<h2>The Young Woodworker</h2><div class="chaptertitle">CHAPTER 13</div>
<div class='cap'>FOR EIGHTEEN years after the visit to the Temple,
Jesus was living in Nazareth, growing up from a
boy to a young man. A Jewish boy generally left
his school at about thirteen years of age, and began
working at some trade or business. Jesus went into
Joseph's shop and helped in the work, making plows and
ax-handles and rakes and the plain furniture for the
houses. Whatever Jesus did was done well, and we
cannot doubt that in his trade he soon became a skilful
worker. His ax-handles and plows were as good as the
best; and if he made a bushel measure, it was a true
one, for Jesus was a boy that could be trusted.</div>
<p>As a boy, he was like other boys, playing happily in
play-time and working heartily in work-time. Some
boys like to be alone, reading and thinking and dreaming;
but Jesus was not one of that kind. All through his
life he liked to have people around him, and as a boy we
may be sure he had many friends among other boys.
He was strong, in good health, could run and jump and
climb trees. With his boy friends he wandered among
the mountains and upon the great plain just over the
hills from his town. The Sea of Galilee was only twenty
miles away, and we do not doubt that Jesus with his
friends went fishing in its blue waters and brought home
to his mother the fish which he had caught.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-106.jpg" width-obs="405" height-obs="600" alt="painting" /> <span class="caption">Jesus went into Joseph's shop and helped in the work, making plows and ax-handles and the plain furniture for the houses.</span></div>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-107.png" width-obs="327" height-obs="450" alt="drawing" /> <span class="caption">Tools of an oriental carpenter. 1, 3, 4. Drills. 2. Chisel. 5. Handle of a drill. 6. Nut held in the hand while the drill revolves. 7. Saw. 8.
Punch. 9. Horn of oil. 10. Mallet. 11. Bag
for nails. 11. Basket to hold tools.</span></div>
<p>After a time, Joseph, the husband of Mary, died,
and Jesus was left to care for his mother and her large
family of children. It is no light load for one just
coming out of boyhood and just beginning to be a man,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
to have laid upon him the earning of enough money to
buy food for a mother and at least six younger brothers
and sisters; and this was the load which the young
Jesus took up. But although Joseph who had been a
father to him was gone, Jesus knew that his heavenly
Father was still with
him, and he could
call upon him for
help in every need.</p>
<p>Jesus worked
hard all the long
days, but when the
Sabbath day came,
which among the
Jews was Saturday,
his shop was shut up
and he sat on the
floor of the village
church, listening to
the reading of the Old
Testament and joining
in the songs of
praise. He took his
turn as the reader
at the desk, and as
he read the lesson in
Isaiah or Micah or
Hosea, he saw meanings
in the verses that
others could not see, for in the long hours of the workshop
he was thinking and praying and listening to the voice
of God.</p>
<p>While Jesus was living this quiet life in the home and
the shop some changes were going on in the land. The
ruler in Galilee was Herod Antipas, the son of that wicked<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
Herod who killed all the babies in Bethlehem; and
he was very little better than his father. In Judea,
the part of the land around Jerusalem, Archelaus,
another son of Herod, ruled so badly that all the people
sent to the Emperor Tiberius at Rome asking to have
him taken away. The Jews hoped that they might then
have rulers of their own people; but the Emperor sent
them a Roman governor, whom they did not like but
dared not make angry. In many places through the
land, especially in Galilee, where Jesus was living, some
of the people refused to pay their taxes to the Roman
empire, and began fighting against the rulers. They
could not battle with the Roman armies, and hid in the
woods and caves and mountains, but came out in bands
and robbed the people on the roads. All through the
land, north and south, were fear and trouble. The
people were not contented with their rulers, and all
hoped that the time was near when the Kingdom of God
would come and their Roman officers and tax-gatherers
would be driven away. They looked for a kingdom like
the one over which David reigned a thousand years
before, a kingdom with armies and victories over its
enemies and a palace for the king.</p>
<p>But they did not know that in that little one-room
house on the hillside of Nazareth, the King was waiting
for his call to go forth and bring in the true Kingdom
of God.</p>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />