Chapter
21 -
Bethesda and the Sanhedrin
Listen to Audio
"NOW there is at Jerusalem by the sheep market a pool, which is called in
the Hebrew tongue Bethesda, having five porches. In these lay a great
multitude of impotent folk, of blind, halt, withered, waiting for the moving
of the water."
At certain seasons the waters of this pool were agitated, and it was
commonly believed that this was the result of supernatural power, and that
whoever first after the troubling of the pool stepped into the waters, would
be healed of whatever disease he had. Hundreds of sufferers visited the
place; but so great was the crowd when the water was troubled that they
rushed forward, trampling underfoot men, women, and children, weaker than
themselves. Many could not get near the pool. Many who had succeeded in
reaching it died upon its brink. Shelters had been erected about the place,
that the sick might be protected from the heat by day and the chilliness of
the night. There were some who spent the night in these porches, creeping to
the edge of the pool day after day, in the vain hope of relief.
Jesus was again at Jerusalem. Walking alone, in apparent meditation and
prayer, He came to the pool. He saw the wretched sufferers watching for that
which they supposed to be their only chance of cure. He longed to exercise
His healing power, and make every sufferer whole. But it was the Sabbath
day. Multitudes were going to the temple for worship, and He knew that such
an act of healing would so excite the prejudice of the Jews as to cut short
His work.
But the Saviour saw one case of supreme wretchedness. It was that of a man
who had been a helpless cripple for thirty-eight years. His disease was in a
great degree the result of his own sin, and was looked upon as a judgment
from God. Alone and friendless, feeling that he was shut out from God's
mercy, the sufferer had passed long years of misery. At the time when it was
expected that the waters would be troubled, those who pitied his
helplessness would bear him to the porches. But at the favored moment he had
no one to help him in. He had seen the rippling of the water, but had never
been able to get farther than the edge of the pool. Others stronger than he
would plunge in before him. He could not contend successfully with the
selfish, scrambling crowd. His persistent efforts toward the one object, and
his anxiety and continual disappointment, were fast wearing away the remnant
of his strength.
The sick man was lying on his mat, and occasionally lifting his head to gaze
at the pool, when a tender, compassionate face bent over him, and the words,
"Wilt thou be made whole?" arrested his attention. Hope came to his heart.
He felt that in some way he was to have help. But the glow of encouragement
soon faded. He remembered how often he had tried to reach the pool, and now
he had little prospect of living till it should again be troubled. He turned
away wearily, saying, "Sir, I have no man, when the water is troubled, to
put me into the pool: but while I am coming, another steppeth down before
me."
Jesus does not ask this sufferer to exercise faith in Him. He simply says,
"Rise, take up thy bed, and walk." But the man's faith takes hold upon that
word. Every nerve and muscle thrills with new life, and healthful action
comes to his crippled limbs. Without question he sets his will to obey the
command of Christ, and all his muscles respond to his will. Springing to his
feet, he finds himself an active man.
Jesus had given him no assurance of divine help. The man might have stopped
to doubt, and lost his one chance of healing. But he believed Christ's word,
and in acting upon it he received strength.
Through the same faith we may receive spiritual healing. By sin we have been
severed from the life of God. Our souls are palsied. Of ourselves we are no
more capable of living a holy life than was the impotent man capable of
walking. There are many who realize their helplessness, and who long for
that spiritual life which will bring them into harmony with God; they are
vainly striving to obtain it. In despair they cry, "O wretched man that I
am! who shall deliver me from this body of death?" Rom. 7:24, margin. Let
these desponding, struggling ones look up. The Saviour is bending over the
purchase of His blood, saying with inexpressible tenderness and pity, "Wilt
thou be made whole?" He bids you arise in health and peace. Do not wait to
feel that you are made whole. Believe His word, and it will be fulfilled.
Put your will on the side of Christ. Will to serve Him, and in acting upon
His word you will receive strength. Whatever may be the evil practice, the
master passion which through long indulgence binds both soul and body,
Christ is able and longs to deliver. He will impart life to the soul that is
"dead in trespasses." Eph. 2:1. He will set free the captive that is held by
weakness and misfortune and the chains of sin.
