Jesus the Son of Man

JESUS THE SON OF MAN

His words and His deeds as told and recorded by those who knew Him

by Kahlil Gibran

 

CONTENTS

 

JAMES THE SON OF ZEBEDEE

 

      On the Kingdoms of the World

 

 

ANNA THE MOTHER OF MARY

 

      On the Birth of Jesus

 

 

ASSAPH CALLED THE ORATOR OF TYRE

 

      On the Speech of Jesus

 

 

MARY MAGDALEN

 

      On Meeting Jesus for the First Time

 

 

PHILEMON A GREEK APOTHECARY

 

      On Jesus the Master Physician

 

 

SIMON WHO WAS CALLED PETER

 

      When He and His Brother were Called

 

 

CAIAPHAS

 

      The High Priest

 

 

JOANNA THE WIFE OF HEROD'S STEWARD

 

      On Children

 

 

RAFCA

 

      The Bride of Cana

 

 

A PERSIAN PHILOSOPHER IN DAMASCUS

 

      Of Ancient Gods and New

 

 

DAVID ONE OF HIS FOLLOWERS

 

      Jesus the Practical

 

 

LUKE

 

      On Hypocrites

 

 

MATTHEW

 

      The Sermon on the Mount

 

 

JOHN THE SON OF ZEBEDEE

 

      On the Various Appellations of Jesus

 

 

A YOUNG PRIEST OF CAPERNAUM

 

      Of Jesus the Magician

 

 

A RICH LEVI IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD OF NAZARETH

 

      Jesus the Good Carpenter

 

 

A SHEPHERD IN SOUTH LEBANON

 

      A Parable

 

 

JOHN THE BAPTIST

 

      He Speaks in Prison to His Disciples

 

 

JOSEPH OF ARIMATHAEA

 

      On the Primal Jims of Jesus

 

 

NATHANIEL

 

      Jesus was not Meek

 

 

SABA OF ANTIOCH

 

      On Saul of Tarsus

 

 

SALOME TO A WOMAN FRIEND

 

      A Desire Unfulfilled

 

 

RACHAEL A WOMAN DISCIPLE

 

      On Jesus the Vision and the Man

 

 

CLEOPAS OF BETHROUNE

 

      On the Law and the Prophets

 

 

NAAMAN OF THE GADARENES

 

      On the Death of Stephen

 

 

THOMAS

 

      On the Forefathers of His Doubts

 

 

ELMADAM THE LOGICIAN

 

      Jesus the Outcast

 

 

ONE OF THE MARYS

 

      On His Sadness and His Smile

 

 

RUMANOUS A GREEK POET

 

      Jesus the Poet

 

 

LEVI A DISCIPLE

 

      On Those who would Confound Jesus

 

 

A WIDOW IN GALILEE

 

      Jesus the Cruel

 

 

JUDAS THE COUSIN OF JESUS

 

      On the Death of John the Baptist

 

 

THE MAN FROM THE DESERT

 

      On the Money-changers

 

 

PETER

 

      On the Morrow of His Followers

 

 

MELACHI OF BABYLON AN ASTRONOMER

 

      The Miracles of Jesus

 

 

A PHILOSOPHER

 

      On Wonder and Beauty

 

 

URIAH AN OLD MAN OF NAZARETH

 

      He was a Stranger in our Midst

 

 

NICODEMUS THE POET

 

      On Fools and Jugglers

 

 

JOSEPH OF ARIMATHAEA

 

      The Two Streams in Jesus' Heart

 

 

GEORGUS OF BEIRUT

 

      On Strangers

 

 

MARY MAGDALEN

 

      His Mouth was like the Heart of a Pomegranate

 

 

JOTHAM OF NAZARETH TO A ROMAN

 

      On Living and Being

 

 

EPHRAIM OF JERICHO

 

      The Other Wedding-Feast

 

 

BARCA A MERCHANT OF TYRE

 

      On Buying and Selling

 

 

PHUMIAH THE HIGH PRIESTESS OF SIDON

 

      An Invocation

 

 

BENJAMIN THE SCRIBE

 

      Let the Dead Bury Their Dead

 

 

ZACCHAEUS

 

      On the Fate of Jesus

 

 

JONATHAN

 

      Among the Water-lilies

 

 

HANNAH OF BETHSAIDA

 

      She Speaks of her Father's Sister

 

 

MANASSEH

 

      On the Speech and Gesture of Jesus

 

 

