Boyhood deeds of our Lord Jesus Christ / Estimated Range of Dating: 140-170 C.E. 1 I, Thomas the Israelite, am reporting to you, all my non-Jewish brothers and sisters, to make known the extraordinary childhood deeds of our Lord Jesus Christ - what he did after his birth in my region. This is how it all started: 2 When this boy, Jesus, was five years old, he was playing at the
ford of a rushing stream. (2) He was collecting the flowing water into
ponds and made the water instantly pure. He did this with a single
command. (3) He then made soft clay and shaped it into twelve sparrows.
He did this on the sabbath day, and many other boys were playing
with him.
3 The son of Annas the scholar, standing there with Jesus, took a
willow branch and drained the water Jesus had collected. (2)Jesus,
however, saw what had happened and became angry, saying to him, "Damn
you, you irreverent fool! What harm did the ponds of water do to you?
From this moment you, too, will dry up like a tree, and you'll never
produce leaves or root or bear fruit."
4 Later he was going through the village again when a boy ran and
bumped him on the shoulder. Jesus got angry and said to him, "You
won't continue your journey." (2)And all of a sudden, he fell down
and died.
5 So Joseph summoned his child and admonished him in private, saying, "Why are you doing all this? These people are suffering and so they hate and harass us." (2)Jesus said, "I know that these are not your words, still, I'll keep quiet for your sake. But those people must take their punishment." There and then his accusers became blind. (3)Those who saw this became very fearful and at a loss. All they could say was, "Every word he says, whether good or bad, has became a deed - a miracle even!" (4)When Joseph saw that Jesus had done such a thing, he got angry and grabbed his ear and pulled very hard. (5)The bot became infuriated with him and replied, "It's one thing for you to seek and not find; it's quite another for you to act this unwisely. (6)Don't you know that I don't really belong to you? Don't make me upset." 6 A teacher by the name of Zacchaeus was listening to everything
Jesus was saying to Joseph, and was astonished, saying to himself,
"He is just a child, and saying this!" (2)And so he summoned Joseph
and said to him, "You have a bright child, and he has a good mind.
Hand him over to me so he can learn his letters. I'll teach him
everything he needs to know so as not to be unruly."
(3)Joseph replied, "No one is able to rule this child except God alone.
Don't consider him to be a small cross, brother."
(4)When Jesus heard Joseph saying this he laughed and said to Zacchaeus,
"Believe me, teacher, what my father told you is true. (5)I am the
Lord of these people and I'm present with you and have been born among
you and am with you. (6)I know where you've come from and how many
years you'll live. I swear to you, teacher, I existed when you were
born. If you wish to be a perfect teacher, listen to me and I'll
teach you a wisdom that no one else knows except for me and the one
who sent me to you. (7)It's you who happens to be my student, and
I know how old you are and how long you have to live. (8)When you
see the cross that my father mentioned, then you'll believe that
everything I've told you is true."
(9)The Jews who were standing by and heard Jesus marveled and said,
"How strange and paradoxical! This child is barely five years old
and yet he says such things. In fact, we've never heard anyone say
the kind of thing this child does."
(11)The Jews, once they heard that the child was speaking like this, became angry but were unable to say anything in reply. (12)But the child skipped forward and said to them, "I've made fun of you because I know that your tiny minds marvel at trifles." (13)When, therefore, they thought that they were being comforted by the child's exhortation, the teacher said to Joseph, "Bring him to the classroom and I'll teach him the alphabet." (14)Joseph took him by the hand and led him to the classroom. (15)The teacher wrote the alphabet for him and began the instruction by repeating the letter alpha many times. But the child was quiet and did not answer him for a long time. (16)No wonder, then, that the teacher got angry and struck him on the head. The child took the blow calmly and replied to him, "I'm teaching you rather than you're teaching me, and your condemnation is great. To you these letters are like a bronze pitcher or a clashing cymbal, which can't produce glory or wisdom because it's all just noise. (17)Nor does anyone understand the extent of my wisdom." (18)When he got over being angry he recited the letters from alpha to omega very quickly. (19)Then he looked at the teacher and told him, "Since you don't know the real nature of the letter alpha, how are you going to teach the letter beta? (20)You impostor, if you know, teach me first the letter alpha and then I'll trust you with the letter beta." (21)He began to quiz the teacher about the first letter, but he was unable to say anything. (22)Then while many were listening, he said to Zacchaeus, "Listen, teacher, and observe the arrangement of the first letter: (23)How it has two straight lines or strokes proceeding to a point in the middle, gathered together, elevated, dancing, three-cornered, two-cornered, not antagonistic, of the same family, providing the alpha has lines of equal measure." 