The restored paralytic stooped to take up his bed, which was only a rug and
a blanket, and as he straightened himself again with a sense of delight, he
looked around for his Deliverer; but Jesus was lost in the crowd. The man
feared that he would not know Him if he should see Him again. As he hurried
on his way with firm, free step, praising God and rejoicing in his new-found
strength, he met several of the Pharisees, and immediately told them of his
cure. He was surprised at the coldness with which they listened to his
story.
With lowering brows they interrupted him, asking why he was carrying his bed
on the Sabbath day. They sternly reminded him that it was not lawful to bear
burdens on the Lord's day. In his joy the man had forgotten that it was the
Sabbath; yet he felt no condemnation for obeying the command of One who had
such power from God. He answered boldly, "He that made me whole, the same
said unto me, Take up thy bed, and walk." They asked who it was that had
done this, but he could not tell. These rulers knew well that only One had
shown Himself able to perform this miracle; but they wished for direct proof
that it was Jesus, that they might condemn Him as a Sabbath-breaker. In
their judgment He had not only broken the law in healing the sick man on the
Sabbath, but had committed sacrilege in bidding him bear away his bed.
The Jews had so perverted the law that they made it a yoke of bondage. Their
meaningless requirements had become a byword among other nations. Especially
was the Sabbath hedged in by all manner of senseless restrictions. It was
not to them a delight, the holy of the Lord, and honorable. The scribes and
Pharisees had made its observance an intolerable burden. A Jew was not
allowed to kindle a fire nor even to light a candle on the Sabbath. As a
consequence the people were dependent upon the Gentiles for many services
which their rules forbade them to do for themselves. They did not reflect
that if these acts were sinful, those who employed others to perform them
were as guilty as if they had done the work themselves. They thought that
salvation was restricted to the Jews, and that the condition of all others,
being already hopeless, could be made no worse. But God has given no
commandments which cannot be obeyed by all. His laws sanction no
unreasonable or selfish restrictions.
In the temple Jesus met the man who had been healed. He had come to bring a
sin offering and also a thank offering for the great mercy he had received.
Finding him among the worshipers, Jesus made Himself known, with the warning
words, "Behold, thou art made whole: sin no more, lest a worse thing come
unto thee."
The healed man was overjoyed at meeting his Deliverer. Ignorant of the
enmity toward Jesus, he told the Pharisees who had questioned him, that this
was He who had performed the cure. "Therefore did the Jews persecute Jesus,
and sought to slay Him, because He had done these things on the Sabbath
day."
Jesus was brought before the Sanhedrin to answer the charge of Sabbath
breaking. Had the Jews at this time been an independent nation, such a
charge would have served their purpose for putting Him to death. This their
subjection to the Romans prevented. The Jews had not the power to inflict
capital punishment, and the accusations brought against Christ would have no
weight in a Roman court. There were other objects, however, which they hoped
to secure. Notwithstanding their efforts to counteract His work, Christ was
gaining, even in Jerusalem, an influence over the people greater than their
own. Multitudes who were not interested in the harangues of the rabbis were
attracted by His teaching. They could understand His words, and their hearts
were warmed and comforted. He spoke of God, not as an avenging judge, but as
a tender father, and He revealed the image of God as mirrored in Himself.
His words were like balm to the wounded spirit. Both by His words and by His
works of mercy He was breaking the oppressive power of the old traditions
and man-made commandments, and presenting the love of God in its exhaustless
fullness.
In one of the earliest prophecies of Christ it is written, "The scepter
shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until
Shiloh come; and unto Him shall the gathering of the people be." Gen. 49:10.
The people were gathering to Christ. The sympathetic hearts of the multitude
accepted lessons of love and benevolence in preference to the rigid
ceremonies required by the priests. If the priests and rabbis had not
interposed, His teaching would have wrought such a reformation as this world
has never witnessed. But in order to maintain their own power, these leaders
determined to break down the influence of Jesus. His arraignment before the
Sanhedrin, and an open condemnation of His teachings, would aid in effecting
this; for the people still had great reverence for their religious leaders.
Whoever dared to condemn the rabbinical requirements, or attempt to lighten
the burdens they had brought upon the people, was regarded as guilty, not
only of blasphemy, but of treason. On this ground the rabbis hoped to excite
suspicion of Christ. They represented Him as trying to overthrow the
established customs, thus causing division among the people, and preparing
the way for complete subjugation by the Romans.