JEPHTHA OF CAESAREA

 

      A Man Weary of Jesus

 

 

JOHN THE BELOVED DISCIPLE

 

      On Jesus the Word

 

 

MANNUS THE POMPEIIAN TO A GREEK

 

      On the Semitic Deity

 

 

PONTIUS PILATUS

 

      Of Eastern Rites and Cults

 

 

BARTHOLOMEW IN EPHESUS

 

      On Slaves and Outcasts

 

 

MATTHEW

 

      On Jesus by a Prison Wall

 

 

ANDREW

 

      On Prostitutes

 

 

A RICH MAN

 

      On Possessions

 

 

JOHN AT PATMOS

 

      Jesus the Gracious

 

 

PETER

 

      On the Neighbour

 

 

A COBBLER IN JERUSALEM

 

      A Neutral

 

 

SUSANNAH OF NAZARETH

 

      Of the Youth and Manhood of Jesus

 

 

JOSEPH SURNAMED JUSTUS

 

      Jesus the Wayfarer

 

 

PHILIP

 

      And When He Died All Mankind Died

 

 

BIRBARAH OF YAMMOUNI

 

      On Jesus the Impatient

 

 

PILATE'S WIFE TO A ROMAN LADY

 

 

A MAN OUTSIDE OF JERUSALEM

 

      Of Judas

 

 

SARKIS AN OLD GREEK SHEPHERD CALLED THE MADMAN

 

      Jesus and Pan

 

 

ANNAS THE HIGH PRIEST

 

      On Jesus the Rabble

 

 

A WOMAN, ONE OF MARY'S NEIGHBOURS

 

      A Lamentation

 

 

AHAZ THE PORTLY

 

      The Keeper of the Inn

 

 

BARABBAS

 

      The Last Words of Jesus

 

 

CLAUDIUS A ROMAN SENTINEL

 

      Jesus the Stoic

 

 

JAMES THE BROTHER OF THE LORD

 

      The Last Supper

 

 

SIMON THE CYRENE

 

      He who Carried the Cross

 

 

CYBOREA

 

      The Mother of Judas

 

 

THE WOMAN OF BYBLOS

 

      A Lamentation

 

 

MARY MAGDALEN THIRTY YEARS LATER

 

      On the Resurrection of the Spirit

 

 

A MAN FROM LEBANON

 

      Nineteen Centuries Afterward

 

 

 

 

 

JAMES: THE SON OF ZEBEDEE

On the Kingdoms of the World

 

Upon a day in the spring of the year Jesus stood in the market-place of Jerusalem and He spoke to the multitudes of the kingdom of heaven.

 

 

And He accused the scribes and the Pharisees of setting snares and digging pitfalls in the path of those who long after the kingdom; and He denounced them.

 

 

Now amongst the crowd was a company of men who defended the Pharisees and the scribes, and they sought to lay hands upon Jesus and upon us also.

 

 

But He avoided them and turned aside from them, and walked towards the north gate of the city.

 

 

And He said to us, “My hour has not yet come. Many are the things I have still to say unto you, and many are the deeds I shall yet perform ere I deliver myself up to the world.”

 

 

Then He said, and there was joy and laughter in His voice, “Let us go into the North Country and meet the spring. Come with me to the hills, for winter is past and the snows of Lebanon are descending to the valleys to sing with the brooks.

 

 

“The fields and the vineyards have banished sleep and are awake to greet the sun with their green figs and tender grapes.”

 

 

And He walked before us and we followed Him, that day and the next.

 

 

And upon the afternoon of the third day we reached the summit of Mount Hermon, and there He stood looking down upon the cities of the plains.

 

 

And His face shone like molten gold, and He outstretched His arms and He said to us, “Behold the earth in her green raiment, and see how the streams have hemmed the edges of her garments with silver.

 

 

“In truth the earth is fair and all that is upon her is fair.

 

 

“But there is a kingdom beyond all that you behold, and therein I shall rule. And if it is your choice, and if it is indeed your desire, you too shall come and rule with me.

 

 

“My face and your faces shall not be masked; our hand shall hold neither sword nor sceptre, and our subjects shall love us in peace and shall not be in fear of us.”

 

 

Thus spoke Jesus, and unto all the kingdoms of the earth I was blinded, and unto all the cities of walls and towers; and it was in my heart to follow the Master to His kingdom.

