213 48 23MB
English Pages 144 [148] Year 2008
GREEN EDITION
N E W* fl $ TAME N T
I L1US TRAT ED
A read-along set that makes the Bible come alive Introducing kids to the Bible is twice the fun in this delight¬ ful book and CD set. The mag¬ nificent storybook depicts Jesus’ life, from his humble birth to the miracles he worked, the par¬ ables he told, and the message he shared. The forty-one stories in¬ clude “The Escape,” “Wine and Water,” and “Lazarus.” Others tell about the miracle of loaves and fishes, the Good Samaritan, and more. Colorful illustrations and a CD recording of eleven of the most engaging Gospel tales make this gift edition a treasure for all ages to share.
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THERE IN THE COURTYARD OF THE INN THE SHEPHERDS FOUND THE INFANT JESUS
Page 23
THE ILLUSTRATED
BIBLE STORY BOOK NEW TESTAMENT
Stories retold for children by
Seymour Loveland With an Introduction by
Katharine Lee Bates Illustrated by
Milo winter
Dover publications, Inc. MlNEOLA, NEW YORK
Planet Friendly Publishing s/ Made in the United States >/ Printed on Recycled Paper GREEN EDITION
, Learn moreatwww.greenedition.org
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And printing on recycled paper helps minimize our consumption of trees, water and fossil fuels. The text of The Illustrated Bible Story Book—New Testament was printed on paper made with 10% post-consumer waste, and the cover was printed on paper made with 10% post-consumer waste. According to Environmental Defense's Paper Calculator, by using this innovative paper instead of conventional papers, we achieved the following environmental benefits: Trees Saved: 12 • Air Emissions Eliminated: 1,017 pounds Water Saved: 4,184 gallons • Solid Waste Eliminated: 542 pounds For more information on our environmental practices, please visit us online at www.doverpublications.com/green
Copyright Copyright © 1925 by Rand McNally & Company. Reproduced with permission. CD content copyright © 2008 by Dover Publications, Inc. All rights reserved.
Bibliographical Note The Illustrated Bible Story Book—New Testament, first published by Dover Publications, Inc., in 2008, is reproduced from the work first published by Rand McNally & Company, Chicago and New York, in 1925. This edition includes a new audio recording to accompany the text.
International Standard Book Number ISBN-13: 978-0-486-46835-8 ISBN-10: 0-486-46835-6 Audio recording produced by Blane & DeRosa Productions, Inc.
Manufactured in the United States of America Dover Publications, Inc., 31 East 2nd Street, Mineola, N.Y. 11501
THE ILLUSTRATED
BIBLE STORY BOOK NEW TESTAMENT
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2018 with funding from Kahle/Austin Foundation
https://archive.org/details/illustratedbibleOOOOIove
T
THE INTRODUCTION
HE life of Jesus Christ, related with supreme dignity and surpassing beauty in the gospels, cannot be told too often. In this book of New Testament stories the life of Christ is set forth in simple language for young children. The four gospels tell mainly about the manhood of Jesus: how He journeyed from place to place with His little group of disciples, healing the sick, preaching the Word of God. Jesus was Himself the Word, for God is Love and the life of Christ was Love. I wish that we might have had one gospel more, written by Mary, to tell us of the clinging child, the eager boy, the earnest youth who was the light of the carpenter’s home in Nazareth. The longing to know more of those early years has been so great that simple people, centuries ago, caught at floating legends that we no longer credit: how Jesus, at play with other children, molding clay into images of donkeys and cows and dogs, fashioned little sparrows that flew at his command; how when old Joseph, who, the story said, “was not very skilful at his carpenter’s trade,” would find he had made a door too wide or a shelf too long, Jesus would touch the timber and instantly door or shelf “became as Joseph would have it”; how one day Jesus’ playfellows “spread their garments on the ground for Him to sit on, and having made a crown of flowers, put it upon His head and stood on His right and left as the guards of a king. And if anyone happened to pass by, they took him by force and said, ‘Come hither, and worship the King, that you may have a prosperous journey.’” Though these tales are only the fancies of wistful hearts, not the memories of those who had seen that blessed childhood, yet even in these there is at least a grain of truth. We know from what Jesus said and did that He cared for all living creatures and especially for birds; we are sure that His young hands always were quick to help, and we can easily understand that the little Nazarenes would make Him the center of their games. Devout old painters liked to picture the carpenter’s shop: Joseph busy with his saw and Mary sitting by, her sewing fallen to her knee while her look dwelt tenderly on the Holy Child as He gathered up the chips and shavings, with a flutter-winged cluster of cherubs doing their best to aid. Is there any surer way to make the boyhood of Jesus more real and vivid to us? Yes, from pictures and books about the Holy Land and from visiting these scenes of Jesus’ youth, we can see something of what He saw; from brief men¬ tions in the New Testament we can learn a little of the family life; and from Christ’s own references to features of the landscape and the happenings of the 7
neighborhood so familiar to Him, we can glean yet more.
So together let us in
imagination go, as pilgrims for hundreds and hundreds of years have gone, by sea, by land, in dream, in prayer, to Nazareth. Palestine is in size but a small strip of the earth. through it from top to bottom in three hours.
An express train could run
It consists, from west to east of a
coast lying beside the blue Mediterranean, a low coast broken only by the long, level lift of Mount Carmel; then of a range of hills running north and south, on one of whose slopes Nazareth is built; then of the Jordan valley widening out into the Sea of Galilee; and, finally, a bordering table-land.
The four divisions, in the time of
Christ, were Galilee to the north, then Samaria in the center, farthest to the south, Judea, and Perea which included all the region lying east of the Jordan and south of the Jabbok. Nazareth is now a large town, as Syrian towns go, sweeping well up the hill¬ side, its white,
flat-roofed
houses gleaming out from fig trees and olive groves.
Under Roman rule it probably was even larger, an important “city,” as the New Testament always terms it,
among two hundred towns and villages of Galilee
where people lived in such close quarters that Jesus may early have learned to slip away into the hills for quiet thought.
The house was probably built of stone,
as the houses of Nazareth are today, and may have had, like some of these, a garden inclosed by a cactus hedge.
Joseph almost certainly was a mason as well
as a carpenter, for the builders of his time worked in stone more than in wood. Perhaps his son was taught to carve in marble. a boy, may have known the joy of the artist.
One likes to think that Jesus, as At every hour He knew the thrill
of beauty, and often would have climbed “unto the brow of the hill whereon their city was built” for the wonderful view reaching from the purples of Mount Carmel to the dazzling snows of Mount Hermon. If Joseph had his workshop at home, his house, its square outlines softened by blossoming vines like the close-pressing houses of his neighbors, may possibly have had two stories.
A Jew of a proud old family descended from King David, Joseph
was by no means ashamed of being a workingman, for the Hebrew commanded that every boy be taught a trade. As one of their rabbis wrote: “Labor honors the laborer.” On a summer morning, the little household would be early astir. On the flat roof, whose low parapet guarded a restless child from a fall, Jesus would have been sleeping snugly wrapt in a gay-colored quilted coverlet, not unlike our “puffs” or “comforters.”
From the open housetop, before His eyes had closed
in a tired boy’s sound slumber, Jesus would have seen the same moon and stars, the same trooping constellations, that keep watch over us today, and on waking He would have looked on the fresh rose of dawn, lifting His heart to the joy of a new day.
He would have been happy in the color and fragrance of the 8
hour and would have had a gentle smile tor the doves resting on the parapet, unafraid as He stepped near. Then quite naturally Jesus would have risen, taken up his light bed and carried it down the ladder-stair to the large living-room below. Here the family quilts were each neatly rolled up and tucked away on a low bench that ran against the walls nearly all the way around the room. On this ledge were arranged such few articles as even the simplest housekeeping needs—clay pots and bowls and a lamp shaped like a saucer with the wick floating on the surface of the olive oil. On either side of the door stood a tall, slim water jar. In a corner of the room was a great wooden chest, painted in some bright design, holding the family treasures — scrolls of the Law and the Prophets, finely woven robes and other choice raiment. In another corner of the room might be seen a broad stool, colored as gaily as the chest, and here and there were great clay vessels for the storing of grain and vegetables, wicker baskets of fruit, and a pile of palm-leaf mats, which, spread upon the floor or upon the bench, gave the parents easier couches. Jesus, indeed, liked best of all, when the night was warm, to sleep out on the hills, rolled in his loose Galilean coat. By the time the washing and prayers, required by the Jewish rule, were finished, and Joseph had come in from his workshop — or come up, if the livingroom formed a second floor — Mary was placing on the painted stool, now drawn out into the open space, a tray bearing thin rounds of new bread and a large bowl of rice, into which Joseph and any guests, sitting on their heels in eastern fashion, around the low stool, dipped their hands in turn. For Mary had risen first of all the household and, one of the red water jars gracefully balanced on her erect head, had tripped down the stony road to the town spring — now called Lady Mary’s Fountain — for water. Perhaps, too, she, with the help of a neighbor, another Mother in Israel, had been grinding corn at her hand-mill, lightly kneading the moistened meal, and then baking the dough, spread into these thin layers, in the neighborhood oven. Breakfast over, water would be brought for the washing of fingers, and Joseph would give his son the task for the day. If he bade Jesus help him in the shop, we may be sure that many a passer-by lingered in the open door to hear the strange, wise talk of the bright-faced young apprentice sitting on the floor and working away with plane or drill on the flat board that served as carpenter’s bench. But if it were a holiday, how gladly Jesus went out on one of His long rambles! He could walk to Mount Tabor in two hours, to the Sea of Galilee in five. And all the way He was noting where the foxes had their holes and the birds of the air their nests, delighting in the scarlet splendor of the wild lilies — “even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these’’—watching the life of 9
vineyard and threshing floor and market place. He would meet shepherds leading their flocks through green pastures, gathering the lambs in their arms and carrying them in their bosom. He would pause to hear the pipers, on the road to some grand wedding, playing a tune for the dancing children who frolicked after them. He would follow the bees to find where they hid their honeycomb. He would stand to see the sower scattering his seed, a fisherman letting down his net, a hen gather¬ ing her chickens under her wings. And all these common things had deep and beautiful meaning for Him, the more common the more divine, as if His Father in Heaven were, through them, giving Him a message. Mary often felt that she did not understand when her star-eyed son told her of the thoughts that had come to Him from the fields and hills, “but His mother kept all these sayings in her heart. And Jesus increased in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man.” Katharine Lee Bates
io
THE CONTENTS THE COMING OF THE KING
page
A Wonderful Message. Mary. The Story the Star Told. The Star and the Magi. Wicked King Herod. The Escape. In the Temple. Locusts and Wild Honey. King and Herald.
15 18 21 23 26 29 32 37 40
THE EARLY WORK OF JESUS Wine and Water. Bethesda—House of Mercy. Through the Roof. Her Only Son. Touching the Hem. Supper Time. Afraid. My Neighbor. Lost and Found. The Grateful Stranger. The Other Brother.
47 48 50 53 55 58 61 64 66 69 72
JESUS’ LATER WORK The Master’s Blessing. 79 Lazarus. 81 Sons of Thunder. 84 At the House of Martha.. 87 Behold Your King!. 89 House of Prayer. 93 A Great Gift. 95 A Sad Supper. 97 Thirty Pieces of Silver. 99 The Friend Who Was Afraid.102 Calvary.105
SPREADING THE GOOD NEWS When the Promise Was Kept.Ill Breakfast by the Sea.114 Many Tongues.U 7 Lying and Losing.U 9 One of the Seven.02 The Great Missionary.124 A Strange Table.128 Prison Doors.131 Shipwrecked.03 The City of the Great King.137
II
THE COMING OF THE KING
STANDING NEAR THE TEMPLE ALTAR, ZACHARIAS SAW THE ANGEL GABRIEL
BIBLE STORY BOOK A WONDERFUL MESSAGE It was a beautiful evening.
The
of those big gates was so large and
sun had put on his scarlet robe and
heavy that it would have taken forty
was all ready to say good night to
children, all pushing at once, to open
the world.
it.
His rays, like long, slen¬
This great brass gate must have
der fingers, reached out over the sky
dazzled the people’s eyes when the
as though flinging a farewell to all
sun shone on it.
the little folks before he slipped so
Beautiful Gate.
far out of sight that no one could find him until morning. blue
heavens
one
twinkled merrily.
brave
The people who belonged to this
Up in the
church did not want everybody to
little star
come
Perhaps if stars
could speak we might have
They called it the
two
heard
inside strong
of
it,
stone
they
walls
Inside these walls,
built
around
it.
but outside the
“ Cheer up, children,
church
I’m going to be with you until the
prayed.
sun comes back."
inside of the church because he had
this one
say,
most
of
the
people
Zacharias, the priest, went
something very important to do there.
What do you suppose the star saw as it flashed and sparkled?
itself,
so
At
A beauti¬
twilight,
just
as
the
first
star
ful church on top of a high hill in
peeped out of the blue sky, he must
a beautiful city.
This church was
throw some sweet-smelling powders,
called the Temple, and the city was
called incense, on the hot coals that
Jerusalem.
burned on the golden altar.
Everything was so lovely
that if you had walked through the
was
great silver and gold gates and into
not even
the temple courts, you might have
a noise.
thought you were in fairyland.
his heart instead of with his lips.
One 15
the
silent time when
This
a chatterbox
nobody,
child, made
Everyone was praying with
What make!
a smoke the Zacharias
cleared away.
Of course Zacharias should have
incense did
waited
until
known that Gabriel brought happy
it
tidings.
Then how he must
This angel never brought
have rubbed his eyes in surprise, and
anything but good news to people.
stared at the golden altar!
He was
There was one thing the old priest
sure no one had been near the altar
and his wife wanted more than any¬
when he threw on the incense!
But
thing
now some one was beside it.
He
had heard no one come in.
else
in
the
world,
and that
was a little child of their own.
How
The
message Gabriel brought
Zacharias
could the visitor have come there?
and
was
Zacharias
was sure his visitor was
“You shall have a son and his name
an angel.
Only a messenger of God
shall
his
wife
Elizabeth,
be John.”
this:
But Gabriel told
could come in so quietly and look so
Zacharias even more than this.
kindly.
little John was to be a wonderful
When
Zacharias saw
the
The
angel in the temple he must have been
child.
frightened, for when Gabriel spoke
happy.
he told him he need have no fear
man he was to tell the people to get
and said, “ I bring you good news.”
ready for the
He was to make many people When
he
grew
to
be
a
King, for now their
real King was coming. You remember how the Hebrews asked
Samuel to make
Saul
king,
and
poor king
Saul was. had
had
what
a very
their
Since then the Hebrews a great
many kings, but
only three of them had been good ones.
Now
they
were
watching
for the perfect King that God had promised
to
send
them.
Gabriel
told Zacharias that the King would soon be here. When we are going to have guests we get ready for them.
What a task
Mother has cleaning the rooms, dust¬ ing and straightening the furniture, and SILENTLY ZACHARIAS MOTIONED TO THE WAITING PEOPLE TO GO HOME
cooking
good
company to eat! 16
things
for the
John, the little boy
he motioned to the waiting people to go home.
Then slowly he walked
through the Beautiful Gate and down to his own small house.
Can’t you
see these two old people,
Elizabeth
and
sat
Zacharias,
as
they
beside each other?
close
The lamplight
shone on Elizabeth’s white hair while she watched what her husband wrote on
a tablet.
wonderful
He
was
message
brought him.
writing the
Gabriel
had
He could not speak,
for not since the angel’s visit had Zacharias been able to say a word. But I know that he was happy, for Gabriel
had said his promised
was
be
to
the
herald
son
who should
announce the coming of the
King.
THROUGH THE BEAUTIFUL GATE WALKED ZACHARIAS
who was coming to
Zacharias and
Elizabeth,
had grown to
be
a
when
man
was
he
going
to
tell
the
people to get ready for the expected King.
He was not going to tell them
to build
a
great
palace
for
him.
John was coming before the King came so that body
he
could
tell
to prepare for him.
going to tell
the
people
every¬
He was to
make
their hearts ready to love the King when
He came.
That is a much
better way to get ready for company than dusting rooms, cleaning furni¬ ture, and preparing food. Out of the church and into the outer court went Zacharias.
ZACHARIAS WRITING GABRIEL’S WONDERFUL MESSAGE ON A TABLET FOR ELIZABETH
Silently 17
no farther.
MARY The king.
Hebrews
the
wanted
a
ruined
them.
worked
hard
but
poor
each year
and
crippled sat
Bad kings had
The
roadside
until they died.
good
One like David would have
suited them best.
Then they dropped by
ging.
people
lay
in
the
dust
The blind and the
beside
Perhaps
the
road
there
beg¬
would
be
whole days when they had nothing
grew
to eat.
You would be very likely
poorer and poorer, because the kings
to see a small
took away from them almost every¬
street snatching a bone from a half-
thing they had, to make their own
starved
dog, each
palaces
bit
food
In the
richer
the
and
more beautiful.
Oriental
country where
Hebrews
lived,
no
one
of
girl or boy in the
a
trying
rich
to
get
neighbor
a
had
thrown away.
cared
In
all
the
land
there
were
no
for the poor or those who were ill.
doctors and no nurses for little sick
If you had walked through a street
babies.
in one of the cities in this land when
and no clean white beds.
Jesus lived there,
looking mothers held their suffering
you
would have
There
were
no
hospitals
Weary, sad-
seen many things that would have
children
while
they
made you sorry.
begged for something to eat.
But
Homeless
sick
people
staggered
in
their
arms
no one paid any attention.
along the road until they could go
In that
country no one loved the unhappy and hungry people.
They had been
forgotten. There were other people in this country who were not rich, but who had homes and enough to eat. of
these
people
were
would remember them. He had promised King.
sure
Some God
And He did.
to send them a
This one would be different
from any king they had ever had. He would love every one of them. He would make well all those who were ill.
He would make the wicked
wish to be good, and the unhappy people glad.
BLIND AND CRIPPLED BEGGARS SAT BY THE WAYSIDE
18
MARY FEEDING THE DOVES IN THE COURTYARD
When God speaks, people cannot
Think of the sweetest and dearest
hear Him unless they are ready to
face you ever saw.
listen.
smile always made your heart glad.
Zacharias,
the
priest,
had
A face whose
been ready, and so he had seen and
Such a
face must have been
heard Gabriel, God’s messenger.
Mary’s.
A happy little maid who
In
like
all the land of the Hebrews there was
could talk with God’s angel, Gabriel,
only one other person who was ready
must have had a sweet face, always
to listen to a messenger from God.
cheery and full of sunshine.
Who
sure everyone who looked at her felt
do
you
was?
Anyone
have
told you.
suppose in It
that
person
Nazareth was a
could
happier.
humble
You will want to know how Mary to guess.
When she talked or sang,
even the singing of the birds did not
Jewish maiden named Mary. looked, I am sure.
I am
sound sweeter.
We can be sure that
Mary
kind
had
a
heart, gentle,
winning ways, a helpful spirit and
We shall have
loved
Now shut your eyes and
let us make a picture of Mary for
not
ourselves.
able
I’m sure you can see her. 19
everybody.
bring good people.
God’s angels do news
to
disagree¬
one thing we can be certain; when he came he found Mary busy. never calls his
tasks
lazy people, only
to
God
hie
those
gives
who
are
willing to work. Into the court of came Gabriel.
Mary’s house
“ Hail, thou that art
highly favored, the Lord is with thee. Blessed art
thou
among
women,”
was his greeting. Mary looked up at him in astonish¬ ment.
Did the stranger think she
was a princess?
Such
a greeting
was given only to the rich and power¬ ful.
And Mary was neither.
What
could this beautiful stranger mean? Then Gabriel spoke again.
THE ANGEL GABRIEL BRINGS GOD’S WONDERFUL MESSAGE TO MARY
King is coming.
Mary must often have felt sorry
here.
“The
He will soon be
You have found favor with
for those who were ill and poor. I
God, and a little child who is to be
am certain that
a tiny sick
the great King will be given to you.”
baby felt better because Mary had
Into Mary’s heart there came a
cared for it.
many
great gladness.
When she prayed, I
know she asked God to hurry and
mother
send
Through her, God would remember
the
promised
people besides
King.
Many
Mary were praying
of
She was to be the
the
promised
and bless His people.
King.
The child
for the coming of the great King.
that He was going to place in her
Mary really believed that God heard
arms would love all people and help
her prayer and would answer. But I fear the other people said in their
them in all their troubles.
hearts, “We will pray about it, but
“ Henceforth
God will not hear us.” And of course
call me blessed”!
God did not hear that kind of prayer.
for her people and God had heard.
wonder
We do not know whether it was
Her
in the evening or in the morning that Gabriel visited Mary.
son
that
she all
Jesus
people because Son of God.
But of 20
sang
Do you
with
generations
joy, shall
She had prayed would He
was
save also
His the
THE STORY THE STAR TOLD What do we see at night that we cannot
see
stars, of
in
the daytime?
course.
How
The
black
the
nights would be without our friends, the stars!
When I was little I liked
to think that
the stars
were
little
people with dresses of different colors. Some stars wear pretty yellow dresses, others white or blue, and still others red or green. One
night a star twinkled and
beckoned as if it wanted to speak to me.
I thought it wished to tell
me a story.
WHEN THE SHEPHERDS LOOKED UP RIGHT BESIDE THEM THEY SAW AN ANGEL IN SHINING GARMENTS
The story I think the star wanted to tell me that night is a beautiful
watch was sure he heard music.
story.
I’m sure the little star knew all
looked up at the stars and called to
about it because when all the won¬
his companions to come and watch
derful things in the story happened
them.
the star was dancing and twinkling
though they were alive with happi¬
in the sky just as it was that night
ness.
I thought it wanted to tell it to me.
shepherds that the angel of the Lord
And this is the story it told:
was coming to them with some won¬
“One
evening,
long,
long ago,
He
They glowed and sparkled as They were trying to tell the
derful news.
the stars were all shining brightly.
“And
sure
enough,
when
the
They were trying their best to give
shepherds looked up, there they saw,
light to a few shepherds who were
in shining garments, the angel stand¬
keeping
ing right
night
sheep on a country.
watches
hillside in
over
their
a
hungry
wolf
His
face
shone with such a wonderful light
a far-away
If the stars had not shone
so brightly
beside them.
it made glow.
might
everything on the hillside
At first the shepherds were
have come and carried off a sheep
frightened.
or a lamb.
kind and when he spoke to them
Suddenly a shepherd on 21
But the angel looked so
his voice rang out so clear and so sweet that they all knew he came bringing them good news.
Then the
watching shepherds crowded close to the angel to hear the story he had to tell them. “‘To-night/ the angel said unto theny ‘is the most wonderful night since
the
world
was
made.
there is born to you in
For
Bethlehem
this day, a little Child a Savior who is Christ the Lord.’ “Then
the
music the shepherds
heard grew louder and clearer.
It
was a song, and a great company of angels was singing it. There were so many of them the shepherds could not count them.
AS THE SHEPHERDS JOURNEYED HOMEWARD THEY SANG THE SONG THE ANGELS SANG
This was the song
the angels sang as they floated away toward the stars: ‘Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace good will toward men.’ “After the light had
faded and
the song had ended, the shepherds did
not
wait
a
moment.
They
were in a hurry to get to Bethlehem and see the little Christ Child. they started on
their
their haste they may
journey.
Off In
have run all
the way. “The courtyard crowded
with
of the inn was
people.
Tired
chil¬
dren were sleeping on the stone floor. Sleepy donkeys and camels nodded TIRED CHILDREN WERE SLEEPING ON THE FLOOR AND SLEEPY DONKEYS AND CAMELS WERE NODDING
and blinked at the shepherds. 22
How
THE STAR AND THE MAGI
could the shepherds hope to find a tiny baby in the midst of such a great crowd? But the angel had told
little
Years and years ago, when people
Christ Child was here, and of course
had no clocks to tell them the time
they would find him.
and no maps to guide them when
did.
the
shepherds
Lying
manger, an
on
that
some
inclosed
the
And so they straw place
in in
a
they traveled, they watched the stars.
the
These twinkling little friends in the sky never made a mistake in the
courtyard of the inn, was the little child Jesus. His mother and father
time and always knew exactly where
were with him.
they were going.
“We will follow
“The shepherds stood very still as
the stars,” the people said when start¬
they looked down upon the tiny baby. Perhaps they were listening
ing on a journey, and the friendly stars always showed them the way they should go.
again to the angels’ song. Then one by one they tiptoed quietly out of the courtyard. And as they went
Some Wise Men in the East, called the Magi, spent every night
slowly back to the green hillside far¬
watching the stars.
Their big, wise
away, they sang the song they had
books — scrolls — had told them that a
heard the angels sing.” Then the little star hid itself behind a fleecy cloud and I knew the story was ended. But soon a single bright beam, like a- long slender finger, gleamed through the cloud, and then a starry face appeared. “O little star,” I said, “I have heard that story before. It is in the Bible.” Then the star twinkled and danced as though it were laughing at me. “I, too, have heard all the Bible stories,” said the little star.
“And
I have seen them all, for I have been in the sky ever since the world was made.”
THEIR SCROLLS TOLD THE MAGI OF A BRIGHT NEW STAR
23
THE MAGI ON THEIR WAY TO JERUSALEM
new star, very bright and beautiful,
might flash a welcome to the waiting
was coming.
Wise Men.
The
Magi intended
At last the star appeared, and then
to start on a long journey when it appeared.
Where?
the great city of Hebrew land. were they going? had
told
them
the Magi started off on their long
To Jerusalem,
journey toward Jerusalem.
Why
Their wise books that
a
How far
they traveled and how long it took
wonderful
them to reach that distant city no
thing would happen in the Hebrew
one knows.
country while the new star was in
have
the sky. A great King was to be born
passed through the gates to the city
in Israel, and this beautiful star was
of Jerusalem.
the sign that would tell the Magi when the King had come.
