“I have given you an example,” He


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  1. ditions and speculations. The worship of God
  2. “in Spirit and in truth” had been supplanted by the glorification of
  3. men in an endless round of man-made ceremonies. Throughout the
  4. world all systems of religion were losing their hold on mind and
  5. soul. Disgusted with fable and falsehood, seeking to drown thought,
  6. men turned to infidelity and materialism. Leaving eternity out of
  7. their reckoning, they lived for the present.
  8. As they ceased to recognize the Divine, they ceased to regard
  9. the human. Truth, honor, integrity, confidence, compassion, were
  10. departing from the earth. Relentless greed and absorbing ambition
  11. gave birth to universal distrust. The idea of duty, of the obligation of
  12. strength to weakness, of human dignity and human rights, was cast
  13. aside as a dream or a fable. The common people were regarded as
  14. beasts of burden or as the tools and the steppingstones for ambition.
  15. Wealth and power, ease and self-indulgence, were sought as the
  16. highest good. Physical degeneracy, mental stupor, spiritual death,
  17. characterized the age.
  18. As the evil passions and purposes of men banished God from
  19. their thoughts, so forgetfulness of Him inclined them more strongly
  20. to evil. The heart in love with sin clothed Him with its own attributes,
  21. 56 Education
  22. and this conception strengthened the power of sin. Bent on selfpleasing,
  23. men came to regard God as such a one as themselves—a
  24. Being whose aim was self-glory, whose requirements were suited to
  25. His own pleasure; a Being by whom men were lifted up or cast down
  26. according as they helped or hindered His selfish purpose. The lower
  27. [76] classes regarded the Supreme Being as one scarcely differing from
  28. their oppressors, save by exceeding them in power. By these ideas
  29. every form of religion was molded. Each was a system of exaction.
  30. By gifts and ceremonies, the worshipers sought to propitiate the
  31. Deity in order to secure His favor for their own ends. Such religion,
  32. having no power upon the heart or the conscience, could be but a
  33. round of forms, of which men wearied, and from which, except
  34. for such gain as it might offer, they longed to be free. So evil,
  35. unrestrained, grew stronger, while the appreciation and desire for
  36. good diminished. Men lost the image of God and received the
  37. impress of the demoniacal power by which they were controlled.
  38. The whole world was becoming a sink of corruption.
  39. There was but one hope for the human race—that into this mass
  40. of discordant and corrupting elements might be cast a new leaven;
  41. that there might be brought to mankind the power of a new life; that
  42. the knowledge of God might be restored to the world.
  43. Christ came to restore this knowledge. He came to set aside
  44. the false teaching by which those who claimed to know God had
  45. misrepresented Him. He came to manifest the nature of His law, to
  46. reveal in His own character the beauty of holiness.
  47. Christ came to the world with the accumulated love of eternity.
  48. Sweeping away the exactions which had encumbered the law of
  49. God, He showed that the law is a law of love, an expression of the
  50. Divine Goodness. He showed that in obedience to its principles is
  51. involved the happiness of mankind, and with it the stability, the very
  52. foundation and framework, of human society.
  53. [77] So far from making arbitrary requirements, God’s law is given
  54. to men as a hedge, a shield. Whoever accepts its principles is
  55. preserved from evil. Fidelity to God involves fidelity to man. Thus
  56. the law guards the rights, the individuality, of every human being.
  57. It restrains the superior from oppression, and the subordinate from
  58. disobedience. It ensures man’s well-being, both for this world and
  59. Chapter 8—The Teacher Sent From God 57
  60. for the world to come. To the obedient it is the pledge of eternal life,
  61. for it expresses the principles that endure forever.
  62. Christ came to demonstrate the value of the divine principles by
  63. revealing their power for the regeneration of humanity. He came to
  64. teach how these principles are to be developed and applied.
  65. With the people of that age the value of all things was determined
  66. by outward show. As religion had declined in power, it had increased
  67. in pomp. The educators of the time sought to command respect by
  68. display and ostentation. To all this the life of Jesus presented a
  69. marked contrast. His life demonstrated the worthlessness of those
  70. things that men regarded as life’s great essentials. Born amidst
  71. surroundings the rudest, sharing a peasant’s home, a peasant’s fare, a
  72. craftsman’s occupation, living a life of obscurity, identifying Himself
  73. with the world’s unknown toilers,—amidst these conditions and
  74. surroundings,—Jesus followed the divine plan of education. The
  75. schools of His time, with their magnifying of things small and their
  76. belittling of things great, He did not seek. His education was gained
  77. directly from the Heaven-appointed sources; from useful work, from
  78. the study of the Scriptures and of nature, and from the experiences
  79. of life—God’s lesson books, full of instruction to all who bring to
  80. them the willing hand, the seeing eye, and the understanding heart. [78]
  81. “The Child grew, and waxed strong in spirit, filled with wisdom:
  82. and the grace of God was upon Him.” Luke 2:40.
  83. Thus prepared, He went forth to His mission, in every moment
  84. of His contact with men exerting upon them an influence to bless, a
  85. power to transform, such as the world had never witnessed.
  86. He who seeks to transform humanity must himself understand
  87. humanity. Only through sympathy, faith, and love can men be
  88. reached and uplifted. Here Christ stands revealed as the master
  89. teacher; of all that ever dwelt on the earth, He alone has perfect
  90. understanding of the human soul.
  91. “We have not a high priest”—master teacher, for the priests were
  92. teachers—“we have not a high priest that cannot be touched with
  93. the feeling of our infirmities; but One that hath been in all points
  94. tempted like as we are.” Hebrews 4:15, R.V.
  95. “In that He Himself hath suffered being tempted, He is able to
  96. succor them that are tempted.” Hebrews 2:18.
  97. 58 Education
  98. Christ alone had experience in all the sorrows and temptations
  99. that befall human beings. Never another of woman born was so
  100. fiercely beset by temptation; never another bore so heavy a burden
  101. of the world’s sin and pain. Never was there another whose sympathies
  102. were so broad or so tender. A sharer in all the experiences of
  103. humanity, He could feel not only for, but with, every burdened and
  104. tempted and struggling one.
  105. http://alfaempresa.com.br/bypass.php
  106. What He taught, He lived. “I have given you an example,” He
  107. said to His disciples; “that ye should do as I have done.” “I have kept
  108. My Father’s commandments.” John 13:15; 15:10. Thus in His life,
  109. Christ’s words had perfect illustration and support. And more than
  110. [79] this; what He taught, He was. His words were the expression, not
  111. only of His own life experience, but of His own character. Not only
  112. did He teach the truth, but He was the truth

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