But the plans which these rabbis were working so zealously to fulfill
originated in another council than that of the Sanhedrin. After Satan had
failed to overcome Christ in the wilderness, he combined his forces to
oppose Him in His ministry, and if possible to thwart His work. What he
could not accomplish by direct, personal effort, he determined to effect by
strategy. No sooner had he withdrawn from the conflict in the wilderness
than in council with his confederate angels he matured his plans for still
further blinding the minds of the Jewish people, that they might not
recognize their Redeemer. He planned to work through his human agencies in
the religious world, by imbuing them with his own enmity against the
champion of truth. He would lead them to reject Christ and to make His life
as bitter as possible, hoping to discourage Him in His mission. And the
leaders in Israel became instruments of Satan in warring against the
Saviour.
Jesus had come to "magnify the law, and make it honorable." He was not to
lessen its dignity, but to exalt it. The scripture says, "He shall not fail
nor be discouraged, till He have set judgment in the earth." Isa. 42:21, 4.
He had come to free the Sabbath from those burdensome requirements that had
made it a curse instead of a blessing.
For this reason He had chosen the Sabbath upon which to perform the act of
healing at Bethesda. He could have healed the sick man as well on any other
day of the week; or He might simply have cured him, without bidding him bear
away his bed. But this would not have given Him the opportunity He desired.
A wise purpose underlay every act of Christ's life on earth. Everything He
did was important in itself and in its teaching. Among the afflicted ones at
the pool He selected the worst case upon whom to exercise His healing power,
and bade the man carry his bed through the city in order to publish the
great work that had been wrought upon him. This would raise the question of
what it was lawful to do on the Sabbath, and would open the way for Him to
denounce the restrictions of the Jews in regard to the Lord's day, and to
declare their traditions void.
Jesus stated to them that the work of relieving the afflicted was in harmony
with the Sabbath law. It was in harmony with the work of God's angels, who
are ever descending and ascending between heaven and earth to minister to
suffering humanity. Jesus declared, "My Father worketh hitherto, and I
work." All days are God's, in which to carry out His plans for the human
race. If the Jews' interpretation of the law was correct, then Jehovah was
at fault, whose work has quickened and upheld every living thing since first
He laid the foundations of the earth; then He who pronounced His work good,
and instituted the Sabbath to commemorate its completion, must put a period
to His labor, and stop the never-ending routine of the universe.
Should God forbid the sun to perform its office upon the Sabbath, cut off
its genial rays from warming the earth and nourishing vegetation? Must the
system of worlds stand still through that holy day? Should He command the
brooks to stay from watering the fields and forests, and bid the waves of
the sea still their ceaseless ebbing and flowing? Must the wheat and corn
stop growing, and the ripening cluster defer its purple bloom? Must the
trees and flowers put forth no bud nor blossom on the Sabbath?
In such a case, men would miss the fruits of the earth, and the blessings
that make life desirable. Nature must continue her unvarying course. God
could not for a moment stay His hand, or man would faint and die. And man
also has a work to perform on this day. The necessities of life must be
attended to, the sick must be cared for, the wants of the needy must be
supplied. He will not be held guiltless who neglects to relieve suffering on
the Sabbath. God's holy rest day was made for man, and acts of mercy are in
perfect harmony with its intent. God does not desire His creatures to suffer
an hour's pain that may be relieved upon the Sabbath or any other day.
The demands upon God are even greater upon the Sabbath than upon other days.
His people then leave their usual employment, and spend the time in
meditation and worship. They ask more favors of Him on the Sabbath than upon
other days. They demand His special attention. They crave His choicest
blessings. God does not wait for the Sabbath to pass before He grants these
requests. Heaven's work never ceases, and men should never rest from doing
good. The Sabbath is not intended to be a period of useless inactivity. The
law forbids secular labor on the rest day of the Lord; the toil that gains a
livelihood must cease; no labor for worldly pleasure or profit is lawful
upon that day; but as God ceased His labor of creating, and rested upon the
Sabbath and blessed it, so man is to leave the occupations of his daily
life, and devote those sacred hours to healthful rest, to worship, and to
holy deeds. The work of Christ in healing the sick was in perfect accord
with the law. It honored the Sabbath.