Weary men they must
been
as
their
tired
camels
Straight to the palace of wicked
Would
King Herod they went.
“We have
it peep over the hilltops in the early
seen in the East a wonderful star,”
morning, or would it rise out of the
they
East as they watched at midnight?
brings good news of a Child bom
Perhaps just
to be the King of the Jews.”
as the sun’s
last
ray
had said good night, its first beams
told
Herod, “the star
was troubled. 24
which Herod
He did not want to
hear of any other king in his country.
throw all other kingdoms and whose
“Tell
us where we
rule would have no end.
King,
for we have come to honor
can
find
this
wicked has to die, and Herod knew
Him,” the Magi said to Herod.
that
Wicked King Herod was badly frightened at their message. strangers from the
East
been
could
he
do
called
the
to
keep
lawyers
and
priests to his palace. demanded,
it? the
ace. Through the gates of Jerusalem
Herod
and down the rocky road they and
chief
their camels traveled.
heard
come
brought
from
they
Magi
deserts,
instead
of glad. Herod was troubled.
These
welcomed
the
worried
was
who
journeyed
were
people
were strangers from the East
king’s
they
own
men
people of the the
His
No wel¬
waiting for the Christ Child.
Judea,”
news
They were
going toward Bethlehem.
answered. court
If the Magi would only tell
What
“where do our writings
When the
wicked
they turned away from Herod’s pal¬
“Tell me,” he
Bethlehem of
very, very
The Magi must have felt sad as
say Christ is to be born?” “In
a
he would surely destroy him.
The king did
not want to lose his throne.
was
him where he could find that Child,
watching the stars and had learned the story they told.
he
man.
These
had
Everything
Him.
over
They
mountains,
had
crossed
and forded rivers that they
might
bring to the
King
their
rich
little new-born
gifts.
But
their
hearts were cheered, for high in the
He called
the Magi to him secretly and said,
heavens rode the glowing star.
“Tell me when you first saw this star.”
only in the East, but here, it still
Men as wise as the Magi
was guiding them.
could
With
Not
the star
easily see that the wicked king was
before them there could be no room
afraid.
The king could not deceive
in their hearts for anything but joy.
them.
When he told them that he,
too, wanted to
At
last the Wise
Men
the little town of Bethlehem.
go and worship the Jews, they must
brightly
shining star
hung
have known his words were not true.
heavens
above
as
new
King of the
Herod
was
afraid
of
the
reached
little
them
The in the
they
rode
softly through the silent streets.
The
Child the Wise Men had come to
Magi stopped at a house.
see.
been a little one, but I know it was
He
really
believed that this
It must have
little Child was Christ—the Christ
clean
whose kingdom was going to over¬
do where there is a great deal of love. 25
and looked as homes always
WICKED KING HEROD “ Go away, go away, you can’t play with
us!”
I
heard
a shrill
voice
shout under my window. “What can
the matter be?”
wondered as I looked outside.
I
One
sulky-looking little fellow was hang¬ ing
over
the
fence
watching
boys at play in the yard.
the
“Boys,”
I asked, “why don’t you let Willie in the game?
He looks lonely.”
“He doesn’t play fair. have
him,”
Then
I
little
We won’t
Dick
answered.
went back to the story
I was writing, the one about wicked
THE MAGI BOWED LOW BEFORE THE CHILD JESUS AS HE LAY ASLEEP IN HIS MOTHER’S ARMS
King Herod.
King
Herod
didn’t
In they went and found the little
play fair, either.
Child Jesus, and His mother, Mary.
one.
It may be that the real King of the
pretended
Jews lay asleep in His mother’s arms
the Magi told him about the baby
when the Magi entered. They bowed
born
low before Him.
As Mary watched,
all the time he was plotting to kill
the Magi spread before her the gifts
the Child as soon as he could find
they had
Him.
brought for the Child-
gold, rich spices, and sweet-smelling incense.
And now the Wise these
students
of
No one could trust him. to
“King
be of
very the
glad
He when
Jews.”
And
Herod wanted to be a great king.
Men
He hoped that some day he would
were ready to return to the East. But
He cheated every¬
be
the stars
as
great
as
Solomon.
Herod
was dreadfully afraid that some one
believed that God spoke to them in
might
and
take
dreams.
his kingdom away from him.
Do
A dream had warned them
want to
be
king
that the Child Jesus was in danger
you wonder that he trembled with
from Herod.
They believed it was
fear when the Magi told him that
God speaking, so they went back to
a new King of the Jews had been
their own country by another road
born?
that did not lead through Jerusalem.
one would interfere with him that 26
Herod was so afraid some¬
he even put his wife to death and ordered three of his own sons killed. He thought they might be cheating him.
But
people
to
while he
was
find
if
cheating him,
out
watching they
were
all the time he was
cheating others. Herod was ill when the Magi—the Wi se Men him. he
from the East—visited
He really was dying, although
did not
know it.
No one can
be well and happy who is as wicked as Herod was, and does the dread¬ ful
things
he
did.
The
unhappy
king must have watched every day expecting
to
see
the
Magi
again.
HEROD STRAINED HIS EYES AFTER THE RIDER OF EVERY CAMEL HE SAW IN THE STREETS
He may even have hoped that these to
wise men would be foolish enough
bring
the
little
back with them.
Christ Child
Herod no doubt
strained his eyes after the rider of every
camel
streets
of
that
he
saw
Jerusalem.
in
the
“Surely
the
Magi will come today, surely they will
be
here
today,”
Herod
must
have said to himself as he opened his eyes each morning. But no Magi came.
Their camels
were skimming across the hot desert sands
on
country
their in
way
the
to
East.
their No
second
visit did these Wise Men pay wicked Herod. while
told them in UNHAPPY KING HEROD WAITING FOR THE MAGI TO RETURN
to 27
the
For God was watch¬
ing over the baby Jesus, night,
own
the
Magi
and one slept,
He
a dream to go back
their own country
another way.
do.
The king was so angry everyone who
saw him ran away in
As Herod lay dying, a number
of little children in Bethlehem were
terror.
H ow dared these Magi treat a king
put to death
by
his orders.
as if they had no respect for him?
savage king had all the little boys
When they did not come you cannot
who were two years old and younger
imagine how angry he was, and what
destroyed.
a terrible thing he planned to do.
mothers!
Think
of
The
those
sad
There may not have been
Herod knew now that he co uld
many of them, but a dozen women
live only a few months, perhaps only
crying over their little dead babies
a few weeks, longer.
is enough to make our hearts ache.
must
do
once.
something
He and
felt
do
he
it
Jesus, the Child who was
at
born
“King of the Jews,” was not among
He suffered terribly, but that
did not make him any kinder, nor
the
did it make him feel sorry that he
King Herod lay dying in his palace,
had
Mary
been
so
wicked.
Instead,
he
murdered and
children.
Joseph
were
While hurrying
thought if he must die, he would
away to Egypt with their precious
make
Child.
die.
a
number
of
other
people
“Those
Magi
have fooled me.”
think
they traveled
they
Child as he
kill
arms.
little
new-born
shown
brightly
toward
safety.
Sun¬
beams kissed the tiny hands of the
And I am sure
he added under his breath, “I will that
sun
upon the little family of three as
Herod must have said to his
friends,
The
King of
lay asleep in
Mary’s
The same sun shot its golden
the Jews if I have to kill all the
rays
little boys in Bethlehem.”
Herod
and touched
as
lay dead in the palace.
And that was what he tried to
28
he
into the room
of the wicked his cruel
face
THE ESCAPE Let us go back a little and see what
had
happened
house
in
Bethlehem.
in
the
little
Near
it
we
shall see some kneeling camels blink¬ ing sleepdy as they chew their cud. It is a beautiful night, with many bright stars flashing in the sky.
Just
above
one
the
little
house
hangs
especially brilliant star like a great electric light held high in the heavens. Suppose we peep inside the house. Everything is so quiet the people who live there must all be asleep.
We will
tiptoe quietly through the door and look around.
But there’s no use in
looking for chairs to sit on.
People
ONE OF THE MAGI STOPS TO WHISPER SOMETHING TO JOSEPH AS HE STEPS OUTSIDE THE DOOR
in the country where the little house stands never use chairs.
There when
She
is holding
her
little
son, the
the people are tired and want to rest
promised King.
they squat on their heels or sit on
looking man, who must be Joseph,
the floor.
her husband.
There
are
some
lamps on a stand. say
they
handles.
were
queer-looking saucers
Then perhaps we may
see some strange-looking men saying
You and I would only
Beside her is a kind¬
good-by to Joseph.
These men surely
do not belong either in
with
or in Jerusalem.
The lamps are filled with
Bethlehem
No, of course not,
oil and bits of something that looks
for they are the Magi from the East
like cotton
who
are
floating in the oil.
have
brought
the infant Jesus.
The people in the house are wide
rich
gifts
to
One of the Magi
awake instead of being asleep as we
stops to whisper something to Joseph
had thought.
as he steps outside the door.
What
do you suppose he is saying?
Prob¬
Suppose we watch to
see what they are doing.
A mother
is holding a dear little baby folded
ably he is telling Joseph that Herod
close in her arms.
wishes to visit the Child Jesus.
Why, it is Mary,
knows that no good will
the maiden who talked with Gabriel! 29
Joseph come of
No doubt why
he
Mary anxiously asked
thought
so.
I
can
hear
Joseph answer, “An angel from God warned me in a dream to flee into Egypt with you and the Child.
I
think they must have gone that very night. Just outside of Bethlehem was an inn,
called
travelers
a
khan,
stopped
Egypt.
The
where
on
little
their town
many
way
to
made
a
good halting place for people and caravans
making
a
long
journey.
Here their camels, asses, horses, and other animals could be watered and fed,
and
the
could rest.
travelers
themselves
Joseph may have gone
to the khan to see about buying a
THE WISE MEN MOUNT THEIR SLEEPY CAMELS AND RIDE SILENTLY AWAY
camel for the journey to Egypt, for to
he was in a great hurry to be off.
Bethlehem, he will come to do the
He wanted to go the quickest way
baby harm.
possible,
such
a visit.
If
Herod
comes
Herod.
tinkle as they go strutting down the
In
Now,
must
lose
no
were to save the Child from King
How
the shells around the camels’ necks narrow street!
they
time in leaving Bethlehem if they
The Wise Men mount their sleepy camels and ride silently away.
for
their visitors
those
days
the
best
way to
travel quickly was on a dromedary.
gone, Joseph and Mary will soon be
These
asleep.
were trained for speed.
The whispered message of
swift,
one-humped
camels
They never
the Wise Man made Joseph uneasy.
carried
I can
We might call a dromedary a “lim¬
almost see
him
turning on his hard bed.
tossing and Suddenly
baggage,
ited express.”
only
passengers.
Because that was the
he leaped to his feet and awakened
swiftest way to go, I think the little
Mary.
“We must start at once for
family must have traveled on a drome¬
Egypt!
The Child’s life is in dan¬
dary
ger from Herocl.”
when
Herod. 30
they
fled
from
King
It was a long journey to
Egypt.
An ass would have grown tired, and it
would
have
been
thirsty
much
oftener than Joseph could have found water for it.
But dromedaries could
go for days without water or food. Another splendid thing was that they could run
hour after hour without
growing tired. and
Mary,
No, I am sure Joseph
with
the
Child
Jesus,
did not wait for a caravan or travel on an ass, but started out that night on a dromedary. On and on they hurried to reach Egypt and safety.
Had the soldiers
of King Herod come to Bethlehem in the morning they would have seen only
a
tiny
speck
-I—1
moving rapidly
ON AND ON HURRY JOSEPH AND MARY WITH JESUS
across the distant plain.
Little would
they have suspected that what they saw disappearing in the distance was the Child they had come to destroy. It
was
hot
in
Egypt
and
very
uncomfortable, and Joseph and Mary were anxious to go back home.
They
did not have long to wait.
In a
few months news reached them that Herod had died.
Now that the cruel
king had gone, they thought the child Jesus would be safe. Another dream
came
to
Joseph
in which an angel told him he might return to Israel with Mary and the Child.
And Joseph went at once.
How happy Mary and Joseph must have felt as they journeyed, thinking
A DROMEDARY AND ITS MASTER
31
that soon again,
they would
in
the
little
IN THE TEMPLE
be at home house.
But
they could not go back to Bethle¬ hem.
Why?
A
Because Herod’s son,
long procession was winding
slowly through mountain paths and
a man as wicked as his father, was
across broad, grassy plains.
now ruler over Judea.
ing
Bethlehem,
you know, is in Judea.
chattering
Another son of Herod was ruling in
Galil ee.
camels,
This son was
women,
little
children,
and
together
not so
keen
donkeys,
gaily
dressed
solemn-faced
were
Snarl¬
men
journeying
all
toward
wicked as his father and his brother.
Jerusalem.
So to Nazareth, a pretty little town
so many animals that I doubt if you
in
Galilee,
and
her
and
Joseph
Joseph
little
Son.
Behind
them
carried
Mary
could count them all.
Here
Mary
frightened
eyes,
and
kids
had lived before
they
frisky
followed
Cattle with
skipping were
lambs,
driven
into
went to Bethlehem, and here I am
line when they stopped by the way-
sure
side for a nibble of grass or a juicy
they
lived
happily.
People
whose hearts are as full of love as
thistle.
theirs were can never be unhappy
sion
no matter where they may live.
yearly journey to Jerusalem to keep
The people in this proces¬
were
Hebrews
making
the Passover in the temple.
their Every
family must sacrifice a lamb on the temple altar.
Some people wished
to give more than so
they
brought
a single
with
lamb,
them
cattle
and kids. Imagine
how
crowded
city of Jerusalem was thousands
of
the
big
when these
strangers
visited
it!
Every house with an extra bed or a spare
room
was
welcome a guest. one
willing to
there
still
was
made
ready
to
But with every¬
entertain not
a visitor,
enough
room
inside the walls of Jerusalem to care for all those who came. BRINGING WATER FROM THE WELL IN THE LITTLE TOWN OF NAZARETH
people 32
who
could
find
Did the no
place
CHRIST IN THE TEMPLE
to stay
turn
home?
No
it.
around indeed,
They
and
go
not
unstrapped
a
back
bit
their
of
tents
from the backs of their camels, set them up in the valley outside the city
walls,
and
at
once
began
housekeeping. Had
you
looked
over
the
city
walls you might have thought a big army was camped around Jerusalem. But
all
these
peaceful
you
frightened
a
people
looked
wouldn’t bit.
have
Some
so
been
one
who
wrote a book about these times said that
often
people
more
than
journeyed to
two
million
Jerusalem
the feast of the Passover.
for
That is
A CAMP OUTSIDE THE WALLS OF JERUSALEM
a
greater
live
in
number of
any
of
people
our
cities
than
except
in the very largest,
such
York
We shall
or
Chicago.
as
New not
try to count all the caravans in the long
line
or watch them
as
finally reach the city gates.
they Sup¬
pose we look only at the one from Nazareth. Some of the people in the cara¬ van from
Nazareth
found
a
home
in Jerusalem during the week of the feast
of the
Joseph
Passover.
were
among
Mary those
and who
found a stopping place in the city. With them was their son, the boy J esus. and A SCENE IN THE STREETS OF JERUSALEM DURING THE FEAST OF THE PASSOVER
He this
Jerusalem. 34
was twelve was
his
first
years visit
old, to
When some of you children visit
of the day, it was a “day’s journey”
a big town, what do you do first,
to the people in it.
and where do you want to go?
sometimes called only two or three
a picture show, haps
to
a
To
I suppose, or per¬
candy
shop,
or
to
druggist’s for an ice-cream cone.
hours
a
At
Thus the people
travel a “day’s journey.” the
little
town
of
Beeroth
In
(el Bireh) is a fine spring of water.
Jerusalem there were gay shops and
Perhaps the caravan that is on its
fine
way
bazaars
articles
where
were
sold.
many But
curious
only
spot in all the wonderful the
little
to visit.
twelve-year-old
one
Nazareth will
camp there,
because it is the best stopping place
city did lad
to
for travelers who are
wish
Sure enough, the
going
caravan
there.
halts at
His parents had told Him
Beeroth.
Mary and Joseph miss their
about the great temple which King
son and
go from
Herod
hoping to find Him.
had
built.
They
had
told
friend to friend He is not with
Him how all the people were look¬
any of the caravans.
ing for a king who would save them
that He must still be in Jerusalem,
from all their suffering.
so back to the city they hurry.
wished
to
go
only
to
This boy the
temple
because he knew that it was God’s house. Soon the week of the ended. had
Passover
All the animals the people
brought
with
sacrificed upon
the
them
had
altar.
been
Friends
who met only once a year at these feasts
were saying good-by.
Then
the gates of Jerusalem were opened wide,
and
caravan
after
caravan,
on the homeward way, moved slowly down the rocky hillside to the plains below. Caravans had a habit of starting out on a journey late in the after¬ noon and stopping at the first well or spring they reached.
Whether a
caravan traveled all day or rested most
FIND THEIR SON
35
They
think
for God.
Three long, anxious days they try
But this boy is on God’s
to find Jesus.
Finally they go back
side, every one of the lawyers and
to the temple.
And there they find
priests He met in the temple could
him.
He
is
sitting
tell that.
grave
men
who
asking answers
them
among
taught
many
the
at
“ Son, why hast thou thus dealt
He
The
astonished
dom of the boy.
Law,
questions.
questions, too.
lawyers are
the
the
with
us?”
his
mother
asks
him.
wise
“Behold thy father and I sought thee
wis¬
sorrowing.”
His clear, truthful
Mary
and
Joseph
were
greatly
eyes looking into theirs must make
astonished to find their son
them ashamed of some of their acts
temple talking so wisely with the
and
teachers.
thoughts.
Flerod
chose
the
priests, and he did not always choose honest ones. to
Herod’s
liked
only
people who worked for them. did
not
The lad was surprised that they
All those who belonged family
like
anyone
who
in the
should have looked for him so long.
the
They worked
Where
should
to
him?
find
his
parents
Surely
expect
they
should
know he would be in the temple. So Jesus said to his mother: “Flow is it that ye sought me?
Did ye
not know that I must be about my Father’s business?” But
Fie was only
old, just a loved told parents.
twelve
years
boy, and the Law He Flim
He must obey his
And so He left the great
temple and went back to Nazareth with them.
As they traveled home¬
ward under the friendly stars, Mary wondered
in
words
wisdom
of
spoken. arm
She
around
her may the
heart the
over
the
Child
had
have slight
put
her
figure
of
the sweet-faced boy as He walked beside her.
He was her
from His eyes shone the “SON, WHY HAST THOU DEALT THUS WITH US?” ASKED MARY
the Son of God. 36
son, spirit
but of
LOCUSTS AND WILD HONEY How many of you little people
on, let us step right across the United
like to be tumbled out of bed for
States. Then let us lift our feet high
a morning walk so early that the
and take another step and we’re over
sun hasn’t yet chased all the darkness
the big ocean.
out of the sky?
I’m going to ask
and we’ll find ourselves right where
those little folks who like tramping
we want to be, near the shore of
in the cool, dewy morning to take a
the Dead Sea.
walk, with me.
It is just a “pretend”
One more long step
It is a lonely place.
No people
walk, of course, but you and I know
live here.
very well what good times we can
to like it.
Above is the sky, and
have just pretending.
everywhere
are
Put
on
your
boots.
No,
those common school shoes! boots, I mean.
and
not
bare
and
those
a
rocks. few
only
Grass
trees
grow
are
along
the courses of the streams emptying
We wear fairy boots
when we pretend.
bushes
here, but
Fairy
Even animals don’t seem
into the lake.
With our boots 37
Everywhere else the
rocks and the waves of the sea will tell it to us: “There was once a man who lived in this wilderness.
He wore queer
clothes — only a coarse camel’s hair shirt, and a rough hair mantle over his shoulders.
Sometimes he must have
been very cold, especially at night as he lay asleep in
his tent.
His
long hair fell over his shoulders and often blew in his eyes, very much as
Elijah’s
did.
He
was
always
up early and out of his tent before the sun said good morning to the earth. “Watch!
Can’t
you
coming down that hill ?
see
him
He thrusts
his staff into the holes between the rocks.
When
that
long staff digs
OUT IN THE WILDERNESS JOHN WAS UP EARLY AND OUT OF HIS TENT
deep into the holes there is a whirr
ground is scorched and bare, baked
of tiny wings and an angry buzzing.
as hard as clay marbles by the sun’s
The bees think him a meddlesome
heat.
fellow when he helps himself to the
You can’t get cool by drink¬
ing from the lake nor by bathing
honey they had stored
in its clear, beautiful green waters.
rocks.
Some people call
arm as it carries a dripping bit of
for it
it the Salt Sea,
is saltier than the salt you
use on your table.
the
Look at the man’s long, lean
honey to his mouth.
As for bathing!
among
making
his
breakfast
He must be of it.
But
You would bob up and down on
what can those queer-looking things
the waters like a rubber ball.
be
No
he
is
eating
with
drowning in the Salt, or Dead, Sea.
Oh, those are locusts!
The waters hold you up instead of
in
pulling
them a great dainty.
you down.
Even
though
this place is not liked, it has a wonder¬
this
part
the
honey?
The people
of the country think
“The man’s name is John.
ful story to tell, and we have come
angel
here to listen to it.
he was born.
If we listen, the 38
gave
him that name
An
before
His father Zacharias
and his mother Elizabeth were very
the whole
happy because of him.
would have seen nothing but
hate
and
and
His parents
were very old when
he was born,
and they were surprised when a son
lad.
must
Why?
have
fear,
wretched
been
a
strange
city.
But, like Elijah, he went only
to tell the people they were wicked
this wilderness better than big towns
and must do better.
or cities.
ing
H ere in this lonely place
all
the
he played and grew to be a man.
King.
There was too much noise in cities
Him
out
for him.
work
would
Like Elijah, he preferred
people time.
quarreled
in
so
of
King they expected
send
God
was already among them.
to
the
hearts
of
the
no
John was
his herald, sent beforehand
to
people
pre¬ to
receive their King. “Oh, the country was so wicked and the people in it were so cruel! Poor people had no chance at all. If a person was ill, there was nothing to do but die.
No one cared for
those who suffered.
There were a
number of temples and many differ¬ ent gods—the kind of gods people were afraid of and no one Even
the
loved.
Hebrews who had been
taught to worship the true God had almost
forgotten
Him.
There did
not seem to be any love or sympa¬ thy anywhere.
the
coming
to
the
people,
be over—but
John’s that
is
rocks are silent
have
told
their
now, since story.
The
waves rippling on the seashore have
He was getting ready to tell kind
pare
they
the
the people that the great and
for
As soon as he had pointed
The
cities where much
time
He was watch¬
another story.’’
to be alone and think about God live
poverty,
“Sometimes John did go into the
Because he always liked
rather than to
land you
dreadful suffering.
was promised them. “He
length of the
If you had traveled 39
more
to tell
us.
Suppose
we
KING AND HERALD One gray
summer
dawn,
morning
the
sun’s
as
the
messenger,
was creeping silently over the hot city, I heard the noise of chattering tongues and the patter of feet under my window.
Where were the owners
of those feet going so early in the morning?
And why were they in
such a hurry?
They were going to
the lake, of course, for a dip in its cool waters before the scorching sun came and
up.
All
big,
my
these ears
people,
told
me,
little were
happy. Then
I
shut my eyes and with
my mind saw another lake with a long, winding, yellow river flowing
JOHN THE BAPTIST RETURNING TO THE WILDERNESS WHERE HE COULD BE ALONE WITH GOD
into
step back again to our own country. Church bells are ringing.
it.
Crowds
of
people
were
Happy
children are skipping along to Sun¬ day
school.
Sick
little
folks
are
being cared for by sweet-faced nurses in sunny hospitals.
Tired animals
are being groomed and fed instead of being kicked and beaten. seems to be everywhere. these changes
Love
And all
came about because
John the Baptist taught the people to be sorry for and ashamed of their sins.
He pointed out to them the
One who was their King, and he was sage
not afraid to deliver the God
had
sent
to
the
mes¬ world
by him.
IN THE CROWD WERE SCRIBES AND PHARISEES
40
hurrying
down
to
that
lake,
but they did not look happy.
too, This
second picture I saw with my eyes closed was not fierce rays of
a pretty one. the sun had
The burned
up nearly everything bordering the bank
of
the
yellow
river.
Even
the ground looked as though it had been baked. eyes.
Suppose you shut your
Then perhaps you too can see
the picture just as I saw it.
Bare,
bleak-looking hills like stern, grim¬ faced soldiers stand guard at side of the yellow river.
each
Keep your
eyes closed while we all watch with our minds that long procession wretched,
unhappy people
as
of
they L
come pouring down the steep moun¬
TO THE LAKE WENT OLD MEN WITH STAFFS AND SOLDIERS WITH SWORDS AND SHINING HELMETS
tain sides: There goes a Pharisee wrapping his
greedy
tax-gatherers
holding
him.
their purses with long, lean fingers.
some
Rich men on camels, and old men
one he believes not quite so good as
with staffs in their hands are hurry¬
himself.
ing
He
cloak more closely about
and
is
afraid
he
will
touch
Why is he here?
He has
looking
beggar
goes
the river, all of them
anxious to get there.
come to listen to a great preacher. Can you guess who it is?
toward
A sick-
Why
are such crowds
going to
this desolate and lonely place?
stumbling
We
slowly along and is rudely shoved
can see no houses, nor even tents.
to one side by a sneering Sadducee.
Even the trees have given up trying
Scribes
carefully
to
the
sun¬
Surely all these people are on the
A spot on their white
way to see something or some one.
pick
in
their
baked plain.
silken way
robes
through
live
in
gowns seems worse to them than the
Yes,
hearts of stone they carry in their
of the
breasts.
coming to see.
