A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture/X. Jesus at the Age of Twelve Years goes to the Temple

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A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture (1910)
by Friedrich Justus Knecht
X. Jesus at the Age of Twelve Years goes to the Temple
3917867A Practical Commentary on Holy Scripture — X. Jesus at the Age of Twelve Years goes to the Temple1910Friedrich Justus Knecht

Chapter X.

JESUS AT THE AGE OF TWELVE YEARS GOES
TO THE TEMPLE.

[Luke 2, 40— 52 ]

NOW Mary and Joseph went every year [1] to Jerusalem to celebrate the Pasch. When Jesus was twelve years old, He accompanied His parents to the holy city.

The festival days[2] being over, Mary and Joseph set out for their distant home; but the Child Jesus remained[3] in Jerusalem, and His parents knew it not[4]. They thought, at first, that He was in the company of some of their relatives, and so they journeyed a whole day without noticing His absence. But when evening came, they looked for Him, and, not finding Him[5], were overwhelmed with grief.

They returned immediately to Jerusalem, and during three days sought Him[6] through the city, but in vain; no one had seen the Child. At length, on the third day, they went to the Temple, and there they found Him[7], sitting in the midst of the doctors of the law, hearing them and asking them questions. All the doctors were astonished [8] at His wisdom and His answers.

Mary and Joseph were filled with wonder[9] and joy at seeing Him again, and His Mother said to Him: “Son, why hast Thou done so[10] to us? Behold, Thy father and I have sought Thee sorrowing." But He answered: “How is it that you sought me? Did you not know that I must be about My Father’s business?"[11] But “they understood not Redeemer from sin, and the Light of the Gentiles, but they did not understand in what way He would accomplish the great work of Redemption, and how His remaining behind in the Temple could be connected with it. [12] the word that He spoke to them." And rising, He went with his mother (who “kept all these words in her heart" [13]) and His foster-father[14] to Nazareth, and was subject to them. And Jesus increased [15] in wisdom, and age, and grace with God and men.

COMMENTARY.

The Two Natures in Jesus Christ. Our Lord is at once true God and true Man. The foregoing story manifests both His natures to us. As Man, Jesus was the Child of Mary; as Man, He increased in age, and with time developed into boyhood, youth and manhood. Each of the foregoing chapters testify also to Jesus being true God, though we have hitherto seen the Incarnate Son of God in a state of humility, poverty, and persecution, and have heard no word proceed from His mouth. In this last chapter we hear Jesus speak for the first time, and His words are words of superhuman wisdom, and bear most clear testimony to His divine nature. As soon as Jesus had completed His twelfth year, He was an adult in spiritual matters, so now, for a time, He withdrew Himself from the protection of His parents, and came forward, according to the will of His Father, as a teacher of the law, and allowed a few gleams of His divine wisdom to escape Him, thus preparing the way for His future public appearance as fulfiller of the law and prophets. He Himself refers directly to His divine nature by the words: “Did you not know that I must be about My Father’s business?” He calls God His Father, and thus proclaims Himself to be the Son of God. This was our Lord’s first declaration of His Divinity.

Obedience (4th Commandment). Until He was thirty years old, Jesus practised the most complete obedience towards His Mother and foster-father. He did as they bade Him; He helped His Mother in her household work, and served Joseph as an apprentice in his laborious trade of carpenter. Meditate well on this: Who was obedient, and to whom? The Creator to the creature, the Lord to the servant, the Son of God to man! And in what was He obedient? In everything. For how long? For as long as He dwelt with Mary and Joseph, namely thirty years. And why did Jesus, the Eternal Son of God, practise such obedience? 1. That through His perfect obedience He might make satisfaction for the disobedience of sinful man. 2. In order to give a great example of obedience to all children and inferiors.

Piety. The example of Jesus, who went to the Feast at Jerusalem and remained for three days in the Temple, shows us that we ought to like to be in the house of God, to listen attentively to His word and the expounding of it, to busy ourselves with the things of God and to avoid all distractions.

Industry. Jesus worked, and has thereby made work holy, and taught us to work willingly, each one at his own business, and to be ashamed of no kind of labour. Industry is a virtue, and sloth one of the deadly sins.

Growth in holiness. Finally, Jesus, by His hidden life at Nazareth, teaches us that, as we advance in years, so also ought we to advance in wisdom and grace with God and man. We grow in wisdom if we get to know God and His holy will better, by means of religious instruction, sermons and spiritual reading. We grow in grace or favour with God by good works, and especially by prayer and a worthy reception of the holy Sacraments. Grace or favour with men we gain by brotherly love, friendliness, gentleness and unselfishness.

Zeal for God's Glory. Mary and Joseph went every year to the Temple at Jerusalem. Mary was not bound to do so, but she did it, because it was a work pleasing to God. The example of Mary and Joseph ought to teach us to be obedient to the law of God and zealous for His glory. God still imposes commands on us through His holy Church — to hear Mass on Sundays and Holydays &c. & c.

