The Desire of Ages
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 26: At Capernaum
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From among the people, a madman cried, "Let us alone;
what have we to do with Thee, Thou Jesus of Nazareth?"
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At Capernaum Jesus dwelt in the intervals of His journeys to
and fro, and it came to be known as "His own city." It was on the
shores of the Sea of Galilee, and near the borders of the beautiful plain of
Gennesaret, if not actually upon it. {DA 252.1}
The deep depression of the lake gives to the plain that
skirts its shores the genial climate of the south. Here in the days of Christ
flourished the palm tree and the olive, here were orchards and vineyards, green
fields, and brightly blooming flowers in rich luxuriance, all watered by living
streams bursting from the cliffs. The shores of the lake, and the hills that at
a little distance encircle it, were dotted with towns and villages. The lake
was covered with fishing boats. Everywhere was the stir of busy, active life. {DA 252.2}
Capernaum itself was well adapted to be the center of the
Saviour's work. Being on the highway from Damascus to Jerusalem and Egypt, and
to the Mediterranean Sea, it was a great thoroughfare of travel. People from
many lands passed through the city, or tarried for rest in their journeyings to
and fro. Here Jesus could meet all nations and all ranks, the rich and great as
well as the poor and lowly, and His lessons would be carried to other countries
and into many households. [253] Investigation of the prophecies
would thus be excited, attention would be directed to the Saviour, and His
mission would be brought before the world. {DA 252.3}
Notwithstanding the action of the Sanhedrin against Jesus,
the people eagerly awaited the development of His mission. All heaven was astir
with interest. Angels were preparing the way for His ministry, moving upon
men's hearts, and drawing them to the Saviour. {DA 253.1}
In Capernaum the nobleman's son whom Christ had healed was a
witness to His power. And the court official and his household joyfully
testified of their faith. When it was known that the Teacher Himself was among
them, the whole city was aroused. Multitudes flocked to His presence. On the
Sabbath the people crowded the synagogue until great numbers had to turn away,
unable to find entrance. {DA
253.2}
All who heard the Saviour "were astonished at His
doctrine: for His word was with power." "He taught them as one having
authority, and not as the scribes." Luke 4:32; Matthew 7:29. The teaching
of the scribes and elders was cold and formal, like a lesson learned by rote.
To them the word of God possessed no vital power. Their own ideas and
traditions were substituted for its teaching. In the accustomed round of service
they professed to explain the law, but no inspiration from God stirred their
own hearts or the hearts of their hearers. {DA 253.3}
Jesus had nothing to do with the various subjects of
dissension among the Jews. It was His work to present the truth. His words shed
a flood of light upon the teachings of patriarchs and prophets, and the
Scriptures came to men as a new revelation. Never before had His hearers
perceived such a depth of meaning in the word of God. {DA 253.4}
Jesus met the people on their own ground, as one who was
acquainted with their perplexities. He made truth beautiful by presenting it in
the most direct and simple way. His language was pure, refined, and clear as a
running stream. His voice was as music to those who had listened to the monotonous
tones of the rabbis. But while His teaching was simple, He spoke as one having
authority. This characteristic set His teaching in contrast with that of all
others. The rabbis spoke with doubt and hesitancy, as if the Scriptures might
be interpreted to mean one thing or exactly the opposite. The hearers were
daily involved in greater uncertainty. But Jesus taught the Scriptures as of
unquestionable authority. Whatever His subject, it was presented with power, as
if His words could not be controverted. [254] {DA 253.5}
Yet He was earnest, rather than vehement. He spoke as one
who had a definite purpose to fulfill. He was bringing to view the realities of
the eternal world. In every theme God was revealed. Jesus sought to break the
spell of infatuation which keeps men absorbed in earthly things. He placed the
things of this life in their true relation, as subordinate to those of eternal
interest; but He did not ignore their importance. He taught that heaven and
earth are linked together, and that a knowledge of divine truth prepares men
better to perform the duties of everyday life. He spoke as one familiar with
heaven, conscious of His relationship to God, yet recognizing His unity with
every member of the human family. {DA 254.1}
His messages of mercy were varied to suit His audience. He
knew "how to speak a word in season to him that is weary" (Isaiah
50:4); for grace was poured upon His lips, that He might convey to men in the
most attractive way the treasures of truth. He had tact to meet the prejudiced
minds, and surprise them with illustrations that won their attention. Through
the imagination He reached the heart. His illustrations were taken from the