We see here soldiers with
man
shining spears and glittering helmets, 41
there,
this
standing on
river,
we
desolate
saw
is the
man
region.
the
brink
they are
He looks like the eating
his
breakfast
of locusts and honey!
I
am
John
sure
some one.
it is John the Baptist. Everyone seems interested. can to
he be saying? them
about
seems
trees,
be
waiting
So do the people.
talking
King.
telling
the riverside the King comes.
and
for All
of them are looking for the promised
What
He is
to
While
they
wait
there
by He
them that an unfruitful tree is use¬
doesn’t look a bit like one, and so
less and ought to be cut down and
no one but John knows Him.
The
burned.
people
from
The Baptist says that all
see
only
a
stranger
wicked people, like unfruitful trees,
Nazareth, whose father,
are good for nothing.
a carpenter.
Pharisee one
scowl.
another
because
if
Scribe and
Are
they
king!
asking
the
good to
to
show that
for their sins. and
they
are
wishes
Show
by
out
of
being
this
eyes
kindly
seem to
man
a
To
Galilean,
see
like one of themselves.
sorry
“Wash all the bad
wicked
hearts.
people
thoughts in one’s mind,
He urges the people to be bap¬
is
Why, kings have rich purple
whose
others ? tized
strange
robes and wear golden crowns!
John means them,
they do so little
This
Joseph,
the
very
looks just The Stran¬
ger is not even rich, for instead of riding he walks.
your
Jesus, the Nazarene, has come to
baptized
that you intend to stop sinning,” is
be baptized by John.
John’s word to the people.
no doubt are thinking that no King
"Stop
The people
wanting to cheat people when you
would come to see John.
collect taxes, and take
them
sign shall they know that this simple
only what they owe,” John tells the
Galilean is really the expected King?
tax
John, the herald of the King, will
collector.
To
the
from
soldier
he
By what
says, “Be kinder, tell the truth about
tell them.
And he does.
others,
the
of
and
don’t
your wages.”
grumble
about
But John doesn’t pay
pointing to
scoffing
them
Sadducee.
children
of
They pretend to
He
vipers. be,
oh,
calls
John’s
Why? so
given.
very,
the
great
says, by
message
has
been
He has opened the way for
King.
The
are
was the great
not
the
love
good as some of
John
Jesus as He walks
very good, and many of them half so
God!”
the riverside.
much attention to the proud Pharisee and
Lamb
“Behold
all
the
“Lamb
King who
of
God”
came to
people in the
world,
poor people they have shut up in
and, by loving them, to save them
prison.
from their sins. 42
JESUS HAS COME DOWN TO THE JORDAN TO BE BAPTIZED BY JOHN
A CHILD’S GIFT
A CHRISTMAS CAROL The
Christ-child
lay
on
Mary’s
All bring the Christ child presents:
lap,
The poorest does his part;
His hair was like a light.
And I, who am so little,
(O weary, weary were the world,
Give to Him my heart.
But here is all aright.)
— Katharine Lee Bates
The Christ-child lay on Mary’s breast, His hair was like a star. (O
stern
and
cunning
are
GLAD TIDINGS OF the
kings,
GREAT JOY
But here the true hearts are.) While shepherds watched their flocks The Christ-child
lay on Mary’s heart,
by night,
His hair was like a fire.
All seated, on the ground,
(O weary, weary is the world,
The angel of the Lord came down,
But here the world’s desire.)
And glory shone around.
The Christ-child stood at Mary’s knee,
“Fear not,” said he, for mighty dread
His hair was like a crown,
Had seized their troubled mind;
And all the flowers looked up at Him,
“Glad tidings of great joy I bring
And all the stars looked down.
To you and all mankind.
— Gilbert K. Chesterton
A CHRISTMAS FOLK-SONG
“To you, in David’s town, this day Is born of David’s line
The Little Jesus came to town;
A Saviour who is Christ the Lord;
The wind blew up, the wind blew down;
And this shall be the sign:
Out in the street the wind was bold; Now who would house Him from the cold?
“The heavenly babe you there shall find To human view display’d,
Then opened wide a stable door, Fair were the rushes on the floor; The Ox put forth a horned head:
All meanly wrapped in swathing bands, And in a manger laid.”
“Come, little Lord, here make Thy bed.’’
Thus spake the seraph; and forthwith Appear’d a shining throng
Uprose the sheep were folded near:
Of angels praising God, who thus
“Thou Lamb of God, come, enter here.’’
Address’d their joyful song:
He entered there to rush and reed, Who was the Lamb of God indeed.
“All Glory be to God on high, The Little Jesus came to town;
And to the earth be peace;
With ox and sheep He laid Him down;
Good will henceforth from Heav’n to men
Peace to the byre, peace to the fold, For that they housed Him from the cold!
Begin and never cease.”
—Lizette Woodworth Reese
— Nathan Tate
44
THE EARLY WORK OF JESUS
“DRAW NOW,” JESUS COMMANDS THE SERVANTS, “AND BEAR UNTO THE RULER OF THE FEAST.”
WINE AND WATER
peep
inside
the
bride’s
room
you
would think you were looking at a How would you all like to go to a wedding?
Would you not like to
be in the procession? a lamp?
snowbank.
You
might
walk
all
around this bank of white to find
Can you carry
the bride’s face.
There is no use in your
of no use.
But it would be
No one, not even the
trying to join this wedding procession
bridegroom, can get a glimpse of her
unless
face until
you
carry
one.
No!
No!
after the marriage feast.
Don’t try to carry the tall piano lamp,
Her great white veil covers her all
nor reach for the big one that stands
over from top to toe.
on the table.
Go up into your great¬
Weddings in this strange country
grandmother’s attic and perhaps you
of Palestine are at night.
will find hidden away in her chests
why
something in
must carry lights.
a light.
which you can carry
Yes, that deep old bronze
the
guests
missing the
in
That is
the
procession
No fear of our
bridegroom’s house
as
saucer with a handle will do nicely.
we
Fill it with oil and let a wick float
Lighted lanterns will be strung across
in it.
the street and swing back and forth
Now you are ready.
The
procession
There will shouting.
be
will
be noisy.
come
back
with
the
bride!
before his house.
music, singing, and
No one will ever forget the wed¬
The more noise you can
ding to which I have asked you to
make the better.
If you make a great
go.
A Guest has been invited who
deal of noise, the bridegroom will feel
loves to help all people.
sure you are enjoying his wedding.
what their trouble may be, He will
Now start.
procession
always help them out of it. mother and His disciples.
The last to appear are the bride¬
I do not
doubt that He laughs and talks with
All of them
go to' the bride’s house.
He sits
among the merry throng with His
Then follow the torchbear-
groom and his friends. will
is ready to
First come the band and the
singers. ers.
the
No matter
all
She
of them.
Since
in
there is always a wish
His to
heart
help,
I
will be waiting for this merry com¬
am sure everyone who comes near
pany, she and her bridesmaids.
Him
The bridegroom is coming to take
is
helped
and
because He is there.
feels
better
We know who
her to his own home, where he will
that
give a splendid feast to all the com¬
Beside Him is Mary, His mother.
pany.
kindly Guest is.
It is Jesus.
In the midst of the merrymaking
If you should be allowed to 47
something
dreadful
happens.
BETHESDA— HOUSE OF MERCY
In
Palestine people think it a misfortune for the wine to give out before the guests have had their feast.
If I should say “swimming pool,”
Mary is feast.
how many of you little folks, espe¬
“ They have no more wine,” she whis¬
cially you boys, would prick up your
pers to Jesus.
ears and listen?
watching the steward of the
Him?
But why does she tell
and gray would dance and sparkle,
The bridegroom is the one
to supply the wine.
for the owners of those eyes know
Plow can Jesus,
who is only a guest, help them out
how delicious
of
cool water.
their
trouble?
We
shall
Eyes of black, blue,
see.
is a
plunge
to lie near a great
jars.
and never be able to get
says to the servants. “Draw now,” He
He
And they obey.
feast,”
pleased wine. are
as
he
must
America and the ocean into a strange
is the “ruler the
country. large
delicious
Six jars of this rich wine now
waiting
for the
guests.
into it?
ones we used when we stepped across
be very much
tastes
of water
Put on those fairy boots again, the
bear unto the ruler of the feast.” of the
pool
No fun in that, is there?
commands, “and
The steward, who
the
But how would you like
Standing near Him are some empty “Fill them with water,”
in
Now come with me to a
pool
country.
Only
of
water
in
that
same
Around the pool there are
five big porches with marble pillars.
a moment before the jars held spark¬
Lying
ling water.
Now they are brimming
wretched people.
with wine.
The steward praises the
ill.
about
the
pillars
are
some
They are poor and
See that feeble old man groping
bridegroom for keeping his best wine
for a pillar against which he may
until the end of the feast.
lean.
Neither
He must be blind!
A ragged,
he nor the bridegroom knows how
crippled boy is hobbling along on
the wine came there.
crutches.
What can they want here?
Do
suppose
But the ser¬
vants who put water into
the
jars
you
they
come
here
and drew out wine know, and I am
because
sure they will tell all their friends
to the parks on a hot summer day?
about it.
Perhaps that is one of the reasons.
The Guest from Galilee
has done this wonder.
No one there
suspects that He is King. Because
one
who
helps
But there is another reason.
Why? others
it is cooler, just as we go
Some¬
times the water in the pool is shal¬
is
low and at other times it is deep.
not the people’s idea of a king.
Whenever the 48
water
changes
and
becomes deep all these people rush into it. of
Why ?
Bethesda,
changed,
is
Because this pool
after
the
supposed
water
has
cure
the
to
first person who steps into it. think of that
poor blind man and
crippled boy!
How
the way in ?
But
can they find
No one in this country
cares about them.
Who will
help
the feeble ones who have no friends? Across
the
porch
and
between
the pillars comes One whose eyes are always looking for those people whom ears
everyone
will
hear
calling for help.
else the
forgets.
His
weakest
voice
Who can He be?
“Jesus of Nazareth passeth by,” the people will
tell you.
JESUS AND THE MAN WHO WAS HEALED AT THE POOL OF BETHESDA
And as He
goes by He leaves health and joy. Of course Jesus will stop beside the most
miserable
of
all
these
poor
people gathered about the pool. One poor fellow has been ill so long that during his illness you would have had time to grow from a baby into a man.
Just think of it!
“Do you wish to be well?” Jesus asks him. “Yes,” answers the man,
“but
I
cannot get into the pool quickly and somebody always gets in ahead of me.” H ow
pitiful!
That
poor
man,
with his shrunken arms and twisted feet, and his weak body, is too feeble to do anything but lie quietly near “DO YOU WISH TO BE WELL?
the
JESUS ASKED THE MAN
49
pool.
Every
time
the
water
changed
he
hoped
that
THROUGH THE ROOF
someone
would be kind and help him into the pooh
Who lives in the house next door
How glad he must be to
hear the voice of Jesus saying to him,
to
“Arise, take up thy bed, and walk.”
little
Imagine his astonishment as his weak
one with little children in it.
back straightens and grows strong.
I was a small girl, I can remember
The twisted feet are whole and step
thinking that people who lived in
firmly upon the ground.
houses without children were stupid.
up
a
well
bed in
man
and
his. arms.
He stands gathers
his
you?
Is
it
house?
a I
big
house
hope
it
is
to
hard a task as you might think, for
take
your
his bed is only a* rug of wool
marbles, walk up the steps,
or
sheepskin. the
visit
them,
best
you
doll
or
probably a
on the door, and go in.
porches
and
are
and publicans.
forth
priests,
bag
pose, when you went visiting, there
Pharisees,
was such a crowd around the door
Doctors of the law
that
you
could
not
get
into
Bethesda is
There!
people
I’ll have to put my hands over my
as
in
ears,
much
parks.
Rich and poor, young and
they
do
our
and boys pass the pool. is
only
“Go
all be shouting
home,
of
course,
at
and
come some other day.”
Yet among One
for you’ll
once,
old, tired mothers, and happy girls there
the
place where
gather,
all
knock
among
house. What would you do?
them
of
But sup¬
and busy merchants also are there. a
big
If your little friends next door ask you
back
a
a
When
That is not so
Passing
or
In
who
the
came to help.
our
country
proper
thing
that to
would
be
But
in
do.
Palestine, where Jesus lived, people
Suppose when
we step back to
sometimes did strange things when
our own country we bring back with
they wanted to see Him.
us some of the water of Bethesda!
could find no other way, they even
No, not the. real water, of course!
came into a house through the roof!
But a little spot in our hearts warm
Watch
that
little
house
If they
in
the
with love for people and the wish
narrow city street.
to help them.
there is a wedding or a party going
Bethesda, you know,
means “House of Mercy.”
And it
on in it.
You may think
People are packed so close
was by this pool of “mercy” that
together by the doorway that no late
the
comer can enter.
sick
man
heard the voice
of
Jesus.
are 50
Even the windows
filled with people, looking out
Along the street come four men. They
walk
slowly
and
carefully.
They are carrying a bed on which lies
a
man
who
has
palsy.
That
is, he can move only with the help of other people. for
himself.
door. and
He can do nothing
The
men
reach
the
Will the crowd stand aside let
the
four
men
their helpless friend?
pass
with
No, they are
so anxious to get help for themselves that
I don’t believe they even see
the helpless man on the bed.
Door¬
way and windows are packed with people. and to
CARRYING A MAN SICK OF THE PALSY TO JESUS TO ASK FOR HELP
at
the
crowds
pushing
and
Not
here get
to
are
one more can five
Jesus
to
men ask
enter,
who
need
for
help.
strug¬
gling to get inside the house. Jesus
is
in
that
little
house.
People for miles around have heard that He is there and have come to see Him. hurry should
Through the street they
toward turn
the and
house. look
round you would see
If
you
round
and
people com¬
ing from every direction.
Scribes,
Pharisees, and rulers are there.
As
usual they are finding fault because Jesus helps wicked people as well as good ones. and the ill, all
The poor, the rich, have
Jesus for something.
come to ask And not one
among them offers Him anything in DOWN THROUGH THE ROOF THE MEN LOWER THE HELPLESS MAN
return. 51
Will
they
turn
tunately
Surely not.
For¬
friends on the roof peering through
one
the hole they have made, anxiously
There are steps leading
watching what is happening in the
house
is
only
up to the flat roof.
The four men
carry
the
the
Can’t you see those four
come
this
story high.
he rests.
and
some other day?
back
bed
up
begin to tear up the
steps
roof.
room below?
and
Isn’t that a strange way of seeking
Don’t
help—just
to
open
the
roof
and
frown and say that is not the right
place the helpless man directly
way
front of Jesus?
to
treat
a
neighbor’s
house.
in
The four men are
Those little houses in Palestine are
so sure that Jesus will cure the man
not built as ours are, and often the
the instant He sees him, that they do
roofs can easily be torn apart and
not even think it necessary to speak.
as easily put together again.
Jesus is pleased with their faith in
The house we are watching must
Him.
We all like to be trusted, and
have such a roof, for not one of the
all of us are hurt, just as Jesus must
crowd, not even the owner, seems to
have been, by unkind words such as
notice that a hole is being made in
the Scribes and Pharisees were always
it.
speaking about Him.
When the roof is opened, down,
down the four men lower the helpless man.
Right
at
the feet
of
Jesus
Jesus
rewards
helpless He
man
says
the
and
to
faith
his
him,
of
the
friends,
for
“Take
up
your
bed and walk.’’ Up man.
springs
the
once
helpless
He throws his bed, which is
only blankets, over his shoulder and walks briskly toward the door.
No
need of going up through the roof to get out.
The crowd is so aston¬
ished to see the once helpless man walking,
that
the
doorway
to
pass
out
it
melts
and
away
from
allows
the
man
join
his
four
and
friends who are waiting outside for him. can
THROWING HIS BED OVER HIS SHOULDER THE ONCE HELPLESS MAN WALKED OUT OF THE DOOR
As the men walk away you hear the
crowd
saying,
“We
never saw anything like this before.’’ 5^
'
-. .y
"w
___ _
-
±**±1^*.
HER ONLY SON Tap,
tap,
tap!
“What
is
that?
Sometimes they tear their clothes and
Some one must be knocking at my
lie with their faces on the ground.
door,” you say.
We know something sad has happened
Yes, it is I, come
to take you for another walk through
to this woman.
the country of Palestine.
she walks along!
we see today?
What shall
Another procession.
How her feet drag as And her shoulders
are bent as though under a heavy load.
The
A kind-hearted neighbor has an arm
all
around her and is trying to help her.
Some are crying.
If you and I look carefully at this
Through the narrow and often dirty
procession, we shall find out where it is
streets of the
going and why the people are so sad.
No, not a wedding this time. people
in
this
procession
walking slowly.
are
little town
of
Nain
In our own country you have seen sick
they move toward the city gate.
people
See that poor woman dressed all in black. have
put
stretchers.
Her hair looks as if she
had forgotten to comb it. ashes
on
her
Palestine when people
are
so
to
the
hospitals on
Something that looks like
a stretcher is being carried by some
She must head.
carried
men in the procession.
In
There is a
young man lying on it, but he is not
un¬
happy that no one can comfort them,
ill.
they
friends are carrying him out of the
cover their
heads with ashes. 53
He
died
last
night,
and
his
but the sound of their voices tells us they are happy.
In the midst of
the crowd is a noble figure in white. The
multitudes
that follow
crowd
about Him and His disciples.
The
sun touches His hair as if in bless¬ ing, and sheds a glorious light on all who follow Him.
The sad pro¬
cession of black-robed mourners meets the company of people who are light¬ hearted
and
people
may
cheery. not
These
even
see
happy
the
sad
mother, or if they do see her they probably are saying,
“ Why should
we
no
stop?
We
have
friends
in
this funeral train, and the young man THIS UNHAPPY MOTHER, A WIDOW OF NAIN, HAS LOST HER ONLY SON
city to the rocks in the valley.
is not a relative of ours.” But One among this lively group
In
caves among these rocks are placed the
will not move on.
bodies of people who die in Palestine.
path
of
the
sad
He stops in the procession.
The
The sad procession reaches the city gate and passes on toward the valley. The
poor woman is wringing her
hands in grief.
The lad whose body
lies on the bier or stretcher was her only son, and she is a widow.
Per¬
haps there is no one left who will be kind to her and see that she does not starve.
She may lose the little one-
room house in which she and her son have lived.
She has no money to
pay the taxes or the rent.
She may
have to beg the rest of her life. Coming up the path toward the city we see a very different crowd of people.
All of them are excited,
THE MOTHER REJOICING THAT HER SON IS ALIVE
54
TOUCHING THE HEM
stretcher-bearers and the mother, look¬ ing
up,
see
Jesus
standing
there.
Some people in the procession have
Come
with me
to the
seashore,
heard that He heals people who are
little people.
ill.
buckets and shovels for a play on
The young man’s mother may
be thinking.
“Oh, if He had only
the
been here before my boy died!” halts.
You
for them.
Jesus touches the stretcher as the procession
sand.
No,- don’t take your will
have
no
use
The seaside you and I
will visit is in Palestine, and already
The young man
there is so
large
a
crowd on
the
I have no
beach that it is a wonder some of
doubt that even the disciples of Jesus
the people are not pushed into the
wonder why He stops a funeral
water.
is dead, the people say.
on
Among the number on the
the
valley.
beach are many people who are ill.
Jesus is sorry for the mother.
When
All of them, weak and strong, are
He is sorry for people He always
waiting to welcome some one com¬
does something to help them.
ing toward them in a boat.
its
way
to
a
tomb
in
His
One
words make people who hear them
little fellow is holding tight to his
live and become well.
mother’s
“Weep not,”
He says to the sad mother. brings
a
blessing when
as
they
both
stand
with their feet in the water.
Then
“Mother, do you think Jesus will
laying upon the bier His hand, which always
hand
make
it
my crooked
back
straight?”
he asks her.
touches anyone, He says to the young
“Yes, dear,” his
man, “ I say unto thee, arise.”
mother replies.
The closed eyes open.
Into the
“Jesus helps all who need Him, and
pale cheeks color comes.
The boy
He will see that you need Him.”
I should like to
So that is why such great num¬
have heard the first words he spoke
bers of people are waiting for the
when
approaching boat.
sits up and speaks. Jesus
mother. I’m sure.
gave him back to his
They were
happy
Jesus and some
of His disciples are in it.
words,
this
Do you suppose that as
multitude
have come
Jesus.
recognized the face of the King?
to ask Him to cure either themselves
them
have come
or some friend or relative they have
The little procession, now a glad one
of
to meet
he looked into the face of Jesus, he
one, turns back into the city.
Many
All in
brought
Every¬
with
them.
Each
person
is anxious to reach the water’s edge
is happy and is saying in his
and
heart, “God is surely with us.” 55
be
the
first
one
to
speak to
loves all of them and enjoys giving good things to them. See
that
proud
Pharisee
scorn¬
fully drawing around him his rich robe with its wide hem and silken fringe!
He is afraid that some one
whom he thinks not quite so good as himself, might touch him. the
people
another!
push
I
and
How
crowd
one
hope the mothers have
left their babies at home, for they surely
would
be
crushed
frantic
efforts
all
are
in
the
making
to
reach the boat. Suddenly
the
crowd
separates
and a path is made straight through it toward the boat.
PETER SHOVED THE BOAT AWAY FROM THE PEOPLE ON THE SHORE
Jesus.
important it
And each in his haste and
eagerness
to
be
neighbors
and
first
joggles
shoves
his
his
boat
rich
be
ruler
coming. who
wishes
elbows
his path steps
hastily
aside
the
shore.
Jesus.
people
and only you can help her.”
it.
How
can
the
Master hear when all of them speak so
quietly when Him?
shoving
the
shore,
so
ciples
can
away
from
they
boat
away
Jesus
sit
in
the
Peter
Many in the
multitude follow them.
is
Watch!
Following the people is
from
the
a woman.
How pale and weak she
His
dis¬
is!
and it
“My little daughter is dying
to the ruler’s house.
rudely push
Look!
that
let
Off Jesus and His disciples start
And how can He stand
against
to
“Come with me,” the ruler begs
There is a mighty rush of anxious
at once?
to
him pass. touches
toward
Yes,
speak with Jesus, and everyone in
into their sides. The
is a
must
Somebody very
comfortably,
anxious
rabble.
She
is
ill,
and
often
leans
upon
the arm of a friend who
with
her.
She
isn’t
as
is
important
Jesus heals all who come to Him.
as the ruler, and the people do not
He never seems to grow tired.
step
I
think it must be because He really
aside
Jesus. 56
to
let
her pass
toward
But she needs His help as
much
as
the
great
ruler’s
little
daughter. Will push H er
she
be
strong
enough
to
her way through that crowd ? friend
thinks
not,
and
urges
her to go home and wait until some other day.
“Tomorrow there
may
not be so big a crowd,” her friend says. “ I must reach Him today, I shall reach Him today,” the woman replies. “For twelve long years I have been ill,” she adds.
“ I have spent all my
money trying to get well, and have only grown worse.” “If you have been ill for so long you
surely
more
can
before
wait
asking
a
Jesus
few
days
to
help
“IF I MAY ONLY TOUCH THE BORDER OF HIS ROBE I SHALL BE CURED,” THOUGHT THE WOMAN
you,” said the friend again urging
she feels the strength and glow of
her to go home.
health.
“No,
it
Only a slight touch by a feeble
will be today,” replies the woman
hand on the hem of His garment,
earnestly.
but
On
no,
she
doubting shall
it
must
presses
and
companion
reach
Him,
be
today,
leaves
behind. I
shall
her
it
causes
ask who
“I
Jesus
touched
to
Him.
pause He
and turns
around and sees the happy woman.
reach
He
speaks
to
her,
and
she
tells
Him,” she is thinking as she moves
Him of her many years of suffering,
unsteadily through the mass of hurry¬
and how she has been healed just
ing people.
by touching the
She is close, so close
hem
of
His
gar¬
to the Master that her feeble fingers
ment.
rest for an
in Him, and I can see a shade of
instant on the hem of
His flowing robe.
Few people have such trust
sadness in the eyes of Jesus as He
“If I may only
touch the border of His robe I shall
looks kindly upon the woman.
be
thinking.
sweet, clear voice is saying to her,
She has touched the hem and turns
“Daughter, go in peace, your faith
to
has made you well.”
cured,” she
has been
go away, for through her body 57
His
SUPPER TIME
crowded almost into the
water by
the eager people who pushed and Let us go to a wonderful picnic.
shoved one another as they tried to
The biggest picnic you ever attended
reach Jesus where He stood on the
was not half so large as the one we
shore.
shall pretend to visit this afternoon.
“We have had no time to eat or
When you and I go to picnics we
rest,” said the disciples at last.
carry baskets filled with good things to eat.
“We will go into a quiet place and rest,” Jesus answered.
We look for a tree under
whose spreading branches we may eat our lunch. thing tastes! be
hungry
Into a boat they climbed, and rowed
My, how good every¬
across
Mother knew we would when
she
filled those
But
the
They could
hillside, and that is what they did.
pretending to visit we should nothing
to
were
eat.
When Jesus and His disciples came
have
to the spot, they found a multitude
Plenty of
there — large
of people waiting for them there.
ones —
How disappointed the tired disci¬
some made of ropes twisted together,
ples must have been!
all smelling of fish,
they
empty.
and every one
Imagine going to a picnic
with empty baskets!
hearty welcome.
“What a queer
Perhaps
for
help
ing.
selves
were
so
Never
when tired.
them¬
But
Jesus
smiled.
and
hand in friendly welcome.
like
since
has
it.
The
there
been
picnic
made
they
before had there been one like it, never
it
some of them cross to hear the people asking
What a strange picnic!
I don’t believe
gave the hungry multitude a
picnic!” some little folks are think¬
another
people
walk around the lake to the lonely
At the wonderful picnic we are
baskets
lake.
wouldn’t be left behind.
baskets.
found
the
was
see
a
He must have held out his mother
bringing
her
I
can blind
on a lonely hillside near a lake in
baby to Him for healing.
Palestine,
where
is a cripple dragging himself along
poor people had no friends and many
the ground, asking that he might be
sick
made to walk.
them.
that
people Only
sad
had
no
Jesus
country one felt
to sorry
help for
were
carried
There
Some of the people on
stretchers.
They
them, and always gave the people
held out their shriveled arms toward
exactly what they needed.
Jesus, the only friend who had ever
That is why on the day of the
shown
picnic Jesus and His disciples were
pity
them all. 58
for them.
He healed
JESUS FEEDING FIVE THOUSAND PEOPLE
cost too much.” It would have cost them two hundred shillings, and that means about thirty-four dollars of our money. The sun was slipping out of sight, and soon darkness would begin to settle over the valley. probably
were
Sleepy babies
crying,
and
other
little folks were teasing their mothers to
hurry
home
so
they
could
eat
their bowls of porridge. But
Jesus
people home.
would
not
send the
He intended to feed
them and to fill their empty baskets. “How much food is there here?” asked Jesus of the disciples.
A MOTHER BRINGING HER BLIND BABY TO JESUS
and see.”
FOR HEALING
“Five loaves and two fish are all
The sun turned scarlet and long shadows
began
to
creep
“Go
over
we can find,” replied the disciples.
the
Why didn’t all those
“ Bring them to me, and ask the
hungry people hurry home and buy
people to sit down,” commanded Jesus.
something to eat before the shops
The disciples obeyed, probably won¬
grassy hillside.
in town were closed?
dering how Jesus was going to feed
We know that was what the dis¬
five thousand people with five round
ciples thought, for they asked Jesus
cakes of bread and two small fish.
to send the people away, as night
Jesus took the bread and fish and
was near.
blessed them and gave thanks.
“The people are tired, and many of them have come a long way. cannot
send
them
away
watching
people
and
the
The
disciples
I
too, perhaps, were thinking, “ How
hungry.
could one be thankful with so little
Give ye them to eat,” said Jesus.
to eat and so many to feed?”
As
“How can we feed all these hun¬
they watched Jesus break the bread
gry people when we have nothing to
and fish into pieces, their eyes must
give them?” asked the disciples.
have opened wider and
they added, “If
And
we went to town
wider, for
the more He broke them the bigger
and bought food for them it would
grew the piles of food. 6o
The
disciples
the people
all
were
busy giving
they could eat. Per¬
haps for some it was the first time they had ever had enough for sup¬ per. In Jesus’ hands the loaves and fishes kept
increasing as
them into pieces.
he
broke
And those empty
baskets the people had brought with them
came
in
handy,
for
twelve
baskets full of bread and fish were left after the people had had enough. Then down the steep, lonely hill¬ side the people walked, busily talk¬ ing together as they went.
Perhaps
a woman is telling her neighbor that she believes Jesus is the promised King.
AFRAID
Others are whispering among
themselves.
H ow the wind did blow!
“ This is of a truth the
It sent
the fisher boy’s cap spinning along
Prophet that cometh into the world.”
the
beach
and
nearly
Pharisee’s long robe.
tore off the
The sea tossed
up and down, for all the waves, little and big, were having a great frolic with
the
wind.
Even
the
moon
smiling down upon the lively waves did not make the sea seem any calmer. You and I would have preferred to
stay
on
land
on
such a night.
But rough as the sea was, some men seemed anxious to venture out upon it.
They were Jesus’ disciples.
He
had told them to cross to the other side of the lake, and thus get away from the crowd.
Late that afternoon,
with only five loaves and two small THE PEOPLE WENT HOME CARRYING BASKETS FILLED
fish they, at Jesus’ command had fed
WITH BREAD AND FISH
61
five thousand people.
toward a lonely hillside.
Now all had
No one
had enough to eat and it was grow¬
would care to follow Him into the
ing dark, yet the people did not want
mountains
to go home.
night.
Since they could not
on
such
a
disagreeable
How cold and dreary it must
stay there all night, Jesus had said
have been!
to His disciples, “Get into your boat
place where Jesus could pray without
and row across the lake.
being disturbed.
I will send
the people away.”
But
it
was
the only
The moon hurried along its nightly path across the sky
I have often wondered how Jesus
as
if
it
were
managed to get that great throng of
anxious to get away from the angry
people to leave Him and go to their
wind.
homes.
behind the hills.
But they finally did go home.
At
last
it
dropped
The morning stars
Perhaps it was chilly along the shore
had begun to twinkle when
and the wind blew too strong for
ceased praying
them.
the
Or they may have remem¬
lake.
down
and
There,
Jesus
looked toward tossed
about
in
bered that at home there were other
their little boat, were His disciples.
people who were ill whom to-morrow
Although they rowed with all their
they could bring to Jesus to be healed.
strength, their boat did not seem to
At
last
Jesus
was
alone.
He
move far through those rocking waters.
turned from the shore and walked
The wind blew them back, and it was not easy for the disciples to pull against it. Wild winds and waves did not hinder Jesus.
He saw that His dis¬
ciples needed Him and off He started to help them. for Him.
There was no boat
His disciples had taken
the only one.
Out on the stormy
sea Jesus stepped and walked toward the tossing boat. The
disciples
must
have
been
watching the shore, for they saw H im coming.
At first they did not know
Him, and they were badly frightened. Never before had they seen anyone walking on the sea.
JESUS PRAYING ON THE LONELY HILLSIDE
62
I suppose some
then
of
course
he
began
Jesus
to
He
called
to
and
Jesus
stretched
to
sink.
save
him,
out His hand
and caught him. Do you think Jesus said, “Peter, it was foolish for you to try to walk on
the
water.
Y ou
should
have
known that you could not do it” ? No, indeed!
Jesus never discouraged
people in that way.
Instead, Jesus
must have looked sad when He said to
Peter,
“You
have
little
faith.
Why were you afraid?” Then both of them stepped into OUT ON THE STORMY SEA JESUS STEPPED
the boat.
The wind died down and
of them dropped their oars from fright
the stormy waves grew quiet.
and crouched down
in the bottom
golden rays of the rising sun flashed
Their fear soon left
across the lake as at last the little
for they heard a well-known
boat came safely to land, and Jesus
of the boat. them,
voice calling out to them, “It is I;
and His disciples were at home.
be not afraid.” While every one of the disciples knew that voice belonged to Jesus, Peter was the first to answer.
But
Peter usually did speak first.
He
said to Jesus, “If it is you, tell me to walk on the water to meet you.” And Jesus answered, “Come.” Out of the boat Peter scrambled and stepped bravely
upon the sea.
He walked forward easily, so easily, indeed, that
he had time to notice
how strong the wind was and how madly moment of
the
the
waters
he storm
raged.
noticed he
the
was
But
the
wildness
afraid,
The
and
THE LITTLE BOAT CAME SAFELY TO LAND
63
: msasmam
MY NEIGHBOR by
How many of you little people have neighbors?
All
of you, of course.
the
roadside
lonely travelers.
and
pounce
upon
It is best to leave
“The little girl across the street and
all our valuables behind us.
the boy next door are our neighbors,”
carry nothing that will tempt a thief.
you say.
We shall
Palestine, the country where
Now we are ready and off we start.
Jesus lived, and where you and I have
Soon the road turns into a solitary
been visiting so
many
place where we can see nothing but
people in it, and of course many of
high rock walls around us and the
these people were neighbors.
blue sky overhead.
often, had
But would you believe it?
There
This must be the place.
Yes, I
lived a lawyer in Palestine who did
am sure this is the very spot where
not know who his neighbors were, and
a Hebrew traveling all
he asked Jesus to tell him.
Jerusalem to
Suppose we journey today down
by thieves.
Jericho
alone from
was
attacked
His clothes were torn off
the steep, rocky road that leads from
him and his money was stolen.
Jerusalem to Jericho.
cruel thieves beat the poor man and
go together.
We shall all
It is safer than travel¬
left him lying by the roadside.
The Sup¬
ing alone, for the road is rough and
pose we sit here in this cool cave
dangerous.
and eat our lunch while I tell you
Many wild beasts prowl
about, and robbers hide in the caves
what happened next. 64
The wounded Hebrew lay groan¬
And he probably added as he dis¬
ing' where he had been left to die.
appeared down the road, “I should
Surely
his
be foolish to stay in this dangerous
groans and come to help him.
At
spot just to help a stranger.”
last a priest came slowly along.
He
some
one
would
hear
Nightfall was near.
Cold winds
was on the opposite side of the road
began to blow through the valley.
from
H ow
the
man.
the moans helpless
and
man.
The looked Did
to the side of the No!
priest
heard
toward
the
cross
over
he
the
injured
shivered!
man
must
have
He heard the howl of a
wolf in the
distance.
The savage
injured traveler?
beast was waiting for darkness, when
The priest looked at the man
he would creep up and tear the man
carefully, then drew his robe more
in pieces.
closely around him and passed by on the way to Jericho. did
Then the last rays of the setting
Why was he so
cruel?
He
not think
he
cruel.
He only thought as he went
sun shone upon a donkey and
was
rider.
neighbors.
He is a stranger to me.
in the
afternoon a
along, and I
am sure
the
Samaritan on his back was whistling. The Samaritan saw the wounded man.
Why should I stop to help him?” Late
The little animal was trotting
merrily
onward, “That man is not one of my
his
Levite,
He
jumped
off,
reined
in
his
and
ran to
donkey,
the
man’s
or teacher, came hurrying along the
side.
road.
anxious to get' out
man lying at his feet was a Hebrew.
of that desolate valley before night¬
The Samaritans and Hebrews hated
time.
each
He was
He paused when he reached
the wounded Hebrew. was interested.
The Samaritan saw that the
other,
and never
other neighbor.
The Levite
the side of the man, who was now
forgot
nearly dead.
was a Hebrew.
He looked
closely at
“This
him, then shook his head and turned away without offering any help. man
lying
in
the
road
and I
The
was
that
the
not
each
But this Samaritan
had so much love
He crossed over to
called
the
in his heart he
man
wounded
lying
there
man needs help
can give it to him,” thought
Samaritan.
So he helped the
another teacher, neither was he one
Hebrew on the donkey, and walked
of
beside
the
Levite’s
neighbors.
growing late and a
place
know
of
the
safety teacher
“It
is
inn.
I must hurry to and was
shelter,”
him All
until
they
reached
an
night he stayed with the
man and cared for him. In the morn¬
I
ing
thinking. 65
he left
some
money with the
LOST AND FOUND Poor little dog! the moment at
my
I
I knew he was lost
heard him whining
heels.
I
spoke
to the small stray, doggie, doggie! me
saying,
“ Come
Come home with
and you shall
to eat.”
coaxingly
have
something
But he would not follow.
He only sat still, cocking his head on
one
Some
side
as he
people
do
looked not
language, but I do.
at
me.
know
dog
So I understood
that, as he thumped his tail on the walk, he was saying, “‘Doggie’ isn’t THE SAMARITAN GAVE THE LANDLORD SOME MONEY AND ASKED HIM TO CARE FOR THE HEBREW
my name. Along
landlord and asked him to take care
I can’t go with you.” came
a
boy
whistling.
of the Hebrew until he was able to
He called to the dog, “Here, Fido,
go home.
Fido!”
Now
that
the
story
is
Still the dog did not stir.
A little girl came sorrowfully down
finished,
we will start back again over the
the road.
road
the
which
Jerusalem.
runs The
from
Jericho
rocks
no
to
dog
Frisk!”
longer
Then her eyes fell upon and At
she
called,
once
the
“Frisk,
small
dog
look lonely, and the stones seem to
bounded into her arms with delight.
smile.
So
the
How can they help it, since
glowing
sunlight
of
love
and
for
“Frisk” he
did
was not
the
dog’s
intend to
name, follow
anyone home until he heard it.
one’s neighbor has touched them all?
The little girl and her dog made
“Who is my neighbor?” the lawyer asked, and Jesus answered by telling
me think of a Bible story.
There
him the story I have told you.
are other animals besides dogs that know their names and will
follow
we can help, some one who needs
only when they
called.
us,” every child’s voice is answering.
In Palestine there are many, many
“Why, our neighbor is some one
Yes,
you
are
lawyer thought
right.
the
same
And
the
sheep.
thing as
The shepherds who care for
them know all
he turned away from Jesus.
hear them
the sheep in their
flocks and call each one by its name. 66
Let
us
visit
a
sheepfold
on
sunny hillside in Palestine. is
only
one
narrow
There
door
in
rough stone wall of the fold. shall
we
do
if
the
door
a the
What is shut?
Some small boy will answer, “Climb over
the
top.”
Impossible!
The
tops of the walls are covered with tree branches, prickly brambles, and sharp thorns. to steal over.
Even a wolf coming
a lamb doesn’t dare jump
Only
a
half-starved
lion
or
leopard will leap over the wall and risk getting torn on those thorns. There!
The door of the sheepfold
opens and out comes the shepherd. NOW AND THEN THE SHEPHERD STOPS AND CALLS SOFTLY TO A STRAYING LAMB
His rough sheepskin mantle is thrown over his shoulders.
As the day is
he will turn his mantle inside out
hot,
fleece
outside.
and wear the woolly side next to him.
Tonight, if he sleeps on the hillside,
He carries a sling, a queer-looking
he
wears
the
wallet filled with coarse food, and a long crook or staff. One
by
through
one
the
shepherd.
the
gate
He
sheep
and
knows
come
follow where
the there
is a fine pasture filled with tempting grass.
A sparkling stream of cool
water
gurgles
green field. pasture.
its
way
across
It is a long way to that
The
sheep
will
have
travel
through
a
lonesome,
valley
before
they
reach
the
the
shepherd
goes
it.
before
to
rocky But them.
Now and then he calls a straying lamb, and the lamb hears and trots ONE BY ONE THE SHEEP FOLLOW THE SHEPHERD THROUGH THE GATE
obediently after him. 67
The
shepherd
eyes.
Beside
must
that
have
sharp
Again they pass safely through the
of
water
rocky valley.
pool
The
among the rocks a savage leopard
gatekeeper opens
the
door
may be hiding, or a wolf may be
of the sheepfold when he sees them
watching to see at what moment it
coming.
can run off with some foolish lamb
the open door with
that lingers behind the flock.
One by one, the
The
The
shepherd
stands
by
his rod raised.
sheep and lambs
shepherd must watch for these wild
pass under the rod and through the
beasts and drive them away.
gate into the fold.
Hear the shep¬
herd
sheep
But last.
the And
pasture my! oh,
is
reached
my!
what
frolic the lambs are having!
at a
counting
the
as
they
pass in, “Ninety-seven, ninety-eight,
They
ninety-nine —
then he
drops
his
kick up their heels and skip about
rod and exclaims, “Only ninety-nine
as though they were happy children.
sheep!
At last the shepherd looks at the sky and calls to his sheep.
I1
One must be lost.
I had a
hundred with me this morning.”
They are
Do you suppose
a long way from home and the fold.
sheep
It is late afternoon, and a storm is
have
coming.
that is enough”?
Off they move homeward.
doesn’t
he says, “One
count
ninety-nine
for
much.
the
fold,
and
Indeed not!
At
in
I
once he does what we all do when we
lose
something.
We
go
out
and hunt for it until we find it. Off
the
darkness
shepherd
and
storm,
goes
in
the
calling
the
missing sheep by name as he feels his
way
He stops. his ear.
along
the
rough
A faint “ba-a-a” reaches The lost sheep must have
taken shelter in some cave the rocks.
valley.
among
The shepherd follows the
sound of its voice.
Yes, there it is,
looking out from between the rocks, and crying “ba-a-a”
every
time
it
hears its name called.
The shepherd
seizes it, throws it across his shoul¬ THE SHEPHERD SEIZED THE LOST SHEEP, THREW IT ACROSS HIS SHOULDERS AND STARTED FOR THE FOLD
ders, 68
and
starts
for the
sheepfold.
■
He cannot afford to lose one of his sheep. and
To the shepherd each sheep
each
little
lamb
is
valuable
and important. As soon as the shepherd reaches the
fold
friends
safety
together,
found my
in
my
he
crying,
sheep!
sheep!”
calls
I
And
“I
have
have
his
his
found
friends
are
glad and rejoice with him. Jesus He
liked to watch the sheep.
knew
that
a
good
shepherd
loves each one of his flock.
So one
day when the Scribes and Pharisees complained talked and said,
the
Master
ate with sinners,
THE GRATEFUL STRANGER
Jesus
“The shepherd hunts the lost
sheep,
not
the fold. are
because
ill
those
that
are
safe
in
Poor, wretched man, standing alone
Sinners and people who
on the shore and watching a great
are like lost sheep.
They
ship sail out to sea!
On that ship
are the ones who need to be helped,
are his wife, his children, and nearly
and they are the
all
ones
I
came to
help.”
his
hide
The scornful
proud
Pharisee
and
the
in
the
Pie
ships
ashore again.
“ We are better
anywhere.
No
ship
other people,” they said, and
him.
they
even
land on its shores.
prayers. been
God
so
in
their
How angry they must have
when
Jesus
told
them
tried
to
hold,
but
an
No one wanted him
than
told
had
officer had found him and put him
Scribe did not spend any
time helping others.
friends.
of
that
No
the
country
country
would
would
carry
let
him
Even the people in
which
he
was
born shut the doors of their houses
God is like a good shepherd hunt¬
in his face.
ing for his lost sheep, and that God
and
rejoices more
Then why would no one take him?
over dl people made
had
He was a good man
money
to
pay
his
fare.
He was a leper.
well and wicked people made good
Leprosy
than over all the people who think
One
themselves perfect and strong. 69
who
is has
a
horrible
it might
disease. better
be
THE SAMARITAN PRAISED GOD AND FELL AT JESUS’ FEET SO GRATEFUL WAS HE TO BE WELL
dead.
stopping near cities and little towns
People who have leprosy are
called lepers, and there were many
to
of them
inside the city walls.
lived.
in
No
touch
Palestine
when
Jesus
one
ever
would
else
a chair a leper had sat
or a dish he had used.
beg.
Never did
they
venture
When night
came and the city gates were closed
on
I suppose they crept into some caves
Every time
among the rocks for shelter.
These
anyone passed, the lepers had to cry
ten men had just heard some won¬
out “Unclean, unclean,” for no one
derful
was allowed to go near them.
them that a great Healer was travel¬
They
news.
Some
one had told
had to leave their friends and their
ing through the country,
homes.
H e could cure them.
They had so little to eat I
and that
It was hard
know they were often ill with hunger.
for the lepers to believe this, but a
A few filthy rags covered their poor
friend said that
suffering bodies.
Teacher
Can you imagine
anything worse than being a leper? always
kept
close
the
had dead.
seen
this
Perhaps
this friend had once been a leper
In Palestine there were ten lepers who
raise
he
himself and had been cured.
together.
Every one of the ten was
They wandered about the country,
watching 70
for
the
Teacher.
now “He
surely will come our way some time,”
And off they went, hurrying to reach
they
the priests.
must
In
the
they
all
that they were clean would they be
God would
allowed to come inside the city or
send the great Healer to them soon.
to mingle again with their friends.
There
As they
cheerless
have
thought.
caves
at
night
must have prayed that was
one
of them,
at least,
Not until a priest said
ran,
every
man
of
them
who surely prayed God to help him
found that he was “clean,” for the
and
loathsome
to
him.
send
Jesus
the
Healer
to
The poor fellow was a stran¬
ger, a Samaritan. these
One turned back.
The Jews hated
Samaritans.
Would
leprosy had been
stranger, the
Jesus,
cured.
He was the
Samaritan.
God had
heard his prayer and he was grate¬
who was a Jew, cure a Samaritan?
ful.
Do
until he had thanked Jesus for his
you
suppose
that question? did not.
the
leper
No, I
Why?
am
asked
sure he
He would not go to the priests
healing.
Because he knew
Nine of Jesus’ own people
had passed on without a word.
But
that Jesus never asked who people
this stranger praised God with a loud
were
voice and fell at Jesus’ feet, so grate¬
nor
from
where
they
came.
Did they need His help?
That was
the question Jesus asked.
Everyone
ful was he to be well again. “Where are the nine?” Jesus asked him.
who asked His help received it. How eagerly the ten lepers must
“Among the ten that were
healed,”
He
added,
“ is
only
this
have watched every group of people
stranger grateful?”
He must have
that passed along the road to the city
reached forth His hand and touched
gate!
And when Jesus and His dis¬
the man kneeling at His feet, as He
ciples finally came, I can almost hear
said, “Arise, thy faith hath made thee
the call of the ten as they cried out:
whole.” The nine lepers ran on to visit
“Jesus, Master, have mercy on us!” And the Master heard their voices,
the priests.
although
well again, and that was all.
off.”
the
They
Him.
lepers
did
not
“stood dare
afar
They were glad to be
they came from
go near
the
temple, what
do you suppose they did?
Some stern soldier or pitiless
When
No doubt
Pharisee would have had them pun¬
they ran to tell their friends of their
ished
wonderful
for coming too
close to the
and
the priests,”
show
yourselves
Jesus
answered them.
But what of the
Samaritan stranger?
throng of people around the city gate. “ Go
cure.
I think he must
have followed Jesus and learned from
unto
Him how to help others. 71
THE OTHER BROTHER
“Little Walter has been hobbling o around
answered Ted.
Ted’s only answer was
to
an impatient jerk of his shoulders. Ted.
He
thought he
had
he
told
his
mother,
near
fault,”
“Mother told him not
that
rickety
platform,
and he hurt
himself.”
you sorry that Walter is well and at home again ? ”
think it’s too mean for any¬
thing,”
hospital
“O Ted!” exclaimed Mother, “are
been badly treated and was cross. “I
go
but he did,
Everyone in the . house was happy except
a
“Well, that was his own
asked his sister as she
passed him.
in
said Sister.
“Not outdoors this beauti¬
ful day?’’
crutches
while you have been out playing,”
Ted lay curled up in a corner of the sofa.
on
“ I
“for
never
had
a
pony,”
replied
Ted, paying no attention to Mother’s
Dad to give Walter that new pony.
question.
I’m older, I ought to have had it.”
it to me.” “You make me think of the other
“Why, Teddy boy!” answered his mother, “we are all so happy because little
brother
can
walk again
“ Dad ought to have given
brother,” said Mother.
and
“What other brother ?” asked Ted.
be strong like other boys that Dad
“A
gave him the pony just for joy.”
boy that
many
years
lived
ago,
in
who
Palestine
was
angry
because his father gave his younger brother a present.” “Tell me about him,” begged Ted. “ Some were
very
men good
who were
thought
they
angry
with
Jesus because He helped bad people just as quickly as He helped good people.
So Jesus told a story to these
people, who thought they always did exactly right.” “Was it about the other brother?” asked Ted. “Yes,”
answered
Mother,
“and
you may tell me which of the two brothers in the story you like better.
THE OTHER BROTHER WHO LIVED IN PALESTINE
72
the
“The two brothers had everything
The younger brother must have been
weakly yielded to them when they tempted him to do evil things. But he found listening to pleasant words from his wicked companions much
a jolly, lovable little fellow.
more agreeable than listening to his
they needed to make them happy, because their father was very rich. Perhaps
his father called him ‘ Sunshine’ as
brother’s faultfinding at home.
he whistled cheerily around the house. He was a
“Yet money
can’t
last
forever,
favorite with his play¬
especially when one throws it away
mates, for he was generous and shared his good things with them. “But the other brother! No doubt
on foolish and wicked things as did this younger brother. When his
he always obeyed his parents and
any more rich gifts for his compan¬
his teachers, but he had a sour, surly
ions.
way of speaking and acting, and he
as soon as he needed their help.
surely was stingy. I think he never shared his pleasures with anyone, and was afraid his father was not giving him all he deserved. I can
had no money to buy food, and he was in a strange country. Very often
hear him finding fault all the time
and he was glad to find even this
and pointing out all that was bad
work.
money was gone, he could not buy Of course they deserted him He
he was hungry. A farmer who kept many pigs needed a swineherd, He need not starve, because
in everything and everyone. “When the boys grew to be men, their habits had not changed. The boy who loved people and a good time wanted to leave home. I am not surprised that he asked his father to give him his share of their wealth, and to let him go away and visit other countries. “ I am sorry to say, however, that this happy, generous young man was not wise. I think he enjoyed hav¬ ing people call him a ‘good fellow.’ It was easy for his friends to coax his money away from him. All they had to do was to flatter him. He
HE WASTED HIS MONEY WITH FOOLISH FRIENDS
73
“Then the father went out to tell
he could eat some of the food that
the elder son the good news about
was given him to feed the pigs.
his brother.
“ I can see the young man stand¬ ing
in
swine.
the
midst
of
his
herd
son doing?
of
was the
elder
Sulking in a corner of
the field, angry as he could be.
H is fine linen mantle and
rich sandals are gone.
What
‘I’ve
stayed at home and worked and done
He is rag¬ He has
right, but you never gave me a party
no friends, for in that country every¬
for my friends,’ he said to his father.
one despises a swineherd.
‘ Now as soon as this fellow who has
ged, cold, and oh, so dirty!
companions
are
those
His only filthy
pigs.
wasted his money and done wickedly
He throws himself upon the ground
comes home you have a great feast
with a bitter ciy when he thinks of
for him.’
his father and his beautiful home.
“ I can hear the astonished father
Not long does he lie there, however.
reply, ‘Why, my son, you could have
Suddenly he
had a party any time.
jumps
up
and
leaps
over the wall of the swine yard.
