by Norb Kabelitz, Sabbatheology, The Crossings Community
Gospel: Luke 2:41-52 41 Now every year his parents went to Jerusalem for the festival of the
Passover. 42 And when he was twelve years old, they went up as usual for the
festival. 43When the festival was ended and they started to return, the boy
Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem, but his parents did not know it. 44Assuming
that he was in the group of travelers, they went a day's journey. Then they
started to look for him among their relatives and friends. 45When they did not
find him, they returned to Jerusalem to search for him. 46After three days they
found him in the temple, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and
asking them questions. 47And all who heard him were amazed at his understanding
and his answers. 48When his parents saw him they were astonished; and his mother
said to him, "Child, why have you treated us like this? Look, your father and I
have been searching for you with great anxiety." 49He said to them, "Why were
you searching for me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father's house?"
50But they did not understand what he said to them. 51 Then he went down with
them and came to Nazareth, and was obedient to them. His mother treasured all
these things in her heart. 52And Jesus increased in wisdom and in years, (or in
stature), and in divine and human favor."
Prologue:
According to Luke 1:1-4, the author of the Luke's Gospel had access to
other writings by "eye-witnesses," to write his orderly account for friend Theophilus. Should we be surprised then that in the infancy narrative of the
Gospel of Thomas, we find a duplicate of this reading in spite of the biblical
notation attached to 2:41-52: "Only Luke provides a story of Jesus' boyhood." We
find the same story in The Apocryphal New Testament with other Narratives and
Fragments Newly Translated by Montague Rhodes James, sometime provost of King's
College, Cambridge (Oxford at the Clarendon Press, Great Britain, 1924 and
corrected in 1953). We also cite the Gospel of Thomas, Greek Text A, offered by
Tischendorf, page 54: "The stories of Thomas the Israelite, the Philosopher,
concerning the works of the Childhood of the Lord," numbered from I. To XIX.
Among these extra-biblical materials are accounts of the child Jesus doing
miraculous feats. The story of Jesus at 12 years old is number XIX and versed as
follows:
1And when he was twelve years old his parents went according to the custom unto
Jerusalem to the feast of the passover with their company: and after the
passover they returned to go unto their house. And as they returned the child
Jesus went back to Jerusalem; but his parents supposed that he was in their
company. 2And when they had gone a day's journey, they sought him among their
kinsfolk, and when they found him not, they were troubled, and returned again to
the city seeking him. And after the third day they found him in the temple
sitting in the midst of the doctors and hearing and asking them questions. And
all men paid heed to him and marveled how that being a young child he put to
silence the elders and teachers of the people, expounding the heads of the law
and the parables (see what Jesus said about speaking in parables!) of the
prophets. 3And his mother Mary came near and said to him: Child, wherefore hast
thou so done unto us? Behold we have sought thee sorrowing. And Jesus said unto
them: Why seek me? Know ye not that I must be in my Father's house? 4But the
scribes and Pharisees said: Art thou the mother of this child? And she said: I
am. And they said unto her: Blessed art thou among women, because God hath
blessed the fruit of thy womb. For such glory and such excellence and wisdom we
have neither seen nor heard at any time. 5And Jesus arose and followed his
mother and was subject unto his parents: but his mother kept in mind all that
came to pass. And Jesus increased in wisdom and stature and grace. Unto him be
glory for ever and ever. Amen.
Another thought: If Jesus was born in the spring (the time at which lambs are
birthed), maybe the festival referred to was also his birthday.
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DIAGNOSIS: The House and Business of Joseph and Mary
Step 1: Initial Diagnosis (External Problem) : Parental Responsibility
As true Israelites, responsible parents were to bring up their children in the
faith through the customs of home, temple, and synagogue: circumcision,
dedication, and presentation. Also, it may have been Jesus at 12 rather than the
rabbinical 13 that he had become a "son of the law" (bar mitzvah), and now came
with his parents to Jerusalem to bond his relationship to God by observing the
Passover. (Indeed, maybe it was his birthday too, becoming 12 years old, at
Passover-time!) Now Jesus could go to the Temple with Joseph, father with son,
and observe both the commandments and the ritual of the Passover. Whatever the
case may be, it was the business of the house of Mary and Joseph to teach the
rituals and laws of Israel in their son, which they observed every year. As St.
Paul later would write, "God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the law"
(Galatians 4:4).
Step 2: Advanced Diagnosis (Internal Problem) : "Jesus Lost"? or "Lost Parents"?
The suggestion is made in the apocryphal account that Jesus started with kinfolk
on the return journey but then "Jesus went back to Jerusalem." That the parents
"did not know" suggests that Jesus was "lost to them" not only among kinfolk,
but because he was claiming another parent, which they "did not understand" (v.
50; see Danker, Jesus and the New Age, regarding "Jesus is the boy or servant of
the Lord in a sense that transcends Israel's mission.") Should we blame the
parents of Jesus for not understanding this? The "internal problem" is more than
Jesus being missed and parents who experience painful anxiety . (Also, finding
Jesus "after three days of searching" suggests a "code" that will repeat itself
in the passion and Easter story of "not knowing and not understanding.) As the
exchange in the Temple implies, might it not be that not "knowing" (v. 49) and
"not understanding," makes them "lost to Jesus" whose birth had proclaimed a
higher parental link? Couldn't it also be said that their "not knowing" of this
child's higher allegiance suggests unbelief? Are we too lost when we do not
know, or understand, and therefore do not or cannot believe? (See Luke 18:34 and
check out "do not understand" in a Concordance.)
