<h2>The Boy Lost and Found</h2><div class="chaptertitle">CHAPTER 12</div>
<div class='cap'>JESUS STAYED at the school in the village church
until he was twelve years old. By that time he
could read and write and could also repeat many
verses. But as his reading book and spelling book and
copy book and memory verses were all in the Bible, and
as he heard long readings from its books at the church
service, we may be sure that he knew quite well all the
best things in that best of all books, the Bible. One
proof of this is that in later years, when anyone tried to
puzzle him with a hard question, he often answered
promptly with a sentence from the Bible.</div>
<p>A Jewish boy generally left school at the age of
twelve, unless he wished to become a rabbi, which was
the name among the Jews for a teacher of their law. If
that was his wish or the purpose of his parents, he was
sent up to Jerusalem to study in the college held by the
scribes or teachers in the Temple. Saul of Tarsus, a boy
about four years younger than Jesus, whom we know as
Paul the Apostle, was a student in the Temple college,
but Jesus was not. While the young Saul was studying
in Jerusalem, Jesus as a young man was working in the
carpenter shop at Nazareth.</p>
<p>When Jesus was twelve years old he was taken on
his first journey from Nazareth up to Jerusalem to
attend the great feast of the Passover. Three great
feasts were held during the year. The feast of the
Passover was in the early spring, and kept in mind the
great day when the Israelites went out of Egypt, no
longer slaves but free men. The feast of the Pentecost<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span>
was held in the late spring, just fifty days after the
Passover—the word "pentecost" meaning "fifty days"—and
reminded the people that fifty days after their
fathers went out of Egypt, God gave them their law
amid lightning and thunder on Mount Sinai. The feast
of the Tabernacles, or "feast of tents" (for that is the
meaning of the word tabernacles), was held in the fall;
and at this time the people built for themselves huts of
green branches, ate in them and slept in them for a week,
to show the outdoor life of the early days in the wilderness,
while they were marching to Canaan, the Promised
Land. These three great feasts were held in Jerusalem,
and from every part of the land the people came up to
the city to attend them.</p>
<p>It was a great event when the boy Jesus for the first
time went on this journey to Jerusalem. The younger
children were left at home, under the care of some friend,
for a boy did not begin attending these feasts until he
was twelve years old. Of course, Joseph and Mary knew
all about this journey, for they had made it many times.
They went in the caravan or company from Nazareth,
following the road that Joseph and Mary had taken on
their way to Bethlehem, twelve years before. As they
journeyed, Mary seated on the ass, Joseph and the boy
Jesus walking beside her, they would talk about the
places which they passed, and the stories of old times
told about them. Jesus knew all those stories, for every
Jewish boy had heard them, over and over.</p>
<p>As they paused on the top of the hill beside Nazareth,
below them was spread out the great plain of Esdraelon,
and they would say, "That mountain by the Great Sea
on the west is Mount Carmel, where Elijah built his
altar and made his great offering, when in answer to his
prayer the fire came down from heaven and burned up
the bullock laid on the altar. Do you see that road<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
running across the plain? On that road Elijah ran in
front of King Ahab's chariot, after the long drought,
when the rain was coming. And then, this plain! Over
it from Mount Tabor, there on the left, Deborah and
Barak chased the flying Canaanites across the plain.
Do you see that second mountain beyond Tabor? That
is Mount Gilboa; and at its foot Gideon with his brave
three hundred frightened at night the Midianite host
and won a great victory."</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-097.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="305" alt="photo" /> <span class="caption">Mount Tabor and the plain of Esdraelon</span></div>
<p>They went down into the Jordan valley and walked
southward by the Roman road, following the Jordan
River. At one place the mountains on either side came
down close to the river, and there was barely room for
the road between the foaming stream on one side and the
steep rocks on the other.</p>
<p>"Look," said Joseph, "this <ins title="Transcriber's Note: this word not present in original text">is</ins> the place where the
waters rose up and stood in a heap when our fathers under
Joshua were about to cross the river, thirty miles
below."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They crossed a brook which fell into the river; and
Joseph said, "Do you see this brook? Up there among
the mountains was the place where the prophet Elijah
was fed by the ravens; for this is the brook Cherith."</p>
<p>They came to the place just above Jericho where
under Joshua the Israelites walked across the dry bed
of the river, the holy ark carried by the priests in front
and the people following in a long procession. There
the river is very wide and quite shallow, so that people
walk across, except in the early spring, when it is swollen
by the rains and the melting snow on the high mountains
far to the north.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-098.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="308" alt="drawing" /> <span class="caption">The Temple of Herod restored by Fergusson. The covered portico on the left is the royal porch extending along the southern side of the Temple area. The colonnade running from left to right is Solomon's porch extending across the
eastern side of the area. The courts were much larger than as here shown. The Temple of Herod restored by Fergusson. The covered portico on the left is
the royal porch extending along the southern side of the Temple area. The
colonnade running from left to right is Solomon's porch extending across the
eastern side of the area. The courts were much larger than as here shown.</span></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-099.jpg" width-obs="410" height-obs="600" alt="painting" /> <span class="caption">At last his parents found Jesus in the Temple, the center of a company of learned scholars; he was asking questions of them and they were asking questions of him, while all around were people listening and wondering at
this boy's deep knowledge of the truth.</span></div>
<p>There they would point out across the river Mount
Nebo, where Moses stood looking upon the land and then
all alone lay down and died. They stopped for a rest at
Jericho, where were stories to tell of the walls that fell
down when the Israelites marched around them, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>
the priests blew their ram's-horn trumpets. Perhaps
they stopped and drank at the great spring near Jericho
where the water was made pure by Elisha the prophet.