As
All that I
have is yours to use whenever you
he runs I can hear him shout, ‘I’m
want it.
going home to my father and tell
thought dead is alive and at home
him how foolish and wicked I have
again, and we should rejoice.’
been!
I had rather be at home as
“‘Well, I shall not welcome him,’
one of my father’s servants than stay
answered the other brother.
in this country.’
“The father returned to the house
“ But when he was still a long way from home his father met him. sorrowed
because
I
of joy and feasting, leaving his elder
‘My
dear, dear son!’ his father cried. have
But your brother whom we
son alone and unhappy outside in
‘I
the darkness.”
thought
Ted jumped from the sofa as he
you were dead, and now you have
heard the clatter of hoofs approach¬
come back to me alive.’
ing the house.
“With arms about each other they walked home.
dow just in time, to wave his hand
Then the house was
lighted with many lamps.
He ran to the win¬
at the pale little fellow dashing past
The father
on his pony.
What if Walter
had
gave a great party to welcome his
been hurt because he was disobedi¬
son
ent?
home.
beautiful
In sandals
silken the
robes young
and man
again.
Ted was glad that he was well “I’m not the other brother,
and his guests danced and enjoyed
Mother!”
the rich feast and gay music.
toward the door. 74
he
shouted
as
he
ran,
RAGGED, HUNGRY, COLD AND LONELY, THE SWINEHERD STOOD THINKING LONGINGLY OF HIS OLD HOME
TWO LITTLE SONS
A CHILD'S PRAYER
Little Christ was good, and lay Sleeping, smiling in the hay; Never made the cows’ round eyes Open wider at His cries; Never when the night was dim, Startled guardian Seraphim, Who above Him in the beams Kept their watch round His white dreams: Let the rustling brown mice creep Undisturbed about His sleep.
Little Jesus, wast Thou shy Once, and just so small as I? And what did it feel like to be Out of Heaven, and just like me? I should think that I would cry For my house all made of sky; I would look about the air, And wonder where my angels were. Hadst Thou ever any toys Like us little girls and boys? Didst Thou kneel at night to pray, And didst Thou join Thy hands, this way? And did they tire, sometimes, being young? And make the prayer seem very long? And dost Thou like it best, that we Should join our hands to pray to Thee? (I used to think, before I knew, The prayer not said unless we do.) And did Thy Mother at the night Kiss Thee, and fold the clothes in right? And didst Thou feel quite good in bed, Kissed, and sweet, and Thy prayers said?
Yet if it had not been so — Had He been like one I know, Fought with little fumbling hands, Kicked inside His swaddling bands, Puckered wilful crimsoning face — Mary Mother, full of grace, At that little naughty thing, Still had been a-worshiping. -NANCY CAMPBELL
THE LITTLE SHEEP OF BETHLEHEM
Thou canst not have forgotten all That it feels like to be small: And Thou know’st I cannot pray To Thee in my father’s way — Take me by the hand and walk, And listen to my baby-talk. To Thy Father show my prayer (He will look, Thou art so fair), And say: “O Father, I, Thy Son, Bring the prayer of a little one.” And He will smile, that children’s tongue Has not changed since Thou wast young!
The little sheep of Bethlehem Were not afraid that night, When suddenly the gentle skies Grew strange with song, and bright; When swift their shepherds went away And left them, small and still, All huddled in a woolly heap Upon a lonely hill. A peace was on the earth that night, Oh, very wide and deep; Perhaps they knew they need not fear; Those blessed little sheep.
—Abridged from Francis Thompson
— Elizabeth Thornton Turner
76
JESUS’ LATER WORK
THE MASTER’S BLESSING Suppose in
we
take
Palestine.
see many
another
None
children
the
disciples
could
looking woman. walk
“Everyone must love Him,” many
just
of them exclaim together.
big
“ Not so,” says a sad-faced woman.
enough to toddle, others so tiny they
“ Our
must be carried.
Pharisees hate Him.
Along the country
rulers
and
the
priests
they even plan to kill
They
when He reaches Jerusalem.”
clothes,
dressed
in
their
little
and
bodies no doubt with oil.
their faces
best and
“Kill
have been rubbed
ever
The people in this country
mothers
as though afraid. them.
hang back
going?
are
they
a
all
disciples
have
little
Jesus
of gold.
people
the tried
woman
answers.
for their
king, but
He wants to live among
His people and make them happy. If you and I
says to another.
this
our
group
of
keep on following happy
children
we
shall soon come to a village.
children,” adds a quiet little woman. “Jesus loves everyone.
our
Him
does not care for palaces or crowns
He goes to Jerusalem,” one mother at
done?”
every one of them knows that He
“He surely will pass this way as
not look
call
once
dark-eyed
to
whom they lovingly call “Master.”
may
He
Many of that group would like
To see the Great Teacher,
“But He
has
to seize Him and make Him king,”
Others walk so fast
Where
What
Christ, and
they have to drag their little children after
Master
J esus, the best friend we
had!
“His
much better than a dip in water. timid
the
ask many shocked mothers.
of Palestine think a rub with oil is Some
and
Eve been told
roads they come with their mothers. are
cure
him, but Jesus did,” adds a happy-
As we go we shall
little
of
Ahead
He surely
of
us
goes
a
Pharisee.
must love little children,” replies a
Watch him stoop to shake the dust
happy mother as she
from his robe as a small boy runs
hurries along
past him.
with her four little ones.
on his face that he thinks children
Some of these women look sad.
should
What can be the matter? “My
little
girl
was
ill
with
running
a
with
our
sick
at
around
home and
“There! There!
“ My husband waited one day by mountain
stay
and
not
kicking
be up
dust on people’s clothes.
fever and Jesus healed her,” says one. the
I can see by the frown
Don’t
you
see
the Master?” cries an excited mother.
boy. 79
make a great deal of it.
They seem
unable to do anything quietly. The disciples
are angry.
They
do not wish Jesus to be interrupted. “What
do
you
want
ask the women.
here ?”
they
They seem cross
and do not speak kindly. “We have brought our children here for the Master to bless them,” the mothers answer. “What
nonsense!”
I
can
some of those disciples say. you know the
hear
“Don’t
Master is too busy
to be bothered with children?” See
those
poor,
disappointed
women turn to go away. many of them
A MOTHER BRINGING HER CHILDREN TO JESUS SO THAT HE MAY BLESS THEM
“Where is He? but
Where is Jesus?”
all day to get just one blessing for their babies.
His disciples
around Him.
are
all
How can we get to
Him?” asks a sad-faced woman.
that
He
children to
may
look determined. will Jesus
bless I
laid
His
They
heads
asked. have
was
And refused
all
the them
the
angry this!
can see the women’s eyes grow
sad.
know they all hands
curly
hands
But only for a moment are they They
hear
a
voice
telling
them to stay, to bring their children
not willingly turn back until has
the
His
sad and their shoulders droop.
Jesus so
them.
on
I
big sisters have walked many miles to bring the
Master as He lays
disciples
Many of these mothers and
A simple prayer from
the
women
“We must get to Him,” they all agree.
tramped with
blistered feet along the dusty roads
eagerly asks another. “Yes,
have
Perhaps
to Him.
upon
Jesus
each little head.
is
calling
them
the little ones to Him.
to
bring
I can see
Such noisy chattering the disciples
Him take the babies in His arms.
hear as the group of children draws
Softly He strokes the heads of the
near!
small
The
people
of
Palestine
seem to enjoy noise, for they always
over 80
boys Him
and as
girls
tiny
tots
who
climb
the
world
LAZARUS
over will do with people who they know love them. Around
this
little
group
stand
A
pretty
path
the astonished disciples, the scornful
hillside.
rulers, and
flash
and
were
laughing
What!
the
interrupt
sneering Pharisees. their
wise
words
The
runs
small
sparkle
stones
as
at
along
the
in
it
though
they
great
gray
the
w ith Jesus just to please a lot of
rocks that rise above each side of
foolish mothers and their children!
the path.
Gardens gay with flowers
Of course they don’t say such things
cover
hillside,
aloud, but I can see by their faces
walls hang tree branches laden with
that this is what they are thinking.
delicious fruit.
Jesus knows what they are think¬ ing.
and
over
their
As you pass by, the
trees seem to call out, “Come, pick
I see Him rise with a chubby
little child in H is arms.
the
my fruit, and eat.”
If you and I
He holds
really were walking along that path
the little one out toward the people
the day on which our story begins,
and says,
we’d
come unto
“Let
the
little
me,
for
the
children Kingdom
surely
answer,
“Thank you,
pretty trees, we’ll gladly taste your
of Heaven is like little children.”
fruit.” Thirteen men are slowly climbing the hillside along the path.
Who
are the men, and in what country is
this
hillside?
They
are
Jesus
and His apostles, and this is Galilee, the only place where the Master is safe
from
talking to
enemies.
earnestly
Jesus
John.
His
I
All
together.
are
Close
walk
Peter,
James,
and
think
Peter is saying to
his brother Andrew, “How fortunate we
were
to
escape
from
Judea!”
The last time they were there the ungrateful
Judeans
had
tried
to
stone the Master. Judas shakes the moneybag which he
carries.
He
probably
is
glad
the Judeans did not try to steal his 81
and puffing from his long run the messenger makes known his errand. “Lazarus, whom you love dearly, is ill, and his sisters have sent me to tell you.” Lazarus
lives with
Martha and Judea.
his
Mary, in
sisters,
Bethany of
“Will Jesus dare go back to
Judea?” question His apostles. The messenger waits expectantly. Surely Jesus will Bethany. return
go with
him to
But no, Jesus bids him
alone
while
He
and
the
apostles walk on to a small village among the hills. Two days pass by.
startles the twelve apostles by say¬
JUDAS SHAKES THE MONEY BAG AND SO LONG AS THAT IS SAFE HE IS HAPPY
gold.
So
long as that
ing, “We must go back to Judea.” I
moneybag
can hear Peter anxiously
try¬
ing to persuade Jesus not to return
is safe, Judas is happy. John and James are frowning as they follow Jesus.
Then Jesus
there.
The other apostles all join
Neither of them
Peter in urging the Master to keep
can understand why the Master will
away from the Judeans, who wish
not permit them to call down fire
to kill Him.
from heaven and burn to ashes His
“Lazarus
cruel enemies.
hurry
to
dead,”
Jesus
tells
them, “and I go to help him.” I can see all the apostles shake
Following them up the path is another man.
is
their heads as they wonder how it
He seems in a great
reach
Jesus.
I
is
should
possible
to
great cloud of dust he raises as he
Teacher.
races along.
He is determined to go, they follow a
message
He
call and waits for the man.
So when
love
they
their
see
that
H im back into Judea.
for Jesus!”
Two days it takes to make the
he shouts as he comes near. Jesus stops when
they
after
he
have
But
Lazarus
think he might almost choke in the
“I
is dead.
help
journey
hears the Panting
to
Bethany.
Martha
is
waiting for Jesus as He nears the 82
pretty village. she
tells
“You are too late,”
Jesus.
“My
brother
has
been dead four days.” “Let me see where you have laid him,”
Jesus
her sister
says.
Then
she
and
Mary take Him to their
brother’s tomb. There are many people crowding around the tomb. who and
have
come
Martha.
They are friends to
The
Mary
friends whisper
among themselves. asking one
console
I can hear them
another,
“If
this
man
who opened the eyes of the blind loved
Lazarus,
then
why
did
He
let him die?” Mary and Martha, thinking Jesus
LAZARUS HEARD JESUS’ VOICE CALLING HIM AND CAME FORTH FROM THE TOMB
has come too late to help them, are weeping
bitterly.
The people
sorry for the sisters. that
Jesus
might
Jesus.
are
helped
is
hushed.
I
believe that even the wind stopped
They all feel have
Every voice
playing
if
with
that
it is too late.
bee humming in the sunshine crept
stands
for
an
instant
with
He
walks
quietly
quiet.
hands
mouth of the tomb.
to
the
And
The
the
voice
“Lazarus,
A heavy stone
stillness. stone
away!”
that of
come The
bird
calling, broke the
man
in
the
silence of his tomb hears that loved
Jesus
and
comes
ing near by.
been
dead,
and
forth. now
he
He is
has alive
and well.
Why open the
Great is the
grave when Lazarus has been dead
rejoicing
of
Mary
and Martha as they walk with their
But willing hands roll
away the stone.
Jesus
young
voice
four days?
little
forth!”
commands the men who are stand¬ Martha objects.
the
stopped its song to listen.
rests against it. “Roll
That the
into the heart of a flower and was
clasped and face uplifted in prayer. Then
rustle.
so
they
He
not
leaves
only He had come sooner, but now But Jesus, too, is sorrowful.
should
the
brother away from the empty tomb.
All are watching 83
SONS OF THUNDER “I
want
to
be
first.
I
won’t
these children a story than to write
play unless I can be first,” declared
one
a
window,
them saying, “ If you’ll stop quarrel¬
where some children were playing.
ing, I’ll come and tell you a story.”
shrill “I’m
voice the
under
eldest,
my
I
ought to
first,” shouted a boy as he
soldier,”
I
They
were
playing
as I
I was right. soldier,
and
soldier,
so
that
one
and
I
needs
to is
a
a
story.
All
pair of
ears,
could see that each one of
“Two I
Thunder,’
story
about?”
they
brothers, called who
lived
in
‘Sons of Palestine
with Jesus.” “Can thunder have sons?”
my desk went pencils and I
listening
the grass.
small girl. paper.
is
asked, as we all seated ourselves on
ought to be captain,” chimed in a Into
one
“What’s the
captain,” the eldest boy told me. a
to
my small listeners had a pair.
“I’m the biggest, I ought to be father’s
called
No captains are necessary when
each one wanted to be captain.
“ My
I
placed
thought,
looked out upon them.
So
“We will, we will!” they shouted.
believe those little folks are
playing
them.
be
himself at the head of the line. “I
for
thought it better to
“ No, of course not.
tell
When one
is a son of thunder, it means he is 84
brave, and often that he is warlike.
wonderful to be rulers,
John and James, disciples of Jesus,
being hunted like refugees!
were very impatient and quick about everything
they
wanted
do things
to
did.
They that
often
angered
“James and
Jesus.
Like
wanted
to
all
Salome,
I can hear
highest places in the
Master’s
the
brothers
kingdom.
their
enemies.
we will ask Jesus for them.’
Once they begged Jesus to command
of
her exclaim, ‘ My sons, you deserve the
kill
told
their mother, about it.
the other disciples and that grieved soldiers,
John
instead
I will go with you and
“The
brothers
nodded.
They
fire to come down from heaven and
were as sure as their mother that the
destroy a Samaritan village, because
best places in the kingdom should
the people would not let Jesus and
be given to them.
H is disciples lodge there.
Of course
about the other disciples, each one of
and rebuked the
whom no doubt was thinking that he
Jesus
said
‘No,’
They forgot all
himself deserved the highest honor.
two angry brothers. “ It was a tiresome journey from
“‘Will
Galilee to Jerusalem, especially so
us?’
when one must walk all the way,
they,
as did Jesus and the disciples.
the Master.
“On this journey Jesus had been telling them some wonderful news. All the disciples were greatly excited
the
you
do
brothers
with
their
something
for
asked
Jesus,
as
mother,
came
to
“‘What do you wish?’ answered Jesus. “Up
spoke
Salome
before
her
about it, especially James and John.
sons could answer.
Jesus had told them that
He was
promise that you will give the best
What
places in your kingdom to my sons.
soon
to
pleased
have the
a
kingdom.
disciples
most
was
to
hear that each one of them was to have
a
throne
all
to
himself
and
‘ I want you to
Let them sit next to you, one on your right, the other on your left.’ “What could Jesus reply?
rule over part of the Hebrew people.
were
All had left their homes to follow
each one wanted to sit on the right
the Master.
or left hand of
They wandered about
the country with Him, often driven Do
from the cities and
you
wonder
that
when
being stoned. Jesus
them
twelve
disciples.
There
No
doubt
Jesus, but none of
except James and John
had
dared ask Him for the honor. “Then
Jesus
said, ‘The
places
promised them thrones in His king¬
in My kingdom are not given away.
dom
Whoever wants a place there must
they
were
delighted?
How
earn
it.’
Then
He added as
He
turned to the brothers, ‘Are you able to work for what you want?’ “‘Yes, we are willing- and able,’ replied the brothers. ‘“Then you shall have the work to do,’ Jesus told them. “There the two brothers showed that they were true sons of thunder, for
work
did
not
frighten
them.
They did not whine because Jesus said He could not give them what they desired, but they must earn it. “Did they win like real soldiers? Yes,
for
kingdom
they
learned
did
not
that
mean
Jesus’ golden
JAMES AND JOHN SPENT THEIR LIVES IN BLESSING OTHERS AND DOING KINDLY DEEDS
thrones and purple robes, as the disci¬ ples thought at first.
loving thoughts
His kingdom
I
which was to conquer and rule the whole world, was to be built up by
and
kindly
deeds.
wonder if Salome was satisfied! “After Jesus left them to work
alone, the two brothers spent their lives in blessing others.
Never did
John again ask to have fire consume his enemies.
Instead he told them
love was the law of the kingdom.” When my story was finished the eldest boy said, “ That fellow next to you is a Boy Scout. he
does
something
to
Every day help
some¬
body.” “He
should
added the small
be girl
our
captain,”
whose
father
was a soldier. “ Let him have the first place,” all
the
children
deserves it.”
SALOME, THE MOTHER OF JAMES AND JOHN
86
exclaimed.
“He
AT THE HOUSE OF MARTHA What do you suppose is happen¬ ing in that large house on the hill¬ side? are
From every direction people
hurrying toward
it.
A party?
Yes, a great supper is being given by
Mary and Martha in
Jesus.
He and H is
honor of
disciples
are
on their way to Jerusalem to keep the in
Passover.
They have
stopped
Bethany of Judea, where
Mary
and Martha live. Here come a number of scowling Pharisees.
They have been invited
to the supper, but are angry about it.
Then
home?
why don’t they
They
Martha’s
are
brother,
curious
stay
see
are joyfully happy over exactly the
Some¬
same thing. What can it be? Listen!
to
Lazarus.
“WE SURELY MUST GET RID OF THIS NAZARENE,” SAID ONE PHARISEE TO ANOTHER
at
“We
thing very strange has happened to the young
man,
and they
do
must
put
an
end to
the
wonders this man Jesus is working,”
not
one Pharisee says to another.
understand it. gar¬
The other replies, “All the people
ments are picking their way care¬
will be following Him if we do not
fully
stop them.”
Scribes
along
swishing silken the
road
leading
to
they
“Since Jesus raised Lazarus from
look — scribe, ruler, priest, and
the dead,” a scribe remarks with a
Martha’s all
in
Pharisee!
house.
How
cross
sneer,
I should think they’d be
H im every day.”
ashamed to carry such sullen faces
“We must surely get rid of this
to a joyous supper party.
Nazarene,” they all agree.
Other guests who seem glad and gay
are
coming.
rich
and
see
Lazarus.
Big
poor, all
“more people are following
and
“Why
little,
not
kill
Lazarus
also?”
some of them ask.
are anxious
to
Pharisees
are
These wicked people are angry
bitterly angry, while the other people
because Jesus is loved by those who
The
87
celebrate this wonderful event, and to honor the Friend who gave their brother back to them.
All of their
friends and many strangers have been invited.
Mary
and
Martha
must
have thought, as they prepared for their guests, “All these people will see Lazarus and will believe in Jesus.” And that is just
what
priest
and
ruler, scribe and Pharisee think, and that is the reason they are all
so
angry about the supper as they enter Martha’s house. The sun peeps through the lattice windows, and his golden light falls upon
chievous
THE HEAD OF JESUS
ill,
and by the poor and the
unhappy.
long
table
the guests recline.
MARY POURING THE PRECIOUS OINTMENT OVER
are
a
around which Perhaps a mis¬
sunbeam creeps
into the
eyes of a Pharisee and blinds him for
When Jesus raised Lazarus
a
moment.
from the dead, Pharisee and priest
matter.
decided to put an end to Him and
he saw anyway.
to His wonderful works.
be blind.
From the
hour in which they learned of that
But
it
does
not
He would not believe what So he may as well
The guests look with awe upon
empty tomb or gazed spitefully after
Lazarus.
Lazarus walking through the town
among themselves and saying, “Can
with his sisters, the
it
Pharisees and
be
I
can
possible
hear them talking that
this
cheerful
priests began to plan some way in
young man who is eating and drink¬
which they could destroy the Master.
ing
Why?
in his tomb?”
Because the people would
with
us
today once lay dead When the eyes of
follow one who was kind to them
the guests rest upon Jesus, who has
and loved them.
done
Jesus loved them
this,
I
know
that
some
of
and helped them in all their troubles.
them are thinking, “ Surely this man
Three months have passed since
Jesus must be the promised King.”
Jesus restored Lazarus to life.
Mary
Slowly the sun changes from gold
and Martha are giving a supper to
to scarlet. 88
His long red rays reach
BEHOLD YOUR KING!
across the sky as though they were waving
good
night
to
the
earth.
The day awoke with a smile as
The soft light falls upon the head
the sun
of Jesus at the table.
out of
woman is
Who is the
standing behind Him?
Mary,
Lazarus’
younger
It
on
sister.
chased the its eyes.
leaf and
and stirring.
filled with precious ointment.
happy
When
she breaks it over the head of Jesus
perfume.
have of
costly
wickedly Judas.
thrown
day,”
at
“Today is a happy, sang
Martha’s
found
Today
every
bird and
her
house, with
Jesus
and
start for Jerusalem to
It is money
away,”
into
it
must
Mary
and
Lazarus, up and ready for a journey.
oint¬
ment!” some of the guests exclaim. “Worse than that.
flower and stole
When the sun said “ Good morn¬
His
ing!”
a waste
Sunbeams danced
blossom and blade of grass.
hair, the room is filled with fragrant “What
shadows
people’s houses bidding them be up
In her hand she has a beautiful flask
and pours the ointment upon
night
His
apostles
make
ready
for the Passover.
declares
Down the road I can see a little
“The ointment should have
band of
been sold and the money spent for
people
waiting
for them.
the poor.” But the grateful
heart of
Mary
pleases Jesus, and He smiles kindly upon her.
“ It was kind of her to
do this for me,” He tells the guests. Honored guests very
often were
anointed with oil by their hosts.
Oil
was poured on the heads of kings when they were crowned.
Among
the people gathered round Martha’s table are there only two who wish to do anything for Jesus?
Is it only
the sisters, Mary and Martha, who honor the One who has blessed them all?
Perhaps
Mary,
as she
stood
behind Jesus and poured the oint¬ ment on
His head, meant to say,
MARY AND MARTHA WITH LAZARUS GOING TO JERUSALEM FOR THE PASSOVER
“This is the King!” 89
The eyes of all rest lovingly upon
outer cloak and threw it
the
roadway.
One who is in the center of
the group. an ass.
“The Master is coming this way,”
It is Jesus, sitting upon
exclaimed
“Now we are ready to start,”
a
man
as
he
shout many voices, and off they all
mantle across the road.
walk toward Jerusalem.
like a Samaritan.
flung his He looked
Perhaps he was
the grateful leper healed by Jesus.
Jesus, as He journeys, is joined by throngs of people.
upon the
Lazarus
Like Himself,
casts
his
silken,
gold-
all are on their way to Jerusalem.
embroidered robe before the ass upon
Among
which Jesus sits.
the
multitude that crowds
As he does so I
about the Master I can see people
hear him say to the multitude, “We
who once were lame or palsied walk¬
do these things to honor kings, and
ing briskly along.
so we do them for Jesus.”
A strong, well
Slow progress can Jesus and His
man greets a neighbor who does not turn away from him.
A month ago
apostles make, for people from north,
no one would go near this same man
south, east, and west keep coming
because
and
of
his
leprosy.
Eyes
are
crowding about
Him.
Many
there that once were blind, but now
wave palm branches as they walk,
see and enjoy the sunlight.
while others strew leaves and flowers
Rich
and
poor
asses and on multitude
on
camels and
along His pathway.
hearts springs a song of thanksgiving
foot move in a great
toward
the
city.
Now
to their Friend and Helper.
and then a Roman soldier on horse¬
Their shouts of joy are answered
back, with shield and spear glittering
by
in the sunshine, dashes past the long
people
line
Jerusalem.
of
people.
There
are
From grateful
little
the
cries
of
coming
another
toward
host
them
of
from
As they approach they
children flitting in and out among
cry, “Blessed is the King, the King
the crowd like so many gay-colored
of Israel!”
butterflies.
Again the throngs with
I
can see a little boy
Jesus lift up their voices, shouting,
and girl pull
their mother’s gown
“Blessed
excitedly and hear them say to her,
be
also scribes,
day He talked with the
rulers.
many
others,
children!”
unfastened
that
In that joyous throng there
we passed Him, just as He did the
with
kingdom
is
coming! ”
“Mother! Jesus smiled at us when
The mother nodded happily.
the
She,
Pharisees, priests,
are and
They, too, are journeying to
Jerusalem to keep the feast of the
her
Passover. 90
But
not
one
word
of
ONE MOTHER, UNFASTENING HER OUTER CLOAK, THREW IT IN THE PATHWAY OF THE MASTER
They probably are thinking of the Pharisees
who
a
few days
before
told Jesus to get out of the country because Herod wished to kill Him. I know they all are saying in their hearts, “It
is
not
Herod, but the
Pharisees and priests who would like to destroy the Master.” On the people move, until they come
within
sight
Jesus halts.
of
Jerusalem.
For a moment the host
around Him is quiet.
The beautiful
Holy City lies before Him.
In the
midst of the city stands the temple, H is
Father’s
house
He
loves
so
dearly'. Jesus does not smile. His eyes are filled with tears.