things of daily life, and although they were simple, they had in them a
wonderful depth of meaning. The birds of the air, the lilies of the field, the
seed, the shepherd and the sheep,—with these objects Christ
illustrated immortal truth; and ever afterward, when His hearers chanced to see
these things of nature, they recalled His words. Christ's illustrations
constantly repeated His lessons. {DA 254.2}
Christ never flattered men. He never spoke that which would
exalt their fancies and imaginations, nor did He praise them for their clever
inventions; but deep, unprejudiced thinkers received His teaching, and found
that it tested their wisdom. They marveled at the spiritual truth expressed in
the simplest language. The most highly educated were charmed with His words,
and the uneducated were always profited. He had a message for the illiterate; and
He made even the heathen to understand that He had a message for them. {DA 254.3}
His tender compassion fell with a touch of healing upon
weary and troubled hearts. Even amid the turbulence of angry enemies He was
surrounded with an atmosphere of peace. The beauty of His countenance, the
loveliness of His character, above all, the love expressed in look and tone,
drew to Him all who were not hardened in unbelief. Had it not been for the
sweet, sympathetic spirit that shone out in every look and word, He would not
have attracted the large congregations that He did. The afflicted ones who came
to Him felt that He linked His [255] interest with theirs as a
faithful and tender friend, and they desired to know more of the truths He
taught. Heaven was brought near. They longed to abide in His presence, that the
comfort of His love might be with them continually. {DA 254.4}
Jesus watched with deep earnestness the changing
countenances of His hearers. The faces that expressed interest and pleasure
gave Him great satisfaction. As the arrows of truth pierced to the soul,
breaking through the barriers of selfishness, and working contrition, and
finally gratitude, the Saviour was made glad. When His eye swept over the
throng of listeners, and He recognized among them the faces He had before seen,
His countenance lighted up with joy. He saw in them hopeful subjects for His
kingdom. When the truth, plainly spoken, touched some cherished idol, He marked
the change of countenance, the cold, forbidding look, which told that the light
was unwelcome. When He saw men refuse the message of peace, His heart was
pierced to the very depths. {DA
255.1}
Jesus in the synagogue spoke of the kingdom He had come to
establish, and of His mission to set free the captives of Satan. He was interrupted
by a shriek of terror. A madman rushed forward from among the people, crying
out, "Let us alone; what have we to do with Thee, Thou Jesus of Nazareth?
art Thou come to destroy us? I know Thee who Thou art; the Holy One of
God." {DA 255.2}
All was now confusion and alarm. The attention of the people
was diverted from Christ, and His words were unheeded. This was Satan's purpose
in leading his victim to the synagogue. But Jesus rebuked the demon, saying,
"Hold thy peace, and come out of him. And when the devil had thrown him in
the midst, he came out of him, and hurt him not." {DA 255.3}
The mind of this wretched sufferer had been darkened by
Satan, but in the Saviour's presence a ray of light had pierced the gloom. He
was roused to long for freedom from Satan's control; but the demon resisted the
power of Christ. When the man tried to appeal to Jesus for help, the evil
spirit put words into his mouth, and he cried out in an agony of fear. The
demoniac partially comprehended that he was in the presence of One who could
set him free; but when he tried to come within reach of that mighty hand,
another's will held him, another's words found utterance through him. The
conflict between the power of Satan and his own desire for freedom was
terrible. [256] {DA 255.4}
He who had conquered Satan in the wilderness of temptation
was again brought face to face with His enemy. The demon exerted all his power
to retain control of his victim. To lose ground here would be to give Jesus a
victory. It seemed that the tortured man must lose his life in the struggle
with the foe that had been the ruin of his manhood. But the Saviour spoke with
authority, and set the captive free. The man who had been possessed stood
before the wondering people happy in the freedom of self-possession. Even the
demon had testified to the divine power of the Saviour. {DA 256.1}
The man praised God for his deliverance. The eye that had so
lately glared with the fire of insanity, now beamed with intelligence, and
overflowed with grateful tears. The people were dumb with amazement. As soon as
they recovered speech they exclaimed, one to another, "What is this? a new
teaching! with authority He commandeth even the unclean spirits, and they obey
Him." Mark 1:27, R. V. {DA
256.2}
The secret cause of the affliction that had made this man a
fearful spectacle to his friends and a burden to himself was in his own life.
He had been fascinated by the pleasures of sin, and had thought to make life a
grand carnival. He did not dream of becoming a terror to the world and the
reproach of his family. He thought his time could be spent in innocent folly.