Jesus claimed equal rights with God in doing a work equally sacred, and of
the same character with that which engaged the Father in heaven. But the
Pharisees were still more incensed. He had not only broken the law,
according to their understanding, but in calling God "His own Father" had
declared Himself equal with God. John 5:18, R. V.
The whole nation of the Jews called God their Father, therefore they would
not have been so enraged if Christ had represented Himself as standing in
the same relation to God. But they accused Him of blasphemy, showing that
they understood Him as making this claim in the highest sense.
These adversaries of Christ had no arguments with which to meet the truths
He brought home to their consciences. They could only cite their customs and
traditions, and these seemed weak and vapid when compared with the arguments
Jesus had drawn from the word of God and the unceasing round of nature. Had
the rabbis felt any desire to receive light, they would have been convinced
that Jesus spoke the truth. But they evaded the points He made concerning
the Sabbath, and sought to stir up anger against Him because He claimed to
be equal with God. The fury of the rulers knew no bounds. Had they not
feared the people, the priests and rabbis would have slain Jesus on the
spot. But the popular sentiment in His favor was strong. Many recognized in
Jesus the friend who had healed their diseases and comforted their sorrows,
and they justified His healing of the sufferer at Bethesda. So for the time
the leaders were obliged to restrain their hatred.
Jesus repelled the charge of blasphemy. My authority, He said, for doing the
work of which you accuse Me, is that I am the Son of God, one with Him in
nature, in will, and in purpose. In all His works of creation and
providence, I co-operate with God. "The Son can do nothing of Himself, but
what He seeth the Father do." The priests and rabbis were taking the Son of
God to task for the very work He had been sent into the world to do. By
their sins they had separated themselves from God, and in their pride were
moving independently of Him. They felt sufficient in themselves for all
things, and realized no need of a higher wisdom to direct their acts. But
the Son of God was surrendered to the Father's will, and dependent upon His
power. So utterly was Christ emptied of self that He made no plans for
Himself. He accepted God's plans for Him, and day by day the Father unfolded
His plans. So should we depend upon God, that our lives may be the simple
outworking of His will.
When Moses was about to build the sanctuary as a dwelling place for God, he
was directed to make all things according to the pattern shown him in the
mount. Moses was full of zeal to do God's work; the most talented, skillful
men were at hand to carry out his suggestions. Yet he was not to make a
bell, a pomegranate, a tassel, a fringe, a curtain, or any vessel of the
sanctuary, except according to the pattern shown him. God called him into
the mount, and revealed to him the heavenly things. The Lord covered him
with His own glory, that he might see the pattern, and according to it all
things were made. So to Israel, whom He desired to make His dwelling place,
He had revealed His glorious ideal of character. The pattern was shown them
in the mount when the law was given from Sinai, and when the Lord passed by
before Moses and proclaimed, "The Lord, The Lord God, merciful and gracious,
long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for
thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin." Ex. 34:6, 7.
Israel had chosen their own ways. They had not builded according to the
pattern; but Christ, the true temple for God's indwelling, molded every
detail of His earthly life in harmony with God's ideal. He said, "I delight
to do Thy will, O My God: yea, Thy law is within My heart." Ps. 40:8. So our
characters are to be builded "for an habitation of God through the Spirit."
Eph. 2:22. And we are to "make all things according to the pattern," even
Him who "suffered for us, leaving us an example, that ye should follow His
steps." Heb. 8:5; 1 Peter 2:21.
The words of Christ teach that we should regard ourselves as inseparably
bound to our Father in heaven. Whatever our position, we are dependent upon
God, who holds all destinies in His hands. He has appointed us our work, and
has endowed us with faculties and means for that work. So long as we
surrender the will to God, and trust in His strength and wisdom, we shall be
guided in safe paths, to fulfill our appointed part in His great plan. But
the one who depends upon his own wisdom and power is separating himself from
God. Instead of working in unison with Christ, he is fulfilling the purpose
of the enemy of God and man.
The Saviour continued: "What things soever He [the Father] doeth, these also
doeth the Son likewise. . . . As the Father raiseth up the dead, and
quickeneth them; even so the Son quickeneth whom He will." The Sadducees
held that there would be no resurrection of the body; but Jesus tells them
that one of the greatest works of His Father is raising the dead, and that
He Himself has power to do the same work. "The hour is coming, and now is,
when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God: and they that hear
shall live." The Pharisees believed in the resurrection of the dead. Christ
declares that even now the power which gives life to the dead is among them,
and they are to behold its manifestation. This same resurrection power is
that which gives life to the soul "dead in trespasses and sins." Eph. 2:1.
