English:
Identifier: jesusofnazarethh00abbo (find matches)
Title: Jesus of Nazareth: His life and teachings; founded on the four Gospels, and illustrated by reference to the manners, customs, religious beliefs, and political institutions of His times
Year: 1869 (1860s)
Authors: Abbott, Lyman, 1835-1922
Subjects: Jesus Christ
Publisher: New York, Harper
Contributing Library: New York Public Library
Digitizing Sponsor: MSN
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te sliould be pleased, every ap-petite satisfied, and the prolific profusion of the Garden ofEden should repeat itself in the land of the Messiah.f Theseprophecies of their scribes, with which constant repetitionin the synagogue had rendered the common people familiar,seemed to them about to be fulfilled. This provision for thebody was more significant than all that which Christ hadprovided for the soul. Their enthusiasm overcoming allbounds, the people prepared forthwith to crown this prince,and, taking him in their arms, bear him at the head of a tri-umphal procession into the Holy City, in the midst of thePassover feast, to overturn by a miracle the power of Rome,and inaugurate the new kingdom of God. The disciples, stillbut little comprehending the nature of that kingdom, wei-ebut too ready to farther the plan and fan the wild enthusi-asm. Christ instantly perceived, and as instantly frustrated * Isaiah Ixv., 13. t See authorities quoted in Milmans History of Christianity, p. 103.
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Mar., A.D.33.) WALKING ON THE WAVE. 313 their purpose. He commanded his reluctant disciples to taketo their boat, and set these people the example of dispersing.He overcame their unwillingness to leave him in these moun-tain solitudes alone by the promise to join them at the mouthof the Jordan, just below Bethsaida. Then, bidding the peo-ple to depart, he withdrew himself for an hour of repose andof communion with his God in the mountain solitudes ofthe Jaulan.* The discij^les had not gone far, and darkness had just gath-ered about them, when one of those sudden gusts which theLebanon range sends so frequently down the valley of theJordan struck the lake, and, despite the utmost efforts of theoarsmen, drove their boat far out to sea.f Instead of reach-ing Bethsaida, as they should have done, in an hour or two,midnight found them rowing against a head wind and overboisterous waves to make good their appointment with theirLord. When even the gray morning brokej their boat wasstill out u
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