The Holy Family (Jesus, Mary and Joseph) in the house at Nazareth is a model held up for the imitation of all families. Love, unity and peace reigned there; no sound of discord, no evil word could be heard. The days passed by in work and prayer, and while the members of this Holy Family were occupied with their labour, they raised their hearts to God. Towards their neighbours they were modest, friendly and helpful, taking every opportunity of doing good to others.

The loss of Jesus. Mary lost Jesus through no fault of her own; but with what sorrow she sought Him, with what joy she found Him! We lose Jesus through our own fault when we separate ourselves from Him by mortal sin. This is the greatest of all misfortunes, for he who has lost Jesus, has lost all, and can never be happy without Him. He to whom this misfortune has happened must seek Jesus with sorrow and tears of penance, and he will find Him again in the Temple (His Church), if he will reconcile himself to God by a good and contrite confession.


Application. Do you like going to the house of God? Have you never, of your own fault, neglected the services of God? And how do you behave in church when you are there, and how do you listen to the sermon?

As a Christian child you ought to follow the example of Jesus Christ. But how can you be a follower of Him, if you are not obedient to your parents and superiors? Obedience is for you the first and most necessary virtue; and if you will not obey those who stand to you in the place of God, you are not worthy of the name of Christian. How has it been with you hitherto in this respect? Have you always obeyed your parents and superiors both exactly and promptly? If on any future occasion you are told to do something which is distasteful to you, say to yourself: “Jesus, I will do this for love of Thee.”

  1. Every year. It was commanded by the law that every male Israelite should go to Jerusalem each year, for the three principal feasts (Old Test. XXXIX). This was not obligatory on the women, but pious women and maidens liked to take part in the pilgrimage, and Mary did not shrink from the severities of the long journey from Nazareth to Jerusalem which enabled her to visit the Sanctuary of the Lord. Boys above the age of twelve were bound to fast, to go to Jerusalem for the three feasts, and in all things to observe the law.
  2. Festival days. Which lasted a week.
  3. Remained. Intentionally.
  4. Knew it not. Owing to the great throng of about 500,000 pilgrims pressing through the gate, they lost sight of the relatives and acquaintances who accompanied them from Nazareth.
  5. Not finding Him. What anxiety must they not have felt when they lost Jesus, who had been entrusted to their charge by God! Was He lying in prison — or killed? Had His sufferings already begun? Such thoughts filled their hearts with the keenest pain, and they could neither rest nor sleep till they had once more found the Divine Child.
  6. Sought Him. They sought Him on the way back, inquiring about Him from all the pilgrims behind them, and at all the places through which they had passed; but nobody could give them tidings of Him. With growing anxiety they arrived at Jerusalem, and vainly searched the streets of the city.
  7. They found Him. In a hall in the outer court of the Temple, where the doctors met to expound the law, and to answer questions and objections. To these assemblages there came both the earnest inquirers and the curious, all of whom sat at the feet of the doctors on low stools, placed on the ground.. Jesus however was not sitting among the inquirers, but among the doctors, who were held by the people in the highest esteem! He listened to them, put questions to them, and answered their questions, so as to lead them to a knowledge of the truth. Most likely the discourse was about the prophecies.
  8. Astonished. Because such questions were unheard-of as coming from a boy of twelve years old. They suspected that they were in presence of some supernatural manifestation.
  9. Wonder. They “wondered” at seeing Jesus seated among the doctors, and the gaze of every bystander turned on Him with astonishment and veneration.
  10. Done so. Remaining behind without our knowledge. These words are the expression of the great love and anxiety of soul which Mary had experienced on account of her beloved Child.
  11. My Father s business. You should not have sought me, nor have feared for me, for you ought to have remembered that I leave you only to do the work which my Heavenly Father has given me to do.
  12. Understood not. They understood, indeed, the literal meaning of what He said, but not its deeper sense. They knew that Jesus was the Son of God, the
  13. In her heart. She pondered over them and compared them with what she had heard from the angel, from the wise men, from Simeon &c., and thus she entered more and more deeply into the mystery of Redemption.
  14. Foster-father. Our Lord passed among the people for the son of Joseph the carpenter, though He was the Son of God, and St. Joseph was only His foster-father.
  15. Increased. Shortly before (Luke 2, 40), the Gospel says: “The Child was full of wisdom”, and yet now (Luke 2, 52) it says: “He advanced in wisdom and grace.” How then is this increase of wisdom to be understood? In a literal sense, Jesus could neither increase nor decrease in wisdom and grace, for from the first moment of His Incarnation He was full of grace and truth (John 1, 14), but He appeared in the eyes of men to increase in wisdom and grace as He advanced in age, by revealing, with increasing years, more and more of the hidden fulness of wisdom and grace which were within Him. Jesus increased in favour with men, because, the more they came in contact with Him, the more they loved and appreciated Him; and in favour with God, because, the more Jesus did for the glory of God, the more His eternal Father was pleased with Him.