Thoughts From the Mount of Blessing
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 1: On the Mountainside
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With a feeling that something more than usual might be expected,
the disciples pressed about their Master.
Illustration ©
Pacific Press Publ. Assoc. |
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More than fourteen centuries before Jesus was born in
Bethlehem, the children of Israel gathered in the fair vale of Shechem, and
from the mountains on either side the voices of the priests were heard
proclaiming the blessings and the curses—"a blessing, if ye obey
the commandments of the Lord your God: . . . and a curse, if ye will
not obey." Deuteronomy 11:27, 28. And thus the mountain from which the
words of benediction were spoken came to be known as the mount of blessing. But
it was not upon Gerizim that the words were spoken which have come as a
benediction to a sinning and sorrowing world. Israel fell short of the high
ideal which had been set before her. Another than Joshua must guide His people
to the true rest of faith. No longer is Gerizim known as the mount of the
Beatitudes, but that unnamed mountain beside the Lake of Gennesaret, where
Jesus spoke the words of blessing to His disciples and the multitude. {MB 1.1}
Let us in imagination go back to that scene, and, as we sit
with the disciples on the mountainside, enter into the thoughts and feelings
that filled their hearts. Understanding what the words of Jesus meant to those
who heard them, we may discern in them a new vividness and beauty, and may also
gather for ourselves their deeper lessons. {MB 1.2}
When the Saviour began His ministry, the popular conception
of the Messiah and His work was such as wholly unfitted the people to receive
Him. The spirit [2] of true devotion had been lost in
tradition and ceremonialism, and the prophecies were interpreted at the dictate
of proud, world-loving hearts. The Jews looked for the coming One, not as a
Saviour from sin, but as a great prince who should bring all nations under the
supremacy of the Lion of the tribe of Judah. In vain had John the Baptist, with
the heart-searching power of the ancient prophets, called them to repentance.
In vain had he, beside the Jordan, pointed to Jesus as the Lamb of God, that
taketh away the sin of the world. God was seeking to direct their minds to
Isaiah's prophecy of the suffering Saviour, but they would not hear. {MB 1.3}
Had the teachers and leaders in Israel yielded to His transforming
grace, Jesus would have made them His ambassadors among men. In Judea first the
coming of the kingdom had been proclaimed, and the call to repentance had been
given. In the act of driving out the desecrators from the temple at Jerusalem,
Jesus had announced Himself as the Messiah—the One who should cleanse
the soul from the defilement of sin and make His people a holy temple unto the
Lord. But the Jewish leaders would not humble themselves to receive the lowly
Teacher from Nazareth. At His second visit to Jerusalem He was arraigned before
the Sanhedrin, and fear of the people alone prevented these dignitaries from
trying to take His life. Then it was that, leaving Judea, He entered upon His
ministry in Galilee. {MB
2.1}
His work there had continued some months before the Sermon
on the Mount was given. The message He had proclaimed throughout the land,
"The kingdom of [3] heaven is at hand" (Matthew
4:17), had arrested the attention of all classes, and had still further fanned
the flame of their ambitious hopes. The fame of the new Teacher had spread
beyond the limits of Palestine, and, notwithstanding the attitude of the
hierarchy, the feeling was widespread that this might be the hoped-for
Deliverer. Great multitudes thronged the steps of Jesus, and the popular
enthusiasm ran high. {MB
2.2}
The time had come for the disciples who had been most
closely associated with Christ to unite more directly in His work, that these
vast throngs might not be left uncared for, as sheep without a shepherd. Some of
these disciples had joined themselves to Him at the beginning of His ministry,
and nearly all the twelve had been associated together as members of the family
of Jesus. Yet they also, misled by the teaching of the rabbis, shared the
popular expectation of an earthly kingdom. They could not comprehend the
movements of Jesus. Already they had been perplexed and troubled that He made
no effort to strengthen His cause by securing the support of the priests and
rabbis, that He did nothing to establish His authority as an earthly king. A
great work was yet to be accomplished for these disciples before they would be
prepared for the sacred trust that would be theirs when Jesus should ascend to
heaven. Yet they had responded to the love of Christ, and, though slow of heart
to believe, Jesus saw in them those whom He could train and discipline for His
great work. And now that they had been long enough with Him to establish, in a
measure, their faith in the divine character of His mission, and the people
also had received evidence of His power which they could not [4]
question, the way was prepared for an avowal of the principles of His kingdom
that would help them to comprehend its true nature. {MB 3.1}
Alone upon a mountain near the Sea of Galilee, Jesus had
spent all night in prayer for these chosen ones. At the dawn He called them to
Him, and, with words of prayer and instruction, laid His hands upon their heads
in benediction, setting them apart to the gospel work. Then He repaired with
them to the seaside, where in the early morning a great multitude had already
begun to assemble. {MB
4.1}
Besides the usual crowd from the Galilean towns, there were
great numbers from Judea, and from Jerusalem itself; from Perea, and from the
half-heathen population of Decapolis; from Idumea, away to the south of Judea,
and from Tyre and Sidon, the Phoenician cities on the shore of the
Mediterranean. "Hearing what great things He did," they "came to
hear Him, and to be healed of their diseases; and . . . power came
forth from Him, and healed them all." Mark 3:8, R.V.; Luke 6:17-19, R.V. {MB 4.2}
Then, as the narrow beach did not afford even standing room
within reach of His voice for all who desired to hear Him, Jesus led the way
back to the mountainside. Reaching a level space that afforded a pleasant
gathering place for the vast assembly, He seated Himself upon the grass, and
His disciples and the multitude followed His example. {MB 4.3}
With a feeling that something more than usual might be
expected, the disciples had pressed about their Master. From the events of the
morning they gathered assurance that some announcement was [5] about to
be made in regard to the kingdom which, as they fondly hoped, He was soon to
establish. A feeling of expectancy pervaded the multitude also, and eager faces
gave evidence of the deep interest. {MB 4.4}
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As they sat upon the green hillside, awaiting the words of
the divine Teacher, their hearts were filled with thoughts of future glory.
There were scribes and Pharisees who looked forward to the day when they should
have dominion over the hated Romans and possess the riches and splendor of the
world's great empire. The poor peasants and fishermen hoped to hear the
assurance that their wretched hovels, the scanty food, the life of toil, and
fear of want, were to be exchanged for mansions of plenty and days of ease. In
place of the one coarse garment which was their covering by day and their
blanket at night, they hoped that Christ would give them the rich and costly
robes of their conquerors. {MB
5.1}
All hearts thrilled with the proud hope that Israel was soon
to be honored before the nations as the chosen of the Lord, and Jerusalem
exalted as the head of a universal kingdom. {MB 5.2}
Click here to read the next chapter:
"The Beatitudes"
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