 

 

Then just at that moment Judas of Iscariot stepped forth. And he walked up to Jesus, and spoke and said, “Behold, the kingdoms of the world are vast, and behold the cities of David and Solomon shall prevail against the Romans. If you will be the king of the Jews we shall stand beside you with sword and shield and we shall overcome the alien.”

 

 

But when Jesus heard this He turned upon Judas, and His face was filled with wrath. And He spoke in a voice terrible as the thunder of the sky and He said, “Get you behind me, Satan. Think you that I came down the years to rule an ant-hill for a day?

 

 

“My throne is a throne beyond your vision. Shall he whose wings encircle the earth seek shelter in a nest abandoned and forgotten?

 

 

“Shall the living be honoured and exalted by the wearer of shrouds?”

 

 

“My kingdom is not of this earth, and my seat is not builded upon the skulls of your ancestors.

 

 

“If you seek aught save the kingdom of the spirit then it were better for you to leave me here, and go down to the caves of your dead, where the crowned heads of yore hold court in their tombs and may still be bestowing honours upon the bones of your forefathers.

 

 

“Dare you tempt me with a crown of dross, when my forehead seeks the Pleiades, or else your thorns?

 

 

“Were it not for a dream dreamed by a forgotten race I would not suffer your sun to rise upon my patience, nor your moon to throw my shadow across your path.

 

 

“Were it not for a mother’s desire I would have stripped me of the swaddling-clothes and escaped back to space.

 

 

“And were it not for sorrow in all of you I would not have stayed to weep.

 

 

“Who are you and what are you, Judas Iscariot? And why do you tempt me?

 

 

“Have you in truth weighed me in the scale and found me one to lead legions of pygmies, and to direct chariots of the shapeless against an enemy that encamps only in your hatred and marches nowhere but in your fear?

 

 

“Too many are the worms that crawl about me feet, and I will give them no battle. I am weary of the jest, and weary of pitying the creepers who deem me coward because I will not move among their guarded walls and towers.

 

 

“Pity it is that I must needs pity to the very end. Would that I could turn my steps towards a larger world where larger men dwell. But how shall I?

 

 

“Your priest and your emperor would have my blood. They shall be satisfied ere I go hence. I would not change the course of the law. And I would not govern folly.

 

 

“Let ignorance reproduce itself until it is weary of its own offspring.

 

 

“Let the blind lead the blind to the pitfall.

 

 

“And let the dead bury the dead till the earth be choked with its own bitter fruit.

 

 

“My kingdom is not of the earth. My kingdom shall be where two or three of you shall meet in love, and in wonder at the loveliness of life, and in good cheer, and in remembrance of me.”

 

 

Then of a sudden He turned to Judas, and He said, “Get you behind me, man. Your kingdoms shall never be in my kingdom.”

 

 

 

And now it was twilight, and He turned to us and said, “Let us go down. The night is upon us. Let us walk in light while the light is with us.”

 

 

Then He went down from the hills and we followed Him. And Judas followed afar off.

 

 

And when we reached the lowland it was night.

 

 

And Thomas, the son of Diophanes, said unto Him, “Master, it is dark now, and we can no longer see the way. If it is in your will, lead us to the lights of yonder village where we may find meat and shelter.”

 

 

And Jesus answered Thomas, and He said, “I have led you to the heights when you were hungry, and I have brought you down to the plains with a greater hunger. But I cannot stay with you this night. I would be alone.”

 

 

Then Simon Peter stepped forth, and said:

 

 

Master, suffer us not to go alone in the dark. Grant that we may stay with you even here on this byway. The night and the shadows of the night will not linger, and the morning shall soon find us if you will but stay with us.”

 

 

And Jesus answered, “This night the foxes shall have their holes, and the birds of the air their nests, but the Son of Man has not where on earth to lay His head. And indeed I would now be alone. Should you desire me you will find me again by the lake where I found you.”

 

 

Then we walked away from Him with heavy hearts, for it was not in our will to leave Him.

 

 

Many times did we stop and turn our faces towards Him, and we saw him in lonely majesty, moving westward.

 

 

The only man among us who did not turn to behold Him in His aloneness was Judas Iscariot.

 

 

And from that day Judas became sullen and distant. And methought there was danger in the sockets of his eyes.

ANNA
THE MOTHER OF MARY

On the Birth of Jesus

 

Jesus the son of my daughter, was born here in Nazareth in the month of January. And the night that Jesus was born we were visited by men from the East. They were Persians who came to Esdraelon with the caravans of the Midianites on their way to Egypt.