He stretches
“JESUS A KING!” THE PEOPLE SNEER
out H is arms toward the city as a praise
do
they
speak.
“Jesus
king!” I can hear them sneer.
a
mother stretches out her hand to her
“A
little one, and says, “Why will you
king wearing a golden crown who
destroy the
will
most? O Jerusalem! You know not
make
war
and
conquer
our
how to have peace.
enemies is what we want!”
Again
these Pharisees so greatly that one of rudely
crowd you
and
hear
saying?”
pushes reaches
what
through Jesus.
the
Therefore your
multitude
toward Jerusalem.
the
moves on
They march to
the walls of the city.
“Do
your disciples are
he asks Jesus.
love you
enemies shall destroy you.”
The shouts of the multitude anger them
friends who
The great
gates are open wide to admit pilgrims.
He prob¬
the
Among them is the King.
ably shakes his fist in the Master’s
Through the archway He rides, but
face as he adds, “Tell your disciples
none
to stop
loving
their shouts of praise!”
“The stones would give praise if
recognize
Him
disciples
and
except His
His
apostles.
“This man, say the people of Jeru¬
the people did not,” Jesus replies.
salem,
The faces of the apostles walking
is
the
prophet
Nazareth of Galilee.”
close to Jesus grow serious and sad.
ciples shout, 92
Jesus
from
But the dis¬
“ Behold your King!”
HOUSE OF PRAYER When your mother buys meat for your dinner where does she get it? “At
the
answer.
market,
of
course,”
you
And if she wishes a pretty
canary to sing in her window, she will
go
to
the
Butcher shops
bird
and
store
for it.
bird stores
are
the proper places to buy beef and birds. I
You will be surprised when
tell you that once upon a time
people sold animals in their churches. And the church I am going to tell you about, in which such things were done,
was
neither old nor useless,
but new and very beautiful.
From
MONEY CHANGERS IN THE COURTS OF THE TEMPLE
different countries, even from
those
in Jerusalem had brought with them
far across the sea, visit this
people came to
wonderful
church.
You
from their own country. Into this beautiful temple
may have seen a picture of it, for it
Jesus and His disciples.
was the great temple in Jerusalem.
the
The temple was surrounded by a
temple.
It
was
came
He loved
God’s
house.
H e came there to pray and to teach.
number of beautiful paved courts or
The
yards.
could
and the blind followed Jesus always.
hear oxen lowing, sheep bleating, and
They never gave their kind Friend
doves cooing.
any
In these
courts
one
They made so much
sick
rest.
and
the poor, the lame
Before
the
sun was up
noise I’m sure the priests inside the
in the morning and
temple could hardly hear themselves
they kept coming to Him for help.
speak when they taught the people.
Through the temple courts passed
Around the courts, were men sit¬
Jesus and the people who followed
ting at small tables changing money.
Him.
Piles
merchants
of
gold,
silver,
and
coins lay on these little tables.
copper
making
The
late
The noise and buying and
change
must
at
night
shouting of selling and have
made
men at the tables were changing into
Jesus’ face grow stern as He listened.
Jewish coin, the money that strangers
No doubt the merchants looked at 93
Him and laughed.
crowded out to make room for cattle
What did they
and money changers!
care if the temple was God’s house? These men buying and selling in
Do you wonder that Jesus knotted
the temple knew that Jesus loved it.
a whip of strong cords and drove
They knew
them
He would use it only
for healing and prayer.
all
out of
the
temple?
He
There they
must have opened the gates of the
sat, impudently watching Jesus and
courts and turned the oxen and sheep
His
into
disciples.
The
eyes of these
the
valley.
The
dove
cotes
buyers and sellers as they looked at
in the courts were torn down.
Jesus, must
have said, “You can’t
Jesus, H is Father’s house was not a
stop us, even if you don’t like what
place for cattle pens and dove cages.
we are doing.”
Jesus overturned
Did Jesus stop to ask whose task
tables.
all
the
To
money
What a clattering there must
it was to take care of the temple
have
courts?
coins rolled out on the temple pave¬
No, this beautiful
was H is Father’s house. built for prayer. as a shelter God
It had been
ments !
God intended it
to
help
and
gold
and
greedy
Pharisee
silver
eyes
must
of
have
glittered with hate as the coins rolled
And these people
wanted
as the
H ow the
publican
for all who were ill,
poor, or unhappy. whom
temple
been
out of sight!
were
“You
have
made this temple a
den of thieves instead of a house of prayer,” said Jesus to the men who bought and sold in it.
He would not
stand quietly by while His Father’s house was being wrongly used. After these traders had been cast out of the courts, I can see Jesus and His disciples in the temple.
There
they will pray, and the sick people who
followed
Him will be cured.
While Jesus is blessing the people in the temple, very different things are
happening
and
lawyer,
angry. OUT OF HIS FATHER’S HOUSE JESUS DROVE ALL THE TRADERS AND MONEY CHANGERS
outside.
priest
and
Pharisee ruler
are
They are planning to destroy
Jesus and put an end to His work. 94
A GREAT GIFT
was left.
He nodded his head cheer¬
fully as he thought, “I’ve still some¬ Johnny had two shiny silver dimes
thing left for myself.”
which he jingled in his pocket as he walked to Sunday school.
Mary,
Uncle
had
so
almost little
ashamed give,
slipped
her
the
box.
Then
her
nickel
hand last night because for a whole
pocket was empty.
week he had not mis-spelled a single word in his lesson.
she
to
Nat had dropped them into Johnny's
into
that
Dear little girl and dear little boy!
Those two dimes
They did not know it, but by their
meant two picture shows or four ice¬
acts they really were telling a Bible
cream cones.
story.
Which should it be?
Before Johnny had decided, cousin
Mary
ran
up
ing, “See Johnny! nickel.
Mother
to
him
his
hear the Bible story which Johnny
say¬
and Mary acted without knowing it. Now
I have a whole
gave it to me
at the
for
you
going
to
do
five
would
pep'mints,”
by
entered
side
the
the
two
children
Sunday-school
room
and sat quietly listening while their teacher told them about a far-away country where some poor little chil¬ dren were dying of hunger. a box was passed around,
Then and all
the children dropped money into it. Johnny silver into
watched
dimes the
slip
box.
one of
his shiny
through
How
fine
the it
slit
made
him feel to be giving ten pennies to help buy food for starving chil¬ dren!
He thrust his hand into his
pocket
and
felt
of the
dime
be
Jerusalem.
We
needed to reach around
one of them.
“ I jus’ love choc’late
pep’mints.” Side
in
several pairs of short arms like yours
choc’late
she answered.
temple
pretend that we are
roof rests upon pillars so large that
with
it?” asked Johnny. “Buy
we’ll
are walking in a great hall whose
wiping the supper dishes last night.” “What
I’m sure you would like to
that 95
Some of these pillars
THE PHARISEE AND THE POOR WIDOW DROPPING OFFERINGS IN THE TREASURY BOXES OF THE TEMPLE
have great boxes fastened to them.
and praised him for his generosity.
What are these boxes for? Wait a
The
moment and watch closely.
everybody to know how wealthy and
There
comes
a
Pharisee.
scribes
and
generous they are.
He
Pharisees
want
Some even have
pulls a bag from his bosom and takes
a bell rung just before they say their
out a handful of money and into one
public prayers or give alms.
of the boxes lets fall some jingling gold pieces.
Jesus
Each box is labeled.
is
in
the
temple,
sitting
close to the treasury boxes.
Peter,
The box into which the Pharisee
Judas,
dropped his money is labeled, “For
with Him.
the
his bag of money out of his bosom
poor.”
“How
generous
that
and the
other apostles
are
Judas, I am sure, takes
Pharisee must be!” you are think¬
and wonders when
ing.
his
full and heavy as the bags of those
bosom is twice as much money as
two rich rulers coming through the
he slipped into the treasury box.
temple
We
Yes, but
hear
a
in the
swishing
bag in
of
silken
courts.
wondering why
it
will
be
Peter,
I
Jesus
stays on
as
know, is in
garments and looking around see a
Jerusalem when the rulers, scribes,
scribe approach a box and put in
and Pharisees are planning to kill
more gold.
Him.
He watches to see how
many people noticed his large gift
“Jesus,” Peter thinks, “ would
be much safer in Galilee.” 96
Hark!
A baby is crying!
Yes,
A SAD SUPPER
it is snuggled close in its mother’s arms, as she walks timidly toward one
Did your mother ever tell
you
of the treasury boxes, the one with
to sit up straight at the table and
the label, “For the
not get under it by slipping down
temple.”
where is her money bag? none.
She
is a
But
in
She has
your
chair?
she did.
poor widow who
I’m
almost
sure
Mine did when I was a
loves the temple and wants to put
little
something into its treasury. A single
didn’t like to sit up when they ate.
copper coin in her fingers is all the
They drew wide couches close
money she has.
their low
She worked hard
girl.
In
Palestine
table
people to
and lay down
on
for it, although it is worth less than
them.
one of our pennies.
to have their heads and hands next
With a happy
They were careful, though,
to the table.
smile she slips her bit of money into
Tonight I want you to go with
the box, then turns and goes quickly
me to a supper in Palestine.
out of the temple.
There
will be no little girls or boys there.
Judas and the other disciples are praising the people who have given
We
shall
much, although they still have left
All
of
a great deal more than
they
recline
they gave.
see
them
thirteen are
at
men
looking
the
only.
sad
table.
as
No,
I
But Jesus does not praise the scribes
am mistaken, one of them does not
and Pharisees who gave large sums
look
of gold.
He says that the greatest
happy as he carelessly jingles some
gift put into the treasury that after¬
silver pieces which lie in the bag
noon was
he carries.
the
widow’s mite — that
simple copper coin—all She has
given all her
she
had.
living
and
sad.
These and
That
man
thirteen
His
even
men
twelve
seems
are
Jesus
apostles.
The
must work hard if she needs more
apostles are sad because Jesus has
money.
told
I
can
see
Judas
frown.
that
this
is
the
last
supper they will ever eat together.
He does not like to have the woman
“Tonight I am going to be taken
praised when she gave so little.
away from you by wicked men who
You and I know why Jesus praised her.
them
will kill me,” Jesus said.
She cheerfully gave all that
“ But we are here,” the apostles
she had. And now you know how it was that Johnny and Mary acted
must have answered.
“We will not
a Bible story without knowing it.
let
the
97
the
priests
and
Pharisees
find you.
If they do not find you
they cannot hurt you.” Jesus’ face, always full of love for everyone, tonight was white and sad. He seemed to be suffering as He answered the apostles, “ One of my own friends who is eating with me at this table is going to show the priests
and
Pharisees
where
they
may find me and how to seize me.” “One of us!” the shocked apos¬ tles all answered.
Even the apostle
with the moneybag shook his head as
if
he
could
not
believe
it.
Then each one of them anxiously asked, “Lord, is it I?” “ It is one of you at the table,” Jesus
replied.
The
apostle
the bag seemed uneasy.
with JESUS TELLING HIS APOSTLES THAT THIS IS THE LAST SUPPER THEY WILL EVER EAT TOGETHER
No doubt
he was afraid to raise his eyes and look at Jesus. Sad sorry
as as
was were
this supper, all
of
them
and that
Jesus was going to be taken away from
them,
dispute
the
apostles
together.
And
you think the dispute
began
to
what
do
was about?
They were quarreling over which one of them was going to be the most important.
Each one of them
was sure he ought to be greatest. Jesus did not say anything but He
did
something.
Pie
quietly
rose
from the table, put some water in a basin, and wrapped a towel around JESUS WASHING THE FEET OF ONE OF THE APOSTLES
His 98
waist.
Then
He
washed the
feet of His twelve apostles. their feet dirty?
Were
Certainly not.
Palestine washing
a
THIRTY PIECES OF SILVER
In
person’s
feet
meant that you loved him and wanted to do something for him. “Why
in which they keep their pennies?
do you wash our feet?”
asked Peter.
And
how
often
I
want
are not
to
show
you
counted!
helping any one
by quarreling about who shall first,” replied Jesus.
be
“I came into
Judas, one of Jesus’ apos¬
tles, always carried a bag of money. Whenever
Jesus
sent
Judas
is the only reason you are
was
their
just
to
help — that
in the is,
to
I believe all the apostles except Judas were ashamed that they had quarreled.
But
Judas
carried
bag with the money in was
sure
that
the
most
it, and
the
heavy
of
His
out
to
banker.
buy A
it.
Judas
heavy
bag
bag
made
Judas
happy,
because he loved money. Watch
him
stalking
along
the
road angrily swinging his bag back and forth!
he
any
meant one with lots of money in it. A
serve — all people who need it.”
or
apostles needed anything, they always
the world to help people, and that world,
those pennies are
poured out on the table just to be
“Because that you
How many little folks have bags
He is angry with Jesus.
important
of them all was the man with the money. When table
Jesus
came
back to
the
He dipped a piece of bread
in some oil and handed it to Judas. “ Do
quickly
what you
are going
to do,” He said to him. Up jumped Judas from the table and
hurried
away.
Probably
the
other apostles wondered why Judas didn’t wait and go with them to the garden,
for
with them.
he
always
had
gone
Judas did intend to go
to the garden of Gethsemane that same night, but not with Jesus and the apostles.
JUDAS, ANGRY WITH JESUS HURRIES TO THE GARDEN
99
JUDAS STRETCHED FORTH HIS HANDS GREEDILY, AND THE PRIEST PUT INTO THEM THIRTY SHINY SILVER PIECES
Yesterday Jesus overturned the money
“No, but it would have been in
tables in the temple and the money
my bag, for Jesus and His disciples
rolled away and was lost.
give me all their money to carry,”
“ Some
of that money should be in my bag,” thought Judas.
answered Judas.
“My bag should be
The
chief
priests
are
glad that
full, not nearly empty,” he tells a
Judas is angry with Jesus.
Pharisee walking beside him.
he will listen to them if they offer
Perhaps
“Why?” asked the Pharisee.
him money.
“Because
and he stops to talk with them.
day
before
yesterday
So they call to him “I
Jesus let a woman empty a whole
don’t
box of expensive1 ointment on His
people all the time, the way Jesus
head.
does.
sell
He should have told her to it and give Him the money,”
Judas answered.
want to be giving things
to
I want to get something for
myself,”
I
can
hear Judas tell the
wicked men who hate Jesus.
“But it wouldn’t have been your
“Will
money,” said the Pharisee.
you
help
us
to
Jesus?” the chief priests ask.
IOO
arrest
“I
will
if you pay me enough
for it,” Judas answers. stretched
forth
his
Judas cared.
Then Judas
hands
For those silver pieces
he had sold Jesus to the men who
greedily,
meant to kill Him.
I’m sure that
and the priests put into them thirty
night the rulers, the mob, and Judas
shiny silver pieces.
skulked in the shadows of trees and
Judas is happy, for now his bag is heavy.
rocks as they walked to the garden.
He thinks he has fooled
Judas opened the garden gate and
the priests and Pharisees, for Judas
greeted Jesus with a kiss.
feels sure these wicked men cannot
seized
hurt Jesus.
Instead of trying to
He remembers the time
Jesus
and
led
The mob
Him
away.
get away,
as
Jesus fed five thousand people with
Judas expected, Jesus allowed
only two fishes
brutal mob to beat and abuse Him.
bread.
and five loaves of
He thinks of the time Jesus
Judas
waited
until
the
Jesus
was
walked on the water and quieted the
condemned to death.
wind by just speaking to it, and he
He save Himself?
remembers when He brought Lazarus
they
up out of his tomb.
“If Jesus can
have kept muttering to himself, and
do
He
I am sure he added, “I sold Him
all
these
things
can
save
Himself,” Judas no doubt thought.
for
“Wait until night comes, then I
will
be
there
alone
pieces
Jesus,”
he
of silver,
must
but
I
When morning came Judas took his bag and went to see the priests
“Jesus
with
thirty
hurt
I did not think
thought He could get away.”
will lead you to Gethsemane,” Judas told the priests and rulers.
could
“Why doesn’t
and
His
rulers.
Inside
out
he
turned
apostles and it will be easy for you
the bag, and the silver pieces fell
to take Him,” he added.
jingling at the feet of the priests.
“How
are
Jesus in the
we
going
to
“ I do not want your money,” he told
know
them.
dark?” the Pharisees
“Arrest the person I kiss,”
“We
Judas
don’t
care
replied the rulers.
answered.
to
take
it.
moon
came
up
about
that,”
“We hate Him
and we are going to kill Him.”
The sun slipped away from the The
was wicked
Jesus never has done any wrong.”
asked Judas.
earth.
“ I
Miserable, unhappy Judas!
over
How
the hills and showered silver moon¬
he hated those thirty pieces of silver
beams over everything.
now!
But
the
silver
in
the
And he must have hated him¬
self, too, for he went out and hanged
bag was
himself.
the only kind of silver for which IOI
THE FRIEND WHO WAS AFRAID
off by themselves asleep under the
The moon was playing hide and
watch with Him in this garden called
seek
with
the
clouds.
First
one
olive trees. Jesus had asked His disciples to Gethsemane.
“We surely will,” all
little cloud and then another darted
of them
a fleecy finger into the moon’s face.
added, “You say that wicked men
But the moon would not stay hidden.
are coming tonight to take you away
It sailed so fast and so high it left
from us, and that they will kill you.
the saucy clouds behind, and made
But I will not let them.”
the stars stop twinkling and disappear.
rest of the disciples had said, “We
High in the
answered, and
Peter
had
And the
heavens the moon
will all stay with you and help you.”
smiled down upon a beautiful garden
Jesus had smiled very sadly, as He
filled with olive trees, and threw a
answered, “You think now that you
shower of silvery
love me, but tonight all of you are
moonbeams over
a man kneeling in the garden. man was Jesus. alone.
If you
The
going to run away and leave me.”
But He was not had looked closely
you would have seen the disciples
“Not I,” said Peter.
“The others
may run away, but I shall stay with you
even
though
the
priests
and
the Pharisees put me in prison and kill me.” What fine, brave words!
But they
did not make Jesus happy. He looked at
Peter
as though
He
felt sorry
for him and said, “This very night, Peter, before the cock crows, you will
have
denied three times that
you know me.” “Never!” replied Peter.
“I am
ready to die for you.” Perhaps Peter was saying to himself, “When the cock crows! midnight.
Why, it is now nearly I
can’t forget Jesus in
just a few hours.” A dark cloud crept slowly toward JESUS AT PRAYER IN THE GARDEN OF GETHSEMANE
the moon and 102
threw a black veil
Then off to the high priest’s house the mob carried Jesus.
If He had
looked around He would have seen only people who
hated Him — the
scribes, the proud Pharisees, and the rulers.
Of those disciples who had
promised to stay with Him, all but one had run away, just as Jesus had said they would.
Where was Peter?
Surely he did not run away!
No,
you can see him following the mob, but he
is so far behind that none
of the mob can see him.
He skulks
along in the shadow of the rocks and trees. Jesus, tired and cold, was hurried into the high priest’s house.
THROUGH THE GATE CAME A MOB OF ANGRY MEN
over its face.
Jesus rose from the
ground and wakened His disciples.
No one
offered Him a seat or asked Him to come near the fire.
He had to
They had forgotten that they came to the garden to watch with Him. Jumping up, the disciples saw, com¬ ing through the garden gate, a mob of
angry
men
carrying
clubs, and swords.
lanterns,
When some of
them seized Jesus roughly and tried to
tie
H is
hands
together,
Peter
bravely drew his sword and cut off the ear of the high priest’s servant. “Put up your sword,” Jesus said to Peter. Then what do you did?
think Jesus
He stretched forth His bound
hands and healed the bleeding ear. Jesus always clid kind deeds, even to the people who abused Him.
JESUS IN THE HOUSE OF THE HIGH PRIEST
103
A young maiden pointed at Peter and said,
“You are a disciple of
this Nazarene, Jesus.’’ “ I am not.
I don’t even
know
whom you are talking about,’’ Peter replied angrily.
Then see him try
to slip out of the room!
But it was
useless. A man met Peter at the door and said,
“I
saw
you
in
the
garden
tonight with Jesus.” Peter was so angry he wanted to strike the man.
“You did not, for I
was not there.
I do not know the
man of whom you speak,” he said, pushing his way through the door. Outside there was a maid watch¬ “I DO NOT KNOW THE MAN OF WHOM YOU SPEAK,” SAID PETER
ing.
stand while the horrible mob spat
are a disciple of Jesus.” Peter must have clenched his fists
upon Him, struck Him in the face, and tore
His
clothing
nearly
off.
as he replied, “ I tell you I do not
Peter sat comfortably by the fire warming his hands.
She, too, called to Peter, “You
know this Jesus.”
He must have
As
he
spoke,
the
long,
shrill
wondered why Jesus did not fight
call of the cock rang out.
H is enemies, and said to himself,
three
“Jesus
three times Peter had denied know¬
has
the
power
these wicked people.
to
destroy
Why doesn’t
He do it and save Flimself?”
o’clock
ing the
in
Master.
the
It was
morning
Peter heard
and and
Do
remembered what Jesus had told him.
Peter began to doubt
Don’t you suppose he clapped his
the power of Jesus because He would
hands over his ears to shut out the
not strike back?
Poor
sound and rushed into the darkness?
He was so badly frightened
The moon had slipped from the
you suppose
Peter!
I fear so.
he forgot Jesus had told His disci¬
sky.
ples, that after He was crucified and
a chilly mist.
Peter shivered, but
buried, He should rise from the tomb
not with fear.
He was ashamed of
and see and talk with them again.
himself, and oh, so sorry! 104
There was nothing to see but
CALVARY The day was The
sun
had
dark and gloomy. hid
ashamed
to
shine,
wonder.
Even
his face as and
a ball
I
if
do
not
of fire
like
our sun would try not to look upon the awful things that were happening in Jerusalem that day. Along a narrow street came a pro¬ cession.
No, it was not a procession,
but a howling, shrieking mob.
Men
were hurling ugly words and stones at
a prisoner
who
was
through the city gates. was Jesus.
Many weeping women
women
prisoner.
led
The prisoner
were following the mob. these
being
spoke
Some of
kindly
to
the THE MOB WITH JESUS IN THEIR MIDST MOVED SLOWLY THROUGH THE CITY GATES
Perhaps they offered Him
a cup of cold water, or a cloth with
governor wanted to kill Jesus.
which
did they want to kill Him?
He
could wipe
stained face.
His
blood¬
No doubt these faith¬
the
ful women were roughly torn away their
and
They He
armies,
wanted and
fine
kings
palaces,
that
their enemies by wicked wars.
them.
taught
He healed them when they
how
to
rule
by
big
conquered
loved people and had been kind to were ill.
called
king,” the rulers said.
to the ground. no laws.
Him
“We will not have that kind of
fury savagely threw them
Jesus had broken
loved
Because
Him “King” and “Christ.”
from Jesus by priest and scribe, who in
people
Why
Jesus
love,
and
therefore priest and ruler hated Him.*
He made blind eyes see,
lame feet walk, and sorrowful people
People
happy
were
in their hearts forget how to love.
different people after they had talked
That was the trouble with the priests
with Jesus.
and
again.
Even
sinners
He always made it seem
who
rulers.
have
They
hate
and
anger
had hated their
easier to be good than to be wicked.
enemies for so long that I believe
But
if you could have taken out their
priest,
scribe,
Pharisee,
and 105
hearts and looked at them, you would
the best Friend the people ever had.
have found them
Outside the walls of the city, then
black
with
hate
on toward Golgotha, the procession
and hard as stone. On moved the procession until it
went.
The cross was thrown upon
was outside the walls of Jerusalem.
the ground and Jesus was stretched
Across the shoulders of Jesus lay a
upon
cross.
Him to the cross, they raised it to
It was large, and much too
heavy for Him to carry.
He bent
low to the ground under the burden. Finally Then who
Jesus
the was
stumbled
After they
Him hang there by His hands
until He died. The
hands
of
Jesus
that
stopped a
man
blessed little children, that had fed
passing
and
him
the hungry, that had lovingly touched
made
the loathsome leper, and had made
upon
Jesus’
head.
His
the blind to see, now were bleeding from the sharp nails which fastened them
and
always had hurried
back was
bleeding from
the lashes of stout whips.
But scribe
to
those
the
who
to the side
needed His
been driven through them.
suffering.
The man they hated was to be cru¬ cified, and they were glad.
nothing wrong,”
“He has done
rulers,
“Crucify Him!
had
shouted,
Crucify Him!”
many people had said. Pharisee.
shouted
spike which
King of the Jews.”
had
Pilate had writ¬
ten it and had it placed there. All
“But Jesus is king of the Jews,” so,”
were
On the cross above Jesus’ head
Pilate said.
But the ignorant people, led by savage
of
was the title, “Jesus of Nazareth, the
Pilate, the governor, had wanted to set Jesus free.
great
help
aloud
His
a
The feet that
torn
as they saw
by
cross.
and Pharisee, priest and ruler laughed
“ Not
had
soldiers
forehead was covered with scratches,
their
fastened
fell.
The soldiers had placed a crown
His
had
and
bear the cross. of thorns
let
it.
morning the sun
hiding.
had
been
The clouds had been grow¬
ing blacker
and
blacker
until
by
noon it was dark as night.
Not a
leaf moved, not a bird sang.
When
men act like savages and wild beasts, scribe
and
“We have no king but
Caesar.” So Jesus was given to the men
it
is
not
surprising
things happen. king, we will
that
strange
“Hate must be our not
have love,” the
rulers said in their hearts.