And after a climb up to the mountains, at the end of six
days or a week, they came to Jerusalem, the end of their
journey, and the place called by the people "the holy
city."</p>
<p>And then, there was the splendid Temple of God!
How the boy's heart was stirred as he walked over the
bridge leading from Mount Zion to Mount Moriah!
They went into the great outside court, the court of the
Gentiles, the only place in the Temple where foreigners
were allowed to enter; and the boy Jesus was shocked
to see that it had been turned into a market, where
cattle and sheep and doves were sold, and where tables
stood around for the men who changed foreign money
into Jewish shekels.</p>
<p>Over the eastern wall and the Golden Gate, they
saw the Mount of Olives, then covered to the top with
vineyards and olive trees and gardens. They climbed
up a flight of steps and passed through a gate called
"the Beautiful Gate," into a smaller court, like the
outer court open to the sky. This was named "The
Court of the Women" because from its lattice-covered
gallery the women looked down on the altar and the
services of worship. Jesus noticed that in this Court of
the Women were many classes of young men studying,
seated in a circle, listening to their teachers. How he
longed to sit down among them and listen to these wise
scholars; for though only a boy, he had thought deeply
on many things which he had read, and many questions
had come to his mind which he greatly desired to have
answered. He saw the sacrifice offerings laid on the altar
and burned, while trumpets sounded and censers of incense
were waved and the priests chanted the psalms of David.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>While the family were in Jerusalem they found
friends with whom they stayed, and in their house the
Passover feast was eaten. It was a very simple meal,
just a roasted lamb, some vegetables and bread made
without yeast, in thin cakes, like soda biscuit, only larger.
They ate the meal
lying down on
couches around
the table, their
heads toward the
table, their feet
away from it. It
was the custom
or rule of the Jews,
at this feast, to
have the story of
the first Passover.
Perhaps Joseph
said to Jesus:</p>
<p>"My son, you
know what took
place when this
passover was
eaten for the first
time. Tell us the
story."</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-102.jpg" width-obs="371" height-obs="500" alt="photo" /> <span class="caption">David street, Jerusalem, looking toward Olivet</span></div>
<p>Then the boy
Jesus told of the
terrible plagues that fell upon the land of Egypt; of
the last and greatest sorrow, the death of the oldest
son in every house; how the Israelites sprinkled their
door-posts with the blood of the slain lamb and were
passed over by this death-angel; how they ate the lamb
on that night, dressed for their journey; and how they
went out of Egypt and marched through the Red Sea.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The family were in Jerusalem for a week, and every
day Jesus went up to the Temple to worship in its services
and to learn what he could from its teachers. The last
day of their visit came, and at its close the families
going to Galilee met together for their homeward journey.
A horn was blown and the caravan or company started
northward. Mary missed her son, but thought that he
was somewhere in the crowd, talking with other boys
of his own age. But when night came, the company
stopped to rest and Jesus did not appear. Mary was
alarmed. They looked through all the crowd, but no
Jesus was to be found.</p>
<p>Then in great trouble, Joseph and Mary hastened
back to Jerusalem, looking for their boy. They asked
for him among the friends at whose house they had stayed,
but he had not been there. They wandered up and
down the narrow streets, but while they saw many groups
of boys, their boy was not among them. At last, on the
third day, they looked for him in the Temple. In one
of its courts a crowd of people were listening to the
teachers who seemed to be talking with someone.
They drew near, and Mary's heart began to beat
as she suddenly heard a boy's voice sounding from
the middle of the throng. She knew that voice, in
its clear, rich, honest tone! She pressed her way
in; and there stood her boy, the center of a company
of the learned scholars. He was asking questions
of these men, and they in their answers were asking
him questions in turn, while all around were people
listening and wondering at this boy's deep knowledge of
the truth.</p>
<p>Mary hastily rushed up to Jesus, and said:</p>
<p>"My son, why have you treated us so unkindly?
Your father and I have been looking for you, in great
trouble, for three days!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Jesus looked up at his mother's face, with surprise,
and said:</p>
<p>"Why should you look for me? Did you not know
that I would be in my Father's house?"</p>
<p>Evidently on the last day of their stay, he had slipped
away for one more visit to the Temple; and once there
his mind and heart had been so full that no thought of
the home-going had come to him. He had just stayed
there in the courts of the Lord's house without a thought
of the outside world.</p>
<p>Where had he slept on those two nights? Who had
given him food during those three days? He might
have lain down, as thousands did during the feast, under
the olive trees on the Mount of Olives. Some stranger
may have seen him and invited him to a meal. But it
would not be strange if in his deep, whole-souled interest,
he had never thought of food and had eaten nothing
during those three days.</p>
<p>But without a word he took his mother's hand and
walked out of the Temple. He made the journey home
to Nazareth, saying little but thinking much of all that
he had seen and heard. One great, precious truth at
least had come home to his heart. He felt that the Lord
God of Israel was his own Father and he could trust
fully the Father God.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />