The Desire of Ages
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 53: The Last Journey From Galilee
This chapter is based on Luke 9:51-56; 10:1-24.
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As the seventy listened to the words of Christ, the Holy Spirit was impressing their minds with living realities, and writing truth upon the tablets of the soul.
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As the close of His ministry drew near, there was a change
in Christ's manner of labor. Heretofore He had sought to shun excitement and
publicity. He had refused the homage of the people, and had passed quickly from
place to place when the popular enthusiasm in His favor seemed kindling beyond
control. Again and again He had commanded that none should declare Him to be
the Christ. {DA 485.1}
At the time of the Feast of Tabernacles His journey to
Jerusalem was made swiftly and secretly. When urged by His brothers to present
Himself publicly as the Messiah, His answer was, "My time is not yet
come." John 7:6. He made His way to Jerusalem unobserved, and entered the
city unannounced, and unhonored by the multitude. But not so with His last
journey. He had left Jerusalem for a season because of the malice of the
priests and rabbis. But He now set out to return, traveling in the most public
manner, by a circuitous route, and preceded by such an announcement of His
coming as He had never made before. He was going forward to the scene of His
great sacrifice, and to this the attention of the people must be directed. {DA 485.2}
"As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even
so must the Son of man be lifted up." John 3:14. As the eyes of all Israel
had been directed to the uplifted serpent, the symbol appointed for their
healing, so all eyes must be drawn to Christ, the sacrifice that brought
salvation to the lost world. {DA
485.3}
It was a false conception of the Messiah's work, and a lack
of faith [486] in the divine character of Jesus, that had led
His brothers to urge Him to present Himself publicly to the people at the Feast
of Tabernacles. Now, in a spirit akin to this, the disciples would have
prevented Him from making the journey to Jerusalem. They remembered His words
concerning what was to befall Him there, they knew the deadly hostility of the
religious leaders, and they would fain have dissuaded their Master from going
thither. {DA 485.4}
To the heart of Christ it was a bitter task to press His way
against the fears, disappointment, and unbelief of His beloved disciples. It
was hard to lead them forward to the anguish and despair that awaited them at
Jerusalem. And Satan was at hand to press his temptations upon the Son of man.
Why should He now go to Jerusalem, to certain death? All around Him were souls
hungering for the bread of life. On every hand were suffering ones waiting for
His word of healing. The work to be wrought by the gospel of His grace was but
just begun. And He was full of the vigor of manhood's prime. Why not go forward
to the vast fields of the world with the words of His grace, the touch of His
healing power? Why not take to Himself the joy of giving light and gladness to
those darkened and sorrowing millions? Why leave the harvest gathering to His
disciples, so weak in faith, so dull of understanding, so slow to act? Why face
death now, and leave the work in its infancy? The foe who in the wilderness had
confronted Christ assailed Him now with fierce and subtle temptations. Had
Jesus yielded for a moment, had He changed His course in the least particular
to save Himself, Satan's agencies would have triumphed, and the world would
have been lost. {DA 486.1}
But Jesus had "steadfastly set His face to go to
Jerusalem." The one law of His life was the Father's will. In the visit to
the temple in His boyhood, He had said to Mary, "Wist ye not that I must
be about My Father's business?" Luke 2:49. At Cana, when Mary desired Him
to reveal His miraculous power, His answer was, "Mine hour is not yet
come." John 2:4. With the same words He replied to His brothers when they
urged Him to go to the feast. But in God's great plan the hour had been
appointed for the offering of Himself for the sins of men, and that hour was
soon to strike. He would not fail nor falter. His steps are turned toward
Jerusalem, where His foes have long plotted to take His life; now He will lay
it down. He set His face steadfastly to go to persecution, denial, rejection,
condemnation, and death. {DA
486.2}
And He "sent messengers before His face: and they went,
and entered into a village of the Samaritans, to make ready for Him." But [487]
the people refused to receive Him, because He was on His way to Jerusalem. This
they interpreted as meaning that Christ showed a preference for the Jews, whom
they hated with intense bitterness. Had He come to restore the temple and
worship upon Mount Gerizim, they would gladly have received Him; but He was
going to Jerusalem, and they would show Him no hospitality. Little did they
realize that they were turning from their doors the best gift of heaven. Jesus
invited men to receive Him, He asked favors at their hands, that He might come
near to them, to bestow the richest blessings. For every favor manifested
toward Him, He requited a more precious grace. But all was lost to the
Samaritans because of their prejudice and bigotry. {DA 486.3}
James and John, Christ's messengers, were greatly annoyed at
the insult shown to their Lord. They were filled with indignation because He
had been so rudely treated by the Samaritans whom He was honoring by His
presence. They had recently been with Him on the mount of transfiguration, and
had seen Him glorified by God, and honored by Moses and Elijah. This manifest
dishonor on the part of the Samaritans, should not, they thought, be passed
over without marked punishment. {DA 487.1}
Coming to Christ, they reported to Him the words of the
people, telling Him that they had even refused to give Him a night's lodging.
They thought that a grievous wrong had been done Him, and seeing Mount Carmel
in the distance, where Elijah had slain the false prophets, they said,
"Wilt Thou that we command fire to come down from heaven, and consume
them, even as Elias did?" They were surprised to see that Jesus was pained
by their words, and still more surprised as His rebuke fell upon their ears, "Ye
know not what manner of spirit ye are of. For the Son of man is not come to
destroy men's lives, but to save them." And He went to another village. {DA 487.2}
It is no part of Christ's mission to compel men to receive
Him. It is Satan, and men actuated by his spirit, that seek to compel the
conscience. Under a pretense of zeal for righteousness, men who are confederate
with evil angels bring suffering upon their fellow men, in order to convert
them to their ideas of religion; but Christ is ever showing mercy, ever seeking
to win by the revealing of His love. He can admit no rival in the soul, nor
accept of partial service; but He desires only voluntary service, the willing
surrender of the heart under the constraint of love. There can be no more
conclusive evidence that we possess the spirit of Satan than the disposition to
hurt and destroy those who do not appreciate our work, or who act contrary to
our ideas. [488] {DA 487.3}
Every human being, in body, soul, and spirit, is the
property of God. Christ died to redeem all. Nothing can be more offensive to
God than for men, through religious bigotry, to bring suffering upon those who
are the purchase of the Saviour's blood. {DA 488.1}
"And He arose from thence, and cometh into the coasts
of Judea by the farther side of Jordan: and the people resort unto Him again;
and, as He was wont, He taught them again." Mark 10:1. {DA 488.2}
A considerable part of the closing months of Christ's
ministry was spent in Perea, the province on "the farther side of
Jordan" from Judea. Here the multitude thronged His steps, as in His early
ministry in Galilee, and much of His former teaching was repeated. {DA 488.3}
As He had sent out the twelve, so He "appointed seventy
others, and sent them two and two before His face into every city and place,
whither He Himself was about to come." Luke 10:1, R. V. These disciples
had been for some time with Him, in training for their work. When the twelve
were sent out on their first separate mission, other disciples accompanied
Jesus in His journey through Galilee. Thus they had the privilege of intimate
association with Him, and direct personal instruction. Now this larger number
also were to go forth on a separate mission. {DA 488.4}
The directions to the seventy were similar to those that had
been given to the twelve; but the command to the twelve, not to enter into any
city of the Gentiles or of the Samaritans, was not given to the seventy. Though
Christ had just been repulsed by the Samaritans, His love toward them was
unchanged. When the seventy went forth in His name, they visited, first of all,
the cities of Samaria. {DA
488.5}
The Saviour's own visit to Samaria, and later, the
commendation of the good Samaritan, and the grateful joy of that leper, a
Samaritan, who alone of the ten returned to give thanks to Christ, were full of
significance to the disciples. The lesson sank deep into their hearts. In His
commission to them, just before His ascension, Jesus mentioned Samaria with
Jerusalem and Judea as the places where they were first to preach the gospel.
This commission His teaching had prepared them to fulfill. When in their
Master's name they went to Samaria, they found the people ready to receive
them. The Samaritans had heard of Christ's words of commendation and His works
of mercy for men of their nation. They saw that, notwithstanding their rude
treatment of Him, He had only thoughts of love toward them, and their hearts
were won. After His ascension they welcomed the Saviour's messengers, and the
disciples gathered a precious harvest from among those who had once been their
bitterest enemies. [489] "A bruised reed shall He
not break, and the dimly burning flax shall He not quench: He shall bring forth
judgment unto truth." "And in His name shall the Gentiles
trust." Isaiah 42:3, margin; Matthew 12:21. {DA 488.6}
In sending out the seventy, Jesus bade them, as He had
bidden the twelve, not to urge their presence where they were unwelcome.
"Into whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you not," He said,
"go your ways out into the streets of the same, and say, Even the very
dust of your city, which cleaveth on us, we do wipe off against you:
notwithstanding be ye sure of this, that the kingdom of God is come nigh unto
you." They were not to do this from motives of resentment or through wounded
dignity, but to show how grievous a thing it is to refuse the Lord's message or
His messengers. To reject the Lord's servants is to reject Christ Himself. {DA 489.1}
"I say unto you," Jesus added, "that it shall
be more tolerable in that day for Sodom, than for that city." Then His
mind reverted to the Galilean towns where so much of His ministry had been
spent. In deeply sorrowful accents He exclaimed, "Woe unto thee, Chorazin!
woe unto thee, Bethsaida! for if the mighty works had been done in Tyre and
Sidon, which have been done in you, they had a great while ago repented,
sitting in sackcloth and ashes. But it shall be more tolerable for Tyre and
Sidon at the judgment, than for you. And thou, Capernaum, which art exalted to
heaven, shalt be thrust down to hell." {DA 489.2}
To those busy towns about the Sea of Galilee, heaven's
richest blessings had been freely offered. Day after day the Prince of life had
gone in and out among them. The glory of God, which prophets and kings had
longed to see, had shone upon the multitudes that thronged the Saviour's steps.
Yet they had refused the heavenly Gift. {DA 489.3}
With a great show of prudence the rabbis had warned the
people against receiving the new doctrines taught by this new teacher; for His
theories and practices were contrary to the teachings of the fathers. The
people gave credence to what the priests and Pharisees taught, in place of
seeking to understand the word of God for themselves. They honored the priests
and rulers instead of honoring God, and rejected the truth that they might keep
their own traditions. Many had been impressed and almost persuaded; but they
did not act upon their convictions, and were not reckoned on the side of
Christ. Satan presented his temptations, until the light appeared as darkness.
Thus many rejected the truth that would have proved the saving of the soul. {DA 489.4}
The True Witness says, "Behold, I stand at the door,
and knock." Revelation 3:20. Every warning, reproof, and entreaty in the
word of God or [490] through His messengers is a
knock at the door of the heart. It is the voice of Jesus asking for entrance.
With every knock unheeded, the disposition to open becomes weaker. The
impressions of the Holy Spirit if disregarded today, will not be as strong tomorrow.
The heart becomes less impressible, and lapses into a perilous unconsciousness
of the shortness of life, and of the great eternity beyond. Our condemnation in
the judgment will not result from the fact that we have been in error, but from
the fact that we have neglected heaven-sent opportunities for learning what is
truth. {DA 489.5}
Like the apostles, the seventy had received supernatural
endowments as a seal of their mission. When their work was completed, they
returned with joy, saying, "Lord, even the devils are subject unto us
through Thy name." Jesus answered, "I beheld Satan as lightning fall
from heaven." {DA
490.1}
The scenes of the past and the future were presented to the
mind of Jesus. He beheld Lucifer as he was first cast out from the heavenly
places. He looked forward to the scenes of His own agony, when before all the
worlds the character of the deceiver should be unveiled. He heard the cry,
"It is finished" (John 19:30), announcing that the redemption of the
lost race was forever made certain, that heaven was made eternally secure
against the accusations, the deceptions, the pretensions, that Satan would
instigate. {DA 490.2}
Beyond the cross of Calvary, with its agony and shame, Jesus
looked forward to the great final day, when the prince of the power of the air
will meet his destruction in the earth so long marred by his rebellion. Jesus
beheld the work of evil forever ended, and the peace of God filling heaven and
earth. {DA 490.3}
Henceforward Christ's followers were to look upon Satan as a
conquered foe. Upon the cross, Jesus was to gain the victory for them; that
victory He desired them to accept as their own. "Behold," He said,
"I give unto you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all
the power of the enemy: and nothing shall by any means hurt you." {DA 490.4}
The omnipotent power of the Holy Spirit is the defense of
every contrite soul. Not one that in penitence and faith has claimed His
protection will Christ permit to pass under the enemy's power. The Saviour is
by the side of His tempted and tried ones. With Him there can be no such thing
as failure, loss, impossibility, or defeat; we can do all things through Him
who strengthens us. When temptations and trials [493] come,
do not wait to adjust all the difficulties, but look to Jesus, your helper. {DA 490.5}
There are Christians who think and speak altogether too much
about the power of Satan. They think of their adversary, they pray about him,
they talk about him, and he looms up greater and greater in their imagination.
It is true that Satan is a powerful being; but, thank God, we have a mighty
Saviour, who cast out the evil one from heaven. Satan is pleased when we
magnify his power. Why not talk of Jesus? Why not magnify His power and His
love? {DA 493.1}
The rainbow of promise encircling the throne on high is an
everlasting testimony that "God so loved the world, that He gave His
only-begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have
everlasting life." John 3:16. It testifies to the universe that God will
never forsake His people in their struggle with evil. It is an assurance to us
of strength and protection as long as the throne itself shall endure. {DA 493.2}
Jesus added, "Notwithstanding in this rejoice not, that
the spirits are subject unto you; but rather rejoice, because your names are
written in heaven." Rejoice not in the possession of power, lest you lose
sight of your dependence upon God. Be careful lest self-sufficiency come in,
and you work in your own strength, rather than in the spirit and strength of
your Master. Self is ever ready to take the credit if any measure of success
attends the work. Self is flattered and exalted, and the impression is not made
upon other minds that God is all and in all. The apostle Paul says, "When
I am weak, then am I strong." 2 Corinthians 12:10. When we have a
realization of our weakness, we learn to depend upon a power not inherent.
Nothing can take so strong a hold on the heart as the abiding sense of our
responsibility to God. Nothing reaches so fully down to the deepest motives of
conduct as a sense of the pardoning love of Christ. We are to come in touch
with God, then we shall be imbued with His Holy Spirit, that enables us to come
in touch with our fellow men. Then rejoice that through Christ you have become
connected with God, members of the heavenly family. While you look higher than
yourself, you will have a continual sense of the weakness of humanity. The less
you cherish self, the more distinct and full will be your comprehension of the excellence
of your Saviour. The more closely you connect yourself with the source of light
and power, the greater light will be shed upon you, and the greater power will
be yours to work for God. Rejoice that you are one with God, one with Christ,
and with the whole family of heaven. [494] {DA 493.3}
As the seventy listened to the words of Christ, the Holy
Spirit was impressing their minds with living realities, and writing truth upon
the tablets of the soul. Though multitudes surrounded them, they were as though
shut in with God. {DA
494.1}
Knowing that they had caught the inspiration of the hour,
Jesus "rejoiced in spirit, and said, I thank Thee, O Father, Lord of
heaven and earth, that Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent,
and hast revealed them unto babes: even so, Father; for so it seemed good in
Thy sight. All things are delivered to Me of My Father: and no man knoweth who
the Son is, but the Father, and who the Father is, but the Son, and he to whom
the Son will reveal Him." {DA 494.2}
The honored men of the world, the so-called great and wise
men, with all their boasted wisdom, could not comprehend the character of
Christ. They judged Him from outward appearance, from the humiliation that came
upon Him as a human being. But to fishermen and publicans it had been given to
see the Invisible. Even the disciples failed of understanding all that Jesus
desired to reveal to them; but from time to time, as they surrendered
themselves to the Holy Spirit's power, their minds were illuminated. They realized
that the mighty God, clad in the garb of humanity, was among them. Jesus
rejoiced that though this knowledge was not possessed by the wise and prudent,
it had been revealed to these humble men. Often as He had presented the Old
Testament Scriptures, and showed their application to Himself and His work of
atonement, they had been awakened by His Spirit, and lifted into a heavenly
atmosphere. Of the spiritual truths spoken by the prophets they had a clearer
understanding than had the original writers themselves. Hereafter they would
read the Old Testament Scriptures, not as the doctrines of the scribes and
Pharisees, not as the utterances of wise men who were dead, but as a new
revelation from God. They beheld Him "whom the world cannot receive,
because it seeth Him not, neither knoweth Him: but ye know Him; for He dwelleth
with you, and shall be in you." John 14:17. {DA 494.3}
The only way in which we can gain a more perfect
apprehension of truth is by keeping the heart tender and subdued by the Spirit
of Christ. The soul must be cleansed from vanity and pride, and vacated of all
that has held it in possession, and Christ must be enthroned within. Human
science is too limited to comprehend the atonement. The plan of redemption is
so far-reaching that philosophy cannot explain it. It will [495] ever
remain a mystery that the most profound reasoning cannot fathom. The science of
salvation cannot be explained; but it can be known by experience. Only he who
sees his own sinfulness can discern the preciousness of the Saviour. {DA 494.4}
Full of instruction were the lessons which Christ taught as
He slowly made His way from Galilee toward Jerusalem. Eagerly the people
listened to His words. In Perea as in Galilee the people were less under the
control of Jewish bigotry than in Judea, and His teaching found a response in
their hearts. {DA 495.1}
During these last months of His ministry, many of Christ's
parables were spoken. The priests and rabbis pursued Him with ever-increasing
bitterness, and His warnings to them He veiled in symbols. They could not
mistake His meaning, yet they could find in His words nothing on which to
ground an accusation against Him. In the parable of the Pharisee and the
publican, the self-sufficient prayer, "God, I thank Thee that I am not as
the rest of men," stood out in sharp contrast to the penitent's plea,
"Be merciful to me the sinner." Luke 18:11, 13, R. V., margin. Thus
Christ rebuked the hypocrisy of the Jews. And under the figures of the barren
fig tree and the great supper He foretold the doom about to fall upon the
impenitent nation. Those who had scornfully rejected the invitation to the
gospel feast heard His warning words: "I say unto you, That none of those
men which were bidden shall taste of My supper." Luke 14:24. {DA 495.2}
Very precious was the instruction given to the disciples.
The parable of the importunate widow and the friend asking for bread at
midnight gave new force to His words, "Ask, and it shall be given you;
seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." Luke
11:9. And often their wavering faith was strengthened by the memory that Christ
had said, "Shall not God do justice for His elect, which cry to Him day
and night, and He is long-suffering over them? I say unto you, that He will do
them justice speedily." Luke 18:7, 8, R. V., margin. {DA 495.3}
The beautiful parable of the lost sheep Christ repeated. And
He carried its lesson still farther, as He told of the lost piece of silver and
the prodigal son. The force of these lessons the disciples could not then fully
appreciate; but after the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, as they saw the
ingathering of the Gentiles and the envious anger of the Jews, they better
understood the lesson of the prodigal son, and could enter into the joy of
Christ's words, "It was meet that we should make merry, [496]
and be glad;" "for this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was
lost, and is found." Luke 15:32, 24. And as they went out in their
Master's name, facing reproach and poverty and persecution, they often
strengthened their hearts by repeating His injunction, spoken on this last
journey, "Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father's good pleasure to
give you the kingdom. Sell that ye have, and give alms; provide yourselves bags
which wax not old, a treasure in the heavens that faileth not, where no thief
approacheth, neither moth corrupteth. For where your treasure is, there will
your heart be also." Luke 12:32-34. {DA 495.4}
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"The Good Samaritan"
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