It is unlikely that a ministry of healing had any part in the early plans of Jesus. His mission was essentially spiritual. He felt himself called to lead men into a certain quality of life, and believed that such a life would end all human ills. Such was his interpretation of the current hope of the kingdom of God. He had grown up with the hope. The thought of the coming of the kingdom was the very atmosphere of the pious souls of Nazareth. The doing of God's will on earth as it is done in heaven became the passion and prayer of his life. It may have been early that Jesus came to the profound realization that in himself, in his motives, in his attitude toward others, in all his ambitions and endeavors, God's will was actually being done. He must have seen that the hopes of the kingdom could be fulfilled if men would be to God what he was, and would live with one another as he lived. The physical ills that distressed men would largely disappear when human relations were thus rectified, and God's goodness would supply all needs when-right spiritual adjustments had been made. Seek ye first the Kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you.