarging Yahweh concepts of Deity. And did you never take
notice of these commandments as twice recorded in the Scriptures, that in
the first case deliverance from Egypt is assigned as the reason for Sabbath
keeping, while in a later record the advancing religious beliefs of our forefathers
demanded that this be changed to the recognition of the fact of creation as
the reason for Sabbath observance?
P1599:14, 142:3.22
"And then will you remember that once again -- in the greater spiritual enlightenment
of Isaiah's day -- these ten negative commandments were changed into the great
and positive law of love, the injunction to love God supremely and your neighbor
as yourself. And it is this supreme law of love for God and for man that I
also declare to you as constituting the whole duty of man."
P1599:15, 142:3.23
And when he had finished speaking, no man asked him a question. They went,
each one to his sleep.