But once in the downward path, his feet rapidly descended. Intemperance and
frivolity perverted the noble attributes of his nature, and Satan took absolute
control of him. {DA 256.3}
Remorse came too late. When he would have sacrificed wealth
and pleasure to regain his lost manhood, he had become helpless in the grasp of
the evil one. He had placed himself on the enemy's ground, and Satan had taken
possession of all his faculties. The tempter had allured him with many charming
presentations; but when once the wretched man was in his power, the fiend
became relentless in his cruelty, and terrible in his angry visitations. So it
will be with all who yield to evil; the fascinating pleasure of their early
career ends in the darkness of despair or the madness of a ruined soul. {DA 256.4}
The same evil spirit that tempted Christ in the wilderness,
and that possessed the maniac of Capernaum, controlled the unbelieving Jews. But
with them he assumed an air of piety, seeking to deceive them as to their
motives in rejecting the Saviour. Their condition was more hopeless than that
of the demoniac, for they felt no need of Christ and were therefore held fast
under the power of Satan. [257] {DA 256.5}
The period of Christ's personal ministry among men was the
time of greatest activity for the forces of the kingdom of darkness. For ages
Satan with his evil angels had been seeking to control the bodies and the souls
of men, to bring upon them sin and suffering; then he had charged all this
misery upon God. Jesus was revealing to men the character of God. He was
breaking Satan's power, and setting his captives free. New life and love and
power from heaven were moving upon the hearts of men, and the prince of evil
was aroused to contend for the supremacy of his kingdom. Satan summoned all his
forces, and at every step contested the work of Christ. {DA 257.1}
So it will be in the great final conflict of the controversy
between righteousness and sin. While new life and light and power are
descending from on high upon the disciples of Christ, a new life is springing
up from beneath, and energizing the agencies of Satan. Intensity is taking
possession of every earthly element. With a subtlety gained through centuries
of conflict, the prince of evil works under a disguise. He appears clothed as
an angel of light, and multitudes are "giving heed to seducing spirits,
and doctrines of devils." 1 Timothy 4:1. {DA 257.2}
In the days of Christ the leaders and teachers of Israel
were powerless to resist the work of Satan. They were neglecting the only means
by which they could have withstood evil spirits. It was by the word of God that
Christ overcame the wicked one. The leaders of Israel professed to be the
expositors of God's word, but they had studied it only to sustain their
traditions, and enforce their man-made observances. By their interpretation
they made it express sentiments that God had never given. Their mystical
construction made indistinct that which He had made plain. They disputed over
insignificant technicalities, and practically denied the most essential truths.
Thus infidelity was sown broadcast. God's word was robbed of its power, and
evil spirits worked their will. [258] {DA 257.3}
History is repeating. With the open Bible before them, and
professing to reverence its teachings, many of the religious leaders of our
time are destroying faith in it as the word of God. They busy themselves with
dissecting the word, and set their own opinions above its plainest statements.
In their hands God's word loses its regenerating power. This is why infidelity
runs riot, and iniquity is rife. {DA 258.1}
When Satan has undermined faith in the Bible, he directs men
to other sources for light and power. Thus he insinuates himself. Those who
turn from the plain teaching of Scripture and the convicting power of God's
Holy Spirit are inviting the control of demons. Criticism and speculation
concerning the Scriptures have opened the way for spiritism and theosophy—those
modernized forms of ancient heathenism—to gain a foothold even in the
professed churches of our Lord Jesus Christ. {DA 258.2}
Side by side with the preaching of the gospel, agencies are
at work which are but the medium of lying spirits. Many a man tampers with
these merely from curiosity, but seeing evidence of the working of a more than
human power, he is lured on and on, until he is controlled by a will stronger
than his own. He cannot escape from its mysterious power. {DA 258.3}
The defenses of the soul are broken down. He has no barrier
against sin. When once the restraints of God's word and His Spirit are
rejected, no man knows to what depths of degradation he may sink. Secret sin or
master passion may hold him a captive as helpless as was the demoniac of
Capernaum. Yet his condition is not hopeless. {DA 258.4}
The means by which we can overcome the wicked one is that by
which Christ overcame,—the power of the word. God does not control
our minds without our consent; but if we desire to know and to do His will, His
promises are ours: "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you
free." "If any man willeth to do His will, he shall know of the
teaching." John 8:32; 7:17, R. V. Through faith in these promises, every
man may be delivered from the snares of error and the control of sin. {DA 258.5}
Every man is free to choose what power he will have to rule
over him. None have fallen so low, none are so vile, but that they can find
deliverance in Christ. The demoniac, in place of prayer, could utter only the
words of Satan; yet the heart's unspoken appeal was heard. No cry from a soul
in need, though it fail of utterance in words, will be unheeded. Those who will
consent to enter into covenant relation with the God of heaven are not left to
the power of Satan or to the infirmity of their own [259]
nature. They are invited by the Saviour, "Let him take hold of My
strength, that he may make peace with Me; and he shall make peace with
Me." Isaiah 27:5. The spirits of darkness will battle for the soul once
under their dominion, but angels of God will contend for that soul with
prevailing power. The Lord says, "Shall the prey be taken from the mighty,
or the lawful captive delivered? . . . Thus saith the Lord, Even the
captives of the mighty shall be taken away, and the prey of the terrible shall
be delivered: for I will contend with him that contendeth with thee, and I will
save thy children." Isaiah 49:24, 25. {DA 258.6}
While the congregation in the synagogue were still
spellbound with awe, Jesus withdrew to the home of Peter for a little rest. But
here also a shadow had fallen. The mother of Peter's wife lay sick, stricken
with a "great fever." Jesus rebuked the disease, and the sufferer
arose, and ministered to the wants of the Master and His disciples. {DA 259.1}
Tidings of the work of Christ spread rapidly throughout
Capernaum. For fear of the rabbis, the people dared not come for healing upon
the Sabbath; but no sooner had the sun disappeared below the horizon than there
was a great commotion. From the homes, the shops, the market places, the
inhabitants of the city pressed toward the humble dwelling that sheltered
Jesus. The sick were brought upon couches, they came leaning upon staffs, or,
supported by friends, they tottered feebly into the Saviour's presence. {DA 259.2}
Hour after hour they came and went; for none could know
whether tomorrow would find the Healer still among them. Never before had
Capernaum witnessed a day like this. The air was filled with the voice of
triumph and shouts of deliverance. The Saviour was joyful in the joy He had
awakened. As He witnessed the sufferings of those who had come to Him, His
heart was stirred with sympathy, and He rejoiced in His power to restore them
to health and happiness. {DA
259.3}
Not until the last sufferer had been relieved did Jesus
cease His work. It was far into the night when the multitude departed, and
silence settled down upon the home of Simon. The long, exciting day was past,
and Jesus sought rest. But while the city was still wrapped in slumber, the
Saviour, "rising up a great while before day, . . . went out,
and departed into a solitary place, and there prayed." {DA 259.4}
Thus were spent the days in the earthly life of Jesus. He
often dismissed His disciples to visit their homes and rest; but He gently
resisted their efforts to draw Him away from His labors. All day He toiled, [260]
teaching the ignorant, healing the sick, giving sight to the blind, feeding the
multitude; and at the eventide or in the early morning, He went away to the
sanctuary of the mountains for communion with His Father. Often He passed the
entire night in prayer and meditation, returning at daybreak to His work among
the people. {DA 259.5}
Early in the morning, Peter and his companions came to
Jesus, saying that already the people of Capernaum were seeking Him. The
disciples had been bitterly disappointed at the reception which Christ had met
hitherto. The authorities at Jerusalem were seeking to murder Him; even His own
townsmen had tried to take His life; but at Capernaum He was welcomed with
joyful enthusiasm, and the hopes of the disciples kindled anew. It might be
that among the liberty-loving Galileans were to be found the supporters of the
new kingdom. But with surprise they heard Christ's words, "I must preach
the kingdom of God to other cities also: for therefore am I sent." {DA 260.1}
In the excitement which then pervaded Capernaum, there was
danger that the object of His mission would be lost sight of. Jesus was not
satisfied to attract attention to Himself merely as a wonder worker or a healer
of physical diseases. He was seeking to draw men to Him as their Saviour. While
the people were eager to believe that He had come as a king, to establish an
earthly reign, He desired to turn their minds away from the earthly to the
spiritual. Mere worldly success would interfere with His work. {DA 260.2}
And the wonder of the careless crowd jarred upon His spirit.
In His life no self-assertion mingled. The homage which the world gives to
position, or wealth, or talent, was foreign to the Son of man. None of the
means that men employ to win allegiance or command homage did Jesus use.
Centuries before His birth, it had been prophesied of Him, [261]
"He shall not cry, nor lift up, nor cause His voice to be heard in the
street. A bruised reed shall He not break, and the dimly burning flax shall He
not quench: He shall bring forth judgment unto truth. He shall not fail nor be
discouraged, till He have set judgment in the earth." Isaiah 42:2-4,
margin. {DA 260.3}
The Pharisees sought distinction by their scrupulous
ceremonialism, and the ostentation of their worship and charities. They proved
their zeal for religion by making it the theme of discussion. Disputes between
opposing sects were loud and long, and it was not unusual to hear on the
streets the voice of angry controversy from learned doctors of the law. {DA 261.1}
In marked contrast to all this was the life of Jesus. In
that life no noisy disputation, no ostentatious worship, no act to gain
applause, was ever witnessed. Christ was hid in God, and God was revealed in
the character of His Son. To this revelation Jesus desired the minds of the
people to be directed, and their homage to be given. {DA 261.2}
The Sun of Righteousness did not burst upon the world in
splendor, to dazzle the senses with His glory. It is written of Christ,
"His going forth is prepared as the morning." Hosea 6:3. Quietly and
gently the daylight breaks upon the earth, dispelling the shadow of darkness,
and waking the world to life. So did the Sun of Righteousness arise, "with
healing in His wings." Malachi 4:2. {DA 261.3}
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"Thou Canst Make Me Clean"
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