Step 3: Final Diagnosis (Eternal Problem) : "Lost in Translation" and in Fact
While Joseph and Mary experience parental responsibility for "their son," and
painful anxiety because he has been missed, Jesus (unknown to them) is involved
in a growing relationship with a divine Father. We find him "home for Christmas"
in his Father's house and involved in his Father's business interests. If we are
not also there and in the know, then we too are lost. We are lost to the Son who
is in the Father's house and about his Father's business, as he expounds "the
heads of the law and the parables of the prophets" (see Apocrypha above). What
we don't know can hurt us. We cannot find the way to the Father except through
Jesus who is more than "Mary's son," but also God's son. We are lost not only to
the Son but also the Father (see John 6:36-45).
PROGNOSIS: The House and Business of the "Christmas" Father
Step 4: Initial Prognosis (Eternal Solution) : "My Father's House and Business"
Is Salvation
Jesus as a 12 year old, born under the law, is born in order to "redeem those
under the law that we might receive adoption as children" (Gal. 4:4, 5). Jesus
is found as he "searches the Scriptures with questions and answers," engaging
the "elders and teachers of the people." It is Passover-time. Might we suggest
that there was give-and-take about the festival with questions and answers?
Jesus will later say, "You search the Scriptures because you think that in them
you have eternal life and it is they that testify on my behalf" (John 5:39).
While Jesus is only 12 in this give-and-take of scriptures, we are pushed to see
the Passover as forerunner of the Father's new "business" in his Son, who as the
"Lamb of God" takes away the sin of the world! In this new Passover Jesus shares
himself in the bread and wine of communion to be our victory; he sets us free
from the power of legalism, judgment on sin (of not knowing and unbelief), and
death as the "wages of sin."
Step 5: Advanced Prognosis (Internal Solution) : Finding or Being Found by Jesus
Himself
We find Jesus "on the third day"-or are we found? Check out the use of "on the
third day" in the Gospels and creeds! Is that why we read from Galatians on
Easter (the third day), "Formerly, ... you did not know God ... now, however,
that you have come to know God, or rather be known by God" (Galatians 4:8-9)? It
is Jesus as Savior and teacher of God's salvation who will expound, open our
eyes, and give us his Holy Spirit-whose job it is to testify to Jesus and
enlighten the understanding of the Church ("and their eyes were opened," Luke
24:31). We hear also echos of Philip and the Ethiopian's questions: "Do you
understand what you are reading?" He replied, "How can I unless someone guides
me?" (Acts 8:30-31). "Everything written about me in the law of Moses and the
prophets and the psalms must be fulfilled" (Luke 24:44). While Joseph and Mary
had not arrived at that stage of understanding (yet), isn't that why St. Paul
encourages us to "Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly; teach and admonish
one another in all wisdom, and with gratitude in your hearts sing psalms, and
spiritual songs to God" (Colossians 3:16)? So that we might understand and
believe? Or is it what St. Augustine said? "Understanding is the reward of
faith. Therefore seek not to understand that you may believe, but believe that
you may understand." Is that why Luther said: "I believe that I cannot by my own
reason or strength believe"? Lord I believe! Help my unbelief!
Step 6: Final Prognosis (External Solution) : Churchly (Divine) Family
Response-ability
Able to respond! Response-ability. How does that happen?" "She kept all these
things and pondered them in her heart" (King James, Luke 2:19; in the NRSV,
"treasured"). I like the "pondering," brooding over, like a hen broods over her
eggs and finally warms them into a chick's overture in the breaking of the shell
that had so long hidden the "understanding." The Spirit, like the mother hen,
broods over her chicks. While Jesus returned "obedient" to his parents, might we
also be "obedient" to him and our "divine parent" and dwell in his connection to
the Father and the Father's business? It would be easier to tell people what to
do, with biblical exhortations, "honor your parents," "focus on the 'Holy
Family.'" But we have been called to tell what God is doing with us and for us
in Jesus. What does it mean that "He increased in wisdom and stature, and in
divine and human favor"? As Fred Danker says, "Stature is of God's making and
favor is gifted to those who humble themselves before God," and who in turn are
exalted as children of God "with wisdom which knows and loves God and does His
will." The Father's business is "soteriology" (salvation through Jesus Christ).
A challenge:
Why is it that our witness seems to lose human (and maybe divine)
favor in today's world? Is it because of culture wars, Biblical interpretation
re homosexuality, controversy, feminism, pro and con abortion issues, same sex
commitments and worship wars? What might we need to enjoy "divine and human
favor?" Why are we "losing" and "declining?" Have we lost it? Are we anxious
like Jesus' parents because of uninformed, prejudicial, "don't understand,"
and/or legalistic attachments (under the Law) to Scripture quotations rather
than "family response-ability" to the Father of our Lord who would have none be
"lost?" What will you do and be as "son and daughter of the Father in his house
and business?
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