That spirit of life in Christ Jesus, "the power of His resurrection," sets
men "free from the law of sin and death." Phil. 3:10; Rom. 8:2. The dominion
of evil is broken, and through faith the soul is kept from sin. He who opens
his heart to the Spirit of Christ becomes a partaker of that mighty power
which shall bring forth his body from the grave.
The humble Nazarene asserts His real nobility. He rises above humanity,
throws off the guise of sin and shame, and stands revealed, the Honored of
the angels, the Son of God, One with the Creator of the universe. His
hearers are spellbound. No man has ever spoken words like His, or borne
himself with such a kingly majesty. His utterances are clear and plain,
fully declaring His mission, and the duty of the world. "For the Father
judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the Son: that all men
should honor the Son, even as they honor the Father. He that honoreth not
the Son honoreth not the Father which hath sent Him. . . . For as the Father
hath life in Himself; so hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself;
and hath given Him authority to execute judgment also, because He is the Son
of man."
The priests and rulers had set themselves up as judges to condemn Christ's
work, but He declared Himself their judge, and the judge of all the earth.
The world has been committed to Christ, and through Him has come every
blessing from God to the fallen race. He was the Redeemer before as after
His incarnation. As soon as there was sin, there was a Saviour. He has given
light and life to all, and according to the measure of light given, each is
to be judged. And He who has given the light, He who has followed the soul
with tenderest entreaty, seeking to win it from sin to holiness, is in one
its advocate and judge. From the opening of the great controversy in heaven,
Satan has maintained his cause through deception; and Christ has been
working to unveil his schemes and to break his power. It is He who has
encountered the deceiver, and who through all the ages has been seeking to
wrest the captives from his grasp, who will pass judgment upon every soul.
And God "hath given Him authority to execute judgment also, because He is
the Son of man." Because He has tasted the very dregs of human affliction
and temptation, and understands the frailties and sins of men; because in
our behalf He has victoriously withstood the temptations of Satan, and will
deal justly and tenderly with the souls that His own blood has been poured
out to save,--because of this, the Son of man is appointed to execute the
judgment.
But Christ's mission was not for judgment, but for salvation. "God sent not
His Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through Him
might be saved." John 3:17. And before the Sanhedrin Jesus declared, "He
that heareth My word, and believeth Him that sent Me, hath eternal life, and
cometh not into judgment, but hath passed out of death into life." John
5:24, R. V.
Bidding His hearers marvel not, Christ opened before them, in still wider
view, the mystery of the future. "The hour cometh," He said, "in which all
that are in the tombs shall hear His voice, and shall come forth; they that
have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done ill,
unto the resurrection of judgment." John 5:28, 29, R. V.
This assurance of the future life was that for which Israel had so long
waited, and which they had hoped to receive at the Messiah's advent. The
only light that can lighten the gloom of the grave was shining upon them.
But self-will is blind. Jesus had violated the traditions of the rabbis, and
disregarded their authority, and they would not believe.
The time, the place, the occasion, the intensity of feeling that pervaded
the assembly, all combined to make the words of Jesus before the Sanhedrin
the more impressive. The highest religious authorities of the nation were
seeking the life of Him who declared Himself the restorer of Israel. The
Lord of the Sabbath was arraigned before an earthly tribunal to answer the
charge of breaking the Sabbath law. When He so fearlessly declared His
mission, His judges looked upon Him with astonishment and rage; but His
words were unanswerable. They could not condemn Him. He denied the right of
the priests and rabbis to question Him, or to interfere with His work. They
were invested with no such authority. Their claims were based upon their own
pride and arrogance. He refused to plead guilty of their charges, or to be
catechized by them.
Instead of apologizing for the act of which they complained, or explaining
His purpose in doing it, Jesus turned upon the rulers, and the accused
became the accuser. He rebuked them for the hardness of their hearts, and
their ignorance of the Scriptures. He declared that they had rejected the
word of God, inasmuch as they had rejected Him whom God had sent. "Ye search
the Scriptures, because ye think that in them ye have eternal life; and
these are they which bear witness of Me." John 5:39, R. V.