7 After Zacchaeus the teacher had heard the child expressing such intricate allegories regarding the first letter, he despaired of defending his teaching. (2)He spoke to those who were present: "Poor me, I'm utterly bewildered, wretch that I am. I've heaped shame on myself because I took on this child. (3)So take him away, I beg you, brother Joseph. I can't endure the severity of his look or his lucid speech. (4)This child is no ordinary mortal; he can even tame fire! Perhaps he was born before the creation of the world. (5)What sort of womb bore him, what sort of mother nourished him? -I don't know. (6)Poor me, friend, I've lost my mind. (7)I've decided myself, I who am wholly wretched. I strove to get a student, and I've been found to have a teacher. (8)Friends, I think of the shame, because, although I'm an old man, I've been defeated by a mere child. (9)And so I can only despair and die on account of this child; right now I can't look him in the face. (10)When everybody says that I've been defeated by a small child, what can I say? And what can I report about the lines of the first letter which he told me about? I just don't know, friends. For I don't know its beginning or its end. (11)Therefore, I ask you, brother Joseph, take him back to your house. What great thing he is - god or angel or whatever else I might call him - I don't know." 8 While the Jews were advising Zacchaeus, the child laughed loudly
and said, "Now let the infertile bear fruit and the blind see and the
deaf in the understanding of their heart hear: (2)I've come from
above so that I might save those who are below and summon them to
higher things, just as the one who sent me to you commanded me."
9 A few days later Jesus was playing on the roof of a house when
one of the children playing with him fell off the roof and died. When
the other children saw what had happened, they fled, leaving Jesus
standing all by himself.
10 A few days later a young man was splitting wood in the
neighborhood when his axe slipped and cut off the bottom of his foot.
He was dying from the loss of blood.
11 When he was six years old, his mother sent him to draw water
and bring it back to the house. (2)But he lost his grip on the picture
in the jostling of the crowd, and it fell and broke. (3)So Jesus spread
out the cloak he was wearing and filled it with water and carried it
back to his mother.
12 Again, during the sowing season, the child went out with his father to sow their field with grain. While his father was sowing, the child Jesus sowed one measure of grain. (2)When he had harvested and threshed it, it yielded one hundred measures. (3)Then he summoned all the poor in the village to the threshing floor and gave them grain. Joseph carried back what was left of the grain. (4)Jesus was eight years old when he did this miracle. 13 Now Jesus' father was a carpenter, making ploughs and yokes at
that time. He received an order from a rich man to make a bed for him.
(2)When one board of what is called the crossbeam turned out to be
shorter than the other, and Joseph didn't know what to do, the child
Jesus said to his father, "Put the two boards down and line them up
at one end."
14 When Joseph saw the child's aptitude, and his great intelligence
for his age, he again resolved that Jesus should not remain
illiterate. So he took him and handed him over to another teacher.
(2)The teacher said to Joseph, "First I'll teach him Greek, then Hebrew."
This teacher, of course, knew of the child's previous experience (with
a teacher) and was afraid of him. Still, he wrote out the alphabet and
instructed him for quite a while, though Jesus was unresponsive.
15 After some time another teacher, a close friend of Joseph, said
to him, "Send the child to my schoolroom. Perhaps with some flattery
I can teach him his letters."
16 Joseph sent James to tie up some wood and carry it back to the house, and the child Jesus followed. While James was gathering the firewood, a viper bit his hand. (2)And as he lay sprawled out on the ground, dying, Jesus came and blew on the bite. Immediately the pain stopped, the animal burst apart, and James got better on the spot. 17 After this incident an infant in Joseph's neighborhood became
sick and died, and his mother grieved terribly. Jesus heard the loud
wailing and the uproar that was going on and quickly ran there.
(3)And immediately the infant looked up and laughed. Jesus then
said to the woman, "Take it, give it your breast, and remember me."
18 A year later, while a building was under construction, a man
fell from the top of it and died. There was quite a commotion, so
Jesus got up and went there. (2)When he saw the man lying dead, he
took his hand and said, "I say to you, sir, get up and go back to
work." And he immediately got up and worshipped him.
19 When he was twelve years old his parents went to Jerusalem, as
usual, for the Passover festival, along with the their fellow travelers.
(2)After Passover they began the journey home. But while on their way,
the child Jesus went back up to Jerusalem. His parents, of course,
assumed that he was in the traveling party. (3)After they had traveled
one day, they began to look for him among their relatives. When they
did not find him, they were worried and returned again to the city to
search for him.
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