And so
who hated Him. This dreadful band
the One who loved them best they
of cruel rulers was allowed to destroy
crucified. io 6
THE PROCESSION MOVING SLOWLY ON ITS WAY TO GOLGOTHA
THE MASTER
“The Master has come over Jordan,” Said Hannah, the mother, one day; “ He is healing the people who throng Him, With a touch of His finger, they say. And now I shall carry the children, Little Rachel and Samuel and John, I shall carry the baby Esther, For the Lord to look upon.”
And the heavy heart of the mother Was lifted all earth-care above, As He laid His hands on the brothers, And blessed them with tenderest love; As He said of the babes in His bosom, “Of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.” And strength for all duty and trial That hour to her spirit was given. •—Julia. Gill
THE NAZARENE
The father looked at her kindly, But he shook his head and smiled, “Now, who but a doting mother Would think of a thing so wild?”
He told us everything he could About the lilies, and the way The shepherds carry home the lambs Within their arms at close of day; How we within our Shepherd’s fold Are ever safely housed and fed, And all who walk with tender Love Like little lambs are gently led.
“Nay, do not hinder me, Nathan, I feel such a burden of care, If I carry it to the Master, Perhaps I shall leave it there. If He lay His hand on the children, My heart will be lighter, I know, For a blessing for ever and ever Will follow them as they go.”
E’en as a hen beneath her wings Shelters her tiny trembling brood, He would have gathered in his arms The world had they but understood. He spoke to all the humble folk And told them just such lovely things,— Of how the Father guards and guides Even the sparrow’s drooping wings.
So over the hills of Judah, Along by the vine-rows green, With Esther asleep on her bosom, And Rachel her brothers between; ’Mong people who hung on His teaching, Or waited His touch and His word, Through rows of proud Pharisees list’nmg, She passed to the feet of our Lord.
He told them of a son who left His home and wandered hungering, And who on turning back had met Such joy and happy welcoming. He told them Love is ever Love, And falls on all like gentle rain; He told them everything he could, Then turned and blessed, and blessed again.
“Now, why shouldst thou hinder the Master,” Said Peter, “with children like these?” Then Christ said, “Forbid not the children; Permit them to come unto Me”; And He took in His arms little Esther, And Rachel He sat on His knee.
— Marion Susan Campbell
108
SPREADING THE GOOD NEWS
THE WOMEN WHO CAME TO THE TOMB WITH FLASKS OF OINTMENT AND BOXES OF SPICES FOUND IT OPEN AND EMPTY
WHEN THE PROMISE WAS KEPT
Why? before
Because,
only
His death,
a
few
days
Jesus
had
told
them that, even if they killed Him, Who is up first in the morning? The birds, of course.
in three days He would rise again
Long before
out of His tomb.
our sleepy eyes are open, the birds are
flitting
about
in
our
On
gardens
the
women
toiled
up
the
steep, stony path, all of them won¬
and calling to one another.
dering how they could get past the
One morning long, long ago, so
guard
of soldiers
and
who
would
early that only the birds were awake,
roll away the great stone from the
some
door of the tomb.
women
were
walking
up
stony path toward a garden.
a
Each
to
the
garden.
one of them carried a flask of oint¬
thing was!
ment or a box of costly spices.
happy
In
Soon they came How
quiet
every¬
Not a sound except the
song
of
a
little
bird,
glad
that garden someone they loved was
that the morning was so near.
buried,
gray mist was beginning to disap¬
not in the earth, but in
rocky cave. faces
a
These women had sad
because
Jesus,
lay in that tomb.
their
pear behind pink clouds.
friend,
They had watched
that
face we
to
get
and
rustled
as
The women stood still.
in the garden. are
danced
if
it
were saying “good morning” to them.
they knew exactly where to find it how
The wind
was whispering merrily to the leaves
when He had been laid in it, and
“But
The
into
was
a
look
of
On each
astonishment.
Not a soldier was in sight.
Some
the tomb to leave our spices?” one
swords may have been lying on the
woman asked.
ground, perhaps a helmet or even a shield had been dropped.
“A great stone closes the open¬
“The soldiers who were here must
ing,” another said.
have left
“Yes,” they all added, “and the
in a hurry,” the women
chief priests and the Pharisees have
probably were thinking.
set a guard of soldiers around it!”
frightened these stern men?
Those
silly
Pharisees!
priests
and
The
foolish
women
the tomb.
As if a guard of soldiers
moved
What had on
toward
Their tear-dimmed eyes
and a heavy stone sealed tight could
opened wide.
keep Jesus in the tomb!
their boxes of spices, so surprised
The priests
and Pharisees themselves were afraid
were they.
they
had
could
not
keep
Him
there. hi
Perhaps they dropped Now they knew what
frightened
the
soldiers
away.
had shown them all that no wicked thing or person could kill Him. “Go tell the disciples that He is alive,”
said
the
stranger with
the
shining face. Down the steep hillside flew the happy women.
They ran until they
reached Jerusalem and the house in which the disciples sat. “The tomb is empty! dead,
He
has
Jesus is not
risen!”
joyously exclaimed.
the
women
But the disciples
would not believe them. Out in the country, a long way from the garden and its tomb, two sorrowing men were walking. now afternoon. seemed
“JESUS IS NOT DEAD, HE HAS RISEN FROM THE TOMB !’’
The
tomb
was
wide
open.
The
more
frisky kids
It was
The sun had never golden.
frolicked
Lambs in
the
and
fields.
heavy stone had been rolled away
Even surly camels must have had a
and
twinkle in their eyes as they passed
the
strong
seal
which
had
fastened it to the opening of the
the men.
cave
never noticed how happy everything
was
broken.
They
stooped
But these
down and looked inside the tomb.
seemed
It
thoughts were so sad
was
empty.
No,
there
in
the
light.
He
H e is alive
live,
and
because
lived,
gloomy.
“Jesus
day, and now it is late in the after¬ noon.”
was going to
He
own
told us He would rise on the third
Jesus had told His disciples and He
and
The other spoke, saying,
and is risen, just as He told you.” the people that
their
happened.”
spoke to them saying, “Why do you come here to find Jesus?
because
of the men, “and as yet nothing has
The
women thought him an angel.
be,
“This is the third day,” said one
darkness stood someone whose face shone like a wonderful
to
two travelers
Both shook their heads in
sorrowful disappointment.
they
A third
man, a Stranger, joined them.
To
should live.
H is words were true.
Him the two travelers began to tell
His promise
had
their grief.
been
kept.
He II2
“Jesus of Nazareth, a great prophet, was crucified last Friday.
showed them
His
hands and His
We had
feet pierced and torn by the nails
hoped He was the one who would
which had fastened Him to the cross.
save
Israel,” the two travelers told
“I am alive,” Jesus told them.
this Stranger who had joined them.
at last the disciples believed.
As the
men talked,
grew lighter.
their
hearts
Perhaps they began to
They were no longer sad.
And Every
one of them now wanted to go out
notice how lovely the day was, and to
and
be cheered by the gay-colored flowers
that Christ had overcome death.
along the roadside.
The
had wonderful eyes.
tell
the
people
everywhere
Stranger
Then one sunny day as they stood
They seemed to
together on a hillside, a cloud came
see the thoughts in the men’s minds.
up and hid the Master.
And His smile was kind and loving.
cloud
How did it happen that He had not
alone.
heard of the cruel act on Calvary?
them
passed,
the
When the
disciples
were
Now, what He had taught was
living
in
their
hearts.
the
When Jesus left them His disci¬
Stranger talked to them about the
ples must have remembered what He
Scriptures.
once had told them: that the will of
The
Christ, of
two
men
listened
as
Then as He spoke about
slowly
Calvary
that
awful
disappeared,
saw a tomb open,
picture
and
and the
God is that man should live forever.
they
Master
they loved walk forth. “Why didn’t we recognize Him while
He was
talking
to
us
and
know that He was Jesus?” the two men asked after the left them.
Stranger had
Like the women, they
also ran to tell the disciples not to grieve any more, for Jesus was alive. And what
about those disciples
who would not believe? these
witnesses
that Jesus lived. for
they still
With all doubted
Why is.it so hard
people to believe good news?
Then one day Jesus came to them as they sat together in a room.
He
ONE SUNNY DAY A CLOUD CAME UP AND IIID THE MASTER. THEN THE DISCIPLES WERE ALONE
BREAKFAST BY THE SEA Very
know
each one of them was saying in his heart, “Oh, if only Jesus were here!”
early that the day had not changed
someone over on the shore waiting
its raiment of misty gray for its gay
for them.
“Who can it be?” they
sunny
fish¬
asked
another.
All
feared
in
night
the
I
Much to their surprise, they saw
robe,
in
of them say.
so
ing
early
hear some
seven
the
men
Sea of
they
had
morning,
were
Galilee.
one
some
Roman
Perhaps
they
soldier
was
been out in their
watching for them, or that a scribe
boats and not a single fish had come
was waiting to arrest them because
near their
they had been with Jesus.
net.
No
wonder
were tired and discouraged!
they They
had
no
right
probably were cold also, for morn¬
many
things
ing fogs do not make warm wraps.
these
last
Jesus
had
done
ful things in
many
Galilee.
wonder¬
The seven
to
arrest
had
few
them,
been
days
had a right to do.
A scribe but
done
that
no
in one
Jesus had been
wickedly put to death.
The apostles
fishermen out on the sea had seen
did not expect any better treatment
those wonders, for they were Jesus’
from the rulers than their
apostles.
had received.
“And now everything has
ended,” they must have been think¬ ing.
“ Cruel
men
have
crucified
the Master, and He has been laid in the tomb.” was but
empty
To be sure, the tomb and
He was
Jesus
had
risen,
not there with them
Slowly they approached the shore. Hark!
A voice they love is calling
to them. “H ave you anything to eat?”
“Not a thing,” was the disciples’ answer.
not understand it.
and caught nothing.”
said,
us
and
go fishing,” the
seven
Peter had
apostles
started to the Sea of Gahlee.
had Good
it
asked.
as He used to be, and they could “Let
Master
“We have fished all night
“Your net is on the wrong side of the boat,” replied the voice on the shore.
“ Throw it over on the
fishermen though they all were, not
right side and you will find plenty
one among them had been able to
of fish.”
catch even a single fish during the long night. “We
might
On the
other side
the net was thrown. as
well
go ashore.
There’s nothing here for us,” I can
into the sea
it
sank.
of the
boat
Down, down I
think
it
must almost have pulled the apostles
THE NET NEARLY BROKE, SO HEAVY WAS IT WITH FISH
in
after
broke, so
it,
for
heavy
the was
net it
nearly
with
fish.
At last all were together on the shore.
Jesus had everything ready
The apostles gazed wonderingly at
for them.
one another.
All began to suspect
chilly after that long, lonely night
that the figure waiting for them on
on the water, so He had a fine fire
the beach was Jesus.
of burning coals waiting for them.
“ It
is
the
John to Peter.
Master,”
whispered
Eagerly the apostles
Breakfast
He knew they must feel
was
ready,
and broiled fish.
also.
Bread
How happy those
pushed the boat forward, dragging
apostles must have been as they sat
after them the great net filled with
around the fire on the beach talking
fish.
with Jesus!
But Peter could not wait for
the boat to land.
crucified,
Hastily he tied
could
the
sea.
carry
His him
strong ashore
but
had been cruelly
had
come
back
to
them as He had promised.
on his outer coat and cast himself into
He
I
limbs of
much
can the
dark
quicker than the boat. 115
see
the
morning
sea
and
golden creep
make
sunshine
across every
the wave
Bethany.
Lazarus with
Martha may meet
Mary and
Him there and
give Him a joyous greeting.
The
cruel cross, the dark tomb no longer cause them sorrow. come them. Him.
Jesus has over¬
They could not hurt
He has promised His disci¬
ples the
same
power.
Will
the
Master
climbs
they
use it? Slowly
rough, steep hillside. remain behind.
The people
Only eleven apos¬
tles are following now. with
the
Seven ate
Jesus on the seashore.
The
other four joined the happy group as they journeyed toward Bethany. Jesus is far ahead. He has reached the “I HAVE TAUGHT YOU TO BE FISHERS OF MEN,” JESUS SAID TO THE APOSTLES
sparkle in the light.
top.
eleven.
But the danc¬
He
turns
to
bless
the
Upon His face I know there
rested a holy
smile
of
tenderness
ing waters shone no brighter than
for His “friends,” as He called the
the happy faces of the apostles as
apostles.
they listened to Jesus.
look upon Him.
“ I have taught you to be fishers of men,” He said.
“ I cannot stay
liant.
They lifted their eyes to The light is bril¬
For a moment it dazzles them.
Then slowly
across
the
mountain
with you much longer, but I expect
top a fleecy cloud floats between the
you to go out into all the world and
apostles and Jesus.
teach people everywhere what I have
from their sight.
taught
you, and do
the
He is hidden
wondrous
The cloud passes by and is gone.
works that I have shown you how
The apostles look again at the spot
to do.”
where Jesus stood, but
Many people are gathered on the seashore the
and
Master
gaze risen
in
wonder
from
on
His tomb.
there.
He is
not
They know in their hearts
that He has left them and now they must do
their work alone.
They
Some follow Jesus and His apostles
can do it, for the Master has shown
as
them the way.
they walk
toward
a
hill
near
MANY TONGUES
They must have met scowling scribes and
Was
it
tricky
Pharisees
who
mocked
evening or was it morn¬
them, saying, “We have killed their
ing when the apostles said good-by
master, we shall hear no more from
to Jesus on the hillside?
them.”
I like to
The chief priests talking on
think it was nearing twilight, when
the street corners no doubt were plan¬
the clouds were beginning to put on
ning to turn out of the synagogue
their pretty gay-colored dresses just
everyone who
before the sun slipped out of sight
band of ignorant people won’t dis¬
behind the hills.
turb us again,” the chief priests and
From red to pink,
from gold to green and then to pale gray, the clouds changed. star shone in the sky,
A bright
and a mist
loved Jesus.
“This
scribes probably said. The
apostles
and
Jesus’
friends kept together.
other
A house in
crept slowly up from the valley. Not
Jerusalem sheltered them from their
until
enemies,
a moonbeam told the people
who meant to
kill
them
that night had come did any one of
if ever they mentioned the name of
them
Jesus.
turn
away
and
homes in Jerusalem.
go
to
their
Every one. of
the disciples, the women
who fol¬
For
ten
days
and
nights
this little group of people remained together and prayed.
They were so
lowed Jesus, and perhaps some little children He
had
blessed
stumbled
down the darkening path toward the lights of the city. “We shall
have to do our own
work now,’’ some apostles must have said.
Perhaps a few were ashamed
because they had been selfish and had asked
Jesus
to
do their work
instead of doing it themselves. you know
any girls
or
boys
Do who
are like these apostles, always asking mother or teacher to do their hard work
for
them?
Sometimes small
fingers are lazy ones. Quietly through the noisy streets of
Jerusalem
the
apostles
walked.
THE ENEMIES OF JESUS ARE PLANNING TO KILL HIS APOSTLES
quiet no one knew they were pray¬ ing.
The people outside liked noisy
prayers.
They
thought
the
more
noise one made the better one prayed. At last,
early
one morning,
all
the apostles heard a sound like that made and
by then
a
strong,
upon
the
rushing head
wind,
of each
“These men from Galilee have been to our schools. can
they
speak
so
who thought they had killed Jesus ‘were
frightened
when
were.
apostles saw
heard
I am sure they
Instead of a few people in
Palestine hearing about Jesus, now
everyone in Jerusalem knew about it,
the whole world was going to know
because all those upon whom the light
of Him.
shone
thought they had silenced the disci¬
able
light.
the
they
But soon
were
the
but
different
Do you suppose that the people
and
one
many
have asked.
the apostles talking ?
No
Then how
languages?” priests and scribes must
apostle there rested a light, brilliant beautiful.
never
to
speak
many
Rich rulers and Pharisees
tongues — that means they were able
ples’ tongues
to
different
How terribly disappointed and badly
Every lonely stranger in
frightened they must have been as
Jerusalem heard the language of his
they listened to the apostles telling
own country spoken by the apostles.
the story of Jesus in every language
speak
languages.
and
understand
under
the
by crucifying Jesus.
sun, and
to
people
of
so many different countries! The strangers in Jerusalem were glad to hear what the apostles had to tell
them.
instead
of a
praying
When
night
few faithful
together
on
a
came,
apostles housetop,
there were thousands of people who had heard the story of Christ and H is wonderful works. For a time, the people stayed with the disciples but soon all of them were bursting with the good news. Apostles, were
disciples,
hurrying
to
and
strangers
different
lands
carrying with them the glad tidings UPON THE HEAD OF EACH APOSTLE RESTED A LIGHT
Jesus had brought them.
LYING AND LOSING Harriet was going to give away her
little
gray
dress.
She
had
grown so big the past year that the gray dress was now a tight squeeze for her. and
She held it up to the light
lovingly
fingered
rainbow braid.
She
its
rows
of
admired that
rainbow braid and the gray buttons splashed
with
gay
colors.
“Why
should I give away the braid and buttons?”
Harriet
asked
herself.
And then added, “ Mother can use them on another dress for me.” She shrugged her small shoulders as
she
thought,
“I
promised
my
Sunday-school teacher I would give
BARNABAS BRINGS PETER A BIG BAG FULL OF MONEY
her a whole dress for the Christmas
was to send away.
box
girls’
was held up for them all to admire.
Well, it will be a
A soft, warm sweater and wool cap
whole dress even without the braid
to match were packed away in the
and
box.
she
is
sending
orphan asylum. buttons.
to
Besides,
the
braid
and
buttons never kept anyone warm.” So down she sat and with sharp scissors
slashed
bow braid.
away
at
the
rain¬
What did it matter if
her clumsy fingers sometimes made a
hole
dress?
in
the
Snip,
soft snip,
wool off
of
the
came
the
Then some handkerchiefs on
whose
borders
butterflies
went
uneasy
she
thing all
A pretty kimono
as laid
its
danced in.
Harriet
noticed
away
buttons
gay-colored
in and
that
that
grew every¬
box
had
trimming
on.
The teacher held up a dress, an unsightly object.
the
braid
this dress can fasten the back with
had been torn or cut away.
The
pins,” thought Harriet.
back was buttonless, and the pretty
buttons.
“The little girl who gets
their
to
teacher
their
Christmas for the
ugly
holes where
collar
snipped
offerings
which
had
box
had removed the top button.
The next day a dozen small girls brought
were
In the gray skirt
she
with
slipped
the
scissors
when
Harriet
Many people, big and little, act Bible
stories
without
knowing
it.
Harriet did. Suppose you and I pay another make-believe
visit
to
Palestine.
What do you suppose we shall see this time? looking
A great group of happypeople
crowding
around
Peter and the other apostles. shall
see
a
man
named
We
Barnabas
pushing his way through the crowd. At last he reaches Peter and hands him a big bag full of money. “ I sold my rich fields this morn¬ ing,”
I
can
hear
Barnabas
say.
“Here is all the money that they brought.
dress
is
this?”
it
and
use
it
for
those in our company who are in
ANANIAS, HIDING BEHIND A ROCK, EMPTIES HALF OF THE MONEY IN THE POUCH OF HIS BELT
“Whose
Take
need.” More people are coming, each one
asked
bringing something to the apostles.
the teacher. “Mine,” answered Harriet.
“We
“It
don’t
want
to
own
any¬
is too small for me, so I’m giving
thing ourselves, we wish to share all
it
we have with others,” they said.
away to some poor
little
girl.”
Who
“But Harriet, all of the dress is
were
those
“others”
that
these generous people were talking
not here,” said the teacher.
about?
“ Y es, it is,” replied Harriet, but
Everyone who believed in
she hung her head, ashamed to meet the
Jesus
eyes of her teacher or her classmates.
In the days of the apostles not a
“Harriet, no one asked you for
single Christian ever went hungry,
box
a
dress,
one
that
some
Look!
There comes a man who
poor little girl would be happy to
doesn’t
wear.
This
to
can
the
wear.
It is not whole.
You have
feet
hurt him,
dress
is
not
fit
“Christian.”
cold, or friendless.
your dress, but you offered to give the
and was called
ruined it with your scissors.”
seem
a
matter
when he walks. 120
bit be?
happy.
What
Perhaps
his
for he hesitates so He has a big bag
with some money in it.
It doesn’t
look fat like the other bags given to
Peter.
It is lank and
lean, as
though it were hungry and wanted more
to
fill
That man emptied pouch
it.
Ah,
I
know!
hid behind a rock and
half
the
concealed
money in
his
into
belt.
a At
last he reaches Peter and throws the half-filled bag at his feet.
I don’t
think Peter is pleased. “ There is the price of my farm,” said
Ananias,
the
man
with
the
lean bag. I can see Peter’s look of surprise as
he
lifts
the
lean
bag.
Then
I know he said to the man, “Your great farm so rich and filled with fine cattle was sold sum!” head
He must as
he
for this small
have
looked
“YOU ARE TRYING TO CHEAT GOD,” PETER SAID
shaken
squarely
“No one asked you to sell your
his
farm,
into
the
neither money
have
you
asked
received
for
for
replied
have kept back part of the price.”
part of the price, you are trying to cheat God, not us.
Can you hear Ananias answering
with frightened eyes at the apostles
I can see Peter look sorrowfully
and the crowd around them.
“ Lied
company
to
Those
told
awful words thundered in his ears.
Ananias as he hands back the in
that
knew
Ananias
had
not
truth. he
sum. that
the
have sold it
And
I
company
believe knew
for a that
Peter feel
had
knocking
He had deceived
no one but himself.
in
said.
his heart
against his side.
large
everyone
God,”
He could
His land was valuable and
must
You have lied
Ananias, white with terror, gazed
in the bag is all I got for it.”
Everyone
back
to God, not to men.”
almost in a whisper? “The money
bag.
“By keeping
it,”
the eyes of Ananias, adding, “You
at
Peter.
we
Ananias
had
brought an offering in God’s name
Ananias
never would have sold it unless he
and
had received a big sum for it.
Peter 121
had
lied
would
when not
he
take
gave it.
it.
God,
ONE OF THE SEVEN Philip
had
Jerusalem.
been
Scribes
turned and
out
of
Pharisees
were determined that he should not teach any more people about Jesus. The
apostles
were
sorry
to
lose
Philip because he was such a help to them.
He with six other good
men looked after the poor widows and little children who called them¬ selves
Christians,
and
kept
them
from starving. The
Christians
abused.
were
dreadfully
Many of them were turned
out of their homes and had to live in caves.
hide in the tombs among the rocks.
FEAR STOPPED THE BEATING OF ANANIAS’ HEART AND HE DROPPED AT THE FEET OF THE APOSTLES
whose
word
is
truth,
would not accept it. word
was
Ananias
of
Sometimes they had to
course
Not another able
to
utter.
His tongue, dry and stiff with fear, refused to move. to God!”
“You have lied
Again those words rang
through his mind. something, H is
fear
Lying to save
he had lost everything. stopped
the
beating
of
his heart and he dropped down at the apostles’ feet — dead. Ananias
had
sold
his
property
for the benefit of others, but greedily kept back part of the price. Harriet
do
cutting
off
she
ruined
any its the
better braid pretty
Did
when
and
by
buttons
gray
dress SOMETIMES THE PERSECUTED CHRISTIANS HAD TO LIVE IN CAVES
she was giving away? 122
They were stoned, whipped, burned, and even thrown to savage lions to be torn in pieces. But for some
reason
could
not
the
which
their
understand,
Christians
were
enemies
the
more
abused
the
larger and more powerful grew the company of people who followed the apostles. “Why can’t we keep them still?” asked
ruler,
priest,
and
Pharisee.
“ Nothing frightens them,” said a scribe. “What are we going to do about it?
Soon
the
whole
world
will
be running after them and become Christians,” said all of them. Because
the
rich
rulers
hated BESIDE THE ROAD PHILIP SAW A MAN SITTING IN A CHARIOT BUSILY ENGAGED IN READING
everyone who spoke of Jesus, they had driven Philip out of Jerusalem.
chariot reading.
Foolish
good
stop his horses and begin to read out
sense they had! By making Philip leave the city they only gave him a splendid opportunity to tell the
here in the hot sun!” Philip must have thought. When he studied he
rulers,
how
little
“ How strange to
usually went up on the roof and sat in the shade. He moved closer to the chariot.
story of Jesus and his works to many other cities and to a great many more
the wilderness near Jerusalem, Philip
The man who was reading had a puzzled look on his face. “ Surely something must be troubling him greatly. I wonder if I can help him?” thought Philip. The man began to read aloud. “ Do you understand what you
saw a handsome chariot drawn by
are reading?” asked Philip politely.
beautiful horses standing by the road¬
“ I do not,” answered the man.
people. Philip’s eyes were always busily watching. No matter where he was, his eyes were sure to discover some¬ one he could talk to about Jesus. One day when he was walking in
side.
A man was sitting
in
“Can you help me?”
the 123
Philip climbed into the
THE GREAT MISSIONARY
chariot
and looked over the man’s shoulder. “Why, that is a chapter from our Scripture!”
he
exclaimed.
Let us watch another procession.
“This
man must love the writings which
This is not a long one.
tell about God.
a few people traveling together on
He will surely want
their
donkeys.
the story as the man chirruped to his
line
of
horses and the chariot rolled along
along the road
on its journey to
Damascus.
to hear about Jesus.”
So Philip told
Ethiopia, where
There
them
It is only they go,
picking
their
a
way
from Jerusalem to
All of them seem to be
in a great hurry, especially one man
the man lived. He
who as he goes angrily shoves some
was a member of the queen’s house¬
letters into the pocket of his mantle.
hold and a powerful leader.
This man is Paul.
The man was very, very rich.
Many,
He has asked
many people obeyed his commands.
the high priest to permit him to go
“You must baptize me,” said the
to Damascus to arrest every person
man to Philip, “for I want to be a
who
Christian.”
people the truth.