In every page, whether history, or precept, or prophecy, the Old Testament
Scriptures are irradiated with the glory of the Son of God. So far as it was
of divine institution, the entire system of Judaism was a compacted prophecy
of the gospel. To Christ "give all the prophets witness." Acts 10:43. From
the promise given to Adam, down through the patriarchal line and the legal
economy, heaven's glorious light made plain the footsteps of the Redeemer.
Seers beheld the Star of Bethlehem, the Shiloh to come, as future things
swept before them in mysterious procession. In every sacrifice Christ's
death was shown. In every cloud of incense His righteousness ascended. By
every jubilee trumpet His name was sounded. In the awful mystery of the holy
of holies His glory dwelt.
The Jews had the Scriptures in their possession, and supposed that in their
mere outward knowledge of the word they had eternal life. But Jesus said,
"Ye have not His word abiding in you." Having rejected Christ in His word,
they rejected Him in person. "Ye will not come to Me," He said, "that ye
might have life."
The Jewish leaders had studied the teachings of the prophets concerning the
kingdom of the Messiah; but they had done this, not with a sincere desire to
know the truth, but with the purpose of finding evidence to sustain their
ambitious hopes. When Christ came in a manner contrary to their
expectations, they would not receive Him; and in order to justify
themselves, they tried to prove Him a deceiver. When once they had set their
feet in this path, it was easy for Satan to strengthen their opposition to
Christ. The very words that should have been received as evidence of His
divinity were interpreted against Him. Thus they turned the truth of God
into a lie, and the more directly the Saviour spoke to them in His works of
mercy, the more determined they were in resisting the light.
Jesus said, "I receive not honor from men." It was not the influence of the
Sanhedrin, it was not their sanction He desired. He could receive no honor
from their approbation. He was invested with the honor and authority of
Heaven. Had He desired it, angels would have come to do Him homage; the
Father would again have testified to His divinity. But for their own sake,
for the sake of the nation whose leaders they were, He desired the Jewish
rulers to discern His character, and receive the blessings He came to bring
them.
"I am come in My Father's name, and ye receive Me not: if another shall come
in his own name, him ye will receive." Jesus came by the authority of God,
bearing His image, fulfilling His word, and seeking His glory; yet He was
not accepted by the leaders in Israel; but when others should come, assuming
the character of Christ, but actuated by their own will and seeking their
own glory, they would be received. And why? Because he who is seeking his
own glory appeals to the desire for self-exaltation in others. To such
appeals the Jews could respond.
They would receive the false teacher because he flattered their pride by
sanctioning their cherished opinions and traditions. But the teaching of
Christ did not coincide with their ideas. It was spiritual, and demanded the
sacrifice of self; therefore they would not receive it. They were not
acquainted with God, and to them His voice through Christ was the voice of a
stranger.
Is not the same thing repeated in our day? Are there not many, even
religious leaders, who are hardening their hearts against the Holy Spirit,
making it impossible for them to recognize the voice of God? Are they not
rejecting the word of God, that they may keep their own traditions?
"Had ye believed Moses," said Jesus, "ye would have believed Me: for he
wrote of Me. But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye believe My
words?" It was Christ who had spoken to Israel through Moses. If they had
listened to the divine voice that spoke through their great leader, they
would have recognized it in the teachings of Christ. Had they believed
Moses, they would have believed Him of whom Moses wrote.
Jesus knew that the priests and rabbis were determined to take His life; yet
He clearly explained to them His unity with the Father, and His relation to
the world. They saw that their opposition to Him was without excuse, yet
their murderous hatred was not quenched. Fear seized them as they witnessed
the convincing power that attended His ministry; but they resisted His
appeals, and locked themselves in darkness.
They had signally failed to subvert the authority of Jesus or to alienate
the respect and attention of the people, many of whom were convicted by His
words. The rulers themselves had felt deep condemnation as He had pressed
their guilt home upon their consciences; yet this only made them the more
bitter against Him. They were determined to take His life. They sent
messengers all over the country to warn the people against Jesus as an
impostor. Spies were sent to watch Him, and report what He said and did. The
precious Saviour was now most surely standing under the shadow of the cross.
|