Philip’s for joy.
heart
must
have
sung
His enemies in Jerusalem
believes
that
Jesus
taught
When he started
on his errand Paul really felt very savage
about
the
matter.
While
no doubt were rubbing their hands
in Jerusalem
Paul
had beaten the
in glee,
Philip was
“People
the
Way,”
among
Christians were first called, and had
thinking that
unhappily
wandering to
speak
again
the
tombs
afraid
of
Jesus.
They would probably have
seen that magnificent chariot rapidly
He
carrying
men
his home.
Ethiopian Soon
be
A dreadful thing happened just before
ruler toward
the
put to death.
their teeth with rage, could they have powerful
as
even ordered some of them to
opened wide their eyes, and gnashed
the
of
his
Paul
saw
a
drag
started howling the
to
Damascus.
mob of
disciple
cruel
Stephen
through the streets and stone him
great country and its people would
to death outside the city.
hear the wonderful message Philip
not
had brought him about Jesus.
He even helped the men by hold-
His
try
to
stop
their
Paul did wickedness.
enemies had made this possible by
ing
driving Philip the preacher out of
while they threw the stones.
Jerusalem.
intended 124
their
long, to
flowing
destroy
every
mantles Paul person
PAUL, BLINDED BY THE WONDERFUL LIGHT, BEING LED TO DAMASCUS BY HIS COMPANIONS
we can’t catch these people in the synagogue we wdl drag them out of their houses,” said Paul. He heard the hoofs of his donkey pattering on the ground.
An eagle
screamed above him, and the hoarse call of a vulture made him shiver. It was noon, the sun
was
bright.
Why should Paul shiver?
Surely
he could not feel cold in the hot sun!
I
believe
was thinking him
half
He
must
“That who spoke the name of Jesus.
If
know what
about,
ashamed have
Stephen OFTEN PEOPLE WHO FOLLOWED THE TEACHINGS OF JESUS WERE PUT IN CHAINS
I
and
and of
been
his
made errand.
thinking
saying
man
it
he
himself,
felt
kindly
even toward the men who
abused
him,
people
while
Stephen
to
of
I
am
cursing
he found any people in Damascus
who never did me any harm, and
who followed Jesus, he expected to
swearing to injure them.”
put
suppose that if Paul compared him¬
chains
on
them
and
bring
them back with him to Jerusalem.
self
Men and women, and perhaps even
ashamed
children,
did.
he would put
in
prison.
with
Stephen of
Suddenly
How brave Paul felt as he and
it
himself? Paul
put
Do you
made I
him
think his
it
hands
his friends rode through the country
before his eyes.
to
than the noonday sun shone around
Damascus!
must
have
How
sat
upon
straight his
he
him.
donkey!
A light brighter
It blinded him and he
fell
He whipped the little animal into
to the ground.
a
voice saying, “Why do you perse¬
gallop,
reach we
so
anxious
Damascus!
was
he
“Hurry,
have no time to lose,”
to
cute me?”
hurry, I
Then he heard a
can
And Paul
almost hear Paul call to his men.
you, Lord?”
cried out, “ Who
He must have been far ahead of
“I am Jesus,” was the reply.
them,
Paul arose.
for
Paul
never
hung
back
when he had anything to do.
“If
are
The light had been
so bright that it made the daylight 126
seem like darkness. see,
and
his
astonished
He could not
companions
they
could
were
not
in
so
the
And
afraid of anything. hearts
speak.
are
filled
Paul
wasn’t
People whose
with
love
forget
how to be afraid.
They led Paul the rest of the way
A
to Damascus. Paul was changed.
vision.
few days after Paul
Damascus
In the vision
his
sight
was
reached restored.
Jesus had told him that he was to
Then he walked into the synagogue
be an apostle to the Gentiles.
and began to tell people that Jesus
people
must
be
taught
loves everybody.
that
All
was Christ, the Son of God.
God
Until
Jesus was a Jew,
Paul was an old man he
but his religion was for every kind
sailed over seas and traveled through
of people under the sun.
Paul was
many strange countries, healing the
to carry this good news into every
sick and preaching the good news
country.
that God is love, and that Jesus is
Not one of the disciples
was able to do this work as well as
His beloved Son.
Paul did it.
not know it,
The disciples believed
While Paul did
he was
Christ’s
first
Jesus came to be king of the Jews.
missionary in far away lands carry¬
But after Paul had talked with Jesus
ing the gospel to the whole world.
on the way to
Damascus,
he saw
that Jesus came to help all people. I
believe
when
the
he
words
prayed
for
of
Stephen
his
enemies
helped Paul to see that Jesus was more than
king of the Jews.
He
realized that Christ came to be Lord of
the
whole
earth,
because
He
taught that love was for all people. Paul was quick about everything. No one ever had to wait for him. I
am sure when something had to
be done “Just
he never said to anyone,
wait
a
minute.”
That
was
one of the reasons he made such a good apostle. The great hate in Paul changed to great love after his talk with Jesus 127
A STRANGE TABLE
up little tents on them where they can
dream
All of you, I know. at
night
when
asleep, while others dream
in
are
housetop where he could be alone
the
and quiet. While Peter was praying a strange
daytime, awake, with their eyes wide open.
Peter
wanted to pray, so he went to the
Some
they
in the daytime and
sleep comfortably at night.
How many of you little folks have dreams?
keep cool
Most dreams are foolish, but
thing happened.
He thought he saw
once in a while a dream tells us
the heavens above him open and a
something important, something that
great vessel
we should
up at the four corners come slowly
really
remember.
Big
folks and little folks have strange
down to
dreams.
the
The apostle Peter had one,
like a sheet
him until
roof.
he
eyes or
tell you about it.
sure he was awake.
And when do you think the dream came to him?
sun was at its brightest. the
way
the
dream
Peter was very hungry.
came to him.
This was
came
pinched
Not
about.
a bit,
prised.
He lived in
rubbed
himself to
awake when the
At noonday when the
it rested upon
Perhaps
and it was so very odd that I must
gathered
dream, or vision,
Was he frightened?
only very greatly sur¬
If
the
sheet
had
away
breezes give one a big appetite, it’s
to
if
not surprising that by noontime he
But it was not empty.
was
is the odd part of the story.
girls and boys
see
and
gone
downstairs
dinner was
now
sheet was full of animals.
in a hurry for their dinner.
of beasts
When Peter was so hungry, and
fish.
what do you think
thought.
He
Surely a
and
The
All kinds creeping
“Not a fish!”
Peter must have
“And I am a fisherman,
and used to eating fish.”
hungry man could find nothing to eat on the roof.
birds
here
things were in it, but not a single
dinner was not yet ready for him, went up on the housetop.
and
ready.
And
who come trooping home from school
he did?
been
empty, perhaps he would then have turned
hungry as
make
He was wide
a house by the seashore, and as salt
as
his
Here was plenty of meat waiting
But in Palestine,
to be killed and eaten.
where people live so differently from
not go hungry.
us, they do things that seem queer
move.
to you and me.
Many of the houses
prise
have flat roofs.
People sometimes set
He and
He need
But Peter did not
only looked with sur¬ displeasure
at
sheet filled with animals. 128
the
big
A WONDERFUL VISION OR DREAM CAME TO PETER AS HE WAS ALONE ON THE HOUSETOP PRAYING
“ Rise, you. “I “The
Peter,
here
is
food
for
before Peter.
Each time the Voice
Kill and eat,” said a Voice.
begged
to
cannot,” replied sheet
is
the
apostle.
turned
of
unclean
anything unclean.”
full
animals that are not fit to eat.
I
never
is
touch
anything
that
H is works.
They
What right
have
you to say that something God has
away saying, “ I
Peter listened to the Voice which him, but still
he
Peter
never eat
he was wise as to one thing: “What can it mean?”
dream.
I can hear
Peter say as he came slowly down from the roof. below.
All day and all night they
had traveled to find
would
let down before him.
the men asked the doorkeeper. “I
this strange vessel, or sheet, filled animals
was
drawn
up
to
am
Peter,”
129
live
here?”
answered
the
apostle when he saw the men wait¬ ing at the door.
heaven and as many times let down
Peter,
“Does
Simon,
Three times
called
him.
not touch the animals in the sheet
with
He
Three men were waiting for him
made is unfit to eat or touch?” to
but
began to think about this
“God made these animals.
spoke
eat,
If Peter was foolish about eating
unclean.” are
him
Then I am sure
he thought to
himself, “What can
these people who are Gentiles want with me who am a Jew? are
Gentiles
heathen, and are common and
unclean.
We Jews do not associate
with them.” “Will you come home with us?” the men asked Peter. “Why do you ask me?” replied Peter. never
“You know that we Jews have
anything
to
do
with
the heathen.” “We
wish
to
know
about
the
truths you teach,” replied the men. “ Cornelius, our master, has sent for you.
He
and
all
his
household
wish to learn about the true God.” NOW PETER KNOWS THE MEANING OF HIS DREAM
Now Peter knew the meaning of that strange dream, or vision, upon the housetop.
God loves every one
of His children.
To Him each girl
or boy, man or woman, is a treasure to
be
treated
with
respect
and
loving kindness. “ I cannot call any people com¬ mon and unclean,” thought Peter to himself,
“for
I
know
God
made
them all.” The door.
men
stood
Very likely
waiting
at the
Peter stretched
forth both his
hands in
a cordial
welcome
said,
shall
and
“I
be
glad to go with you, for the mes¬ sage THE GENTILES WISHING TO LEARN ABOUT GOD ARE ASKING PETER TO GO HOME WITH THEM
I
can
all people.” 130
bring
to you
is for
PRISON DOORS Peter
was
in
prison.
He must
have been very uncomfortable, for his hands and feet were bound with chains and he was sleeping between two soldiers.
What had he done?
Nothing, except to tell the people the story of Jesus. were so glad to of
them
And the people
hear it that many
stopped
listening
to
the
scribes and Pharisees and would not give any more money to the syna¬ gogues.
Instead, they hid in caves
and
secret
in
rooms
where
they
could feel safe while they listened to Peter and the other apostles as they told them about Jesus.
who
Every day more and more people came
to
church
hear
that
Peter.
told
about
PETER ASLEEP ON THE COLD STONE FLOOR OF THE PRISON
hated
the
followers of Jesus
and the new church called Christian.
The
new
They probably expected to see the
Jesus
was
people
running
back to the syna¬
rapidly growing so large that scribes
gogue to ask the rulers not to kill
and
them because they had
Pharisees,
priests
were frightened.
and
rulers
“What shall we
Peter.
listened to
But the rulers were disap¬
do to stop their talking?” they had
pointed.
asked
scowled as they saw some rich dis¬
each other as
they saw the
following
and
crowds apostles. will
Peter
“Perhaps
King
the
Herod
help us,” said the rulers and
Pharisees among themselves. “If their
it
pleases you
telling
that
I
story
will
ciples
carrying
gold
money
in
bags
of Jesus,”
their
and to
silver
give
to
Peter for the new church! Let
stop
And how they must have
us
watch
Peter
as
he lies
asleep on the cold stone floor of the prison.
His jailers no doubt were
Herod said to the Jews who hated
wishing Herod would kill Peter so
the apostles.
they could go back to their warm,
and
put
So Herod killed James
Peter
in
prison.
But
Herod’s cruelty didn’t help the Jews
light
homes.
I
know
Peter must
have smiled in his sleep, for he knew
me.”
The
light
which
awakened
Peter had put his two jailers to sleep. “Come with me,” said the friend that Peter called an angel. Past the first and second guards went
Peter and his shining guide.
No one noticed them. that guided
Did the light
Peter make blind the
soldiers who guarded the prison? think so.
On the two walked.
I
The
heavy iron gate of the prison opened noiselessly of itself to let Peter and his guide pass through. as quietly closed.
But
Then
it
Peter and
his guide were free and walking in the city street. When Peter turned to thank the
THE CHAINS FELL FROM PETER’S HANDS AND FEET
every was
member of the awake
and
one who had
new church
praying
for
led
him out of the
prison, the shining figure was gone.
him.
And their prayers were heard and
He
answered.
near but some dim torches carried by
How?
Watch!
standing beside wake up.
Some
when
morning
came
time, for
Herod
had
decided to put Peter to death as he
or dreaming?” he asked himself.
had James.
“ Rise quickly,” the shining figure
Softly
said, and added, “Fasten your san¬ dals and put on your cloak.” chains
was
“ Now I know my visitor
He was saved just in
“Am I awake
The
light
me from Herod,” thought Peter.
Peter, astonished, opened
Peter obeyed.
no
was a messenger of God sent to save
one
Peter tells him to
his eyes and stared.
alone, and
watchmen.
Suddenly the dark, damp prison grew brilliantly light.
was
streets
Peter glided through the
of
Jerusalem.
reached a friend’s house.
fell
At
last
he
Rap! rap!
from his hands and feet as though
What a noise his knuckles must have
they had rotted with rust.
“ It must
made as they beat upon the door!
be a vision,” Peter thought. “ Surely
Were his friends glad to see him?
no one is strong enough to pass all
Surely.
the prison guards and come to help
first his friends would not believe it 132
But do you know that at
SHIPWRECKED A
group
of
angry
men
were
standing in front of the synagogue. Priest and Pharisee, scribe and ruler were shaking their fists and some= times shrieking aloud in rage. “We
must
stop
this man
Paul
from preaching,” hissed a Pharisee. “Only ignorant people and the poor listen to the preaching fisher¬ men
who
were
Jesus’
apostles,”
listens
to
declared a scribe. “But He
is
everyone educated
and
is
a
Paul. Roman
citizen,” added a high priest. “Why,
would
you
believe
even the king asked Paul the other
PETER’S FRIENDS THINK THEY SEE A VISION
was Peter standing in the doorway?
day to tell him about Jesus!”
They thought they saw a vision. “Tell all the disciples that I have escaped. been
Their prayers for me have
answered,” Peter said to his
friends. them,
But he could not stay with
for he
knew when morning
came Herod would send his soldiers after him. the
So out Peter went into
darkness
and
found
a
place
where he was safe from the cruelty and hatred of ruler and Pharisee. Did
Peter
stop
talking
about
Jesus after his escape from prison? Never!
He
talked
all
the
more.
Once he had kept still because he was afraid.
it,
Now the apostle who
once had denied that he knew Jesus, PAUL STANDING BEFORE THE KING TELLING HIM ABOUT JESUS AND HIS WORKS
became the first to declare His name. 133
'The
ruler
who
spoke
the
The apostles and other disciples
last
words clenched his fist as he spoke.
at last believed that
He, with the others, was afraid so
earnest, and they welcomed him as
many people would be running to
an apostle of Christ.
hear
more than any of them because he
Paul
that
no
one
would
be
left to go to the synagogue.
Paul
was
in
He could do
could reach more people.
“ Let us send him away from our
The Jews who would not listen,
country or kill him,” they all said.
had Paul arrested and brought be¬
Paul was having a hard time of it.
fore the
king.
Ever since that ride to
Damascus
demanded.
when
he
had
met
and
talked
head.
Jesus
in
a vision,
the
Jews
sought to kill him. thought
really the he
had
him
an
enemy
were afraid of
the emperor. whether
and
this
man
who
asked
I
I will let him decide
am right
or
wrong
in
preaching Jesus.” So off he started.
about Jesus. can
done?”
the king of Paul.
meant what he said when he talked “How
you
his
I wish to go to Italy and talk to
believe
friend
have
shook
and
apostles at first didn’t their
king
they
“Nothing,” answered Paul, “but
Even
honestly
him,”
Now
him.
was
The
“What
Once they had
trusted him as their friend. they
to
“Kill
once
But how do
you suppose he went?
In a ship,
of
you
course,
but
not
as
or
I
imprisoned the Christians and put
would
many of them to death, now preach
able to walk about the decks and
Jesus?” many of the apostles had
enjoy ourselves.
asked.
so,
But
nothing
discouraged
He went
right
traveling
all
on over
Paul.
preaching the
for
and
country.
looked
him
and
company
of
he
people
the
the
ship
the
sturdy
world
would
hear
about
Paul were allowed to speak. this was what scribe and
whole
Jesus
went
winds
H is
the
free,
as
a
prisoner,
if
And
off
Pharisee,
waves
and
gathered
priest and ruler feared.
it
sailed.
never
It
would
Italy, the sea was so rough
Great
Soon
be
Paul could not do
as though
who believed in Jesus and practiced teachings.
would
The ship sailed and reach
little
We
guarded by Roman soldiers.
Everywhere he went he left behind a
go.
towered
and
swept
little
sailed in
were
ship on.
the
sky
so
fierce.
high over
above it,
shook
but them
Black
clouds
and
blotted
out the sun by day and the stars 134
by night. the
Huge waves driven by
fierce
sides
as
winds lashed though
they
the
ship’s
wanted
to
not
go
any
farther,”
said
Paul, “the voyage is too dangerous. You
may
lose
your
ship
and
all
its freight.” to him. He was in a hurry to get Italy for the
was
its
helpless.
passengers,
and
also
jaws. So
The
were
badly
the
fright¬
winter.
Far,
away
from
the
sheltering
sailed
the
ship.
Boom!
“We are lost!” all of them cried. “Not
far
shore
so,”
ship
and
but
every
saved.
But the captain would not listen to
boat
between
ened.
send it to the bottom. “ Do
crushed
its
said freight
man
on
Paul.
“Your
will
be
board
will
be
Last night in a vision God
told me so.” “ Let us throw over an anchor,” said one of the sailors.
This was
done, then up it was drawn.
Swish!
lost,
Down
nearly
again into the sea it was cast, but
tore the brave little boat to pieces.
not so far did it sink, for the ship
The captain
was nearing land.
Crash!
Wind
the
teeth
the
vessel
and
wave
had sailed
of a mighty was
like
a
right into
“Put off the lifeboat and let us
storm, and tiny
save ourselves,” said the sailors.
shell 135
we will
“If they 1 eave the ship without
to reach the shore!”
us you cannot be saved,” declared
“ Be quick, jump overboard, every¬
Paul to the chief captain.
one that can swim, and make for
“We will kill the prisoners lest they try
to escape,” answered
the shore!” shouted soldier and ship
the
captain.
soldiers. “The
have to swim if we want
prisoners
shall
not
the
be
killed, they shall go with us,” said the chief captain. and loved him.
“The others must try for
shore
on
boards
or
broken
pieces of the ship.”
He knew Paul
The
He was not going
morning
fog
like
a
gray
blanket hung over the sea and the
to allow any harm to come to him.
sinking ship.
The ship was slowly breaking to
could be
Away in the distance
seen
a faint
shore
line.
pieces as the waves beat against it.
All were asking themselves whether
All
the men could make it before their
the
freight
had
been
thrown
into the sea to allow the ship
to
strength
float. Then
left
them.
One
by
one
the men hurled themselves into the a sailor
cried
out,
the lifeboat has drifted away!
“See,
angry waves.
Now
but
Paul
It was a long swim,
and every
came safely to shore. shivering
they
one
of them
Dripping and
thankfully
stepped
upon land once more.
Paul
a
a
fire
for
them.
Not
built
prisoner
tried to run away. Did
Paul
get
to
Rome?
He
surely did, and for two years there in his own house he told the story of Jesus.
Paul’s enemies had not
closed his mouth as they had hoped. Instead
they
had
helped
him
to
carry his message to other countries and
to
tempest stop
his
tongue
many
people.
and
angry sea
tongue.
silenced
Storm
and
could
not
Never until
it
was had
his told
to all the civilized world the story of its King, the Christ.
PAUL BUILDING A FIRE FOR THE SHIPWRECKED MEN 136
THE CITY OF THE GREAT KING Astonished, I looked out over the lake.
Only a few minutes before
I had seen nothing but water. now!
I
took
off
my
But
glasses and
rubbed
my eyes, to see what ailed
them.
Not a thing was the matter
with them, and yet I was very sure my eyes were not telling stories.
Why?
me true
Because coming out
of the water and resting on the blue waves I could see a city with streets and houses. moving
People and carts were
along the roads.
“Oh,
a
mirage!” I said to myself as the city
POOR AND HOMELESS PEOPLE IN PALESTINE
slowly faded away and nothing was
tigers.
to be seen but the blue waters of the
and mothers loved Christ were killed.
lake.
While it lasted
mirage
John, one of the apostles, was not
Some people
a bit frightened by these cruel deeds.
see things with their minds instead
He felt sure that some time all the
of their eyes, and call them visions.
world would be Christian.
I have always thought a vision was
little island of Patmos, in the sea far
something like a mirage.
west of Palestine, John had a won¬
looked like a real city.
the
Even babies whose fathers
We really
On the
do see what we are looking at, even
derful vision.
though it isn’t there.
and a new earth where everything
He saw a new heaven
In the country of Palestine, where
was just as God wanted it to be.
it was so hard for poor people to
Suppose you and I have another
live, because no one tried to make
walk together.
them
things as they ought to be.
things
happy,
some
happened.
very Here
dreadful wicked
picture
Let us try to see
is a sad one.
My first
It is a hot
rulers and bad priests were trying
summer day.
to kill the people who loved Jesus.
dusty and crowded with people.
Some were burned
crawl over the rubbish heaps piled
to
death,
and
The city streets are
high near the sidewalks.
many were fed to hungry lions and 137
Flies
Little sick
babies are crying
for
milk
which
would
their mothers cannot buy. and another takes its place.
a
the
street
the
Christ
ruled,
he
city that
seemed to
come
Perhaps at the
very time he saw the vision of that heavenly city,
On both sides of pretty white
new
down from heaven ?
It is
but the streets are
wide and clean.
when
said it was like a new Jerusalem—.
Like a mirage the picture fades the same city,
be
the shrieks
houses
he may have
heard
and screams of
angry
in their new coats of paint, look as
people
if
streets of the old city of Jerusalem.
they were
smiling.
There
are
stoning
Christians
no ash heaps or rubbish anywhere.
I
Are there any sick children?
was sure to be
a
Wicked
never
in that big brick building.
Yes, Let us
like to feel that he things
in
the
knew there
new
Jerusalem. last.
You
go softly up the steps and peep into
and I believe that everything really
a room.
good comes to stay with us.
Many small beds are in
And
it, each one so clean that it looks
that is what John knew and saw
like a snowdrift.
and that is what he told us.
being
rocked,
Sick babies are
fed, and
cared
for
In “The City of the Great King,”
by kind nurses. What can have happened to make such a change in a city?
I know.
the New Jerusalem, all
the people
are
hearts
kind
because their
filled with love.
Some of Christ’s love has come into
lose
the hearts of the people.
And,
Wherever
anything best
are
There no one can
or be
sick
of all, in that
or
die.
city
no
That
is
H is love goes, old and wicked places
one will ever be afraid.
are made over into new and good
the kind of city God makes.
ones. Hungry boys and girls, ragged
Do you know we can help build
and dirty, become clean and sweet,
“The City of the Great King” by
and sit down to tables covered with
being
good things to eat.
who needs us?
love
of
Jesus
always hunting
in
People with the their
hearts are
kind,
by
helping
I must tell you the
name of the city.
for lonesome folks
No, you needn’t
hold up your hands.
It isn’t the
so that they can make them happy.
city built
No
you are thinking about.
one is sobbing or crying, for
with bricks and mortar
selfishness and everything else that
of
is wicked
like any other city.
have gone away to stay.
Do you wonder that when
the
the
Great
Christianity. 1:3 8
“The City
King” is
all loving deeds, and
apostle saw how beautiful the world
everyone
not
built
Its stones are its name is
FAR AWAY FROM PALESTINE ON THE LITTLE ISLAND OF PATMOS IN THE SEA, JOHN HAD A WONDERFUL VISION HE SAW A NEW HEAVEN AND A NEW EARTH
A LITTLE CHILD’S HYMN
TWENTY-THIRD PSALM
Thou that once, on mother’s knee, Wert a little one like me, When I wake or go to bed, Lay Thy hands about my head; Let me feel Thee very near; Jesus Christ, our Saviour dear.
The God of love my Shepherd is, And He that doth me feed, While He is mine, and I am His, What can I want or need? He leads me to the tender grass, Where I both feed and rest; Then to the streams that gently pass: In both I have the best. Or if I stray, He doth convert, And bring my mind in frame; And all this not for my desert, But for His holy name. Yea, in Death’s shady black abode Well may I walk, not fear; For Thou art with me, and Thy rod To guide, Thy staff to bear. Nay, Thou dost make me sit and dine Ev’n in my enemies’ sight; My head with oil, my cup with wine Runs over day and night. Surely Thy sweet and wondrous love Shall measure all my days; And as it never shall remove, So neither shall my praise.
Be beside me in the light, Close by me through all the night; Make me gentle, kind, and true, Do what mother bids me do; Help and cheer me when I fret, And forgive when I forget. Once wert Thou in cradle laid, Baby bright in manger-shade, With the oxen and the cows, And the lambs outside the house: Now Thou art above the sky; Canst Thou hear a baby cry? Thou Since Thou Jesus Thou Wert
art nearer when we pray, Thou art so far away; my little hymn wilt hear, Christ, our Saviour dear, that once, on mother’s knee, a little one like me.
— George Herbert
LIRST CHRISTMAS SONG
— Francis Turner Palgrave
In the fields with their flocks abiding, They lay on the dewy ground, And glimmering under the starlight The sheep lay white around. When the light of the Lord streamed o’er them, And lo! from the heavens above An angel leaned from the glory, And sang his song of love. He sang that first sweet Christmas The song that shall never cease — Glory to God in the highest, On earth good will and peace.
WESLEY’S HYMN
Loving Jesus, meek and mild, Look upon a little child! Make me gentle as Thou art, Come and live within my heart. Take my childish hand in Thine, Guide these little feet of mine. So shall all my happy days Sing their pleasant song of praise; And the world shall always see Christ, the holy Child, in me! — Abridged
— An old Carol
140
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